Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

16
Vol. 116, No. 215 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages One section Thursday Sept. 6, 2012 50 cents Today 95 PS w/t-storm Tonight 73 Index On this day in history 150 years ago Stonewall Jackson’s men occupy Frederick, Md., as the Con- federate Army of Northern Virginia establishes its base north of the Potomac. Stocks........ 7 Classified...... 14 Comics...... 12 Wisdom...... 11 Weather........ 5 Obituaries........ 3 Opinion........ 4 Sports........ 8 20% chance of t-storm Two Corinth women were killed on Wednesday in a one-vehicle ac- cident on U.S. 72. Samantha J. Evetts, 20, and Phoe- nix Peacher, 18, both of Corinth, were pronounced dead at the scene by Coro- ner Jay Jones. Both attended Alcorn Central High School. The Corinth Police Depart- ment received the call on the accident at 1:44 p.m. and responded to the scene a short distance east of Lake Hill Motors on U.S. 72. Peacher was the driver of the 2002 Ford Mustang that was heading westbound on Highway 72 when the driver lost control of the car, drove down a steep em- bankment and hit a utility pole, according to Assistant Chief Scotty Harville. The passenger, Evetts, was ejected from the vehicle. Neither of the vehicle’s occu- pants was wearing a seatbelt. Personnel from the Corinth Fire Department also responded to the scene. Funeral arrangements were in- complete at press time Wednesday Two killed in Highway 72 crash BY BOBBY J. SMITH [email protected] Vehicle left the highway and struck utility pole Evetts Peacher Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith Rescue workers respond to the scene of the one-vehicle crash on U.S. Highway 72 that claimed the lives of two local women Wednesday afternoon. County supervisors agreed on Tuesday to sell an old industrial building to the town of Rienzi for use as a community-orient- ed property. Formerly used by Wurlitzer and King Manufacturing, the building will be sold to the town for $1,000. Third District Su- pervisor Tim Mitchell said the town feels it will be advanta- geous to own the property when seeking grants to improve the building rather than leasing it. Board attorney Bill Davis said the county has the authority to sell the building at a sum the county determines to be a “fair value.” The building is in declining condition and the town recently approached the county about nding a use for it. Rienzi of- cials have mentioned a number of possibilities for the property, including a park, walking track, community center or town hall. In other business: After difculties with get- ting a couple of road projects scheduled, the board had a dis- cussion of rescinding the cur- rent contracts for paving and chip & seal services. Supervisors approved two requests for use of the court- house grounds — a downtown block party on Sept. 29 request- ed by Cindy Thomas and dis- tribution of women’s and chil- dren’s self-defense awareness information by Jay Anthony on Oct. 5-6. Supervisors sell former manufacturing building BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Numerous defendants re- cently entered guilty pleas in Alcorn County Circuit Court. The following are additional sentences handed down during the August term, according to court records: Michael L. Mann, 44, sale of cocaine — 10 years in cus- tody of the Mississippi Depart- ment of Corrections with credit for time served and the balance suspended with three years of post-release supervision; $1,000 ne; no additional time on a second count of sale of co- caine Michael Guy Stinnett, 40, uttering a forgery — 10 years with credit for time served and the balance suspended with ve years of post-release supervi- sion; $1,000 ne; no additional time on a second count of ut- tering a forgery. Court records show a shoplifting charge is pending in Union County. Damien Leigh Hollins, 31, possession of two or more pre- cursors — 15 years with 13 sus- pended and two to serve with ve years of post-release su- pervision and $1,000 ne; pos- session of methamphetamine — concurrent sentence of eight years with six suspended; pos- session of stolen property — concurrent sentence of 10 years with eight suspended Henry Ezekial Trimble, 48, felony DUI — Five years house arrest and four years of post-re- lease supervision; $2,000 ne Jackie Lamar Willis, 34, burglary of a building — Seven years with ve suspended and two to serve with ve years of post-release supervision Gary Dean Smith Jr., 25, possession of marijuana Three-year suspended sentence with three years probation and $1,000 ne David Burcham, 33, eeing or eluding a law enforcement ofcer — Five-year suspended sentence with ve years proba- tion and $1,000 ne Jeffrey Lamonte Batie, 37, attempted disposal of stolen property — 10 years with credit for time served and the balance suspended; $500 ne Jamie B. Henderson, 37, felony DUI — Five years with four suspended and four years of post-release supervision Sandra Gail Prisant, 43, two or more precursors with intent — Five years probation and $1,000 ne Heather Nicole Hayes, 31, burglary and larceny of a dwell- ing, two counts — Suspended 20- and 10-year sentences; grand larceny — 10 years house arrest and ve years post-re- lease supervision Bradley Jerome Green, 32, felony DUI — Five years house arrest with four years post-re- lease supervision and $1,000 ne Brandon Kitchens, 27, fel- ony eeing — Five years with credit for time served and the balance suspended with three years post-release supervision Defendants’ pleas entered in circuit court BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Please see PLEAS | 2A The city and county boards agreed this week to accept a grant offer that will improve runway lighting at the Corinth-Alcorn County Airport. The $247,077 project will entail a cost of only $6,177 each for the city and county. The Board of Aldermen and Board of Supervisors agreed to accept the Federal Avia- tion Administration grant and to commit the match Grant will aid airport improvements BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] Please see AIRPORT | 2A Daily Corinthian THE IMPORTANCE OF SCREENING AND DETECTING CANCER EARLY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 CROSSROADS ARENA CONFERENCE CENTER 8 AM - NOON

description

Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Transcript of Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Page 1: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Vol. 116, No. 215 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • One section

ThursdaySept. 6, 2012

50 centsToday95

PS w/t-stormTonight

73

Index On this day in history 150 years agoStonewall Jackson’s men occupy Frederick, Md., as the Con-

federate Army of Northern Virginia establishes its base north of the Potomac.

Stocks........7 Classified......14 Comics......12 Wisdom......11

Weather........5 Obituaries........3 Opinion........4 Sports........8

20% chance of t-storm

Two Corinth women were killed on Wednesday in a one-vehicle ac-cident on U.S. 72.

Samantha J. Evetts, 20, and Phoe-nix Peacher, 18, both of Corinth, were pronounced dead at the scene by Coro-ner Jay Jones. Both attended Alcorn Central High School.

The Corinth Police Depart-ment received the call on the accident at 1:44 p.m. and responded to the scene a short distance east of Lake Hill Motors on U.S. 72.

Peacher was the driver of

the 2002 Ford Mustang that was heading westbound on Highway 72 when the driver lost control of the car, drove down a steep em-bankment and hit a utility pole, according to Assistant Chief Scotty Harville.

The passenger, Evetts, was ejected from the vehicle.

Neither of the vehicle’s occu-pants was wearing a seatbelt.

Personnel from the Corinth Fire Department also responded to the scene.

Funeral arrangements were in-complete at press time Wednesday

Two killed in Highway 72 crash

BY BOBBY J. [email protected]

Vehicle left the highway and struck utility pole

Evetts

Peacher

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Rescue workers respond to the scene of the one-vehicle crash on U.S. Highway 72 that claimed the lives of two local women Wednesday afternoon.

County supervisors agreed on Tuesday to sell an old industrial building to the town of Rienzi for use as a community-orient-ed property.

Formerly used by Wurlitzer and King Manufacturing, the

building will be sold to the town for $1,000. Third District Su-pervisor Tim Mitchell said the town feels it will be advanta-geous to own the property when seeking grants to improve the building rather than leasing it.

Board attorney Bill Davis said the county has the authority to

sell the building at a sum the county determines to be a “fair value.”

The building is in declining condition and the town recently approached the county about fi nding a use for it. Rienzi offi -cials have mentioned a number of possibilities for the property,

including a park, walking track, community center or town hall.

In other business:■ After diffi culties with get-

ting a couple of road projects scheduled, the board had a dis-cussion of rescinding the cur-rent contracts for paving and chip & seal services.

■ Supervisors approved two requests for use of the court-house grounds — a downtown block party on Sept. 29 request-ed by Cindy Thomas and dis-tribution of women’s and chil-dren’s self-defense awareness information by Jay Anthony on Oct. 5-6.

Supervisors sell former manufacturing buildingBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Numerous defendants re-cently entered guilty pleas in Alcorn County Circuit Court.

The following are additional sentences handed down during the August term, according to court records:

■ Michael L. Mann, 44, sale of cocaine — 10 years in cus-tody of the Mississippi Depart-ment of Corrections with credit for time served and the balance suspended with three years of post-release supervision; $1,000 fi ne; no additional time on a second count of sale of co-caine

■ Michael Guy Stinnett, 40, uttering a forgery — 10 years with credit for time served and the balance suspended with fi ve

years of post-release supervi-sion; $1,000 fi ne; no additional time on a second count of ut-tering a forgery. Court records show a shoplifting charge is pending in Union County.

■ Damien Leigh Hollins, 31, possession of two or more pre-cursors — 15 years with 13 sus-pended and two to serve with fi ve years of post-release su-pervision and $1,000 fi ne; pos-session of methamphetamine — concurrent sentence of eight years with six suspended; pos-session of stolen property — concurrent sentence of 10 years with eight suspended

■ Henry Ezekial Trimble, 48, felony DUI — Five years house arrest and four years of post-re-lease supervision; $2,000 fi ne

■ Jackie Lamar Willis, 34,

burglary of a building — Seven years with fi ve suspended and two to serve with fi ve years of post-release supervision

■ Gary Dean Smith Jr., 25, possession of marijuana — Three-year suspended sentence with three years probation and $1,000 fi ne

■ David Burcham, 33, fl eeing or eluding a law enforcement offi cer — Five-year suspended sentence with fi ve years proba-tion and $1,000 fi ne

■ Jeffrey Lamonte Batie, 37, attempted disposal of stolen property — 10 years with credit for time served and the balance suspended; $500 fi ne

■ Jamie B. Henderson, 37, felony DUI — Five years with four suspended and four years of post-release supervision

■ Sandra Gail Prisant, 43, two or more precursors with intent — Five years probation and $1,000 fi ne

■ Heather Nicole Hayes, 31, burglary and larceny of a dwell-ing, two counts — Suspended 20- and 10-year sentences; grand larceny — 10 years house arrest and fi ve years post-re-lease supervision

■ Bradley Jerome Green, 32, felony DUI — Five years house arrest with four years post-re-lease supervision and $1,000 fi ne

■ Brandon Kitchens, 27, fel-ony fl eeing — Five years with credit for time served and the balance suspended with three years post-release supervision

Defendants’ pleas entered in circuit courtBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

Please see PLEAS | 2A

The city and county boards agreed this week to accept a grant offer that will improve runway lighting at the Corinth-Alcorn County Airport.

The $247,077 project will entail a cost of only $6,177 each for the city and county. The Board of Aldermen and Board of Supervisors agreed to accept the Federal Avia-tion Administration grant and to commit the match

Grant will aid airport improvements

BY JEBB [email protected]

Please see AIRPORT | 2A

Daily Corinthian

THE IMPORTANCE OF SCREENING

AND DETECTING CANCER EARLY

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 2012 CROSSROADS ARENA CONFERENCE CENTER 8 AM - NOON

Page 2: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

funding.The scope of the proj-

ect includes an upgrade of airfi eld lighting con-trols, replacement of the Precision Approach Path Indicator, and an update of the airport master plan.

The FAA grant covers 90 percent of the proj-ect, or $222,369, and the Mississippi Department of Transportation will contribute $12,354.

The grant includes $63,000 for planning with the remainder going to airport development.

In July, the boards agreed to match an Air-port Multi-Modal Grant that will provide for the enclosing of T-hangars to protect aircraft from the elements.

In other actions this week, the Board of Su-

pervisors agreed to sub-mit application to the Mississippi Develop-ment Authority to form an economic develop-ment pact with the city of Corinth that would allow the two to commit equal shares of matching funds on projects throughout the county. The request must be approved by MDA.

The pact affects one project currently on the table — improvements to Manpower Road, which is outside the city lim-its, for Caterpillar’s new South Harper Road facil-ity.

Supervisors also agreed for the county to apply for a grant on be-half of Corinth Gas & Water for a gas line that would serve as a backup for Kingsford and APAC, according to the county engineering fi rm.

and $1,000 fi ne■ Gary Lee Harris, 31,

possession of two or more precursors — 10 years house arrest with fi ve years post-release super-vision and $1,000 fi ne; conspiracy to manufac-ture methamphetamine (Tishomingo County) — 10 years with credit for time served and balance suspended; $1,000 fi ne

■ Melissa G. Perez, 32, false pretense / bad check — Three years probation; $500 fi ne; $960 to bad check unit

■ John W. Voyles, 39, disposal of stolen prop-erty — Suspended 10-year sentence with fi ve years probation; pay a fi ne and restitution to Corinth Gas & Water Department; grand larceny — Sus-pended 10-year sentence

■ Timothy Davis, 32, possession of cocaine —

Eight years with credit for time served and the bal-ance suspended with fi ve years of post-release su-pervision and $1,000 fi ne

■ Tracy Deon Wooten, 41, sale of a controlled substance — Three years with credit for time served and the balance suspended with three years of post-release su-pervision and a $1,000 fi ne; sale of marijuana — Consecutive sentence of three years with credit for time served and the balance suspended and $1,000 fi ne

■ Ray Charles Spencer, 56, possession of cocaine with intent — 15 years with 11 suspended and four to serve and $1,000 fi ne; sale of cocaine (Pren-tiss County) — Concur-rent sentence of 15 years with 11 suspended and four to serve; ordered to report to Prentiss County Jail on Aug. 20

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

PLEAS

CONTINUED FROM 1

AIRPORT

CONTINUED FROM 1

ELMER, Tenn. — A re-quest to put a referendum on the ballot to fund two new elementary schools was denied by the Mc-Nairy County Board of Commissioners during a special called meeting Tuesday night.

The commissioners voted 12-8 to postpone the idea of putting the referendum on the No-vember ballot. Commis-sioners had moved their September meeting up one week to meet the deadline required to get any measure on the ballot

for the upcoming election.McNairy’s Board of

Education had asked the county commission to place a referendum on the ballot that would have used a $20 wheel tax and/or a half-cent sales tax in-crease to pay for the pro-posed new schools in Ad-amsville and Selmer.

McNairy County Mayor Ronnie Brooks is now planning to put together a joint meeting between commissioners and school offi cials. He hopes to get commissioners on the budget committee, building committee and education committee to

meet with McNairy Coun-ty Director of Schools Charlie Miskelly and the school board to get an agreement between the groups.

“We have some com-munication issues to iron out between the commis-sioners and the school offi cials,” said Brooks. “A few commissioners were unhappy with the way that information was pro-vided them by the school board”

An optimistic Brooks believes the combined meeting of commission-ers and school represen-tatives will help smooth

over unanswered ques-tions between the two groups.

“I believe everyone agrees there is a need for two elementary schools and we just have to fi nd a way to fund them,” said Brooks. “We need to present it to the people in the county and get them enough information. Our county has always sup-ported school building programs in the past.”

If the county commis-sion passes a resolution to support the referen-dum then a special elec-tion could be held in the future.

Commissioners reject requestBY JEFF YORK

Special to the Daily Corinthian

Submitted photo

Celebrating 40 years in bankingThe Mississippi Bankers Association recently recognized Regions Bank associate Reta Baswell in Corinth for reaching her 40-year banking career milestone. During the celebration, Baswell, a Branch Service Lead-er with the bank’s Corinth main branch, was presented with a certificate by Paula Smith, Regions’ Corinth Main Branch Manager, and Becky Spence, Regions’ Shiloh Road Branch Manager.

Photo courtesy Mississippi House of Representatives

Wilson gives opening prayer at State LegislatureBrother Tommy Wilson, pastor at Living Free Ministries in Corinth, led the session in opening prayer dur-ing his visit in February. Wilson (left) visited with Rep. Nick Bain while at the capital.

TUPELO, Miss. — A company that dissembles wide-body commercial aircraft has invited Tupelo offi cials to take a tour amid some public criticism of how its operation looks.

Universal Asset Man-agement fl ies 747s and other decommissioned aircraft to Tupelo and takes them apart in the former Army Air National Guard facility. The parts are then recycled.

To help block the hulk-ing jets from view, the city planted trees and shrubs near the fence line bor-dering the facility. But it will take years for the foli-age to grow into an effec-tive screen.

The Northeast Missis-sippi Daily Journal re-ports that some residents apparently have com-plained to city offi cials about what they claim is an unsightly view.

UAM, which opened operations at Tupelo Re-gional Airport in 2011.

“I think the biggest mis-

conception is that UAM is a junkyard that causes damage, and that's the furthest thing from the truth,” said Keri Wright, chief operating offi cer for the Memphis-based com-pany.

“We're not a junkyard. We run a highly sophis-ticated and highly skilled process that the entire aviation industry depends on,” Wright said.

UAM fl ies 747s and oth-er decommissioned air-craft to Tupelo and takes them apart in the former Army Air National Guard facility. The parts are then recycled.

Council member Mike Bryan said some constit-uents that are unhappy with all the planes.

“They want to know how many more planes will come in and are we getting money from them sitting there,” he said.

UAM pays the airport $85,000 annually for its lease. That rate will in-crease each year until capping at $115,000.

UAM reaches out to Tupelo leaders

Associated Press

JACKSON — Many hunters would be happy if they could hit just one 4 1/2-inch clay disc fl y-ing through the air at 42 miles per hour.

Tony Kirk of Corinth won't be satisfi ed until he hits 100.

One hundred out of 100, to be precise.

At age 10, Kirk started shooting trap with his father after going to a range at his hometown of Corinth.

“I shot a round or two and was hooked from

there,” said Kirk.Now 14, Kirk accom-

plished in August what most trapshooters never achieve in a lifetime.

Kirk won a sub-ju-nior competition at the Grand American World Trapshooting Champi-onships in Sparta, Ill., an event that draws thou-sands of the top trap-shooters in the U.S. and abroad.

His father was quite proud of Kirk's accom-plishment.

“There are people that go up there their whole life and don't come

home with a trophy,” Tony Kirk Sr. said.

Kirk didn't stop there. He competed against more than 2,000 other shooters of all ages for a chance at the biggest event, the Grand Ameri-can Handicap.

Jim Porter with the American Trapshoot-ers Association said the handicap system is much like a handicap in golf and the distance from which a competi-tor shoots is based on known ability and other factors.

Shooting 99 clays out

of 100, Kirk seemed to have secured a spot in the fi nal round of the Handicap, until some-one shot a perfect 100 and left Kirk as the run-ner-up.

How big is runner-up? According to Porter, “the accomplishment he has made is huge, nothing short of huge.”

Stressing the point, Porter said, “it's really, really, really huge.”

Porter said it is a lot like fi nishing one stroke behind Tiger Woods.

Kirk still has plenty of goals left.

Runner-up trapshooter keeps eye on targetBY BRIAN BROOM

Associated Press

JACKSON — Rain from the remnants of Hurri-cane Isaac could help the drought-stricken Mississippi River, but experts say it's not enough for long-term relief.

The Mississippi River is lower than it has been in years, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is busy trying to keep barge traffi c fl owing on the vital shipping

channel.Marty Pope, a hydrologist

for the National Weather Service in Jackson, Miss., says Isaac dumped rain on areas that feed the lower Mis-sissippi River, but too little for a sustained rise in water level.

Corps spokesman Kavana-ugh Breazeale says the river could rise two feet at Vicks-burg, Miss., over the coming weeks.

Isaac could mean some relief to low Miss. River

BY HOLBROOK MOHRAssociated Press

Page 3: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Deaths

Local3A • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

Ethylene BraddockCOLUMBUS — Funer-

al services for Ethylene Braddock, 72, are set for 2 p.m. Friday at Magno-lia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Liberty Hill Baptist Church Cemetery in Glen.

Ms. Braddock died Tuesday, September 4, 2012 at Aurora Health & Rehab.

Born December 20, 1939, she was a home-maker and of the Baptist faith.

She was preceded in death by her parents, El-ton and Modena Hath-cock Braddock.

Survivors include two brothers, James Elton Braddock and Larry Wayne Braddock both of Columbus.

Bro. Travis Smith will offi ciate.

Visitation is from noon until service time Friday at the funeral home.

Richard Nunley

IUKA — A graveside service for Richard (R.C.) Nunley, 84, is set for 11 a.m. today at Providence Cemetery.

Mr. Nunley died Tues-day, September 4, 2012.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Roy

Milton and Bessie Mann Nunley; a son, Jackie James; a sister, Pearline Drexel; and a brother, Leroy Milton Nunley.

Survivors include his wife, Betty Nunley of Iuka; six daughters, Patty Nunley Bennett and hus-band Larry of Pontotoc, Pat Radar and husband Norm of McCarrol, Ill., Carol Colin of Addison, Ill., Sharon Brajkovich and husband Peter of Lombard, Ill., Debbie Bowling and husband Wayborn of Iuka and Lisa Kretzchmar of Bir-mingham, Ala.; 14 grand-children; and 25 great grandchildren.

In lieu of fl owers do-nations can be made to Providence Cemetery Fund.

Ludlam Funeral Home is in charge of arrange-ments.

Durell Rogers

WALNUT — Funeral services for Winfred Du-rell Rogers, 75, are set for 2 p.m. Friday at Lone Oak Baptist Church with burial in Lone Oak Bap-tist Church Cemetery.

Mr. Rogers died Tues-day, September 4, 2012 at Magnolia Regional Health Center.

He was preceded in death by his parents,

Clarence and Nellie Set-tlemires Rogers; two brothers, Gene Rogers and Curtis Rogers; and a sister, Helen Gann.

Born February 10, 1937, he was a logger for Chapman Hardwood, Inc. of Ripley. He was a member of Lone Oak Baptist Church.

Survivors include his wife of 52 years, Wanda Rogers of Walnut; three sons, Aaron Rogers and wife Sandra of Corinth, Hank Rogers and wife Debra of Fulton, and Joe Rogers of Walnut; a daughter, Peggy Bates and husband Benny of Ripley; 12 grandchil-dren, Blake Rogers, Josh Rogers, Craig Talley, Hagen Talley, Tiffany Wood, Tyler Rogers, Brandon Scott, Jimmy Durrell Rogers, Heather Jackson and husband Alison, Hannah Jackson, Benny Bates, and U.S. Army Sgt. Andrew Wil-banks and wife Barbara; and four great grand-children.

Bro. Charles “Smiley” Mills will offi ciate.

Visitation is 5-9 p.m. tonight and from 1 p.m. until service time Friday at the church.

Dovie Louise Tillman

Funeral services for

Dovie Louise Tillman, 85, of Corinth, are set for 11 a.m. Friday at Magno-lia Funeral Home Chapel of Memories with burial in Farmington Baptist Church Cemetery.

Ms. Tillman died Wednesday, September, 5, 2012 at Magnolia Re-gional Health Center.

Born June 29, 1927, she was a retired Special Diet Cook in the Dietary Department at Magnolia Regional Health Center with 30 plus years of ser-vice. She was a member of Farmington Baptist Church.

She was preceded in death by a son, David Gurley; her parents, Freeman and Nealie Ro-mine Tillman; and two brothers, Willie B. Till-man and Dolmar Gene Tillman.

Survivors include a daughter, Mary Aber-crombie of Corinth; four grandchildren, Jennifer Wylie and husband Jim-my of Golden and Helen Hall and husband Don of Golden; four great grand-children; and four great-great grandchildren.

Bro. Warren Jones will offi ciate.

Visitation is 3-8 p.m. tonight and from 10 a.m. until service time Friday at the funeral home.

Youngsters are going to get a chance to milk a goat at the Alcorn County Fair.

Once they try the milk-ing end, children will also be allowed to sample their work.

The exhibition is being done by Mandie Wilbanks. Wilbanks and her husband, Josh, raise Purebred Nu-bian goats on their farm “I want children to come out and see how easily goats are kept and how wonder-ful the milk is,” said Mandie Wilbanks. Wilbanks, who also works at Rickman’s Meat Market, started us-ing goat milk after her son, Nate, was having trouble eating at two years-old. She bought two young dairy goats and quickly learned that the milk is better in a number of ways than milk from a cow.

In fact, 65 percent of milk consumption world-wide is from goats. It has been determined that goat milk is less allergen-ic. Study of infants shows that those allergic to cow

milk could drink goat milk with virtually no side effects.

Goat milk is also natu-rally homogenized and is easier to digest. It rarely causes lactose intolerance and matches up to the hu-man body better, accord-ing to studies.

“It’s going to be hands on,” said Wilbanks of the exhibition. “A lot of kids don’t even know that goats produce milk.”

The Wilbanks family, also made up of six-year-old Elsie, are set to bring three of the goats along with two babies to the fair on both Friday and Satur-day afternoon.

Children will be allowed to also feed the smaller goats. “I have showed livestock before, but never goats,” said the mother of two. “Elsie would milk ev-ery day, if I would let her.”

Wilbanks calls her “Nan’s Milk and Honey” venture a hobby.

“I just wanted to teach my kids how to do some-thing since I was raised on a hog farm,” she said.

Goat exhibit will introduce youth to agriculture

BY STEVE [email protected]

Revolve is ready to get crunk.

The ministry led by young people will be featured on Wednesday, September 12 at the Al-corn County Fair.

“Revolve is a high-energy service geared toward young people,” said organizer Jonathan Marsh.

“It is awesome to see the sincere worship.”

Willie “Kryst Lyke” Prince, a hip hop artist from Birmingham, Ala., will kick things off at the event set for 6-8 p.m. at the Crossroads Arena.

The Zach Fleming Band

is set to follow Prince during the night. Flem-ing, originally from De-catur, Ala., has led wor-ship across the southeast and worked with such people as Ed Newton and Wade Morris.

He committed his life to sharing the Gospel through worship music.

“I believe worship is an integral part of every be-liever’s life,” said Flem-ing on the band website. “I hope to point all those I come in contact with to the hope and redemption that is found in Christ.”

Ike Ubasineke is sched-uled to be the featured speaker. Ubasineke, who follows the Revolve

Drama Team that night, is part of the “The Base-ment” Leadership De-velopment and Worship Team.

The Basement Extreme Team is dedicated to reaching the “unreach-able” and letting them know of God’s love, hope, and purpose for their lives.

Revolve, held the fi rst Monday of each month, draws students to some-thing bigger than them-selves.

The 150-200 students of the ministry is getting their hands dirty and making a difference in the lives of other young people.

Revolve service brings worship to county fair

BY STEVE [email protected], N.C. —

The oldest and youngest delegates to the Demo-cratic National Conven-tion were born 80 years apart, but they say the thrill of participating in the political process is timeless.

Sam Gray of Marion, Iowa, who turns 18 next month, said he hasn’t had much time to do the homework the teachers at his high school as-signed to him. But he’s getting quite an educa-tion by coming to Char-lotte as one of 5,556 del-egates.

“It’s amazing to have this opportunity,” said Gray. “It’s really cool to be able to experience this.”

On the other side of life, there’s Elzena Johnson of Terry, Miss., who turns 98 on Sept. 25. She’s participating in her fi rst convention after a life-time of being a mother, a champion swimmer in the senior Olympics into her 80s, a Terry board alderman, and most im-portantly, a loyal Demo-crat. She recalls getting active for the party as a teenager.

“We are Democrats, and we wouldn’t miss Charlotte,” Johnson said.

One of her earliest po-

litical memories as a child is of her parents voting af-ter having paid a $4 poll tax. Johnson was fi rst eli-gible to vote for president in 1936, casting a ballot for Franklin Roosevelt. Gray’s political memo-ries are much more re-cent — family members discussing a 2000 debate between Al Gore and George W. Bush, and wanting to learn more. “I didn’t know what they were talking about but I wanted to participate,” he said. Today, he said, “I’m starting the conver-sation.”

Gray serves on the stu-dent Senate and plays on the golf team at his high school in Marion, a city of

35,000 near Cedar Rap-ids. Gray’s parents aren’t party activists, although one uncle was once a small-town mayor and another served in Demo-crat Jimmy Carter’s ad-ministration in transpor-tation.

Delegates must be 18 years old on Election Day to qualify as a delegate.

“He’s always surpris-ing us,” said his mother, Joann. “He’s very talent-ed and we’re just glad to see him use his talents.”

When other teenagers are thinking about cars and dates, Gray is think-ing about the future — he wants to be either an at-torney or a fi nancial ad-viser.

Oldest convention delegate originally from MississippiGARY D. ROBERTSON

Associated Press

The Special Events PlaceFor All Occasions

1808 E. Shiloh Rd., Corinth, MS • 662-287-3606 Find us on

The The FloristFlorist

atat

Stop the Harassment & Keep your PropertyStop the Harassment & Keep your PropertyQUICK - EASY - LOW COST

FREE background information upon request

We Care For You! We Will Help You!

Affordable fl exible payment plansZEROZERO down payment gets you a fresh start with

WIDE WIDTH VINYL13’2” Extended Width Vinyl

SEVERAL ROLLS IN STOCK!

4128 CR 200 (Farmington Rd.), Corinth, MS • 662-287-20444128 CR 200 (Farmington Rd.), Corinth, MS • 662-287-2044

!!!WATCH THE PAPER FOR A $100 OFF COUPON!!!!!!WATCH THE PAPER FOR A $100 OFF COUPON!!!

up to 16’ WideAvailable!

Hours:M-F 9-5; SAT. 9-Noon

7th Year Anniversary

September 4th-October 31st$4.99 $4.99

Lunch Special

Mon-Fri 11am-4pmAll You Can Eat

New Items Added2115 S. Harper Rd • 662-287-3666 • Across From Wal-Mart • Corinth, MS

P.O. Box 1800Corinth, MS 38835

Home Delivery1 year - - - - - - - $139.806 months - - - - - - $71.403 months - - - - - - $35.85

Mail Rates1 year - - - - - - - -$195.006 months - - - - - - $97.503 months - - - - - - $48.75

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

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

All other areas will be delivered the next day.

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

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

Postmaster:Send address changes to:

P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835

$98.70$49.35

Iuka423-6600

Corinth286-2274

Booneville728-3070

Quick WayNEED CASH??

CASH ADVANCESCar Title • Personal Check

BACK TO SCHOOL CASH!BACK TO SCHOOL CASH!

FinancialFreedom Begins

With A PlanLet Us Develop A Plan For

Your Individual Needs

Page 4: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Thursday, September 6, 2012www.dailycorinthian.com

How to reach us -- extensions:Newsroom.....................317Circulation....................301Advertising...................339Classifieds....................302Bookkeeping.................333

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

Beth Cossittbusiness manager

[email protected]

Willie Walkercirculation manager

[email protected]

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.

E-mail:[email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

To Sound Off:email :

[email protected] 287-6111

Classified Adv. 287-6147

Mark Boehlereditor

[email protected]

Mark Boehler, editor

“Take the train,”We used to say;But now that trainHas gone away.Riding the London Underground from

downtown to Heathrow Airport can awaken you to just how archaic America’s transporta-tion system is. Most U.S. cities make heading to the airport a hassle.

And once there, where can you fl y? Airlines are dropping routes to small cities like hot potatoes, having declared the likes of Har-risburg, Pennsylvania and Sioux Falls, South Dakota not profi table enough for non-stop fl ights.

Changing planes multiple times can make your trip take longer than it would if you trav-eled by train. So, why not board the train in-stead? In most cases, you can’t do that. The United States has invested big time in roads, but not rails. Practical intercity train travel is confi ned to very few places, mostly in the Northeast corridor that stretches between Boston and Washington, D.C., and parts of California. And even in those cases, your train fare can cost far more than a discount plane ticket. And all that periodic gab about a high-speed rail system that would rival its counterparts in Europe and Asia lacks both money and political support.

That leaves us with highways. Having driven to Alaska and back this summer, I can say with authority that they’re pretty good. I think it’s part of why we Americans regularly drive much farther than our European or Asian brethren.

U.S. highways are just too convenient, es-pecially when our public transit is just too abysmal. Further, gas prices are so low com-pared to Europe that many of us (though not me, not even on my way to Fairbanks) still drive SUVs. Even when gas fl irts with the $4-per-gallon mark, we’re still paying only 60 percent of the European rate. We’re also fi lling oil mogul coffers and pushing our lead-ers into a string of never-ending Middle East misadventures.

The good news for rail believers these days lies in freight, not passengers. The private sector has ramped up its reliance on train travel for trans-oceanic shipping containers. All the rail lines have now invested in inter-modal terminals, serious maintenance, and specialized freight cars.

Except in New England. Since the Pough-keepsie Bridge over the Hudson burned 40 years ago, trains have no convenient route to get there. Consequently, trucks rule. The railroads are not about to invest their own money in a new crossing, and no single gov-ernment is in charge. Here, then, is one big downside of privatization: neither the public nor private sector is able to perform when a really major task rears its head.

And often they can’t even get together to tackle much smaller challenges. Take buses. With the defection of airlines from small cit-ies, the decay of intercity passenger rail ser-vice, and the metastatic growth of highway traffi c, a new alternative has sprung from its own long-cold ashes — the bus. As the media is beginning to notice, the intercity bus busi-ness is booming. Rather than viewing this popular new phenomenon as a blessing, local governments see it as a bother, and the states scarcely see it at all.

What a shame. With our population grow-ing inexorably, oil prices spiraling, the public unwilling to pay for train lines, and ever more air routes shutting down, intercity buses could be a godsend. But no one is willing to pay for them either, no matter how economi-cal they may be. No subsidies, no terminals, and no one’s priority.

Buses still appeal mostly to lower-income Americans, who lack political clout. Howev-er, if buses were gussied up, given a chance to operate out of attractive terminals, and treated at least as well as trains, the private sector might again bail a segment of our ail-ing transportation infrastructure.

Unfortunately neither the bus companies nor their riders possess the political muscle to make that happen. Further, the automak-ers and oil companies have the clout to keep serious federal money out of mass transit of any kind.

Indeed, for long-distance mass transit, the end of the tunnel remains disappointingly dark.

(Daily Corinthian columnist and Other-Words columnist William A. Collins is a for-mer state representative and a former may-or of Norwalk, Connecticut. otherwords.org)

Sorry, you can’t getthere from here

Prayer for today

A verse to share

STARKVILLE — In the na-tional political conventions of my youth, the events of-fered drama and intrigue that rivaled modern-day reality television shows. To-day’s conventions offer vir-tually no drama.

Well into the 1970s, the national conventions ar-rived with the nominee of the respective parties in doubt. The 1976 Republi-can convention gave Missis-sippi a moment in the sun as Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan sparred for the soul of the state’s GOP.

After assuming the presi-dency following the 1974 resignation of President Richard Nixon in the depths of the Watergate scandal, President Gerald Ford be-gan in 1975 to seek the 1976 Republican nomination for president that would culmi-nate at the Kansas City GOP National Convention.

In Mississippi, Reagan had earlier won support from Greenville’s Clarke Reed, then-state Sen. Charles Pickering of Laurel and Jackson oilman W.D. “Billy” Mounger. Ford was supported by then-U.S. Rep. Thad Cochran, 1975 Mississippi gubernatorial

nominee Gil Carmichael of Merid-ian and then-Jackson City C o m m i s -sioner Doug Shanks.

But when Reagan chose liberal Penn-

sylvania U.S. Sen. Richard Schweiker as his running mate, Reed defected to the Ford camp and other Mis-sissippi delegates followed.

Nationally, the Ford-Rea-gan battle for the nomina-tion was almost dead even and both candidates began to scour the country for un-committed delegates to the convention. Because of the so-called “unit rule” - which required that the candidate who had the support of the majority of the state’s 30 delegates got all 30 votes — a procedural vote on a Reagan-backed convention rules change was the show-down vote. Mississippi’s 30 votes went against the rules change and Reagan’s bid for the nomination was effec-tively dead in 1976.

Mississippi Democrats — once the dominant party in state politics — continue to

struggle against the state’s current Republican jugger-naut. During World War II, Mississippi Democrats took 94 percent of the state’s vote.

The late 1940s saw the rise of the Dixiecrat Party over the issue of segrega-tion, but Democrats were able to return to dominance in the 1950s. But the presi-dential candidacy of John F. Kennedy in 1960 signaled the beginning of the end of Democratic dominance in presidential politics in Mis-sissippi. With the excep-tion of Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter in 1976, no Demo-cratic nominee has won a presidential bid in Missis-sippi.

Despite Mississippi’s rather predictable presi-dential political behavior, the conventions were still dramatic affairs up until the rise of early primaries and “Super Tuesday” politics. Now, the conventions carry zero drama as to the nomi-nation process and serve rather as a scripted week of prime time exposure for the major parties in which the smallest details are stage managed.

After covering both Re-

publican and Democratic national conventions, it became clear to me that that while the scripting and packaging of modern con-ventions is visible to TV viewers, it’s more evident in the convention halls to the delegates.

That’s why actor Clint Eastwood’s appearance at the GOP convention was so captivating. Eastwood ob-viously had no script and was obeying no time limit. His rambling, vaguely scary speech kept Republicans and Democrats alike on the edge of their seats hanging on his every word.

Politics was more fun before the spin doctors, the speech writers, the TV commercial producers, the ad agencies and the focus groups took command of the process.

Clint Eastwood reminded the nation that there is vir-tually nothing more invigo-rating for political junkies than an unscripted speaker in front of an open micro-phone — empty chair and all.

(Sid Salter is a syndicat-ed columnist. Contact him at 601-507-8004 or [email protected].)

Modern conventions hold little drama

“One question, Mr. Presi-dent,” read the words on the front cover of this week’s Economist, behind a silhou-ette of the back of Barack Obama’s head, “just what would you do with another four years?”

It’s a good question, and one that’s still open as Barack Obama prepares to deliver his acceptance speech at the Democratic National Convention in rainstorm-plagued Char-lotte tonight.

Other presidents seeking re-election have usually pro-vided a more or less convinc-ing answer. George W. Bush said he would try to reform Social Security and advance energy independence.

Bill Clinton said he would provide “a bridge to the twenty-fi rst century,” which turned out to include sig-nifi cant tax cuts and a lunge toward Medicare reform.

Bush failed to deliver on Social Security, and Clinton failed to deliver on Medi-care, but both tried to pivot from a fi rst-term to a sec-ond-term agenda. The fi rst George Bush, in contrast, didn’t seem to pivot. He gave the impression he’d just keep going on. That wasn’t good enough for voters.

Obama similarly has not pivoted. Unlike Clinton, he did not shift ground when his party was rejected in the off-year election.

For a second term he has been calling for more infrastructure stimulus, more unionized teachers and (though he has said it’s harmful in a time of eco-nomic sluggishness) higher tax rates on high earners.

Republican strategist Karl Rove had a bit of fun with this last week in his Wall Street Journal column, imagining how a more mod-erate and compromising Obama would be running well ahead now, as Clinton was at this point in 1996.

Instead, the Obama cam-paign, with assists from mainstream media and during the months it had a money advantage, has concentrated on demoniz-ing Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan. Clinton did this with great effect on Bob Dole in 1996. It hasn’t worked so well this time.

The Democrats’ other strategy is to rouse the en-thusiasm of their various disparate constituencies. This hasn’t worked for an incumbent Democrat since Harry Truman in 1948.

But it is something you fall back on given the nature of the Democratic Party. The Republicans have always had a core constituency of people considered by themselves and others as typical Ameri-cans — Northern Protestants in the 19th century, white married Christians today — who are by themselves less

than a majority.The Democratic Party has

typically been a coalition of out-groups — white South-erners and big city Catholics in the 19th century. Today, the coalition includes blacks and to a lesser extent His-panics, unmarried women, members of the Millen-nial generation, public em-ployee union members and, most important, the group that demographer Joel Kot-kin dubbed gentry liberals.

They don’t always agree. Blacks tend to oppose same-sex marriage, while gentry liberals strongly fa-vor it. Labor unions want the Keystone pipeline, while environmentalists want to kill it.

Other diffi culties have surfaced. Democrats to their surprise fi nd themselves on the defensive on Medicare, needing to explain why they took $716 billion from it and gave it to the still unpopular Obamacare.

Late in the game, Obama decided to rope in Bill Clin-ton to give a big convention speech Wednesday night. In effect, he’s trying to sug-gest his second four years will look like Clinton’s.

In the meantime, there is evidence that the Demo-cratic Party brand, to use marketing term, is in trou-ble.

Pollster Scott Rasmussen periodically estimates party identifi cation on the basis of

thousands of robocall inter-views of likely voters.

His fi ndings have been uncannily close to the exit polls. In the last quarter of 2008, his party ID numbers were 41 percent Democrat-ic, 33 percent Republican. The 2008 exit poll showed Democrats ahead in party ID by 39 to 32 percent.

In the third quarter of 2010, Rasmussen pegged party ID as tied at 35 per-cent. The 2010 exit poll showed it exactly the same.

The third quarter of 2012 is not yet over. But the Ras-mussen party ID numbers for the second and third quarters combined are omi-nous for Obama’s party: 34 percent Democratic, 36 per-cent Republican. Republi-cans are up only 3 percent from 2008, but Democrats are down 7 percent.

The partisan playing fi eld has changed a lot since 2008. But Obama’s policies have not. There has been no pivot. It will be interesting to see how loudly and often the delegates cheer, “Four more years!”

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner, www.washingtonexam-iner.com, is a resident fel-low at the American Enter-prise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.)

Obama hobbled by record, slumping Democratic brand

BY WILLIAM A. COLLINS

The only thing that counts is faith express-ing itself through love.

— Galatians 5:6 (NIV)

Strong and loving God, help us to trust you completely. In Jesus’ name we pray. Amen.

Sid SalterColumnist

BY MICHAEL BARONE

Page 5: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • 5A

StateChild care operators oppose new system

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — Child care operators are complaining about Mississippi’s plan to install fingerprint scan-ners to check in and out children who benefit from federally-subsidized vouchers.

Operators said Wednesday that it’s another effort to cut pay-ments when they already feel squeezed. They said parents may pull their children out because of the hassle or because they fear having their fin-ger scanned.

The state Department of Human Services was not invited to a legisla-tive hearing Wednesday when complaints were aired. DHS Director Ricky Berry wrote in a letter to state Sen. Albert Butler, D-Port Gibson, that the system will cut costs and stop centers from being paid when children aren’t there.

Butler, chairman of the Investigate State Of-fices Committee, said he plans another meeting to give the department

a say, and wants admin-istrators to hold a public hearing on the rules. Those rules are currently up for public comment.

DHS plans to adopt the rules Oct. 1. Scan-ners are currently being tested in some Jackson-area centers. They’re supposed to be rolled out Nov. 1 in 38 counties in southwest Mississippi, the Delta and around Jackson. The remaining 42 counties are sup-posed to start using the scanners Feb. 1.

Carol Burnett, execu-tive director of the Biloxi-based Low Income Child-care Initiative, said DHS appears locked into its course of action.

“I don’t foresee that hearing changing DHS’ mind about implementa-tion,” she said. “Truth-fully, they seem pretty committed.”

Singing Brakeman’s birthday celebrated

MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) — Events are planned Thursday and Saturday in Meridian in celebra-tion of Jimmie Rodgers’

115th birthday.The birthday celebra-

tion for the “Father of Country Music” kicks off at 6 p.m. Thursday with a party at the Dentzel Carousel in Highland Park on Thursday.

Betty Lou Jones, presi-dent of the Jimmie Rodg-ers Foundation, tells the Meridian Star that the design for a Jimmie Rod-gers specialty car tag will be unveiled during the celebration. The tag was approved this year by the Legislature

On Saturday, the Inter-national Singing Brake-man Association will cel-ebrate Rodgers’ birthday on Saturday at the Best Western Motel in Merid-ian beginning at 2 p.m.

Born in Meridian on Sept. 8, 1897, Rodgers was also known as the “Singing Brakeman” for his work on the railroad. He made his first record-ing in 1927.

Rodgers died of tuber-culosis at the age of 35 on May 26, 1933 in New York City. He was the first performer elected to Nashville’s Country Mu-sic Hall of Fame in 1961.

Rodgers also has been inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame (1970) and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame (1986). He also has been hon-ored with a Mississippi Blues Trail marker in Me-ridian in 2007.

The first star on the Mississippi Arts and Entertainment Cen-ter’s Walk of Fame was dedicated to Rodgers in 2009. Rodgers was hon-ored with the first marker on the Mississippi Coun-try Music Trail in 2010.

Meridian holds an an-nual festival in his honor.

3rd arrest made in fatal shooting

MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) — Meridian police say a third suspect has been ar-rested in an Aug. 21 fatal shooting.

Police Chief James Reed says 29-year-old Robert Demond Moore of Meridian has been charged with murder in the August shooting death of Jaddarian Jimerson on a city street.

Reed says Moore post-ed a $350,000 bond and

was released Tuesday.A 17-year-old man and

28-year-old Anthony Mar-tin Davis, also of Merid-ian, are each charged with murder in the case. Both remain in jail.

Reed says Jimerson was shot the leg and then in the head from close range. Jimerson was pronounced dead at the scene on Aug. 21.

State reports 2 new West Nile virus deaths

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — The Mississippi State Department of Health is reporting two new deaths and 19 new human cas-es of the West Nile virus.

Health officials say both deaths were in

Rankin County, and the new cases were reported in Calhoun (2), Copiah (1), Hinds (1), Lamar (1), Lauderdale (1), Madison (2), Marion (1), Pearl Riv-er (1), Rankin (6), Warren (1), and Yazoo (2) coun-ties, bringing the state total to 114 cases and four deaths.

Health officials say it is the largest number of cases reported by the end of July since 2002.

In 2011, Mississippi had 52 WNV cases and five deaths. The MSDH only reports laboratory-confirmed cases to the public.

The MSDH is also re-porting a human case of La Crosse Encephalitis in Lawrence County.

DID YOU KNOW...You have a choice who you

select as your physical therapist

Alcorn Rehab Services, Inc.662-284-4656

1708 Shiloh Road • Corinth, MS

APPOINTMENTSAVAILABLE

PT does not have to be pain and torture. Physical Th erapy - the way it was meant to be at

We make house calls. Transportation available.

Say “Goodbye” to Painful, Numb Feet!

Studio Awelcomes

Sophia DiMarco

Sophia would like to invite her clients

and friends to join her at her

new salon

1812 E. Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS662-286-2559

PrimaryCare

Treatment of illness& chronic diseaseWellness exams

Weight LossManagement

Lipotropic Injectionsfor weight

Loss!Phentermine,

Adipex,Ionamine,

Xencial

MICHIE HEALTHCARE ASSOCIATES, LLC

5823 HWY 22 South, Michie, TN

Next to Michie Pharmacy Walk-ins Welcome

731-239-9470

Page 6: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

6A • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Democratic offi cials are moving President Barack Obama’s convention speech Thursday indoors, citing the possibility of se-vere weather.

Obama had planned to accept his party’s nomina-tion in an outdoor football stadium before a crowd of up to 74,000 people. But Obama offi cials said forecasters have predict-ed severe thunderstorms Thursday in the 9 p.m. to 10 p.m. hour, raising concerns about the safety of supporters, volunteers, staff members and law en-forcement.

Offi cials said Thursday’s entire program would be moved indoors, including Vice President Joe Biden’s speech. The events will be held at the Time Warner Cable Arena, the site of the fi rst two days of the con-vention proceedings.

Obama will speak to about 15,000 people gath-ered in the arena Thurs-day, a far smaller audience than had been expected at the outdoor stadium.

Democrats were warily watching the weather all week. Their worst case scenario was a last-minute cancellation that would strand tens of thousands of people, many of whom had planned to arrive by the busload in the middle

of the storm with no place to go.

Obama’s team, locked in a tight race with Repub-lican Mitt Romney in this Southern battleground state, determined that wasn’t worth the political risk.

Democrats were also worried about the pos-sibility of anti-Obama hecklers acquiring some of the free tickets to the event and disrupting the president’s speech. The move indoors limits that possibility because most of those in the crowd will be offi cial convention par-ticipants.

Republicans, who can-celed the fi rst day of their convention due to weather in Tampa, Fla., accused Democrats of downgrad-ing their events because of low enthusiasm.

“After promising to hold the event at Bank of Amer-ica stadium rain or shine, suddenly Team Obama is moving inside after ques-tions about enthusiasm for the event,” said Kirsten Kukowski, spokeswoman for the Republican Na-tional Committee. “What’s the real forecast for the speech? Forty percent chance of lies and scat-tered excuses.”

Democrats insisted the decision was based strictly on the weather.

Steve Kerrigan, who heads the Democratic con-vention, said more than

65,000 people had signed up for credentials to at-tend the outdoor speech but now could not be ac-commodated because of the smaller venue. He said organizers were encourag-ing those credential hold-ers and “Americans across the country to continue to come together with their friends and neighbors to watch and participate in history.”

Kerrigan said Obama would speak to those credential holders on a national conference call Thursday afternoon. “We will work with the cam-paign to ensure that those unable to attend tomor-row’s event will be invited to see the president be-tween now and Election Day,” he said.

Forecasts for Thursday night had been improving all through the week. The National Weather Service said Wednesday morning that there is a 40 percent chance of thunderstorms in the afternoon, but it would drop to 20 percent by the time the president was scheduled to speak in the 10 p.m. hour.

But there was still no guarantee of good weather for Obama’s speech.

“We’re dealing with a warm, unstable air mass, so you can never absolute-ly say it’s not going to rain or storm,” said National Weather Service meteo-rologist Bryan McAvoy.

Obama’s convention speech moving for safety concerns

JULIE PACE & KEN THOMAS

Associated Press

Dawn craft to depart asteroid for Ceres

LOS ANGELES (AP) — One asteroid down, one to go.

After spending a year gazing at Vesta, NASA’s Dawn spacecraft was set to cruise toward the most massive space rock in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter — a voy-age that will take nearly three years.

Firing its ion propulsion thrusters, Dawn had been slowly spiraling away from Vesta for more than a month until it was to pop free from its gravitational grip. Since its antenna was pointed away from Earth during this last ma-neuver, engineers would not know until Wednesday how it went.

The departure was con-sidered ho-hum compared with other recent missions — think Curiosity’s white-knuckle “seven minutes

of terror” dive into Mars’ atmosphere.

“It’s not a sudden event. There’s no whip-lash-inducing maneuver. There’s no tension, no anxiety,” said chief engi-neer Marc Rayman of the NASA Jet Propulsion Labo-ratory, which manages the $466 million mission. “It’s all very gentle and very graceful.”

Launched in 2007, Dawn is on track to be-come the first spacecraft to rendezvous with two celestial bodies in a bid to learn about the solar system’s evolution.

Dawn slipped into orbit last year around Vesta — about the size of Ari-zona — and beamed back stunning close-ups of the lumpy surface. Its next destination is the Texas-size Ceres, also known as a dwarf planet.

Vesta and Ceres are the largest bodies in

the asteroid belt littered with chunks of rocks that never quite bloomed into full-fledged planets. As cosmic time capsules, they’re ideal for scientists trying to piece together how Earth and the other planets formed and evolved.

During its yearlong stay at Vesta, Dawn used its cameras, infrared spec-trometer, and gamma ray and neutron detector to explore the asteroid from varying altitudes, getting as close as 130 miles above the surface.

Dawn uncovered a few surprises. Scientists have long known that Vesta sports an impressive scar at its south pole, likely carved by an impact with a smaller asteroid. A closer inspection revealed that Vesta hid a second scar in the same region — evidence that it had been whacked twice with-in the last 2 billion years.

No hiccups anticipated on disaster assistance

WASHINGTON (AP) — Ongoing negotiations on

Capitol Hill are likely to ensure a smooth flow of disaster aid in the wake of Hurricane Isaac.

Congressional aides are working quietly on a six-month government funding bill that would prevent a shutdown of the government next month and ensure that the gov-ernment’s main disaster relief program gets a steady flow of money.

It’s a different story from a year ago, when inadequate Federal Emergency Management Agency funding and slew of expensive disasters almost combined to drain the government’s main disaster program dry.

A spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Tuesday it’s hoped lawmakers can reach agreement on the funding bill next week. The House and the Sen-ate then would pass it before the current budget year ends on Sept. 30 and avert a government shutdown.

“I have heard of no hic-cups,” Boehner spokes-man Kevin Smith said.

Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., announced in late July plans for the six-month funding mea-sure, which is expected to keep most agency bud-gets funded essentially at current levels. A lame duck session of Congress after the Nov. 6 elections is expected to focus on efforts to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff — an austere, one-two punch combining the expiration of Bush-era tax cuts and automatic cuts to the Pen-tagon and other Cabinet agencies that were re-quired after a congressio-nal supercommittee failed to reach a debt-reduction agreement last year.

Disabled boy not allowed to board plane

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) — A California family that was not allowed to board a cross-country flight says they believe they were discriminated against be-cause their son has Down syndrome.

Robert Vanderhorst, his wife Joan and 16-year-old son Bede, who is disabled, were booked to fly on an American Airlines flight from Newark to Los Ange-les on Sunday when the boy and his parents were not allowed on the plane.

The family from Por-terville had upgraded to first class tickets at an airport kiosk, and asked the airline to seat the boy and one of his parents together — a request the airline granted — Vander-horst said Tuesday.

When the family was ready to board, they were stopped by airline personnel, told their son

was a “security risk” and would not be allowed on the flight, he said. The parents protested, and later were rebooked to fly coach with another airline.

American Airlines spokesman Matt Miller said the disabled boy was agitated and running around the gate area prior to boarding, which his parents dispute. The airplane’s pilot observed the boy, Miller said, and made the call based on his behavior.

“He was not ready to fly, that was our perspective,” Miller said. “We rebooked the family out of concern for the young man’s safety and that of other passen-gers as well.”

But Vanderhorst said his son did not run at any time, did not make any loud noises and didn’t dis-play any other offensive behaviors. The boy walked around with him or sat quietly in the gate area, Vanderhorst said.

Vanderhorst said Bede, a freshman at Granite Hills High School in Por-terville, about 70 miles from Fresno, is very charming in contact with other people. The family has flown more than two dozen times with him, without any difficulties.

“Usually my son gets his snack and falls asleep, just like most peo-ple,” Vanderhorst said. “The problem is this pilot thought my son might not be like most people. He didn’t want a disabled per-son disturbing other pas-sengers in first class.”

The family says the pi-lot might have also been affected by the disabled boy’s size — Bede is 5 foot -1 and weighs 160 pounds.

Nation Briefs

Joe’s ShoesInvestment Services, Inc.

Not FDICinsured.

No bank guarantee.May lose value.

“It is good to have a trusted advisor who can help you sort through the many alternatives and assist you with a plan that makes sense for you.”

Chuck CounceBancorpSouth Financial Advisor 601 Fillmore Street, Corinth 662-396-6016

THURSDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 6, 2012 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WPTY ^ ^

Wipeout “Rats!” (N) Rookie Blue “I Never” (N)

Democratic National Convention

ABC 24 News

(:35) Night-line

Two and Half Men

Big Bang Theory

WREG # #Big Bang Theory

Two and Half Men

Big Brother (N) (L) Democratic National Convention

News Ch. 3 Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

QVC $ . Jewelry Collection Fashion’s Night Out (N) At-Home Salon

WCBI $Big Bang Theory

Two and Half Men

Big Brother (N) (L) Democratic National Convention

News Late Show With David Letterman

Ferguson

WMC % %America’s Got Talent (N) (L)

Democratic National Convention The 2012 Demo-cratic National Convention. (N)

News The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N)

Jimmy Fallon

WLMT & >The Vampire Diaries The Next “Chicago” (N) CW30 News (N) Family

Feud Sanford & Son

Andy Griffith

The Jef-fersons

WBBJ _ _Wipeout “Rats!” (N) Rookie Blue “I Never”

(N) Democratic National Convention

News (:35) Night-line

Jimmy Kimmel Live (N)

WTVA ) )America’s Got Talent (N) (L)

Democratic National Convention The 2012 Demo-cratic National Convention. (N)

News (N) The Tonight Show With Jay Leno (N)

Jimmy Fallon

WKNO * Democratic National Convention The 2012 Democratic National Convention. (N) (L)

Last of the Wine

Keeping Up Tavis Smiley

Newsline

WGN-A + (How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met WGN News at Nine (N) America’s Funniest

Home Videos Old Chris-tine

Old Chris-tine

WMAE , ,Democratic National Convention The 2012 Democratic National Convention. (N) (L)

Tavis Smiley

Charlie Rose (N) World News

WHBQ ` `Raising Hope

New Girl “See Ya”

Glee The kids consider their futures.

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

TMZ (N) Cosby Show

Family Guy

WPXX / Cold Case Cold Case Criminal Minds Criminal Minds Criminal Minds

WPIX :The Vampire Diaries The Next “Chicago” (N) PIX News at Ten Jodi

Applegate. (N)Seinfeld Seinfeld Friends Friends

MAX 0 3} ›› The Bone Collector (99) Denzel Washing-ton, Angelina Jolie.

} ›› Man on Fire (04) Denzel Washington. A bodyguard takes revenge on a girl’s kidnappers.

Sexy As-sassins

SHOW 2 } ›› Lara Croft Tomb Raider: The Cradle of Life (03) Angelina Jolie.

The Real L Word “Per-fect Day” (N)

Gigolos (N) The Real L Word “Per-fect Day”

Gigolos

HBO 4 1} Harry Potter-Sorcerer’s

2 Days: Chavez

Hard Knocks: Training Camp

Ward/Daw-son

Cathouse Real Sex (:05) } ›› The Change-Up (11)

MTV 5 2 2012 MTV Video Music Awards (N) 2012 MTV Video Music Awards 2012 MTV VMAs

ESPN 7 ?College Football: Pittsburgh at Cincinnati. (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live) SportsCenter (N) (Live)

SPIKE 8 5iMPACT Wrestling (N) UFC Unleashed MMA Un-

censoredWays to Die

Ways to Die

Ways to Die

USA : 8NCIS “Shalom” Political assassination.

NCIS “Escaped” NCIS A missing Navy lieutenant.

Covert Affairs “Glass Spider”

} ›› He’s Just Not That Into You

NICK ; C Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends Friends

DISC < DProperty Wars Auction

Kings (N)Auction Kings

Texas Car Wars (N) Auction Kings

Auction Kings

Texas Car Wars

A&E > The First 48 The First 48 The First 48 (N) (:01) The First 48 “Cold

Light of Day”(:01) The First 48

FSSO ? 4College Football: Bowie State at Benedict. (N) (Live) Football

PrevWorld Poker Tour: Season 10

BET @ F (6:30) Of Boys and Men (08) Democratic National Convention 2012 Reed Wendy Williams

H&G C HBuying and Selling “Paul and Terri”

You Live in What? House Hunters

Hunters Int’l

Living Abroad

Hunters Int’l

You Live in What?

E! D } ››› Julie & Julia (09) Meryl Streep, Amy Adams. Chelsea E! News Chelsea

HIST E BPawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Counting

CarsCounting Cars

(:02) Great Lake War-riors (N)

Pawn Stars Pawn Stars

ESPN2 F @ 2012 U.S. Open Tennis: Pro-Celebrity Exo/Men’s Quarterfinal. NFL Live (N) Baseball Tonight

TLC G Say Yes: ATL

Say Yes: ATL

Four Weddings (N) Four Weddings Four Weddings Four Weddings

FOOD H Chopped “Make a Splash!”

Chopped Licorice in the first basket.

Extreme Chef “Off To Thailand” (N)

The Great Food Truck Race

Chopped Licorice in the first basket.

INSP I The Waltons The Waltons Little House/Prairie Medicine Woman The Big Valley

LIFE J =Project Runway Project Runway The designers must

sell goods. (N)Project Runway The designers must sell goods.

(:01) Project Runway

TBN M Behind Osteen Prince Hillsong Praise the Lord Holy Evidence

AMC N 0} ›› Four Brothers (05) Mark Wahlberg. Siblings seek re-venge for their adoptive mother’s murder.

} ›› Four Brothers (05) Mark Wahlberg. Siblings seek re-venge for their adoptive mother’s murder.

FAM O <(6:00) } ››› Mulan (98, Musical)

} ››› Mulan Animated. A Chinese maiden dis-guises herself as a man.

The 700 Club Fresh Prince

Fresh Prince

TCM P The Curtain Pole

Manicure Lady

A Dash Through

On Wed-ding

Bangville Mabel Drama

The Knock-out

Great Mys-tery

Rounders } Tillie-Romance

TNT Q AThe Mentalist “Little Red Book”

The Mentalist The Mentalist CSI: NY Murder victims. CSI: NY A dog trainer is murdered.

TBS R *Family Guy Family Guy Big Bang

TheoryBig Bang Theory

Sullivan & Son

Big Bang Theory

Conan Seth Green; Milo Green. (N)

Sullivan & Son

The Office

GAME S Bible Challenge Beat the Chefs (N) To Be Announced Bible Challenge Beat the Chefs TOON T Annoying Regular King/Hill King/Hill American American Fam Guy Fam Guy Childrens Eagle TVLD U K M*A*S*H M*A*S*H Raymond Raymond Raymond Raymond King King King King SPEED Z Car Warriors Wrecked Wrecked Parts Parts Car Warriors Wrecked Wrecked

FX Æ ;Anger Anger Anger Anger Anger Anger How I Met How I Met How I Met How I Met

OUT Ø Hunt Pursuit Realtree Nascar Bow Adven Season Outdoors Bushman Hunt NBCS ∞ EA Madden Show Caught Looking (N) Caught Looking Dream On: Journey Caught Looking OWN ± Hard Evidence Hard Evidence Hard Evidence Hard Evidence Hard Evidence FOXN ≤ The O’Reilly Factor America’s Election Headquarters (N) Greta Van Susteren APL ≥ Gator Boys Gator Boys Off Hook Off Hook Gator Boys Gator Boys

HALL ∂ GLittle House on the Prairie

Little House on the Prairie

Frasier Frasier Frasier Frasier Golden Girls

Golden Girls

DISN “ LShake It Up!

} ›› 16 Wishes (10) Debby Ryan, Jean-Luc Bilodeau.

(:10) Jessie Phineas and Ferb

Jessie A.N.T. Farm Wizards-Place

Wizards-Place

SYFY ECollection Intervention Collection Intervention Collection Interven-

tion (N)} › The Hills Have Eyes 2 (07, Horror) Michael McMillian, Jessica Stroup.

Danville Church of Christ

CHRIST ONLY HAS ONE CHURCH Christ promised to build His church in Matthew 16:18. “ ... and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it”. Paul identifi es the church as the one body. “Who now rejoice in my sufferings for you, and fi ll up that which is behind of the affl ictions of Christ in my fl esh for his body’s sake, which is the church” (Col 1:24). “There is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your calling” (Eph 4:4). “But now are they many members, yet but one body” (1 Cor. 12:20). Since the body is the church; Christ only has one church. Paul revealed that those who were baptized were baptized into the one body. “For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free; and have been all made to drink into one Spirit” (1Cor 12:13). Christ is referred to as the head of the body the church. (CoI 1:18). Since there is only one body or church, why are there so many different churches today? All who claim to be the Lord’s church should honor Christ by wearing His name. Christ is not associated with denominationalism and does not approve of it. Denominational names are not found in the new testament? Paul revealed that the Lord purchased the church with His own blood according to Acts 20:28: “ Take heed therefore unto yourselves, and to all the fl ock, over the which the Holy Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood”. The only church which belongs to Christ is the one He purchased with His blood, is the head of and the one who wears His name. Are we a member of the Lord’s church or a denominational group which we cannot read about in the Bible? The Lord’s church started about 33 A. D., some 1500 years before denominationalism. The one body refers to the Lord’s church (Eph 4:4-6, Eph 1:22-23; Col 1:24).

481 CR 409 • Rienzi, MS 38865Phone: 662-287-6530 • Charles W. Leonard

Page 7: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Business7A • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

13,338.66 10,404.49 Dow Industrials 13,047.48 +11.54 +.09 +6.79 +14.305,390.11 3,950.66 Dow Transportation 4,951.07 -57.29 -1.14 -1.37 +9.30

499.82 411.54 Dow Utilities 466.43 -2.35 -.50 +.38 +8.748,327.67 6,414.89 NYSE Composite 7,992.01 -10.31 -.13 +6.89 +8.662,498.89 1,941.99 NYSE MKT 2,404.88 -11.17 -.46 +5.55 +5.723,134.17 2,298.89 Nasdaq Composite 3,069.27 -5.79 -.19 +17.82 +20.411,426.68 1,074.77 S&P 500 1,403.44 -1.50 -.11 +11.60 +17.09

14,951.57 11,208.42 Wilshire 5000 14,682.65 -10.38 -.07 +11.32 +16.19847.92 601.71 Russell 2000 821.23 -.91 -.11 +10.84 +15.75

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.32 8 45.88 -.62 +6.1AT&T Inc 1.76 49 36.93 +.12 +22.1AirProd 2.56 15 82.11 +.62 -3.6AlliantEgy 1.80 18 44.35 -.06 +.5AEP 1.88 10 42.95 -.19 +4.0AmeriBrgn .52 14 38.18 -.60 +2.7ATMOS 1.38 15 35.25 -.33 +5.7BB&T Cp .80 13 31.79 +.07 +26.3BP PLC 1.92 5 40.36 -1.27 -5.6BcpSouth .04 19 14.89 +.07 +35.1Caterpillar 2.08f 9 82.75 +.09 -8.7Chevron 3.60 8 110.77 -.45 +4.1CocaCola s 1.02 20 37.51 +.23 +7.2Comcast .65 19 33.71 +.19 +42.2CrackerB 1.60f 17 63.50 +.13 +26.0Deere 1.84 10 74.82 +.70 -3.3Dell Inc .32 6 10.52 -.04 -28.1Dillards .20 8 74.88 -.67 +66.8Dover 1.40f 12 56.96 -.86 -1.9EnPro ... 18 37.76 +.07 +14.5FordM .20 8 9.57 +.16 -11.1FredsInc .24 14 13.56 +.13 -7.0FullerHB .34f 23 30.90 +.07 +33.7GenCorp ... 96 9.61 +.30 +80.6GenElec .68 17 20.65 +.14 +15.3Goodyear ... 14 12.54 +.42 -11.5HonwllIntl 1.49 20 57.37 -.15 +5.6Intel .90f 10 24.39 -.03 +.6Jabil .32 11 21.48 +.02 +9.3KimbClk 2.96 18 82.60 -.39 +12.3Kroger .46 22 22.56 +.22 -6.9Lowes .64 18 28.10 -.33 +10.7

McDnlds 2.80 17 89.06 +.01 -11.2MeadWvco 1.00 21 28.80 +.09 +8.0OldNBcp .36 13 13.32 -.02 +14.3Penney ... ... 26.43 +.47 -24.8PennyMac 2.20 8 21.97 +.29 +32.2PepsiCo 2.15 19 71.54 -.40 +7.8PilgrimsP ... ... 4.97 +.02 -13.7RadioShk ... ... 2.72 +.19 -72.0RegionsFn .04 17 6.99 -.02 +62.6SbdCp ... 11 2189.90+113.35 +7.6SearsHldgs .33t ... 52.11 -1.03 +64.0Sherwin 1.56 29 142.03 -1.11 +59.1SiriusXM ... 4 2.52 -.03 +38.2SouthnCo 1.96 19 45.37 -.10 -2.0SprintNex ... ... 4.95 +.15 +111.5SPDR Fncl .23e ... 15.16 ... +16.6StratIBM12 .76 ... 25.00 ... -1.0TecumsehB ... 12 5.59 ... +25.6TecumsehA ... ... 5.25 -.01 +11.7Torchmark .60 11 51.57 +.06 +18.9Total SA 2.90e ... 49.49 -.15 -3.2USEC ... ... .58 -.04 -49.5US Bancrp .78 12 33.08 -.04 +22.3WalMart 1.59 16 73.55 +.04 +23.1WellsFargo .88 11 33.75 -.05 +22.5Wendys Co .08 ... 4.42 +.10 -17.5WestlkChm .75f 16 69.30 -.05 +72.2Weyerhsr .60 39 25.06 +.01 +34.2Xerox .17 8 7.42 +.16 -6.8YRC rs ... ... 6.19 +.57 -37.9Yahoo ... 17 15.09 +.20 -6.4

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DABB Ltd ... 17.32 +.08AES Corp 15 11.29AK Steel dd 4.89 -.13AOL 3 33.75 +.27AbtLab 18 65.75 +.29Accenture 18 61.35 +.29AccoBrds 6 6.37 -.11ActivsBliz 17 11.82 +.14AdobeSy 21 32.26 +.83AMD dd 3.51 -.13Aeropostl 19 14.03 -.03Aetna 8 38.17 +.02Agilent 13 36.74 -.31AkamaiT 36 37.71 +.04AlcatelLuc ... 1.07 -.04Alcoa 32 8.52 +.10AllscriptH 18 10.78 +.31Allstate 9 37.79 +.39AlphaNRs dd 5.61 +.08AlpTotDiv q 4.36 -.01AlteraCp lf 19 36.46 -.60Altria 17 34.25 -.15Amarin ... 14.12 -.52Amazon cc 246.22 -1.66Ameren 62 33.03 +.31AMovilL 12 25.55 -.04ACapAgy 8 34.79 -.03AmCapLtd 3 11.29 +.14AEagleOut 24 22.29 -.23AmExp 14 57.19 -1.42AmIntlGrp 3 34.81 +.25ARltyCT n ... 11.96 +.07Amgen 18 84.08 -.25Ann Inc 20 37.21 +.73Annaly 70 17.53 +.06A123 Sys h dd .22 -.02Apache 10 84.47 +.10Apple Inc 16 670.23 -4.74ApldMatl 13 11.72 -.02ArcelorMit 11 14.38 -.26ArchCoal dd 5.97 +.18ArchDan 14 26.63 -.25ArenaPhm dd 9.16 -.14AresCap h 11 17.36 -.05ArmHld ... 25.15 +.32ArmourRsd 94 7.54 +.05AssuredG 4 13.99 +.17Atmel 16 5.82 -.21AuRico g 7 5.54 -1.45Avon 26 15.21 +.02Baidu 29 111.94 -2.57BakrHu 12 44.46 -.20BcBilVArg ... 7.59 -.08BcoBrad pf ... 16.36 +.12BcoSantSA ... 7.19 +.06BcoSBrasil ... 7.34 -.01BkofAm 9 7.95 -.04BkNYMel 12 22.52 -.03Bar iPVix q 11.12 -.31BarrickG 9 38.09 -.16Baxter 15 58.08 -.37BeazerHm dd 2.94 -.07BerkH B 16 85.19 +.94BestBuy dd 17.91 -.11Blackstone dd 13.18 -.05BlockHR 18 16.23 -.27Boeing 13 71.92 +1.05BostonSci 13 5.52 +.11BrMySq 16 33.08 -.06Broadcom 26 34.93 -.41BrcdeCm 22 6.06 +.13CA Inc 13 26.13CBRE Grp 16 17.01 -.21CBS B 16 35.56 -.38CME Grp s 7 55.31CMS Eng 16 23.15 -.10CNO Fincl 13 9.45 +.49CSX 12 21.40 -.33CVS Care 16 45.53 -.40CYS Invest 4 14.41 -.05Cadence 22 13.42 +.03CalDive dd 1.57 +.06Calpine 54 18.19 +.28Cameco g ... 21.71 +.24CampSp 14 34.71 -.41CdnNRs gs ... 29.66 -.02CapOne 10 56.17 -.32CapitlSrce 14 6.99 +.05CardnlHlth 13 38.98 -.71Carlisle 14 52.50 -1.05CarMax 18 31.62 +.97Carnival 17 34.72 -.07Celgene 21 70.96 -1.11Cemex dd 7.65 +.13Cemig pf s ... 17.44 +.57CenterPnt 6 20.64 +.01CntryLink 47 42.70 -.03ChkPoint 19 46.88 +.98CheniereEn dd 14.79 +.06ChesEng 6 19.54 +.35Chicos 20 18.99Chimera 5 2.57 -.01CienaCorp dd 13.95 +.21CinciBell 29 5.01 -.05Cirrus 34 42.59 +1.01Cisco 13 18.90 -.10Citigroup 8 29.77 +.07Clearwire dd 1.60 +.07CliffsNRs 4 34.72 +1.04Coach 16 57.13 -.34CocaCE 13 29.69 +.03Comc spcl 20 32.97 +.19Comerica 13 30.51 -.21Compuwre 27 9.97 -.12Comverse dd 5.84 -.21ConAgra 23 25.43 -.22ConocPhil s 7 54.87 -1.34ConsolEngy 13 28.93 +.10ConstellA 15 33.16 -.06Corning 8 11.85 -.06Cosan Ltd ... 14.61 +.46CoventryH 15 41.34 -.09CSVS2xVxS q 2.46 -.08CSVelIVSt q 14.39 +.38CrwnCstle 72 63.62 +.41Ctrip.com 18 16.37 -.25CurEuro q 125.16 +.30CypSemi 12 11.64 -.23DCT Indl dd 6.50 +.08DDR Corp dd 15.30 -.05DNP Sel rt ... .02 -.01DR Horton 8 19.44 -.05DeanFds dd 16.61 -.13DeckrsOut 10 45.84 -2.74DeltaAir 5 8.88 +.32DenburyR 9 15.41Dndreon dd 4.88 -.10DevonE 10 57.01 -.44DigDMda n ... .98 -.43DirecTV 15 52.86 +.56DxFnBull rs q 97.23 -.01DirSCBear q 15.95 +.01DirFnBear q 20.08 -.02DirDGldBll q 12.85 +.09DirEMBear q 14.36 +.20DirxSCBull q 58.30 +.09Discover 9 37.91 -.84DiscovLab dd 3.31 +.06DishNetwk 12 32.35 +1.33Disney 17 50.79 +1.13DollarGen 21 51.06 +.40DollarTh 14 87.19 -.03DollarTr s 21 47.33 -.86DomRescs 18 52.50 -.01DonlleyRR 6 11.32 +.28DowChm 18 28.45 -.19DuPont 13 48.78 -.05DukeEn rs 17 64.47 -.34DukeRlty cc 14.71 -.04

E-F-G-HE-Trade 23 8.56 -.03eBay 17 47.16 -.20EMC Cp 22 26.41 +.06Eaton 11 43.98 -.24Elan 11 11.21 -.13EldorGld g 26 13.55ElectArts dd 13.14 +.11EmersonEl 15 49.00 -.84EmpDist 17 21.32 -.13EnCana g 24 21.56 -.31EsteeLdr s 28 59.59 -.19ExcoRes dd 6.80 -.07Exelixis 9 4.75 +.09Exelon 13 35.80 -.31ExpScripts 31 62.85 -.21ExxonMbl 11 87.33 +.21Facebook n ... 18.58 +.85Fastenal 31 42.24 -1.13FedExCp 13 85.80 -1.74FifthThird 9 14.92 -.13

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

NokiaCp 2122821 2.38 -.45S&P500ETF 862604 140.91 -.12SprintNex 803170 4.95 +.15Facebook n 581009 18.58 +.85BkofAm 519163 7.95 -.04FordM 401491 9.57 +.16OfficeDpt 391618 1.92 +.31Bar iPVix 383939 11.12 -.31Intel 376756 24.39 -.03AMD 339553 3.51 -.13

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,421Declined 1,563Unchanged 134

Total issues 3,118New Highs 182New Lows 32

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,076Declined 1,367Unchanged 140

Total issues 2,583New Highs 109New Lows 27

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

OakRidgeF 3.95 +1.39 +54.1BonTon 12.07 +2.37 +24.4RecovE rsh 3.64 +.52 +16.7ImpacMtg 7.61 +1.06 +16.2Amrep 5.79 +.73 +14.4TlCmSys 2.16 +.27 +14.3OYO Geo 106.66 +12.87 +13.7Arrhythm 2.45 +.27 +12.4HarvNRes 9.57 +.95 +11.0Trovagne s 2.45 +.24 +10.9

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

EmmisC pf 8.66 -5.84 -40.3AmbwEd 2.27 -.83 -26.8AuRico g 5.54 -1.45 -20.7Francesca 29.92 -6.16 -17.1NokiaCp 2.38 -.45 -15.9EmclaireF 21.32 -3.61 -14.5DigitAlly rs 4.59 -.76 -14.2Crexendo 3.37 -.48 -12.5Calavo h 22.46 -3.02 -11.9MGC Diag 5.31 -.66 -11.1

AllianzNFJDvVlIs 12.57 -0.01 +11.4American BeaconLgCpVlInv 19.93 -0.03 +13.0LgCpVlIs 21.03 -0.04 +13.2American CentEqIncInv 7.87 ... +9.5GrowthInv 27.95 -0.06 +13.8InfAdjI 13.34 ... +5.6UltraInv 26.02 -0.04 +13.5ValueInv 6.19 ... +10.2American FundsAMCAPA m 20.85 -0.02 +11.2BalA m 19.92 ... +10.5BondA m 12.94 ... +5.0CapIncBuA m 52.58 -0.05 +8.8CapWldBdA m21.36 ... +5.7CpWldGrIA m 35.08 ... +11.0EurPacGrA m 38.04 -0.05 +8.2FnInvA m 39.12 -0.06 +11.3GrthAmA m 32.71 -0.05 +13.9HiIncA m 11.11 +0.01 +9.5IncAmerA m 17.79 -0.02 +8.2IntBdAmA m 13.79 ... +2.4InvCoAmA m 30.09 -0.05 +12.1MutualA m 27.99 -0.05 +9.5NewEconA m 27.43 -0.08 +15.3NewPerspA m 29.52 +0.03 +12.8NwWrldA m 50.28 -0.03 +9.0SmCpWldA m 37.85 -0.10 +14.1TaxEBdAmA m13.08 ... +7.1USGovSecA m14.62 ... +2.2WAMutInvA m 30.82 -0.06 +9.7AquilaChTxFKYA m 11.03 ... +4.1ArtisanIntl d 22.73 -0.03 +14.6IntlVal d 28.04 +0.06 +11.8MdCpVal 20.87 -0.01 +5.9MidCap 38.30 -0.11 +16.3BaronGrowth b 57.21 -0.11 +12.2BernsteinDiversMui 14.88 -0.01 +2.5IntDur 14.21 ... +4.5TxMIntl 12.84 -0.05 +2.9BlackRockEngy&ResA m26.97 +0.01 -16.4EqDivA m 19.53 -0.02 +8.6EqDivI 19.58 -0.02 +8.8GlobAlcA m 19.12 -0.01 +6.0GlobAlcC m 17.79 -0.01 +5.4GlobAlcI 19.21 -0.01 +6.2HiYldBdIs 7.89 +0.01 +11.5CalamosGrowA m 51.09 -0.09 +10.1Cohen & SteersRealty 69.58 -0.17 +15.6ColumbiaAcornIntZ 38.12 -0.06 +11.7AcornZ 30.62 -0.07 +12.5DivIncZ 14.82 -0.02 +10.3StLgCpGrZ 13.33 -0.02 +10.9TaxEA m 14.26 ... +7.4DFA1YrFixInI 10.35 ... +0.82YrGlbFII 10.14 ... +0.95YrGlbFII 11.31 ... +4.1EmMkCrEqI 18.10 -0.10 +5.7EmMktValI 26.85 -0.15 +4.0IntSmCapI 14.29 -0.06 +6.7RelEstScI 26.98 -0.06 +17.4USCorEq1I 12.01 ... +12.4USCorEq2I 11.81 -0.01 +12.2USLgCo 11.11 -0.01 +13.1USLgValI 21.56 ... +13.6USMicroI 14.70 -0.01 +11.6USSmValI 26.22 -0.02 +13.5USSmallI 22.95 -0.02 +12.3DWS-ScudderGrIncS 17.66 -0.02 +10.5DavisNYVentA m 35.36 -0.03 +8.8NYVentY 35.78 -0.03 +9.0Delaware InvestDiverIncA m 9.45 ... +5.8Dimensional InvestmeIntCorEqI 9.61 -0.03 +5.7IntlSCoI 14.51 -0.04 +6.4IntlValuI 14.90 -0.07 +3.3Dodge & CoxBal 75.15 +0.18 +12.8Income 13.87 ... +6.3IntlStk 31.15 -0.05 +6.5Stock 115.83 +0.35 +15.1DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 11.34 ... +7.2DreyfusApprecia 44.34 -0.02 +10.3Eaton VanceLrgCpValA m 19.05 -0.03 +12.0FMILgCap 17.02 -0.03 +11.6FPACres d 28.35 +0.01 +6.8NewInc m 10.67 ... +1.7Fairholme FundsFairhome d 30.35 +0.07 +31.1FederatedStrValI 5.09 -0.01 +7.6ToRetIs 11.59 ... +5.3FidelityAstMgr20 13.32 ... +5.6AstMgr50 16.17 -0.01 +8.6Bal 19.94 -0.01 +10.6BlChGrow 49.25 -0.13 +16.1CapApr 29.21 +0.03 +18.6CapInc d 9.28 ... +11.3Contra 77.30 -0.10 +14.6DiscEq 24.24 -0.01 +12.7DivGrow 29.54 -0.03 +14.2DivrIntl d 27.90 +0.01 +9.3EqInc 45.91 -0.01 +12.7EqInc II 19.28 -0.01 +12.1FF2015 11.80 -0.01 +8.3FF2035 11.68 -0.01 +10.9FF2040 8.15 -0.01 +10.9Fidelity 35.26 -0.06 +13.9FltRtHiIn d 9.90 ... +5.0Free2010 14.12 -0.01 +8.1Free2020 14.27 -0.01 +9.1Free2025 11.86 -0.02 +10.0Free2030 14.12 -0.02 +10.2GNMA 12.00 ... +3.1GovtInc 10.95 ... +2.7GrowCo 96.34 -0.28 +19.1GrowInc 20.64 -0.01 +14.2HiInc d 9.20 ... +10.7IntBond 11.12 -0.01 +4.0IntMuniInc d 10.65 ... +3.9IntlDisc d 30.51 +0.04 +10.5InvGrdBd 7.98 -0.01 +5.3LatinAm d 47.73 +0.30 -2.4LowPriStk d 40.31 ... +12.8Magellan 72.48 -0.09 +15.3MidCap d 29.59 -0.07 +13.3MuniInc d 13.52 ... +6.3NewMktIn d 17.49 +0.04 +14.4OTC 61.52 +0.06 +12.5Puritan 19.51 -0.03 +11.3RealInv d 32.48 -0.08 +18.2Series100Idx 10.11 -0.01 +14.6ShIntMu d 10.87 -0.01 +1.8ShTmBond 8.59 ... +1.9StratInc 11.32 +0.01 +7.7Tel&Util 18.63 ... +8.5TotalBd 11.29 ... +5.5USBdIdx 12.03 -0.01 +3.9USBdIdxInv 12.03 -0.01 +3.8Value 72.36 +0.04 +14.0Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 22.52 -0.03 +14.2NewInsI 22.83 -0.03 +14.4StratIncA m 12.64 ... +7.4Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 49.92 -0.04 +13.3500IdxInstl 49.92 -0.04 +13.3500IdxInv 49.91 -0.04 +13.2ExtMktIdAg d 39.60 -0.02 +13.0IntlIdxAdg d 31.64 -0.06 +6.4TotMktIdAg d 40.77 -0.03 +13.2First EagleGlbA m 48.22 -0.05 +6.9OverseasA m 21.60 -0.03 +6.1ForumAbStratI 11.26 ... +1.9FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A f 12.70 ... +7.3FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A m 7.49 ... +8.3Growth A m 49.08 -0.07 +9.9HY TF A m 10.89 -0.01 +9.2

Name P/E Last Chg

3,290,619,533Volume 1,452,598,040Volume

12,000

12,400

12,800

13,200

13,600

M A M J J A

12,920

13,100

13,280Dow Jones industrialsClose: 13,047.48Change: 11.54 (0.1%)

10 DAYS

HighIncA m 2.03 ... +10.4Income A m 2.18 ... +8.9Income C m 2.20 ... +8.4IncomeAdv 2.17 ... +9.6NY TF A m 12.14 ... +5.5RisDv A m 36.88 -0.05 +6.0StrInc A f 10.55 ... +8.1US Gov A m 6.90 ... +2.1FrankTemp-MutualDiscov A m 29.51 -0.02 +8.7Discov Z 29.92 -0.03 +8.9QuestZ 17.72 -0.03 +9.1Shares A m 22.01 -0.02 +11.1Shares Z 22.22 -0.02 +11.4FrankTemp-TempletonGlBond A m 13.10 -0.01 +8.9GlBond C m 13.13 ... +8.7GlBondAdv 13.06 -0.01 +9.1Growth A m 17.97 +0.01 +10.3World A m 15.01 +0.02 +9.2Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 10.72 ... +10.2GES&SUSEq 44.04 -0.07 +13.7GMOEmgMktsVI 10.72 -0.04 +4.0IntItVlIV 19.28 -0.07 +3.2QuIII 23.47 ... +12.5QuVI 23.48 ... +12.6Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.27 ... +10.7MidCpVaIs 37.86 -0.07 +12.8HarborBond 12.92 ... +7.3CapApInst 42.10 ... +14.1IntlInstl d 56.89 +0.02 +8.5IntlInv m 56.25 +0.01 +8.2HartfordCapAprA m 31.71 +0.10 +10.0CpApHLSIA 41.12 +0.05 +10.6DvGrHLSIA 21.22 -0.01 +9.8TRBdHLSIA 11.82 ... +6.0HussmanStratGrth d 11.07 -0.02 -10.9INVESCOCharterA m 17.53 -0.02 +9.2ComstockA m 16.87 +0.01 +11.8EqIncomeA m 9.03 ... +9.5GrowIncA m 20.41 -0.02 +10.6HiYldMuA m 10.05 ... +11.1IvyAssetStrA m 24.34 -0.15 +9.3AssetStrC m 23.53 -0.15 +8.8JPMorganCoreBdUlt 12.12 ... +4.5CoreBondA m 12.12 ... +4.2CoreBondSelect12.11 ... +4.4HighYldSel 8.03 ... +10.0IntmdTFSl 11.38 ... +2.9LgCapGrSelect 24.11 -0.07 +12.3MidCpValI 27.26 -0.05 +14.8ShDurBndSel 11.02 ... +1.5ShtDurBdU 11.02 ... +1.7USEquit 11.19 -0.01 +13.6USLCpCrPS 22.54 -0.03 +14.2JanusBalT 26.71 -0.03 +10.2GlbLfScT d 29.96 -0.07 +20.3PerkinsMCVT 21.63 -0.01 +7.1TwentyT 61.60 -0.17 +20.6John HancockLifAg1 b 12.40 -0.02 +10.3LifBa1 b 13.28 -0.01 +9.6LifGr1 b 13.12 -0.02 +10.2LifMo1 b 13.18 -0.01 +8.8LazardEmgMkEqtI d 18.55 -0.05 +10.4Legg Mason/WesternCrPlBdIns 11.62 ... +6.9Longleaf PartnersLongPart 29.42 +0.13 +10.4SmCap 28.99 -0.09 +14.9Loomis SaylesBondI 14.78 ... +9.7BondR b 14.72 ... +9.5Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 11.57 +0.01 +10.6BondDebA m 7.99 ... +9.0ShDurIncA m 4.62 ... +4.6ShDurIncC m 4.65 ... +4.1MFSIsIntlEq 17.34 -0.01 +8.9TotRetA m 14.93 ... +8.2ValueA m 24.85 +0.02 +12.0ValueI 24.97 +0.02 +12.2MainStayHiYldCorA m 6.04 +0.01 +9.2Manning & NapierWrldOppA 7.26 ... +9.5Matthews AsianChina d 20.78 -0.30 -3.4India d 15.48 -0.17 +13.9MergerMerger b 15.96 ... +2.4Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.93 ... +8.4TotRtBd b 10.93 ... +8.3Morgan Stanley InstlIntlEqI d 13.41 ... +9.5MdCpGrI 34.45 +0.06 +4.6NatixisInvBndY 12.54 ... +8.3StratIncA m 15.05 ... +8.1StratIncC m 15.14 +0.01 +7.6Neuberger BermanGenesisIs 49.15 -0.02 +5.9NorthernHYFixInc d 7.38 ... +10.1StkIdx 17.47 -0.02 +13.2NuveenHiYldMunI 16.88 +0.01 +16.9OakmarkEqIncI 28.55 -0.05 +5.5Intl I d 18.18 +0.03 +9.8Oakmark I 47.89 -0.05 +14.9OberweisChinaOpp m 9.38 -0.10 +7.8Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 14.37 -0.03 +8.6LgCpStr 9.44 -0.02 +7.6OppenheimerDevMktA m 32.13 -0.12 +9.6DevMktY 31.82 -0.12 +9.8GlobA m 58.74 -0.04 +8.7IntlBondA m 6.48 +0.01 +7.2IntlBondY 6.48 +0.01 +7.5IntlGrY 28.32 +0.09 +11.0LtdTmNY m 3.40 ... +5.2MainStrA m 36.64 -0.04 +13.9RocMuniA m 16.98 +0.01 +10.7RochNtlMu m 7.50 -0.01 +14.5StrIncA m 4.27 ... +9.2PIMCOAAstAAutP 11.01 ... +11.5AllAssetI 12.47 ... +9.7AllAuthA m 10.95 ... +11.2AllAuthIn 11.03 ... +11.6ComRlRStI 7.01 -0.04 +8.9DivIncInst 12.11 ... +10.8EMktCurI 10.29 +0.01 +4.8EmMktsIns 12.20 +0.01 +11.7FloatIncI 8.75 +0.01 +8.8ForBdIs 11.15 +0.01 +7.4ForBondI 11.33 +0.02 +5.9HiYldIs 9.46 +0.01 +9.9InvGrdIns 11.17 ... +11.1LowDrA m 10.60 ... +4.6LowDrIs 10.60 ... +4.8RERRStgC m 5.05 -0.01 +25.7RealRet 12.49 +0.01 +7.5RealRtnA m 12.49 +0.01 +7.2ShtTermIs 9.87 ... +2.7ToRtIIIIs 10.13 ... +8.0TotRetA m 11.50 ... +7.9TotRetAdm b 11.50 ... +8.0TotRetC m 11.50 ... +7.3TotRetIs 11.50 ... +8.1TotRetrnD b 11.50 ... +7.9TotlRetnP 11.50 ... +8.1ParnassusEqIncInv 29.33 -0.05 +12.0PermanentPortfolio 48.36 -0.05 +4.9PioneerPioneerA m 41.34 -0.03 +7.7PrincipalL/T2020I 12.41 -0.02 +10.2L/T2030I 12.24 -0.01 +10.8LCGrIInst 10.17 -0.02 +14.5PutnamGrowIncA m 14.01 +0.01 +11.1NewOpp 56.86 -0.11 +12.9RoycePAMutInv d 11.58 -0.02 +7.6

PremierInv d 19.41 -0.04 +4.8RussellStratBdS x 11.40 -0.02 +6.5Schwab1000Inv d 39.94 -0.03 +12.9S&P500Sel d 22.16 -0.02 +13.2ScoutInterntl d 30.35 ... +9.3SelectedAmerican D 42.94 -0.06 +8.9SequoiaSequoia 161.46 +0.13 +11.0T Rowe PriceBlChpGr 44.82 -0.18 +16.0CapApprec 22.84 ... +10.8EmMktBd d 13.91 +0.02 +13.8EmMktStk d 30.23 -0.17 +6.0EqIndex d 37.94 -0.03 +13.1EqtyInc 25.47 -0.04 +11.7GrowStk 37.25 -0.11 +17.0HealthSci 42.56 -0.20 +30.6HiYield d 6.82 +0.01 +10.1InsLgCpGr d 18.51 -0.07 +14.8IntlBnd d 10.00 +0.01 +4.3IntlGrInc d 12.07 -0.02 +4.8IntlStk d 13.31 +0.01 +8.3LatinAm d 38.82 +0.29MidCapVa 24.40 +0.02 +14.1MidCpGr 58.15 -0.07 +10.3NewAsia d 15.28 -0.14 +9.8NewEra 41.91 -0.09 -0.3NewHoriz 35.81 -0.12 +15.4NewIncome 9.93 ... +4.8OrseaStk d 7.88 ... +7.7R2015 12.68 ... +9.5R2025 12.82 -0.01 +10.7R2035 12.99 -0.01 +11.4Real d 21.37 -0.04 +17.6Rtmt2010 16.33 -0.01 +8.7Rtmt2020 17.53 -0.01 +10.2Rtmt2030 18.39 -0.02 +11.2Rtmt2040 18.48 -0.02 +11.5ShTmBond 4.86 ... +2.4SmCpStk 35.67 -0.09 +14.1SmCpVal d 38.06 -0.09 +10.4SpecInc 12.88 ... +7.5Value 25.33 +0.01 +12.4TCWEmgIncI 9.13 +0.01 +15.1TotRetBdI 10.11 ... +9.4TempletonInFEqSeS 18.06 ... +6.0ThornburgIncBldA m 18.57 -0.02 +7.5IncBldC m 18.57 -0.02 +7.1IntlValA m 25.19 -0.02 +5.5IntlValI d 25.76 -0.02 +5.9Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 24.35 -0.01 +11.4USAAIncome 13.44 ... +5.0VALIC Co IStockIdx 26.37 -0.02 +13.0Vanguard500Adml 129.89 -0.11 +13.3500Inv 129.87 -0.10 +13.2BalIdxAdm 23.61 -0.02 +9.5BalIdxIns 23.61 -0.02 +9.5CAITAdml 11.69 ... +5.2CapOpAdml 75.84 -0.06 +11.3DivGr 16.54 -0.04 +8.5EmMktIAdm 33.10 -0.20 +4.5EnergyAdm 110.25 -0.62 -0.4EnergyInv 58.71 -0.33 -0.4EqInc 23.84 -0.04 +10.5EqIncAdml 49.97 -0.09 +10.5ExplAdml 73.37 -0.12 +10.4Explr 78.79 -0.13 +10.3ExtdIdAdm 44.46 -0.03 +13.0ExtdIdIst 44.46 -0.03 +13.0ExtdMktIdxIP 109.74 -0.08 +13.0FAWeUSIns 82.46 -0.25 +6.1GNMA 11.10 ... +2.5GNMAAdml 11.10 ... +2.5GlbEq 17.62 -0.02 +10.7GrthIdAdm 36.57 -0.06 +15.7GrthIstId 36.57 -0.06 +15.7GrthIstSg 33.87 -0.05 +15.7HYCor 5.99 +0.01 +9.9HYCorAdml 5.99 +0.01 +10.0HltCrAdml 60.60 +0.19 +11.7HlthCare 143.60 +0.46 +11.7ITBondAdm 12.15 -0.01 +5.8ITGradeAd 10.39 ... +7.2ITIGrade 10.39 ... +7.2ITrsyAdml 11.83 -0.01 +2.8InfPrtAdm 29.15 +0.01 +5.7InfPrtI 11.87 ... +5.7InflaPro 14.84 ... +5.6InstIdxI 129.06 -0.11 +13.3InstPlus 129.07 -0.11 +13.3InstTStPl 31.78 -0.03 +13.3IntlGr 17.55 -0.02 +7.3IntlGrAdm 55.85 -0.08 +7.4IntlStkIdxAdm 23.16 -0.07 +6.0IntlStkIdxI 92.63 -0.28 +6.1IntlStkIdxIPls 92.65 -0.28 +6.1IntlVal 28.31 -0.07 +6.3LTGradeAd 10.99 -0.04 +10.7LTInvGr 10.99 -0.04 +10.6LifeCon 17.15 -0.01 +6.8LifeGro 22.96 -0.03 +9.6LifeMod 20.56 -0.02 +8.2MidCapIdxIP 107.48 -0.15 +10.7MidCp 21.72 -0.03 +10.5MidCpAdml 98.63 -0.15 +10.6MidCpIst 21.79 -0.03 +10.7MidCpSgl 31.13 -0.04 +10.7Morg 19.92 -0.03 +14.0MorgAdml 61.81 -0.08 +14.1MuHYAdml 11.23 +0.01 +7.6MuInt 14.36 ... +4.5MuIntAdml 14.36 ... +4.6MuLTAdml 11.76 ... +6.5MuLtdAdml 11.18 ... +1.5MuShtAdml 15.93 ... +0.8PrecMtls 15.19 -0.04 -19.2Prmcp 68.24 +0.05 +10.5PrmcpAdml 70.83 +0.05 +10.6PrmcpCorI 14.79 +0.01 +9.6REITIdxAd 95.08 -0.21 +17.6STBond 10.67 ... +1.6STBondAdm 10.67 ... +1.7STBondSgl 10.67 ... +1.7STCor 10.84 ... +3.5STFedAdml 10.89 ... +1.3STGradeAd 10.84 ... +3.6STIGradeI 10.84 ... +3.6STsryAdml 10.80 ... +0.7SelValu 20.35 -0.07 +9.5SmCapIdx 37.70 -0.05 +13.0SmCpIdAdm 37.76 -0.04 +13.1SmCpIdIst 37.76 -0.04 +13.1SmCpIndxSgnl 34.02 -0.04 +13.1Star 20.26 -0.02 +9.1TgtRe2010 24.09 -0.01 +7.4TgtRe2015 13.29 -0.01 +8.0TgtRe2020 23.55 -0.02 +8.6TgtRe2030 22.93 -0.03 +9.6TgtRe2035 13.78 -0.01 +10.2TgtRe2040 22.61 -0.03 +10.3TgtRe2045 14.20 -0.02 +10.3TgtRe2050 22.51 -0.03 +10.3TgtRetInc 12.16 ... +6.3Tgtet2025 13.39 -0.01 +9.1TotBdAdml 11.20 -0.01 +3.8TotBdInst 11.20 -0.01 +3.8TotBdMkInv 11.20 -0.01 +3.8TotBdMkSig 11.20 -0.01 +3.8TotIntl 13.84 -0.04 +6.0TotStIAdm 35.11 -0.03 +13.2TotStIIns 35.12 -0.02 +13.3TotStISig 33.89 -0.02 +13.2TotStIdx 35.10 -0.02 +13.2TxMCapAdm 70.54 -0.05 +13.1ValIdxAdm 22.37 ... +10.7ValIdxIns 22.37 ... +10.7WellsI 24.36 -0.04 +8.0WellsIAdm 59.03 -0.08 +8.0Welltn 33.69 -0.04 +9.0WelltnAdm 58.20 -0.06 +9.1WndsIIAdm 50.74 -0.14 +12.2Wndsr 14.26 -0.01 +12.7WndsrAdml 48.12 -0.01 +12.8WndsrII 28.59 -0.08 +12.1VirtusEmgMktsIs 9.52 -0.02 +10.2Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 8.13 -0.01 +10.6SciTechA m 10.95 -0.03 +22.9Western AssetMgdMuniA m 17.12 ... +8.1YacktmanFocused d 20.28 +0.01 +8.6

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

Finisar 24 13.69 +.17FstHorizon dd 9.02 +.03FstNiagara 16 7.91 +.04FstSolar dd 18.65 -.27FirstEngy 14 42.78 -.71Flextrn 10 6.63 -.02FootLockr 16 35.31 -.15ForestOil s 11 7.44 -.01Francesca 37 29.92 -6.16FMCG 10 35.25 -.37FrontierCm 29 4.56Fusion-io dd 27.65 -1.15GATX 17 41.81 +.11GNC 20 40.13 +.50GT AdvTc 5 5.49 +.07Gafisa SA ... 3.80 -.10GalenaBio dd 1.91 +.04GameStop 9 20.55 +.14Gannett 9 15.56 +.07Gap 20 35.45 -.36GaylrdEnt cc 40.10 -.30GenDynam 9 64.78 +.13GenGrPrp dd 20.98 +.22GenMills 17 38.99 -.34GenMotors 8 21.76 +.45GenOn En dd 2.53 -.04Genworth 10 5.17 -.08Gerdau ... 8.94 +.22GileadSci 18 58.44 +.43GoldFLtd ... 12.71 +.55Goldcrp g 24 40.86 +.17GoldStr g 38 1.51 -.01GoldmanS 16 109.94 +3.53GovPrpIT 21 22.78 -.05GrtBasG g ... .25 +.01GreenMtC 11 23.83 -.16Groupon n ... 4.18 -.06Guidewre n ... 32.25 +2.90GulfportE 13 27.44 +1.73Hallibrtn 9 32.41 +.26HartfdFn 8 18.05 +.35HltMgmt 9 7.58 -.06Heckmann dd 3.87 +.16HeclaM 18 5.44 -.04Heinz 19 55.49 -.47Hemisphrx dd .85 +.14Hertz 15 14.54 +.25Hess 13 49.31 -.34HewlettP 6 17.27 +.28HollyFront 6 39.21 -.89HomeDp 20 56.54 -.25HopFedBc 20 7.76 +.07HostHotls cc 15.16 -.10HovnanE dd 3.21 +.06HudsCity dd 7.39 +.14HuntBncsh 12 6.49 -.08

I-J-K-LICICI Bk ... 32.34 -.71ING ... 7.64 +.11ION Geoph 20 6.80 +.02iShGold q 16.50 -.01iSAstla q 22.99 -.06iShBraz q 52.25 +.49iShGer q 21.33 +.14iSh HK q 16.72 -.09iShJapn q 8.83 -.11iSh Kor q 55.08 -.84iSTaiwn q 12.52 -.11iShSilver q 31.27 -.09iShChina25 q 32.17 -.29iSSP500 q 141.48 +.20iShEMkts q 38.86 -.21iShB20 T q 126.72 -.60iS Eafe q 51.20 -.14iShR2K q 82.13 +.02iShREst q 65.92 -.04iShDJHm q 18.29 -.09ITW 15 58.45 -.47IngerRd 45 45.55 -.30IngrmM 8 15.24 -.02IBM 14 195.04 +.50IntlGame 17 12.09 -.03IntPap 13 34.18Interpublic 11 10.75 +.04Invesco 15 23.85 +.03Isis dd 14.79 -.30ItauUnibH ... 15.55 +.10JDS Uniph dd 11.18 -.01JPMorgCh 8 37.11 +.10Jamba dd 2.39 -.08JanusCap 14 8.66 -.09JetBlue 11 4.90 +.01JohnJn 21 67.27 +.01JohnsnCtl 11 26.70 +.03JnprNtwk 27 17.49 -.20KB Home dd 11.30 -.05KeyEngy 8 7.58 -.11Keycorp 8 8.31 -.09Kimco 60 20.37 -.12KindMorg 52 35.50 -.18Kinross g dd 8.84 -.03KodiakO g 33 9.03 +.08Kohls 12 51.20 -.79Kraft 21 41.67 -.17LSI Corp 41 7.78 +.01LamResrch 24 33.26 -.37LVSands 18 41.72 +.06LeapFrog 17 10.06 -.65LennarA 14 32.88 +.02Lexmark 7 21.32 +.18LibtyIntA 17 18.66 +.11LillyEli 13 45.81 +.52LincNat 36 23.17 -.14LinkedIn cc 113.28 +5.91LockhdM 11 91.53 +1.00LaPac dd 13.65 -.28lululemn gs 49 66.72 -.16LyonBas A 13 46.97 -.04

M-N-O-PMBIA 5 10.93 -.09MEMC dd 3.11 +.13MFA Fncl 10 8.26 -.05MGIC dd 1.14 +.01MGM Rsts dd 9.77 +.01Macys 13 39.87 -.35MagHRes dd 4.29 +.12Manitowoc 21 13.00 -.31Manulife g ... 11.35 +.01MarathnO 8 27.18 -.27MarathPet 7 50.32 -.47MktVGold q 47.93 +.16MV OilSv s q 39.67 -.26MktVRus q 27.13 -.11MktVJrGld q 22.03 -.03MartMM 39 74.99 -.24MarvellT 10 10.24 +.16Masco dd 13.46 -.59Mattel 16 34.76 -.21MaximIntg 21 27.08 -.24McDrmInt 19 10.95 -.18McGrwH 17 51.79 +.31MeadJohn 27 75.95 +2.36Medicis 25 43.54 -.11Medtrnic 12 40.85 -.36MelcoCrwn 21 11.49 -.36MentorGr 15 17.03 +.04Merck 20 43.44 +.19MetLife 9 34.01 +.01MetroPCS 11 9.84 -.04MicronT dd 6.19 +.10Microsoft 15 30.39 +.01MobileTele 12 18.88 +.51Molycorp ... 11.32 -.10Monsanto 22 87.55 +.93MonstrBv s 31 55.56 -1.69MonstrWw 18 7.55 +.45MorgStan 13 15.68 +.17Mosaic 13 58.81 +2.06Mylan 16 23.79 +.15NII Hldg dd 6.26 +.14NRG Egy dd 21.36 -.17Nabors 11 14.69 +.11NOilVarco 14 78.57 +.50Navistar dd 20.41 +.42NetApp 25 34.55 -.07Netflix 29 54.96 -.97NY CmtyB 12 13.37 -.04NewellRub 39 18.08 +.11NewmtM 14 49.62 +.15NewsCpA 54 23.75 +.22NewsCpB 54 23.88 +.20Nexen g ... 25.16 -.06NiSource 23 24.92 +.22NobleCorp 27 36.79 -.49NokiaCp ... 2.38 -.45NA Pall g ... 1.95 +.13NorthropG 9 66.52 -.23NuanceCm 30 23.45 -.22Nucor 20 37.00 -.11NustarEn dd 48.66 -2.32Nvidia 18 13.32 +.05OCZ Tech dd 5.36 -.50OcciPet 11 82.65 -.46

OfficeDpt 8 1.92 +.31OfficeMax 13 6.04 +.11Oi SA s ... 3.71 -.01OmniVisn 33 16.32 -.04OnSmcnd dd 6.13 +.01Oracle 16 32.07 +.50Orexigen dd 4.91 +.31PDL Bio 6 7.37 +.05PG&E Cp 24 42.98 -.46PPG 14 108.77 +.60PPL Corp 10 29.64 +.03Paccar 11 39.22 +.07Pandora dd 12.27PattUTI 7 15.24 +.32PeabdyE 6 21.20 +.30PeopUtdF 18 11.97 +.01PepBoy 14 9.75 +.76PepcoHold 17 19.39 -.05PeregrinP dd 3.05 +.12PetrbrsA ... 20.20 +.13Petrobras ... 20.83 +.16Pfizer 14 23.92 +.14PhilipMor 18 89.09 -.54Phillips66 n ... 41.74 -.67PiperJaf dd 24.84 +.13PluristemT dd 4.61 +.42Potash 14 41.21 +.57Power-One 8 6.51 +.08PwshDB q 28.66 -.14PwShs QQQ q 68.02 -.07ProLogis 45 34.58 +.12ProShtS&P q 35.08 +.01PrUShS&P q 14.45 +.01PrUShQQQ q 28.39 +.06ProUltSP q 58.17 +.07ProUShL20 q 15.06 +.16PrUVxST rs q 4.95 -.28ProctGam 17 67.29 -.11PUSSP500 rs q 41.96 +.06Prudentl 7 54.67 +.04PSEG 12 31.27 -.05PulteGrp 61 14.04 +.29

Q-R-S-TQlikTech cc 22.12 +.82Qlogic 12 12.18 -.15Qualcom 18 60.68 +.12Questcor 24 49.90 +2.11QksilvRes dd 3.54 +.22RF MicD dd 3.73 -.10RschMotn 2 6.52 -.13RioTinto ... 43.35 +.19RiteAid dd 1.22 +.01RylCarb 13 27.53 +.60SAIC dd 11.96 -.14SLM Cp 9 15.48 -.21SpdrDJIA q 130.37 +.14SpdrGold q 164.31 -.17S&P500ETF q 140.91 -.12SpdrHome q 23.78 -.08SpdrLehHY q 39.88 +.02SpdrS&P RB q 28.01 -.08SpdrRetl q 61.84 +.13SpdrOGEx q 52.84 +.16Safeway 9 16.50 +.68Saks 27 11.44 -.38SanDisk 16 40.60 -.29SandRdge dd 6.79 +.27Sanofi rt ... 1.72 +.04Sarepta rs dd 15.54 +.62SavientPh dd 1.31 +.04Schlmbrg 18 71.25 -.17Schwab 20 13.34 +.01SeadrillLtd 10 39.53 -.89SeagateT 86 32.53 +.13SealAir 71 14.96 +.84SiderurNac ... 5.05 +.36SilvWhtn g 22 35.16 +.02Sina dd 59.36 -.57SkywksSol 27 29.20 -.82SmithWes dd 8.72 +.65SmithfF 9 19.85 -.11SwstAirl 30 9.09 +.24SwstnEngy dd 31.52 +.27SpectraEn 17 28.30 -.17SpectPh 9 12.52 +.34SP Matls q 35.35 +.16SP HlthC q 38.93 +.01SP CnSt q 35.61 -.06SP Consum q 45.51 +.07SP Engy q 70.71 -.27SP Inds q 35.88 -.10SP Tech q 30.46 -.03SP Util q 36.33 -.16StdPac 57 6.86 -.07Staples 8 11.10 +.24Starbucks 28 49.80 +.29StateStr 11 41.95 +.23StlDynam 16 11.69 -.14StemCells dd 2.13 -.07Stryker 14 53.12 -.70Suncor gs 8 31.67 +.08SunTrst 16 25.45 -.16Supvalu dd 2.28 +.04Symantec 11 17.93 +.05Synovus dd 2.20 +.05Sysco 16 30.16 -.13TD Ameritr 16 17.00 +.06TJX s 20 45.63 -.53TaiwSemi ... 14.18 -.20TalismE g ... 13.75 -.20Target 15 63.73 -.11TeckRes g ... 26.74 -.22TeekLNG ... 37.90 -2.05TenetHlth dd 5.27 -.04Teradyn 12 15.43 -.15Terex 17 20.85 -1.03Tesoro 8 39.09 -.22TevaPhrm 13 39.51 -.19TexInst 20 28.52 -.26ThomCrk g 3 2.84 -.033M Co 15 91.75 +.07TibcoSft 43 31.06 +.34Tiffany 17 59.31 -1.18TimeWarn 16 42.25 +.90TiVo Inc dd 9.38 -.17TollBros 62 32.74 +.02Transocn dd 46.60 -1.54Travelers 11 64.53 -.11TripAdv n ... 35.40 +.75TriQuint cc 5.53 -.10TwoHrbInv 9 11.68 +.02TycoIntl 21 55.54 -.54Tyson 12 15.57 -.32

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUBS AG ... 11.38 +.29US Airwy 5 11.22 +.77USG dd 21.02 -.09UnionPac 15 119.23 -3.03UtdContl 21 19.07 +.97UPS B 18 71.94 -1.76UtdRentals 15 34.37 -.05US NGs rs q 18.83 -.32US OilFd q 35.57 +.06USSteel dd 18.57 -.21UtdTech 14 78.03 -.32UtdhlthGp 11 54.28 -.28Vale SA ... 16.18 +.30Vale SA pf ... 15.94 +.27ValeantPh dd 59.30 +.52ValeroE 8 31.22 +.20VangEmg q 39.71 -.21VeriFone 16 35.38 +.66VerizonCm 44 43.80 +.10ViacomB 14 48.98 -.38VimpelCm 46 10.99 +.34Visa 22 127.61 -.91Vodafone ... 28.26 -.18Vonage 1 2.17 +.06Vringo dd 3.20 -.04VulcanM dd 37.94 +.24Walgrn 12 35.88 +.18WalterEn 9 31.01 +.28WarnerCh 21 14.19 +.10WsteMInc 17 34.00 -.40WeathfIntl 35 12.02 +.38WellPoint 8 59.15 -.24WDigital 6 41.84 -.48WstnUnion 9 17.68 +.02WhitingPet 10 47.04 +1.59WmsCos 19 32.13 -.24WmsSon 18 42.31 +1.09Windstrm 36 9.97 -.01WT India q 16.39 -.15XL Grp dd 23.02 -.22XcelEngy 16 28.03 -.05Xilinx 18 33.39 -.40Yamana g 18 17.18 +.02Yelp n ... 25.77 +1.52YumBrnds 20 63.34 +.36Zalicus dd 1.40 +.05Zynga n ... 2.92 +.09

Today

Smith & Wesson earnings

Wall Street anticipates that Smith & Wesson’s fortunes continued to improve in the May-to-July quarter.

The firearm maker has been paying down debt and increasing its manufacturing capabilities. It’s also seen brisk demand for its sporting rifles and polymer pistols. The company reports fiscal first-quarter results today.

Hovnanian Enterprises earnings

Did stronger sales trends for new homes help boost Hovnanian Enterprises’ third-quarter earnings?

The homebuilder, which reports results for the May-to-July quarter today, is expected to report a smaller quarterly loss and improved revenue compared to the same period last year.

U.S. sales of new homes rose in May, dipped in June and picked up once more in July.

Mattress Firm earnings

Mattress Firm reports results for its second fiscal quarter today.

The retailer’s earnings grew on an annual basis in the first two quarters since it became a publicly traded company last November. Mattress Firm, which completed its acquisi-tion of rival Mattress Giant in May, has been opening new stores. That’s helped drive sales of its specialty mat-tresses higher. Source: FactSet

Price-earnings ratio: 16based on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: none

Operating EPS

1Q ’12 2Q ’12

est.$0.29 $0.28

Source: FactSet

Price-earnings ratio: lost moneybased on past 12 months’ results

Dividend: none

Operating EPS

3Q ’11 3Q ’12

est.-$0.47-$0.14

1.00

2.25

$3.50HOV $3.21

$1.53

’1220

30

40

$50MFRM $30.77

$22.00

’12

European Central Bank President Mario Draghi is expected to reveal details Thursday of a new bond-buying program aimed at cutting borrowing costs for Spain and Italy, the latest flash points in the European debt crisis.

Stock prices have risen in recent weeks, in part because investors expect the Federal Reserve and the ECB to reduce lending costs in the United States

and Europe. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index has risen nearly 5 percent since July 25.

Expectations have been high since July 26 when Draghi vowed to do “whatever it takes” to hold the eurozone together. The following week, on Aug. 2, he announced the broad outlines of a plan to buy government bonds to help eurozone countries struggling to manage their debt.

Until then, countries such as Spain and Italy had seen their borrowing costs – reflected in the interest rates on bonds they sell – rise to unmanageable levels.

Investors were worried the two countries could soon get to a point where they couldn’t afford to handle their finances and would be pushed into asking for a bailout. That has already happened three times in the eurozone – with Greece, Ireland and Portugal.

But Draghi may have set expectations too high with his what-ever-it-takes pledge, says David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates in Toronto. Markets won’t accept anything less than an open-ended commitment to buy Spanish, Italian and other European countries’ bonds, he says.

“He better have some form of bazooka, loaded and ready to go,” Rosenberg says.

Jenni Sohn • APSOURCE: FactSet

1.2

1.3

$1.4

Mario Draghi’s moment

U.S. dollar per euro

What’s next? The value of the euro has fallen 11 percent over the last year. Thursday’s meeting of the European Central Bank may reveal its latest step to prevent a possible breakup of the 17-country euro alliance.

$1.26Sept. 5

20122011

$1.41Sept. 5

www.edwardjones.com

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®

Financial Advisor

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Page 8: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Sports8 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

Local Schedule

TodaySoftballBooneville @ Tish Co., 5:30Itawamba AHS @ Corinth, 6Central @ Kossuth, 6Jumpertown @ BiggersvilleVolleyballAmory @ Tishomingo Co.Cross CountryCentral-USJ @ Jackson, Tenn. 

FridayFootballAdamsville @ McNairy, 7Tish Co. @ Kossuth, 7:30 (WXRZ)Bolivar, Tenn. @ Corinth, 7:30Central @ Mooreville, 7:30Biggersville-Houlka (@ Okolona), 7:30Saltillo @ Booneville, 7:30Belmont @ Baldwyn, 7:30Walnut @ Middleton, Tenn., 7:30Benton Academy @ Thrasher, 7:30 

SaturdayFootballNortheast @ Jones County, 7SoftballTupelo TournamentKossuth, TupeloCross CountryCorinth @ Pontotoc Invitational

Shorts

ACHS Baseball Boosters

The Alcorn Central High School Baseball Boosters will meet on Mon-day, September 10 at 6 p.m. in the ACHS lobby. All parents of boys in grades 7-12 who will play this season are asked to attend.

 Youth Leagues

Registration for Flag Football (ages 5-18) at the Sportsplex will continue until Sept. 15. i Cost is $45.

 Soccer Clinic

The HRAY soccer clinic will be held Saturday, Sept. 15 in Middleton, Tenn. The clinic gets under way at 9 a.m. and participants are required to wear shinguards. For more information call Robert Browder at 731-212-0578.

 Softball Tournament

The MS Thunder’s Best of the Best softball tournament will be Sept. 29-30. Age groups will include 8U, 10U and 12U. Four-game guarantee -- 2 pool games, then double elimination. Hit your own softballs. Entry fee is $150 (8U), $225 (10U and 12U). The tournament will be at Hansburger Sportsplex in Pontotoc. Contact: Kelly Guin 891-0314, Jerre Lane 316-5925 or Ken Butler 488-1185.

 Bowling Leagues

Plaza Lanes has announced its schedule for 2012-2013 season. Adult leagues for men and women will bowl on Monday and Thursday night All night leagues will at 6:30 p.m.

FARMINGTON — The Cubs and Dodgers are playing for all the marbles.

The two clubs captured the respective Yard Division and Lawn Division champi-onships over the weekend and advanced to the Missis-sippi Yard Wiffl eball League’s World Series.

The seven-game series will begin Saturday at 2:45 at Co-Op Field at Home Banking Company Stadium.

The Dodgers — the regu-

lar-season champions in the Lawn Division — lost Game One to the Padres before reel-ing off three straight to claim

the best-of-5 series.The No. 2 seed Friars had

advanced to the league cham-pionship with a 2-0 sweep of the Braves in the Divisional Round.

The Yard Divisional Cham-pionship was a classic with the Cubs pulling a 3-1 up-set over the regular-season champion Rangers.

The Cubs walked-off in Game 4 after trailing 8-5 heading into their fi nal at-bat.

The Rangers entered the postseason hot, winning 14 of their last 15 to climb out

of the cellar and earn the di-vision championship and a fi rst-round bye.

All four games were decid-ed by one run.

The Rangers opened the se-ries with a 5-4 win before the Cubs clawed back for 7--6 and 6-5 wins in Games Two and Three.

The Cubs opened the post-season with a sweep of the ri-val Cardinals in the Divisional Round.

(For more visit www.leaguelineup.com/msyard-wiffl eballleague)

MYWL World Series: Cubs-DodgersBY H. LEE SMITH II

[email protected]

JACKSON — Many hunters would be happy if they could hit just one 4 1⁄2-inch clay disc fl ying through the air at 42 miles per hour.

Tony Kirk of Corinth won’t be satisfi ed until he hits 100.

One hundred out of 100, to be precise.

At age 10, Kirk started shooting trap with his father after going to a range at his hometown of Corinth.

“I shot a round or two and was hooked from there,” said Kirk.

Now 14, Kirk accomplished in August what most trap-shooters never achieve in a lifetime.

Kirk won a sub-junior competition at the Grand American World Trapshoot-ing Championships in Sparta, Ill., an event that draws thou-sands of the top trapshooters in the U.S. and abroad.

His father was quite proud of Kirk’s accomplishment.

“There are people that go up there their whole life and don’t come home with a tro-phy,” Tony Kirk Sr. said.

Kirk didn’t stop there. He competed against more than 2,000 other shooters of all ages for a chance at the big-gest event, the Grand Ameri-can Handicap.

Jim Porter with the Ameri-can Trapshooters Association said the handicap system is much like a handicap in golf and the distance from which a competitor shoots is based on known ability and other factors.

Shooting 99 clays out of 100, Kirk seemed to have se-cured a spot in the fi nal round

of the Handicap, until some-one shot a perfect 100 and left Kirk as the runner-up.

How big is runner-up? Ac-cording to Porter, “the ac-complishment he has made is huge, nothing short of huge.”

Stressing the point, Porter said, “it’s really, really, really huge.”

Porter said it is a lot like fi nishing one stroke behind Tiger Woods.

Kirk still has plenty of goals left.

“Next year,” he said, “I want to win it all.”

Local trapshooter keeps eye on targetAssociated Press

NEW YORK — At fi rst, Tyler Hamilton was impressed with the power Lance Armstrong wielded in cycling circles, his ability to call the head of the international cycling federa-tion at any time — and call him by his fi rst name.

As time passed, Hamilton saw how that power could work against him, too — for example, when he was sum-moned to the federation’s of-fi ces and warned he was being monitored shortly after beat-ing Armstrong in a race.

The 41-year-old, who rode

with Armstrong on the U.S. Postal Service team from 1998 to 2001, details the years he spent lying about us-ing performance-enhancing drugs and his relationship with Armstrong in his book, “The Secret Race, Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de

France: Doping, Cover-Ups and Winning at All Costs.”

He said coming clean about secrets he always swore he’d take to the grave gave him a sense of peace after years “of being so stressed out,” even

Hamilton: Armstrong book provides reliefAssociated Press

Please see BOOK | 9

NEW YORK — Chants of “Let’s go, Andy!” rang out be-tween points during the last service game of his career, and again before the start of what would wind up as the last return game.

Always a fan favorite at the U.S. Open, and the 2003 champion, Andy Roddick headed into retirement with a

6-7 (1), 7-6 (4), 6-2, 6-4 loss to Juan Martin del Potro of Argentina in the fourth round at Flushing Meadows on Wednesday.

It was an emotional farewell for Roddick, who sat in his changeover chair, covering his face with a white towel, af-ter sailing a running forehand long on the last point. He choked up during an on-court

speech at Arthur Ashe Sta-dium, telling the crowd, “Oh, wow. For the fi rst time in my career, I’m not sure what to say.”

“Since I was a kid, I’ve been coming to this tournament. I felt lucky just to sit where all of you are sitting today, to watch this game, to see the champions that have come and gone,” Roddick told the

fans. “I’ve loved every minute of it.”

The American surprisingly announced last Thursday, his 30th birthday, that the U.S. Open would be his fi nal tournament. That impromptu news conference came a day before Roddick’s second-round match, and he wound

Roddick’s career ends with loss to del PotroAssociated Press

Please see RODDICK | 9

Volleyball

The Corinth Lady Warriors re-mained unbeaten at home with a straight set win over Tishomingo County on Tuesday.

Corinth improved its overall mark to 12-6 — 6-0 in the Teepee — with a 3-0 win over Tishomingo County. The 25-10, 25-20, 25-19 win also provided CHS with a home-and-home sweep of the Lady Braves.

Grace Swanson paced the winners with 10 assists and tied Sadie John-son for the team lead with two aces. Johnson also chipped in five assists and was second on the squad with five kills.

Jaynesia Johnson had six kills to pace the Lady Warriors. Aundrea Adams recorded a team-best three blocks, with Prentiss Worsham and Madison Colley leading the dig effort with three each.

Corinth returns to action Monday at New Albany.

 Corinth 3, Tish County 0

Tish Co. 10 20 19 -- 0

Corinth 25 25 25 -- 3

Aces: Sadie Johnson 2, Grace Swanson 2, Madeline Shirley. Kills: Jaynesia Johnson 6, S. Johnson 5, Aundrea Adams 2, Annaleee Hen-drick, Swanson. Assists: Swanson 10, S. John-son 5. Blocks: Adams 3, Hendrick, J. Johnson. Digs: Prentiss Worsham 3, Madison Colley 3, S. Johnson, Adams, Shirley, Hendrick, J. Johnson.

Record: Corinth 12-6

BY H. LEE SMITH [email protected]

Photo Courtesy Northeast

Defensive Player of the WeekNortheast Mississippi Community College sophomore linebacker Nick Thomason was named Defensive Player of the Week by the Mississippi Association of Community/Junior Colleges. The sophomore registered 11 tackles (six solo), two tackles for loss and blocked an extra-point kick in a 33-14 loss to Copiah-Lincoln on Saturday.

Please see SHORTS | 9

Page 9: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Scoreboard Daily Corinthian • 9Thursday, September 6, 2012

Baseball

NL StandingsEast Division

W L Pct GBWashington 83 52 .615 —Atlanta 76 60 .559 7½Philadelphia 66 71 .482 18New York 65 72 .474 19Miami 60 76 .441 23½

Central Division W L Pct GBCincinnati 83 55 .601 —St. Louis 74 63 .540 8½Pittsburgh 71 64 .526 10½Milwaukee 66 69 .489 15½Chicago 51 84 .378 30½Houston 42 94 .309 40

West Division W L Pct GBSan Francisco 77 59 .566 —Los Angeles 73 64 .533 4½Arizona 67 70 .489 10½San Diego 63 74 .460 14½Colorado 56 78 .418 20

Wild Card standings W L Pct GBAtlanta 76 60 .559 —St. Louis 74 63 .540 —Los Angeles 73 64 .533 1Pittsburgh 71 64 .526 2

–––Tuesday’s Games

Washington 11, Chicago Cubs 5Pittsburgh 6, Houston 2Colorado 6, Atlanta 0Milwaukee 8, Miami 4Cincinnati 2, Philadelphia 1St. Louis 5, N.Y. Mets 1San Diego 6, L.A. Dodgers 3, 11 in-

ningsArizona 8, San Francisco 6, 11 in-

ningsWednesday’s Games

Philadelphia 6, Cincinnati 2N.Y. Mets 6, St. Louis 2Chicago Cubs at WashingtonHouston at PittsburghColorado at AtlantaMilwaukee at MiamiSan Diego at L.A. Dodgers, (n)Arizona at San Francisco, (n)

Thursday’s GamesColorado (Chacin 2-4) at Atlanta

(T.Hudson 13-5), 11:10 a.m.Milwaukee (Estrada 2-5) at Miami

(Jo.Johnson 7-11), 11:40 a.m.Chicago Cubs (Germano 2-5) at

Washington (Zimmermann 9-8), 6:05 p.m.

Friday’s GamesChicago Cubs at Pittsburgh, 6:05

p.m.Colorado at Philadelphia, 6:05 p.m.Miami at Washington, 6:05 p.m.Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 6:10 p.m.Houston at Cincinnati, 6:10 p.m.Milwaukee at St. Louis, 7:15 p.m.Arizona at San Diego, 9:05 p.m.L.A. Dodgers at San Francisco, 9:15

p.m.

AL standingsEast Division

W L Pct GBBaltimore 76 59 .563 —New York 76 59 .563 —Tampa Bay 75 61 .551 1½Boston 63 74 .460 14Toronto 60 75 .444 16

Central Division W L Pct GBChicago 74 62 .544 —Detroit 72 63 .533 1½Kansas City 61 74 .452 12½Cleveland 58 78 .426 16Minnesota 56 81 .409 18½

West Division W L Pct GBTexas 80 55 .593 —Oakland 76 60 .559 4½Los Angeles 74 63 .540 7Seattle 66 71 .482 15

Wild Card standings W L Pct GBBaltimore 76 59 .563 —New York 76 59 .563 —Oakland 76 60 .559 —Tampa Bay 75 61 .551 1Los Angeles 74 63 .540 2½Detroit 72 63 .533 3½

–––Tuesday’s Games

Cleveland 3, Detroit 2Baltimore 12, Toronto 0Tampa Bay 5, N.Y. Yankees 2Minnesota 18, Chicago White Sox 9Kansas City 6, Texas 3L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 1Boston 4, Seattle 3

Wednesday’s GamesChicago White Sox 6, Minnesota 2L.A. Angels 7, Oakland 1Cleveland at DetroitBaltimore at TorontoN.Y. Yankees at Tampa BayTexas at Kansas CityBoston at Seattle, (n)

Thursday’s GamesN.Y. Yankees (Phelps 3-4) at Baltimore

(Hammel 8-6), 6:05 p.m.Texas (Feldman 6-11) at Kansas City

(Hochevar 7-13), 7:10 p.m.Friday’s Games

N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore, 6:05 p.m.Texas at Tampa Bay, 6:10 p.m.Toronto at Boston, 6:10 p.m.Cleveland at Minnesota, 7:10 p.m.Kansas City at Chicago White Sox, 7:10

p.m.Detroit at L.A. Angels, 9:05 p.m.Oakland at Seattle, 9:10 p.m.

Top TenNATIONAL LEAGUE

G AB R H Pct.AMcCutchen Pit 130 496 92 172 .347MeCabrera SF 113 459 84 159 .346Posey SF 123 442 62 144 .326YMolina StL 116 427 53 138 .323

DWright NYM 132 489 79 153 .313CGonzalez Col 120 474 85 148 .312Braun Mil 127 494 90 154 .312Fowler Col 123 399 69 123 .308Holliday StL 133 515 85 157 .305AHill Ari 132 507 74 153 .302

Home RunsBraun, Milwaukee, 37; Bruce, Cincin-

nati, 32; Stanton, Miami, 30; Beltran, St. Louis, 28; PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 27; Kubel, Arizona, 27; LaRoche, Washing-ton, 27.

Runs Batted InBraun, Milwaukee, 98; Bruce, Cin-

cinnati, 93; Headley, San Diego, 93; Holliday, St. Louis, 92; ArRamirez, Milwaukee, 89; ASoriano, Chicago, 88; LaRoche, Washington, 87.

PitchingDickey, New York, 18-4; Cueto, Cin-

cinnati, 17-7; GGonzalez, Washington, 17-7; AJBurnett, Pittsburgh, 15-5; Strasburg, Washington, 15-6; Lohse, St. Louis, 14-2; Hamels, Philadelphia, 14-6.

AMERICAN LEAGUE G AB R H Pct.MiCabrera Det 134 521 88 172 .330Trout LAA 114 467 108 154 .330DavMurphy Tex 121 365 55 117 .321Beltre Tex 131 511 79 162 .317Jeter NYY 133 566 84 179 .316Mauer Min 127 470 71 148 .315Fielder Det 135 487 71 152 .312Butler KC 134 508 59 157 .309Konerko CWS 120 446 56 137 .307TorHunter LAA 116 442 70 135 .305

Home RunsADunn, Chicago, 38; Hamilton, Tex-

as, 38; Encarnacion, Toronto, 37; Mi-Cabrera, Detroit, 34; Granderson, New York, 34; Willingham, Minnesota, 33; Trumbo, Los Angeles, 30.

Runs Batted InHamilton, Texas, 114; MiCabrera,

Detroit, 113; Willingham, Minnesota, 98; Encarnacion, Toronto, 95; Fielder, Detroit, 93; Pujols, Los Angeles, 92; ADunn, Chicago, 88.

PitchingPrice, Tampa Bay, 17-5; Weaver, Los

Angeles, 16-4; Sale, Chicago, 15-6; Scherzer, Detroit, 15-6; MHarrison, Texas, 15-9; Vargas, Seattle, 14-9; Darvish, Texas, 14-9.

BasketballWNBA Glance

EASTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBx-Connecticut 20 7 .741 —x-Indiana 17 8 .680 2Atlanta 14 13 .519 6Chicago 10 16 .385 9½New York 10 16 .385 9½Washington 5 22 .185 15

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L Pct GBx-Minnesota 22 4 .846 —x-Los Angeles 19 9 .679 4x-San Antonio 17 9 .654 5Seattle 11 14 .440 10½Phoenix 6 19 .240 15½Tulsa 6 20 .231 16

x-clinched playoff spot—

Tuesday’s GamesConnecticut 77, Washington 70Minnesota 88, Los Angeles 77

Wednesday’s GamesIndiana at AtlantaPhoenix at New York

Thursday’s GamesTulsa at Seattle, 9 p.m.

Friday’s GamesPhoenix at Connecticut, 6 p.m.Los Angeles at Washington, 6 p.m.Chicago at New York, 6:30 p.m.Atlanta at Minnesota, 7 p.m.Indiana at San Antonio, 7 p.m.

Football

Top 25 ScheduleSaturday

No. 1 Alabama vs. Western Ken-tucky, 2:30 p.m.

No. 2 Southern Cal vs. Syracuse at East Rutherford, N.J., 2:30 p.m.

No. 3 LSU vs. Washington, 6 p.m.No. 4 Oregon vs. Fresno State, 5:30

p.m.No. 5 Oklahoma vs. Florida A&M, 6

p.m.No. 6 Florida State vs. Savannah

State, 5 p.m.No. 7 Georgia at Missouri, 6:45 p.m.No. 8 Arkansas vs. Louisiana-Mon-

roe at Little Rock, Ark., 6 p.m.No. 9 South Carolina vs. East Caro-

lina, 11:21 a.m.No. 11 Michigan State at Central

Michigan, 2:30 p.m.No. 12 Clemson vs. Ball State,

11:30 a.m.No. 13 Wisconsin at Oregon State,

3 p.m.No. 14 Ohio State vs. UCF, 11 a.m.No. 15 Virginia Tech vs. Austin Peay,

12:30 p.m.No. 16 Nebraska at UCLA, 6:30 p.m.No. 17 Texas vs. New Mexico, 7 p.m.No. 18 Oklahoma State at Arizona,

9:30 p.m.No. 19 Michigan vs. Air Force, 2:30

p.m.No. 20 TCU vs. Grambling, 6 p.m.No. 21 Kansas State vs. Miami, 11

a.m.No. 22 Notre Dame vs. Purdue, 2:30

p.m.No. 23 Louisville vs. Missouri State,

2:30 p.m.No. 24 Florida at Texas A&M, 2:30

p.m.No. 25 Stanford vs. Duke, 9:30 p.m.

NFL scheduleFirst Week

Wednesday, Sept. 5Dallas at N.Y. Giants, 7:30 p.m.

Sunday, Sept. 9Indianapolis at Chicago, NoonPhiladelphia at Cleveland, NoonSt. Louis at Detroit, NoonMiami at Houston, NoonAtlanta at Kansas City, NoonJacksonville at Minnesota, NoonWashington at New Orleans, NoonBuffalo at N.Y. Jets, NoonNew England at Tennessee, NoonSeattle at Arizona, 3:25 p.m.San Francisco at Green Bay, 3:25 p.m.Carolina at Tampa Bay, 3:25 p.m.Pittsburgh at Denver, 7:20 p.m.

Monday, Sept. 10Cincinnati at Baltimore, 6 p.m.San Diego at Oakland, 9:15 p.m.

NFL preseasonAMERICAN CONFERENCE

East W L T Pct PF PANew England 1 3 0 .250 55 69Buffalo 0 4 0 .000 59 119Miami 0 4 0 .000 43 96N.Y. Jets 0 4 0 .000 31 88

South W L T Pct PF PAHouston 3 1 0 .750 101 80Jacksonville 3 1 0 .750 100 117Tennessee 3 1 0 .750 89 67Indianapolis 2 2 0 .500 99 75

North W L T Pct PF PAPittsburgh 3 1 0 .750 104 71Baltimore 2 2 0 .500 108 92Cincinnati 2 2 0 .500 70 72Cleveland 2 2 0 .500 84 82

West W L T Pct PF PASan Diego 3 1 0 .750 64 78Denver 2 2 0 .500 81 75Kansas City 1 3 0 .250 61 116Oakland 1 3 0 .250 61 75

NATIONAL CONFERENCEEast

W L T Pct PF PAPhiladelphia 4 0 0 1.000 106 60Dallas 3 1 0 .750 73 60Washington 3 1 0 .750 98 59N.Y. Giants 2 2 0 .500 80 58

South W L T Pct PF PACarolina 2 2 0 .500 69 72Tampa Bay 2 2 0 .500 60 95New Orleans 2 3 0 .400 87 81Atlanta 1 3 0 .250 73 85

North W L T Pct PF PAChicago 3 1 0 .750 84 99Detroit 2 2 0 .500 102 94Green Bay 2 2 0 .500 74 72Minnesota 1 3 0 .250 76 71

West W L T Pct PF PASeattle 4 0 0 1.000 122 44San Francisco 3 1 0 .750 90 53St. Louis 2 2 0 .500 84 92Arizona 1 4 0 .200 98 119

MiscellaneousTransactions

BASEBALLCarolina League

WINSTON-SALEM DASH–Assigned RHP James Hudelson to Kannapolis (SAL).

American AssociationSIOUX FALLS PHEASANTS–Traded

INF Cory Morales to Southern Mary-land (Atlantic) for a player to be named.

ST. PAUL SAINTS–Traded LHP Brian Gump to San Rafael (North American) to complete an Aug. 15 trade.

Atlantic LeagueLONG ISLAND DUCKS–Acquired

the rights to RHP John Brownell from Grand Prairie (AA) for future consider-ations. Signed RHP John Brownell. Re-leased RHP Bubbie Buzachero.

BASKETBALLNational Basketball Association

NBA–Named Mike Bantom executive vice president, referee operations.

FOOTBALLNational Football League

NEW YORK JETS–Re-signed DT Mar-cus Dixon. Signed P Robert Malone. Released LB Ricky Sapp from the prac-tice squad. Signed CB LeQuan Lewis to the practice squad.

Canadian Football LeagueEDMONTON ESKIMOS–Acquired the

rights for OL Matthew O’Donnell from Saskatchewan for WR Greg Carr.

Arena Football LeagueORLANDO PREDATORS–Named

Doug Plank coach.HOCKEY

National Hockey LeagueOTTAWA SENATORS–Signed C Zack

Smith to a four-year contract extension through the 2016-17 season.

American Hockey LeaguePROVIDENCE BRUINS–Signed F Jus-

tin Courtnall.ECHL

READING ROYALS–Agreed to terms with F Julien Cayer and D Garrett Clarke.

COLLEGEMISSISSIPPI STATE–Dismissed

junior F Shaun Smith and junior F Kristers Zeidaks from the men’s bas-ketball team for repeated violations of team rules.

OHIO STATE–Named Dave Rollins men’s assistant swimming coach.

Soccer

MLS standingsEASTERN CONFERENCE

W L T Pts GF GASp. Kansas City 15 7 5 50 34 24New York 13 7 7 46 46 39Chicago 13 8 5 44 35 31Houston 11 7 9 42 39 33Columbus 12 8 6 42 33 30D.C. 12 10 5 41 43 38Montreal 12 14 3 39 43 46Philadelphia 7 13 5 26 25 30New England 6 14 7 25 33 38Toronto FC 5 16 6 21 30 48

WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GASan Jose 16 6 5 53 56 33Real Salt Lake 14 10 4 46 38 32Seattle 12 6 8 44 41 27Los Angeles 13 11 4 43 48 40Vancouver 10 11 7 37 29 37FC Dallas 8 12 9 33 34 38Chivas USA 7 11 7 28 20 39Portland 7 13 6 27 27 43Colorado 8 17 2 26 33 41

NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie.

Sunday’s GamesFC Dallas 1, Seattle FC 1, tieChicago 3, Houston 1San Jose 4, Chivas USA 0

Wednesday, Sept. 5Columbus at New England, 7 p.m.Portland at Colorado, 8 p.m.

Thursday, Sept. 6Real Salt Lake at Houston, 7:30

p.m.Saturday, Sept. 8

Chivas USA at Seattle FC, 3 p.m.

Auto racing

Weekend scheduleNASCAR

FEDERATED AUTO PARTS 400

Site: Richmond, Va.Schedule: Friday, practice (ESPN2,

11 a.m.-2:30 p.m.), qualifying (ESPN2, 4:30-6 p.m.); Saturday, race, 6:30 p.m. (ABC, 6-10 p.m.).

Track: Richmond International Race-way (oval, 0.75 miles).

Race distance: 300 miles, 400 laps.

Last year: Kevin Harvick won the last of his four 2011 victories.

Last week: Denny Hamlin raced to his second straight victory and series-leading fourth of the season, holding off Jeff Gordon in a green-white-check-ered fi nish at Atlanta. Hamlin won the previous week at Bristol.

Fast facts: The race ends the regu-lar season. The top 10 in the stand-ings and the top two victory leaders from Nos. 11-20 will earn spots in the Chase. Greg Biffl e, Dale Earnhardt Jr., Matt Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson, Martin Truex Jr., Brad Keselowski, Hamlin, Clint Bowyer and Harvick have wrapped up spots in the top 10, and No. 10 Tony Stewart has clinched a wild-card spot as a three-time winner. No. 11 Kasey Kahne, with two victo-ries, is in position to take the second wild card spot. ... The points will be re-set to 2,000 for each Chase qualifi er, and the top 10 will receive three points for each regular-season victory. ... Hamlin, from nearby Chesterfi eld, won the September races at the track in 2009 and 2010. ... Stewart is a three-time Richmond winner. Kyle Busch won the Richmond spring race for the fourth straight year. ... Joe Gibbs Rac-ing announced Tuesday that Kenseth will drive for the team next year, replac-ing Joey Logano. Kenseth is leaving Roush Fenway. Penske Racing also an-nounced Tuesday that Logano will drive for the team.

Next race: Geico 400, Sept. 16, Chi-cagoland Speedway, Joliet, Ill.

Online: http://www.nascar.com–––

NATIONWIDE

Virginia 529 College Savings 250

Site: Richmond, Va.Schedule: Friday, practice, qualify-

ing (ESPN2, 3-4 p.m.), race, 6:30 p.m. (ESPN, 6-9 p.m.).

Track: Richmond International Race-way (oval, 0.75 miles).

Race distance: 187.5 miles, 250 laps.

Last year: Kyle Busch raced to his eighth victory of the year and the last of his Nationwide-record 51 career wins.

Last week: Ricky Stenhouse Jr. won at Atlanta, using a late push from run-ner-up Brad Keselowski to pass Kevin Harvick. Stenhouse, the defending se-ries champion, has four victories this season.

Fast facts: Elliott Sadler leads the season standings, 12 points ahead of Stenhouse. Sam Hornish Jr. is third, 32 points back. Sadler has four vic-tories this year, matching Stenhouse for the most among series regulars. ... Sprint Cup drivers Denny Hamlin, Harvick and Kurt Busch are racing. Harvick has won fi ve Nationwide races at Richmond, and Hamlin has two se-ries victories at his home track. Kurt Busch won the spring race at the track in a car owned by brother Kyle Busch. ... Danica Patrick is making her 50th series start.

Next race: Dollar General 300, Chi-cagoland Speedway, Joliet, Ill.

Online: http://www.nascar.com–––

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK

Next race: American Ethanol 200, Sept. 15, Iowa Speedway, Newton, Iowa.

Last week: Ty Dillon raced to his fi rst NASCAR Truck victory, passing Kyle Busch with six laps to go at Atlanta.

Online: http://www.nascar.com–––

NHRA FULL THROTTLE

U.S. NATIONALS

Site: Clermont, Ind.Schedule: Saturday, qualifying; Sun-

day, fi nal eliminations (ESPN2, 2-7 p.m.).

Track: Lucas Oil Raceway.Last year: Antron Brown became the

fi rst U.S. Nationals winner in both Top Fuel and Pro Stock Motorcycle, beat-ing Del Worsham in the Top Fuel fi nal. Mike Neff raced to the Funny Car vic-tory, Greg Anderson won in Pro Stock, and Hector Arana Jr. topped the Pro Stock Motorcycle fi eld.

Last event: Ron Capps won in Brain-erd, Minn., on Aug. 22 to take the Fun-ny Car points lead. Erica Enders raced to her third Pro Stock victory of the season and second in a row. Morgan Lucas won the Top Fuel division, and Eddie Krawiec topped the Pro Stock Motorcycle fi eld.

Fast facts: The event was post-poned after rain washed out the fi nal two rounds of qualifying Sunday and the fi nal eliminations Monday. ... The competition ends the 17-race regular season. The top 10 in each division will qualify for the six-race Countdown to the Championship. ... Brown leads the Top Fuel standings, 58 points ahead of Spencer Massey. Both driv-ers have four victories this season. Massey had the qualifying lead when racing was suspended. ... Capps, a three-time winner this year, has a 53-point lead over Robert Hight in the Funny Car standings. Hight won four straight events from February to April. Courtney Force had the qualifying lead ... Allen Johnson leads the Pro Stock points race and has a series-best four victories. ... Krawiec tops the Pro Stock Motorcycle standings and has six victories.

Next event: O’Reilly Auto Parts Na-tionals, Sept. 14-16, zMAX Dragway, Concord, N.C.

Online: http://www.nhra.com–––

FORMULA ONE

ITALIAN GRAND PRIX

Site: Monza, Italy.Schedule: Friday, practice (Speed,

7-8:30 a.m.), Saturday, practice, quali-fying (Speed, 7-8:30 a.m.); Sunday, race, 7 a.m. (Speed, 6:30-9 a.m.).

Track: Autodromo Nazionale di Mon-za (road course, 3.6 miles).

Race distance: 190.8 miles, 53 laps.

Last year: Red Bull’s Sebastian Vet-tel raced to the eighth of his 11 vic-tories en route to his second straight season title.

Last week: McLaren’s Jenson But-ton won the Belgian Grand Prix for his second victory of year. Points leader Fernando Alonso was sent fl ying off the track in an early wreck triggered by Romain Grosjean.

Fast facts: Alonso, the 2010 winner on Ferrari’s home track, has a 24-point lead over second-place Vettel in the season standings. Alonso leads the series with three victories. Vettel has one victory. ... Grosjean will sit out the race after receiving a one-event ban for dangerous driving. Grosjean went for a small gap and clipped Lewis Ham-ilton’s McLaren. That sent both cars spinning and led to Grosjean’s Lotus fl ying over Alonso’s Ferrari, which then took out Sergio Perez’s Sauber. All four drivers escaped injury. Jerome D’Ambrosio will drive in place of Gros-jean.

Next race: Singapore Grand Prix, Sept. 23, Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore.

Online: http://www.formula1.com–––

INDYCARNext race: MAVTV 500, Sept. 15,

Auto Club Speedway, Fontana, Calif.Last week: Ryan Hunter-Reay won

the Grand Prix of Baltimore for his series-leading fourth victory of the season. The Andretti Autosport driver is second in the standings, 17 points behind Will Power with one race left.

Online: http://www.indycar.com

Television

Thursday’s lineupSchedule subject to change and/or

blackouts.COLLEGE FOOTBALL

7 p.m. (ESPN) – Pittsburgh at Cin-cinnati

GOLF7:30 a.m. (TGC) – European PGA

Tour, KLM Open, fi rst round, at Hilver-sum, Netherlands

11:30 a.m. (TGC) – LPGA, Kingsmill Championship, fi rst round, at Williams-burg, Va.

2 p.m. (TGC) – PGA Tour, BMW Cham-pionship, fi rst round, at Carmel, Ind.

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

N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore or Texas at Kansas City (8 p.m. start)

TENNIS11 a.m. (ESPN2) – U.S. Open, men’s

quarterfi nal and mixed doubles cham-pionship match, at New York

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

well after he retired.“The truth will set you free, I’d

always heard that term,” Ham-ilton told The Associated Press during an interview Wednes-day. “Once in a while, when I was younger, I’d lie, then tell the truth and I’d feel better. But this was like a thousand-pound backpack off my shoulders. I was out of cycling, I was continuing to live my life in my post-cycling career. But I was miserable. There was something wrong.”

The book, released Wednes-day, is a culmination of a gut-wrenching 18 months for Ham-ilton, who provided details to a grand jury looking into the Arm-strong case, then talked about them during an interview on “60 Minutes.” All of his information was used in the case the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency brought against Armstrong.

Armstrong has long denied doping but last week chose not to fi ght drug charges by USA-DA, which last month erased 14 years of Armstrong’s competitive results, including his seven Tour de France titles.

Wearing a light grey suit and long curly hair that brushed his neck, Hamilton looked and sounded much more relaxed than the halting, hesitant person who appeared on “60 Minutes” in May 2011.

up winning that one, and a third-rounder, too, riding a wave of support in the stands.

But those two opponents were ranked 43rd and 59th, and the seventh-seeded del Potro, the 2009 U.S. Open champion, pro-vided a far more daunting chal-lenge — especially once he lifted his energy level and got his big, fl at forehand cranked up.

The match was suspended be-cause of rain Tuesday night after Roddick took the fi rst point of the opening-set tiebreaker, and they resumed more than 18 hours lat-er in front of thousands of empty blue seats. It took Roddick only four minutes to close that set, fresh and strong as can be, while del Potro was rather sluggish.

The key, probably, was the third set.

Neither man faced so much as a single break point, and this time it was del Potro’s turn to dominate the tiebreaker. Gain-ing more traction on his oppo-nent’s once-all-powerful serve, del Potro whipped a cross-court forehand return right at Rod-dick’s feet on set point.

Del Potro’s momentum swing continued when he broke to be-gin the third set. He hit a drop shot that Roddick chased, grunt-ing loudly, and eventually del Potro deposited a passing win-ner that left Roddick hanging his head.

Del Potro broke again for a 3-0 edge in that set, producing a drop shot winner that Roddick didn’t even chase.

BOOK

RODDICK

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 8

The Church league will bowl on Tuesday nights and will consist of 4-per-son teams and each per-son must be a member of that church. Thursday morning league is open to ladies only and starts at 9 a.m. The youth league will bowl on Sat-urday mornings at 10:30. Any person interested in entering or joining a team should call Plaza Lanes

at 286-8105.  Corinth KIX Soccer

A few spots are avail-able on the Corinth KIX soccer team, a club that travels to tournaments in Northeast Mississippi and Southern Tennes-see. Age limit is 10-13, depending on birthday. Minimal cost required. For information on a try-out call Brian (415-3215) and leave a message.

 BaseballRecord Book

The 2012 Mississippi Baseball Record Book, which includes public schools and four-year state colleges, is out and can be purchased for $10.

The book can be or-dered by mailing payment to: Mississippi Baseball Record Book, Diamonds By Smillie, 3159 Kendrick Road Corinth, MS 38334.

Baseball Tryouts

■ The West Tennes-see Wildcats, a 7U travel baseball team, will be holding tryouts for the 2013 season. If inter-ested call Chad at 731-646-0426.

■ The Jackson Athlet-ics, a 13U majors travel team, will be holding try-outs for the fall and 2013 season.

If interested call Jason at 901-487-6875.

SHORTS

CONTINUED FROM 8

TN/MS Handgun Carry ClassNow Certifi ed Mississippi “Enhanced”

Carry Permit Class-NRA Certifi ed Instructors1 Day • Sat., September 8, 2012

8:30 a.m.

2645 Damon RdCounce, TN

Tri-State Gun Club

901-262-8072“Non-Profi t”

LUNCH & RANGE INCLUDED

80 Yrs.Experience!

Take Hwy 350 to CR 375, turn left onto CR 375, bear right, turns into Damon Rd.

Gun Club is 3.7 miles on the right

HAPPY With Your Health Insurance Plan?

1509 Highway 72 East Corinth, MS 38835

662-665-7970bfi [email protected]

Floyd Insurance Services, LLC

Annuities/IRA’sInterest Rates

Medicare Supplements, Life/Final Expenses, Cancer, Accident, Dental, Group & Individual Major, Medical Health

2.00%/3YRS 2. 5%/5YRS 3.10%/7YRS 3.20%/9YRS

36 years experience

With Your CD RATES?????

2.00%/3YRS2.00%/3YRS 2.85%/5YRS2.85%/5YRS 3.10%/7YRS3.10%/7YRS 3.50%/10YRS3.50%/10YRS

Floyd Insurance Services, LLC

Medicare Supplements, Life/Final Expenses, Cancer, Accident, Dental, Group & Individual Major, Medical Health

Taking better care of you!

Jimmy BennettJi B

Bennett Apothecary2049 Shiloh Road • Corinth, MS

Phone: 662-286-6914

Diabetes TipWant to know how a particular meal affects your blood sugar? Check it just before the first bite of that meal and again one and a half to two hours after that. Its OK to go up about 50-60 points. If it goes up more then you may need to make an adjustement in food or medicine. Remember your after meal blood sugar goal should be under 180 according to the American Diabetes Association. Some doctors even recommend that you be under 140. Controlling your diabetes can help you to reduce the risk of damage to your eyes, kidneys, nerves and most of all your heart.

September is National Childhood Obesity Awareness Month

One in three American children is already overweight or obese. They are at greater risk of cardiovascu-lar disease, bone and joint prob-lems, sleep apnea, sychological problems, bullying and more. This is a sobering public health issue, compounding as overweight and obesity continue into adulthood. The financial implications of child-hood obesity are sobering, at $14 billion per year in direct health care costs alone. Increased awareness and prevention of childhood obe-sity will save billions of dollars in unnecessary health care costs and promote healthier lifestyles to im-

prove and prolong the lives of the next gen-eration of Americans. Protect ing the health and well-being of A m e r i c a n c h i l d r e n for years to come is a critical endeavor. Adults must ensure that young people re-ceive a healthy start in life.

• Monday night is for Men and Women

• Tuesday night is Church League (Teams must be composed of church members only!)

Anyone interested in joining one of these leagues,

call Plaza Lanes @ 286-8105 or 415-3555

Plaza Plaza Bowling LanesBowling Lanes“Find out why 70 million Americans have made “Find out why 70 million Americans have made

bowling the #1 participation sport!”bowling the #1 participation sport!”2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS2001 Shiloh Rd. • Corinth, MS

662-286-8105 662-286-8105 Bowling-America’s #1 Participation Sport!Bowling-America’s #1 Participation Sport!

Attention all BOWLERS!!Attention all BOWLERS!!Plaza Lanes is introducing itsPlaza Lanes is introducing its

FALL LEAGUE SCHEDULE!!FALL LEAGUE SCHEDULE!!

Page 10: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

10 • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

CINCINNATI — Not even the return of All-Star fi rst baseman Joey Votto was enough to help the Cincinnati Reds win a se-ries from the Philadelphia Phillies.

Votto went 2-for-3 with a walk in his fi rst game since July 15, but Erik Kratz hit a three-run home run, Chase Utley added a two-run shot, and Roy Halladay pitched the Phillies to a 6-2 win on Wednesday.

Votto lined the third pitch he saw in 52 days

to left fi eld for a single with two outs in the fi rst inning. He walked in the fourth and singled to left-center in the sixth before striking out look-ing against left-hander Antonio Bastardo in the eighth.

“I think it went better than I expected,” Votto said. “I was happy to be back in the lineup play-ing. Unfortunately, it came with a loss.”

Reds manager Dusty Baker thought about tak-ing Votto out in the sev-enth, but changed his

mind when Votto said he was OK.

“Joey’s fi ne,” Baker said. “I think those (medi-cal) rehab days (in the mi-nor leagues) really helped. I asked him in the seventh inning how he was doing, and he said he was fi ne.”

“He looked pretty good to me. He even slid. We didn’t anticipate him slid-ing on that double-play ball, but he’s a ballplayer.”

Votto hurt his knee slid-ing into third base in San Francisco on June 29. He went into another slid Wednesday in the fourth

inning.“The knee held up well

until Bastardo buckled it,” Votto joked. “I was a little apprehensive and did some things gingerly. I have to get over that hurdle, and I will at some point.”

Votto said he was hum-bled by the ovation he received when he went out just before the game to loosen up, and by the standing ovation given to him by half of the crowd when he stepped to the plate in the fi rst inning.

“I’m appreciative of the

support,” said Votto, who admitted on Tuesday to being apprehensive about his reception. “It exceed-ed my expectations.”

Halladay, 4-1 in his last six starts, is 110-0 when he is staked to a lead of at least four runs.

Halladay (9-7) scat-tered eight hits over 7 1-3 innings, allowing one run with fi ve strikeouts and one walk. Philadel-phia won two of three in the series against the NL Central leaders and went 4-3 overall this season. The Phillies have won

nine straight season se-ries against the Reds.

The Reds went 32-16 while Votto was out due to two operations related to a torn meniscus in his left knee.

Votto fi nished 2-for-3 with a walk and a strike-out for Cincinnati, which lost a series for just the third time in 16 matchups since the All-Star break (11-3-2).

Jay Bruce homered for the fourth consecu-tive game, but it wasn’t enough to rally the Reds in the ninth inning.

Votto’s return doesn’t help Reds against PhilliesThe Associated Press

The Washington Nationals are closing in ontheir first postseason berth since movingto Washington in 2005. While there hasbeen great baseball tradition in Washing-ton dating back to the early 1900s, there

has been very little postseason baseballin our nation’s capital. Can you name theonly three teams to play postseason gamesin Washington DC?

New York Yankees at BaltimoreLast weekend at New York, the Orioles wontwo of three to creep ever closer to the Yan-kees in the AL East. The Yankees’ lead, whichhad reached double-digits in July, stood at justtwo games at the end of the weekend. New-comer Randy Wolf earned his first win as anOriole on Sunday in relief of Chris Tillman, wholeft injured. Baltimore ace Wei-Yin Chen willpitch the first game of the four-game set onThursday. Youngster Zach Britton, who hasgiven up just three runs over his last threestarts, will pitch the finale for Baltimore. TheYankees will send 13-game winners PhilHughes (Friday) and CC Sabathia (Saturday) tothe mound.

Los Angeles Dodgers at San FranciscoForget about home-field advantage in thisgreat rivalry. The last two series have beenswept by the visitors — Los Angeles in SanFrancisco and the Giants in L.A. Chad Billings-ley (with relief help) and Clayton Kershawhurled back-to-back shutouts during theDodgers’ last visit to San Fran, but neither willpitch in this series. The scheduled pitchingmatchups do not exactly exude classic pen-nant race drama. Josh Beckett, Chris Capuanoand Joe Blanton will pitch for the visitors, whileTim Lincecum, Matt Cain and Barry Zito willgo for the Giants.

Adrian Beltre, TexasBeltre is honored here for the second week ina row as he continues to creep into the MVPdiscussion. The Texas third baseman had threethree-hit games last week and batted .478with a 1.563 OPS. Among his seven extra-basehits were three home runs, and he drove inseven runs. Beltre closed the week with an 8-for-14 series against Cleveland, all the whileplaying excellent defense at the hot corner.

Christian Yelich, MiamiThe 20-year-old is already in his third profes-sional season. The slim outfielder has playedin 106 games at High-A Jupiter batting .330with 12 home runs and 20 steals.

Chris Owings, ArizonaThe defensive whiz split time between High-A and Double-A this season. After hitting .324at Visalia, he was promoted to Mobile wherehe’s batting .259.

21 Age of Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout, who is the youngest player ever to hit 25 home runs and steal 40 bases in a season. Trout is bidding to become just the third rookie to win an MVP award.

58-0 Record for the Baltimore Orioles when leading after seven innings.

32 Runs in August for Angel Pagan of the Giants. No other National Leaguer scored more than 22.

4 1-0 losses by the Tampa Bay Rays this season, which leads the majors. Two of the games went 10 innings and all four came in August.

5 American League teams with a winning record vs. the AL West. The division-leading Texas Rangers are not one of the five. The list includes the Yankees and Rays from the East, the White Sox from the Central and the Angels and A’s from the West.

11,759 Average attendance for a four-game series in Baltimore featuring the White Sox and Orioles — essentially twoplayoff teams in a city presumably of fans starved for winning baseball. #smh

1997 The last season the Red Sox finished below .500. They must finish 19-8 to avoid a losing season.

Stephen Strasburg Athlon Sports

Hisashi Iwakuma, SeattleYou may not be familiar with Iwakuma, but heis quickly becoming one of Seattle’s topstarters. Last week he was 2-0 with a 0.00ERA and 0.75 WHIP. After a win at Minnesota,the slender righthander tossed 7.1 shutout in-nings against the Angels, giving up just fivehits, no walks and seven strikeouts in the 2-1win. The Mariners have won his last five starts.

Pedro Alvarez, PittsburghThe Pirates’ third baseman is beginning to un-lock the potential that made him the secondoverall pick in 2008. He began last week with10 hits in four games, including 11 total basesin a win over St. Louis on Tuesday. He batted.458 with a 1.542 OPS and led the NL with fourhome runs. During the week, he either scoredor drove home more than a third of the Pirates’runs.

Bud Norris, HoustonIt isn’t easy getting wins these days in Houston,but that doesn’t prevent Norris from pitchingwell enough to earn victories. In 12.2 inningsover two starts, Norris had a 0.95 ERA and 0.71WHIP pitching against San Francisco andCincinnati. He left the Giants game after 6.2 in-nings with the score tied 1-1, then tossed sixshutout innings over the Reds and left with a1-0 lead. The Astros’ bullpen lost both games.

Sudden ImpactFirst at-bat in the 2012 Futures Game: HomeRun. First at-bat in the big leagues: home run.Second at-bat in the majors: double. That’sjust a taste of what this summer has been likefor Texas Rangers’ rising star Jurickson Pro-far. The 19-year-old made his major leaguedebut for the Rangers last Sunday, playingsecond base, a postion he has played very lit-tle in the minors. A natural shortstop, Profarhad appeared just 25 times at second base,but handled the position well for the Rangers.The youngster’s exploits have had re-searchers rifling through pages of history tofind other teenage phenoms and their first at-bats. Here’s a sampling: • Profar is now the youngest player ever tohomer for the Rangers, besting Ivan Ro-driguez.• The last 19-year-old in the American Leagueto homer in his first game was pitcher DennyMcLain, but not in his first at-bat.• At 19 years, 195 days, Profar is the youngestMLB player to homer since his teammateAdrian Beltre did it for the Dodgers back in1998. • According to Elias Sports Bureau, Profarjoins Whitey Lockman (1945) and Ted Tappe(1950) as the only teenagers to homer in theirfirst at-bats, only Lockman at 18 years, 345days, was younger.

1. Reds Cruising to NL Central title.2. Nationals Can Nats hold on without Stephen Strasburg?3. Rangers Jurickson Profar certainly looks like the real deal.4. Yankees Huge week coming up at Tampa and Baltimore.5. Giants Went 5-1 on back-to-back road trips.6. Braves Bravos feel like they can run down the Nats.7. A’s Where did all this winning come from?8. Rays Next 12 games against contenders.9. Orioles Within one good weekend of catching the Yanks.

10. Tigers Maybe this time they really do have control of the division.11. White Sox Tigers’ ace Verlander beat Sox ace Sale on Sunday.12. Dodgers Must gain ground against the Giants this weekend.13. Cardinals Offense took about a week off.14. Pirates Back-to-back shutouts over St. Louis looked good at the time.15. Angels Won 9 of 12 to climb back in race; 7 of next 10 games vs. A’s.16. Diamondbacks Still nine games left with San Francisco.17. Mariners Continue to bank on starting pitching.18. Phillies Committed to being a spoiler down the stretch.19. Brewers One of the teams that contenders don’t want to play right now.20. Mets Can affect wild card race vs. Cards, Braves and Nats.21. Padres Last seven saves by four different pitchers.22. Royals Finishing with a flurry could yield 76 wins, most since 2003.23. Red Sox Can Bobby V and Dustin Pedroia coexist?24. Blue Jays Last two series Jays won were against Yankees and Tigers.25. Marlins Ozzie Guillen will likely get a mulligan on this season.26. Twins Need just eight wins to avoid 100 losses.27. Rockies Can the Rockies get one pitcher to 10 wins?28. Indians Need to learn from this season and move on.29. Cubs Optimistic about young players, but lots of holes to fill.30. Astros Total house cleaning on the field and in the front office.

Sept. 6, 1995As MLB and its players desperately try to mendfences with fans after a labor dispute cancelledthe 1994 postseason and delayed the beginningof the season, Cal Ripken Jr. emerges as a savinggrace for the game. Ripken plays in his 2,131stconsecutive game for the Baltimore Orioles, break-ing a record once thought to be untouchable. Thegame is delayed for 20 minutes in the fifth inningas the crowd celebrates the accomplishment.

Sept. 4, 1998With their 11-6 win over the White Sox at US Cel-lular Field, the Yankees establish a new mark forthe earliest date to reach 100 wins. With a recordof 100-38, the Yankees break the existing stan-dard by five days.

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

Athlon Sports

The Angels’ Mike Trout continuesto chase history as a 21-year-oldrookie bidding to become just thethird rookie to win AL MVP honors.How does his season stack up againstthe best rookie seasons of all-time?

Here’s at glance at the best rookieseasons ever.1. Ted Williams, Boston Red Sox, 1939

The Splendid Splinter burst onto thescene in Boston leading the ALwith145 RBIs and 344 total bases. Hiscommand of the strike zone was im-mediately evident by his 107 walks. 2. Albert Pujols, St. Louis Cardinals, 2001

After a meteoric rise through the mi-nors, the 13th-round draft pick startedmore than 30 games at four differentpositions. On a team that includedMark McGwire and Jim Edmonds, therookie led the Redbirds in runs, hits,doubles, home runs and RBIs.3. Dale Alexander, Detroit Tigers, 1929

His career was brief — only fiveseasons — due a knee injury, but hisrookie season was stellar. The Tigers’first baseman led the circuit with 215hits and did not miss a game. He wona batting title in 1932.

4. Fred Lynn, Boston Red Sox, 1975Some of his numbers pale compared

to other eras, but the 1970s were notkind to hitters. The Gold Glove out-fielder is one of only six rookies everwith 100 runs and RBIs, and he led theAL in runs, doubles, slugging and OPS.He was the first rookie to win an MVP.

5. Richie Allen, Philadelphia Phillies, 1964Later known as Dick Allen, the

enigmatic slugger had some difficultyfinding a home later in his career. Butduring his rookie season, the Phillies’offense leaned on him as he led theNL in runs and triples. He startedevery game at third base.6. Mark McGwire, Oakland A’s, 1987

Before his arms blew up like Pop-eye’s, McGwire was a feared sluggerfor Oakland. Part of the Bash Brotherswith Jose Canseco, McGwire estab-lished a rookie record with 49 homeruns, which led the AL that season. 7. Ichiro Suzuki, Seattle Mariners, 2001

Ichiro came to America as theowner of seven batting titles in Japan,not exactly inexperienced. But win-ning a batting title, a stolen base titleand earning MVP honors in his firstseason in the U.S. is impressive. 8. Tony Oliva, Minnesota Twins, 1964

Oliva won a batting title and led theAmerican League in hits, runs anddoubles. He joined Hall of FamersRod Carew and Harmon Killebrew ina formidable lineup in the 1960s, lead-ing the Twins to the World Series in1965, and to two division titles in1969-70.

9. Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankees, 1936Joltin’ Joe began his assault on AL

pitching right out of the box. He fin-ished eighth in MVP voting and itmarked the only time in his career thathe led the league in triples.10. Carlton Fisk, Boston Red Sox, 1972

Our most vivid memory of Fisk isthe stout catcher waving a home runfair to walkoff Game 6 of the 1975World Series. Pudge won a Gold Gloveas a rookie and led the AL with ninetriples. His OPS+ of 162 ranks amongthe best ever for a first-year player.11. Frank Robinson, Cincinnati Reds, 1956

Robinson, who would become thefirst player to win the MVP award inboth leagues, got the attention of NLpitchers quickly in 1956. His OPS of.936 finished second in the NL to DukeSnider, and ranked ahead of WillieMays, Hank Aaron and Stan Musial.12. Johnny Mize, St. Louis Cardinals, 1936

The Hall of Famer had a .400 on-base percentage in each of his first sixseasons. He missed three full seasonsdue to WWII service, and wasn’t quitethe same player when he returned.13. Nomar Garciaparra, Boston Red Sox, 1997

Nomar led the league in hits andtriples during his rookie campaign. Heearned a trip to the All-Star Game, fin-ished eighth in MVP balloting andwon a Silver Slugger award.14. Ryan Braun, Milwaukee Brewers, 2007

His rookie season was briefer thanmost since he didn’t make his debutuntil May 25. But his 34 home runstied for fifth in the league and his .634slugging topped the NL.15. Mike Piazza, Los Angeles Dodgers, 1993

The second of five consecutiveDodgers to win the NL Rookie of theYear, Piazza started 141 games behindthe plate. He led the Dodgers in aver-age, runs, homers and RBIs. HONORABLE MENTIONSDel Bissonette, Brooklyn Dodgers, 1928Del Ennis, Philadelphia Phillies, 1946Mitchell Page, Oakland A’s, 1977Paul Waner, Pittsburgh Pirates, 1926

Best Rookie Seasons of All-Time

TRIVIA ANSWER: The old Washington Senators of the AmericanLeague (who moved to Minneapolis in 1961) playedin the World Series in 1924, 1925 and 1933. ThePittsburgh Pirates and New York Giants representedthe National League in those Series.

Williams, Getty Images; Pujols, AP ImagesMike Trout of the Angels conjures up memories of a young Ted Williams (left) and Trout’steammate Albert Pujols during their rookie campaigns. Will Trout have a similar career?

Year Player, Team G R H HR RBI Avg. OPS1939 Ted Williams, BOS 149 131 185 31 145 .327 1.0452001 Albert Pujols, STL 161 112 194 37 130 .329 1.0131929 Dale Alexander, DET 155 110 215 25 137 .343 .9771975 Fred Lynn, BOS 145 103 175 21 105 .331 .9671964 Richie Allen, PHI 162 125 201 29 91 .318 .9391987 Mark McGwire, OAK 151 97 161 49 118 .289 .9872001 Ichiro Suzuki, SEA 157 127 242 8 69 .350 .8381964 Tony Oliva, MIN 161 109 217 32 94 .323 .9161936 Joe DiMaggio, NYY 138 132 206 29 125 .323 .9281972 Carlton Fisk, BOS 131 74 134 22 61 .293 .9091956 Frank Robinson, CIN 152 122 166 38 83 .290 .9361936 Johnny Mize, STL 126 76 136 19 93 .329 .9791997 Nomar Garciaparra, BOS 153 122 209 30 98 .306 .8752007 Ryan Braun, MIL 113 91 146 34 97 .324 1.0041993 Mike Piazza, LAD 149 81 174 35 112 .318 .9322012 Mike Trout, LAA* 111 107 151 25 74 .333 .968*Through Sept. 2

Best Seasons by Rookies

Page 11: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Wisdom11 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

DEAR ABBY: “Disap-pearing Stepmother’s” June 9 letter brought back memories of my stepdaughter “Amy’s” wedding. Her mother also tried her best to prevent us from being involved. However, Amy included all four of her parents in the wedding.

Dad and Stepdad walked her down the aisle together, and her mom and I lit the bride’s candle together (though I’m sure she gritted her teeth when she did it).

The bride needs to de-velop a backbone and stand up to her mother. The dad (who’s paying for half the wedding) should at least put his foot down about the guest list, and invite whomever he and his wife would like to be there. Wedding photos can be of the two families separately, including the stepmom. Otherwise, re-sentment will linger and

p o i s o n the rela-t i o n s h i p b e t w e e n stepmom and step-daughter. -- AN-O T H E R S T E P -MOM

D E A R STEPMOM: I encouraged “Disappearing” to attend the wedding to support her stepdaughter and in-ject a dose of reality into the “fantasy,” and readers were quick to share their views:

DEAR ABBY: I, too, am stepmom to two beauti-ful young women whose mother harbors animosi-ty toward me and my hus-band. When the girls were kids she fi lled their heads with lies about us. Their father and I remained noncritical, loving and constant.

There were some rocky

years, but my stepdaugh-ters and I have made it through. When the younger one was married two years ago, she did a beautiful job including me. Her mother spent the wedding day spewing vile lies about us to anyone who’d listen, and is still bitter these 26 years later.

The girls see their mother as she is and do not let her affect their relationship with us. For this I credit my husband, who never tolerated her ill treatment of me. Step-moms are not looking to be in the spotlight or take anyone’s place. But we are an important part of the modern family and should be treated with the honor and respect we deserve. -- MADE IT THROUGH

DEAR ABBY: I work in the wedding industry, and all too frequently I see the engaged couple manipulated by a parent

in order to hurt the for-mer spouse and alienate the stepparent. It is the bane of my professional existence. They cause so much stress for the cou-ple that I’ve had brides break down and cry in my offi ce and choose to elope rather than deal with the drama.

Parents must realize that their children are loved by many people, and the best gift they can give them on their wed-ding day is to set aside dif-ferences and old grudges in order to support the couple as they begin their marriage. -- FRUSTRAT-ED WEDDING PLAN-NER

DEAR ABBY: My hus-band’s former wife has been a huge challenge for me, even showing up at our small wedding cer-emony and slapping me in the face. The children were all there and I kept the evening going by hug-

ging them and saying I was sorry their mom was so upset. Now, as I watch these grown kids and their kids making their way through life, I am proud to have been part of showing them what a solid, loving family can be without alienation and selfi shness. -- BARBARA IN ILLINOIS

DEAR ABBY: I sym-pathize with “Disappear-ing,” having myself been ignored at “blended” family events, including weddings. I am also con-veniently excluded from family photos.

I deal with all of this by staying in the background during events. The gath-ering is not about me. My stepkids are simply trying to keep the drama caused by their mother to a mini-mum. They would never hear the end of it from her, and she has been known to go off in public. I know they appreciate

my quiet approach be-cause, when not in their mother’s presence, they treat me with kindness, love and humor. -- MAR-CIA IN VIRGINIA

DEAR ABBY: First wives hold the upper hand in many instances. It’s something you never really get used to -- you just live with it.

When your husband’s daughter matures and is a mom herself, things may change. They did for me. Take the high road and always do the right thing. That fi rst wife is clearly traveling on a lower path. -- SURVIVOR IN ALA-BAMA

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

Bride resists attempt to keep stepmom in shadows

People talk about the benefits of slowing down to “smell the roses,” but the events that actually cause such slow downs -- traffic, long lines, missed connections, etc. -- are often met with an-noyance. Venus offers us a challenge as she slips into the “show me” sign of Leo. Walk the talk. Beauty is all around at every moment, ripe for the taking.

ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll awaken with a new perspective. It’s been a while since you were this objective about your own life. When you really think about it, you rather like where you’ve landed.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You may have to explain this to some-one: Just because you are privy to information doesn’t mean it’s yours. It belongs to the person who gave it to you and is not to be given away to another.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Your awareness will be heightened. You won’t assume that everyone is looking out for everyone else. You’ll look out for you and yours. Some-times you have to be your own biggest fan.

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’re excellent at operating with your team. You try to see things as your team members might see them. Also, you’ll have the overriding sense that you are stron-ger together than you are apart.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You’ll show people that you care and demon-strate exemplary char-acter through simple matters of respect -- for instance, turning off your phone to give your full attention to the people you’re with.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You’ll experience an increased sense of purpose, and yet your purpose may be strange-ly difficult to put into words. Try anyhow. The exercise will focus you powerfully.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). No one will give you time for reflection; it’s something you’ll have to steal. Decide how you’re going to spend your time, and let everyone know what you’re doing.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You’ll see people constantly during this busy day. You’ll move in and out of environments, always saving some of your energy for the next meeting. Make notes as you go because you’re not likely to remember all of the details.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). Someone will recognize your tal-ent. This person also may have an opinion as to which way you should take your gifts. It’s worth a listen, but if a ride on the bandwagon is of-fered, don’t jump.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Take action, and you’ll also be taking control. Take responsibil-ity, and you’ll also be tak-ing ownership. Take of-fense, and you’ll also be taking time and energy away from your success mission.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). If someone badmouths another per-son, they will, if given a reason, do the same to you. Your wise instincts kick in. You recognize and avoid toxic people and behaviors.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). It’s true that you’re adept at reading body language, but that’s not the entire reason you’re hyper-aware of some-one’s opinion of you

(even though the person never voices it). You also can read minds.

TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Sept. 6). You respond well to challenge and will do amazing things under pressure in 2013. Cap-ricorn and Libra people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 2, 15, 49, 3 and 10.

ASTROLOGICAL QUES-TIONS: “My mom and dad are about to get the shock of their lives. I am 18 and have decided that I don’t want to go to college yet. I want to pursue music. I’ve played guitar and harp since I was 10, and I’ve been told I’m good. I’ve started writing songs in private. I want to study music and see where it will take me. Maybe I’ll be famous. How should I break the news to them? What do I tell them? I’m a Libra.”

Libra people are art-ists at heart, and they harmonize in many ways with the rest of the world. Music has obvious appeal, partly because musicians quite literally play for a living. But make no mistake: As a profession, music is about as competitive as it gets. A very small percentage of musicians make their living solely from music. Having a plan will be crucial to your success. Where will you live? How will you support yourself? Will your parents allow you to live at home while you study music? If so, how will you contribute to the household? I encourage you to tap into your in-nate sense of balance. Many musicians have part-time jobs that allow them to focus on music while still being able to support themselves.

CELEBRITY PROFILES: Virgo comedian and best-

selling author Jeff Fox-worthy hosts the popular game show that asks “Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader?” And though he’s a redneck humorist, his masterful comic ap-proach exudes a sophis-ticated artistry that only can come from years of experience and practice. Foxworthy was born when Mercury, Venus and Uranus were in the sign of entertainment.

(If you would like to write to Holiday Mathis, please go to www.cre-ators.com and click on “Write the Author” on the Holiday Mathis page.)

Horoscopes

BY HOLIDAY MATHIS

Today in history

Today is Thursday, Sept. 6, the 250th day of 2012. There are 116 days left in the year.

Today’s Highlight in History

On Sept. 6, 1997, a public funeral was held for Princess Diana at Westminster Abbey in London, six days after her death in a car crash in Paris.

On this dateIn 1757, the Marquis

de Lafayette, the French hero of the American Revolution, was born in Auvergne, France.

In 1861, Union forces led by Gen. Ulysses S.

Grant occupied Paducah, Ky., during the Civil War.

In 1901, President Wil-liam McKinley was shot and mortally wounded by anarchist Leon Czolgosz at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y. (McKinley died eight days later.)

In 1916, the first self-service grocery store, Piggly Wiggly, was opened in Memphis, Tenn., by Clarence Saun-ders.

In 1939, the Union of South Africa declared war on Germany.

In 1948, Princess Juliana of the Nether-lands was inaugurated as queen, two days after the abdication of

her mother, Queen Wil-helmina.

In 1952, Canadian television broadcasting began in Montreal.

In 1966, South African Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd was stabbed to death by an apparently deranged page during a parliamentary session in Cape Town.

In 1970, Palestinian guerrillas seized control of three U.S.-bound jet-liners. (Two were later blown up on the ground in Jordan, along with a London-bound plane hijacked on Sept. 9; the fourth plane was de-stroyed on the ground in Egypt. No hostages were harmed.)

Thursday, September 13th

4-8 PM

FREEHealth Fair for Children!

Alcorn County Fair Crossroads Arena

All Children 0-18 Welcome

FREE Admission To The Fair!!Prizes

Health ScreeningsGive-A-Ways

Health Fair

Page 12: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

ACROSS1 Cask stopper5 Conquest for

Caesar9 Serbs, e.g.

14 School thatexpelled JamesBond

15 Gustav Mahler’swife

16 Hilarious person17 Grandmotherly

nickname18 Protective trench19 Miguel’s gal20 Prickly

undergrowth22 Pine secretion23 More than te-

hee, online24 Prop for a safety

briefing26 Brewer’s vessel29 Implore31 Wheels32 Mideast

language34 Finish a

gymnasticsroutine, perhaps

37 Toward the stern40 They lead you

astray ... andwhat the starts of20-, 24-, 52- and60-Across are?

44 Brian of RoxyMusic

45 “Yeah, sure”46 Surpass47 Washed-out49 Bob Marley

genre51 Place in

considerabledisarray

52 It’s often a toughcut

57 Fighting Tigers’sch.

59 Ness and others60 Verbally

overwhelm65 Dim66 Small pie67 Time for action68 2-Down, for one69 Mother of Don

Juan70 Kerry’s home71 Much of the RMS

Queen Mary,now

72 Bank (on)

73 “Seasons ofLove” musical

DOWN1 Not in good

shape?2 Natural Bridges

locale3 Second helping,

to a dieter4 Twist5 Long shot, say6 Baseball’s

Moises7 It has a campus

near the JFKLibrary

8 Turning tool9 Ancient Athens

rival10 Nitwit11 Ouzo flavoring12 Watch13 Barely sufficient21 Slangy “Don’t

worry about it”25 “High Voltage”

rockers26 Ex-GIs’ org.27 Bern’s river28 1982 sci-fi film30 Superficially

fluent33 Grumpy friend?35 Exist

36 Mosquitoprotection

38 Unfriendly types39 Fastener

named for itsshape

41 Have supper42 Wedding

receptionhighlight

43 Catch sight of48 Heineken brand50 All thumbs

52 Winter puddlecause

53 Scout master?54 Elaborate display55 Up and at ’em56 Scottish feudal

lord58 Milker’s handful61 Hurler Hershiser62 Large-tongued

comics dog63 Wave a red flag at64 Nikita’s no

By Jerome Gunderson(c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc. 09/06/12

09/06/12

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

[email protected]

Husband can’t get a hug from wife,but she’s having steamy chats online

Ask Annie

Marvin

Blondie

Garfield

B.C.

Dilbert

Zits

Beetle Bailey

Wizard of Id

Dustin

Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Variety12 • Daily Corinthian Thursday, September 6, 2012

Page 13: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • 13

Lawless, R, *** 1⁄2,Shia LaBeouf, Tom Hardy, Jason Clarke, Guy Pearce, Jessica

Chastain; Weinstein Co. fi lm; D i r e c -tor John Hillcoat; length -- 104 min-utes

“ L a w -less” is based on a true story about the

Bondurant family in Vir-ginia during the 1920s and 1930s. The book the movie is based on, “The Wettest County in the World,” was written by Matt Bondurant, a grand-son of one of the Bondu-rant brothers. His book focuses on the three Bon-durant brothers who were

involved in bootlegging moonshine in Franklin County.

Forrest Bondurant (Tom Hardy) is the oldest brother followed by How-ard, (Jason Clarke) who has an extremely hot tem-per, The youngest brother is Jack (Shia LaBeouf). Jack enjoys having a good time without fully understanding the con-sequences of not paying attention to what is going on around him.

Forrest is the leader of the Bondurant family and has a reputation of be-ing a fearless individual. He defi nitely lives up to his status. When Maggie (Jessica Chastain), a city girl, arrives in town look-ing for work, she takes a strong liken to Forrest. For awhile, Forrest ap-pears not to be interested but gradually he begins to

take notice of his beauti-ful employee.

Cricket (Dane De-Haan), crippled by rickets as a child is a good old boy just trying to do his job. He is Jack’s best friend and accomplice in Jack’s bootlegging schemes.

Jack has a crush on Ber-tha (Mia Wasikowska), a preacher’s daughter. He decides to attend a service at her father’s church but has had too much fruit of the vine. What happens is not pleasant to the con-gregation.

Special agent Charlie

(Guy Pearce) is a nemesis to Forrest and his broth-ers, and a horrible, despi-cable person.

“Lawless” is high volt-age entertainment con-taining strong violence. As the story progresses and some very horrify-ing incidents take place, tension prevails and lasts throughout the fi lm. From the toughness and seemingly invincibility of Forrest to Jack trying to prove himself to his brothers it moves with white lightning speed -- pun intended.

In order to sell or make illegal booze in Franklin County, some local law enforcement individuals have to be compensated to look the other way. City thugs also move in for their take but as For-rest tells others, “We are Bondurants and we don’t lay down for anybody.” He speaks in a mountain brogue that says he really means it.

The audience will no-tice some bootleggers in the movie using a radia-tor to make the whiskey, adding battery acid to the brew. This created lead poisoning or “Jake Leg” which a lot of individuals suffered from when they drunk the home brew. It could cause death, paraly-sis or brain damage.

By the end of “Lawless” the audience will want special agent Charlie to

get what he deserves. The cinematography is ex-ceptional and the tension about as tight as it can get. Be prepared for some very graphic and grue-some scenes. Still, “Law-less” is a well-told story about a legendary family who became a part of the violence and bootlegging activity in “the wettest county in the world.”

(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.)

Moonshine conspiracy comes alive in ‘Lawless’

Terry Burns

Movie Critic

Terry Burns’ movie ratings

Premium Rush, PG-13, ****Expendables 2, R, ***The Bourne Legacy, PG-13, *** 1⁄2Total Recall, PG-13, *** 1⁄2Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, PG-13, ***

Not that I should com-plain -- what with all those poor folks down in New Orleans who had water up to their roofs.

But in our corner of McNairy County, Tenn., our grass is scorched, our dogwoods drooping and we got only one downpour last Friday that lasted about three minutes.

Meanwhile, the massive aftermath of Hurricane Isaac was heading north into Arkansas and Kansas -- straight toward our fam-ily’s cabin in the Ozarks, where I’d promised to join my sisters and my brother for a get-together.

Hmmm. At its best, La-bor Day weekend is not my favorite time to go. It’s Summertime’s Last Hurrah. Folks throng the river, families clambering over the Big Falls, jabber-ing above the roar of the water at so high a pitch we hear them way down at

our dock, one canoe after an-other in-termittent-ly shooting the rapids with an e x c i t i n g whoosh or nosediving into the

bubbling depths. What-ever, the result is always accompanied by shrieks, exultant or despairing.

The river is crowded and it is loud.

On the other hand, thunderstorms might drive us all inside.

I thought about being cooped up in a small cabin for a long weekend and emailed my sister: “Are we sure we want to do this?”

She replied, “Of course we do!”

So while my husband stayed home with the critters, I headed off to

Memphis, where I joined up with my brother Dean on Friday, and we rolled on over the Mississippi River bridge and into Ar-kansas, a pleasant drive except for a patch of rain so hard Dean drove down the middle of the deserted highway, making sure we didn’t go plunging into the ditches along its side. Our sister Bay had reached the cabin before us.

Saturday was warm and windy and cloudy, but not wet. After a lei-surely morning drinking coffee, frying omelettes (and admiring the bream our brother had caught while we sisters slept), we did a supermarket run to stock up on food. Then I toodled into town to go “antique-ing” as Dean and Bay biked off on a winding trek to Cherokee Village, fi ve miles away.

They’d hardly gotten going before they no-

ticed ragged cloud forma-tions in the west. Looked like those things might swoop down and swallow something. It began to sprinkle, so they peddled hard, thinking they’d fi nd shelter farther on. But the clouds moved on to the north and east, and they breathed easier. Still, they made it home six minutes faster than they’ve ever done that run.

Meanwhile, our sister Thaïs and her husband were wending their way from Kentucky. Heard the eery rowr-er-row of sirens as they passed through town after town. Radio reported a tornado had just been sighted on the ground at Crowley’s Ridge.

“Where is Crowley’s Ridge?” Sean asked.

“We just passed it,” Thaïs said. “A few seconds ago.”

While my siblings were

evading Isaac, I was drift-ing through my favorite antique mall, each stall a miniature museum of Americana. A CD of bluegrass music twanged away in the background. The aroma of something I couldn’t quite identify (sorta nutty, sorta sweet) wafted from a burning candle. Heard an old lady exclaim: “One hundred and nineteen dollars! I’ve got that set in my kitch-en!” She looked up from a stack of three pink and white Pyrex bowls (the square sort, with match-ing lids) and shook her head, astonished.

I spent all of one dollar on a water glass etched with fl eur-de-lis, then, at the last moment, was se-duced by a quaint New Year’s “noisemaker.” Three bucks. Too much, but Mom’s birthday is coming and she’ll love it.

Got back to the cabin

just before Thaïs and Sean pulled in, stiff from their long drive, and Dean and Bay pulled up on their bikes, sweaty and jubilant. Dragged on our swim-suits for The Swim to the Falls, chatting and laugh-ing and swapping stories. That Spring River water was uncomfortably chilly on this grey, windy after-noon. But we were the only folks in sight. The two-legged kind, I mean. We shared the falls with one short, brown heron. Passed a banded water snake, pretty head lifted above the river’s surface, pressing hard for shore.

Green trees. Tumbling waters. Somber skies. All ours.

(Daily Corinthian col-umnist Ryland Bruhwiler lives on a farm in Mc-Nairy County, Tenn. She can be contacted by email at [email protected].)

Evading Isaac’s remnants during summertime’s last hurrah

Ryland Bruhwiler

Columnist

(Payment Plans available)

LAW OFFICES OF CHARLES E. HODUMAnnounces the

Re-establishment of Offices at601 Main Street, Walnut, Mississippi 38683

Tippah CountyHours by appointmentOffice 1-662-223-6895

AndNashville area office:

9005 Overlook Blvd. •Brentwood, Tennessee 37027Hours by appointment

Office 1-615-242-0150 • Fax 1-615-274-4948

For information e-mail: [email protected] location:

Collierville, Tennessee 38017Office 1-901-853-8110 • Fax 1-901-853-0473

Continuing to serve West and Middle Tennessee and Northern and Middle Mississippi with representation in:

Family Law – Criminal Defense – Contract andCorporate – Personal Injury – Entertainment Law

Web site: Hodumlaw.com

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

Bain & MossAttorneys At Law

662-287-1620

Criminal Law: Federal StateDrug Offenses • Assault & Battery • DUI Defense •

Burglary • Theft • Violent Crimes • Murder • All

Felonies & MisdemeanorsPersonal Injury

www.corinthlaw.net

516 Fillmore St. • Corinth, MSBackground Information Available Upon RequestListing Of These Previously Mentioned Area(s) Of Practice Does Not Indicate Any Certifi cation Of Expertise Therein.

Nick Bain • Tyler Moss

ContactLaura Holloway

at662-287-6111ext. 308

to advertiseyour

Law Firmon this page.

Page 14: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

14 • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

ServiceS

JIMCOROOFING.

SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BIDALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY

$1,000,000 LIABILITY

INSURANCE• SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975• LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY

(NO SECONDS)• METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE,

SHAKES, COATINGS. • LEAK SPECIALIST

WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS& DO CARPENTRY WORK

662-665-1133662-286-8257

JIM BERRY, OWNER/INSTALLER

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community ProfilesFOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(Daily Corinthian Only $165)

BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDERUN YOUR ADON THIS PAGE

Dr. Jonathan R. CookseyNeck Pain • Back Pain

Disc ProblemsSpinal Decompression Therapy

Most Insurance Accepted

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

3334 N. Polk StreetCorinth, MS 38834

(662) 286-9950

CHIROPRACTOR

40 Years

Loans $20-$20,000

1299 Hwy 2 West(Marshtown)

Corinth, MS 38834Crushed Lime Stone (any size)

Iuka Road GravelWashed gravel

Pea gravelFill sand

Masonry sandBlack Magic mulch

Natural brown mulchTop soil

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

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

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

ALEXWAMSLEYHauling & Backhoe

Service• Fill Sand• Top Soil• Gravel• Crushed Stone• Licensed Septic Service• Septic Repairs• Foundations• Site Preparation

Cell662-415-3896

Smith Discount Home Center

412 Pinecrest Road287-2221 • 287-4419

Fax 287-2523

Don’t Waste Your Money ... Shop With Us!1X4X8 Pine ........................................

$200¢

1x4x10 Pine ........................................$250

1x4x12 Pine ........................................$300

1X6 or 1X8 White Pine 500m

Paneling ...$1195

to$1695

Crossties ........$695

while supplies last

5/8-T-1-11 Siding = ..........$1595

3/8-T-1-11 Siding = ..........$1395

1x4x14 PIne ......................................$399

1x4x16 PIne ...................................... $505

7/8 plywood ..............................$1595

3/4 presswood veneer ....$499

25 Year 3 tab shingle ....$5495

35 year architectural

Shingle .............................................$6295

Laminate Floor From

.................................................39¢ - $109

Round Commodes ............. $4995

Turf ....................................................$100 yd

PICKWICK SOUTHSIDE, TN AREA

662-643-7570

475 Watkins Rd., Counce4.54 acres, Cedar 3 BR, 2

BA, 1788 heated square ft., C/H/A plus gas FP w/hearth,

2-car garage, new roof, concrete drive, in-ground

pool with new liner & new salt chlorination system,

wooded country setting & very private. $96,000 fi rm.

RUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN

& COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS

PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIANONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147FOR DETAILS.

HOME REPAIRS

• Carports • Vinyl Siding• Room Additions• Shingles & Metal Roofi ng• Concrete Drives• Interior & Exterior Painting

FREE ESTIMATES30 YEARS EXPERIENCE

FULLY INSURED731-689-4319

JIMMY NEWTON

HOME FOR SALE

Low Maintenance Home, downtown

Corinth, Townhouse, 3 BR, 2.5 BA’s, stainless steel appliances, all hardwood fl ooring, gas fi replace, patio,

attached 2-car garage. $159,990.

901-277-1881

PLUMBING & ELECTRIC

Jason Roach Plumbing & Electric • Licensed & Bonded • Bucket Truck Service • Backhoe662-396-1023Jason Roach, Owner

MODERNIZE YOUR KITCHEN OR BATH FAST AND VERY INEXPENSIVE

NEW COUNTERTOPSOne of North Mississippi’s

Largest SelectionsNo Long Wait...Best Prices...

Expert Preparation...All Modern Equipment...Precision Cutting.

Trained Personnel to Assist You.Free Quotes

VISIT OUR SHOWROOMMONDAY-FRIDAY, 7AM-5PM

Smith Cabinet Shop1505 Fulton Dr., Corinth, MS

662-287-2151

3 BR, 2 BA brick home located at 15 Barnstable Road (behind Lake Hill Motors). New paint &

fl ooring. Open layout, like new! See 17 pictures (www.facebook.com/alcorn.homes) Open

House every Saturday, 12-5pm. Only $92,500. Call or text 662-415-4405 after 4pm.

Email: [email protected]

HOME FOR SALE

B & B FENCE CO.205 Cardinal Dr. • 662-287-4667

(Next to Cat.) • bandbfence@gmail. com

• Chain-link galv. black green–brown • Wood-ornamental iron- alum. • Decorative Estate gate• Auto. gates & entry systems• Vinyl-privacy-picket-rail

Financing Available

We sell materials fordo-it-yourselfers!

UNDER CONTRACTRUN YOUR AD IN THE DAILY CORINTHIAN

& COMMUNITY PROFILES ON THIS

PAGE FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH

(DAILY CORINTHIANONLY $165.00).

CALL 662-287-6147FOR DETAILS.

General Help0232

WANTEDINDEPENDENT

CONTRACTORS(Newspaper Carrier)

Requirements:

• Driver’s License• Dependable Transportation• Light Bookwork Ability (will train)• Liability Insurance

BIGGERSVILLE AREA

Please come by the Daily Corinthian and fi ll out a questionaire.

DAILY CORINTHIAN1607 S. Harper Rd.

Corinth, MS

Excellent Earnings Potential

MotorcycleS0832

Th ank you for your prayers, support and off ers of help following our business loss due to fi re on July 1.

Aft er almost 17 years in the same place, we have reopened under a new name and location.

T&R OUTDOOR - POLARISJ & H GUNS

CROSSROADS OUTDOORJ & H GUNS2022 hwy 72 East Annex - Corinth, MS 38834(662) 287-1234Next door to Magnolia Funeral Home

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

ALL WEATHER Coat. $25.Call 662-287-0323.

BLACK STORM door, 32",with screen, $30. 662-287-5490.

FREE ADVERTISINGAdvertise one item val-ued at $500 or less forfree. Price must be inad & will run for 5 days.

Ads may be up to ap-prox. 20 words includ-ing phone number. Theads must be for privateparty or personal mdse.& cannot include pets &supplies, livestock (incl.chickens, ducks, cattle,goats, etc) & supplies,garage sales, hay, fire-wood, & automobiles.

E m a i l a d t o :[email protected], mail ad to FreeAds, P.O. Box 1800, Cor-inth, MS 38835, fax ad to662-287-3525 or bring adto 1607 S. Harper Rd.,Corinth.

* N O P H O N E C A L L SPLEASE. INCLUDE NAME& ADDRESS FOR OUR RE-CORDS.

JET 3 power chair, redmetallic, in exc. cond.,accessories & ownersmanual included, $200.662-279-7967.

KING SIZE waterbedmattress w/heatingpad, $25. 462-8248.

LUXURY COAT. One sizefits all. $150 Call 662-287-0323.

LUXURY COAT. One sizefits all. $150 Call 662-287-0323.

STAFFORD MEN's suit, 40regular, 35-30 pants,navy pin stripe, alreadycleaned, $10. 286-9877.

T H R E E S T O O G E S(Larry,Curly,Moe) 14"collectible dolls in tux,orig. bx/stand w/name,$90. 415-7775

UTILITY/GOLD CART trail-er, 4x8 tilt, rear gate,full size tires, $475. 662-415-8180.

VERY GOOD London Foglong coat with hood,size 12, already cleaned,lost weight, will sell for$40. 286-9877.

HouSeHold GoodS0509

USED 3 1/2 ton outdoorpkg. central heat pump,$500. 662-603-4154.

MuSical MercHandiSe0512

VITO 7214 clarinet withhard case, $65 obo. 287-1285 or 665-2069.

electronicS0518PA SYSTEM. 450 NadyAudio, 4 channel powermixer w/speakers.$450. 662-415-9777 or287-3337.

PA SYSTEM . 800 Ch.2/12" monitors. 2/15"spkrs w/horn. Call formore details. 415-9777or 287-3337

SportinG GoodS0527

POWERTEC LAT and CurlMachine, exc. cond.,$40. 287-4958, if no an-swer, leave msg.

SEARS & ROEBUCK 12gauge double barrelshotgun. $225. 662-720-6855.S H A R P E R I M A G EF o l d a w a y E l l i p t i c a lStrider, exc. cond., $25.287-4958, if no answer,leave msg.

furniture0533TWIN BED w/mattress, 4drawers + middle stor-age area underneath.From Casabellas. $225.662-603-4488

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.

MiSc. iteMS for Sale0563

4S I-Phone, army greenotter box, Brand New,$20. 415-7775

C H R I S T M A S V I L L A G Escene. $40. Call 662-287-0323.

LARGE BAG of Christ-mas Ornaments. Call 662-287-0323.

AMERICAN PERFORM-ANCE Wheel collection,size 15x7.0. $300. 287-2509 or 808-3908.

General Help0232CAUTION! ADVERTISE-MENTS in this classifica-tion usually offer infor-mational service ofproducts designed tohelp FIND employment.Before you send moneyto any advertiser, it isyour responsibility toverify the validity of theoffer. Remember: If anad appears to sound“too good to be true”,then it may be! Inquir-ies can be made by con-tacting the Better Busi-n e s s B u r e a u a t1-800-987-8280.

NEEDING CNC MILLINGCenter's program & set-up. 10 yrs. minimumexp. Send resume toP.O. Box 2436, Corinth,MS 38835.

truckinG0244DRIVER TRAINEES

NEEDED NOW!Learn to drive for

Covenant Transport.No Experience Needed!

New Drivers earn$700-$900 per wk!Teams $100-125k!

Plus excellent benefits!Local CDL Training

1-888-540-7364

catS/doGS/petS0320AKC GREAT DANE pup-pies, 3 black & 1 fawn,S&W, $500-$700. 662-423-3170 or 662-279-6695.

FREE KITTENS. 7 wks.Whites, grays, yellows.287-9561, lv. msg.

FREE PUPPIES. 4 males,2 females. Black in col-or. 731-239-9645.

MISSING: SMALL BostonTerrier, black & whitew/red collar, KendrickRd. area. Name Boston.287-1883 or 287-2657.

HouSeHold GoodS0509

EMPIRE DIRECT vent wallgas furnace, 37" x 27",35,000 BTU, $495. 662-415-0863 or 287-6419.

NEW IN the box, rotis-serie/convection oven,Euro-Pro, 6-8 slices $50,Call 662-415-8844

GaraGe/eState SaleS0151

YARD SALE. Sat. 3201Hwy 72 W. Brand nameclothes all ages, hunt-ing items.

YARD SALE. Sat, 6-12. Gl-endale Baptist, 2478Hwy 72E Glen. Proceedsto benefit MargaretLackey state missions

HUGE SALE. Fri. & Sat.,7:00-1:00. Glassware,furn., rug, toddler bed,high chair, quilts, ma-ternity & little boys'clothes, pictures, sea-sona l decorat ions ,little bit of everything!Laura Holloway & Caro-lyn Swindle. 8 CR 522(Biggersville).

inStruction0180MEDICAL CAREERS beginhere - Train ONLINE forAllied Health and Medi-cal Management. Jobplacement assistance.Computer available. Fi-nancial Aid if qualified.SCHEV certified. Call877-206-5185. www.Cen-turaOnline.com

WORK ON JET ENGINES -Train for hands on Avia-tion Career. FAA ap-proved program. Finan-cial aid if qualified - Jobplacement assistance.CALL Aviation Instituteo f M a i n t e n a n c e .866-455-4317.

GaraGe/eState SaleS0151

SAT., 7-2. kid-adult clths,vac, dishes, rug, stroller,walker, shoes, lamps,pics. 45 Biggersvil leacross from cemetery.

YARD SALE. Fri. & Sat.168 CR 157. Infant thru4x clothes, furn., lots ofstuff.

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

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

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

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

GaraGe/eState SaleS0151

FRI. & SAT. 38 OaklandSchool Rd. Glassware,books, lamps, Christ-mas i tems , lots ofhouse th ings .

FRI/SAT. 2131 LiddonLake Rd., Unit 2. Furn.,handicap walkers, shwrchair, cookware, bas-kets, containers, tools.

GARAGE SALE . Furn.,lawn equip., little girls'size 4-5 clths. 22 CR 703behind Wenasoga FoodMart. Thurs., Fri., Sat.

GIANT YARD SALE. Sat., 7-2. 1709 E. 3rd. Furn.,bedding, kitchenware,pictures, lots of nic-nacs.

GIGANTIC SALE. Fri. & Sat.2101 Beauregard Parkoff Harper Rd. Lots ofgoodies, clothes, furn.etc. Something for all!

HUGE YARD SALE. Fri. &Sat. 96 CR 407, Biggers-v i l le . Jungle decor ,furn. , pictures, etc.

MASONIC CENTER ThriftStore. All clothes $1.00.Thurs., 9-12, Fri., 9-4,Sat., 9-12. Fillmore &Childs.

M O N A L I S A ' S T h r i f tS t o r e . A l l S u m m e rclothes 99¢. 1007 Hwy 72E. across from PizzaHut. 662-603-5870.

GaraGe/eState SaleS0151

1712 PINECREST , Fr i-Sat,Household, winterclothes (all sizes),babyitems, furn, 11X8 rug.

3 FAMS. Off Farmington,take 213 to 15 CR 268.Thurs., Fri., Sat. Furn.,clothes, lots & lots ofitems. 662-212-4603.

BIG SALE! SAT. ONLY.2111 Walnut Dr. Kids-a d u l t c l o t h e s , h / hi t e m s , f u r n .

BIG YARD SALE. Kossutharea, CR 662. Thurs., Fri.,Sat. Sev. fams. Lots ofitems.

ENTIRE H/h furn., plussize + preteen clothes.Fri. & Sat., 7 'til. Rain orshine. 67 CR 238 (Cent-ral Place).

loSt0142LOST: MALE red GoldenRetriever, CR 435 (Hur-ricane Creek area). Onlyhas 3 legs. REWARD! 284-6054.

Take stock in America.

Buy U.S. Savings Bonds.

Page 15: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

Daily Corinthian • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • 15

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS0848

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

We’ve Got Your Keysto a Great Deal!

2005 Chevy Suburban LTLoaded, White, Tan Ltr

$13,950

$32,950

2010 Chevy Equinox LSSilver

$15,950

2007 Chevy LTZ Z714x, Ltr., Heated Seats, New Tires

$21,950

2012 Chevy Impala LT 27k, Silver

$16,950

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on April 27,2004, Steve D. Lambert andLinda Lambert aka LindaColeman Lambert executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto David A. Harris,Trustee for the benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc. acting solelyas a nominee for CitizensBank & Savings Co its suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inBook 653, Page 663; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201201186; and WHEREAS,the holder of said Deed ofTrust substituted and/or ap-pointed Nationwide TrusteeServices, Inc., as Trustee insaid Deed of Trust by instru-ment recorded in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryClerk Instrument 201203012 ;and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-east Quarter of Section 27,Township 2 South, Range 6East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Northwest cornerof the Southeast Quarter ofSect ion 27, Township 2South, Range 6 East; thencerun South 697.5 feet; thencerun East 1215 feet for a truepoint of beginning; thence runEast 455 feet; thence runNorth 235.5 feet; thence runEast 402.4 feet; thence runNorth 50 feet; thence runNorth 83 degrees 22 minutesEast 320.5 feet to the Westright-of-way line of a pavedpublic road; thence run South44 degrees 33 minutes East122.6 feet along the Westright-of-way of said road tothe North line of the prop-erty conveyed by Bill Smithand wife, Celia Smith, to Den-nis Coleman and wife, SueColeman, by deed dated April12, 1976, which has been re-corded in the ChanceryClerk's Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 178 at page 175; thencerun West 181.52 feet to theNorthwest corner of theproperty conveyed by BillSmith and wife, Celia Smith,to Dennis Coleman and wife,Sue Coleman, by the deed re-ferred to above; thence runSouth 59 feet; thence runWest 175 feet; thence runSouth 740 feet; thence runWest 910 feet, more or less,to a point due South of thebeginning point; thence runNorth 565 feet, more or less,to the beginning point, con-taining 15 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1018907MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213872

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTEROF THE ESTATE OFCHARLES A. SMITH,JR., DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2012-0324-02

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: MADELINE SMITHAddress Unknown

You have been made aDefendant in the suit filed inthis Court by Charisse A.Smith Ward, Petitioner, seek-ing to sell real property loc-ated in Alcorn County, Missis-sippi.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 24thday of September, 2012, inthe Cour t room o f theTishomingo County Court-house in Iuka, TishomingoCounty, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appearand defendant, a judgment willbe entered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

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

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the16 day of August, 2012.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

BY: W. JUSTICEDEPUTY CLERK

3t 8/23, 8/30, 9/6/1213859

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFMARY ELIZABETHRUSH, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2012-0484-02

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: Unknown Heirs of Mary Elizabeth Rush,Deceased

You have been made a De-fendant in the suit filed in thisCourt by Paul Calvin Rushand Barbara Rush-Pierce, Pe-titioners, seeking a determin-ation of heirs.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 16thday of October, 2012, in theCourtroom of the AlcornCounty Chancery Building inCorinth, Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and in case of yourfailure to appear and defend-ant , a judgment wi l l beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

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

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the31 day of August, 2012.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

BY: KAREN BURNS, D.C.DEPUTY CLERK

3t 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/1213882

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on April 27,2004, Steve D. Lambert andLinda Lambert aka LindaColeman Lambert executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto David A. Harris,Trustee for the benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc. acting solelyas a nominee for CitizensBank & Savings Co its suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inBook 653, Page 663; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201201186; and WHEREAS,the holder of said Deed ofTrust substituted and/or ap-pointed Nationwide TrusteeServices, Inc., as Trustee insaid Deed of Trust by instru-ment recorded in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryClerk Instrument 201203012 ;and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-east Quarter of Section 27,Township 2 South, Range 6East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Northwest cornerof the Southeast Quarter ofSect ion 27, Township 2South, Range 6 East; thencerun South 697.5 feet; thencerun East 1215 feet for a truepoint of beginning; thence runEast 455 feet; thence runNorth 235.5 feet; thence runEast 402.4 feet; thence runNorth 50 feet; thence runNorth 83 degrees 22 minutesEast 320.5 feet to the Westright-of-way line of a pavedpublic road; thence run South44 degrees 33 minutes East122.6 feet along the Westright-of-way of said road tothe North line of the prop-erty conveyed by Bill Smithand wife, Celia Smith, to Den-nis Coleman and wife, SueColeman, by deed dated April12, 1976, which has been re-corded in the ChanceryClerk's Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 178 at page 175; thencerun West 181.52 feet to theNorthwest corner of theproperty conveyed by BillSmith and wife, Celia Smith,to Dennis Coleman and wife,Sue Coleman, by the deed re-ferred to above; thence runSouth 59 feet; thence runWest 175 feet; thence runSouth 740 feet; thence runWest 910 feet, more or less,to a point due South of thebeginning point; thence runNorth 565 feet, more or less,to the beginning point, con-taining 15 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1018907MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213872

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on May 11, 2006,Tim W. Mask and TammyMask executed and delivereda certain Deed of Trust untoMississippi Valley Title Insur-ance, Trustee for the benefitof JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA,to secure an indebtednesstherein described, whichDeed of Trust is recorded inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-s i s s i p p i i n I n s t r u m e n t2 0 0 6 0 2 9 9 6 ; a n d

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Instru-ment 201202938 ; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the inter-section of the South line ofthe Northwest Quarter ofSect ion 19, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi with thewest right-of-way line of Mis-s i ss ipp i h ighway no. 2 , ;Thence run North 32 de-g rees 22 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 1,131.780 feetalong said West right-of-wayline to the South line of Sun-set Boulevard; Thence runalong the South side of Sun-set Boulevard North 71 de-g rees 34 m inu tes 24 .3seconds West 576.517 feet;Thence run South 32 degrees22 minutes 00.0 secondsWest 500.00 feet; Thence runSouth 45 degrees 39 minutes04.5 seconds West 394.035feet; Thence run South 83 de-g rees 04 m inu tes 22 .0seconds West 63.360 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;Thence run South 83 degrees04 minutes 22.0 secondsWest 25.000 feet; Thence runSouth 187.867 feet to theNorth right-of-way line ofBramblewood Drive; Thencerun North 89 degrees 22minutes 55.7 seconds Westalong the North side ofBramblewood Drive 272.368feet ; thence run North165.474 feet; Thence runSouth 77 degrees 07 minutes58.4 seconds East 40.074 feet;Thence run North 14 de-g rees 20 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 151.257 feet tothe South right-of-way line ofHorseshoe Circle and a cul-de-sac with a 50-foot radius;Thence run Northeasterlyalong said radius for 43.995feet; Thence run North 85degrees 00 minutes 00.0seconds East along said right-of-way line for 38.834 feet tothe point of curvature of acurve having the followingcenterline characteristics:Delta angle equals 47 de-g rees 26 m inu tes 16 .2seconds LT; Tangent distanceequals 87.564 feet; Radiusequals 200.000 feet; Thencerun Northeasterly along saidcurve for 94.561 feet; Thencerun South 18 degrees 55minutes 00.0 seconds East183.282 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing 1.86acres, more or less. Propertysituated in county of Alcorn,state of Mississippi.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1106579MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213871

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on April 27,2004, Steve D. Lambert andLinda Lambert aka LindaColeman Lambert executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto David A. Harris,Trustee for the benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc. acting solelyas a nominee for CitizensBank & Savings Co its suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inBook 653, Page 663; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201201186; and WHEREAS,the holder of said Deed ofTrust substituted and/or ap-pointed Nationwide TrusteeServices, Inc., as Trustee insaid Deed of Trust by instru-ment recorded in the Officeof the aforesaid ChanceryClerk Instrument 201203012 ;and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lying and being in the South-east Quarter of Section 27,Township 2 South, Range 6East, Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, more particularly de-scribed as follows: Commen-cing at the Northwest cornerof the Southeast Quarter ofSect ion 27, Township 2South, Range 6 East; thencerun South 697.5 feet; thencerun East 1215 feet for a truepoint of beginning; thence runEast 455 feet; thence runNorth 235.5 feet; thence runEast 402.4 feet; thence runNorth 50 feet; thence runNorth 83 degrees 22 minutesEast 320.5 feet to the Westright-of-way line of a pavedpublic road; thence run South44 degrees 33 minutes East122.6 feet along the Westright-of-way of said road tothe North line of the prop-erty conveyed by Bill Smithand wife, Celia Smith, to Den-nis Coleman and wife, SueColeman, by deed dated April12, 1976, which has been re-corded in the ChanceryClerk's Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, in DeedBook 178 at page 175; thencerun West 181.52 feet to theNorthwest corner of theproperty conveyed by BillSmith and wife, Celia Smith,to Dennis Coleman and wife,Sue Coleman, by the deed re-ferred to above; thence runSouth 59 feet; thence runWest 175 feet; thence runSouth 740 feet; thence runWest 910 feet, more or less,to a point due South of thebeginning point; thence runNorth 565 feet, more or less,to the beginning point, con-taining 15 acres, more or less.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1018907MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213872

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on May 11, 2006,Tim W. Mask and TammyMask executed and delivereda certain Deed of Trust untoMississippi Valley Title Insur-ance, Trustee for the benefitof JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA,to secure an indebtednesstherein described, whichDeed of Trust is recorded inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-s i s s i p p i i n I n s t r u m e n t2 0 0 6 0 2 9 9 6 ; a n d

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Instru-ment 201202938 ; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the inter-section of the South line ofthe Northwest Quarter ofSect ion 19, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi with thewest right-of-way line of Mis-s i ss ipp i h ighway no. 2 , ;Thence run North 32 de-g rees 22 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 1,131.780 feetalong said West right-of-wayline to the South line of Sun-set Boulevard; Thence runalong the South side of Sun-set Boulevard North 71 de-g rees 34 m inu tes 24 .3seconds West 576.517 feet;Thence run South 32 degrees22 minutes 00.0 secondsWest 500.00 feet; Thence runSouth 45 degrees 39 minutes04.5 seconds West 394.035feet; Thence run South 83 de-g rees 04 m inu tes 22 .0seconds West 63.360 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;Thence run South 83 degrees04 minutes 22.0 secondsWest 25.000 feet; Thence runSouth 187.867 feet to theNorth right-of-way line ofBramblewood Drive; Thencerun North 89 degrees 22minutes 55.7 seconds Westalong the North side ofBramblewood Drive 272.368feet ; thence run North165.474 feet; Thence runSouth 77 degrees 07 minutes58.4 seconds East 40.074 feet;Thence run North 14 de-g rees 20 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 151.257 feet tothe South right-of-way line ofHorseshoe Circle and a cul-de-sac with a 50-foot radius;Thence run Northeasterlyalong said radius for 43.995feet; Thence run North 85degrees 00 minutes 00.0seconds East along said right-of-way line for 38.834 feet tothe point of curvature of acurve having the followingcenterline characteristics:Delta angle equals 47 de-g rees 26 m inu tes 16 .2seconds LT; Tangent distanceequals 87.564 feet; Radiusequals 200.000 feet; Thencerun Northeasterly along saidcurve for 94.561 feet; Thencerun South 18 degrees 55minutes 00.0 seconds East183.282 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing 1.86acres, more or less. Propertysituated in county of Alcorn,state of Mississippi.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1106579MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213871

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on May 19, 2006,Terry Doles and ChristyDoles executed and de-livered a certain Deed ofTrust unto Wade King, Trust-ee for the benefit of Mort-gage Electronic RegistrationSystems Inc, as nominee forAmSouth Bank, i ts suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inInstrument 200603021; andWHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201201460; and

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Book201203523, Page 1; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi , for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east corner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 13, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 351.70 feet;thence run South 1064.10feet to an iron pin at theNorthwest corner of the wallproperty as referenced inDeed Book 231 at Page 144in the deed records of Al-corn County, Mississippi, saidcorner being on the East lineof an easement 30.0 feet inwidth and said corner beingthe point of beginning; thencerun along the East line of saideasement and an existinggravel driveway the following:South 30 degrees 18 minutes30 seconds East 67.58 feet;thence South 20 degrees 20minutes 00 seconds East100.78 feet; thence South 12degrees 19 minutes 00seconds East 65.50 feet;thence South 08 degrees 58minutes 00 seconds East87.40 feet; thence leaving saideasement and driveway runNorth 87 degrees 05 minutes00 seconds East 301.13 feetto an iron pin in a fence line;thence run North 12 degrees44 minutes 00 seconds West156.30 feet along a fence to afence corner; thence runSouth 74 degrees 29 minutes00 seconds West 24.96 feetalong a fence to a fencecorner; thence run South 02degrees 03 minutes 00seconds East 78.21 feet to aniron pipe; thence North 35degrees 13 minutes 00seconds West 356.60 feet toan iron pin; thence run South62 degrees 27 minutes 30seconds West 153.40 feet tothe point of beginning. To-gether with a perpetual non-exclusive easement and right-of-way for the following pur-poses; namely, the right toenter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad, together with the rightto use said easement for thepurpose of ingress and egressand for the public utilities allover, upon and across the fol-lowing described land: A stripof land 30 feet in width being15 feet on either side of thecenterline of the following de-scribed line: Commencing atthe Northeast corner of theNortheast Quarter of Sec-tion 13, Township 2 South,Range 8 East , in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, and runNorth 84 degrees 00 minutesWest 147.40 feet; thence runSouth 6 degrees 37 minutesWest 561.26 feet; thence runSouth 44 degrees 09 minutesWest 455.43 feet; thence runSouth 36 degrees 30 minutesEast 25 feet to the intersec-tion of the centerline of saideasement with the Easternright-of-way of a public pavedroad for the point of begin-ning; thence run with the saideasement centerline South 39degrees 51 minutes East102.18 feet; thence run South39 degrees 13, minutes East100 feet; thence run South 32degrees 33 minutes East 100feet; thence run South 20 de-grees 20 minutes East 98.12feet; thence run South 12 de-grees 19 minutes East 64.92feet; thence run South 8 de-grees 58 minutes East 84.97feet to the end of the ease-ment.

Subject to right-of-way toAlabama/Tennessee NaturalGas Company recorded inthe Chancery Clerk office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi, inDeed Book 86 at Page 447.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1008951MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213870

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on March 31,2009, Gerald D. Wilbanks andBeverly S. Wilbanks executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto John H. Shows,Trustee for the benefit ofMortgage Electronic Registra-tion Systems, Inc., actingsolely as a nominee for Com-merce National Bank, its suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inInstrument 200901642; and

WHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201202936; and

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Instru-ment 201202937 ; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit : Commencing at theSoutheast corner of theSouthwest Quarter of Sec-tion 14, Township 3 S, Range6 E, and run North to theNortheast corner of theSouth Half of said quartersection; run thence West tothe Kossuth and HinkleCreek public road; run thencealong the meanderings of saidpublic road to the West lineof said Quarter Section;thence South to the Southw-est corner of said quartersection; thence East to thepoint of beginning, and con-taining 78 acres, more or less.Less and Except the followingdescribed property: Com-mencing at the Southeastcorner of the SouthwestQuarter of Section 14, Town-ship 3, Range 6, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, and runNorth 80 rods to the North-east corner of the South Halfof said Quarter Section; runthence West 120 rods ;thence South 80 rods to theSouth line of said QuarterSection; thence East 120 rodsto the true point of beginning.Containing 60 acres and lyingand being in Alcorn County,Mississippi. Indexing Instruc-tions: Index under SouthwestQuarter of Section 14, Town-ship 3 S, Range 6 E.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc.400 Northridge Drive Suite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 J1102661MSP U B L I S H : 0 9 / 0 6 / 2 0 1 2 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213869

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on May 11, 2006,Tim W. Mask and TammyMask executed and delivereda certain Deed of Trust untoMississippi Valley Title Insur-ance, Trustee for the benefitof JPMorgan Chase Bank, NA,to secure an indebtednesstherein described, whichDeed of Trust is recorded inthe office of the ChanceryClerk of Alcorn County, Mis-s i s s i p p i i n I n s t r u m e n t2 0 0 6 0 2 9 9 6 ; a n d

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Instru-ment 201202938 ; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit: Commencing at the inter-section of the South line ofthe Northwest Quarter ofSect ion 19, Township 2South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi with thewest right-of-way line of Mis-s i ss ipp i h ighway no. 2 , ;Thence run North 32 de-g rees 22 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 1,131.780 feetalong said West right-of-wayline to the South line of Sun-set Boulevard; Thence runalong the South side of Sun-set Boulevard North 71 de-g rees 34 m inu tes 24 .3seconds West 576.517 feet;Thence run South 32 degrees22 minutes 00.0 secondsWest 500.00 feet; Thence runSouth 45 degrees 39 minutes04.5 seconds West 394.035feet; Thence run South 83 de-g rees 04 m inu tes 22 .0seconds West 63.360 feet tothe Po int o f Beg inn ing ;Thence run South 83 degrees04 minutes 22.0 secondsWest 25.000 feet; Thence runSouth 187.867 feet to theNorth right-of-way line ofBramblewood Drive; Thencerun North 89 degrees 22minutes 55.7 seconds Westalong the North side ofBramblewood Drive 272.368feet ; thence run North165.474 feet; Thence runSouth 77 degrees 07 minutes58.4 seconds East 40.074 feet;Thence run North 14 de-g rees 20 m inu tes 00 .0seconds East 151.257 feet tothe South right-of-way line ofHorseshoe Circle and a cul-de-sac with a 50-foot radius;Thence run Northeasterlyalong said radius for 43.995feet; Thence run North 85degrees 00 minutes 00.0seconds East along said right-of-way line for 38.834 feet tothe point of curvature of acurve having the followingcenterline characteristics:Delta angle equals 47 de-g rees 26 m inu tes 16 .2seconds LT; Tangent distanceequals 87.564 feet; Radiusequals 200.000 feet; Thencerun Northeasterly along saidcurve for 94.561 feet; Thencerun South 18 degrees 55minutes 00.0 seconds East183.282 feet to the Point ofBeginning, containing 1.86acres, more or less. Propertysituated in county of Alcorn,state of Mississippi.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1106579MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213871

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF

SALE

WHEREAS, on June 2, 2011,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank Corinth, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201102299 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002481 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002479 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on September 8,2008, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200805711 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on July 21, 2008,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 200804348 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on December 21,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200800210 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on November 7,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200707391 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on September 5,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200705616 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, the aforesaidBancorpSouth Bank, pursuantto the provisions of the afore-said Deeds of Trust, has elec-ted to substitute B. BronsonTabler as Trustee in and forall the above described Deedsof Trust and the indebted-ness secured thereby in lieuof and in place of J. PatrickCaldwell, said Appointment ofSubstituted Trustee is recor-ded in the Office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi, instru-ment recording number201203683; and

WHEREAS, default has beenmade in the payment of saidindebtedness, the SecuredParty is hereby authorized tosell the herein described realproperty in accordance withthe terms and conditions ofthe Deeds of Trust.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, B.BRONSON TABLER, asTrustee in and for said Deedsof Trust, will offer for saleand will sell to the highestbidder for cash, at a publicsale during the legal hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. onthe 7th day of September,2012, at the South front doorof the Alcorn County Court-house, Corinth, Mississippi,the real property being situ-ated in Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, being more particularlydescribed as follows, to-wit:

Lying and being in Block 118of Mitchell and Mask’s Surveyof the City of Corinth ,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet for the pointof beginning; thence continueSouth 16 degrees 20 minutesWest along said West right-of-way line 111.7 feet; thencerun North 71 degrees 27minutes West 133.0 feet;thence run North 16 degrees20 minutes East 10.3 feet;thence run North 73 degrees40 minutes West 67.1 feet tothe East right-of-way line ofPolk Street; thence run North16 degrees 20 minutes Eastalong said East right-of-wayline 45.2 feet; thence runNorth 88 degrees 45 minutesEast 127.45 feet; thence runSouth 82 degrees 45 minutesEast 79.5 feet to the point ofbeginning.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet; thence runNorth 82 degrees 45 minutesWest 79.5 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 127.45 to the East right-of-way line of Polk Street forthe point of beginning; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Eastright-of-way l ine of PolkStreet 45.2 feet; thence runSouth 73 degrees 40 minutesEast 67.1 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 20 minutesEast 66.468 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 70.389 feet to the pointof beginning.

SUBJECT TO right-of-way forpublic streets and utilities.

The above described prop-erty is the same property de-scribed in the deed to PhillipN. Pace et ux from J. L. Ald-ridge et ux dated August 1,1996, recorded in Deed Book283, pages 87-88, in the landrecords of Alcorn County,Mississippi.

I will convey only such title asis vested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 13th day of August, 2012.

B. BRONSON TABLER, SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE

PUBLICATION DATES:August 16, 2012August 23, 2012August 30, 2012September 6, 201213848

SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S

NOTICE OF SALE

STATE OF MISSISSIPPI COUNTY OF ALCORN

WHEREAS, on May 19, 2006,Terry Doles and ChristyDoles executed and de-livered a certain Deed ofTrust unto Wade King, Trust-ee for the benefit of Mort-gage Electronic RegistrationSystems Inc, as nominee forAmSouth Bank, i ts suc-cessors and assigns, to se-cure an indebtedness thereindescribed, which Deed ofTrust is recorded in the of-fice of the Chancery Clerk ofAlcorn County, Mississippi inInstrument 200603021; andWHEREAS, said Deed ofTrust was subsequently as-signed unto JPMorgan ChaseBank, National Association,by instrument recorded in theOffice of the aforesaid Chan-cery Clerk in Instrument201201460; and

WHEREAS, the holder ofsaid Deed of Trust substi-tuted and/or appointed Na-tionwide Trustee Services,Inc., as Trustee in said Deedof Trust by instrument recor-ded in the Office of the afore-said Chancery Clerk Book201203523, Page 1; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofindebtedness secured by saidDeed of Trust, and the hold-er of said Deed of Trust, hav-ing requested the under-signed so to do, on Septem-ber 27, 2012, Substitute orAppointed Trustee shall, dur-ing legal hours (between thehours of 11 o' clock a.m. and4 o' clock p.m.), at public out-cry, offer for sale and will sell,at the South Main door of theAlcorn County Courthouse inCorinth, Mississippi , for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Situated in the County of Al-corn, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Commencing at the North-east corner of the NortheastQuarter of Section 13, Town-ship 2 South, Range 8 East,Alcorn County, Mississippi;thence run West 351.70 feet;thence run South 1064.10feet to an iron pin at theNorthwest corner of the wallproperty as referenced inDeed Book 231 at Page 144in the deed records of Al-corn County, Mississippi, saidcorner being on the East lineof an easement 30.0 feet inwidth and said corner beingthe point of beginning; thencerun along the East line of saideasement and an existinggravel driveway the following:South 30 degrees 18 minutes30 seconds East 67.58 feet;thence South 20 degrees 20minutes 00 seconds East100.78 feet; thence South 12degrees 19 minutes 00seconds East 65.50 feet;thence South 08 degrees 58minutes 00 seconds East87.40 feet; thence leaving saideasement and driveway runNorth 87 degrees 05 minutes00 seconds East 301.13 feetto an iron pin in a fence line;thence run North 12 degrees44 minutes 00 seconds West156.30 feet along a fence to afence corner; thence runSouth 74 degrees 29 minutes00 seconds West 24.96 feetalong a fence to a fencecorner; thence run South 02degrees 03 minutes 00seconds East 78.21 feet to aniron pipe; thence North 35degrees 13 minutes 00seconds West 356.60 feet toan iron pin; thence run South62 degrees 27 minutes 30seconds West 153.40 feet tothe point of beginning. To-gether with a perpetual non-exclusive easement and right-of-way for the following pur-poses; namely, the right toenter upon the hereinafterdescribed land and to do anyand all work necessary tobuild, maintain and repair aroad, together with the rightto use said easement for thepurpose of ingress and egressand for the public utilities allover, upon and across the fol-lowing described land: A stripof land 30 feet in width being15 feet on either side of thecenterline of the following de-scribed line: Commencing atthe Northeast corner of theNortheast Quarter of Sec-tion 13, Township 2 South,Range 8 East , in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, and runNorth 84 degrees 00 minutesWest 147.40 feet; thence runSouth 6 degrees 37 minutesWest 561.26 feet; thence runSouth 44 degrees 09 minutesWest 455.43 feet; thence runSouth 36 degrees 30 minutesEast 25 feet to the intersec-tion of the centerline of saideasement with the Easternright-of-way of a public pavedroad for the point of begin-ning; thence run with the saideasement centerline South 39degrees 51 minutes East102.18 feet; thence run South39 degrees 13, minutes East100 feet; thence run South 32degrees 33 minutes East 100feet; thence run South 20 de-grees 20 minutes East 98.12feet; thence run South 12 de-grees 19 minutes East 64.92feet; thence run South 8 de-grees 58 minutes East 84.97feet to the end of the ease-ment.

Subject to right-of-way toAlabama/Tennessee NaturalGas Company recorded inthe Chancery Clerk office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi, inDeed Book 86 at Page 447.

Title to the above describedproperty is believed to begood, but I will convey onlysuch title as is vested in me asSubstituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this the 27th day of August,2012

Stephanie Fonteno, Assistant Vice President Nationwide Trustee Services,Inc. 400 Northridge DriveSuite 1100 Sandy Springs, GA 30350 (404) 417-4040 1008951MS PUBL ISH : 09 /06 /2012 ,09 /13 /2012 , 09 /20 /201213870

leGalS0955

SUBSTITUTEDTRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF

SALE

WHEREAS, on June 2, 2011,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank Corinth, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201102299 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002481 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002479 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on September 8,2008, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200805711 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on July 21, 2008,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 200804348 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on December 21,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200800210 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on November 7,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200707391 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on September 5,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200705616 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, the aforesaidBancorpSouth Bank, pursuantto the provisions of the afore-said Deeds of Trust, has elec-ted to substitute B. BronsonTabler as Trustee in and forall the above described Deedsof Trust and the indebted-ness secured thereby in lieuof and in place of J. PatrickCaldwell, said Appointment ofSubstituted Trustee is recor-ded in the Office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi, instru-ment recording number201203683; and

WHEREAS, default has beenmade in the payment of saidindebtedness, the SecuredParty is hereby authorized tosell the herein described realproperty in accordance withthe terms and conditions ofthe Deeds of Trust.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, B.BRONSON TABLER, asTrustee in and for said Deedsof Trust, will offer for saleand will sell to the highestbidder for cash, at a publicsale during the legal hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. onthe 7th day of September,2012, at the South front doorof the Alcorn County Court-house, Corinth, Mississippi,the real property being situ-ated in Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, being more particularlydescribed as follows, to-wit:

Lying and being in Block 118of Mitchell and Mask’s Surveyof the City of Corinth ,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet for the pointof beginning; thence continueSouth 16 degrees 20 minutesWest along said West right-of-way line 111.7 feet; thencerun North 71 degrees 27minutes West 133.0 feet;thence run North 16 degrees20 minutes East 10.3 feet;thence run North 73 degrees40 minutes West 67.1 feet tothe East right-of-way line ofPolk Street; thence run North16 degrees 20 minutes Eastalong said East right-of-wayline 45.2 feet; thence runNorth 88 degrees 45 minutesEast 127.45 feet; thence runSouth 82 degrees 45 minutesEast 79.5 feet to the point ofbeginning.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet; thence runNorth 82 degrees 45 minutesWest 79.5 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 127.45 to the East right-of-way line of Polk Street forthe point of beginning; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Eastright-of-way l ine of PolkStreet 45.2 feet; thence runSouth 73 degrees 40 minutesEast 67.1 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 20 minutesEast 66.468 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 70.389 feet to the pointof beginning.

SUBJECT TO right-of-way forpublic streets and utilities.

The above described prop-erty is the same property de-scribed in the deed to PhillipN. Pace et ux from J. L. Ald-ridge et ux dated August 1,1996, recorded in Deed Book283, pages 87-88, in the landrecords of Alcorn County,Mississippi.

I will convey only such title asis vested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 13th day of August, 2012.

B. BRONSON TABLER, SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE

PUBLICATION DATES:August 16, 2012August 23, 2012August 30, 2012September 6, 201213848

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

unfurniSHed apartMentS0610

2 BR, stove/refrig. furn.,W&D hookup, CHA.287-3257.

MAGNOLIA APTS. 2 BR,stove, refrig., water.$365. 286-2256.

FREE MOVE IN (WAC): 2BR, 1 BA, stove & refrig.,W&D hookup, CR 735,Section 8 apvd. $400mo. 287-0105.

HoMeS for rent0620

3 BR, 2 full BA, Farming-ton area, $450 mo., $450dep. 662-287-9109.

5 BR house, $650 mo. &3 BR trailer, $375 mo.Lease w/1 mo. deposit.Newly remodeled. Rent-al ref's needed. 2820Hwy 57, Counce, Tn. 901-490-7550.

MoBile HoMeS for rent0675

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HoMeS for Sale0710

FOR SALE BY OWNER. 8CR 522, large familyhome, great for enter-taining! 4/5 BR, 3 BA,basement & shop on 2acres (additional acre-age available). By ap-pointment, 284-5379.

HUDPUBLISHER’S

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

lotS & acreaGe07341 PLOT at JerusalemCommunity Cemetery,$500. 662-808-5905.

MoBile HoMeS for Sale0741

2 DBL . WIDE Mobi leHomes with property.Call 223-0608

MOBILE HOMES FORS A L E . O N L Y $ 1 , 0 0 0DOWN! Under $17,900.N O C R E D I T C H E C K !Y o u ’ r e a l r e a d y a p -proved, subject to in-come ver i f icat ion .O W N E R F I N A N C I N G .SIMPLE TO PURCHASE!MOVE IN TODAY! All mo-bile homes for sale areset up in mobile homepark and ready to movein. Bellecrest. Hatties-burg. 601-545-1300.

MiSc. real eState0780

TRAILER W/property,163 Henderson Rd., alloffers considered. 260-786-3163.

TRANSPORTATION

MotorcycleS08322004 POLARIS Ranger2x4 ATV, 425cc, 113 hrs.,bench seat, tilt bed,windshield, $3800 firm.287-6804.

auto/truck partS & acceSSorieS

0848

FIBERGLASS WHITE ton-neau cover for '98Dodge pickup, 4 WB,$450. 662-603-4488.

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

leGalS0955SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OFSALE

WHEREAS, on June 2, 2011,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank Corinth, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201102299 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002481 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on May 20, 2010,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 201002479 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on September 8,2008, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200805711 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on July 21, 2008,J. L. Aldridge and RosemaryAldridge executed a Deed ofTrust to J. Patrick Caldwell,Trustee for BancorpSouthBank, Tupelo, Mississippi, saidDeed of Trust being recor-ded at Instrument RecordingNumber 200804348 in theChancery Clerk’s Office of Al-corn County, Mississippi; and

WHEREAS, on December 21,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200800210 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on November 7,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200707391 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, on September 5,2007, J. L. Aldridge and Rose-mary Aldridge executed aDeed of Trust to J. PatrickCaldwell, Trustee for Ban-corpSouth Bank, Tupelo, Mis-sissippi, said Deed of Trustbeing recorded at InstrumentR e c o r d i n g N u m b e r200705616 in the ChanceryClerk’s Off ice of AlcornCounty, Mississ ippi ; and

WHEREAS, the aforesaidBancorpSouth Bank, pursuantto the provisions of the afore-said Deeds of Trust, has elec-ted to substitute B. BronsonTabler as Trustee in and forall the above described Deedsof Trust and the indebted-ness secured thereby in lieuof and in place of J. PatrickCaldwell, said Appointment ofSubstituted Trustee is recor-ded in the Office of the Chan-cery Clerk of Alcorn Countyat Corinth, Mississippi, instru-ment recording number201203683; and

WHEREAS, default has beenmade in the payment of saidindebtedness, the SecuredParty is hereby authorized tosell the herein described realproperty in accordance withthe terms and conditions ofthe Deeds of Trust.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, B.BRONSON TABLER, asTrustee in and for said Deedsof Trust, will offer for saleand will sell to the highestbidder for cash, at a publicsale during the legal hours of11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. onthe 7th day of September,2012, at the South front doorof the Alcorn County Court-house, Corinth, Mississippi,the real property being situ-ated in Alcorn County, Missis-sippi, being more particularlydescribed as follows, to-wit:

Lying and being in Block 118of Mitchell and Mask’s Surveyof the City of Corinth ,County of Alcorn, State ofMississippi, more particularlydescribed as follows:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet for the pointof beginning; thence continueSouth 16 degrees 20 minutesWest along said West right-of-way line 111.7 feet; thencerun North 71 degrees 27minutes West 133.0 feet;thence run North 16 degrees20 minutes East 10.3 feet;thence run North 73 degrees40 minutes West 67.1 feet tothe East right-of-way line ofPolk Street; thence run North16 degrees 20 minutes Eastalong said East right-of-wayline 45.2 feet; thence runNorth 88 degrees 45 minutesEast 127.45 feet; thence runSouth 82 degrees 45 minutesEast 79.5 feet to the point ofbeginning.

LESS AND EXCEPT the fol-lowing described property:

Commence at the Northeastcorner of Block 118 ofMitchell and Mask’s Survey tothe City of Corinth, AlcornCounty, Mississippi; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Westright-of-way line of JacksonStreet 15.7 feet; thence runNorth 82 degrees 45 minutesWest 79.5 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 127.45 to the East right-of-way line of Polk Street forthe point of beginning; thencerun South 16 degrees 20minutes West along the Eastright-of-way l ine of PolkStreet 45.2 feet; thence runSouth 73 degrees 40 minutesEast 67.1 feet; thence runNorth 16 degrees 20 minutesEast 66.468 feet; thence runSouth 88 degrees 45 minutesWest 70.389 feet to the pointof beginning.

SUBJECT TO right-of-way forpublic streets and utilities.

The above described prop-erty is the same property de-scribed in the deed to PhillipN. Pace et ux from J. L. Ald-ridge et ux dated August 1,1996, recorded in Deed Book283, pages 87-88, in the landrecords of Alcorn County,Mississippi.

I will convey only such title asis vested in me as SubstitutedTrustee.

WITNESS my signature thisthe 13th day of August, 2012.

B. BRONSON TABLER, SUBSTITUTED

TRUSTEE

PUBLICATION DATES:August 16, 2012August 23, 2012August 30, 2012September 6, 201213848

Page 16: Daily Corinthian E-edition 090612

16 • Thursday, September 6, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

auto ServiceS0840

Put your automobile, truck, SUV, boat, tractor, motorcycle, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Here’s How It Works: Your ad will be composed 1 column wide and 2 inches deep. The ad will run each day in the Daily Corinthian until your

vehicle sells. Ad must include photo, description, and price. You provide the photo. Certain restrictions apply. 1. No dealers. 2. Non-commercial only 3. Must pay in advance. No exceptions. 4. Single item only. 5. Categories

included are auto, motorcycle, tractor. boat, RV and ATV 6. After every 30 DAYS, advertised price of listing needs to be reduced. 7. NO REFUNDS for any reason 8. NON-TRANSFERABLE. Call 287-6147 to place your ad!Auto Sales

470FARM/LAWN/

GARDEN EQUIP.

868AUTOMOBILES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2005 AIRSTREAM LAND YACHT30 ft., with slide out

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

$75,000. 662-287-7734

2002 FLAGSTAFF 32’ travel trailer w/super slide, weight 5600 lb, can be towed with 1/2 ton truck, kept under

cover all its life except when camping, has been used 3-4 times

each year. Comes w/hitch & has new awning. Super nice!

$9000. 662-287-5926 or 662-653-8632.

1998 Chevy S-10 LS,

extended cab, 3rd door, low rider,

5-spd., 2.2 ltr., 4 cyl., runs great,

$2000 obo662-415-6262.

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel camper, 2 slides, fi berglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa

sleeper, refrig., mi-cro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500662-223-0056.

’04 HONDA SHADOW

750$3900

662-603-4407

832MOTORCYCLES/

ATV’S

2004 KAWASAKIMULE

3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat,

tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well

maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.

731-212-9659731-212-9661.

1991 Ford Econoline

Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one

owner, serious interest. $7000

287-5206.

2008 Jayco Eagle 5th Wheel

38’, 4 slides, exc. cond., $28,000

fi rm. Trailer located in Counce, TN. 425-503-5467

2001 HONDA REBEL 250 WITH EXTRAS,

BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,

$1850662-287-2659

GUARANTEED

1999 CHEROKEE SPORT 4X4,

6 cyl., all works good except for

A/C$4000.

662-665-1143.

‘98 FAT BOY,New factory EVOE engine w/warranty, 80 cu. in., 1300 mi. new wheels/tires,

pipes & paint. Divorce Sale. Over $13,000

invested.

$8000 obo662-665-1781

RAZOR 08 POLARIS

30” ITP Mud Lights, sound bars, 2600

miles.

$7500 662-808-2900

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 EX

“New” Condition$1995

215-666-1374662-665-0209

2006 GMC YUKONExc. cond. inside & out,

106k miles, 3rd row seat, garage kept, front

& rear A/C,tow pkg., loaded

$13,995662-286-1732

REDUCED

804BOATS

804BOATS

2000 DODGE

CARAVAN, $1500.

731-645-0157 AFTER 4 P.M.

2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van, too many

extras to list, good travel or work van, will trade or sell.

Reduced to$2,300

662-287-1834.

868AUTOMOBILES

2006 FORD EXPLORER WHITE, EDDIE

BAUER EDITION, 42K MILES

LOADED, EXC. COND.

$14,500662-423-3908

423-8829

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P.

JOHNSON, TROLLING MTR., GOOD COND., INCLUDES TRAILER,

$1200 OBO OR WILL TRADE. 731-610-8901 OR EMAIL FOR

PICS TO

[email protected]

‘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.,

$7,900. 662-808-0113.

16’ Aqua bass boat 70 HP Mercury, 4 seats, trolling

motor,

$4,000662-287-5413.

1959 Ford diesel

tractor

$4000662-750-0607

3000 series, new rear tires

& tubes

19 Ft. Heavy Duty Home Made

Trailer

$600662-750-0607

2002 BUICK

LESABRE 115,000 miles.

$3800286-6866 or284-8291.

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr.,

exc. drive train, 215k miles, great

work truck. $8400.

662-664-3538.

BUSH HOG 61” ZERO TURN, COM-MERCIAL, 28 HP KOE-HLER, 45 HOURS, NEW

$7900662-728-3193

FOR SALE1961 CHEV.2 dr. hardtop (bubble top), sound body,

runs.

$10,000Days only,

662-415-3408.

2000 Custom Harley

Davidson Mtr. & Trans.,

New Tires, Must See

$12,000 662-415-8623 or 287-8894

REDUCED

$10,500

816RECREATIONAL

VEHICLES

Cruisemaster Motorhome by

Georgieboy, 1997 GM 454 ci chassie, 37’ with slider, 45,000

miles with white Oak interior. $19,500. 662-808-7777 or

662-415-9020

1967 CHEVYNeeds paint &

body work$4000.

504-952-1230

1996 LINCOLN TOWN CARExc. cond.,

1-family owned, 138,350 miles.

$3900.662-415-8682

Luxury V-8 Lone Star Dodge P/U, 19.5 mpg w/low

miles, 52k, 2x4 2005 Model Quad Cab, SLT w/PS, PL, AC, CD. A great Buy @

$12,980. Call 731-239-9226.

2003 YAMAHA V-STAR CLASSIC

looks & rides real good!

$3000662-603-4786

2004 32 ft

Forest River Camper,

C/H/A, sleeps 5, full bedroom,

full bath, new carpet,

& hardwood, fridg, stove, microwave.

$3500.00662-665-6000

‘03 Hummer H2, loaded, runs/LOOKS

PERFECT! 103k miles, blk w/tan int., 3rd row, priced low $17,850 fi rm.

Clear title. Serious cash buyer only!901-592-8967.

2009 HYUNDAI ACCENT

4-dr., 41,000 miles, dark blue ext. & gray int., 4 cyl. auto., CD/

XM radio, 36 mpg. payoff is

$11,400731-610-7241

1996 FORD F150 4X4

stick, camoufl age,

186,200 miles (mostly interstate

driving), runs good.

$3000 obo. 662-607-9401

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

662-287-5413or cell 284-8678

$3,500 $9,500

2007 JACL motorscooter

250, only 1741 actual

miles, silver & black, great beginner’s or ladies’ bike, $1250 obo.

662-423-5095

2007 Franklin pull camper, 36’, 20’

awning, 2 slide outs, full kitchen, W&D, tub/shower, 32” Sony TV, fully air-conditioned & lots

more! $11,500. 662-643-3565 or 415-8549

REDUCEDREDUCED

2000 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS LSLoaded, exc. cond.,

gold color, all leather interior.

$3800286-6781

or 643-0211

1985 1/2 TON SILVERADO

305 ENG., AUTO., PS, PB, AC, NEEDS PAINT, READY TO RESTORE,

DRIVEN DAILY. $3,500

call Iuka.287-1213 AFTER

4 P.M.

HoMe iMproveMent & repair

OUTSIDE & INSIDE. Car-pentry, plumbing, deck,roofing, tile, rottenwood repair, painting,home siding, remodel-ing, level floors.731-239-2601.

ServiceS

EXTRA! EXTRA! Still Run-ning! Drop-off LaundryService. Call Jessica at662-603-5904. Pick-up &Deliver.

SOCIAL SECURITY DISAB-ILITY BENEFITS. WIN orPay Nothing! Start YourApplication In Under 60Seconds. Call Today!C o n t a c t D i s a b i l i t yGroup, Inc. Licensed At-torneys & BBB Accred-ited. Call 888-460-3130.

StoraGe, indoor/outdoorAMERICAN

MINI STORAGE2058 S. Tate

Across fromWorld Color

287-1024MORRIS CRUM

MINI-STOR. ,72w., 3 locs.

Unloading docks/Rental trucks,

286-3826.

profeSSional Service directory

alterationS

SEW MUCH FUN! Mono-gram & EmbroideryBack-To-School itemsor just about anything.Laura Holloway, 284-5379 after 5 or leavemsg.

leGalS0955

Substitute Trustee’s Notice of Sale

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Alcorn

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof May, 2010 and acknow-ledged on the 21st day ofMay , 2010, Bobby LynnBrown and Donna Fay Brown,husband and wife, executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto Cecil D. McCle-llan, III, Trustee for MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, Beneficiary, to secure anindebtedness therein de-scribed, which Deed of Trustis recorded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi in In-strument# 201002597; and

WHEREAS, on the 10th dayof February, 2012, MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, assigned said Deed ofTrust unto Wells Fargo Bank,NA, by instrument recordedin the office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk in Instru-ment# 201200869; and

WHEREAS, on the 13th dayof August, 2012, the Holderof said Deed of Trust substi-tuted and appointed John CMorris IV as Trustee in saidDeed of Trust, by instrumentrecorded in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201203798; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofthe indebtedness secured bythe said Deed of Trust, andthe holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested theundersigned so to do, on the20th day of September, 2012,I will during the lawful hoursof between 11:00 a.m. and4:00 p.m., at public outcry, of-fer for sale and will sell, at thesouth front door of the Al-corn County Courthouse atCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

A 2.280 acre tract, being butout of the Dorothy B. Per-kins tract, as referenced bydeed recorded in Deed Book270 at pages 353-361 in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi, ly-ing in the Southwest Quarterof Section 26, Township 1South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, being fur-ther described as follows:

Commencing at the Southw-est corner of the SouthwestQuarter of Section 26, Town-ship1 South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Mississippi;thence run North 1320.00feet to a point; thence runEast 30.00 feet to a point onthe East right of way line ofAlcorn County (Public) RoadNo. 702; thence run along theEast right of way line of said(Public) Road the following:North 270.00 feet to a steelpost found, being the North-west Corner of the WilliamCharles and Beulah Barnestract, as referenced by deedrecorded in Deed Book 282at pages 112-113, in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;North 00 degrees 23 minutes34 seconds West 307.826feet to an iron pin found forthe point of beginning; thencecontinue North 00 Degrees23 Minutes 34 Seconds Westalong the East right of wayline of said (Public) Road213.789 feet to an iron pinset; thence leaving the Eastright of way line of said (Pub-lic) Road run East 424.463feet to an iron pin set; thencerun South 255.00 feet to aniron pin set; thence runNorth 84 degrees 26 minutes05 Seconds West 425.00 feetto the point of beginning, con-taining 2.280 acres, more orless.

I will only convey such title asis vested in me as SubstituteTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this 27th day of August, 2012.John C Morris IVSubstitute Trustee2309 Oliver RoadMonroe, LA 71201(318) 330-9020

kdb/F12-1645PUBLISH: 8.30.12/ 9.6.12/9.13.1213867

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HoMe iMproveMent & repair

BUTLER, DOUG: Founda-tion, floor leveling,bricks cracking, rottenwood, basements,shower floor. Over 35yrs. exp. Free est.7 3 1 - 2 3 9 - 8 9 4 5 o r662-284-6146.

JT'S Handyman. Press.washing, carpentry,paint ing. 284-6848.

leGalS0955

Substitute Trustee’s Notice of Sale

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Alcorn

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof May, 2010 and acknow-ledged on the 21st day ofMay , 2010, Bobby LynnBrown and Donna Fay Brown,husband and wife, executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto Cecil D. McCle-llan, III, Trustee for MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, Beneficiary, to secure anindebtedness therein de-scribed, which Deed of Trustis recorded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi in In-strument# 201002597; and

WHEREAS, on the 10th dayof February, 2012, MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, assigned said Deed ofTrust unto Wells Fargo Bank,NA, by instrument recordedin the office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk in Instru-ment# 201200869; and

WHEREAS, on the 13th dayof August, 2012, the Holderof said Deed of Trust substi-tuted and appointed John CMorris IV as Trustee in saidDeed of Trust, by instrumentrecorded in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201203798; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofthe indebtedness secured bythe said Deed of Trust, andthe holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested theundersigned so to do, on the20th day of September, 2012,I will during the lawful hoursof between 11:00 a.m. and4:00 p.m., at public outcry, of-fer for sale and will sell, at thesouth front door of the Al-corn County Courthouse atCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

A 2.280 acre tract, being butout of the Dorothy B. Per-kins tract, as referenced bydeed recorded in Deed Book270 at pages 353-361 in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi, ly-ing in the Southwest Quarterof Section 26, Township 1South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, being fur-ther described as follows:

Commencing at the Southw-est corner of the SouthwestQuarter of Section 26, Town-ship1 South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Mississippi;thence run North 1320.00feet to a point; thence runEast 30.00 feet to a point onthe East right of way line ofAlcorn County (Public) RoadNo. 702; thence run along theEast right of way line of said(Public) Road the following:North 270.00 feet to a steelpost found, being the North-west Corner of the WilliamCharles and Beulah Barnestract, as referenced by deedrecorded in Deed Book 282at pages 112-113, in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;North 00 degrees 23 minutes34 seconds West 307.826feet to an iron pin found forthe point of beginning; thencecontinue North 00 Degrees23 Minutes 34 Seconds Westalong the East right of wayline of said (Public) Road213.789 feet to an iron pinset; thence leaving the Eastright of way line of said (Pub-lic) Road run East 424.463feet to an iron pin set; thencerun South 255.00 feet to aniron pin set; thence runNorth 84 degrees 26 minutes05 Seconds West 425.00 feetto the point of beginning, con-taining 2.280 acres, more orless.

I will only convey such title asis vested in me as SubstituteTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this 27th day of August, 2012.John C Morris IVSubstitute Trustee2309 Oliver RoadMonroe, LA 71201(318) 330-9020

kdb/F12-1645PUBLISH: 8.30.12/ 9.6.12/9.13.1213867

leGalS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFLESTER LEATHER WOOD,DECEASED

CAUSE NO.: 2012-0280-02-MM

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Lester Leatherwood,Deceased, and any all un-known persons claiming anyright, title and interest in andto the estate of the LesterLeatherwood. You have beennamed by Ricky Leather-wood Administrator of theLester Leatherwood, who isseeking the judicial determin-at ion of heirs of LesterLeatherwood, Deceased.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidpetition at 9:00 a.m. on the17th day of October, 2012, inthe Chancery Courtroom ofLee County Chancery Courtlocated in Tupelo, Mississippi,and in case of your failure toappear and defend a judg-ment will be entered againstyou for the money or otherthings demanded in the peti-tion and you will be foreverbarred.

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

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the31st day of August, 2012.

Bobby MarottALCORN COUNTY CHANCERY CLERK

BY: Willie JusticeDeputy Clerk

3t 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/1213884

Substitute Trustee’s Notice of Sale

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Alcorn

WHEREAS, on the 21st dayof May, 2010 and acknow-ledged on the 21st day ofMay , 2010, Bobby LynnBrown and Donna Fay Brown,husband and wife, executedand delivered a certain Deedof Trust unto Cecil D. McCle-llan, III, Trustee for MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, Beneficiary, to secure anindebtedness therein de-scribed, which Deed of Trustis recorded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Al-corn County, Mississippi in In-strument# 201002597; and

WHEREAS, on the 10th dayof February, 2012, MortgageElectronic Registration Sys-tems, Inc., as nominee forResidential Finance Corpora-tion, assigned said Deed ofTrust unto Wells Fargo Bank,NA, by instrument recordedin the office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk in Instru-ment# 201200869; and

WHEREAS, on the 13th dayof August, 2012, the Holderof said Deed of Trust substi-tuted and appointed John CMorris IV as Trustee in saidDeed of Trust, by instrumentrecorded in the office of theaforesaid Chancery Clerk inInstrument# 201203798; and

WHEREAS, default havingbeen made in the payments ofthe indebtedness secured bythe said Deed of Trust, andthe holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested theundersigned so to do, on the20th day of September, 2012,I will during the lawful hoursof between 11:00 a.m. and4:00 p.m., at public outcry, of-fer for sale and will sell, at thesouth front door of the Al-corn County Courthouse atCorinth, Mississippi, for cashto the highest bidder, the fol-lowing described land andproperty situated in AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

A 2.280 acre tract, being butout of the Dorothy B. Per-kins tract, as referenced bydeed recorded in Deed Book270 at pages 353-361 in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi, ly-ing in the Southwest Quarterof Section 26, Township 1South, Range 7 East, AlcornCounty, Mississippi, being fur-ther described as follows:

Commencing at the Southw-est corner of the SouthwestQuarter of Section 26, Town-ship1 South, Range 7 East, Al-corn County, Mississippi;thence run North 1320.00feet to a point; thence runEast 30.00 feet to a point onthe East right of way line ofAlcorn County (Public) RoadNo. 702; thence run along theEast right of way line of said(Public) Road the following:North 270.00 feet to a steelpost found, being the North-west Corner of the WilliamCharles and Beulah Barnestract, as referenced by deedrecorded in Deed Book 282at pages 112-113, in theChancery Clerk's Office ofAlcorn County, Mississippi;North 00 degrees 23 minutes34 seconds West 307.826feet to an iron pin found forthe point of beginning; thencecontinue North 00 Degrees23 Minutes 34 Seconds Westalong the East right of wayline of said (Public) Road213.789 feet to an iron pinset; thence leaving the Eastright of way line of said (Pub-lic) Road run East 424.463feet to an iron pin set; thencerun South 255.00 feet to aniron pin set; thence runNorth 84 degrees 26 minutes05 Seconds West 425.00 feetto the point of beginning, con-taining 2.280 acres, more orless.

I will only convey such title asis vested in me as SubstituteTrustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE,this 27th day of August, 2012.John C Morris IVSubstitute Trustee2309 Oliver RoadMonroe, LA 71201(318) 330-9020

kdb/F12-1645PUBLISH: 8.30.12/ 9.6.12/9.13.1213867

leGalS0955

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFLESTER LEATHER WOOD,DECEASED

CAUSE NO.: 2012-0280-02-MM

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs atlaw of Lester Leatherwood,Deceased, and any all un-known persons claiming anyright, title and interest in andto the estate of the LesterLeatherwood. You have beennamed by Ricky Leather-wood Administrator of theLester Leatherwood, who isseeking the judicial determin-at ion of heirs of LesterLeatherwood, Deceased.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against saidpetition at 9:00 a.m. on the17th day of October, 2012, inthe Chancery Courtroom ofLee County Chancery Courtlocated in Tupelo, Mississippi,and in case of your failure toappear and defend a judg-ment will be entered againstyou for the money or otherthings demanded in the peti-tion and you will be foreverbarred.

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

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the31st day of August, 2012.

Bobby MarottALCORN COUNTY CHANCERY CLERK

BY: Willie JusticeDeputy Clerk

3t 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/1213884

leGalS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFMARY ELIZABETHRUSH,DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2012-0484-02

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters Testamentary hav-ing been granted on 23rd dayof Aug., 2012, by the Chan-cery Court of Alcorn County,Mississippi to the under-signed Co-Executor/Co-Exec-utrix of the Estate of MaryElizabeth Rush, Deceased, no-tice is hereby given to all per-sons having claims against saidestate to present the same tothe Clerk of this Court forprobate and registration ac-cording to law, within ninety(90) days from the first pub-lication of this notice, or theywill be forever barred.

This the 23 day of Aug.,2012.

PAUL CALVIN RUSH,Co-Executor of the

Last Will andTestament of

Mary Elizabeth Rush,Deceased

BARBARA DENISERUSH-PIERCE,

Co-Excecutrix of theLast Will and

Testament ofMary Elizabeth Rush,

Deceased

3t 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/1213881

leGalS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

RE: LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFGRADY WILBOURNHENDERSON

NO. 2012-0354-02-H

NOTICE TOCREDITORS

Letters Testamentary hav-ing been granted on the 13day of August, 2012, by theChancery Court of AlcornCounty, Mississippi, to theundersigned upon the Personand Estate of Grady Wil-bourn Henderson, notice ishereby given to all personshaving claims against said Per-son and Estate to present thesame to the Clerk of the saidCourt for probate and regis-tration, according to law,within ninety (90) days fromthe date of the first publica-tion or they will be foreverbarred.

This the 13 day of August,2012.

JOANNE PEZEWSKI

Of Counsel:

LANGSTON & LOTT, P. A.Post Office Box 382100 South Main StreetBooneville, MS 38829Telephone: (662) 728-9733Facsimile: (662) 728-1992

4t 8/23, 8/30, 9/6, 913/1213858

leGalS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

LAST WILL ANDTESTAMENT OFMARY ELIZABETHRUSH, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2012-0484-02

SUMMONS

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF ALCORN

TO: Unknown Heirs of Mary Elizabeth Rush,Deceased

You have been made a De-fendant in the suit filed in thisCourt by Paul Calvin Rushand Barbara Rush-Pierce, Pe-titioners, seeking a determin-ation of heirs.

You are summoned to ap-pear and defend against thecomplaint or petition filedagainst you in this action at9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 16thday of October, 2012, in theCourtroom of the AlcornCounty Chancery Building inCorinth, Alcorn County, Mis-sissippi, and in case of yourfailure to appear and defend-ant , a judgment wi l l beentered against you for themoney or other things de-manded in the complaint orpetition.

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

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this the31 day of August, 2012.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

BY: KAREN BURNS, D.C.DEPUTY CLERK

3t 9/6, 9/13, 9/20/1213882