110213 daily corinthian e edition

16
Vol. 117, No. 262 Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages 1 section Saturday Nov. 2, 2013 50 cents Index On this day in history 150 years ago A Pennsylvania committee plans the ceremony for a new cemetery dedicated to the fallen Union soldiers from the Battle of Gettysburg. Members send an invitation to President Lincoln to speak, and to their surprise, he accepts. Stocks........ 8 Classified...... 14 Comics........ 7 State........ 5 Weather........ 9 Obituaries........ 6 Opinion........ 4 Sports...... 12 Corinth 45 Amory 15 Booneville 14 Kossuth 0 Thrasher 42 Biggersville 0 Belmont 61 Alcorn Central 19 Today 64 Breezy Tonight 38 0% chance of rain A Corinth man pleaded guilty to armed robbery and a cou- ple of other criminal charges Thursday afternoon in Alcorn County Circuit Court. In another case, a woman pleaded guilty in the theft of wire from Crossroads Arena and catalytic converters from vehicles belonging to Cross- roads Regional Park. Demarkquez L. Williams, 18, of Wick Street, entered a plea of guilty on two indictments and one criminal information — armed robbery and sale or transfer of a stolen rearm in Alcorn County and burglary of a dwelling in a Prentiss County case. Williams was arrested by the Corinth Police Department af- ter investigation of a shooting and robbery and another shoot- ing and attempted robbery that happened several hours apart on Aug. 18-19. Judge Thomas Gardner III sentenced Williams to 20 years in custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections with 10 years suspended, fol- lowed by ve years of probation and a $1,000 ne on the armed robbery charge. It is a day-for- day sentence that will not allow early release. Williams has been incarcer- ated for several months. Gardner imposed a sus- pended 20-year sentence on Guilty plea entered in armed robbery BY JEBB JOHNSTON [email protected] FARMINGTON — Dustin Cal- lens didn’t know what he heard. He just knew it was loud. Callens pulled out three pas- sengers of a burning car which crashed into a power pole at house 254 on County Road 218 at 12:49 p.m. Friday. “I thought something had fell off the porch,” he said of the one-vehicle crash. “I ran out- side and started helping them out of the car.” According to Callens, the battery of the Dodge car burst catching the car on re. “Speed was obviously a fac- tor,” said Farmington Deputy Chief Jerry Mayhall. “The car left the road a couple hundred feet before it hit the pole.” Eric Thompson, 39, of 17 CR 188, Corinth, was the driver of the 1999 Dodge Neon. His son, Noah Thompson, 14, was in the passenger side of the vehicle. Eighteen year-old Blake Car- penter, was seated in the right rear of the car. Noah Thompson was trans- ported via ambulance to Mag- nolia Regional Health Center after being attended to on the porch of the Callens’ home. None of the three individu- als were wearing a seat belt, ac- cording to the accident report. The car was traveling north on CR 218 when it left the right side of the road, running over an address sign at house 252 before hitting the pole. “We heard the crash and saw the car on re,” said ho- meowner Sheila Callens of the accident in her yard. “One of the neighbors ran to get a re extinguisher and put out the re.” Fireman with the Farming- ton Fire and Rescue Depart- ment arrived later to make sure the re was completely extin- guished after it had began to smoke again. Eric Thompson was charged with reckless driving and no in- surance, according to Mayhall. Man pulls victims from burning car BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Staff photo by Steve Beavers One individual was taken to Magnolia Regional Health Center following a one-vehicle crash on CR 218 Friday afternoon. Crossroads residents should be aware the u sea- son is well underway. The Mississippi State De- partment of Health is report- ing its rst conrmed cases of the inuenza (u) in the state for the 2013-14 u sea- son. According to the MSDH Public Health Laboratory, all of the conrmed cases are in- uenza A (2009 H1N1) and are covered by the current u vaccine. State Health Ofcer Dr. Mary Currier said they are now starting to see conrmed u cases in Mississippi. “This not only indicates the u has been detected in the state, but it also serves as a reminder that now is the best time to get your u shot,” said Currier. “The u shot takes one to two weeks to produce immunity, and although the u season usually peeks in Jan-March, it sometimes reaches high levels as early as December.” According to a news release by the MSDH in Jackson, in- dividual u cases are not re- ported to them. The agency monitors u activity through the Inuenza-Like Illness (ILI) Sentinel Surveillance System, made up of health- care centers, pediatricians, primary care physicians, and hospital emergency depart- ments who report the per- centage of patients with u- like symptoms to a statewide database. Healthcare providers par- ticipating in the system also submit respiratory samples for u testing to the MSDH Public Health Laboratory. MSDH uses this information to determine the spread of u in the state, according to the release. The u vaccine is currently available at all county health departments in the state. The Alcorn County Health De- partment is located at 3706 Jo Ann Drive, Route 10, Box 16, in Corinth and is open on Monday-Friday. (For more information, call the Alcorn County Health Department at 662- 287-6121.) Flu season is in full swing SELMER, Tenn. — God puts individuals in the lives of oth- ers for a reason. Missionary Crystal Reece believes the ones God placed in her life were done so in or- der to mold the 41-year-old for His purpose. The 1990 McNairy Central High School graduate recently had her rst book published, detailing how her life has been shaped by the inuences of those people. “God gives us certain people for a reason,” said the 2009 Urshan Graduate School of Theology graduate. “He is al- ways with us and answers all prayers, even if it’s not the answer we desire at the mo- ment.” In the book “Island Splash- es,” Reece talks about her call- ing into the missionary eld. “God places trust in ev- eryone,” she said. “The book is more than a memoir, it’s a chronicle of how God has Missionary shares story of God’s call BY STEVE BEAVERS [email protected] Please see REECE | 2 Submitted photo Crystal Reece, a Selmer, Tenn., native, recently had her book “Island Splashes” published. The book talks about the influences in the life of the licensed minister. As the fall season approaches, the Corinth- Alcorn Animal Shelter will host “Canine Fall Fashions,” a fashion show for pampered pets of all shapes and sizes. “Anybody and any pet can participate in the fashion show,” said Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter Volunteer Director Charlotte Doehner. “Any pet you have that you would like to dress up, either in a fall fashion or their Halloween costume, can enter.” “The entrance fee is $10 and the money goes to help the shelter”, said Doehner. “We are going to have some special music and the event is going to be held at the American Le- gion Post #6. We are asking the pets to come up on the stage, with their owners, and show off their style,” explained Doehner as she described exactly what the contestants would be asked to do. “Since this event is intended to be fun for everyone, there will be no winner.” “Our photographer that does all of our won- derful Facebook pictures, Phyllis Driver, will be there and we will do a little feature story on each one,” said Doehner. In the days following the events, they will be posting photos and stories about each contes- 4-legged fashion show benefits shelter BY HEATHER SMITH [email protected] Staff photo by Heather Smith This happy pooch shows off a popping pink hat in preparation for today’s canine fashion show benefitting the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter. Please see SHOW | 2 Please see PLEA | 2 Daily Corinthian

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Page 1: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Vol. 117, No. 262 • Corinth, Mississippi • 16 pages • 1 section

SaturdayNov. 2, 2013

50 cents

Index On this day in history 150 years agoA Pennsylvania committee plans the ceremony for a new

cemetery dedicated to the fallen Union soldiers from the Battle of Gettysburg. Members send an invitation to President Lincoln to speak, and to their surprise, he accepts.

Stocks........8 Classified......14 Comics........7 State........5

Weather........9 Obituaries........6 Opinion........4 Sports......12

Corinth 45Amory 15

Booneville 14Kossuth 0

Thrasher 42Biggersville 0

Belmont 61Alcorn Central 19

Today64

BreezyTonight

380% chance of rain

A Corinth man pleaded guilty to armed robbery and a cou-ple of other criminal charges Thursday afternoon in Alcorn County Circuit Court.

In another case, a woman pleaded guilty in the theft of

wire from Crossroads Arena and catalytic converters from vehicles belonging to Cross-roads Regional Park.

Demarkquez L. Williams, 18, of Wick Street, entered a plea of guilty on two indictments and one criminal information — armed robbery and sale or

transfer of a stolen fi rearm in Alcorn County and burglary of a dwelling in a Prentiss County case.

Williams was arrested by the Corinth Police Department af-ter investigation of a shooting and robbery and another shoot-ing and attempted robbery that

happened several hours apart on Aug. 18-19.

Judge Thomas Gardner III sentenced Williams to 20 years in custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections with 10 years suspended, fol-lowed by fi ve years of probation and a $1,000 fi ne on the armed

robbery charge. It is a day-for-day sentence that will not allow early release.

Williams has been incarcer-ated for several months.

Gardner imposed a sus-pended 20-year sentence on

Guilty plea entered in armed robberyBY JEBB JOHNSTON

[email protected]

FARMINGTON — Dustin Cal-lens didn’t know what he heard.

He just knew it was loud.Callens pulled out three pas-

sengers of a burning car which crashed into a power pole at house 254 on County Road 218 at 12:49 p.m. Friday.

“I thought something had fell off the porch,” he said of the one-vehicle crash. “I ran out-side and started helping them out of the car.”

According to Callens, the battery of the Dodge car burst catching the car on fi re.

“Speed was obviously a fac-tor,” said Farmington Deputy

Chief Jerry Mayhall. “The car left the road a couple hundred feet before it hit the pole.”

Eric Thompson, 39, of 17 CR 188, Corinth, was the driver of the 1999 Dodge Neon. His son, Noah Thompson, 14, was in the passenger side of the vehicle. Eighteen year-old Blake Car-penter, was seated in the right rear of the car.

Noah Thompson was trans-ported via ambulance to Mag-nolia Regional Health Center after being attended to on the porch of the Callens’ home.

None of the three individu-als were wearing a seat belt, ac-cording to the accident report.

The car was traveling north

on CR 218 when it left the right side of the road, running over an address sign at house 252 before hitting the pole.

“We heard the crash and saw the car on fi re,” said ho-meowner Sheila Callens of the accident in her yard. “One of the neighbors ran to get a fi re extinguisher and put out the fi re.”

Fireman with the Farming-ton Fire and Rescue Depart-ment arrived later to make sure the fi re was completely extin-guished after it had began to smoke again.

Eric Thompson was charged with reckless driving and no in-surance, according to Mayhall.

Man pulls victims from burning carBY STEVE BEAVERS

[email protected]

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

One individual was taken to Magnolia Regional Health Center following a one-vehicle crash on CR 218 Friday afternoon. 

Crossroads residents should be aware the fl u sea-son is well underway.

The Mississippi State De-partment of Health is report-ing its fi rst confi rmed cases of the infl uenza (fl u) in the state for the 2013-14 fl u sea-son. According to the MSDH Public Health Laboratory, all of the confi rmed cases are in-fl uenza A (2009 H1N1) and are covered by the current fl u vaccine.

State Health Offi cer Dr. Mary Currier said they are now starting to see confi rmed fl u cases in Mississippi.

“This not only indicates the fl u has been detected in the state, but it also serves as a reminder that now is the best time to get your fl u shot,” said Currier. “The fl u shot takes one to two weeks to produce immunity, and although the fl u season usually peeks in Jan-March, it sometimes reaches high levels as early as December.”

According to a news release by the MSDH in Jackson, in-dividual fl u cases are not re-

ported to them. The agency monitors fl u activity through the Infl uenza-Like Illness (ILI) Sentinel Surveillance System, made up of health-care centers, pediatricians, primary care physicians, and hospital emergency depart-ments who report the per-centage of patients with fl u-like symptoms to a statewide database.

Healthcare providers par-ticipating in the system also submit respiratory samples for fl u testing to the MSDH Public Health Laboratory. MSDH uses this information to determine the spread of fl u in the state, according to the release.

The fl u vaccine is currently available at all county health departments in the state. The Alcorn County Health De-partment is located at 3706 Jo Ann Drive, Route 10, Box 16, in Corinth and is open on Monday-Friday.

(For more information, call the Alcorn County Health Department at 662-287-6121.)

Flu season isin full swing

SELMER, Tenn. — God puts individuals in the lives of oth-ers for a reason.

Missionary Crystal Reece believes the ones God placed in her life were done so in or-der to mold the 41-year-old for His purpose.

The 1990 McNairy Central High School graduate recently had her fi rst book published, detailing how her life has been shaped by the infl uences of those people.

“God gives us certain people for a reason,” said the 2009 Urshan Graduate School of Theology graduate. “He is al-ways with us and answers all prayers, even if it’s not the answer we desire at the mo-ment.”

In the book “Island Splash-es,” Reece talks about her call-

ing into the missionary fi eld.“God places trust in ev-

eryone,” she said. “The book is more than a memoir, it’s a chronicle of how God has

Missionary sharesstory of God’s call

BY STEVE [email protected]

Please see REECE | 2

Submitted photo

Crystal Reece, a Selmer, Tenn., native, recently had her book “Island Splashes” published. The book talks about the influences in the life of the licensed minister.

As the fall season approaches, the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter will host “Canine Fall Fashions,” a fashion show for pampered pets of all shapes and sizes.

“Anybody and any pet can participate in the fashion show,” said Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter Volunteer Director Charlotte Doehner. “Any pet you have that you would like to dress up, either in a fall fashion or their Halloween costume, can enter.”

“The entrance fee is $10 and the money goes to help the shelter”, said Doehner.

“We are going to have some special music and the event is going to be held at the American Le-gion Post #6. We are asking the pets to come up on the stage, with their owners, and show off their style,” explained Doehner as she described exactly what the contestants would be asked to do. “Since this event is intended to be fun for everyone, there will be no winner.”

“Our photographer that does all of our won-derful Facebook pictures, Phyllis Driver, will be there and we will do a little feature story on each one,” said Doehner.

In the days following the events, they will be posting photos and stories about each contes-

4-legged fashion show benefits shelterBY HEATHER SMITH

[email protected]

Staff photo by Heather Smith

This happy pooch shows off a popping pink hat in preparation for today’s canine fashion show benefitting the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter.Please see SHOW | 2

Please see PLEA | 2

Daily Corinthian

Page 2: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region2 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, November 2, 2013

The Mississippi Department of Cor-rections inmate who was found dead at his mother’s house last week after gaining a weekend pass was misiden-tifi ed in the Friday front page story.

The inmate found dead on Oct. 26 was 56-year-old William “Danny” Whitaker of Corinth.

Timothy Dale Whitaker, the 48-year-old brother of Danny Whita-ker, remains in custody of the Mis-sissippi Department of Corrections. Timothy Whitaker was convicted in 2010 of burglary of a dwelling and ag-gravated assault.

Repeated attempts to get the autop-sy report of Danny Whitaker from Al-corn County Sheriff Charles Rinehart have been unsuccessful.

Services for Danny Whitaker were held Friday. He was a truck driver for East West Trucking Company, attend-ed Farmington Baptist Church and enjoyed watching football, especially the Dallas Cowboys.

Correction

shaped my life through His unwavering trust.”

The idea for the book came about one day while the missionary was sitting in class at Urshan.

“I got to thinking about all the different infl u-ences in my life,” said the licensed minister. “Those infl uences are like splash-es which help mold us … I am a missionary because of the people who have made splashes in my life.”

“Her story is our sto-ry,” added Melani Shock, Pentecostals of Alexan-dria, and author of Eat This Book. “The fragile segments of Crystal’s life are held together by the God-thread of unwaver-ing trust … it is this very thread that reaches out and weaves you into the amazing tale of a life of selfl ess devotion to the God of the universe.”

Reece will remain in Selmer until Nov. 30 when she heads back to her missionary work in

the Kingdom of Tonga. She will be in the Poly-nesian sovereign state for fi ve years.

“The last two years, I have traveled to 46 states, covering 81,000 miles sharing what I do in the South Pacifi c,” said Re-ece.

A graduate of the Uni-versity of Tennessee, Reece served the United

Pentecostal Church Inter-national as a missionary for eight years in Vanu-atu and Tonga. Over that period, she worked as a Bible School administra-tor, teacher and assisted the church leadership in many other ways.

“From ministry to fam-ily, God has methodi-cally ordered every infl u-encer which has rippled through my life,” said the McNairy Central gradu-ate. “I pray to continu-ally make splashes from here to the uttermost parts of the earth by living out each lesson God has taught me.”

“Island Splashes” can be ordered at westbow-press.com for $19.95. The book is also available at Books-A-Million, Barnes & Noble and at Amazon.com.

“As you read, may your heart be stirred, causing you to splash others with the all-encompassing love of Jesus Christ,” said missionary envoy David Brott.

In the book “Island Splashes,” Crystal Re-ece talks about her call-ing into the missionary field.

the burglary charge and a suspended fi ve-year sentence on the fi rearm charge.

Williams must also pay restitution of $49,844.97 to one victim, $2,188.13 to another and $15,000 to the Mississippi Crime Victims Compensation Fund.

Williams waived in-dictment on the criminal information accusing him of armed robbery of an individual on Aug.

18, when he took $220 from the victim. The fi rearm offense occurred Jan. 30 and the burglary occurred last Nov. 14, according to the indict-ments.

In another case, April Nicole Crump pleaded guilty to a two-count in-dictment of grand lar-ceny.

She will serve fi ve years of probation, as the judge imposed a suspended 10-year sentence. She must also pay restitu-tion of $2,760 to Cross-

roads Arena and $1,498 to Corinth-Alcorn Parks and Recreation, as well as a $1,000 fi ne.

Count one of the in-dictment involves theft of electrical wiring from the arena on April 2 with another subject, and count two involves the removal of catalytic con-verters from four vehi-cles belonging to Cross-roads Regional Park on June 25.

Catalytic converters are sometimes stolen and sold to scrap yards.

PLEA

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

tant.“Each day, we will

have a new winner and there will be a little fea-ture story about the ani-mal on Facebook”, said Doehner.

There are a couple of rules for the competi-tion that the pet owners should know.

“Costumes should be animal appropriate. The owner can also dress up, if they want, to match their pet. We are calling it a ‘Fall Fashion Show’ because we are assum-ing people are going to get out their coats and sweaters and hats and rain gear that they would normally put on their pets during this time,” said Doehner.

“Everyone is a winner,” explained Doehner. “The joy and unconditional love that each pet gives to their owner makes them a winner, regardless of their costume or fashion. This event will be an op-portunity for owners to express their creativity and show off their ani-mals. The idea is just to show off your pet, and to have a lot of fun that day.”

Participating in the fashion show is going to be simple and there will be no specifi c categories.

“As each person regis-ters, they will be given a number and they will be taken in that order, one at a time, up on the stage. And I’m sure everyone is going to get lots of ap-plause. Then, after their dog is up on the stage and had their picture taken, we will do a brief interview with them and that interview will be put on our Facebook,” said Doehner.

“We wanted to show off the coats that were made for us, and also to get the community involved with the shel-ter,” Doehner said as she talked about the motives behind the fashion show. “It’s a fundraiser for the shelter. Right now, times are tough and we need to raise money to repair

the shelter. This is one of many fundraisers we will be doing this year. We have over 200 animals here and it is pretty ex-pensive to keep them fed and provide the medical care that they need.”

This fundraiser will be held in the American Legion Building on 511 Tate Street today with the fashion show start-ing at 1 p.m. and ending at 3 p.m., and the indoor fl ea market will open at 10 a.m. There will also be Italian cooking available from 1 p.m. until 3 p.m. and each meal will cost $8 per person.

Along with the fashion show, there will also be a fl ea market. According to Doehner, “There are clothing, housewares, tools, furniture, display cases, and these are all items that people have donated to the shelter for the fl ea market.”

If anyone would like to donate items to the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter, there are several things that they would be grateful to receive. They are in need of bleach, dog and cat toys, cat litter, newspapers, dog hous-es, dry cat food, dry dog food, cat litter pans, food bowls, laundry deter-gent, fl oor cleaners, tow-els, sheets, and blankets. Monetary donations are welcome as well. All fi -nancial donations should be taken to Kellie Holder Accountant Firm at 1407-A Harper Road Corinth, MS 38834. Donations should be made to the Animal Shelter Fund.

One thing that the Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter is always in need of are volunteers. Any-one who wants to offer their personal time to helping the animals in the shelter are encour-aged to do so. Volunteers can help the animals by simply spending quality time with them. They are asked to hold and hug their puppies, walk the adult dogs and puppies, play with the kittens and pet the adult cats. At the shelter, there is a cat porch where the cats

can be taken to play or bask in the sun. There is also a playground for the puppies and the dogs to have fun in. Volunteers can exercise the adult dogs by taking them for a walk on their quarter mile walking trail. Fami-lies are asked to bring their children of all ages to enjoy spending time with the animals, so long as any children who are younger than the age of 14 are being supervised by an adult at all times.

Adoptions are needed as the shelter is cur-rently full. Animals avail-able for adoption must stay at the shelter for at least fi ve days before be-ing put up for adoption. They must be cleared of all behavioral issues and medical problems, as well as being spayed or neutered and vaccinated for rabies before they can leave the shelter. All po-tential adopters must fi ll out an adoption applica-tion which can be found in the front offi ce. Appli-cants will be interviewed by a member of the shelter staff before they are approved to adopt an animal. Once they are approved, adopters must sign a contract and then pay an adoption fee. These fees are $65 for all dogs and $40 for all cats regardless of the ani-mal’s age.

The shelter is located on 3825 Proper Street in Corinth. Business hours are Monday through Fri-day from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. Vol-unteers are always wel-come to come and help take care of the animals. There are volunteer ap-plications available in the front offi ce of the ani-mal shelter.

(The Corinth-Alcorn Animal Shelter can be contacted at 662-284-5800 during their regular business hours. For those who need to reach them after hours, they can be contacted by e-mail at [email protected] or see the shelter’s Facebook page.)

REECE

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

SHOW

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

BOONEVILLE — Any-one considering shoplift-ing in the city of Boon-eville may want to think twice as authorities have adopted a get tough poli-cy on punishment for the crime.

“We’ve taken a much stronger stance,” said Booneville Prosecuting Attorney Daniel Tucker.

With the crime on the rise in the city, Tucker said the city’s judges are cracking down and those caught stealing from lo-cal businesses can expect

to face jail time if con-victed.

Tucker said fi rst and second offense shoplift-ing charges are misde-meanors and both carry a maximum penalty of up to six months in jail and/or a $1,000 fi ne. In the past fi rst offense shoplift-ers have often avoided jail time, but that won’t be the case moving forward.

Judges will now give at least 30 days in jail with the balance of the sen-tence suspended except for 48 hours which must be served. They will also face heavy fi nes.

The third conviction

for shoplifting is a felony charge which carries up to fi ve years in prison and a fi ne of up to $5,000.

Tucker said the issue is the impact of the crime on local merchants who get hurt fi nancially.

“It’s a big hit for smaller merchants,” he said.

There doesn’t seem to be a pattern among those being charged in terms of age and Tucker said the items being taken are typ-ically leisure items such as electronics, cosmetics and clothing — not food or other necessities in-dicating someone strug-gling with the economy.

Booneville officials get tougher on shopliftersBY BRANT SAPPINGTONbsappington@dailycorinthian.

com

BOONEVILLE — Whether it’s en-forcing the state’s telemarketing laws, pushing for increased access to high-speed Internet or battling fed-eral regulations he believes will be harmful to the state’s power custom-ers, Northern District Public Service Commissioner Brandon Presley be-lieves his primary responsibility is to the people he serves.

“We’re there not because of any-thing we’ve done. The public is the boss,” Presley told the Booneville Li-ons Club during a visit last Thursday.

Presley focused on consumer protection

BY BRANT [email protected]

Please see PRESLEY | 3

Page 3: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Local/Region3 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, November 2, 2013

Today in

history

Today is Saturday, Nov. 2, the 306th day of 2013. There are 59 days left in the year.

 Today’s Highlightin History:

On Nov. 2, 1948, Pres-ident Truman surprised the experts by winning a narrow upset over Republican challenger Thomas E. Dewey.

 On this date:

In 1783, Gen. George Washington issued his Farewell Orders to the Armies of the United States near Princeton, New Jersey.

In 1865, the 29th president of the United States, Warren Gamaliel Harding, was born near Corsica, Ohio.

In 1889, North Dakota and South Dakota be-came the 39th and 40th states.

In 1917, British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour issued a declaration expressing support for a “national home” for the Jews in Palestine.

In 1947, Howard Hughes piloted his huge wooden flying boat, the Hughes H-4 Hercules (dubbed the “Spruce Goose” by detractors), on its only flight, which lasted about a minute over Long Beach Harbor in California.

In 1959, game show contestant Charles Van Doren admitted to a House subcommittee that he’d been given questions and answers in advance when he ap-peared on the NBC-TV program “Twenty-One.”

In 1962, President John F. Kennedy deliv-ered a brief statement to the nation in which he said that aerial pho-tographs had confirmed that Soviet missile bases in Cuba were being dis-mantled, and that “prog-ress is now being made toward the restoration of peace in the Caribbean.”

In 1963, South Viet-namese President Ngo Dihn Diem was assassi-nated in a military coup.

In 1976, former Geor-gia Gov. Jimmy Carter be-came the first candidate from the Deep South since the Civil War to be elected president as he defeated incumbent Ger-ald R. Ford.

In 1979, black militant JoAnne Chesimard es-caped from a New Jersey prison, where she’d been serving a life sentence for the 1973 slaying of New Jersey state trooper Werner Foerster. (Chesi-mard, who took the name Assata Shakur, is believed to be living in Cuba.)

In 1983, President Reagan signed a bill es-tablishing a federal holi-day on the third Monday of January in honor of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.

The commissioner said bringing encouraging providers to bring high-speed Internet access to rural areas throughout the state is a major focus of his offi ce through their Zap the Gap program. They are seeking to map areas where there is no access to the service to better be able to argue with the Federal Com-munications Commis-sion for a share of the Universal Service Fund fees tacked on to every telephone bill to provide a federal boost to the expansion of access. He said the issue is about giving Mississippians equal access to educa-tional and commercial opportunities that high-speed access provides.

“I don’t want to take anything as far as the people in New York are concerned, but we need to do something right here for the people in New Site,” he said.

He encourages any-one who doesn’t have a source for high-speed Internet access available to their home to visit their website at www.psc.state.ms.us or call them at 1-800-637-7722 to register their name and address.

Presley said he’s ex-tremely concerned about new environmen-tal regulations being considered by the feder-al Environment Protec-tion Agency that would restrict the use of coal to generate electricity. He said the restrictive regulations would re-sult in a major increase in the cost of power for Mississippians if ap-proved and the public service commission has fi led a response to the rules and is prepared to sue the EPA if necessary

to try to block the regula-tions.

“I think they’ve lost their minds,” he said. “The people can’t afford their power bills to go up 10 percent or more just to fulfi ll a dream of the EPA.”

The public service commission will offi cially roll out a new energy ef-fi ciency initiative in 2014 that will provide resourc-es to everyone in the state for lowering their energy usage. Details of the plan are still being fi nalized but he said the effort will help reduce energy consumption resulting in lower bills, reduced impact on the environment and could create up to 9,500 pri-vate sector jobs.

The public service commission is charged with overseeing the state’s Do Not Call reg-istry restricting tele-marketing in the state. Presley said his offi ce aggressively pursues violators of the law and continues to levy large fi nes against those who engage in illegal prac-tices. However, the law only works when people report violations.

“We need you to re-port people who call,” he said.

He asks residents to note the date and time of the call and any addi-tional information they obtain from the caller and then contact his of-fi ce by phone or through the website to fi le a com-plaint.

While not directly part of his responsibilities, he said he’s extremely con-cerned about an ongoing Jamaican lottery scam

targeting residents by telephone. He said the caller will tell the poten-tial victim they’ve won a multimillion dollar prize but must send a fee in order for the funds to be transferred.

Presley said he’s aware of residents in Prentiss County sending a com-bined $354,000 to con artists through this type of scam. He said the

numbers are staggering and it’s important to un-derstand this type of offer is a scam and paying the caller will only result in helping fund their illegal activities.

(For more information on the Mississippi Public Service Commission or to fi le a complaint about util-ity or telemarketing, call 1-800-637-7722 or visit www.psc.state.ms.us.)

PRESLEY

CONTINUED FROM PAGE 2

A Kossuth High School stu-dent has been honored as the Rotary Student of the Month for October.

Emile Neelis has been cho-sen as the Rotary Student of the Month at the Alcorn Ca-reer and Technology Center (ACTC). She is a senior at KHS and a second year student in the Information Technology Program at ACTC.

She was nominated for this honor by her Information Technology Instructor, Donnie Bates, and was recognized at the Thursday Corinth Rotary Club meeting.

“It was an honor to represent the Alcorn Career and Technol-ogy Center as the Rotary Stu-dent of the Month,” Neelis said.

Her involvement and partici-pation in various school activi-ties include; being a member of the Spanish Club at KHS where she serves as secretary; Math and Science Club, Future Busi-ness Leaders of America; Na-tional Honor Society; Art Club where she serves as treasurer; and the National Technical Honor Society.

Neelis is an honor student and scored a 30 on her ACT. She has won various academic awards throughout her high school years including: English II, Geometry and Biology I.

Last summer, she was among 19 students chosen to be in-volved in the Rural Medical Scholars Program at Missis-sippi State University. As part of the program, she completed

two college courses and shad-owed physicians.

Not only is she heavily active in school activities, but she also understands the importance of community activities as well.

She also is involved with JLA, mentoring, the Coke Run, and community art projects — such as painting newspa-per dispensers for downtown Corinth.

As if she isn’t already pressed for time, she also fi nds the time to hold down a part-time job. She is employed as a checkout associate at Kmart and typical-ly works anywhere from 20-30 hours per week.

“Emile is a hard worker both inside and outside the class room,” Bates said. “Informa-tion Technology (I.T.) has been traditionally a male dominated fi eld but, it is changing as young women see that they are equally qualifi ed to master the skills necessary for a career in I.T.”

Bates said Emile is a great role model and example to all her fellow students and the community at large.

Neelis receives student honor

Emile Neelis

JACKSON — The secretary of state’s offi ce is questioning whether Jackson developer Da-vid Watkins took funds from a mall project and diverted it to a project to build a new police sta-tion in Meridian.

Secretary of State Delbert Hosemann is seeking adminis-trative penalties plus restitution of $587,084.

Watkins denied any wrong-doing during an administrative hearing that ended this week be-fore an administrative offi cer at the secretary of state’s offi ce.

In a legal notice, Hosemann says Watkins Development di-verted about a half million dol-lars in bond proceeds for the Me-trocenter Mall project in Jackson to close the deal on the police station project.

Watkins’ attorneys have ac-knowledged he moved the mon-ey from a Retro Metro bank ac-count that was set up for the mall redevelopment to the law en-forcement project in Meridian.

Records show Watkins formed Retro Metro LLC in August 2010.

Hosemann weighs Watkins’ actions

Associated Press

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

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

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]

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Page 4: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

OpinionReece Terry, publisher Corinth, Miss.

4 • Saturday, November 2, 2013www.dailycorinthian.com

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

Reece Terry publisher

[email protected]

Roger Delgadopress

foreman

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]

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To Sound Off:email :

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Mark Boehlereditor

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Mark Boehler, editor

Letters

Hookah lounges are rapidly opening across the country, and this renewed phenomenon has fi nally found its way to Corinth. Although the hookah tradition using a unique delivery system, the bottom line is clear – smoking of any kind is dangerous for smokers and those exposed to secondhand smoke.

Several claims have been made that hoo-kah smoking is less harmful than smoking other tobacco products, but according to the Centers for Disease Control, hookah smok-ers are at risk for the same kinds of diseases caused by cigarette smoking, including oral cancer, lung cancer, and reduced lung func-tion. Hookah smoke is as toxic as cigarette smoke. However, many users believe that hookah smoke is less dangerous because of its fruity fl avors and aroma.

These fl avors and aromas have also seemed to make this dangerous practice appealing to youth. The 2010 Monitoring the Future sur-vey found that 17% of high school seniors in the United States had used hookah in the past year, and other smaller studies suggest that more than a quarter of college students are using hookah. The attraction to fl avored products has often served as a gateway for youth to smoke other forms of tobacco, which can lead to serious health complications and even death.

In addition to the smoke, the charcoal used in hookahs produces high levels of carbon monoxide, metals and cancer-causing chemi-cals, and the custom of sharing hookah pipes opens the door for infectious diseases to be transmitted among users.

The science has been clear for some time. There is no risk free level of exposure to sec-ondhand smoke of any kind. We urge the Board of Alderman to include hookah bars in the smokefree ordinance to continue to pro-tect the community from diseases caused by smoking and secondhand smoke.

Smokefree Mississippi is a broad coalition of organizations who believe all Mississip-pians deserve to breathe smoke free air. We support a comprehensive, statewide smoke-free workplace law to protect Mississippi-ans from the dangers of secondhand smoke exposure. There is no safe level of second-hand smoke. Everyone deserves to breathe smoke-free air.

Jason ThompsonSmokefree Mississippi

Hookah smoking a potential public

health threat

Prayer for todayA verse to share

Nothing in Washington is ever about what it is about.

Health care, keeping vio-lent weapons away from violent people and putting 11 million undocumented workers on a path to citizen-ship are about none of these things.

Instead, they are all about scorekeeping. The Obama administration came out of the government shutdown ahead with the American people. Most people blamed the Republicans in the House for the shutdown for the simple reason that Re-publicans in the House were to blame for the shutdown.

Which means the Repub-licans must get a few points back — if not with the nation as a whole, then at least with their own death wish lobby, those extreme right-wingers who are far more committed to ideology than to country.

Health care? Repeal it, or defund it, or make it small enough to drown in a bed-pan.

Immigration reform with a path to citizenship for those people who are now forced to live “in the shad-ows” (a term fi rst used, as near as I can determine, by Ronald Reagan, when he granted amnesty to 2.9 mil-lion undocumented workers in 1986)? Forget about it.

But immigration reform should be different. Sheer political expediency would,

in normal times, motivate Republicans to back immi-gration reform as a way to attract Hispanic voters.

Recent presidential voting trends have not been good for Republicans. In 2004, George W. Bush got 44 per-cent of the Hispanic vote. In 2008, John McCain got 31 percent. And in 2012, Mitt Romney got 27 percent.

But given that, why should Republicans back a measure that would create 11 million new voters, about three-quarters of whom could be expected to vote Democrat-ic?

A number of reasons, fi rst and foremost of which is that they have little choice. McCain said in April: “I be-lieve if we pass (immigration reform) legislation, it won’t gain us a single Hispanic vote, but what it will do is put us on a playing fi eld where we can compete. Right now, we can’t compete.”

Secondly, the immigration reform bill already passed by the Senate would not transform undocumented workers into voting citizens overnight. Instead, it would place them on an arduous 13-year path that includes fees, fi nes, back taxes and rigorous background checks.

Thirdly, and this should be the big one, the Republi-can Party has a real opportu-nity to reach out to Hispanic voters and persuade them to vote Republican.

A study commissioned af-

ter the Republicans lost the popular vote in the presi-dential election of 2000 revealed that though black voters largely retain their loyalty to the Democratic Party as they move up the socio-economic ladder, His-panic voters do not.

Hispanic voters, the study found, were far more sus-ceptible to switching to the Republican Party as they became wealthier and more suburban. Further, some Hispanics today are a better fi t with the Republican Party on social issues, such as gay marriage and abortion, than they are with the Democrats.

As Steve Coll writes this week in The New Yorker: “As recently as 2007, when the Bush Administration almost passed (an immigration re-form) bill, it still seemed possible that a moderniz-ing Republican Party might build a formidable political coalition of Latinos, evan-gelicals, disaffected Catholic Democrats, high-tech entre-preneurs, libertarians, social and educational reformers, and eclectic independents.”

So what happened? The Republican Party instead became the captive of so-called “movement conserva-tives,” who placed ideologi-cal purity above coalition building.

Coll quotes Geoffrey Ka-baservice, writing in “Rule and Ruin,” as saying move-ment conservatives have “succeeded in silencing, co-

opting, repelling, or expel-ling nearly every compet-ing strain of Republicanism from the party.”

Logically, Republicans in the House would want to pass immigration reform because it would be good for the Republican Party.

It also would be good for immigrants, and more im-portantly, it would be good for the United States.

But all that has become beside the point.

Republican obstruction-ists in the House don’t want to pass immigration reform, because they don’t want to give a victory to President Barack Obama, who has made passage before the end of this year a major goal.

Not all Republicans are pleased with the obstruc-tionists, however. As The New York Times recently noted, “an unusual coali-tion of business executives, prominent conservatives and evangelical leaders” is lobbying this week for Re-publicans to pass immigra-tion reform.

But there is the problem of time. The House will work just 18 days between now and the end of the year.

A humorist once said that doing nothing is very diffi -cult because you can’t take a break from it.

That humorist never lived in Washington.

Roger Simon is Politico’s chief political columnist.

Will GOP pass up Hispanic lifeline?

My parents were children during the Great Depres-sion, and it scarred them, es-pecially my father, who saw destitution in his Brooklyn, N.Y., neighborhood: adults standing in so-called “bread lines,” children begging in the streets. My grandfather was a New York City cop, and so my dad did not suffer as others did. But he never forgot the brutal scenes and worked hard his whole life to build some fi nancial inde-pendence.

Fast-forward to the se-vere recession of 2008, when millions of Americans lost jobs and equity in their homes. No bread lines, but much pain. The Obama ad-ministration responded by pouring trillions of dollars into stimulus and rescue programs, some of which succeeded in stabilizing tottering banks and auto companies. But along with that, the president and his acolytes openly encouraged Americans to use the welfare system. And now the entitle-ment culture has exploded.

According to the Cen-sus Bureau, more people in America today are on welfare than have full-time jobs. There is a culture of dependency being created that is truly

shocking. A recent study by the Cato Institute concludes that welfare now pays more than minimum-wage work in 35 states.

So why enter the work-force at the bottom if the government will give you the same compensation for sitting on your butt?

Some believe that the Democratic Party, which champions the entitlement culture, is doing so to assure future votes from those re-ceiving benefi ts. And right now, about half of all Ameri-can households are getting some kind of compensation from the feds. Some of that, such as Social Security and

Medicare, has been earned. But nearly 50 million Amer-icans are receiving food stamps, and 83 million are on Medicaid.

The United States be-came the world’s strongest economy by folks working hard. Layabouts and people who game the system ac-tually harm our country. Safety nets for the poor and disadvantaged are a must for any compassionate na-tion, but encouraging folks to go on the dole when it’s not absolutely necessary is disgraceful.And that’s what the Obama administration is doing. How else can you explain a 40 percent rise in food stamp recipients in just three years (2009 to 2011, the last statistics available) and a rise of 15 percent in federal disability payments over the same period of time? Is the workplace that dangerous? Really?

As a person who has worked extremely hard for more than 40 years, I don’t want my tax dollars going to drunkards and drug addicts.

And in America, there is no substance testing for welfare recipients. Every time that comes up, the civil liberties lobby screams.

America has become a much weaker nation since 2001. The wars we have fought to protect ourselves against terrorism have drained our treasury and created a deep distrust of authority. The hope and change espoused by Presi-dent Obama has led to chaos in the health care arena and a massive entitlement in-dustry that is growing larger every day.

Unless the voters wise up and get back to self-reliance and responsible govern-ment, this nation will con-tinue down the Nanny State road. That path is unsustain-able. But even worse, it is un-American.

Veteran TV news anchor Bill O’Reilly is host of the Fox News show “The O’Reilly Factor” and author of many books, including the newly released “Killing Jesus.”

Welfare nation is un-AmericanThe qualifying deadline for candidates

in next year’s federal elections is not until March 1, but already the political landscape is stirring with activity.

While it is still early in the process, we would like to make a request of all who would participate in this process: Conduct a serious campaign with civility.

There is no need to exaggerate the serious-ness of this period of American history. Our armed forces remain deployed in harm’s way overseas. Our economy is not yet employing all those who can and would work if given the opportunity. Our national debt is an ever lengthening shadow across the path of future generations.

To meet such challenges demands more of a candidate — whether challenger or incum-bent — than a snappy slogan.

Mississippians need and deserve compe-tent men and women to mount substantive campaigns that rigorously and vigorously ex-amine our nation’s problems and our options for solving them.

At the same time, the candidates and all those associated with their campaigns would best serve their cause by maintaining a civil attitude even in the heat of debate.

As Alan Simpson, a grand old man of the Grand Old Party told the online news journal Religion & Politics last year: “In politics there are no right answers, only a continuing fl ow of compromises among groups resulting in a changing, cloudy and ambiguous series of public decisions where appetite and ambition compete openly with knowledge and wisdom. ... You don’t compromise yourself; you com-promise an issue. ... There isn’t a person alive that doesn’t compromise every day on some-thing without losing their identity or becom-ing a chicken, or a coward, or a bully.”

That’s especially sound advice for someone seeking a legislative position in either cham-ber of Congress.

The Sun-HeraldBiloxi

Mississippians deserve substantive,

civil campaigns

Bill O’ReillyThe O’Reilly

Factor

“Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” — Acts 4:12

Lord God, help me to consider more carefully what I offer to my friends; and may I not be critical of what I receive from my friends. May I not be a hindrance instead of a help to those who would have my companionship. Amen.

BY ROGER SIMONColumnist

Page 5: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

State/Nation5 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, November 2, 2013

Nation Briefs State Briefs

Police: Officer shoots robbery suspect

JACKSON  — Authori-ties say a man who was shot by a Jackson police officer after a robbery has been charged with armed robbery of a busi-ness and aggravated as-sault on a police officer.

Jackson Police Depart-ment spokeswoman Colendula Green says in a news release that the robbery happened Thurs-day morning at the Dollar General in west Jackson.

Green says the first officer arrived as the suspect was taking the money and the man shot at the officer. Green says the officer returned fire.

The suspect was ar-rested later and treated for gunshot wound to the body, though it was not considered life threaten-ing.

Green identified the suspect as Michael Smith, 25.

Arrest made in multiple slayings

JACKSON — Authori-ties say a man has been arrested in the shooting deaths of three people found this week in a Jackson home and the same man is suspected of fatally stabbing an-other man next door.

Jackson Police Depart-ment spokeswoman Colendula Green says in a news release that 31-year-old Javondus Beasley was charged Friday with three counts of capital murder and a fourth murder count is pending.

Green says three bod-ies were found Thursday morning in a house on

Moon Street in west Jackson. They are: Eldra Montez Gibson, Ash-ley Taylor and Sharrod Brown.

The fourth victim, Mi-chael Jerome Wilson, 51, was found Thursday afternoon stabbed to death in the house next door.

Arraignment setin mail theft case

GULFPORT — A U.S. Postal Service employee in south Mississippi charged with stealing gift cards from the mail is scheduled to appear in court Wednesday for her arraignment.

Juanita C. Rauch was indicted Oct. 8 on two counts.

The indictment says that between December 2011 and January 2012 she stole a Target gift card. She’s also charged with taking a Wal-Mart gift card in January 2012.

The indictment says the alleged crimes hap-pened in Harrison and Jackson counties.

Her arraignment is scheduled to take place in U.S. District Court in Gulfport.

Trial set for woman in FEMA fraud case

JACKSON — A woman who had been sched-uled to plead guilty to defrauding the Federal Emergency Management Agency is now set for trial on Nov. 18.

Idella Jones is charged with four counts related to what prosecutors say was a fraudulent claim that a house in Lexing-ton was her primary resi-dence when it was hit by a tornado. Prosecutors say she made the claim in May 2010.

Jones, also known as Idella Jefferson, was scheduled to plead guilty in the case on Oct. 8. However, U.S. District Judge Henry Wingate decided not to accept the guilty plea. The court record did not say why.

On Friday, Wingate set the case for trial in U.S. District Court in Jackson.

Associated Press

Reminder: Time to fall back an hour

WASHINGTON — It’s time to fall back.

Most Americans will be able to get an ex-tra hour of sleep this weekend thanks to the annual shift back to standard time.

The change officially occurs at 2 a.m. Sun-day, but most people will set their clocks back before heading to bed Saturday night.

Public safety offi-cials say this is also a good time to put a new battery in the smoke alarm.

Daylight saving time returns at 2 a.m. local time March 9.

FDA tries to head off drug shortages

WASHINGTON — The Food and Drug Admin-istration announced a new proposal Thursday to try and head off more shortages of cru-cial medications that have disrupted care at hospitals and clin-ics nationwide. Under the proposed rule, companies that make medically important prescription medicines would have to notify the FDA six months ahead of any changes that could disrupt the U.S. supply. That includes plans to discontinue a product or manufactur-ing changes that could slow production.

“The FDA continues to take all steps it can within its authority, but the FDA alone cannot solve shortages. Suc-cess depends upon a commitment from all

stakeholders,” said FDA’s top drug regulator Dr. Janet Woodcock, in a statement.

FDA leaders say ad-vance warnings help the agency work with com-panies to resolve supply problems or find alter-nate producers for drugs that are being phased out. The FDA credits earlier warnings from companies with reduc-ing the number of drug shortages from 251 in 2011 to 117 last year.

Drug shortages in the U.S. have spiked over the past six years, particularly those in-volving inexpensive generic injected drugs, including powerful anti-biotics, painkillers and anesthetics used in surgery. They are the workhorses of hospitals but are difficult to make and produce little profit for drugmakers.

Panel to take upRedskins resolution

WASHINGTON — The D.C. Council will take up a resolution next week urging the Washington Redskins to change their nickname.

The council passed a similar resolution in 2001, and the new one has broad support on the 13-member body. It comes amid a national debate about the name, which some consider to be offensive to Native Americans. President Barack Obama recently said he would “think about changing” the name if he owned the team.

The resolution no longer suggests a new nickname for the team. Councilmember David

Grosso, who wrote the original resolution, had suggested “Redtails” in honor of the Tuskegee Airmen.

The council has no power over the Redskins.

Suspected LAX gunman in custody

LOS ANGELES — A gunman armed with a semi-automatic rifle opened fire at the Los Angeles Interna-tional Airport on Friday, wounding a Transporta-tion Security Administra-tion employee and two others in an attack that frightened passengers and disrupted flights nationwide.

Police said the un-identified suspect, who was apparently injured following an exchange of gunfire with officers, was in custody.

Some passengers who already had cleared security rushed onto the tarmac to evacuate, while others were locked down in airport restau-rants and lounges. The airport was being swept for precautionary mea-sures and the bomb unit was on scene.

LAPD Assistant Chief Earl Paysinger said the TSA employee was in-jured and transported to the hospital after the shooting in Terminal 3.

Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center said it received “three male victims from the LAX Airport shootings. One arrived in critical condi-tion and two are listed in fair condition.”

Air traffic was affect-ed nationwide as the FAA grounded flights that had not yet depart-ed for LAX.

Associated Press

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Page 6: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

6 • Saturday, November 2, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

Deaths

Sentencing reset in cocaine investigation

OXFORD — A sentencing hearing for a Como wom-an charged with traveling from Mississippi to Tennes-see to deliver money that came from the distribution of cocaine have been moved up to Monday.

Takisha M. Harris was charged in July in a bill of criminal information, a charge usually filed when a person plans to waive indictment and plead guilty in a case.

Court records say she took $45,000 to Tennessee in the spring of 2012 that was to be used for the purchase of cocaine.

She pleaded guilty in July to two counts, conspira-cy and bank fraud.

Her sentencing had been scheduled for Dec. 11, but is now set for Monday in U.S. District Court in Oxford.

Ruling in records access lawsuit issued

BILOXI — A Harrison County judge has ordered the state auditor and the Mississippi Department of Ma-rine Resources to turn over records to a Gulf Coast newspaper.

The Sun Herald reports that Chancery Judge Jen-nifer Schloegel issued the ruling Thursday.

The Sun Herald, the MDMR and State Auditor Sta-cey Pickering have fought since January over whether the documents were exempt from the state Public Records Act after the auditor’s office seized them for an ongoing criminal investigation involving the MDMR. The MDMR said it was unable to give the newspaper the records because the auditor’s office had them.

Schloegel ruled relocating records to a law enforce-ment agency does not mean they become investiga-tive reports exempt from public disclosure.

“I would find that they are public records and that they do not meet the exemption of an investigative report ... and therefore, they should be released to the public,” the judge said.

Schloegel said records can be denied to the public under the criminal investigations exemption when they reveal a law enforcement agency’s confidential informants, investigative techniques and procedures, or undercover operations. Investigative reports that law enforcement agencies compile about records they seize also can be exempt from public disclo-sure, she said.

“We do not have any reports prepared by the audi-tor’s office,” Schloegel said. “We have the Depart-ment of Marine Resources records that have been used in the regular course of business .. They cer-tainly were not compiled by DMR for a law enforce-ment purpose.”

The Sun Herald filed requests with the MDMR on Nov. 14, 2012, and Dec. 27, 2012, for financial records associated with the agency’s Emergency Di-saster Relief and Artificial Reef programs.

After the Sun Herald filed its records lawsuit, the MDMR gave the newspaper 22,000 pages of records the agency had on computer, but said the auditor’s office took the only copies of other records.

Schloegel ruled the MDMR did not violate the state Public Records Act because the agency was unable to comply with the Sun Herald’s request.

USM rape case goes to grand jury

HATTIESBURG — The investigation into a rape reported on Southern Miss’ campus at the Kappa Sigma fraternity house has wrapped up, and the case has been handed over to prosecutors for pre-sentation to a grand jury.

University spokesman David Tisdale tells The Hat-tiesburg American university police report the inves-tigation ended Wednesday, but at the request of the victim, the case will be handed off to the Forrest-Per-ry County District Attorney’s Office for presentation to the next meeting of the grand jury.

No one has yet been charged with a crime.University police Chief Bob Hopkins says the al-

leged incident occurred during the early morning hours of Oct. 13, but was not reported until a few days later.

He said Wednesday that the female student victim was an acquaintance of the suspect.

Allen found guilty of murder, sentenced to life

PASCAGOULA — A jury deliberated for just under three hours before finding Jeffrey Allen guilty of capi-tal murder in the March 2011 robbery and shooting

death of Mason’s Junkyard owner Charlie Mason.The Sun Herald reports the 34-year-old Allen was

automatically sentenced to life in prison Thursday because the state was not seeking the death penalty in the case.

Allen and Donna Marie Freeman were each ar-rested on a charge of capital murder in the March 1, 2011.

The state maintains Allen and Freeman went to Mason’s home with plans to rob him of cash to pay Allen’s electric bill when Freeman, Mason’s former girlfriend, allegedly shot Mason to death.

Freeman, of St. Martin, is also charged with capital murder. She has not yet gone to trial.

Man sentenced in oil spill fraud case

GULFPORT — A federal judge has ordered an Ocean Springs man to prison for 16 months and to repay more than $171,000 in oil-spill recovery money he wasn’t eligible to receive.

U.S. District Judge Sul Ozerden sentenced Thanh Van Nguyen on Thursday and ordered restitution of $171,577.

The Sun Herald reports Nguyen had submitted pa-perwork to the Gulf Coast Claims Facility and claimed the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon explosion in 2010 caused him to lose wages and profits from his business, TN Dollar Store.

The federal government said Nguyen closed his business two months before the oil spill. Nguyen could not prove otherwise.

Nguyen accepted a plea agreement in July on a fraud charge for checks mailed in September 2010 and May 2011.

Men admit trafficking bogus credit cards

GULFPORT — Two Baton Rouge-area men have ad-mitted they were producing counterfeit credit cards and using them in Waveland, Miss.

The Sun Herald reports Larry Don Norwood Jr. and Patrick Henry Thomas, both 24, have pleaded guilty in a case investigated by the Waveland police and U.S. Secret Service.

Police arrested them Dec. 13 after Wal-Mart re-ported two men using multiple credit cards to buy inexpensive items and getting cash above their cost.

Police arrested one at Wal-Mart. They arrested the other after he went to bail out his friend.

A federal grand jury indicted them in August.They each face up to 10 years in prison and a

$250,000 fine.Both are free on bond.

Houston man sentenced in drug case

GULFPORT — A man who drove from Houston to D’Iberville to pick up designer drugs in March has been sentenced to the maximum prison term for interstate travel in aid of drug racketeering enter-prises.

The Sun Herald reports 49-year-old Phung Nguyen received a five-year prison term and a $3,000 fine Wednesday at his sentencing by Chief U.S. District Judge Louis Guirola Jr.

The drugs were shipped from China to a D’Iberville home and at first were believed to be Ecstasy. Lab tests showed the 4.4 pounds of substance was 4-MEC, a synthetic chemical similar to Ecstasy.

Nguyen was arrested after a postal inspector in D’Iberville noticed suspicious packages from China and called in an agent with Homeland Security Inves-tigations.

Mississippi sweet potato crop praised

VARDAMAN — Mississippi Sweet Potato Council Executive Director Benny Graves says this weekend’s annual Sweet Potato Festival in Vardaman is a rea-son to celebrate.

Graves tells WTVA-TV in Tupelo that the consump-tion of sweet potatoes has increased nationwide.

Extension agent Trent Barnett says sweet potatoes have rebounded from a 2009 season with so much rain and wet and rotten potatoes.

Barnett says fair weather has allowed farmers to harvest all but 10 percent of the sweet potato crop. After some rain, Barnett says farmers will get back in the fields to get the rest.

Graves says overall the quality of the Mississippi sweet potatoes are the best it’s been in several years.

Graves says 60 percent of the potatoes will land on shelves in grocery stores.

Breeden loses post-conviction appeal review

JACKSON — The Mississippi Supreme Court now says it won’t hear a post-conviction appeal from a man who pleaded guilty to conspiring to have a Petal couple killed.

Virgil Breeden Jr. was sentenced in 2007 to 15 years in prison.

A Forrest County judge denied Breeden’s post-con-viction petition in 2011. The state Court of Appeals last year rejected Breeden’s contention that his plea was involuntary because his lawyer didn’t do a good job.

The Supreme Court said Thursday it had looked at Breeden’s arguments and found no reason to hear them.

Breeden pleaded guilty to two counts of attempted capital murder.

An undercover deputy said in court documents he was offered $1,000 to kill Frank and Jerrine Wilson, whom Breeden alleged were pressuring him to finish the remodeling of a building.

Associated PressAUSTIN, Texas — A

third of the abortion clinics in Texas can no longer perform the pro-cedure starting Friday after a federal appeals court allowed most of the state’s new abortion restrictions to take effect.

A panel of judges at the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans ruled Thursday evening that Texas can enforce its law requiring doctors to have admitting privi-leges at a nearby hospi-tal while a lawsuit chal-lenging the restrictions moves forward. The panel issued the ruling three days after District Judge Lee Yeakel deter-mined that the provision violated the U.S. Consti-tution and said it serves no medical purpose.

The panel’s ruling is not fi nal, and a dif-ferent panel of judges will likely hear the case in January. But in the meantime, Texas clin-ics will have to follow the order. Twelve of the 32 clinics in Texas that perform abortions don’t have doctors who have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals, mean-ing they won’t be able to perform the procedure, though they can provide other services.

Although several con-servative states in recent months have approved broad abortion limits, the Texas ones were particularly divisive be-cause of the number of clinics affected and the distance some women would have to travel to get an abortion.

Dimple FiveashServices for Dimple Fiveash, 64, are set for 2 p.m.

Monday at Memorial Funeral Home Chapel with burial in Lone Oak Cemetery. Visitation is Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m. and Monday from 11 a.m. until ser-vice time.

Ms. Fiveash died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013.

Ruth FlakeFuneral services for Ruth Flake, 87, are set for 2

p.m. Sunday at McPeters Inc. Funeral Chapel with burial in Henry Cemetery.

Visitation is from 1 p.m. until service time.Ms. Flake died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013.Survivors include a host of cousins.She was preceded in death by her brother, Robert

Flake.Memorial contributions may be made to Christ

United Methodist Church, 3161 E. Shiloh Rd., Corinth, MS 38834.

Lawrence E. Norton Sr.

RIPLEY — Services for Lawrence E. Norton Sr., 94, are set for 10 a.m. today at Ripley Funeral Home Chapel with burial in Pine Hill Church Cemetery.

Mr. Norton died Thursday, Oct. 31, 2013, at Rest Haven Nursing Home in Ripley. Born Sept. 10, 1919, he was a member of Pine Hill Primitive Bap-tist Church. He was a supervisor for Delta Ford in Memphis.

Survivors include one daughter, Ann Miskelly of Corinth; one son, Larry Norton of Germantown, Tenn.; two sisters, Iris Voyles of Olive Branch and Lois Leach (Les) of Thousand Oaks, Calif.; four grandchildren, Lisa Miskelly of Gulfport, Michael Miskelly (Robin) of Ripley, Todd Miskelly of Oxford and Lari MasLar (Jamie) of Southaven; four great-grandchildren; and one great-great-grandchild.

He was preceded in death by his parents, Charlie Edward and Annie Lee Goolsby Norton; his wife, Juanita Harrison Norton; two sisters, Sarah Harwell and Oleta Jones; and one brother, James Norton.

Bro. Joe Brown Street and Bro. Kenneth Harrison will offi ciate the service.

State Briefs

Associated Press

Associated PressKANSAS CITY, Mo. —

The Missouri Supreme Court is weighing wheth-er a legal standard that protects sports teams from being sued over fan injuries caused by in-game events should also apply to those caused by mascots or other team personnel.

The court’s ruling on John Coomer’s lawsuit

against the Kansas City Royals could affect how major sports teams en-gage their fans during games.

Coomer says he was hit in the eye by a foil-wrapped hotdog thrown by the Royals’ mascot four years ago. He says he’s had to endure two surgeries to his eye and that his vision was per-manently damaged.

Fan injured by hotdog sues Royals

Ruling halts abortions at third of Texas clinics

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Page 8: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Business8 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, November 2, 2013

MARKET SUMMARY

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTERESTYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %ChgYTD

Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg

15,721.00 12,471.49 Dow Industrials 15,615.55 +69.80 +.45 +19.17 +19.267,064.67 4,838.10 Dow Transportation 7,047.77 +72.59 +1.04 +32.81 +37.92

537.86 435.57 Dow Utilities 504.65 +4.78 +.96 +11.38 +7.4210,127.63 7,841.76 NYSE Composite 10,018.15 +8.50 +.09 +18.65 +21.65

2,471.19 2,186.97 NYSE MKT 2,428.83 -15.41 -.63 +3.11 +2.973,966.71 2,810.80 Nasdaq Composite 3,922.04 +2.33 +.06 +29.89 +31.521,775.22 1,343.35 S&P 500 1,761.64 +5.10 +.29 +23.52 +24.57

18,928.31 14,036.94 Wilshire 5000 18,751.36 +39.44 +.21 +25.05 +26.751,123.26 763.55 Russell 2000 1,095.67 -4.48 -.41 +29.00 +34.54

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

AFLAC 1.48f 10 65.10 +.12 +22.6AT&T Inc 1.80 27 36.24 +.04 +7.5AirProd 2.84 23 108.00 -1.01 +28.5AlliantEgy 1.88 16 52.54 +.32 +19.7AEP 2.00f 19 47.04 +.20 +10.2AmeriBrgn .84 27 66.38 +1.05 +53.7ATMOS 1.40 17 44.57 +.30 +26.9BB&T Cp .92 16 33.89 -.08 +17.2BP PLC 2.28f 11 46.55 +.05 +11.8BcpSouth .20 25 22.12 +.02 +52.1Caterpillar 2.40 17 83.59 +.23 -6.7Chevron 4.00 9 118.01 -1.95 +9.1CocaCola 1.12 21 39.61 +.04 +9.3Comcast .78 20 48.65 +1.05 +30.2CrackerB 3.00 23 110.17 +.30 +71.4Deere 2.04 10 81.64 -.20 -5.5Dillards .24f 11 82.18 +.20 -1.9Dover 1.50f 16 91.26 -.53 +38.9EnPro ... 31 57.67 -2.00 +41.0FordM .40 13 16.89 -.22 +30.4FredsInc .24a 21 16.16 -.04 +21.4FullerHB .40 23 47.97 +.10 +37.8GenCorp ... 8 16.76 -.04 +83.2GenElec .76 20 26.54 +.40 +26.4Goodyear .20 15 20.86 -.12 +51.0HonwllIntl 1.80f 21 86.91 +.18 +36.9Intel .90 13 24.33 -.14 +18.0Jabil .32 12 20.71 -.15 +7.4KimbClk 3.24 22 108.01 +.01 +27.9Kroger .66f 14 42.70 -.14 +64.1Lowes .72 25 49.18 -.60 +38.5McDnlds 3.24f 18 97.24 +.72 +10.2

MeadWvco 1.00 35 35.13 +.28 +10.2OldNBcp .40 15 14.58 +.04 +22.8Penney ... ... 8.14 +.64 -58.7PennyMac 2.28 7 23.25 +.18 -8.1PepsiCo 2.27 20 84.56 +.47 +23.6PilgrimsP ... 8 14.08 -.09 +94.5RadioShk ... ... 2.84 +.03 +34.0RegionsFn .12 12 9.55 -.08 +33.9SbdCp 3.00 13 2755.00 +25.00 +8.9SearsHldgs ... ... 58.17 +.09 +40.6Sherwin 2.00 25 184.67 -3.33 +20.1SiriusXM .05e 54 3.79 +.03 +31.1SouthnCo 2.03 18 41.02 +.11 -4.2SPDR Fncl .32e ... 20.62 +.05 +25.8TecumsehB ... ... 7.27 -.02 +58.0TecumsehA ... ... 7.72 -.08 +67.1Torchmark .68 13 72.77 -.09 +41.2Total SA 3.23e ... 60.25 -.93 +15.8USEC rs ... ... 7.58 -.48 -42.8US Bancrp .92 13 37.37 +.01 +17.0WalMart 1.88 15 77.07 +.32 +13.0WellsFargo 1.20 11 42.67 -.02 +24.8Wendys Co .20 ... 8.73 +.04 +85.7WestlkChm .90f 16 106.57 -.85 +34.4Weyerhsr .88 27 30.34 -.08 +9.1Xerox .23 10 10.02 +.08 +46.9YRC Wwde ... ... 8.35 -1.18 +23.6Yahoo ... 29 33.18 +.24 +66.7

YOUR STOCKS YOUR FUNDS

A-B-C-DAES Corp dd 13.99 -.10AK Steel dd 4.60 +.20AbtLab s 20 36.96 +.41AbbVie n 17 48.96 +.51Accenture 15 73.00 -.50Accuride dd 3.64 -.86ActiveNet dd 14.48 +.04ActivsBliz 14 16.70 +.02AdobeSy 62 54.61 +.39AMD dd 3.31 -.03Aetna 12 62.61 -.09Agrium g 9 85.55 +.23AlcatelLuc ... 3.89 +.06Alcoa 26 9.27AlldNevG 9 4.10 +.02Allstate 15 53.28 +.22AlphaNRs dd 7.43 +.43AlpVident q 24.59AlpAlerMLP q 17.84 -.03AlteraCp lf 23 33.17 -.44Altria 18 37.33 +.10Amarin ... 1.64 -.01Amazon cc 359.00 -5.03AMovilL 13 21.54 +.13AmAxle 4 18.26 -.35ACapAgy 5 21.96 +.24AEagleOut 13 15.13 -.36AmExp 19 82.16 +.36AmIntlGrp 23 48.28 -3.37ARltCapPr dd 13.30 +.03AmTower 54 79.37 +.02Amgen 19 118.69 +2.55Anadarko 28 94.39 -.90AnalogDev 26 49.68 +.38AnglogldA ... 14.74 -.36Annaly 3 11.79Anworth 8 4.76 -.15Apple Inc 13 520.03 -2.67ApldMatl dd 17.70 -.16ArcelorMit dd 15.82 +.06ArchCoal dd 4.29 +.05ArchDan 18 40.90ArenaPhm dd 4.39 +.01AriadP dd 2.58 +.38ArmourRsd 3 4.13 +.01ArrayBio dd 5.13 +.11Arris dd 17.33 -.52Atmel dd 7.24 -.04Autodesk 44 41.89 +1.99Avon dd 18.27 +.77Baidu 33 160.06 -.74BakrHu 24 58.29 +.20BcoBrad pf ... 14.37 -.05BcoSantSA ... 8.83 -.08BcoSBrasil ... 6.90 -.03BkofAm 19 14.02 +.05BkNYMel 19 32.36 +.56Barclay ... 16.37 -.44Barc iPVix q 12.83 -.10BarrickG dd 18.01 -1.38Baxter 17 65.75 -.12BerkH B 16 115.27 +.18BestBuy dd 42.93 +.13BBarrett dd 30.17 +2.50BlackBerry dd 7.77 -.16Blackstone 24 26.99 +.71BodyCentrl dd 3.94 -1.69Boeing 24 133.03 +2.53BostonSci 23 11.75 +.06BoydGm dd 10.32 -.24BrMySq 31 52.48 -.04Broadcom 30 26.77 +.05BrcdeCm 19 8.06 +.04BrukerCp 39 19.23 -1.23CA Inc 14 31.73 -.04CBRE Grp 18 23.03 -.20CBS B 23 59.94 +.80CMS Eng 20 27.62 +.16CSX 14 26.28 +.22CVR Rfg n ... 22.15 -2.19CVS Care 19 62.59 +.33CblvsnNY cc 16.08 +.53CabotOG s 53 35.04 -.28Cadence 8 13.00 +.03Calpine 28 19.87 -.30Cameron 19 54.64 -.22CdnNRs gs ... 31.26 -.49CdnSolar dd 25.56 +2.56CpstnTurb dd 1.23 -.03CardnlHlth 48 60.25 +1.59Carlisle 27 72.84 +.16Carnival 25 34.84 +.19Catamaran 28 46.66 -.31CellThera dd 1.63 -.13Cemex ... 10.51 -.07CenterPnt 55 24.41 -.19CenElBras ... 3.01 -.15CntryLink 19 33.58 -.28ChartInds 39 100.73 -6.74ChesEng dd 28.00 +.04Chimera ... 3.04 +.01CienaCorp dd 23.25 -.02Cigna 13 78.38 +1.40Cirrus 10 22.40 -.03Cisco 12 22.57 +.01Citigroup 12 48.74 -.04CliffsNRs dd 27.34 +1.66Coach 14 50.42 -.26CobaltIEn dd 22.91 -.30ColeREI n ... 14.08 -.12ColgPalm s 27 65.39 +.66Comerica 15 43.04 -.26Compuwre dd 10.62 -.06ConAgra 17 31.80 -.01ConocoPhil 12 73.09 -.24ConsolEngy 72 36.64 +.14ContainSt n ... 36.20Corning 13 17.13 +.04CovantaH 53 17.42 +.25CSVLgNGs q 13.15 -.72CSVelIVST q 29.06 +.06CSVxSht rs q 11.17 -.12CrwnCstle cc 75.18 -.84Ctrip.com 64 54.93 +.68Cummins 17 128.85 +1.83CumMed dd 6.58 +.60DCT Indl dd 7.92 +.17DR Horton 15 18.51 -.44DanaHldg dd 19.34 -.26DeltaAir 10 26.70 +.32DenburyR 17 18.85 -.14Dndreon dd 2.56DigitalGlb dd 34.01 +2.19DirecTV 13 63.67 +1.18DxGldBll rs q 42.41 -5.83DxFinBr rs q 26.04 -.23DxSCBr rs q 21.04 +.32DxFnBull s q 76.53 +.53DirDGdBr s q 34.45 +3.73DxSCBull s q 65.86 -.94Disney 21 69.01 +.42DoleFood dd 13.65 +.10DomRescs 56 64.09 +.34DowChm 40 38.95 -.52DresserR 21 57.72 -3.05DryShips dd 3.07 +.31DuPont 12 61.09 -.11DukeEngy 22 72.51 +.78DukeRlty dd 16.53 -.04Dynavax dd 1.18 -.04

E-F-G-HE-Trade dd 17.13 +.22eBay 25 51.94 -.77EMC Cp 19 23.65 -.42Eaton 19 70.67 +.11Elan dd 17.00 +.34EldorGld g 24 6.58 -.17ElectArts 36 25.63 -.62EllieMae 45 24.03 -4.87EmersonEl 24 67.03 +.06EmpDist 16 22.46 -.03EnCana g 15 17.81 -.11Energen 29 76.17 -2.15Ericsson ... 11.92 -.07EsteeLdr 27 69.94 -1.02ExcoRes 5 5.56 +.15Exelon 15 28.67 +.13Expedia 59 60.08 +1.12ExpScripts 28 62.37 -.15ExxonMbl 9 89.82 +.20F5 Netwks 21 79.43 -2.11Facebook cc 49.75 -.46Fastenal 33 49.39 -.44FedExCp 27 134.65 +3.65FidlNFin 13 27.92 -.23FifthThird 9 18.99 -.0558.com n ... 25.00 +.88Finisar 88 22.87 -.14FstHorizon cc 10.91 +.26FstNiagara 16 11.05 +.01

INDEXES

Name Vol (00) Last Chg

S&P500ETF 1188853 176.21 +.42iShR2K 1048788 108.72 -.48Facebook 924349 49.75 -.46iShEMkts 784049 42.48 +.02BkofAm 746861 14.02 +.05BarrickG 634345 18.01 -1.38SiriusXM 615710 3.79 +.03MktVGold 572738 24.08 -1.02Penney 561352 8.14 +.64GenElec 553969 26.54 +.40

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

NYSE DIARYAdvanced 1,401Declined 1,681Unchanged 84

Total issues 3,166New Highs 105New Lows 22

NASDA DIARYAdvanced 1,038Declined 1,487Unchanged 116

Total issues 2,641New Highs 94New Lows 51

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

IdenixPh 4.61 +1.33 +40.3Osiris 17.76 +4.45 +33.4Iridex 7.44 +1.47 +24.6Lifevntg wd 2.85 +.55 +23.9AtossaG n 2.10 +.34 +19.3GencoShip 3.18 +.51 +19.1GreenDot 25.46 +4.00 +18.6FstSolar 59.14 +8.83 +17.6AriadP 2.58 +.38 +17.3TrimbleN s 33.41 +4.89 +17.1

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

BodyCentrl 3.94 -1.69 -30.0RBS China 28.36 -7.01 -19.8Accuride 3.64 -.86 -19.1HutchT 3.03 -.69 -18.5EllieMae 24.03 -4.87 -16.9HMG 16.86 -3.39 -16.7ElectSci 10.00 -1.98 -16.5Galectin wt 5.32 -.96 -15.3ShndTelcm 23.61 -4.12 -14.9FivePrim n 10.48 -1.73 -14.2

AQRMaFtStrI 10.03 -0.03 +2.6AllianzGINFJAllCpValIns15.32 -0.01 +23.1NFJSmCVIs 37.83 -0.02 +26.4American BeaconLgCpVlInv 26.19 +0.08 +27.5LgCpVlIs 27.67 +0.08 +27.9American CenturyEqIncInv 9.00 ... +17.0GrowthInv 33.20 +0.10 +23.5UltraInv 33.62 +0.06 +29.1ValueInv 7.90 +0.01 +25.3American FundsAMCAPA m 27.49 +0.06 +29.5BalA m 23.66 +0.03 +17.5BondA m 12.56 -0.03 -1.2CapIncBuA m 58.21 -0.04 +13.2CapWldBdA m20.40 -0.09 -2.3CpWldGrIA m 43.99 -0.07 +20.5EurPacGrA m 47.43 -0.27 +15.1FnInvA m 50.52 +0.01 +24.9GrthAmA m 43.63 +0.02 +27.0HiIncA m 11.42 ... +5.9IncAmerA m 20.32 +0.01 +15.4IntBdAmA m 13.51 -0.02 -0.7IntlGrInA m 35.39 -0.26 +14.3InvCoAmA m 37.60 +0.14 +26.2MutualA m 34.37 +0.10 +23.1NewEconA m 38.37 +0.11 +35.0NewPerspA m 37.72 -0.09 +20.7NwWrldA m 59.14 -0.23 +8.5SmCpWldA m 49.56 -0.11 +24.2TaxEBdAmA m12.49 ... -2.4WAMutInvA m 38.61 +0.12 +25.6AquilaChTxFKYA m 10.58 -0.01 -1.9ArtisanIntl d 29.38 -0.24 +19.5IntlVal d 37.80 -0.28 +24.4MdCpVal 27.18 +0.05 +30.7MidCap 49.20 +0.08 +31.1BBHTaxEffEq d 21.24 +0.02 +22.4BaronGrowth b 71.24 -0.38 +32.9BernsteinDiversMui 14.40 -0.01 -0.7IntDur 13.54 -0.04 -1.7TxMIntl 16.43 -0.07 +17.5BlackRockEngy&ResA m33.71 -0.27 +16.5EqDivA m 23.20 +0.07 +18.2EqDivI 23.25 +0.06 +18.4GlobAlcA m 21.81 -0.03 +11.2GlobAlcC m 20.25 -0.02 +10.5GlobAlcI 21.93 -0.02 +11.4HiYldBdIs 8.28 ... +7.7HiYldInvA m 8.28 ... +7.4Cohen & SteersRealty 68.94 +0.45 +8.7ColumbiaAcornA m 35.91 -0.08 +23.9AcornIntZ 47.65 -0.33 +18.0AcornZ 37.35 -0.08 +24.2DivIncZ 17.90 +0.04 +23.3DivOppA m 10.41 +0.02 +21.7DFA1YrFixInI 10.33 ... +0.42YrGlbFII 10.06 ... +0.45YrGlbFII 11.13 -0.01 +0.2EmMkCrEqI 20.02 -0.07 -0.5EmMktValI 29.12 -0.16 -1.0EmMtSmCpI 21.03 -0.07 +0.5IntCorEqI 12.49 -0.08 +19.6IntSmCapI 20.04 -0.13 +27.1IntlSCoI 19.27 -0.13 +22.7IntlValuI 19.32 -0.13 +19.3RelEstScI 27.94 +0.17 +7.4USCorEq1I 15.77 +0.03 +29.0USCorEq2I 15.64 +0.02 +29.7USLgCo 13.91 +0.04 +25.6USLgValI 29.80 +0.08 +31.6USMicroI 19.54 -0.10 +34.2USSmValI 34.43 -0.05 +31.7USSmallI 29.92 -0.11 +32.6USTgtValInst 22.61 +0.01 +33.5DWS-ScudderGrIncS 23.42 +0.08 +29.3DavisNYVentA m 40.69 +0.07 +26.4NYVentY 41.19 +0.07 +26.7Dodge & CoxBal 94.62 +0.42 +23.0Income 13.61 -0.03 +0.4IntlStk 42.18 -0.24 +21.8Stock 159.12 +1.12 +32.1DoubleLineTotRetBdN b 10.98 ... +0.7DreyfusAppreciaInv 50.41 +0.10 +16.3DriehausActiveInc 10.78 +0.01 +2.6FMILgCap 21.24 +0.04 +24.2FPACres d 32.94 -0.05 +17.5NewInc d 10.35 -0.01 +0.7Fairholme FundsFairhome d 40.71 -1.16 +29.5FederatedStrValI 5.81 +0.01 +19.8ToRetIs 11.04 -0.02 -0.7FidelityAstMgr20 x 13.54 -0.03 +4.2AstMgr50 18.10 -0.03 +11.2Bal 22.26 +0.02 +16.0BlChGrow 61.05 +0.13 +31.7CapApr 37.42 +0.13 +27.4CapInc d 9.78 ... +7.3Contra 97.89 +0.06 +27.4DivGrow 34.58 +0.06 +25.1DivrIntl d 35.72 -0.17 +19.3EqInc 56.83 +0.13 +22.7EqInc II 23.59 +0.06 +22.9FF2015 12.80 -0.02 +9.2FF2035 13.40 -0.02 +16.0FF2040 9.44 -0.01 +16.4Fidelity 41.45 +0.07 +21.9FltRtHiIn d 9.98 ... +3.2Free2010 15.33 -0.03 +8.8Free2020 15.67 -0.03 +10.2Free2025 13.32 -0.02 +12.9Free2030 16.15 -0.03 +13.8GNMA 11.38 -0.03 -1.0GrowCo 121.84 +0.11 +30.7GrowInc 26.73 +0.07 +27.4HiInc d 9.42 ... +5.6IntMuniInc d 10.27 -0.01 -1.2IntlDisc d 39.52 -0.30 +19.5InvGrdBd 7.75 -0.02 -1.3LatinAm d 40.53 -0.27 -12.5LevCoSt d 41.36 +0.06 +28.9LowPriStk d 48.49 -0.03 +28.9Magellan 93.25 +0.19 +27.9MidCap d 38.17 -0.04 +31.1MuniInc d 12.81 -0.01 -2.7NewMktIn d 16.14 -0.07 -5.2OTC 76.88 +0.08 +38.5Puritan 20.90 +0.03 +15.9ShTmBond 8.59 ... +0.5SmCapDisc d 30.95 +0.08 +33.2StratInc 11.07 -0.03 +0.5Tel&Util 22.04 +0.09 +20.1TotalBd 10.53 -0.03 -0.6USBdIdx 11.50 -0.03 -1.4USBdIdxInv 11.50 -0.03 -1.5Value 99.67 +0.13 +30.6Fidelity AdvisorNewInsA m 28.78 -0.04 +26.5NewInsI 29.19 -0.04 +26.8StratIncA m 12.36 -0.03 +0.3Fidelity SelectBiotech d 171.03 +1.04 +55.6HealtCar d 189.28 +1.50 +44.4Fidelity Spartan500IdxAdvtg 62.50 +0.18 +25.6500IdxInstl 62.50 +0.18 +25.6500IdxInv 62.50 +0.18 +25.6ExtMktIdAg d 51.88 -0.06 +30.9IntlIdxAdg d 40.50 -0.29 +18.1TotMktIdAg d 52.04 +0.11 +26.6First EagleGlbA m 54.73 -0.19 +12.6OverseasA m 24.22 -0.18 +10.0FrankTemp-FrankFed TF A x 11.83 -0.05 -4.1FrankTemp-FranklinCA TF A x 6.98 -0.03 -3.7GrowthA m 62.07 +0.29 +22.6HY TF A m 9.94 -0.01 -5.9Income C x 2.41 ... +11.7IncomeA x 2.38 -0.01 +11.8

Name P/E Last Chg

3,621,471,184Volume 1,897,982,390Volume

14,400

14,700

15,000

15,300

15,600

15,900

M J J A S O

15,360

15,560

15,760Dow Jones industrialsClose: 15,615.55Change: 69.80 (0.4%)

10 DAYS

IncomeAdv x 2.36 -0.01 +11.6NY TF A x 11.26 -0.04 -4.0RisDvA m 47.28 +0.06 +25.0StrIncA m 10.59 -0.01 +2.7USGovA m 6.55 ... -0.8FrankTemp-MutualDiscov Z 34.66 +0.05 +21.7DiscovA m 34.12 +0.05 +21.3QuestZ 19.70 +0.02 +21.9Shares Z 27.57 +0.06 +23.2SharesA m 27.30 +0.06 +22.9FrankTemp-TempletonFgn A m 8.56 -0.03 +24.6GlBond C m 13.16 -0.01 +0.8GlBondA m 13.14 ... +1.2GlBondAdv 13.09 -0.01 +1.3GrowthA m 24.46 -0.03 +25.9WorldA m 19.86 -0.01 +26.2Franklin TempletonFndAllA m 13.17 +0.01 +19.6GES&SUSEq 57.04 +0.04 +28.4GMOEmgMktsVI d 11.45 -0.02 -2.3IntItVlIV 25.20 -0.15 +21.3QuIII 26.40 +0.09 +20.1QuVI 26.42 +0.08 +20.2Goldman SachsHiYieldIs d 7.38 ... +6.5MidCpVaIs 49.71 +0.03 +26.5ShDuTFIs 10.52 ... -0.1HarborBond 12.20 -0.02 -0.9CapApInst 54.72 +0.01 +28.7IntlInstl 70.29 -0.50 +13.2IntlInv b 69.43 -0.49 +12.8HartfordCapAprA m 45.91 ... +33.5CpApHLSIA 56.76 ... +30.9INVESCOCharterA m 22.22 ... +23.7ComstockA m 22.59 +0.12 +28.1EqIncomeA m 10.94 +0.03 +20.6GrowIncA m 26.47 +0.12 +27.5HiYldMuA m 9.17 ... -5.1IvyAssetStrA m 30.40 +0.06 +17.5AssetStrC m 29.47 +0.06 +16.8JPMorganCoreBdUlt 11.69 ... -0.9CoreBondA m 11.69 ... -1.1CoreBondSelect11.68 ... -1.0HighYldSel 8.22 ... +6.2LgCapGrA m 29.87 ... +24.6LgCapGrSelect29.87 ... +24.7MidCpValI 35.26 ... +26.0ShDurBndSel 10.92 ... +0.1USEquit 14.20 ... +27.5USLCpCrPS 28.35 ... +28.2JanusBalT 30.03 +0.04 +15.8GlbLfScT 42.63 +0.17 +42.4PerkinsMCVT 25.99 +0.02 +21.8John HancockLifAg1 b 15.61 -0.01 +21.2LifBa1 b 15.20 -0.01 +13.3LifGr1 b 15.91 -0.01 +18.2LazardEmgMkEqtI d 19.99 -0.11 +2.3Legg Mason/WesternAggGrowA m173.69 +0.48 +37.4CrPlBdIns 11.32 -0.03 -0.5Longleaf PartnersLongPart 33.65 +0.14 +27.5SmCap 35.93 -0.17 +24.4Loomis SaylesBdInstl 15.31 -0.02 +5.3BdR b 15.24 -0.02 +5.0Lord AbbettAffiliatA m 14.98 +0.04 +26.2BondDebA m 8.28 -0.01 +6.6ShDurIncA m 4.57 ... +1.3ShDurIncC m 4.60 ... +0.8MFSIntlValA m 33.36 -0.23 +23.4IsIntlEq 22.04 -0.15 +14.5TotRetA m 17.26 +0.03 +15.4ValueA m 32.11 +0.12 +28.1ValueI 32.26 +0.12 +28.4MainStayHiYldCorA m 6.08 ... +5.4Manning & NapierWrldOppA 9.02 -0.04 +16.4Matthews AsianChina d 24.61 +0.12 +4.9India d 16.32 +0.05 -6.8MergerMerger b 16.28 +0.01 +2.8Metropolitan WestTotRetBdI 10.69 -0.02 +0.8TotRtBd b 10.69 -0.02 +0.6Morgan StanleyIntlEqI d 16.65 -0.16 +16.1MdCpGrI 44.75 +0.36 +28.8Munder FundsMdCpCrGrY 41.55 -0.01 +26.9NatixisLSInvBdY x 12.34 -0.08 +1.4LSStratIncA m 16.38 -0.02 +9.6LSStratIncC m16.48 -0.02 +9.0Neuberger BermanGenesisInstl 63.20 -0.34 +29.7NorthernHYFixInc d 7.63 ... +6.4StkIdx 21.83 ... +25.2OakmarkEqIncI 33.97 +0.03 +19.2Intl I 26.45 -0.27 +26.4Oakmark I 62.50 +0.16 +28.8Select I 39.57 +0.03 +27.8OberweisChinaOpp m 16.13 +0.06 +45.1Old WestburyGlbSmMdCp 17.24 -0.06 +19.2LgCpStr 12.06 -0.03 +20.4OppenheimerDevMktA m 38.16 -0.04 +8.1DevMktY 37.82 -0.04 +8.4GlobA m 77.79 -0.37 +20.6IntlBondA m 6.17 ... -3.3IntlBondY 6.17 ... -3.1IntlGrY 36.87 -0.27 +20.1MainStrA m 45.79 +0.02 +23.5RocMuniA m 14.87 -0.01 -8.1SrFltRatA m 8.39 ... +5.1StrIncA m 4.16 -0.01 -0.2OsterweisOsterStrInc d 11.89 ... +5.5PIMCOAAstAAutP 10.39 -0.06 -3.5AllAssetI 12.43 -0.05 +1.2AllAuthA m 10.38 -0.06 -3.8AllAuthC m 10.37 -0.06 -4.4AllAuthIn 10.38 -0.06 -3.5ComRlRStI 5.57 -0.08 -15.0DivIncInst 11.66 -0.04 -1.0EMktCurI 10.23 -0.04 -1.7EmMktsIns 11.37 -0.06 -5.2ForBdInstl 10.63 ... +0.4HiYldIs 9.63 ... +5.0InvGrdIns 10.65 -0.04 -1.2LowDrIs 10.34 ...RERRStgC m 3.78 -0.01 -5.7RealRet 11.27 -0.08 -7.3ShtTermIs 9.87 ... +0.8TotRetA m 10.87 -0.03 -1.6TotRetAdm b 10.87 -0.03 -1.4TotRetC m 10.87 -0.03 -2.2TotRetIs 10.87 -0.03 -1.2TotRetrnD b 10.87 -0.03 -1.5TotlRetnP 10.87 -0.03 -1.3PRIMECAP OdysseyAggGr 28.74 +0.03 +47.5ParnassusEqIncInv 37.25 -0.02 +28.8PermanentPortfolio 48.13 -0.06 -1.0PioneerPioneerA m 40.73 +0.09 +26.5PrincipalDivIntI 11.77 ... +15.1L/T2020I 14.27 ... +13.1L/T2030I 14.46 ... +15.7LCGrIInst 12.76 ... +29.3Prudential InvestmenJenMidCapGrZ 39.99 ... +23.3PutnamGrowIncA m 18.90 +0.03 +28.3NewOpp 74.40 +0.01 +27.1RoycePAMutInv d 14.64 -0.03 +27.3PremierInv d 23.09 +0.03 +20.5RussellStratBdS 11.02 -0.03 -1.1

Schwab1000Inv d 48.44 +0.13 +25.9S&P500Sel d 27.86 +0.08 +25.6ScoutInterntl 36.30 -0.27 +9.9SequoiaSequoia 216.22 +2.23 +28.5T Rowe PriceBalanced 23.55 -0.01 +15.7BlChpGr 60.62 +0.14 +32.9CapApprec 26.36 +0.05 +18.5EmMktBd d 12.82 -0.06 -5.8EmMktStk d 33.45 -0.16 -1.8EqIndex d 47.51 +0.13 +25.4EqtyInc 32.57 +0.09 +24.8GrowStk 49.39 +0.06 +30.7HealthSci 58.53 +0.30 +42.0HiYield d 7.15 ... +7.8InsLgCpGr 25.64 +0.06 +35.8IntlBnd d 9.64 -0.06 -2.8IntlGrInc d 15.36 -0.08 +18.5IntlStk d 16.09 -0.13 +11.7LatinAm d 33.95 -0.23 -10.8MidCapE 40.02 +0.05 +30.8MidCapVa 30.22 +0.06 +25.7MidCpGr 73.42 +0.10 +30.0NewAsia d 16.82 +0.01 +0.1NewEra 47.73 -0.22 +13.9NewHoriz 46.27 +0.17 +39.5NewIncome 9.46 -0.02 -1.8OrseaStk d 10.02 -0.05 +17.9R2015 14.49 -0.02 +12.5R2025 15.35 -0.01 +17.0R2035 16.09 -0.01 +20.3Rtmt2010 18.10 -0.02 +9.9Rtmt2020 20.54 -0.01 +14.9Rtmt2030 22.49 -0.01 +18.9Rtmt2040 23.12 -0.01 +21.1Rtmt2045 15.39 ... +21.1ShTmBond 4.79 -0.01 +0.1SmCpStk 44.43 -0.01 +30.6SmCpVal d 49.13 -0.09 +25.4SpecInc 12.99 -0.03 +2.8Value 34.29 +0.14 +30.0TCWEmgIncI 8.52 -0.01 -4.0TotRetBdI 10.11 -0.02 +2.2TIAA-CREFEqIx 13.68 +0.03 +26.7IntlE d 19.20 -0.11 +18.3TempletonInFEqSeS 22.78 -0.10 +16.4ThornburgIncBldA m 20.79 ... +15.1IncBldC m 20.79 ... +14.4IntlValA m 30.22 -0.15 +11.0IntlValI 30.88 -0.15 +11.4Tweedy, BrowneGlobVal d 27.22 -0.09 +17.1VALIC Co IStockIdx 32.70 +0.09 +25.3Vanguard500Adml 162.61 +0.47 +25.6500Inv 162.59 +0.46 +25.5BalIdxAdm 26.89 +0.01 +14.8BalIdxIns 26.89 +0.01 +14.8CAITAdml 11.37 -0.01 -0.4CapOpAdml 105.82 +0.61 +36.3DevMktsIdxIP 119.42 -0.63 +18.6DivGr 20.65 +0.06 +25.3EmMktIAdm 34.97 -0.20 -2.7EnergyAdm 128.88 -0.62 +16.2EnergyInv 68.63 -0.33 +16.2EqInc 29.49 +0.08 +24.5EqIncAdml 61.81 +0.16 +24.6ExplAdml 100.43 -0.11 +35.9Explr 107.84 -0.12 +35.7ExtdIdAdm 60.04 -0.06 +30.9ExtdIdIst 60.04 -0.07 +31.0ExtdMktIdxIP 148.20 -0.15 +31.0FAWeUSIns 98.42 -0.51 +12.5GNMA 10.60 -0.01 -1.0GNMAAdml 10.60 -0.01 -0.9GlbEq 22.69 -0.05 +21.5GrthIdAdm 45.49 +0.09 +25.3GrthIstId 45.49 +0.09 +25.4GrthIstSg 42.12 +0.08 +25.3HYCor 6.05 ... +3.9HYCorAdml 6.05 ... +4.0HltCrAdml 79.43 +0.27 +34.7HlthCare 188.21 +0.63 +34.7ITBondAdm 11.37 -0.04 -2.2ITGradeAd 9.86 -0.03 -1.0ITrsyAdml 11.35 -0.03 -1.7InfPrtAdm 26.21 -0.17 -7.0InfPrtI 10.68 -0.07 -6.9InflaPro 13.35 -0.09 -7.1InstIdxI 161.54 +0.46 +25.6InstPlus 161.55 +0.47 +25.7InstTStPl 40.37 +0.09 +26.8IntlGr 22.74 -0.11 +18.0IntlGrAdm 72.39 -0.35 +18.1IntlStkIdxAdm 27.74 -0.15 +13.0IntlStkIdxI 110.94 -0.57 +13.0IntlStkIdxIPls 110.96 -0.57 +13.1IntlStkIdxISgn 33.28 -0.17 +13.0IntlVal 36.90 -0.22 +18.3LTGradeAd 9.79 -0.08 -5.7LTInvGr 9.79 -0.08 -5.8LifeCon 18.02 -0.02 +7.7LifeGro 27.06 -0.01 +17.3LifeMod 22.89 -0.01 +12.5MidCapIdxIP 143.13 +0.23 +28.9MidCp 28.92 +0.05 +28.7MidCpAdml 131.36 +0.22 +28.8MidCpIst 29.02 +0.05 +28.9MidCpSgl 41.45 +0.07 +28.8Morg 25.21 +0.04 +26.7MorgAdml 78.22 +0.12 +26.8MuHYAdml 10.63 ... -2.6MuInt 13.84 ... -1.2MuIntAdml 13.84 ... -1.2MuLTAdml 11.13 -0.01 -2.5MuLtdAdml 11.06 ... +0.6MuShtAdml 15.87 ... +0.5PrecMtls 10.64 -0.13 -33.3Prmcp 92.23 +0.46 +32.7PrmcpAdml 95.74 +0.48 +32.8PrmcpCorI 19.50 +0.06 +30.6REITIdxAd 98.41 +0.53 +8.4REITIdxInst 15.23 +0.08 +8.4STBondAdm 10.55 -0.01 +0.3STBondSgl 10.55 -0.01 +0.3STCor 10.74 -0.01 +0.8STFedAdml 10.73 ... -0.1STGradeAd 10.74 -0.01 +0.9STIGradeI 10.74 -0.01 +1.0STsryAdml 10.71 -0.01 +0.1SelValu 28.09 +0.01 +33.9SmCapIdx 50.55 -0.05 +30.5SmCpIdAdm 50.63 -0.05 +30.6SmCpIdIst 50.63 -0.05 +30.6SmCpIndxSgnl 45.62 -0.04 +30.7Star 23.63 -0.03 +14.4StratgcEq 28.52 ... +33.0TgtRe2010 25.98 -0.02 +7.7TgtRe2015 14.84 ... +10.9TgtRe2020 26.96 -0.02 +13.1TgtRe2030 27.31 -0.01 +16.8TgtRe2035 16.72 ... +18.7TgtRe2040 27.78 ... +19.8TgtRe2045 17.44 ... +19.9TgtRe2050 27.66 ... +19.8TgtRetInc 12.65 -0.01 +5.0Tgtet2025 15.63 ... +15.0TotBdAdml 10.69 -0.03 -1.5TotBdInst 10.69 -0.03 -1.4TotBdMkInv 10.69 -0.03 -1.6TotBdMkSig 10.69 -0.03 -1.5TotIntl 16.59 -0.08 +12.9TotStIAdm 44.54 +0.10 +26.7TotStIIns 44.54 +0.09 +26.7TotStISig 42.98 +0.09 +26.7TotStIdx 44.52 +0.10 +26.6TxMCapAdm 90.06 +0.23 +26.6ValIdxAdm 28.54 +0.09 +26.7ValIdxIns 28.54 +0.09 +26.7WellsI 25.33 -0.01 +7.4WellsIAdm 61.36 -0.04 +7.5Welltn 38.45 +0.02 +15.8WelltnAdm 66.41 +0.04 +15.8WndsIIAdm 64.33 +0.10 +24.7Wndsr 19.49 -0.01 +29.6WndsrAdml 65.78 -0.03 +29.7WndsrII 36.24 +0.06 +24.6VirtusEmgMktsIs 9.95 -0.07 -3.2Waddell & Reed AdvAccumA m 10.40 +0.03 +27.0SciTechA m 15.80 -0.10 +41.8YacktmanFocused d 25.41 +0.08 +23.8Yacktman d 23.78 +0.09 +24.4

YTDName NAV Chg %Rtn

FstSolar 13 59.14 +8.83FirstEngy 16 38.12 +.25Flextrn 24 7.93 +.04Fluor 25 74.90 +.68ForestLab dd 47.15 +.12ForestOil 15 4.81 +.07FrSea rsh ... .40 +.03FMCG 13 36.78 +.02FrontierCm 45 4.45 +.05GATX 17 51.92 +.37GT AdvTc dd 8.08 +.58Gap 14 36.78 -.21GencoShip dd 3.18 +.51GenDynam dd 87.15 +.52GenGrPrp cc 21.56 +.33GenMills 19 50.32 -.10GenMotors 16 37.39 +.44Genworth 14 14.46 -.07Gerdau ... 8.14 +.21GileadSci s 39 70.97 -.21GlaxoSKln ... 53.19 +.56GluMobile dd 3.37 -.03GoldFLtd ... 4.42 -.18Goldcrp g dd 24.32 -1.11GoldStr g 17 .50 +.02GoldmanS 12 162.05 +1.19GrafTech 45 9.51 +.61GraphPkg 20 8.24 -.16GreenDot 26 25.46 +4.00GreenMtC 21 62.68 -.13Groupon dd 9.93 +.80GulfportE 40 59.06 +.37HCA Hldg 15 47.31 +.17HSBUS pfG ... 20.99 +.21HalconRes 37 5.17 -.01Hallibrtn 18 53.23 +.20HarmonyG ... 3.25 -.15HartfdFn 34 33.65 -.05HltMgmt 23 12.79 -.03Healthwys dd 10.43 +.81HeclaM cc 3.14 +.02HercOffsh 28 6.69 -.11Hertz 30 22.75 -.21Hess 8 80.93 -.27HewlettP dd 25.92 +1.55Hillshire 25 32.26 -.57HimaxTch 63 9.52 -.16HollyFront 6 46.54 +.48HomeDp 23 76.99 -.90HopFedBc 24 10.85HostHotls 90 18.81 +.26HovnanE dd 5.03 -.03HudsCity 23 8.96 -.02HuntBncsh 12 8.85 +.05

I-J-K-LIAMGld g 8 5.01 -.09ING US n ... 30.96 -.06iShGold q 12.77 -.08iShBrazil q 49.62 -.54iShJapan q 11.78 -.13iSh SKor q 64.35 +.45iSTaiwn q 14.41 -.10iShSilver q 21.08 -.01iShChinaLC q 37.83 +.26iSCorSP500 q 177.21 +.52iShEMkts q 42.48 +.02iSh20 yrT q 106.19 -1.16iS Eafe q 65.56 -.32iShiBxHYB q 92.82 -.16iShR2K q 108.72 -.48iShREst q 66.59 +.42iShHmCnst q 22.31 -.21IdenixPh dd 4.61 +1.33IngrmM 12 23.10 -.07IntgDv 25 10.41 -.23IBM 12 179.23 +.02IntlGame 17 18.65 -.15IntPap 17 44.96 +.35Interpublic 24 16.91 +.11InvenSense 27 16.72 -.17Invesco 18 33.84 +.09IridiumCm 6 5.46 -.58IronMtn 65 26.11 -.43ItauUnibH ... 15.11 -.29JA Solar rs dd 10.00 +.36JDS Uniph 45 13.00 -.10JPMorgCh 12 52.51 +.97JetBlue 20 7.27 +.18JohnJn 21 93.37 +.76JohnsnCtl 17 45.94 -.21JnprNtwk 25 18.48 -.16KB Home dd 16.60 -.37Kellogg 24 62.29 -.96KeyEngy 100 7.98 +.16Keycorp 14 12.54 +.01Kimco 46 21.56 +.08KindMorg 30 35.31Kinross g dd 4.82 -.25KodiakO g 26 12.38 -.59Kohls 13 56.85 +.05KraftFGp 18 54.63 +.25LSI Corp 65 8.45 -.03LamarAdv cc 47.49 +1.78LVSands 26 69.88 -.34LennarA 18 34.98 -.57Level3 dd 30.02 -.53LillyEli 11 50.38 +.56LinkedIn cc 219.90 -3.77LinnEngy dd 30.82 +3.12LloydBkg ... 4.99 -.04LockhdM 14 134.55 +1.21Lorillard s 15 51.39 +.38LaPac 10 16.78 -.23lululemn gs 37 67.85 -1.24LyonBas A 13 73.93 -.67

M-N-O-PMGIC dd 8.05 -.09MGM Rsts dd 19.30 +.26MRC Glbl 25 29.50 +1.55Macys 13 45.96 -.15MagHRes 71 7.12 -.01MannKd dd 4.76 -.15MarathnO 16 35.27 +.01MarathPet 10 70.86 -.80MktVGold q 24.08 -1.02MV OilSvc q 49.44 -.18MktVRus q 29.35 +.17MarIntA 22 45.71 +.63MartMM 47 98.61 +.52MarvellT 25 12.02 +.03Masco 55 21.02 -.11Mattel 19 44.81 +.43MaximIntg 20 29.37 -.33McDrmInt dd 7.08 +.01McEwenM dd 1.98 -.16Medivation dd 66.57 +6.71Medtrnic 15 57.26 -.14MelcoCrwn 54 33.39 +.23Merck 27 45.23 +.14MetLife 17 47.32 +.01MKors 34 75.43 -1.52Microchp 36 42.54 -.42MicronT 18 17.58 -.11Microsoft 13 35.53 +.12Molycorp dd 5.02 -.05Mondelez 25 33.59 -.06MorgStan 16 29.20 +.47Mosaic 10 46.10 +.25Mylan 25 38.01 +.14NII Hldg dd 3.40 -.04NPS Phm dd 28.00 -.78NQ Mobile 98 12.78 -1.62NRG Egy 20 28.39 -.14Nabors 41 17.74 +.26NBGrce rs ... 5.67 -.18NOilVarco 15 80.83 -.35NetApp 27 39.13 +.33Netflix cc 329.27 +6.79NwGold g 31 5.65 -.20Newcastle ... 5.52 -.22NewfldExp cc 30.45NewmtM dd 25.98 -1.28NewsCpA n 20 17.77 +.17NextEraEn 22 88.14 +3.39NobleCorp 17 37.15 -.55NokiaCp ... 7.62 -.01NoestUt 17 42.50 -.39NorthropG 13 108.12 +.61NStarRlt dd 9.86 +.53NuanceCm 10 15.57 +.02Nvidia 17 15.26 +.07OcciPet 17 95.65 -.43OcwenFn 30 53.36 -2.87OdysMar dd 2.29 +.13OfficeDpt dd 5.77 +.18OfficeMax 3 15.50 +.52Oi SA ... 1.70 -.03OnSmcnd dd 7.52 +.47OpkoHlth dd 10.02Oracle 14 33.53 +.03OrientEH dd 14.31 +1.00OwensCorn 27 35.88 -.05OxygnB rsh dd 3.23 +.19

PMC Sra dd 5.92 +.07PPG 26 182.75 +.17PPL Corp 12 30.73 +.10Pandora dd 25.99 +.86ParkerVsn dd 2.84 +.13PattUTI 16 24.59 +.31PeabdyE dd 20.05 +.57PennVa dd 9.20 +.69PetrbrsA ... 17.70 -.46Petrobras ... 16.97 -.46Pfizer 16 31.17 +.49PhilipMor 17 89.76 +.64Phillips66 11 64.13 -.30PiperJaf 19 35.55 -.34PitnyBw 27 21.48 +.14Polycom dd 10.94 +.54Potash 14 31.40 +.30PwshDB q 25.43 -.32PS USDBull q 21.75 +.13PS SrLoan ... 24.83PwShs QQQ q 82.81 +.02ProUltQQQ q 88.07 +.03PrUShQQQ q 17.14ProUltSP q 92.68 +.36ProUltR2K q 75.35 -.87PrUVxST rs q 24.89 -.30ProctGam 21 81.15 +.40ProgsvCp 14 26.02 +.05ProUShSP q 33.11 -.18ProUShL20 q 74.43 +1.47ProUSR2K q 13.82 +.15PUSSP500 q 17.80 -.18ProspctCap ... 11.34 +.01PSEG 14 33.82 +.32PulteGrp 3 17.55 -.10

Q-R-S-TQihoo360 cc 86.46 +3.82QlikTech dd 25.03 -.29Qualcom 19 69.90 +.41QuantaSvc 20 30.59 +.38QstDiag 12 60.93 +1.02Qunar n ... 28.40RF MicD dd 5.30 +.05RadianGrp dd 14.52 -.05RealGSolar dd 3.60 +.24Realogy dd 40.67 -.47ReneSola dd 4.51 +.16Rentech dd 1.69 -.01RiteAid 88 5.27 -.06RiverbedT dd 14.95 +.13RBScotlnd ... 10.85 -.93RoyDShllA 9 66.81 +.13Ryland 6 39.20 -1.00RymanHP cc 37.36 +.45SpdrDJIA q 155.86 +.57SpdrGold q 126.95 -.79SP Mid q 234.73 +.21S&P500ETF q 176.21 +.42SpdrHome q 30.34 -.18SpdrLehHY q 40.43SpdrOGEx q 69.16 -.42SpdrMetM q 39.82 +.50Salesforc s dd 53.96 +.60SanDisk 18 68.97 -.53SandRdge dd 6.38 +.04Schlmbrg 18 93.00 -.72Schwab 35 23.12 +.47SeagateT 10 49.20 +.51SealAir 23 31.21 +1.03Sequenom dd 1.90 -.03SiderurNac ... 5.73 +.19SilvWhtn g 16 22.01 -.66SilvrcpM g 13 2.94 -.23SkywksSol 18 25.97 +.17SolarCity n ... 54.75 +1.40SonyCp ... 16.75 -.50SwstAirl 20 17.47 +.25SwstnEngy 67 38.20 +.98SpectraEn 25 35.40 -.17SpiritRC n dd 10.27 -.19Sprint n ... 6.87 +.14SP Matls q 43.67 -.10SP HlthC q 53.12 +.35SP CnSt q 42.51 +.17SP Consum q 63.56 +.15SP Engy q 86.08 -.31SP Inds q 48.97 +.35SP Tech q 33.66 +.01SP Util q 39.06 +.28StdPac 5 7.62 -.31Staples dd 16.18 +.05Starbucks 36 80.37 -.68StarwdPT 16 26.25 +.56Stryker 27 74.03 +.17Suncor gs 12 35.22 -1.13SunEdison dd 9.63 +.33SunPower 24 30.87 +.67SunTrst 13 33.75 +.11Supvalu dd 6.97 -.06SusqBnc 13 11.78SwftEng 5 12.96 -.76Symantec 20 22.77 +.01Synaptics 12 45.50 -.98Synovus dd 3.25Sysco 19 32.56 +.22TECO 18 17.34 +.17TJX 22 60.88 +.09TaiwSemi ... 18.47 +.06TakeTwo dd 17.97 +.06TalismE g ... 12.48Target 16 64.62 -.17Taseko ... 2.22 -.23TASER 54 16.87 -.91TeckRes g ... 27.02 +.28Tellabs dd 2.45 +.01Teradata 20 44.00 -.07TeslaMot dd 162.17 +2.23TevaPhrm 74 37.12 +.03TexInst 27 42.03 -.063D Sys s cc 63.01 +.773M Co 19 125.90 +.05TW Cable 19 123.51 +3.36TimeWarn 19 68.81 +.07TiVo Inc 7 13.73 +.45TollBros 11 32.47 -.41Transocn cc 47.56 +.49TrimbleN s 45 33.41 +4.89TrinaSolar dd 15.33 +.66TriQuint dd 7.77 -.15TurqHillRs dd 4.66 -.1621stCFoxA 12 34.37 +.29TwoHrbInv 5 9.32 -.01Tyson 13 27.71 +.04

U-V-W-X-Y-ZUS Airwy 7 22.44 +.47UltraPt g dd 18.83 +.47UnionPac 17 152.77 +1.37UtdContl dd 35.54 +1.59UPS B 64 98.22 -.02US NGas q 17.45 -.32US OilFd q 34.13 -.56USSteel dd 25.78 +.89UtdTech 16 107.51 +1.26UtdhlthGp 13 68.63 +.37Vale SA ... 16.38 +.37Vale SA pf ... 14.81 +.17ValeroE 15 41.00 -.17ValueClick 14 19.75 +.55VangREIT q 69.49 +.36VangEmg q 41.85 -.02VangEur q 56.42 -.36VangFTSE q 40.65 -.20VerizonCm 71 50.49 -.02VertxPh dd 67.36 -3.99VimpelCm 10 14.31 -.08Visa 27 199.16 +2.49Vodafone ... 36.91 +.06VulcanM dd 53.67 +.12WPX Engy dd 21.91 -.23Walgrn 24 60.52 +1.28WalterEn dd 17.24 +1.35WeathfIntl dd 16.37 -.07Wellcare 18 62.60 -4.08WellPoint 9 85.36 +.56WDigital 18 69.85 +.22WstnUnion 12 17.48 +.46WhitingPet 15 66.13 -.76WholeFd s 44 63.30 +.17WmsCos 40 35.52 -.19Windstrm 32 8.54 -.01WTJpHedg q 47.46 -.27WT India q 16.94 +.14XL Grp 11 30.32 -.25Xylem 27 33.22 -1.28Yamana g 17 9.33 -.60Yandex ... 38.03 +1.17Yelp dd 67.15 -.60YingliGrn dd 6.32 +.32YumBrnds 28 68.48 +.86Zoetis n ... 31.84 +.18Zynga dd 3.58 -.00

The W

eek A

head

Happiest place on earth

Walt Disney is expected to report improved fourth-quarter revenue and profit on Thursday.

The company has benefited in recent quarters from gains at its theme parks, resorts and cable networks. However, its movie studio revenue has slowed. Disney previously said that it expects to incur a loss of $160 million to $190 million during the fourth quarter for the business unit from its film “The Lone Ranger.”

Twitter IPO

In the most highly anticipated IPO since Facebook went public in May 2012, Twitter is expected to debut Thursday.

The company plans to sell 70 million shares between $17 and $20 each. Shares will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker “TWTR.”

This year has been a hot one for IPOs as sharp gains in the stock market have boosted demand. More than 180 companies have gone public in the U.S. this year, up more than 50 percent from the same period in 2012, according to Renaissance Capital.

The right price?

Priceline.com is expected to report improved fiscal third-quarter profit and revenue on Thursday as consumers flock to the online travel company’s site for deals.

The company’s stock has been on a tear all year as the popularity and profitability of its business has grown. The company completed its purchase in May of search and booking site Kayak Software for $1.8 billion. Analysts predict that deal will eventually help drive more travelers to its other sites to make bookings.

Trevor Delaney; Jenni Sohn • APSource: FactSet *based on trailing 12 month results ^ annualized

Avg. broker rating

SELL BUYHOLD

2014201320122011

52-week range

Earnings per share

MGM Resorts (MGM)

MGM Resorts (MGM) Friday’s close: $19.30

5

10

15

20

$25

OSAJJMAMFJDN

$19.30

P/E ratio*: Lost money Market value: $9.3 billion

Number of analysts: 27

$9 21

$10.31Oct. 31

Nov. 1

1-yr 5-yr^ 10-yr^MGM 84.4 3.2 0.8S&P 500 25.8 15.2 7.5

Total return

% % %

20132012

Bet on MGM Resorts?

All-time intraday high

$100.50, Oct. 10, 2007$100.50, Oct. 10, 2007

est.

est.

A profit of 2 cents per share, excluding one-time items, is all it took for MGM Resorts to beat Wall Street’s expectations for third-quarter earnings.

News of deeper third-quarter losses for competitors, Boyd Gaming and Caesars Entertainment, helped drive investors away from casino stocks this week. Although MGM fell 5 percent this week, it remains up 65.8 percent so far this year.

Several analysts reiterated their “Buy” ratings on MGM following its earnings release, citing a strong outlook for 2014. In a note to clients, financial analyst Robert LaFleur of Cantor Fitzgerald wrote, “We are buyers because 2014 is shaping up to be a very good year in Las Vegas as convention business finally returns ....”

Wall Street analysts have an average target price for the stock of $22.68, which reflects projected appreciation of almost 18 percent.

-$0.47 0.03

0.21

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Some of the MGM properties on the

Las Vegas strip

BellagioLuxor

MGM GrandThe Mirage

New York-New York

www.edwardjones.com�

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Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS®, CFP®

Financial Advisor

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

Brian S LangleyFinancial Advisor

605 Foote StreetCorinth, MS 38834662-287-4471

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

Page 9: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

SATURDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 2, 2013 C A 7 PM 7:30 8 PM 8:30 9 PM 9:30 10 PM 10:30 11 PM 11:30 WATN ^ ^

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WKNO * Classic Gospel Lark Rise to Candleford Primeval “Jurassic Mall” Music City Roots: Live

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WGN-A + ((6:30) NBA Basketball: Chicago Bulls at Philadel-phia 76ers. (N) (Live)

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Horoscopes

A Corinth mother is on a missionto educate the community

on the deadly challenges of peanut allergies.

See story by Sarah Rowland coming Sunday.

Coming Up In The Daily Corinthian

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 2, 2013 • 9

DEAR ABBY: I am 19 and a new bride. My husband is in the Army. We’re very happy, but I just found out that I’m pregnant — I’m not sure how far along yet — and I feel torn about what to do.

My husband wants a child very badly, but he did say he would support whatever decision I make. While I have no objection to having a child, I know my fam-ily will make me feel guilty if I do by saying they are disappointed, that I should have waited and that I’m “throwing my life away.”

Abby, I am so confused. I don’t know what to do. I want my family to support me and be there when I have our fi rst child. — PRESSURED AND CON-FUSED

DEAR PRESSURED: Was your family disappointed and saying you were throwing your life away when you married your husband? If the answer is no, then why would they accuse you of doing so because you are pregnant?

You are an adult, albeit a young one, and a wife. The fi rst thing you need to do is see a gy-necologist and fi nd out how far along you are. Your next step is for you and your husband to de-cide if you are emotionally and fi nancially ready to be parents.

No one can decide this for you, but your family’s possible “disap-pointment” should not enter into your decision. If they are not sup-portive, your in-laws might be.

D E A R ABBY: Be-fore my son met his fi -ancee of fi ve years, “Shelby,” he went with another girl, “Dana,” for three years. During that time we be-came good

friends with Dana’s parents (the “Smiths”). After the breakup, we stayed in touch with the Smiths and go out occasionally.

Recently, Mrs. Smith invited us to her husband’s retirement party. When we told our son we were going, he mentioned it to Shelby, who told us we were be-ing disrespectful to her by con-tinuing our relationship with the Smiths.

Shelby’s position is that all ties to Dana and her family should have been severed when the boyfriend/girlfriend relation-ship ended. Our position is the Smiths became friends of ours before Shelby was in the picture, and we don’t think we are being disrespectful to anyone by con-tinuing our relationship with this couple. Are we wrong? — JIM IN CALIFORNIA

DEAR JIM: Of course not. Your son’s fi ancee appears to have serious insecurities. I sin-cerely hope you won’t allow her to control your lives and your

relationships, because if you do, this is just the beginning of how she will try to control you — and your son. This is Shelby’s prob-lem. SHE will have to deal with it. Please do not make it yours.

DEAR ABBY: I have friends who exclude me or take off with other friends before I can get to where they are meeting. What can I do to get them to call me? Why am I their whipping post? — FRIEND-CHALLENGED IN OVERLAND PARK, KAN.

DEAR CHALLENGED: Friends don’t treat friends the way you are being treated. There is nothing you can do to get them to behave differently. You are letting them do this be-cause you’re hoping that if you ignore their insensitivity and rudeness, they will accept you.

Please stop trying to cling to them. Join activities where you’ll meet people with whom you RE-ALLY have something in com-mon. If you do, you will be much happier than you are today.

DEAR READERS: Once again, here is my “timely” re-minder that daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. Sunday -- so don’t forget to turn your clocks back one hour before bedtime.

Dear Abby is written by Abi-gail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pau-line Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Young wife expecting first child faces adult decisions

Abigail Van Buren

Dear Abby

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Maintaining integrity equals keeping your agreements — not some of them, but all of them. Your heart and desire may be leading you in a different direc-tion now.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20). You want to fi nd an inspiring en-vironment, and it’s not that hard now, either. All you have to do is heed that tiny voice beckon-ing you toward that thing you’ve never seen or done before.

GEMINI (May 21-June 21). Maybe you’re waiting for the moment when push comes to shove. But push doesn’t always come to shove. Sometimes push comes to “run away from the one pushing.”

CANCER (June 22-July 22). You’ll try a new role on for size today. Actors know that in order to make a role believable to oth-ers, it must fi rst be believable to you. One way to make that hap-pen is to live the role 24/7.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). It may feel like you are under the gravi-tational pull of something that is not entirely good for you. As long as you are within reach of it, it will continue to tug at you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You like to be fl exible and try new ideas on for size, but you don’t want to be forced to wear them all of the time, especially if they don’t fi t well. Avoid overly pushy types.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You are a smooth persuader. Your soft words will have heavy infl uence because your intention is so clear within you. You don’t have to spell things out. People sense what you want even though it’s all below the surface.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). The key is not to lose your cool — not when the clock ticks past the time you’re supposed to ar-rive, and not when the compe-tition shows up with twice the power.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You may feel like teasing those you love and those you simply think deserve some teas-ing. Just be careful not to antag-onize people who don’t share your sense of humor.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You may feel like you still haven’t become the person you want to be, but you’re getting closer. You may have started out as a work of nature, but the ef-forts you make now are helping you become a work of art.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). Don’t side with the one who doubts everything and always takes the negative route. Nei-ther should you side with the one who loves everything and always takes the positive route. Think for yourself.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You’ll be working backward to-day. You have the solution, and now you just have to fi nd the problem that fi ts it best.

Page 10: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Sports12 • Daily Corinthian Saturday, November 2, 2013

Local scores

Friday Night Lights

Corinth 45, Amory 15Booneville 14, Kossuth 0Belmont 61, Central 19Thrasher 42, Biggersville 0Baldwyn 41, New Site 12Chester Co. 41, McNairy 34Itawamba 46, Tish County 6Mantachie 42, Walnut 12Ripley 33, New Albany 0

ThursdayCoffeeville 58, Falkner 0

State scores

Aberdeen 41, South Pontotoc 6Amite Co. 38, Enterprise Lincoln 0Bassfield 48, East Marion 6Bay Springs 39, North Forrest 21Biloxi 53, Hancock 34Brookhaven 47, Wingfield 6Caledonia 40, Leake Central 36Calhoun City 26, Okolona 25Callaway 31, Vicksburg 12Cathedral 48, Dexter 14Clarksdale 28, Lake Cormorant 9Clinton 35, Greenville-Weston 6Coldwater 46, Houlka 15Columbia 28, McComb 24D’Iberville 41, Hattiesburg 20DeSoto Central 41, Southaven 14East Side 34, O’Bannon 32Ethel 40, West Oktibbeha 0Eupora 35, East Webster 18Florence 21, Raymond 20Forest 48, Choctaw Central 14Forrest Co. AHS 48, NE Jones 21Franklin Academy 46, Mt. Salus 26French Camp 54, Nanih Waiya 6Gautier 56, Long Beach 21Germantown 28, Canton 27Greene County 35, Newton Co. 14Greenwood 46, Cleveland 20Gulfport 27, Ocean Springs 22Hamilton 13, Smithville 12Hazlehurst 56, Crystal Springs 28Hinds AHS 24, Resurrection Catho-

lic 17Hollandale Simmons 26, South

Delta 6J.F. Kennedy 44, Durant 6J.Z. George 7, West Bolivar 6Jackson Aca. 35, Starkville Aca. 3Jefferson County 30, Franklin Co. 6Kosciusko 28, West Lauderdale 17Lafayette 50, Byhalia 13Lake 38, Enterprise Clarke 6Laurel 52, South Jones 7Leake County 62, Puckett 6Leland 42, Riverside 0Louisville 46, Nettleton 0Loyd Star 14, West Lincoln 6

Corinth came away with four touchdowns and a fi eld goal on its fi rst fi ve drives and cruised to a perfect season in Division 1-4A with a 45-15 win over Amory at Warrior Stadium II on Friday.

It was the most points scored by Corinth (10-1, 5-0) against Amory and sends the Warriors into their 17th post-season on a nine-game win-ning streak. CHS’ 42-0 win in 1929 provided the Warriors with their biggest margin of victory in the series.

Corinth will host the Byha-lia, the No. 4 seed from Di-vision 2-4A, in the opening round of the Class 4A playoffs

on Friday. It will be the fi rst meeting between the two pro-grams.

With the program’s ninth 10-win season all but locked up behind a 28-0 advantage four plays into the second quarter, the only question to be answered would be if the longest fi eld goal in school history would last another week.

John Michael McFall, who had given Corinth a 31-7 lead on a career-long 45-yard boot midway of the second quar-ter, was just short on tying Baxter Wilder’s 49-yarder from 12 season ago with 9:42 left in the contest.

The senior, who moved to within one three-pointer of

tying Evan Bauer’s single-season mark of 12, bounced a 54-yarder over the cross bar with just under two min-utes to play. Amory, however, was called for being offsides prior to the snap -- a penalty that kills the play at the high school level.

Amory (4-7, 2-3) got a touchdown and two-point conversion against the Corinth reserves with 54 sec-onds left to crack double fi g-ures. The Warriors fi nished their fi ve-game league trek outscoring their opponent’s 183-54, with the regular de-fense allowing just fi ve TDs in as many games.

Corinth turned an Amory turnover and three straight

punts into a 28-0 advantage. Quarterback Antares Gwyn sandwiched 2- and 15-yard scoring runs around scores from Kyoshi Agnew and Ken-drick Williams.

Williams, who added a 72-yard sprint for a 38-7 lead in the third quarter, saw limited action in the blowout but still managed a game-high 96 yards on just four carries.

Amory’s lone scoring drive against the Corinth regulars came after falling behind 28-0 and covered 80 yards in nine plays. The Panthers net-ted 64 yards of offense on the march, the bulk of their 108-yard fi rst half.

CHS takes 9-game streak into playoffs

BY H. LEE SMITH IIlsmith@dailycorinthian

Please see CHS | 13

JACKSON — Mississippi’s Marshall Henderson will eventually be back to help the Rebels try to make the NCAA tournament for a sec-ond straight season.

It’s unclear if he’ll have enough help around him to make that a reality.

The Rebels are coming off one of the most successful seasons in the school’s his-tory, fi nishing with a 27-9

record, Southeastern Con-ference tournament champi-onship and trip to the NCAA tournament for the fi rst time since 2002.

But now coach Andy Ken-nedy must replace veteran big men like Murphy Hol-loway and Reginald Buck-ner, who provided almost all of the inside muscle, not to mention plenty of points and rebounds.

“We’re losing, if you think about it, about 25

(points) and 18 (rebounds) per game,” Kennedy said. “Those are not easy numbers to replace and I’m not going to ask two guys to do it.”

Henderson should provide the majority of the outside scoring, but the Rebels are hoping for less drama. The 6-foot-2 guard led the SEC with 20.1 points per game this season, but has already been suspended for three games, including two SEC games, for his on-and off-

the-court conduct over the past year.

His production when he’s playing is undeniable.

“He’s a guy that’s coming off a tremendous year as it relates to what he was able to accomplish as a player,” Kennedy said, who added that Henderson has as-sumed more of a leadership role this season.

Veteran guards Jarvis

Ole Miss attempts to return to NCAA tourneyBY DAVID BRANDT

AP Sports Writer

Please see REBELS | 13

COLUMBIA, S.C. — Bad news, Mississippi State: South Carolina quarterback Connor Shaw was out sick a couple of days this week.

The 14th-ranked Game-cocks senior is in the midst of a stellar season — and seems to take his game up another notch when dealing with in-juries or illness. Shaw will try to do that again Saturday when South Carolina (6-2, 4-2 Southeastern Confer-

ence) plays at home for the fi rst time in a month when they host Mississippi State (4-3, 1-2).

Shaw has come off the fi eld in two games so far this sea-son with what appeared to be injuries that would cost him games. But both times, Shaw was back out there the next week leading the Gamecocks to victories.

“At the end of the day, it’s not surprising,” South Caro-lina quarterbacks coach G.A.

Mangus said. “He does what he has to do and he’ll be ready to go this week.”

Shaw was told to stay away from the team Monday and Tuesday to make sure the vi-rus he had wouldn’t spread. He returned to practice Wednesday and is expected to start against the Bulldogs.

Five weeks ago when Shaw was helped to the sidelines at UCF and came out of the locker room with ice on his throwing shoulder and a

grimace on his face. South Carolina coach Steve Spur-rier was told he’d likely miss two-to-three weeks. But the following Monday, Shaw was throwing passes more than half a football fi eld and threw for 262 yards and a touch-down to beat Kentucky 35-28 the next game.

Shaw looked even more banged up when he came out of the Tennessee loss on Oct.

Shaw back from virus for No. 14 GamecocksAssociated Press

Please see SHAW | 13

HATTIESBURG — Southern Mississippi far exceeded very low expectations last season, winning a school-record 27 games and advancing to the quarterfi nals of the National Invitation Tournament.

It’s safe to say the Golden Eagles won’t be sneaking up on anybody this time around.

Southern Miss returns second-year coach Donnie Tyndall, along with a veteran nucleus that includes Neil Watson, Daveon Boarding-ham, Michael Craig and Jer-rold Brooks. It was a talented and popular group that drew

the most fans to Reed Green Coliseum since the early 1990s.

But the Golden Eagles will need to replace some key pieces from a year ago, including leading scorer Dwayne Davis and leading rebounder Jonathan Mills.

Tyndall says it’s possible thanks to more experience and a deeper roster.

“I think our fan base is ex-cited,” Tyndall said. “As I’ve said all along, we came here to build a program, not just a team. And we’re certainly embracing those expecta-tions at this point in time.”

The Golden Eagles are ex-

pected to be one of the favor-ites in a revamped Confer-ence USA that loses longtime rival Memphis, but adds eight teams like Louisiana Tech and Middle Tennessee.

Southern Miss’ major weakness last year was a lack of height in the post, some-thing that Tyndall hopes is at least partially addressed with the addition of Jeremiah Eason (6-foot-7) and Ude If-eanyichukwa (6-10).

“Our team isn’t huge by any stretch, but it’s a little more athletic, a little longer,” Tyn-dall said. “We hope that pays dividends.”

The 5-foot-11 Watson is in

his third season as the Golden Eagles’ starting point guard. He said the team’s familiarity with Tyndall’s coaching style — and specifi cally his zone defense — could help push Southern Miss to the NCAA tournament for the second time in three seasons.

“Now he’s got four guys who have done it, who can help teach and can lead by ex-ample,” Watson said. “I think that’s going to give us an ex-tra boost.”

Southern Mississippi was better than just about any-body expected last season,

Southern Mississippi has high expectationsBY DAVID BRANDT

AP Sports Writer

Please see EAGLES | 13

1-4A meet sweepThe Corinth Warriors and Lady Warriors claimed the Region 1-4A Cross Country championships last weekend for a fourth straight year. Morgan Toomer claimed the individual title, becoming the first 7th-grade male to do so. He also lowered his best time, and best in the state for his grade, the 18:09. Emma Knight defeated reigning state champion Peyton Hamman of Lafayette County by 23 seconds to win the girls’ individual title.

BOONEVILLE — Senior, Hunter Henley, picked off a Weston Bobo pass at the 12 yard line, with 1:52 remaining in the game to help Booneville hold off Kossuth in Division 1-3A action at Ti-ger Stadium on Friday.

The interception stopped what would may have been the go-ahead score for Kossuth.

Booneville went on to win the con-test -- which decided the No. 2 seed and home playoff game -- 14-0.

The Blue Devils scored the lone points of the first three quarters in the opening period as they marched from their own 8 and scored off of a Jack Simpson quarterback sneak from the 1-yard line.

After a missed extra point, the score sat at 6-0 until the 1:39 mark of the fourth. Following Henley’s pick, Andrew Lambert sprinted 61 yards into the endzone and after a successful two point conversion on a toss from Simpson to Henley the score sat and would remain at 14-0.

Jacob Meeks, who booted field goals of 40 and 34 yards in last week’s win over Mooreville, had 80 yards on seven carries for Kossuth.

Dejesuse Rogers paced Booneville with 107 yards rushing on 20 carries.

Matthew Stewart came up with a big stop for Kossuth, picking off a Booneville pass with 5:19 left in the third quarter.

The two-touchdown win by the Blue Devils secured second place in Division 1-3A behind North Pon-totoc. Kossuth is third, followed by Belmont.

Booneville will host Division 2-3A No. 3 seed North Panola on Friday. Kossuth, making its fourth straight appearance, will travel to face 2-2A runner-up Water Valley.

Devils edge Aggies for No. 2 seed

BY ANSON KEITHFor the Daily Corinthian

Please see SCORES | 13

Page 11: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

19 with a knee injury. While Shaw didn’t start last Saturday night at Missouri, he entered with the Gamecocks trailing 17-0 in the third quarter and led South Carolina to a 27-24 in double over-time.

The win over then fi fth-ranked Missouri kept South Carolina in the chase for the SEC Eastern Division crown.

“We know where we are. We know there are four teams that still can win” the division, South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier said. “We are going to try to do our best to win this one and move on to the next one when this is over.”

Here are fi ve things to watch when No. 14 South Carolina plays Missis-

sippi State on Saturday:G A M E C O C K

STREAKS: South Car-olina has a couple of things trending its way this weekend: it has won six straight against the Bulldogs and 14 straight at Williams-Brice Sta-dium. Mississippi State had won six of the fi rst eight meetings before the Gamecocks took control the past decade. Another victory Saturday would tie South Carolina’s re-cord home win streak set from 1978-80.

PRESCOTT THE RUNNER: Something’s got to give: Mississippi State sophomore quar-terback Dak Prescott has run for 100-plus yards three times this year while the Gamecocks de-fense has permitted only one player this season to reach 100 yards on the

ground (Georgia’s Todd Gurley). South Caro-lina is sixth in the SEC against the run, giving up just 144 yards rushing per game.

TRENCH BATTLE: A couple of NFL pros-pects will face each other this week when Missis-sippi State guard Gabe Jackson will try and slow down defensive end Jadeveon Clowney. Count on Jackson, the SEC’s reigning offensive lineman of the week, to work with 6-foot-7 tackle Blaine Clausell to slow down Clowney.

QUARLES HEAT-ING UP: While offenses continue to scheme to limit Jadeveon Clowney’s effectiveness, Gamecocks defensive tackle Kelcy Quarles has taken advan-tage to play the best foot-ball of his career. Quar-

les leads South Carolina with seven sacks and 10 tackles for loss. He had two of those sacks last week in the win over Mis-souri.

VERSATILE LEW-IS: Mississippi State receiver Jameon Lewis become the fi rst player nationally since 2008 to throw, catch and rush for touchdowns in the same game twice in the same season. In a 62-7 win over Troy on Sept. 21, Lewis threw a 36-yard TD to quarterback Dak Prescott, then caught a 50-yard score and added an 8-yard rushing touch-down. Lewis did it again last week to beat Ken-tucky 28-22 with a 19-yard TD run, a 17-yard catch from Prescott be-fore returning the favor to his quarterback to pro-vide the winning margin.

Short fi elds held Corinth to just 121 yards on 25 plays in taking a 31-7 lead at recess. The Warriors fi nished the night with 328 total yards on 54 snaps -- 46 for 285 on the ground.

Corinth’s run at turn-over-free football ended at three-plus games worth of play when Gwyn threw an interception with 5:27 left in the fi rst. The War-riors came out a plus-two though with Tanner Man-ess, Jay Jones and Deonte Keith recovering Panther fumbles.

The Warrior defense added fi ve more sacks to its total for 34 yards. Cody Davis was in on two of the fi ve, unoffi cially.

Corinth 45, Amory

15Amory 0 7 0 8 -- 15Corinth 21 10 14 0 -- 45

1st QuarterCHS -- Antares Gwyn 2

run (John Michael McFall kick), 9:01

CHS -- Kyoshi Agnew 2 run (McFall kick), 6:48

CHS -- Kendrick Wil-liams 7 run (McFall kick), 3:00

2nd QuarterCHS -- Gwyn 15 run

(McFall kick), 10:54AHS -- Fred Garth 4

run (Caleb Shelly kick), 8:10

CHS -- McFall 45 FG, 6:50

3rd Quarter

CHS -- Williams 72 run (McFall kick), 9:12

CHS -- Issac Haney 1 run (McFall kick), 2:46

4th QuarterAHS -- Drake Wallace

71 run (Jalen Holland run), 0:54

winning 27 games and advancing to the quar-terfi nals of the National Invitation Tournament before falling to BYU. The Golden Eagles gained a lot of momentum as a program during the run, drawing big crowds at a place not known for its fan support. Another big year could help solidify that bond with the pro-gram.

Southern Miss does re-turn a solid nucleus that includes Neil Watson, Daveon Boardingham, Michael Craig and Jerr-

old Brooks, but the Gold-en Eagles must fi nd a way to replace the production of leading scorer Dwayne Davis and leading re-bounder Jonathan Mills. Tyndall said it’s possible because of a deeper ros-ter.

The Golden Eagles still aren’t a big team, but the addition of 6-foot-7 Jer-emiah Eason and 6-foot-10 Ude Ifeanyichukwa should help them play a little more effective defense in the paint. Southern Miss struggled against some of the bigger teams in Conference USA last season.

SportsSaturday, November 2, 2013 Daily Corinthian • 13

Lumberton 43, Mount Olive 14

Madison Central 52, NW Rankin 24

Magee 19, Mendenhall 13

Meridian 45, Terry 26Morton 41, Collins 32Moss Point 27, Bay St.

Louis 7Murrah 28, Columbus 9Neshoba Central 44,

Lanier 8North Panola 42, Inde-

pendence 24North Pike 39, South

Pike 0North Pontotoc 34,

Mooreville 0Noxapater 52, Sebasto-

pol 25Oak Grove 42, Provine

0Olive Branch 27, Her-

nando 12Oxford 56, Center Hill

27Pascagoula 28, George

County 13Pearl 34, Ridgeland 27Pearl River Central 62,

Natchez 36Pelahatchie 41, East

Oktibbeha 0Petal 35, Forest Hill 0Philadelphia 41, Choc-

taw County 6Picayune 41, East Cen-

tral 21Purvis 48, Lawrence

County 27Quitman 45, Northeast

Lauderdale 7Ray Brooks 22, McAd-

ams 0Rosa Fort 22, Senato-

bia 13Salem 21, Bogue Chitto

20Saltillo 36, Lewisburg

26Scott Central 34, Clark-

dale 0

Shannon 16, Pontotoc 13

South Panola 22, Gre-nada 0

St. Aloysius 55, Mont-gomery Co. 20

St. Joseph-Greenville 20, Shaw 13

St. Joseph-Madison 21, Pisgah 0

St. Martin 14, Harrison Central 10

St. Stanislaus 46, Pass Christian 9

Stone County 42, West Harrison Co. 24

Stringer 41, Sacred Heart 7

Sumrall 48, St. Patrick 8

Tupelo 17, Horn Lake 7Union 24, Newton 12Vancleave 50, Poplar-

ville 31Veritas School 70, Re-

bul Aca. 28Warren Central 12,

Starkville 9Washington School 28,

Pillow Aca. 14Water Valley 48, Palmer

14Wayne County 28, West

Jones 17West Marion 22, Perry

Central 20West Point 76, New

Hope 50Yazoo City 28, Amanda

Elzy 14

SCORES

CONTINUED FROM 12

EAGLES

CONTINUED FROM 12

CHS

CONTINUED FROM 12

Summers and LaDarius White will see the major-ity of time in the back-court with Henderson. Summers led the team with nearly four assists per game while White averaged 6.4 points per game and was arguably the team’s best defen-sive stopper.

In the paint, Aaron Jones returns after tear-ing an ACL midway through last season. The 6-foot-9 junior showed signs of defensive bril-liance last season, and Kennedy said he has been fully cleared to start the season.

The Rebels will also rely on several fresh-men — especially in the paint. Kennedy said a pair of 6-foot-9 forwards — Dwight Coleby and Sebastian Saiz — should be able to help immedi-ately.

Five things to watch

as Mississippi tries to return to the NCAA

tournament:ALL EYES ON

HENDERSON: Mis-sissippi guard Marshall Henderson is an unde-niable talent — averag-ing 20.1 points per game last season — but his on-and off-the-court antics have grown a little old in Oxford.

He’s already been sus-pended three games this season for his conduct dating back almost a year and everyone will be watching to see if he can keep his behavior in check.

REPLACING THE BIG MEN: Big men Murphy Holloway and Reginald Buckner aren’t with the Rebels any-more, and they’ll be sorely missed. The two combined for about 25 points and 18 re-bounds per game, not to mention bruising post defense. Young players like Aaron Jones, Dwight Coleby and Sebastian Saiz will be asked to make large contributions.

STEADY GUARDS: Henderson is the big-gest name in the Ole Miss backcourt, but the Rebels will also rely on Jarvis Summers and LaDarius White. The two juniors have played a lot of minutes the past two seasons and will be asked to do the same this season. Summers is the team’s only true point guard while White’s big-gest value is as a defen-sive stopper.

THE RETURN OF JONES: Aaron Jones looked like a future start last season — especially on the defensive end — before tearing an ACL against Kentucky. Coach Andy Kennedy consis-tently praises Jones’ ath-letic ability and also his

intelligence and knack for being in the right place at the right time. The Rebels need him to become more produc-tive on the offensive end after he averaged just 3.5 points last season.

BACK TO REL-EVANCE: Ole Miss snapped the SEC’s lon-gest drought without an NCAA tournament last season by blowing through the SEC tourna-ment for an automatic bid. Now the Rebels hope for an extended stay as a relevant pro-gram in the SEC. The chances of that occur-ring are largely tied to the development of players around Hender-son — especially in the paint.

REBELS

CONTINUED FROM 12

SHAW

CONTINUED FROM 12

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Page 12: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

14 • Saturday, November 2, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

SALUTE OR PAY TRIBUTE TO YOUR SPECIAL VETERAN IN OUR SPECIAL VETERAN’S

DAY ISSUE COMINGSUNDAY,

NOVEMBER 10, 2013

SAMUEL D. SMITH

U.S. Army1967-1970

As part of our specialVeteran’s Day Issue, we will

publish photos of local Veterans living and deceased.

$10.00 PER PHOTO

one person per photo. All photos must be submitted by 5 p.m. on Wednesday Nov. 6, 2013.

I give my permission to publish the enclosed information in the Daily Corinthian Veteran’s Day issue.

Signature________________________Phone___________________

Relationship to person in picture:______________________________

Veteran’s Name___________________________________________

Branch of Service__________________________________________

Years of Service, ex. 1967-1970_______________________________

Credit/debit card #_________________________________________

Exp. date___________Name & Address associated w/ card_______________

________________________________________________________

Cash_____________________Check#_________________________

Mail to Veterans Picture, c/o The Daily Corinthian, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835, bring by 1607 S. Harper Rd. 38834. You may

email picture & info to: [email protected]

Page 13: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 2, 2013 •15

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GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

FRI-SAT, 310 S. Tate St,Corinth, 7a-4p, Tools,Work benches, toys, h/hitems, car & truck aircompressor

FRI-SAT, 7a-'til, 751 Hwy2, toys, Boys 0-4 clths &shoes, car seat & lots ofbaby items,beddinghousehold items

FRI-SAT, 7a-til, 7 TurtleCreek Dr (Turtle CreekS/D) Xerc ise equip ,Ladies + size, toys, Holi-day/home decor, lamps

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

BIG YARD SALE, Sat 7-2,14 CR 470, Salem Rd, lotsof baby itms, furn, Dorabed, maternity clths,nm brd clths, mens

FRI-SAT 7a-til, 2131 Lid-don Lake Rd #4, H/Hitems, antique glass-ware, & MUCH MORE!

FRI-SAT, 2200 HickoryRd, Imogene Maynard &J e r r y L a m b e r t ,Something for all! GoodStuff! Great Prices

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

3 FAMILY SALE. Sat ,Central School Rd, LOTSOF EVERYTHING! GREATPRICES! adult/childrenclths, h/h items

38 OAKLAND School Rd,F r i & S a t . u n t i l 2 ,Thomas Kinkade itemsand lots of differentthings.

FRI & SAT, 8-4, Hwy 22S@ MS/TN stateline. RAINOR SHINE, furn, h/h andcollectible items.

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

GARAGE /ESTATE SALES

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

3 FAM. Yard Sale, Fri &Sat, 453 CR 500, MitchellHill/Hightown Rd, Guns,knives, nm brd clths,jewelry, lots more.

Page 14: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Saturday, November 2, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

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Bring more shoppers to your door with locally focused advertising from the experts.

After six years of being a stay-at-home mom, I was nervous about find-ing a new job. The Daily Corinthian employment section made it easy for me to get organized and get back to work.

“- Brenda H. Daily Corinthian Subscriber

[email protected]

HOMES FOR SALE0710

8 CR 522Biggersville/Kossuth

Area3600 Sq. Ft. Heatedarea in this nice multi-level home. 4-5 BR, 3BA, finished basementw/game room, shop,pond. You will LoveThis Spacious Home.

Let's Talk Price!662-284-5379 for Appt.

& More Info

For Sale

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

MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE0741

SALE - SALE - SALEModel Displays Must Go!

New Spacious 4 BR, 2Bath Homes Starting at

$43,500Come Check Out theSI PAD Designed by

SI ROBERTSON Himself.Clayton HomesHwy 72 West,Corinth, MS

1/4 mile past MagnoliaHospital

MANUFACTURED HOMES FOR SALE0747

WOW!!DUCK Dynasty

"Si Pad"3 Bed 2 BathLoaded withFeatures!!!On SALE for

LIMITED TIME!!Windham Homes

287-6991

TRANSPORTATION

FINANCIAL

LEGALS

LEGALS0955IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF TISHOM-INGO COUNTY, MIS-

SISSIPPI

DONALD L. DAVISPLAINTIFF

VS.

MARY BRADLEYHERNANDEZ DAVISDEFENDANT

CAUSE NO.: CV2013-000238-71L

NOTICE

TO: MARY BRADLEYHERNANDEZ DAVIS, aresident of the State of Mis-sissippi, and whose address isunknown after diligent searchand inquiry.

You are a Defendant in theabove styled cause filed bythe Plaintiff who is seeking fora Divorce.

You are required to mail orhand deliver a written re-sponse to the Complaint filedin this action Nathaniel Clark,Attorney for the Plaintiff,whose post office address isP.O. Box 319, Iuka, MS38852, and whose street ad-dress is 125 S. Fulton Street,Iuka, MS 38852.

YOUR RESPONSE MUSTBE MAILED OR DELIVEREDNO LATER THAN THIRTYDAYS, AFTER THE 19 DAYO F O C T O B E R , 2 0 1 3WHICH IS THE DATE OFTHE FIRST PUBLICATIONOF THIS SUMMONS. IFYOUR REPSONSE IS NOTSO MAILED OR DELIVERED,A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THEMONEY OR OTHER RELIEFDEMANDED IN THE COM-PLAINT.

You must also file the ori-ginal of your Response withthe Clerk of this Court with-in a reasonable time after-ward.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this19th day of October, 2013.

___________________ CHANCERY CLERK OF

TISHOMINGO COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

1008 BattlegroundDrive

Tishom-ingo County Courthouse

Iuka, Mis-sissippi 38852

_________________

Deputy Clerk

3TC: 10/19, 10/26, 11/02/13#14445

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

DESIGNER BOOTS, somenew, some s l ight lyworn, sizes 6, 6.5, $30-$200, Call 662-415-9098.

JUNIOR JEANS , somenew, some s l ight lyworn, sizes 3-7, $5 pair,Call 662-415-9098.

LADIES LEATHER jacket,gold/taupe in colorwith gold accent, L/XL,cost $99 on sale willtake $50, make a greatChristmas gift 662-279-5899

LOUISE DUNAVANTPeabody Pathway & Pe-abody Pets prints, Bothsigned. $25 each. Call731-645-4250. Leave msgif no answer.

MENS LEATHER boots(Laredo) worn one timecost $85 will take $50size 9D 2 tone brown.662-279-5899

NEW LADIES All Weathercoat with zip out lining.Navy in color size 18.662-279-5899

NEW NAVY blue uni-form coveralls, long &short s leeve shirts ,hooded sweatshirts,prices are from $7-$12662-284-4604

PUNCH BOWL. WESTMO-RELAND 1950'S 3 FRUITM I L K G L A S S W I T HMATCHING CUPS ANDLADLE. $125. CALL 731-645-4250. Leave mes-sage if no answer.

REVERSE YOUR AD FOR $1.00

EXTRACall 662-287-6147

for details.STROBE PARTY l ight,New in box. Great Hal-loween effects! $10. loc-ated in Corinth. 287-8396 after 12 noon.

U S E D D O O R S ,32"X36"X80". $15. each662-415-1281

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

REAL ESTATE FOR RENT

UNFURNISHED APARTMENTS0610

E. BROOKE APTS., 2 BR, 1BA, D/W, icemaker, 850sq. ft. 287-8219.

WATER PAID. 2BR 1BA,Stv.& Frg. furn. $425m,$300d Call 603-4127

HOMES FOR RENT0620

2 BR, 1 BA, CR 200. $500mo., $500 dep. 1 yr.lease. 286-2594.

3 BR, 2 BA, 2065 Hwy 72E. $750 mo $500 dp. Lotsof Extras! 662-279-9024.

3 BR, 2 BA, CHA, CentralSchool District, CR268#21, $500mo/$250dep.662-284-8396

3 BR, 2 BA, HW floors,stove, ref, w/d conn,C/H/A, 5 Points, $625mo, $625 dep. 287-8179

MOBILE HOMES FOR RENT0675

TAKING APPLICATIONS:2 & 3 BRs. Oakdale Mo-bile Home Pk. 286-9185.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

HOMES FOR SALE0710

HUDPUBLISHER’S

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

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

KIMBLE ENTERTAINERo r g a n w i t h b e n c h ,beautiful $395 cell 262-496-8392

ELECTRONICS051820" TV & STAND, GOODSHAPE. $50. 662-212-3448

LAWN & GARDEN EQUIPMENT0521

5FT. THREE point bushhog mower, like new$495 cell 262-496-8392

S N A P P E R R I D I N Gmower, 30" sgl blade,12HP Ind eng. Just intime to mow leaves.$400. 662-808-7533

SPORTING GOODS0527

2 18 speed bikes likenew $75 ea 662-284-4604

3 DEER HUNTERS SHOOT-ING HOUSES. METALROOFS. $75 EACH. ALL 3FOR $150. 662-284-5085

L I F T C H A I R , W O R K SGOOD, EXCELLENT CON-DITION, $300 662-808-9226 OR 662-415-0819

ROADMASTER 24IN 18speed granite peakmountain bike $65 cell262-496-8392

FURNITURE05331930S DROP leaf table &2 bent wood chairs $100662-287-7234

BROYHILL BEIGE camel-back sofa. Oak QueenAnne legs & trim. 3matching tables. $250for all 662-287-7234

F O R S A L E A N T I Q U ECURIO CABINET & LOTSOF MARTHA & GEORGEWASHINGTON FIGUR-INES, $400 731-239-4204

FULL SIZE 4 piece retrobedroom suite withmattresses $40. Otherestate items for sale.662-396-1188

FULL SIZE metal posterbed. xcellent condition.From Henco. $200. 662-415-1282

GLASS TOP round metaltable. Beautiful basew/4 padded chairs .Xcellent cond. FromHenco $200. 662-415-1282

KITCHEN DISH cabinetlike Aunt Bee's on May-berry R.F.D 72"h x 36"w$125 662-287-7234

PINE FARMHOUSE TABLE.60X42. $125. 662-287-7234

PINE PIE SAFE withscreen doors, 61"h x35"w $100 662-287-7234

BUILDING MATERIALS0542

EXTERIOR DOOR-$40.and Storm Door-$75.Call 287-6419 or 415-0863

MACHINERY & TOOLS0545

DEWALT DW7301 MITERSAW STAND, $125 CASH662-643-6045

RYOBI BT3000, 10 INCH,15 AMP TABLE SAWW/STAND $150 CASH.662-643-6045

WANTED TO RENT/BUY/TRADE0554

M&M. CASH FOR JUNKCARS & TRUCKS. 662-415-

5435 or 731-239-4114.WE PICK UP!

MISC. ITEMS FOR SALE0563

5 TIRES w/ rims. 15"235/75 $400. Call 662-603-3488 or 662-603-2635

ANTIQUE OAK FireplaceSurround. Beveled Mir-r o r . R e f i n i s h e d .$ 3 0 0 . l 6 6 2 - 2 8 7 - 7 2 3 4

JOHANN HAVILANDFine China

Thorn Rose pattern.Perfect Condition, 12place setting (84 pcs).Serving pieces include:Sm & Lge platter, gravyb o a t , s u g a r b o w l ,creamer, oval veg.bowl, covered lge 2handle bowl. $750. Call731-645-4250. Pleaseleave msg. if no an-swer.

FARM

MERCHANDISE

ANTIQUES/ART0506ANTIQUE BR suite, 43 yrsold, like new. all wood,queen bed head & footboard. $500.Serious In-quires Only. 287-4064

ANTIQUE DRESSER/chestof drawers & chifferobecombo, Serious Inquir-ies Only. $300. 662-287-4064

IRIS & HERRINGBONEVINTAGE GLASSWARE

Beaded Berry Bowl (8")w i t h 8 m a t c h i n gbeaded serving bowls.4 3/4"

Vase - 9.25" TALL. $25.Sugar & Creamer - $25.

Sandwich Plates (2)12". $25 EACH

Fluted Bowl 9.5" $20.Fluted Bowl 11.5" $15.Butter Dish, Round,Top Repaired. $10.

Candy Bowl, 6", no top,$10.

Please call 731-645-4250. Leave msg if noanswer.

SOLID OAK ANTIQUEG A M E T A B L E . 3 13/4"X31 3/4" . $100.FIRM. Call 731-645-4250,leave msg if no an-swer.

S O L I D O A K L A D I E SWRITING TABLE, dropfront, 1 drawer, 39.5"tall, 15" deep, 27.5 "wide. Excellent Condi-tion. $250. Call 731-645-4250. If no answer,leave msg.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS0509

2 BROWN Hull Bean pots$10 ea 662-284-4604

BOX SPRINGS & Mat-tress, Full Size, GoodCond. $100. 662-287-2509

FOR SALE Immediatelyfor pick up only. 1-4burner electric stove.$125. 1 Kenmore Wash-er $150. 1 sm. windowa/c $40. 662-212-2307

GREEN CARNIVAL glasslight fixture $40 662-284-4604

GREEN CARNIVAL glasspitcher w/4 goblets $50662-284-4604

GREEN CARNIVAL glasspunch bowl w/6 cups$50 662-284-4604

MCCOY CANISTER w/milkjar $50 662-284-4604

MOON & STARS (Amber)canister w/5 pieces $50662-284-4604

MUSICAL MERCHANDISE0512

CHECK OUT THESEMUSICAL ITEMS.

Y a m a h a Y P T - 3 0 0Portatone. Like new!Great Gift or have funplaying this electrickeyboard with lots offeatures & Effects. $65.

Morgan Monroe Man-dol in w/electronictuner, A style, LikeNew. MMA-1 w/hardshell case. $300.

PEAVY TK0 65 amplifieron rol ler , 2 input ,24"X21" . $125.

CALL 731-645-4250 .Leave message if noanswer.

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

SEVERAL FAMILIES. Sat-urday, CR400 (Old Hill-top Groc) guns, knives,old lamps, H/H items,MUCH MORE!

YARD SALE, Sat, Wheel-er Grove Rd. 2.5 milesCR523, clths, X-mas de-cor, DVD-VHS movies,and much more.

YARD SALESPECIAL

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVEDAYS

Ad must run prior to orday of sale!

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

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

5 LINES(Apprx. 20 Words)

$19.10

(Does not include commercial

business sales)

ALL ADS MUSTBE PREPAID

We accept credit ordebit cards

Call Classifiedat (662) 287-6147

EMPLOYMENT

GENERAL 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.

TRUCKING0244

DRIVER TRAINEESGET PAID CDL

TRAINING NOW!Learn to drive forStevens Transport

New Drivers can earn$800/wk & Benefits!Carrier covers cost!

NO EXPERIENCENEEDED!

Job-Ready in 15 days!Be trained & based

locally!1-888-540-7364

PEOPLE SEEKING EMPLOYMENT0272

SEEKING CARETAKINGposition & lite house-hold duties for elderly.Ref Avail, 662-643-3779

PETS

CATS/DOGS/PETS03201 FE. Yorkie/Pom 12wks.CKC, S&W,$200 cash.662-284-4572

COCKER SPANIEL Puppy,Sol id B lack Female,$125.Call 662-665-0209

FREE CHIQUAQUA malet o g o o d h o m e .Neutered. Great Lapdog. 415-7023

FREE PUPPIES to goodhome. Part Lab. 662-808-6183 or 808-6902

HOUNDS, 2 fe. adults$100. ea. Game rooster$25 & up 662-427-9894

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

MULTI-FAMILY Sale, Sat,953 Hwy 2, 7a-til, clths,furn, household items

MULT I -FAMILY , SAT-URDAY MORNING ONLY.1401 BUNCH ST.

SAT 7-1, 3134 Shiloh Rd,rain/shine. clths, shoes,lamps, h/h & misc. itms.

SAT 8 til, turn ri on CR522 off Wheeler Grv. Rd,#204,heavy duty lawntrailer & much more.

HUGE SALE!!

SAT 8-12, 3 Fam, 36Sunnywood Ln, (SpringForrest), rugs, mirrors,furn, dishes, kids clths,Nutcracker coll, Xmas

MOVING SALE!

SAT ONLY, Multi-FamilySale, 3150 Shiloh Rd, 7a-til, some furn, glass-ware, dishes, girls/adultclths., & Much More

SAT, 7A-til, 2222 HickoryRd, Wmn/kids clths, h/hitems & much more.

SAT, 8A-til, 2570 CarrollRd (Michie) horse trail-er , br ic-a-brac , f/pmantle, xercise equip.

SAT, OFF Central SchoolRd on CR250, Lots ofMisc Household Items

SAT,1143 CR 400,SalemRd, 7a, kids & adultclths, furn, electronics

SAT-SUN, 8a-til, 571 Hwy2 (3.5 thru Kossuth onri) Antiques, iron beds,vintage items, homedecor, furn, bedding,mens M-44, wms 4-3X,Boys 6-12, new jeans

SAT. 11/2, 7-2, 1101 Car-dinal Dr, beside Cater-pillar. Plus sz wmnsdresses, pants, tops.Big/Tall mens, wmns &Jr, l ittle girl/boy szclths. h/h items, Christ-mas Misc. items

SAT. 7A -3p , 2000 E .Mount View, Pine Lk Est,h/h items, clths, Queen& King Comforters, Misc

SAT., 7:30am 'til. 1301P inecrest Rd . Men,wmn, chidren's clothes,& some h/h items & an-tiq. Lots of misc.

SATURDAY, 11/2, 2705N o r t h l a n e , c l t h i n g(teens,adults men & wo-mens, h/h items, 4wheeler, truck tool box

SATURDAY, 7A-til, 226CR213, Furn, H/H, clths,MUCH MUCH MORE!

SATURDAY, 8A-'til, 107Scenic Cove, boys/in-fant/toddler clths, toys,electronic equip, TV's,Lots More!

SATURDAY, BOX ChapelS/D, CR 104 off Kendrick,Name brand clths (adult& kids), toys, h/h items,pictures, Lots of Misc.

SATURDAY, NEW LifeChristian Prking Lot,Furn, Adult Clths, toys,girls +size clths

MOVING SALE!

YARD SALE canopy, furn,Ford tractor pts, golfclubs, beer signs, h/h,antq, colls, etc. E of KCon Kendrick Rd CR109

MOVING SALE!

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

MOVE-IN SALE. Sat, 6-noon, 2200 Chestnut Dr,Front dbl door, Extdoors, hardware, light-ing, shoes,clths, h/h

MULTI FAMILYSALE!!

ALL DAY FRI-SAT TILN O O N . S a r a L a n e ,between Chevron Mapcoon Hwy 72. NO SALESBEFORE 6AM

MULTI-FAMILY SALE, Sat7a-2p, Salem S/D, 8 CR4 7 0 . k i d s t o y s ,adult/kids clths, elec-tronics, home decor

MULTI-FAMILY SALEF R I - S A T , 2 4 S U N N YW O O D L N , S P R I N GFOREST EST, LOTS OFITEMS 50% OFF UNLESSMARKED OTHERWISE.

GARAGE/ESTATE SALES0151

HUGE INDOOR sale, 502Tate St, across fromCindy's Place, furn,dishes, DVD's, kids clths,Lots of Everything!

HUGE YARD Sale, 2011Levee Rd, 7a-til, close toarena/MS State Ext Ofc

INSIDE ESTATE SALE, Fri-Sat, 7a-til Both Days 304Cardinal Dr

INSIDE SALE! JB OUT-DOORS, FRIDAY 10-5,SATURDAY 10-3. FURN,New&Used Mdse, lamps,collectible items

LARGE FAMILY Sale, Sat,7a-'til, Beside B Mart onFarmington Rd, Bed-ding, c lths, Lots ofMdse.

Page 15: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

Daily Corinthian • Saturday, November 2, 2013 •17

SERVICES

Advertise your CAR, TRUCK, SUV, BOAT, TRACTOR, MOTORCYCLE, RV & ATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Ad should include photo, description and

price. PLEASE NO DEALERS & NON-TRANSFERABLE! NO REFUNDS.Single item only. Payment in advance. Call 287-6147 to place your ad. Auto Sales

GUARANTEED

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2004 MERCURYMONTEREYfully loaded, DVD/

CD system, new tires, mileage 80,700, climate controlled air/heat, heat/

cool power seats.

$7,000 OBOCall or text

956-334-0937

2008 Jeep Wrangler Sahara

V-6, auto., power windows, hard top, Sirius radio w/nav cd, dvd, very clean & well maintained. 49,400k mi.

$21,300. O.B.O.662-396-1705or 284-8209

2000 Ford F-350

super duty, diesel, 7.3 ltr., exc.

drive train, 215k miles, excellent, great mechanical

condition”. $7400.

662-664-3538

REDUCED

2004 Nissan Murano,

black, 120k miles, loaded, adult driver, garage kept, Bose, leather,

exc. cond., $10,500.

662-284-6559.

2001 Chevy Venture

mini-van, exc. mech. cond.

$2500.

731-239-4108

804BOATS

2000 MERCURY Optimax, 225 H.P.

Imagine own-ing a like-new,

water tested, never launched, power-house outboard

motor with a High Five stainless prop,for only $7995.

Call John Bond of Paul Seaton Boat Sales in

Counce, TN for details.

731-689-4050or 901-605-6571

1989 FOXCRAFT18’ long, 120 HP

Johnson mtr., trailer & mtr.,

new paint, new transel, 2 live wells, hot foot

control.

$6500.662-596-5053

53’ GOOSE NECK TRAILER

STEP DECK BOOMS, CHAINS

AND LOTS OF ACCESSORIES$12,000/OBO731-453-5031

470 TRACTORS/FARM EQUIP.

1997 Ford New Holland

TractorModel 3930, diesel,excellent condition!,

8-speed with forward, reverse transmission.

800 hrs. Power Steering, Wet Brakes.

Independent PTO $8,900.

731-926-0006.

2013 KUBOTA3800 SERIES

TRACTOR16’ TRAILER, DOUBLE

AXEL, BUSH HOG, BACKHOE,

FRONT LOADER$32,000CALL PICO

662-643-3565

868AUTOMOBILES

1983NISSAN DATSUN280 ZX

Turbo, exc. cond.

$5000.662-415-1482

2009 Nissan Murano SL,

leather upholstery,

sunroof, rear camera, blue tooth, loaded

to the max! 76, 000 Miles$19,800/OBO662-808-9764

1984 CORVETTE383 Stroker, alum. high riser, alum.

heads, headers, dual line holly, everything on car new or rebuilt

w/new paint job (silver fl eck paint). $9777.77

Call Keith662-415-0017.

REDUCED

1974 VW SUPER BEETLE

1600CC ENG, NEW TIRES, RUNS GOOD, MOSTLY RESTORED,

EXTRA PARTS.

$4000662-424-0226

2001 TOWN CARSignature Series,

Dark BlueGood Tires And

BatterySmooth Ride206,000 Miles

$3000 662-286-7939

1987 Honda CRX, 40+ mpg, new paint, new

leather seat covers, after

market stereo, $3250 obo.

340-626-5904.

2000 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX GT

228k miles.$2500 obo.

662-643-6005

868AUTOMOBILES

1997 FORD ESCORT

30 MPGGOOD CAR

$1650CALL

662-808-5005

2000 TOYOTA COROLLA CE

4 cylinder, automatic

Extra Clean136,680 miles

$4200662-462-7634 or

662-664-0789Rienzi

2012 MALIBU LSLTZ PACKAGE

33 Mpg Highway, 1 Owner, Auto Lights, Sirius

Radio, Power Sweats, On Star, Remote Keyless Entry, Cocoa Cashmere Interior, 5 Year 100,000

Mile Power Train Warranty.

$15,900256-412-3257

868AUTOMOBILES

1989 FordCrown Victoria

Rare fi nd, Garage Kept. 33K actual miles, Looks new in/out, 302, great gas mileage,

new tires, fresh belts/hoses, original books and

stickers, Rides like a dream.

$8000Call 662-424-0226

2010 BUICK ENCLAVE

Loaded, Leather, 3rd Row Seating, dual sun

roofs, rear camera, 44000 miles

$27,500Call/Text

662-643-8883

1991 Mariah 20’ ski boat, 5.7 ltr.

engine, new tires, $6700.

662-287-5893, leave msg. & will

return call.

804BOATS

‘90 RANGER BASS BOAT

361V W/MATCHING TRAILER & COVER,

RASPBERRY & GRAY, EVINRUDE 150XP,

24-V TROL. MTR., 2 FISH FINDERS, NEW

BATTS., NEW LED TRAILER

LIGHTS, EXC. COND.,

$6,400. 662-808-0113.

1979 OLDSMOBILE

OMEGA6 CYLINDER

RUNS GREAT!38,000 ORIGINAL MILES

$5,000CALL PICO:

662-643-3565

2001 WHITE FORD RANGER XLT

3.0 V6, AutomaticExtended Cab

New Tires, Cold AirBed Liner

158,000 Miles$4500/OBO

662-212-2492

1989 FORD F350

DIESEL MOVING VAN

WITH TOMMY GATE

RUNS GOOD$3800

731-607-3173

2007 GMC YUKON70,000 MILESGARAGE KEPT$22,500

CALL FORADDITIONAL

INFORMATION662-284-8396

2001 CAMERO CONVERTIBLE

NEW TOPV6

30+ MPGZ28 APPEARANCE

PACKAGEALL POWER

90%+ RESTORED

$7500662-415-9121

1995CHEVY VAN

TOW PACKAGE

83,000 ACTUAL MILES

$2995/OBO 662-415-8180

REDUCED

864TRUCKS/VANS

SUV’S

2009 FORD F150

Gray, 76,000 Miles, Air, Cruise, Power Windows,

Great Stereo, Bedliner, Clean

$14,000.662-284-7293

2004 Ford F350 work truck, V10, underbed tool boxes, towing package, DVD.

$8600 obo. Truck is in daily use. Please call for appt. to see,

340-626-5904.

2005 GMC Envoy

DENALI XL2 OWNER

NEW TIRES, BRAKES & BELTS

112,000 MILES$9800/OBO

662-284-6767

2004 F1504WD STX

BLACK EXTERIORGREY INTERIOR130,000 Miles

ASKING $7800/OBOCALL

662-423-9018 OR

662-279-1703

1991 CUSTOM FORD VAN

48,000ONE OWNER MILES

POWER EVERYTHING

$4995.CALL:

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LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON, AND DEANDREMCGEE AND L INAYEG R A Y S O N - M C G E E ,M I N O R S , B Y A N DTHROUGH THEIR NEXTF R I E N D , M A R G I ES H E L T O NPETITIONERS

VS.

SHATARA R . MCGEE,DEVIN WYKE, RODNEY A .G R A Y S O N A N D U N -KNOWN PUTATIVE FATH-ERSRESPONDENTS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0275-02-L

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OFMISSISSIPPI

TO: Devin Wyke and Un-known Putative Fath-ers, who are not to befound in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice addresses are notknown to the Petition-ers after diligent in-quiry made by said Peti-tioners.

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Deandre McGee andLinaye Grayson-McGee,minors, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minorsand demanding thatthe full custody, con-trol and authority to acton behalf of said minorsbe placed with the Al-corn County Depart-ment of Human Ser-vices. Respondents oth-er than you in this ac-t ion are Shatara R .McGee and Rodney A.Grayson.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 22ND DAYOF JANUARY, 2014, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 31 day of Oc-tober, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI38835-0069BY:KAREN DUNCAN, D. C.Deputy Clerk

K. Steven Saul, Jr., MSB#104061Office of the AttorneyGeneralP. O. Box 220Jackson, Mississ ippi39205-0220Telephone No.(601) 359-4549Fax No.(601)359-4240

3x's11/2, 11/9, 11/16/2013#14463

HOME SERVICE DIRECTORY

HANDYMAN

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LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON, AND DEANDREMCGEE AND L INAYEG R A Y S O N - M C G E E ,M I N O R S , B Y A N DTHROUGH THEIR NEXTF R I E N D , M A R G I ES H E L T O NPETITIONERS

VS.

SHATARA R . MCGEE,DEVIN WYKE, RODNEY A .G R A Y S O N A N D U N -KNOWN PUTATIVE FATH-ERSRESPONDENTS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0275-02-L

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OFMISSISSIPPI

TO: Devin Wyke and Un-known Putative Fath-ers, who are not to befound in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice addresses are notknown to the Petition-ers after diligent in-quiry made by said Peti-tioners.

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Deandre McGee andLinaye Grayson-McGee,minors, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minorsand demanding thatthe full custody, con-trol and authority to acton behalf of said minorsbe placed with the Al-corn County Depart-ment of Human Ser-vices. Respondents oth-er than you in this ac-t ion are Shatara R .McGee and Rodney A.Grayson.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 22ND DAYOF JANUARY, 2014, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 31 day of Oc-tober, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI38835-0069BY:KAREN DUNCAN, D. C.Deputy Clerk

K. Steven Saul, Jr., MSB#104061Office of the AttorneyGeneralP. O. Box 220Jackson, Mississ ippi39205-0220Telephone No.(601) 359-4549Fax No.(601)359-4240

3x's11/2, 11/9, 11/16/2013#14463

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORN

COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

ALCORN COUNTY DE-PARTMENT OF HUMANSERVICES, BY MARGIESHELTON, AND DEANDREMCGEE AND L INAYEG R A Y S O N - M C G E E ,M I N O R S , B Y A N DTHROUGH THEIR NEXTF R I E N D , M A R G I ES H E L T O NPETITIONERS

VS.

SHATARA R . MCGEE,DEVIN WYKE, RODNEY A .G R A Y S O N A N D U N -KNOWN PUTATIVE FATH-ERSRESPONDENTS

CIVIL ACTION, FILE NO.2013-0275-02-L

CHANCERY COURTSUMMONS

THE STATE OFMISSISSIPPI

TO: Devin Wyke and Un-known Putative Fath-ers, who are not to befound in the State ofMississippi on diligentinquiry and whose postoffice addresses are notknown to the Petition-ers after diligent in-quiry made by said Peti-tioners.

You have been madea Respondent in thesuit filed in this Courtby the Alcorn CountyDepartment of HumanServ ices by Marg ieShelton, Social ServicesRegional Director, and,Deandre McGee andLinaye Grayson-McGee,minors, seeking to ter-minate your parentalrights as those rightsrelate to said minorsand demanding thatthe full custody, con-trol and authority to acton behalf of said minorsbe placed with the Al-corn County Depart-ment of Human Ser-vices. Respondents oth-er than you in this ac-t ion are Shatara R .McGee and Rodney A.Grayson.

YOU ARE SUMMONEDTO APPEAR AND DE-FEND AGAINST THE PETI-TION FILED AGAINST YOUIN THIS ACTION AT 9:30A.M. ON THE 22ND DAYOF JANUARY, 2014, INTHE COURTROOM OF THEALCORN COUNTY CHAN-CERY COURTHOUSE ATCORINTH, MISSISSIPPI,AND IN CASE OF YOURFAILURE TO APPEAR ANDDEFEND, A JUDGMENTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THERELIEF DEMANDED INTHE PETITION.

You are not requiredto file an answer or oth-er pleading, but youmay do so if you desire.

ISSUED under myhand and seal of saidCourt, this 31 day of Oc-tober, 2013.

BOBBY MAROLT,CHANCERY CLERKALCORN COUNTY,MISSISSIPPICORINTH, MISSISSIPPI38835-0069BY:KAREN DUNCAN, D. C.Deputy Clerk

K. Steven Saul, Jr., MSB#104061Office of the AttorneyGeneralP. O. Box 220Jackson, Mississ ippi39205-0220Telephone No.(601) 359-4549Fax No.(601)359-4240

3x's11/2, 11/9, 11/16/2013#14463

LEGALS0955

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

REBECCA LAUDERDALEPETITIONER

VS

AMANDA MICHAEL ANDDANIEL PEREZRESPONDENTS

CAUSE NO.2013-0574-02MM

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: DANIEL PEREZ,whose last known postoffice box and streetaddress is unknownafter diligent searchand inquiry.

You have been madea respondent in the suitfiled in this Court by Re-becca Lauderdale, seek-ing a permanent cus-tody of a minor child.

You are required tomail or hand deliver awritten response to thePetition filed againstyou in this action toHonorable Ronald D. Mi-chael , Attorney forPlaintiff , whose ad-dress is 1700 NorthS e c o n d S t r e e t ,Booneville, Mississippi38829.

Your response mustbe mailed or deliverednot later than thirty (30)days after the 26 day ofOctober, 2013, which isthe date of the firstpublication of this Sum-mons. If your responseis not so mailed or de-livered, a judgment bydefault will be enteredagainst you for the re-lief demanded in thePetition.

You must also filethe original of your Re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

Issued under myhand and the seal ofsaid Court this the 21day of October, 2013

Bobby Marolt, Chan-cery ClerkP. O. Box 69Corinth, MS 38835

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

4x's1 0 / 2 6 , 1 1 / 2 , 1 1 / 9 ,1 1 / 1 6 / 2 0 1 3#14451

LEGALS0955

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

IN THE CHANCERY COURTOF ALCORN COUNTY,

MISSISSIPPI

REBECCA LAUDERDALEPETITIONER

VS

AMANDA MICHAEL ANDDANIEL PEREZRESPONDENTS

CAUSE NO.2013-0574-02MM

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSIS-SIPPI

TO: DANIEL PEREZ,whose last known postoffice box and streetaddress is unknownafter diligent searchand inquiry.

You have been madea respondent in the suitfiled in this Court by Re-becca Lauderdale, seek-ing a permanent cus-tody of a minor child.

You are required tomail or hand deliver awritten response to thePetition filed againstyou in this action toHonorable Ronald D. Mi-chael , Attorney forPlaintiff , whose ad-dress is 1700 NorthS e c o n d S t r e e t ,Booneville, Mississippi38829.

Your response mustbe mailed or deliverednot later than thirty (30)days after the 26 day ofOctober, 2013, which isthe date of the firstpublication of this Sum-mons. If your responseis not so mailed or de-livered, a judgment bydefault will be enteredagainst you for the re-lief demanded in thePetition.

You must also filethe original of your Re-sponse with the Clerkof this Court within areasonable time after-ward.

Issued under myhand and the seal ofsaid Court this the 21day of October, 2013

Bobby Marolt, Chan-cery ClerkP. O. Box 69Corinth, MS 38835

BY: Karen Duncan, D.C.

4x's1 0 / 2 6 , 1 1 / 2 , 1 1 / 9 ,1 1 / 1 6 / 2 0 1 3#14451

LEGALS0955

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

REBECCA LAUDER-DALEPETITIONER

VS

AMANDA MICHAELANDJUAN DIAZRESPONDENTS

CAUSE NO. 2013-0575-02-M

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: JUAN DIAZ, whoselast known post office boxand street address is un-known after diligent searchand inquiry.

You have been made a re-spondent in the suit filed inthis Court by Rebecca Laud-erdale, seeking a permanentcustody of a minor child.

You are required to mailor hand deliver a written re-sponse to the Petition filedagainst you in this action toHonorable Ronald D.Michael , At torney forPlaintiff, whose address is1700 North SecondStreet, Booneville, Mis-sissippi 38829.

Your response must bemailed or delivered not laterthan thirty (30) days after the26 day of October, 2013,which is the date of the firstpublication of this Summons.If your response is not somailed or delivered, a judg-ment by default wi l l beentered against you for therelief demanded in the Peti-tion.

You must also file the ori-ginal of your Response withthe Clerk of this Court with-in a reasonable time after-ward.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court this the21 day of October, 2013.

Bobby Marolt , ChanceryClerkP. O. Box 69Corinth, MS 38835

BY: Karen Duncan, D. C.

4 x's10/26, 11/2, 11/9, 11/16/2013#14452

LEGALS0955

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF TISHOM-INGO COUNTY, MIS-

SISSIPPI

DONALD L. DAVISPLAINTIFF

VS.

MARY BRADLEYHERNANDEZ DAVISDEFENDANT

CAUSE NO.: CV2013-000238-71L

NOTICE

TO: MARY BRADLEYHERNANDEZ DAVIS, aresident of the State of Mis-sissippi, and whose address isunknown after diligent searchand inquiry.

You are a Defendant in theabove styled cause filed bythe Plaintiff who is seeking fora Divorce.

You are required to mail orhand deliver a written re-sponse to the Complaint filedin this action Nathaniel Clark,Attorney for the Plaintiff,whose post office address isP.O. Box 319, Iuka, MS38852, and whose street ad-dress is 125 S. Fulton Street,Iuka, MS 38852.

YOUR RESPONSE MUSTBE MAILED OR DELIVEREDNO LATER THAN THIRTYDAYS, AFTER THE 19 DAYO F O C T O B E R , 2 0 1 3WHICH IS THE DATE OFTHE FIRST PUBLICATIONOF THIS SUMMONS. IFYOUR REPSONSE IS NOTSO MAILED OR DELIVERED,A JUDGMENT BY DEFAULTW I L L B E E N T E R E DAGAINST YOU FOR THEMONEY OR OTHER RELIEFDEMANDED IN THE COM-PLAINT.

You must also file the ori-ginal of your Response withthe Clerk of this Court with-in a reasonable time after-ward.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court, this19th day of October, 2013.

___________________ CHANCERY CLERK OF

TISHOMINGO COUNTY,MISSISSIPPI

1008 BattlegroundDrive

Tishom-ingo County Courthouse

Iuka, Mis-sissippi 38852

_________________

Deputy Clerk

3TC: 10/19, 10/26, 11/02/13#14445

SUMMONS BYPUBLICATION

IN THE CHANCERYCOURT OF ALCORNCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

REBECCA LAUDER-DALEPETITIONER

VS

AMANDA MICHAELANDJUAN DIAZRESPONDENTS

CAUSE NO. 2013-0575-02-M

SUMMONS

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: JUAN DIAZ, whoselast known post office boxand street address is un-known after diligent searchand inquiry.

You have been made a re-spondent in the suit filed inthis Court by Rebecca Laud-erdale, seeking a permanentcustody of a minor child.

You are required to mailor hand deliver a written re-sponse to the Petition filedagainst you in this action toHonorable Ronald D.Michael , At torney forPlaintiff, whose address is1700 North SecondStreet, Booneville, Mis-sissippi 38829.

Your response must bemailed or delivered not laterthan thirty (30) days after the26 day of October, 2013,which is the date of the firstpublication of this Summons.If your response is not somailed or delivered, a judg-ment by default wi l l beentered against you for therelief demanded in the Peti-tion.

You must also file the ori-ginal of your Response withthe Clerk of this Court with-in a reasonable time after-ward.

Issued under my hand andthe seal of said Court this the21 day of October, 2013.

Bobby Marolt , ChanceryClerkP. O. Box 69Corinth, MS 38835

BY: Karen Duncan, D. C.

4 x's10/26, 11/2, 11/9, 11/16/2013#14452

Page 16: 110213 daily corinthian e edition

16 • Saturday, November 2, 2013 • Daily Corinthian

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