Daily Corinthian E-Edition 050812

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Complete results from the Corinth Coca-Cola 10K race — pages 9-10 Tuesday May 8,

2012

50 cents

Daily Corinthian Vol. 116, No. 111

Thunderstorm Today

Tonight

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59

• Corinth, Mississippi • 18 pages • 1 section

Judge sentences 2 in fatal beating Staff and wire reports

IUKA — A mother and daughter were each sentenced Monday for their role in the 2009 beating death of an elderly Burnsville resident. Linda F. Holt, daughter-inlaw of the victim, and Terri Sparks, her daughter, appeared before Judge Paul S. Funderburk in Tishomingo County

Mother, daughter go to prison in John Holt killing Circuit Court. Originally indicted on murder charges, each pleaded guilty last week to manslaughter. Funderburk gave Holt the maximum 20-year sentence in custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections.

Sparks was sentenced to 20 years with 12 years suspended and eight years to serve. Sparks’ sentence is consecutive to a 10-year sentence on a case in Alcorn County. John Holt, who was a farmer and truck driver, was found

beaten to death in his Eastport Street home on Dec. 23, 2009. Police found few clues at the scene, and Linda Holt’s arrest came 15 months later. In January 2010, both Linda Holt and Terry Sparks were arrested by the Corinth Police

Department and charged with uttering a forgery after an investigation found that the two went to a Corinth bank on Dec. 22, 2009, the day before John Holt’s death was reported, and cashed a check on the account of John Holt for $200. Later in the day, they returned to the same bank with another of John Holt’s checks.

Supervisors approve economic growth pact with Corinth BY JEBB JOHNSTON jjohnston@dailycorinthian.com

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Project Package volunteer Tom Chartres and Chairman Rickey Pope collects items for Project Package at the recent Spring Fling 2012 Health Fair.

Mid-South Project Package effort lets troops know they’re not forgotten BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com

Mid-South Project Package is a volunteer organization that assembles and mails monthly “care packages” of supplies for the Mid-South’s soldiers. “It is our way of letting them know we have not forgotten

them and how much we appreciate them,” said Chairman Rickey Pope. Most of MS Project Package’s packing and mailing is accomplished at its headquarters in Southaven. When the troops are deployed and the space is avail-

able, the work is done at the National Guard Armory on South Harper Road. Each package’s mailing cost is $11. The average package contains approximately $30 worth of materials for each member of Please see PROJECT | 2

Alcorn County supervisors agreed Monday to participate in a proposed economic development pact with the City of Corinth. Board Attorney Bill Davis said the idea has been presented to the county, and the board passed a motion to proceed with the concept, which is in the early stages of getting organized. Davis said it would be a similar effort to the TAP Alliance among Tishomingo, Alcorn and Prentiss counties, and that local government leaders saw a need for it while working on a current economic development project. The pact would facilitate a joint pooling of resources for economic development in Corinth and Alcorn County. It would be governed by a board composed of two county supervisors and two city aldermen. Davis said a contract will be forthcoming. In another economic development matter, the board approved The Alliance’s request to apply for a $75,000 grant that would go toward drain-

age improvements at the land site on Mississippi Highway 45 near King Kars. Alliance President Gary Chandler said the funds would allow some drainage concerns to be fixed. In other business: ■ Cook Coggin Engineers reported that the Kimberly-Clark industrial access road is ready to open pending final OK on the bridge. A ribbon cutting is likely to be scheduled. ■ Gary Ross, supervisor for district 4, said he wants the 2nd district to begin making payments on a 2006 loan of approximately $60,000. At the time, Ross said the 2nd district was unable to make bill and salary payments, and the 4th district loaned money to the 2nd district. About $10,000 has previously been repaid, he said. ■ Former county engineer Ricky Newcomb had a discussion with the board about payment on two projects. ■ Charles Tomlinson Jr. again addressed the board regarding whether County Road 772A in far northwestern Alcorn County, where he has built a home, is a legal county road.

10K runners raise funds, awareness for Danny Did BY BOBBY J. SMITH bjsmith@dailycorinthian.com

An Oxford couple brought another objective into their participation in the Corinth CocaCola Classic 10K — saving lives. Misty and Stephen Phillips ran Mississippi’s second largest footrace to raise awareness for the Danny Did Foundation, a non-profit corporation dedicated to the mission of preventing deaths caused by epileptic seizures. Their dedication to the cause began when Misty’s 14-year old son, Lucas Yates, began experiencing seizures about two years ago. On Christmas Eve, 2009, Misty and Stephen woke to a loud noise and found Lucas on the bathroom floor in the middle of a seizure. Since then they’ve moved forward with different treatment options, all the while learning to live with Lucas’ condition and learning as

much as possible to better care for him. Faced with a lack of comprehensive information about treatment options from Lucas’ doctors, Misty and Stephen have turned to other organization — including Danny Did — to learn more about caring for Lucas and helping others in similar situations. “The foundation has helped people in 35 states. We want it to help people in all 50 states,” said Misty. One of the main challenges faced by a parent of a child suffering from seizures is the lack of discussion of alternate treatment methods by doctors. Misty said her son’s doctors would just prescribe Lucas an antiseizure medication and made no mention of how the seizures were life-threatening. The docPlease see FUNDS | 2

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Misty and Stephen Phillips ran the Corinth Coca-Cola Classic 10K to raise awareness for the Danny Did Foundation, a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing deaths caused by epileptic seizures. The Oxford couple is training for the Chicago Marathon.

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

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

On this day in history 150 years ago Gen. Beauregard takes note of a vulnerable portion of the Federal line near Farmington. During the evening hours, he begins to mass his troops a mile and a half southwest of the small community. Orders are given for a dawn attack.


Local/State

2 • Daily Corinthian

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Tuition rising 8.5 percent at universities BY JEFF AMY Associated Press

Staff photo by Bobby J. Smith

Monday crash A Tennessee man suffered minor injuries in a wreck Monday afternoon on U.S. 45. About 3:20 p.m. James T. Young, of Adamsville, Tenn., lost control of his Toyota Tundra pickup while driving northbound on U.S. 45, slid down the shoulder of the highway and smacked a cedar tree. The truck was severely damaged in the crash, but Young walked away with only a cut to his brow. The Corinth Police Department, Corinth Fire Department First Responders and Magnolia EMS all responded.

Things to do today Music Week Tonight at 7 p.m., Dr. Terry McRoberts will present “An Evening of Connections: Chinese and American Piano Music Plus Chopin,” at the historic Fillmore Street Chapel in Corinth. Dr. McRoberts is professor of music at Union University. This event will be at the Historic Fillmore Street Chapel. Tickets are available at Ginger’s, Sanctuary, and from all club members for a minimum donation of $10.

Student art exhibit The whimsical and spirited creations of Corinth High School and Corinth Middle School students are on display at the Corinth Artist Guild Gallery, 507 Cruise St. Regular gallery hours are

10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday and by appointment. Call 6650520 for more information. On the web: corinthartistguild.com.

Music month The Alcorn Welcome Center is observing Music Month in May. They will be displaying literature and have giveaways during the month. The Welcome Center also has the Calendar of Events insert/brochure for Corinth which includes contact information for the Corinth Symphony Orchestra, Crossroads Arena, Corinth Theatre-Arts Crossroads Playhouse, Pickin’ on the Square and other general information.

Site Office announces Old Bridge Beach and Piney Grove Beach are open for the season. The summer hours of operation will be daily from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. For questions regarding recreational opportunities including camping contact the Operations Manger’s Office at 662-423-1287 or the webpage at http:// www.sam.usace.army.mil/ TennTom/GenInfo.html.

Senior activities The First Presbyterian Senior Adult Ministry is hosting a Wii sports class for senior adults on Tuesdays at 9 a.m. There is no cost to participate. Call the church office at 286-6638 to register or Kimberly Grantham at 284-7498.

Beaches open Zumba classes The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Bay Springs

Crossroads Bridal Edition

Magazine

If you were married between January 2011 and December 2011 we are looking for your picture and wedding information for our upcoming Crossroads Magazine Bridal Edition. Simply submit your wedding photo and fill out a simple form at the Daily Corinthian and you will be included in our June Edition. Deadline for submitting your photo and form is Friday, May 25, 2012 For more information call:

662-287-6111

From now through June,

Baptist Memorial HospitalBooneville will sponsor a free Zumba class at the Westside Community Center every Tuesday starting at 6 p.m. and every Thursday at 8:30 a.m. Doors will open 30 minutes before the class begins — no one will be allowed to enter after the class starts. For more information, contact Sergio Warren at 720-5432 or sergio.warren@bmhcc.org; or Susan Henson at 212-2745 or slhenson2009@hotmail. com.

Shiloh museum A museum dedicated to the Battle of Shiloh and area veterans is now open next to Shiloh National Military Park. It is located at the intersection of state Route 22 and Route 142 in Shiloh, across from Ed Shaw’s Restaurant. The Shiloh Battlefield & World War II Museum is open Monday through Saturday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. For more information call Larry DeBerry at 731-9260360.

JACKSON — Tuition will rise about 8.5 percent, on average, next year at Mississippi’s eight public universities. The increase was approved Monday by the College Board, finalizing an amount that was discussed last month. In-state students taking two semesters of full-time classes will pay an average of $5,906 for the 2012-13 school year. That amount will be $459 higher, on average, than this year. Some students pay less than full price because of scholarships or financial aid. Officials said increases are necessary because state appropriations continue to shrink. The system’s overall budget will go up slightly next year, but those increases are earmarked for financial aid, the University of Mississippi Medical Center, and some other special items. Universities will see their general appropriations shrink by 1 percent, according to an allotment approved Monday by college board members. Higher Education Commissioner Hank Bounds said Mississippi needs to pay its faculty members more and doesn’t want to hurt the quality of students’ education. Students at the Mississippi University for Women will pay the least, $5,316. Students will pay the most, $6,336, at the University of Southern Mississippi. Nonresident students pay more, as do students studying for professional

degrees such as law or veterinary medicine. Average full-time tuition at Mississippi’s public institutions has risen 65 percent in the last 10 years. Inflation rose 28 percent during that time. Family income in Mississippi rose 23 percent from 2002 to 2010. No later figures have been published yet. Bounds said the increases stem in part from a long-term trend of decreasing state funding. For the first time this spring, Mississippi schools were asked to project increases for two years. The universities project they will need to raise tuition between 5 percent and 6.9 percent next spring for the 20132014 school year. Mississippi is far from alone in seeing sharp increases in public university tuition, and the cost of going to school in the Magnolia State remains less than in most places. Median annual tuition this year at a Mississippi public university is the second lowest among the 15 states tracked by the Southern Regional Education Board, above only Oklahoma. Mississippi universities typically charge about 70 percent of what public universities charge nationwide. Students are having to dig deeper in Mississippi. More than half of public university graduates said they had student loan debt in in 2008-2008, the most recent figures available. Of those students who took out loans, the average debt at graduation was $21,304, a sharp percent increase since 2003-2004.

FUNDS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

tors never recommended the emerging technology and life-saving devices such as seizure monitors for kids to wear while sleeping. (If the child has a seizure, the monitor will send a text message to the parent or caregiver’s phone.) A frustrating, often deadly, silence characterized their interactions with Lucas’ doctors. “It’s almost like the doctors are scared to tell you it’s life-threatening,” said Stephen. To raise awareness of Danny Did and the options available for parents of epileptic children, Misty and Stephen are training to run in the Boston Marathon. Misty is a long-time runner. Stephen — who hadn’t done much running since P.E. class in school — began training in January, shortly after kicking a 20-year two-pack-a-day smoking habit.

Corinth was their third footrace of the year. Misty, 36, crossed the finish line in 49 minutes and 49 seconds. Stephen, 37, finished in one hour and 44 seconds. While Lucas is currently faring better, Misty and Stephen say they will keep on running the good race to raise awareness for a program that could save an untold number of lives. “These kids are warriors,” said Misty. “They’re worth standing up for.” The main goals of the Danny Did Foundation are to advance awareness of epilepsy and Sudden Unexpected Death in Epilepsy (SUDEP), and to enhance communication about SUDEP between medical professionals and those affected by seizures. It also works to spread the word about seizure detection and seizure prediction devices and other technologies that may as-

sist in preventing deaths caused by seizures. Epilepsy impacts almost 3 million people in America and roughly 50 million people worldwide. An estimated 50,000 deaths occur annually in the U.S. from prolonged seizures, SUDEP and other seizure-related causes such as drowning and accidents. The Danny Did Foundation is named after Danny Stanton, the son of Chicagoans Mike and Mariann Stanton. SUDEP ended Danny’s life at age four. Since then, the Stantons have made it their mission to prevent deaths caused by seizures. The name of the organization is taken from the closing sentences of Danny’s obituary: “Please go and enjoy your life. Danny did.” For more information or to make a tax-deductible donation to the Danny Did Foundation visit www.dannydid.org.

when Mid-South Project Package filed for charity status. The most needed donation is money for postage costs. Other items the soldiers have recently requested are: unscented baby wipes, beef jerky, bug spray/wipes, candy bars, potato chips, cereal bars, cookies, coffee, crackers, dental floss, deodorant, eye wash/drops, flipflops, foot powder, fruit cups, gum, hand sanitizer, hot chocolate, Little Debbie snacks, lotion, mouth wash, nuts, paper tow-

els, peanuts, Pop Tarts, pre-sweetened drink mix, puzzle books, razors, ready-to-eat meals, shaving cream, Slim Jims, sunflower seeds, toilet tissue, toothpaste, toothbrushes, trail mix, tuna packets and vienna sausages, home-cooked brownies, cookies, cakes, fried pies and snacks. For more information visit www.msprojectpackage.org. Contact Project Package Chairman Rickey Pope at 284-8108 or by email at rickpope71@hotmail.com.

PROJECT CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1

The Crossroads Magazine is a supplement to the Daily Corinthian

the service. With an average of 700 packages going out each month, the task of securing donations is formidable, said the chairman. The organization recently obtained its taxexempt status. “Nobody in this organization gets a nickel, it’s totally volunteer,” said volunteer Tom Chartres. The chairman expressed his gratitude to local attorney and District 2 Rep. Nick Bain for his generous assistance


Local/State

3 • Daily Corinthian

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Deaths W.C. Mann

BURNSVILLE — W.C. Mann, 68, died Sunday, May 6, 2012, at his home. Arrangements are pending with Cutshall Funeral Home in Glen.

Edward Voyles

Edward Alford Voyles, 87, died Saturday, May 5, 2012. Arrangements are pending with Corinthian Funeral Home.

Today in History

Staff photo by Steve Beavers

Bowling for a cause Plaza Lanes owner David Curry will donate half of what is taken in at the Corinth bowling alley today and Wednesday with proceeds going to the local special needs group’s trip to Disney World under the direction of Havis Hurley. Curry shows the correct bowling form to Amini Cox, who will be one of 24 kids making the trip pn May 26 to June 1. Curry invites everyone to come out today and Wednesday for some bowling action to help a good cause. Hurley said $44,000 has been raised so far for the trip.

Trial begins in sheriff’s 2010 death Associated Press

NATCHEZ — The capital murder trial of a man accused of running over a Mississippi sheriff has begun with jury selection. Christopher Lee Baxter, 26, of Lucedale is accused of running over and killing George County Sheriff Garry Welford in 2010 during a high-speed chase. The Mississippi Press reported that lawyers spent much of Monday interviewing potential jurors, and that jury selection was to continue Monday evening. Opening statements are expected Tuesday morning. Judge Richard McKen-

Obituary Policy All obituaries (complete and incomplete) will be due no later than 4 p.m. on the day prior to its publication. Obituaries will only be accepted from funeral homes.

zie is presiding over the trial, which is taking place in Natchez. Baxter, if convicted, would face life in prison rather than the death penalty because McKenzie has ruled that he is intellectually disabled. Welford was run over while putting out spikes to stop Baxter’s truck and end a police chase in 2010. Officials said Baxter was wanted for missing his sentencing on a drug charge. After an all-night manhunt, Baxter and Brandy Nicole Williams, 20, were captured the next morn-

ing at a mobile home about six miles north of the scene. The State Supreme Court appointed McKenzie, a retired Hattiesburg judge, to hear the case after local judges stepped aside. The trial was moved to Adams County after attorneys in the case agreed last year that it was unlikely they would be able to find an unbiased jury

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rendered. In 1984, the Soviet Union announced it would boycott the upcoming Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles. In 1987, Gary Hart, dogged by questions about his personal life, including his relationship with Miami model Donna Rice, withdrew from the race for the Democratic presidential nomination. Ten years ago: FBI Director Robert Mueller told the Senate Judiciary Committee an FBI memo from Phoenix warning that several Arabs were suspiciously training at a U.S. aviation school wouldn’t have led officials to the Sept. 11 hijackers even if they’d followed up the warning with more vigor. Eleven French engineers, their Pakistani driver and a passer-by were killed in a suicide bombing in Karachi. Five years ago: The Pentagon announced that it had notified more than 35,000 Army soldiers to be prepared to deploy to Iraq beginning in the fall. Bitter enemies from Northern Ireland’s bloody past joined forces atop a new Northern Ireland government.

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pool in George County. McKenzie also ruled that following his arrest, Baxter understood his Miranda rights and voluntarily gave statements to police, so police can use those statements in his trial. Williams, 20, also is charged with capital murder. Her trial is scheduled Aug. 27 in Lafayette County.

Today is Tuesday, May 8, the 129th day of 2012. There are 237 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On May 8, 1945, President Harry S. Truman announced on radio that Nazi Germany’s forces had surrendered, and that “the flags of freedom fly all over Europe.” On this date: In 1886, Atlanta pharmacist John Pemberton invented the flavor syrup for Coca-Cola. In 1958, Vice President Richard Nixon was shoved, stoned, booed and spat upon by antiAmerican protesters in Lima, Peru. In 1961, New York’s recently created National League baseball team announced that it would be called the Mets. In 1962, the musical comedy “A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum” opened on Broadway. In 1972, President Richard M. Nixon announced that he had ordered the mining of Haiphong Harbor during the Vietnam War. In 1973, militant American Indians who’d held the South Dakota hamlet of Wounded Knee for 10 weeks sur-

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Opinion

Reece Terry, publisher

Mark Boehler, editor

4 • Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Corinth, Miss.

State views

Lawmakers leave town without a bond bill used BY JACK ELLIOTT JR. JACKSON — Nearly 40 years ago, Mississippi spent federal revenue sharing money on a wide range of new construction at universities, community colleges and public facilities, including renovation of the state Capitol. When revenue sharing ended during Ronald Reagan’s presidency, state lawmakers began issuing bonds for construction projects. That is, until the 2012 session ended this past week. For the first time in as long as people can remember, there is no bond bill. The philosophical lines are drawn, even with Republicans leading the House and Senate. Finger pointing? Oh, yes, there’s plenty. “I was, I guess, stunned,” said House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jeff Smith, R-Columbus. “I thought what we would do once we got into conference (with Senate), we would deal with what they wanted in a bond bill. We never conferred; not a single time.” The House presented the Senate with a proposed $250 million bond package. Republican Tate Reeves is in his first year as lieutenant governor, the Senate’s presiding officer. He spent eight years as state treasurer, and campaigned for the state’s secondhighest office last year on the promise to reduce Mississippi’s long-term debt — to pay down the credit card balance, as it were. Reeves said the House proposal was too much. “It included such important things as $20 million for a sports complex. When the numbers get to such a point, someone has to stand up and say ‘no.’ I did, and that’s exactly what I had told the voters I would do,” Reeves said. He said the proposal offered by the Senate would’ve given the universities $58 million, about 60 percent of what they sought. It also proposed $15 million for the community colleges, slightly less than the average allocation over the past four years. Reeves said the Senate also proposed $7 million in cash and $13 million in bonds for the local bridge rehabilitation program championed by former Lt. Gov. Amy Tuck. “What we didn’t have was a Christmas tree approach where every legislator got what they asked for. We set out priorities and they were funded the right way. I don’t believe there are many taxpayers who believe we ought to increase our debt by $250 million,” Reeves said. Smith countered that the House had a conservative package. “State Treasurer (Lynn) Fitch said we would be paying off $284 million in bonds this year,” Smith said. “The House’s position was that we stay below what we were paying off. We were $34 million less than what we were paying off. That seemed prudent. And the beauty of our position was that we would have a bond bill with $104 million that address the needs of IHL (universities) for the next four years.” Higher Education Commissioner Hank Bounds said the bond bill could have provided the resources necessary to help the universities provide the learning and living spaces students and faculty. “We are in an extremely competitive higher education market, both for students and faculty. The condition of our facilities impacts our competitive edge and ability to attract students,” Bounds said in a statement. He said the bill gave the universities $96 million for a variety of needs. “The amount is on par with the amount received each year by individual universities in neighboring states, including the University of Tennessee, Alabama and Louisiana State University,” Bounds said. “Increasing the educational attainment rate in Mississippi and investing in university research, development and commercialization will strengthen and expand Mississippi’s economy.” Smith described the Senate proposal as a “strange combination of bonds and appropriated dollars.” He said the cash would only be available if the economy grew. “It was ‘Take it or leave it,”’ Smith said. Reeves said it’s prudent to avoid borrowing more money by issuing bonds. He said the Legislature had gotten into a habit of issuing bonds to buy equipment that would be worn out long before the debt was paid off. “That doesn’t make any sense whatsoever. We ought to utilize one-time money to pay for R&R on state buildings, college campuses and other projects,” Reeves said. The Senate also let die House-passed bills increasing bond authority for a program that helped rural water systems, for various programs through the Mississippi Development Authority and for construction of the Wellspring Center for Professional Futures, which would offer advanced career courses for high school students from Pontotoc, Union and Lee counties. (Jack Elliott is a writer for Associated Press based in Jackson.)

Reece Terry publisher rterry@dailycorinthian.com

Obama’s trip tops Mitt’s firehouse pizzas BY ROGER SIMON It’s good to be president. True, you get blamed for stuff. But, if you are smart, you control events far more than events control you. Take campaign optics. The optics of a political event not only establish context and shape meaning, but people remember the images long after they forget the words. Last Tuesday, Mitt Romney’s optics included Romney carrying pizzas into a Lower Manhattan firehouse. Barack Obama’s optics had Obama standing in front of hulking, sand-colored MRAP (Mine Resistant Ambush Protected) behemoths at Bagram Air Base outside Kabul, Afghanistan, as he addressed the people of America. If that strikes you as a grossly unfair comparison, it is because the comparison is grossly unfair. But real. Presidents have certain disadvantages — they get blamed for everything from

unemployment to gas prices — but they also have certain advantages: They have cool stuff like Air Force One to fly them places, and they have the U.S. military to serve as background. Presidential campaigns are about campaigning. Which is to say that a day in which Mitt Romney communed with pizzas and Barack Obama communed with our troops and nation is a day that Romney probably lost. A few days earlier, Romney was asked if he would have ordered the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, and Romney replied: “Of course. Even Jimmy Carter would have given that order.” Even Jimmy Carter? Even the guy who had the guts to order a military mission into Iran in 1979 to try to rescue U.S. hostages? Sure, the mission was a disaster, but Carter tried. And why beat up on a guy best known today for climbing up lad-

ders and building homes for Habitat for Humanity? So with the one-year anniversary of the killing of bin Laden fast approaching, it seemed like a good subject for Romney to slide away from by ... delivering pizzas to a firehouse! What could be better than that? How could Obama possibly top that kind of imaginative optics? So last Tuesday Romney joins up with legend-in-hisown-mind Rudy Giuliani and goes to Joe’s Pizza parlor in the West Village and orders six pizzas for $136. Romney takes out a platinum money clip and slaps down a $10,000 bill — OK, OK, I am lying about the money clip and the bill. Romney pays, leaves a tip, and the two men walk out to a waiting black SUV to proceed to the firehouse. According to Sam Youngman of Reuters, “As Romney leaves Joe’s Pizza carrying three pizzas, someone on the sidewalk shouts, ‘Just don’t put ‘em on the

roof of the car!’” New Yorkers. You gotta love ‘em. The two men motor over to Engine 24, Ladder 5, a firehouse on Sixth Avenue and Houston Street, that lost 11 of its firefighters on 9/11, and Romney and Giuliani, carrying three pizza each, walk past the horde of cameras — and then dump the pizzas into the arms of a waiting aide as soon as the two (incorrectly) assume they are out of camera range. No press is allowed inside, but afterward, speaking about the day bin Laden was “taken out,” Romney says, “We respect and admire the many people who were part of that, from the president who authorized that attack” to all the rest. Romney goes on to criticize Obama for “politicizing” the event, but throughout his remarks a leather-lunged protester is screaming, “Mitt Romney, you’re a racist!” at the top of her lungs.

A nation of ‘cradle to grave’ Julias In the competition for the creepiest campaign material of 2012, we may already have a winner. It is “The Life of Julia,” the Obama re-election team’s cartoon chronicle of a fictional woman who is dependent on government every step of her life. The phrase “cradle to grave welfare state” originated with Clement Attlee’s socialist government in post-World War II Britain. Back then, it was meant as a boastful description of a new age of government activism. Subsequently, it became a term of derision for critics of an overweening government. In the spirit of Attlee, the Obama campaign revives the concept of “cradle to grave” as it highlights Obama-supported programs that take care of Julia from age 3 to her retirement at age 67. Julia begins her interaction with the welfare state as a little tot through the pre-kindergarten program Head Start. She then proceeds through all of life’s important phases, not Shakespeare’s progression from “mewling and puking” infant to “second childishness and mere oblivion,” but the Health and Human Services and Education Depart-

ment version: a Pell grant (age 18), surgery on insurance coverage guaranteed by ObamRich aCare (22), a Lowery job where she can sue her National e m p l o y e r s Review for more pay thanks to the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act (23), free contraception (27), a Small Business Administration loan (42) and, finally, Medicare (65) and Social Security (67). (In a sci-fi touch, these entitlements are presumed blissfully unchanged sometime off in the 2070s.) No doubt, the creators of Julia — imagine a dour and featureless version of Dora the Explorer who grows old through the years — weren’t seeking to make a major philosophical statement. But they inadvertently captured something important about the progressive vision. Julia’s central relationship is to the state. It is her educator, banker, health-care provider, venture capitalist and retirement fund. And she is, fundamentally, a taker. Every benefit she gets is cut-rate or

free. She apparently doesn’t worry about paying taxes. It doesn’t enter her mind that the programs supporting her might add to the debt or might have unintended consequences. She has no moral qualms about forcing others to pay for her contraception, and her sense of patriotic duty is limited to getting as much government help as she can. The alleged benefits to Julia are exaggerated or nonexistent. Pity the poor thing if she depends on Head Start for her launch into the world. A study by the Department of Health and Human Services last year found that positive educational effects tend to wear off by the first grade. The government assistance she gets for financing college feeds into the maw of inexorable tuition increases. The chances that the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act is going to boost her pay, as a web designer, are essentially nil. Julia is getting punked. Her life is framed to show she gets more from President Barack Obama than from Republicans. The same contrast could be achieved differently. She could lose her web-design job and go on unemployment, which Presi-

dent Obama always wants to extend despite Republican objections. With her family’s income dropping, she could resort to the food-stamp program, which has expanded massively under President Obama despite Republicans inveighing against the trend. These examples don’t suit the campaign’s purposes, though. They show government to be a poor substitute for the robust recovery that President Obama hasn’t delivered even as he has endeavored to make Julia’s birth-control pills free. The point of view of “The Life of Julia” is profoundly condescending. It assumes that giving people things will distract them from larger considerations of the public weal — the economy, debt, the health of the culture. This view’s infantilizing tendency is captured by ObamaCare’s insistence that, for purposes of health insurance, young adults are children who belong on their parents’ policies until the age of 26. It devalues self-reliance and looks at us less as independent citizens than as drab Julias, bereft without the succor of our life partner and minder, the state. No thanks.

Prayer for today

A verse to share

Dear God, break through the din of our routines so we may hear the cry of those who are struggling and find ways to extend to them your love and friendship. Amen.

The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases . . . The Lord is good to those who wait for him, to the soul that seeks him. — Lamentations 3:22, 25 (NRSV)

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Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • 5A

State

Truth About God Matters

Mom, daughter bodies found BY ADRIAN SAINZ Associated Press

GUNTOWN, Miss. — The bodies of a Tennessee mother and her oldest daughter were found behind an alleged kidnapper’s house in north Mississippi, the FBI said Monday, and authorities believe the woman’s two other daughters are still with the man accused in their abduction. Jo Ann Bain and her three daughters disappeared April 27 as the family was packing to move to Arizona. The bodies of Bain and her 14-year-old daughter, Adrienne Bain,

were found behind Adam Mayes’ house near Guntown, a rural area police have been searching. The bodies were discovered late last week and positively identified. The FBI did not say how the two died. The FBI said it believed the other daughters — 12-year-old Alexandria and 8-year-old Kyliyah — were still with Mayes. The agency did not say in a news release why it thought that, and FBI spokesman Joel Siskovic said no further details were available on the bodies or the search for Mayes

and the girls. Mayes, a longtime friend of Bain’s husband, had stayed over at the family’s house to help them pack and load a U-Haul to drive across the country to Arizona, authorities said. Gary Bain, who was at the house that night, awoke to find his wife, daughters and Mayes gone. He couldn’t reach his wife on her cell phone that

day, and reported them missing when the girls didn’t get off the school bus. Mayes was last seen a week ago in Guntown, about 80 miles south of the Bain family’s home in Whiteville, Tenn. Authorities talked to Mayes early on in the investigation, but he fled when they tried to contact him again, Siskovic said.

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The conversation between our Savior and Pontius Pilate underscores the importance of truth. “Then Pilate said to him, ‘Art thou a King then?’ Jesus answered, Thou sayest that I am a King. To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness unto the truth. Everyone that is of the truth heareth my voice.â€? – John 15:37-38. Jesus Describes Himself and His work within the context of the truth. Pilate, in discounting the question of truth, sidestepped the relevance of both the gospel and the Savior who embodied God’s Truth. Many of the problems we face today come from discounting the importance and value of truth. Jesus told Pilate, a commitment to the truth in essential, if we want to hear the Savior, we need to remember and remind ourselves and those around us – that truth matters. Truth about God Matters. The existance of God is the most important truth of all and the foundation for a correct understanding of everything else. “Without faith it is impossible to please Himâ€? –Heb 11:6. If we seek to draw near to God, we must believe that He exists. Our own existance is meaningless if we do not believe in God. The Truth About Scripture Matters. God is not a mere abstract principle, but a loving Father who calls us back into His fellowhship. Sin is the cause of that broken fellowship. Knowing the Bible is the completely true and authoritative word of God is essential to having a right understanding and relationship with God. The ultimate end, in respect to Christianity, is the Bible inspired, without error, infallible word of God. This being true, then all questions as to miracles and doctrine is deďŹ nitely settled, and there is nothing for man to do but believe and obey the truth. If man rejects these truths, he is in black darkness of torturing doubt, and the unrest of the soul for which threre is no cure. Rejecting the Bible leads; incescapably, to rejecting Christ. The Truth about Salvation Matters. Believing in God and listening to His Word are foundational to authentic Christian faith. Yet, for faith to save it must grow into a Conviction engaging our lives in obedience to the gospel. “Buy the truth and sell it not.â€? –Prov. 23:23. As we invest ourselves in the truth of the gospel, we will ďŹ nd blessings in our life.

Northside Church of Christ 3127 Harper Road - Corinth, MS - 286-6256 Minister - Lennis Nowell

Schedule of Services Sunday Morning Bible Study........................................................... 9:45 Sunday Morning Worship Service ................................................. 10:35 Sunday Evening Worship Service .................................................... 5:00 Wednesday Night Bible Study ......................................................... 7:00 You are cordially invited to attend every service.


6 • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

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Another testicle ticket written SPARTANBURG, S.C. (AP) — For the second time in a year, a motorist has been ticketed in South Carolina for displaying a replica of testicles on a vehicle. A Spartanburg County sheriff’s deputy stopped a

Nation Briefs

MAY 8, 2012 8 PM

truck Sunday evening after noticing the “anatomically correct” display on the rear bumper. The incident report says the driver removed the display after being stopped but he was arrested for driving without a

license. He was also given a warning ticket for having an obscene display. Last July, a Berkeley County woman was ticketed for having a similar display on the back of her truck.

Class of 2012

Honor your graduate and all area graduates by being a part of our special Graduation edition. Publishing Sunday, May 20th, 2012. For more information call 662-287-6111. Deadline: May 11th

GOP plan protects defense spending

CIA thwarts new al-Qaida bomb plot

WASHINGTON (AP) — Moving to protect the military from a crippling wave of budget cuts next year, a key House committee voted Monday to cut instead food aid, health care and social services like Meals on Wheels. The measure would require federal employees to contribute more to their pensions, saving taxpayers more than $80 billion over the coming decade, while illegal immigrants would be denied tax refunds from the $1,000 per-child tax credit. There’s no companion legislation moving in the Democratic-controlled Senate, and the proposal doesn’t stand a chance of making it to President Barack Obama’s desk for signature. But the vote was a symbolic swipe at Obama in an election year focused on the economy. The cuts approved by the Republican-controlled Budget Committee total more than $300 billion over the coming decade. The panel approved them on a party-line 21-9 vote; the full House is scheduled to vote on the measure on Thursday. The proposed reductions in the bill are but a fraction of those called for in the broader, nonbinding budget plan that passed the House in March. They are aimed less at taming trillion dollar-plus deficits than preventing the Pentagon from absorbing a 10 percent, $55 billion automatic budget cut in January because last year’s deficit “supercommittee” couldn’t reach a deal. The Obama administration and lawmakers in both parties warn the defense cuts would harm readiness and weapons procurement, and reduce troop levels. One-fourth of the House GOP spending cuts come from programs directly benefiting the poor, such as Medicaid, food stamps, the Social Services Block Grant, and a child tax credit claimed by working immigrants. Federal workers would have to contribute an additional 5 percent of their salaries toward their pensions, while people whose incomes rise after receiving coverage subsidies under the new health care law would lose some or all of their benefits. The automatic spending cuts, known as a “sequester,” would strike domestic benefit programs as well, including a 2 percentage point cut from Medicare payments to health care providers and a $16 billion cut to farm subsidies. The GOP measure would leave those cuts in place. The sequester required by the supercommittee’s failure would abruptly wring about $110 billion in new spending from next year’s budget. But the upcoming GOP measure is more gentle in the near term, cutting deficits this year and next by less than $20 billion — though the cuts add up to more than $300 billion over the coming decade. “The question is whether or not to just let the sequester occur ... or whether to be more targeted, reasonable and responsible,” said Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga. “The last thing we want is those kinds of reductions in defense spending.” Some of the cuts may or not be realistic, though, despite the seal of approval of the respected Congressional Budget Office. Particularly dubious is $22.5 billion in savings claimed by repealing new “orderly liquidation” authority awarded to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to prevent the failure of large financial firms from endangering the economy. Costs would be offset by assessments on other institutions.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The CIA thwarted an ambitious plot by al-Qaida’s affiliate in Yemen to destroy a U.S.-bound airliner using a bomb with a sophisticated new design around the one-year anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden, The Associated Press has learned. The plot involved an upgrade of the underwear bomb that failed to detonate aboard a jetliner over Detroit on Christmas 2009. This new bomb was also designed to be used in a passenger’s underwear, but this time alQaida developed a more refined detonation system, U.S. officials said. The FBI is examining the latest bomb to see whether it could have passed through airport security and brought down an airplane, officials said. They said the device did not contain metal, meaning it probably could have passed through an airport metal detector. But it was not clear whether new body scanners used in many airports would have detected it. There were no immediate plans to change security procedures at U.S. airports. The would-be suicide bomber, based in Yemen, had not yet picked a target or bought a plane ticket when the CIA stepped in and seized the bomb, officials said. It’s not immediately clear what happened to the alleged bomber. White House spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said President Barack Obama learned about the plot in April and was assured the device posed no threat to the public. “The president thanks all intelligence and counterterrorism professionals involved for their outstanding work and for serving with the extraordinary skill and commitment that their enormous responsibilities demand,” Hayden said. The operation unfolded even as the White House and Department of Homeland Security assured the American public that they knew of no al-Qaida plots against the U.S. around the anniversary of bin Laden’s death. The operation was carried out over the past few weeks, officials said. “We have no credible information that terrorist organizations, including al-Qaida, are plotting attacks in the U.S. to coincide with the anniversary of bin Laden’s death,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said on April 26.

Obama’s gay marriage stance under scrutiny WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama’s election-year vagueness on gay marriage is coming under fresh scrutiny. Education Secretary Arne Duncan broke ranks with the White House on Monday, stating his unequivocal support for same-sex marriage one day after Vice President Joe Biden suggested that he supported gay marriage as well. Obama aides worked to manage any political fallout. They said the back-toback remarks by two top administration officials represented personal viewpoints and were not part of a coordinated effort to lay groundwork for a shift in the president’s position. Obama aides also tried to use the latest flare-up in the gay-marriage debate to shine a light on GOP rival Mitt Romney’s history of equivocating on some gay-rights issues, an attempt to turn a potential political problem into an opportunity. Obama, who supports most gay rights, has stopped short of backing

gay marriage. Without clarification, he’s said for the past year and a half that his personal views on the matter are “evolving.” The White House held firm on Monday to that position, which polls show puts the president increasingly at odds with his party and the majority of Americans on gay marriage. But with Biden and Duncan’s comments reinvigorating the debate, Obama is likely to face renewed pressure to clarify his views ahead of the November election. Throughout his first term, he has sought to walk a fine line on samesex marriage. He’s trying to satisfy rank-and-file Democrats by supporting a range of gay rights issues without alienating crucial independent voters who could be turned off by the emotional social issue. The president’s aides acknowledge that his position can be confusing. In states where gay marriage already is legal, the president says married gay couples should have the same rights as married straight couples. But he does not publically support the right of gay couples to enter into a marriage in the first place. Duncan, a longtime friend of the president as well as a member of his Cabinet, made clear Monday that his position on gay marriage was not in lockstep with the White House. Asked in a television interview whether he believed gay couples should legally be allowed to marry, Duncan said simply, “Yes, I do.”

Al-Qaida releases video of hostage WASHINGTON (AP) — In a video released Sunday by al-Qaida, American hostage Warren Weinstein said he will be killed unless President Barack Obama agrees to the militant group’s demands. “My life is in your hands, Mr. President,” Weinstein said in the video. “If you accept the demands, I live; if you don’t accept the demands, then I die.” Weinstein was abducted last August in Lahore, Pakistan, after gunmen tricked his guards and broke into his home. The 70-year-old from Rockville, Md., is the country director in Pakistan for J.E. Austin Associates, a Virginia-based firm that advises a range of Pakistani business and government sectors. In a video message posted on militant websites in December, al-Qaida leader Ayman al-Zawahri said Weinstein would be released if the United States stopped airstrikes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen. He also demanded the release of all al-Qaida and Taliban suspects around the world. The White House had no comment Monday on al-Qaida’s demands or Weinstein’s plea. A woman who answered the phone Monday at a number listed for Weinstein in Rockville, Md., said she had no comment when an Associated Press reporter identified herself. Phone messages left for Weinstein’s relatives were not immediately returned. The SITE Intelligence Group, which monitors militant messages, said Al-Sahab, al-Qaida’s media arm, posted the Weinstein video on jihadist forums Sunday. “It’s important you accept the demands and act quickly and don’t delay,” Weinstein said in the video, addressing Obama. “There’ll be no benefit in delaying, it will just make things more difficult for me.”


Business

7 • Daily Corinthian

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9.88 -.10 40.07 +.63 27.71 -.09 45.60 +.23 64.96 +1.45 43.57 -.19 29.80 +.19 12.82 -.37 15.13 +.01 48.70 -.03 19.90 -.08 21.54 +.65 9.18 -.04 7.08 +.35 11.46 -.35 38.19 -.34 40.90 -.08 54.55 +.32 84.48 -.09 44.16 -.12 43.83 -.46 89.37 +.07 8.06 -.01 14.39 +.40 9.22 +.07 8.75 +.17 17.67 +.73 14.99 +.08

FirstEngy Flextrn FootLockr ForestOil s FMCG FrontierCm Fusion-io n GATX Gafisa SA GameStop Gannett Gap GaylrdEnt GenDynam GenGrPrp GenMills GenMotors GenOn En Genworth Gerdau GileadSci GoldFLtd Goldcrp g GoldmanS GreenMtC Groupon n GpTelevisa Hallibrtn HarleyD HartfdFn Hasbro HltMgmt HeclaM Herbalife s HercOffsh Hertz Hess HewlettP HollyFrt s Hologic HomeDp HopFedBc HostHotls HovnanE HudsCity HuntBnk Huntsmn

46.98 +.01 PattUTI 7 15.43 +.16 6.66 -.03 PeabdyE 8 29.48 +.34 29.98 -.71 PennWst g ... 15.14 -.58 10.67 -.26 PeopUtdF 19 12.24 +.05 36.40 PetMed 14 11.07 -2.69 3.61 -.28 PetrbrsA ... 21.46 +.25 21.92 -1.03 Petrobras ... 22.42 +.27 41.42 -.15 Pfizer 14 22.45 +.07 ÂŽ 4.05 +.13 PhilipMor 17 88.28 -.85 21.09 -.74 Phillips66 n ... 29.35 -.81 13.51 +.16 PiperJaf dd 22.65 -.32 28.57 +.37 PitnyBw 6 16.79 -.31 34.92 +1.15 Popular 11 1.73 +.04 67.42 +.37 Potash 13 42.15 -.32 18.04 +.14 PwshDB q 27.18 -.06 38.53 +.21 PS Oil q 28.17 -.17 22.41 +.05 PwShs QQQ q 64.76 +.06 2.14 +.07 PrinFncl 9 26.06 -.03 5.80 ProShtS&P q 36.60 -.01 8.65 +.03 PrUShS&P q 15.79 -.01 49.90 -.37 ProUltQQQ q 108.82 +.15 12.83 +.15 PrUShQQQ q 32.60 -.03 36.16 -.40 ProUltSP q 55.15 +.04 110.04 +1.05 ProUShL20 q 18.13 -.02 24.30 -.80 PrUPShQQQ q 11.97 -.03 10.46 +.49 ProUSSP500 q 9.67 -.01 21.39 +.01 PrUVxST rs q 14.07 -.50 32.42 -.11 ProUSSilv q 11.97 +.18 51.54 -.35 ProctGam 16 64.25 -.03 19.67 +.01 ProgsvCp 15 21.97 +.18 36.35 +.26 ProUSR2K q 31.83 -.22 6.81 +.01 Prudentl 6 52.19 -.70 3.88 -.08 PulteGrp dd 10.00 +.06 46.98 +.04 Q-R-S-T 4.75 +.14 15.48 -.04 Qualcom 19 61.92 +.01 www.edwardjones.com 50.34 -.60 QuantaSvc 25 23.50 +.34 23.87 -.40 QksilvRes 9 4.63 +.19 28.68 -.83 Rackspace cc 57.80 -.60 17.09 -.01 RadianGrp 12 2.47 -.01 51.39 -.57 RangeRs cc 63.56 -.12 7.25 +.05 RegalEnt 20 14.24 +.20 16.20 -.07 Renren ... 6.40 -.30 1.77 +.07 Rentech dd 2.05 -.09 6.92 +.15 RepubSvc 14 26.90 +.02 Pfizer’s cholesterol pill, Lipitor, has generated $130 3.9 percent. Bannister thinks Pfizer can raise the 6.60 +.11 RschMotn 4 11.82 -.19 dividend, now 88 cents a year, by about 6 percent a billion in sales over the last 15 years. But generic 15.23 +.40 RioTinto year, well above inflation. versions of the best-selling drug in history became ... 52.04 +.13 available in November. Still more, much-cheaper RiteAid dd 1.45 -.04 • Pfizer shares have risen 40 percent since Ian I-J-K-L generics will reach drugstores on May 31. Read became CEO 17 months ago. That’s partly RiverbedT 55 18.81 -.17 IAMGld g 9 11.20 -.31 Yet despite the challenge, Pfizer is because Pfizer repurchased $9 billion SAP AG ... 63.13 +.21 ICICI Bk ... 31.64 +.67 an attractive long-term investment. worth of its stock last year, and plans to 13 13.92 +.04 ING ... 6.93 +.29 SLM Cp buy another $6 billion this year. • Pfizer’s pipeline of experimental q 129.84 -.25 iShBraz q 58.85 +.26 SpdrDJIA drugs is “better than it’s been in recent • Pfizer is selling its infant nutrition q 159.08 -.39 iShGer q 21.64 +.10 SpdrGold business for $12 billion and plans to years,â€? says Linda Bannister, a iShJapn q 9.48 +.04 SpdrWldxUS q 23.51 +.14 divest its animal health business, which is financial analyst with Edward Jones. iSTaiwn q 12.87 -.08 S&P500ETF q 137.10 +.10 twice as big. Proceeds could cover more Two products that may generate q 21.46 -.01 iSh UK q 17.31 +.17 SpdrHome share buybacks and dividend hikes. billions in annual revenue — a stroke q 102.31 +.15 “It's going to be a painful couple prevention drug and a pill to slow iShSilver q 29.21 -.20 SpdrTotMkt quartersâ€? as Lipitor sales drop, Bannister rheumatoid arthritis — could be iShChina25 q 37.18 -.19 SpdrLehHY q 39.62 +.02 SpdrRetl q 60.37 -.27 says, but with the pipeline prospects she approved this year. iShEMkts q 41.51 +.15 q 52.50 -.08 believes it’s a bet worth making. iShB20 T q 118.16 +.02 SpdrOGEx • Pfizer pays a healthy dividend of q 45.62 -.31 iS Eafe q 52.65 +.38 SpdrMetM Safeway 12 19.53 -.16 At its peak in 2006, Lipitor generated annual sales of $13 billion or 27 percent of total revenue. iShR2K q 79.30 +.21 12 37.86 -.09 BernsteinResearch expects that to fall to $1.9 billion or 3.4 percent by 2016. iShREst q 64.02 +.36 StJude 10 35.89 -.05 IdenixPh dd 7.65 +.05 SanDisk PFIZER (PFE) $80 billion 7.05 -.03 Wyeth acquisition ITW 15 56.76 +.33 SandRdge 26 ... 36.34 +.30 52-WEEK RANGE (Oct. 2009) total revenue Infosys 16 44.85 -.82 Sanofi $16.63 23.30 67 22.01 +.05 IngerRd 42 42.67 +.70 SaraLee Lipitor revenue 60 18 70.60 +.64 Monday’s close: $22.45 IngrmM 11 18.86 -.13 Schlmbrg Schwab 20 13.52 -.01 Insmed dd 4.10 +1.40 Price-earnings ratio: 82 31.01 +.58 IBM 15 203.75 -1.24 SeagateT 40 (Based on past 12 months’ 27 17.60 -.09 IntPap 11 31.95 -.18 SealAir results): 21 24 28.29 -1.22 Interpublic 12 11.44 -.06 SelCmfrt 5.02 -.38 Invesco 15 23.63 -.07 Sequenom dd Total returns: YTD: 4% 20 .09 -.01 ItauUnibH ... 15.00 +.15 SvArts rsh ... 3-YR*: 21% 8.40 -.11 IvanhM g dd 10.38 -.23 SiderurNac ... 5-YR*: 1% SilvWhtn g 18 27.45 -.87 JDS Uniph dd 11.07 -.02 0 20-YR*: 10% 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 -.32 JPMorgCh 9 41.78 +.03 SkywksSol 23 25.25 estimates 39 8.26 +.16 JamesRiv dd 3.96 -.17 SwstAirl Sources: BernsteinResearch; FactSet Total returns through May 4 *annualized Linda A. Johnson; J.Paschke • AP JanusCap 10 7.41 +.21 SwstnEngy 17 28.83 +.10 SpectraEn 17 30.40 +.09 JetBlue 14 4.86 +.12 q 35.71 +.03 JohnJn 18 64.80 +.06 SP Matls q 37.03 +.08 JohnsnCtl 13 31.56 -.05 SP HlthC NDEXES q 34.13 +.05 JoyGlbl 11 66.01 -.51 SP CnSt 52-Week Net YTD 52-wk -.02 JnprNtwk 26 19.25 -.46 SP Consum q 44.89 High Low Name Last Chg %Chg %Chg %Chg q 68.10 -.20 KB Home dd 8.18 -.01 SP Engy q 36.20 -.10 KT Corp ... 13.50 +.97 SP Inds 13,338.66 10,404.49 Dow Industrials 13,008.53 -29.74 -.23 +6.47 +2.55 q 28.99 -.08 KeyEngy 12 11.96 -.15 SP Tech 5,627.85 3,950.66 Dow Transportation 5,245.26 +17.62 +.34 +4.49 -4.11 q 35.50 -.07 Keycorp 8 7.92 +.10 SP Util 473.97 381.99 Dow Utilities 467.45 -.43 -.09 +.60 +8.41 11 14.84 -.02 Kimco 66 19.81 +.32 Staples 8,718.25 6,414.89 NYSE Composite 7,948.77 +15.47 +.20 +6.31 -6.24 32 55.48 -.08 Kinross g dd 8.28 -.11 Starbucks 2,498.89 1,941.99 Amex Market Value 2,388.16 -2.58 -.11 +4.82 -.10 19 56.76 -.78 KodiakO g 43 9.07 +.42 StarwdHtl 3,134.17 2,298.89 Nasdaq Composite 2,957.76 +1.42 +.05 +13.54 +4.03 12 45.27 +.08 Kohls 12 50.21 +.16 StateStr 1,422.38 1,074.77 S&P 500 1,369.58 +.48 +.04 +8.90 +1.73 Kraft 20 39.26 +.01 StlDynam 12 11.94 -.21 14,374.13 +7.64 +.05 +8.98 +.63 LSI Corp 12 7.87 -.03 Stryker 15 54.12 +.25 14,951.57 11,208.42 Wilshire 5000 LVSands 23 53.35 -.78 Suncor gs 868.57 601.71 Russell 2000 793.81 +1.97 +.25 +7.14 -5.81 9 30.40 +.05 Lattice 8 4.96 Sunoco dd 49.69 -.54 LeapWirlss dd 5.13 +.35 SunTrst 16 23.99 +.24 13,360 Dow Jones industrials LeggMason 16 23.95 +.27 Supvalu dd 5.51 -.03 LennarA 68 28.37 +.25 Symantec 10 15.94 +.12 Close: 13,008.53 13,120 LibtyIntA 21 18.41 +.01 Synacor n ... 13.10 +1.71 Change: -29.74 (-0.2%) LillyEli 11 41.61 +.33 Synovus dd 2.07 +.04 12,880 10 DAYS LincNat 37 23.36 +.25 Sysco 15 28.29 +.39 13,500 LinkedIn n cc 111.48 -5.82 TCF Fncl dd 12.02 +.21 LionsGt g 52 12.02 +.55 TD Ameritr 17 18.40 +.08 13,000 LizClaib 8 12.86 -.43 TIM Part n ... 28.09 +.56 LockhdM 10 87.31 -.52 TJX s 21 41.49 -.25 LaPac dd 9.49 +.53 TaiwSemi 12,500 ... 15.42 -.02 LyonBas A 11 39.23 -.25 Talbots dd 2.61 -.17 TalismE g ... 11.54 -.06 12,000 M-N-O-P Target 13 55.76 +.11 MEMC dd 3.32 -.03 TeckRes g ... 34.60 -.32 11,500 MFA Fncl 9 7.71 +.10 TelefEsp ... 14.59 +.43 MGIC dd 3.24 +.07 Tellabs dd 3.68 -.07 11,000 MGM Rsts 2 12.16 -.31 TempurP 15 48.29 -8.42 N D J F M A M Macys 14 40.29 -.82 TenetHlth 46 5.04 +.01 MagHRes dd 5.34 +.12 Tenneco 12 28.87 -1.32 Manitowoc 40 12.72 -.16 Teradata 33 72.19 -.95 Manulife g ... 12.69 -.01 Terex TOCKS OF OCAL NTEREST 46 21.95 +.10 MarathnO s 8 26.32 -.48 Tesoro 6 21.74 -.25 YTD YTD MarathP n 6 39.66 -.08 TevaPhrm 14 44.39 -.05 Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg Name Div PE Last Chg %Chg MktVGold q 43.67 -.38 TexInst 20 30.61 +.02 MV OilSv s q 38.58 -.04 1.32 9 43.74 +.26 +1.1 MeadWvco 1.00 21 28.25 +.21 +5.9 Textron 23 25.06 -.44 AFLAC MktVRus q 27.51 -.15 1.76 48 33.00 +.14 +9.1 OldNBcp .36 14 12.58 +.22 +8.0 ThomCrk g 5 4.64 -.89 AT&T Inc MktVJrGld q 21.35 -.62 2.56f 15 85.76 +.24 +.7 Penney 3M Co 14 88.01 -.66 AirProd .80 21 33.58 -.08 -4.5 MarIntA 64 39.29 +.01 1.80 18 43.44 -.46 -1.5 PennyMac TibcoSft 47 32.04 -.66 AlliantEgy 2.20 8 20.27 +.30 +22.0 MarshM 19 34.14 +.05 1.88 9 38.52 -.06 -6.8 TimeWarn 13 36.00 -.35 AEP MartMM 42 79.80 +.37 PepsiCo 2.15f 17 66.62 +.72 +.4 cc 26.02 +.32 AmeriBrgn .52 14 35.95 -.22 -3.3 MarvellT 14 13.97 -.05 TollBros ... ... 6.98 +.16 +21.2 Transocn dd 48.39 +.44 ATMOS 1.38 16 32.40 -.03 -2.8 PilgrimsP Masco dd 14.55 +.15 .50 17 5.04 -.04 -48.1 17 64.59 +.09 BB&T Cp .80f 15 31.87 +.30 +26.6 RadioShk Mattel 15 32.93 -.05 Travelers ... 40.97 +.77 BP PLC .04 25 6.71 +.01 +56.0 1.92 5 41.33 +.37 -3.3 RegionsFn McDrmInt 15 9.99 +.02 TripAdv n TriQuint 21 4.74 -.02 BcpSouth .04 19 13.34 +.10 +21.1 SbdCp McMoRn dd 8.96 +.05 ... 7 1900.25 -30.75 -6.7 TwoHrbInv 6 10.21 Mechel ... 7.49 +.05 Caterpillar 1.84 12 97.19 -1.25 +7.3 SearsHldgs .33t ... 55.12 -.19 +73.4 12 18.63 +.59 Medtrnic 12 38.08 -.07 Tyson Chevron 3.60f 8 103.31 -.41 -2.9 Sherwin 1.56 27 121.63 +.52 +36.2 MelcoCrwn 26 14.20 +.30 U-V-W-X-Y-Z CocaCola 2.04 21 77.28 +.28 +10.4 SiriusXM ... 15 2.17 +.01 +19.0 Merck 17 38.54 -.30 Comcast .65f 18 29.63 +.18 +25.0 UBS AG ... 12.40 +.08 1.96f 19 45.44 +.08 -1.8 MetLife 10 34.55 +.31 1.60f 16 57.82 +.32 +14.7 SouthnCo US Airwy 10 11.10 +.40 CrackerB MetroPCS 9 6.68 +.03 ... ... 2.41 +.05 +3.0 1.84f 12 80.22 -.47 +3.7 SprintNex USG dd 17.75 +.50 Deere Microchp 19 33.46 -.33 .22e ... 15.19 +.09 +16.8 UltraPt g 7 18.74 -.28 Dell Inc ... 8 15.82 +.01 +8.1 SPDR Fncl MicronT dd 6.50 -.05 UtdContl 17 23.59 +1.31 Dillards .20 8 66.50 +.90 +48.2 StratIBM12 .71 ... 25.43 +.24 +.7 Microsoft 11 30.65 -.33 UtdMicro 8 2.53 -.10 Dover 1.26 12 59.01 -1.02 +1.7 TecumsehB ... ... 3.64 -.07 -18.2 MobileTele 15 18.91 +.50 UPS B 20 77.80 +.07 EnPro ... 18 40.87 -.10 +23.9 Monsanto 21 72.83 -.77 TecumsehA ... ... 3.41 +.01 -27.4 q 16.71 +.31 FordM .20 7 10.66 -.01 -.9 MonstrBv s 44 67.56 +.82 US NGs rs Trchmrk s .60f 10 47.86 +.30 +10.3 q 37.05 -.24 FredsInc .24f 16 14.13 +.18 -3.1 MorgStan 28 16.15 +.15 US OilFd dd 26.67 -.02 FullerHB 2.38e ... 47.05 +.54 -7.9 Mosaic 11 51.19 +.24 USSteel .34f 18 31.95 +.41 +38.3 Total SA 14 78.91 -.57 ... ... .76 -.05 -33.3 MotrlaMob dd 39.13 +.33 UtdTech GenCorp ... 97 6.76 +.07 +27.1 USEC 11 55.25 +.53 Mylan 14 21.05 +.05 UtdhlthGp .78f 12 31.84 +.17 +17.7 .68 16 19.32 -.02 +7.9 US Bancrp 6 22.04 +.01 GenElec NII Hldg 20 12.95 +.19 UnumGrp Goodrich 1.16 20 125.06 -.04 +1.1 WalMart 1.59f 13 59.19 +.49 -1.0 UrbanOut 24 28.20 -.11 NRG Egy 17 15.49 +.02 ... 15 10.88 +.04 -23.2 WellsFargo .88 12 33.50 +.47 +21.6 ... 21.44 -.10 Goodyear NYSE Eur 11 25.41 -.16 Vale SA 1.49 22 59.52 +.21 +9.5 Wendys Co ... 20.98 +.01 HonwllIntl .08 ... 4.87 +.06 -9.1 Nabors 11 15.51 +.02 Vale SA pf .90f 12 27.76 -.14 +14.5 cc 52.14 +1.21 Intel NasdOMX 11 23.44 -.23 ValeantPh WestlkChm .30 15 57.50 +.80 +42.9 .32 11 21.08 -.58 +7.2 6 22.88 -.07 Jabil NOilVarco 14 70.31 -.82 ValeroE .60 31 20.22 +.24 +8.3 q 41.79 +.09 KimbClk 2.96 18 79.00 +.71 +7.4 Weyerhsr NeoStem dd .41 +.03 VangEmg .17 8 7.73 +.11 -2.9 16 46.07 -.83 Kroger .46 24 23.01 -.11 -5.0 Xerox NetApp 24 37.99 -.43 VeriFone ... ... 6.15 -.18 -38.3 .56 22 30.79 -.30 +21.3 YRC rs Netflix 24 73.45 +.31 VerizonCm 44 40.53 +.27 Lowes 43 58.12 +20.71 McDnlds 2.80 18 95.51 -.36 -4.8 Yahoo ... 17 15.35 +.20 -4.8 NY CmtyB 12 13.06 +.16 VertxPh ViacomB 14 47.95 -.30 NewellRub 39 18.64 +.08 VirgnMda h ... 22.48 -.18 NewmtM 12 46.14 -.02 21 118.51 +.72 NewsCpA 15 19.40 +.22 Visa dd 23.58 +.45 NewsCpB 18 19.68 +.19 Vivus Vodafone ... 27.99 +.20 Nexen g ... 17.37 -.48 dd 41.47 +.10 MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) NextEraEn 13 64.14 +.57 VulcanM AINERS ($2 OR MORE) OSERS ($2 OR MORE) ... 16.85 +.22 NobleCorp 27 36.27 -.30 WPX En n Name Vol (00) Last Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg 11 33.57 -.08 NokiaCp ... 3.21 +.06 Walgrn 13 64.29 -.09 BkofAm NorthropG 8 61.78 -.12 WalterEn 1609301 7.96 +.22 ET2xNGIn 13.02 +5.60 +75.4 PetMed 11.07 -2.69 -19.5 32 21.71 +.16 S&P500ETF 1127425 137.10 +.10 VertxPh NStarRlt dd 5.54 -.01 WarnerCh 58.12 +20.71 +55.4 CognizTech 56.30 -13.36 -19.2 17 34.01 +.04 AmIntlGrp 1007428 31.84 -.99 Insmed NovaGld g ... 5.67 -.11 WsteMInc 4.10 +1.40 +51.9 BroadSoft 33.16 -7.74 -18.9 WeathfIntl 41 13.81 +.02 NuanceCm 52 23.69 +.15 SiriusXM 915318 2.17 +.01 GTSI 7.72 +2.48 +47.3 ThomCrk g 4.64 -.89 -16.1 9 66.60 +.34 Nucor 15 37.55 -.28 WellPoint SPDR Fncl 815765 15.19 +.09 IncOpR 2.32 +.72 +44.9 BttmlnT 19.03 -3.47 -15.4 9 39.15 +.27 Nvidia 13 12.47 +.21 WDigital 473750 30.65 -.33 SumFWV 6.11 +1.40 +29.7 TravelCtrs 5.16 -.94 -15.4 WstnUnion 9 17.60 -.10 Microsoft OCharleys dd 9.84 461572 79.30 +.21 CascdeBcp 6.04 +1.33 +28.2 TempurP 48.29 -8.42 -14.8 18 33.16 +.46 iShR2K OasisPet 88 29.86 -.34 WmsCos 23.95 -4.14 -14.7 36 11.40 +.07 PwShs QQQ 459466 64.76 +.06 ClearSign n 9.39 +1.95 +26.2 Konami OcciPet 11 87.70 -.18 Windstrm iShEMkts 423632 41.51 +.15 NN Inc 9.35 +1.90 +25.5 TutorPerini 12.32 -2.09 -14.5 q 17.66 +.41 OfficeDpt 6 2.47 +.02 WT India 370998 27.76 -.14 Edenor 2.77 +.53 +23.7 WSB Hldgs 3.00 -.50 -14.3 Wyndham 18 51.41 +.26 Intel OfficeMax 12 4.40 26 125.19 -2.21 OnSmcnd cc 8.14 -.08 Wynn dd 21.22 +.08 Oracle 15 27.92 -.49 XL Grp YSE IARY ASDA IARY 18 33.92 -.14 OrientEH dd 9.91 -.23 Xilinx 1,651 Total issues 3,160 Advanced 1,367 Total issues 2,627 14 13.84 -.28 Advanced PMC Sra dd 6.62 -.05 Yamana g 1,376 New Highs 60 Declined 1,119 New Highs 55 ... 22.57 -.78 Declined PPG 15 106.90 +1.23 Yandex n Unchanged 133 New Lows 53 Unchanged 141 New Lows 75 PPL Corp 10 27.37 +.02 YumBrnds 23 72.38 +1.23 Volume 3,430,836,386 dd 8.34 +.01 PatriotCoal dd 5.38 +.05 Zynga n Volume 1,694,455,044

Today

Fossil earnings

17 10 17 11 8 21 cc 16 ... 9 7 18 cc 10 dd 16 9 dd 34 ... 15 2 20 16 12 ... ... 10 18 10 13 8 8 15 dd 20 13 8 5 cc 21 21 cc dd dd 12 11

$125.77 FOSL $150 Demand for watches, handbags $91.70 and other apparel has trans120 lated into strong sales gains for 90 Fossil. ’12 The retailer’s revenue 60 increased 27 percent in 2011, est. while earnings grew 16 percent. Operating $0.86 $0.92 EPS Did Fossil’s good fortune continue into this year? Wall 1Q ’11 1Q ’12 Street thinks so. The company’s first-quarter Price-to-earnings ratio: 27 results out today are expected based on past 12 months’ results to show earnings and sales improved from a year earlier. Source: FactSet

Eric M Rutledge, AAMS Financial Advisor

1500 Harper Road Suite 1 Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-1409

Brian S Langley

Financial Advisor

605 Foote Street Corinth, MS 38834 662-287-4471

Losing Lipitor

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MARKET SUMMARY G

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D

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

YOUR FUNDS YTD Name NAV Chg %Rtn American Beacon LgCpVlInv 19.52 +0.02 +10.7 LgCpVlIs 20.58 +0.03 +10.8 American Cent EqIncInv 7.59 +0.01 +4.7 GrowthInv 27.74 -0.03 +12.9 InfAdjI 13.11 ... +2.9 UltraInv 25.56 ... +11.5 ValueInv 6.04 +0.01 +7.0 American Funds AMCAPA m 20.65 -0.01 +9.7 BalA m 19.45 ... +7.3 BondA m 12.77 ... +2.7 CapIncBuA m 51.28 +0.03 +5.2 CapWldBdA m21.13 ... +3.9 CpWldGrIA m 34.74 +0.06 +8.6 EurPacGrA m 38.53 +0.17 +9.6 FnInvA m 38.26 ... +8.5 GrthAmA m 31.99 +0.03 +11.3 HiIncA m 11.10 ... +6.8 IncAmerA m 17.37 +0.01 +4.6 IntBdAmA m 13.72 ... +1.3 IntlGrInA m 28.86 +0.11 +5.6 InvCoAmA m 29.29 ... +8.6 MutualA m 27.34 -0.01 +6.3 NewEconA m 27.19 +0.03 +14.3 NewPerspA m 29.10 +0.06 +11.2 NwWrldA m 50.98 +0.13 +10.5 SmCpWldA m 37.94 +0.04 +14.3 TaxEBdAmA m12.90 +0.01 +4.4 USGovSecA m14.47 ... +0.8 WAMutInvA m 30.12 ... +6.6 Aquila ChTxFKYA m 10.97 +0.01 +2.4 Artisan Intl d 22.46 +0.01 +13.3 IntlVal d 27.01 +0.08 +7.7 MdCpVal 20.69 -0.04 +5.0 MidCap 38.80 -0.14 +17.8 Baron Growth b 54.97 +0.03 +7.8 Bernstein DiversMui 14.88 +0.01 +1.5 IntDur 13.98 -0.01 +1.8 TxMIntl 13.26 +0.05 +6.3 BlackRock Engy&ResA m 29.93 -0.14 -7.2 EqDivA m 19.29 ... +6.8 EqDivI 19.33 ... +6.8 GlobAlcA m 19.10 +0.02 +5.2 GlobAlcC m 17.75 +0.01 +4.8 GlobAlcI 19.20 +0.02 +5.3 Calamos GrowA m 51.50 -0.29 +11.0 Cohen & Steers Realty 68.92 +0.40 +13.9 Columbia AcornA m 29.70 -0.03 +11.5 AcornIntZ 38.83 -0.03 +13.2 AcornZ 30.76 -0.03 +11.6 DivIncZ 14.51 -0.01 +7.2 StLgCpGrZ 13.64 -0.13 +13.5 TaxEA m 14.08 +0.01 +4.6 DFA 1YrFixInI 10.34 ... +0.5 2YrGlbFII 10.13 ... +0.5 5YrGlbFII 11.14 ... +2.1 EmMkCrEqI 19.23 +0.05 +11.5 EmMktValI 28.71 +0.08 +10.6 IntSmCapI 14.94 +0.02 +10.0 RelEstScI 26.35 +0.18 +14.1 USCorEq1I 11.72 ... +9.1 USCorEq2I 11.51 +0.01 +8.9 USLgCo 10.82 +0.01 +9.6 USLgValI 20.58 +0.01 +7.9 USMicroI 14.19 +0.04 +7.3 USSmValI 25.09 +0.09 +8.3 USSmallI 22.15 +0.04 +8.0 DWS-Scudder GrIncS 17.37 -0.02 +8.3 Davis NYVentA m 35.40 +0.05 +8.9 NYVentY 35.79 +0.05 +9.0 Delaware Invest DiverIncA m 9.30 ... +2.9 Dimensional Investme IntCorEqI 9.92 +0.04 +7.3 IntlSCoI 15.19 -0.01 +9.8 IntlValuI 15.36 +0.10 +4.4 Dodge & Cox Bal 72.29 ... +8.0 Income 13.71 ... +4.0 IntlStk 31.32 +0.13 +7.1 Stock 110.58 +0.22 +9.3 DoubleLine TotRetBdN b 11.21 ... +3.9 Dreyfus Apprecia 43.18 ... +6.9 Eaton Vance LrgCpValA m 18.46 +0.02 +8.1 FMI LgCap 16.59 ... +8.8 FPA Cres d 28.02 -0.01 +4.6 NewInc m 10.66 +0.01 +0.8 Fairholme Funds Fairhome d 29.28 -0.41 +26.5 Federated StrValI 4.90 +0.02 +1.9 ToRetIs 11.48 -0.01 +3.1 Fidelity AstMgr20 13.12 ... +3.6 AstMgr50 15.91 +0.01 +6.2 Bal 19.46 +0.02 +7.4 BlChGrow 48.20 -0.02 +13.6 Canada d 51.88 +0.17 +3.5 CapApr 28.53 +0.06 +15.9 CapInc d 9.24 +0.01 +8.7 Contra 75.94 +0.12 +12.6 DiscEq 23.38 -0.04 +8.7 DivGrow 28.77 -0.02 +11.2 DivrIntl d 27.83 +0.03 +9.1 EqInc 44.29 +0.01 +7.8 EqInc II 18.68 ... +7.9 FF2015 11.58 +0.01 +5.9 FF2035 11.41 ... +8.2 FF2040 7.95 +0.01 +8.2 Fidelity 34.57 +0.12 +11.0 FltRtHiIn d 9.85 -0.01 +3.3 Free2010 13.82 +0.01 +5.8 Free2020 13.98 ... +6.6 Free2025 11.58 +0.01 +7.4 Free2030 13.78 +0.01 +7.6 GNMA 11.92 +0.01 +1.6 GovtInc 10.81 ... +0.9 GrowCo 93.84 +0.01 +16.0 GrowInc 20.05 +0.03 +10.3 HiInc d 9.10 ... +7.5 Indepndnc 24.67 +0.13 +13.9 IntBond 11.00 ... +2.0 IntMuniInc d 10.61 +0.01 +2.6 IntlDisc d 30.06 ... +8.9 InvGrdBd 7.83 -0.01 +2.5 LatinAm d 52.35 +0.44 +7.1 LowPriStk d 39.31 -0.03 +10.0 Magellan 70.33 +0.05 +11.9 MidCap d 29.23 +0.03 +9.6 MuniInc d 13.38 +0.01 +4.0 NewMktIn d 16.79 -0.02 +8.2 OTC 58.57 +0.19 +7.1 Puritan 19.13 +0.01 +8.6 RealInv d 31.74 +0.24 +15.2 Series100Idx 9.69 +0.01 +9.9 ShIntMu d 10.87 ... +1.2 ShTmBond 8.55 ... +1.1 StratInc 11.17 ... +4.9 Tel&Util 17.74 +0.05 +2.8 TotalBd 11.10 -0.01 +2.8 USBdIdx 11.87 ... +1.7 USBdIdxInv 11.87 -0.01 +1.7 Value 70.06 +0.08 +10.4 Fidelity Advisor NewInsA m 22.14 +0.03 +12.3 NewInsI 22.43 +0.04 +12.4 StratIncA m 12.48 ... +4.9 Fidelity Spartan 500IdxAdvtg 48.60 +0.02 +9.6 500IdxInstl 48.61 +0.02 +9.6 500IdxInv 48.60 +0.02 +9.6 ExtMktIdAg d 38.81 +0.08 +10.7 IntlIdxAdg d 31.65 +0.10 +6.4 TotMktIdAg d 39.55 +0.03 +9.8 First Eagle GlbA m 47.44 -0.11 +5.1 OverseasA m 21.39 -0.13 +5.1 Forum AbStratI 11.11 ... +0.5 FrankTemp-Frank Fed TF A m 12.53 +0.02 +4.5 FrankTemp-Franklin CA TF A m 7.41 +0.02 +5.7 Growth A m 48.96 +0.07 +9.7

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‘John Carter’ effect?

Tenet Healthcare’s 1Q

Walt Disney reports results for the January-March quarter today. What impact will “John Carter� have? The media giant estimated that the box-office disappointment would translate into an $80 million to $120 million loss at its movie studio for the quarter. But Wall Street expects Disney’s profit and revenue improved, reflecting better results at its other businesses.

A year ago, Tenet Healthcare was trying to fend off a takeover bid from a rival hospital operator. Tenet prevailed, and has seen its patient admissions — a key source of potential revenue — rise over the past year. The company reports first-quarter results today. It's coming off a quarterly loss in fourth quarter of 2011.

$7

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TotRetInv d 13.36 ... Russell StratBdS 11.18 ... Schwab 1000Inv d 38.82 +0.03 S&P500Sel d 21.45 +0.01 Scout Interntl d 30.73 +0.05 Selected American D 42.93 +0.03 Sequoia Sequoia 159.85 +0.67 T Rowe Price Balanced 20.28 ... BlChpGr 44.82 ... CapApprec 22.17 ... EmMktBd d 13.53 ... EmMktStk d 31.06 -0.15 EqIndex d 36.96 +0.01 EqtyInc 24.81 ... GrowStk 36.96 ... HealthSci 38.24 ... HiYield d 6.79 ... InsLgCpGr d 18.52 ... IntlBnd d 9.95 ... IntlGrInc d 12.26 +0.04 IntlStk d 13.47 ... LatinAm d 40.70 +0.27 MidCapVa 23.13 ... MidCpGr 58.20 ... NewAsia d 15.69 -0.15 NewEra 42.24 ... NewHoriz 34.90 ... NewIncome 9.80 ... OrseaStk d 7.88 +0.02 R2015 12.45 ... R2025 12.61 ... R2035 12.80 ... Rtmt2010 16.02 ... Rtmt2020 17.22 ... Rtmt2030 18.10 ... Rtmt2040 18.21 ... ShTmBond 4.85 ... SmCpStk 34.49 ... SmCpVal d 37.00 ... SpecGrow 18.66 ... SpecInc 12.71 ... Value 24.38 ... TCW TotRetBdI 9.89 ... Templeton InFEqSeS 17.78 -0.02 Thornburg IncBldC m 18.35 -0.01 IntlValA m 25.84 -0.16 IntlValI d 26.42 -0.17 Tweedy, Browne GlobVal d 23.46 -0.01 USAA Income 13.30 ... VALIC Co I StockIdx 25.56 +0.01 Vanguard 500Adml 126.39 +0.05 500Inv 126.38 +0.05 BalIdx 23.09 +0.01 BalIdxAdm 23.10 +0.01 BalIdxIns 23.10 +0.01 CAITAdml 11.62 +0.01 CapOpAdml d 72.66 +0.01 DevMktsIdxIP d93.54 +0.43 DivGr 16.34 ... EmMktIAdm d 34.97 +0.09 EnergyAdm d109.03 +0.09 EnergyInv d 58.07 +0.05 EqInc 23.21 -0.02 EqIncAdml 48.66 -0.03 ExplAdml 72.98 +0.01 Explr 78.41 +0.01 ExtdIdAdm 43.50 +0.09 ExtdIdIst 43.49 +0.08 FAWeUSIns d 83.50 +0.34 GNMA 11.08 ... GNMAAdml 11.08 ... GlbEq 17.52 +0.04 GrowthIdx 35.55 ... GrthIdAdm 35.55 ... GrthIstId 35.55 ... HYCor d 5.90 ... HYCorAdml d 5.90 ... HltCrAdml d 57.64 +0.22 HlthCare d 136.59 +0.50 ITBondAdm 11.93 ... ITGradeAd 10.20 -0.01 ITIGrade 10.20 -0.01 ITrsyAdml 11.69 ... InfPrtAdm 28.42 +0.01 InfPrtI 11.58 +0.01 InflaPro 14.47 +0.01 InstIdxI 125.57 +0.05 InstPlus 125.58 +0.05 InstTStPl 30.98 +0.02 IntlGr d 18.03 +0.02 IntlGrAdm d 57.37 +0.06 IntlStkIdxAdm d23.48 +0.08 IntlStkIdxI d 93.92 +0.32 IntlStkIdxIPls d93.94 +0.32 IntlVal d 28.54 +0.13 LTGradeAd 10.48 -0.01 LTInvGr 10.48 -0.01 LifeCon 16.90 +0.01 LifeGro 22.72 +0.03 LifeMod 20.34 +0.02 MidCapIdxIP 107.00 +0.11 MidCp 21.63 +0.02 MidCpAdml 98.21 +0.10 MidCpIst 21.69 +0.02 MidCpSgl 30.99 +0.03 Morg 19.78 -0.01 MorgAdml 61.34 -0.02 MuHYAdml 11.07 +0.01 MuInt 14.26 +0.01 MuIntAdml 14.26 +0.01 MuLTAdml 11.63 +0.01 MuLtd 11.18 ... MuLtdAdml 11.18 ... MuShtAdml 15.93 ... PrecMtls d 17.37 -0.07 Prmcp d 65.78 -0.08 PrmcpAdml d 68.26 -0.08 PrmcpCorI d 14.25 -0.01 REITIdxAd d 93.10 +0.64 STBond 10.65 ... STBondAdm 10.65 ... STBondSgl 10.65 ... STCor 10.77 ... STFedAdml 10.86 ... STGradeAd 10.77 ... STsryAdml 10.79 +0.01 SelValu d 19.84 +0.01 SmCapIdx 36.34 +0.05 SmCpIdAdm 36.38 +0.05 SmCpIdIst 36.38 +0.06 SmCpIndxSgnl 32.77 +0.04 Star 20.06 +0.01 StratgcEq 20.20 ... TgtRe2010 23.60 +0.02 TgtRe2015 13.03 +0.01 TgtRe2020 23.11 +0.03 TgtRe2030 22.52 +0.03 TgtRe2035 13.53 +0.02 TgtRe2040 22.22 +0.03 TgtRe2045 13.95 +0.02 TgtRetInc 11.95 ... Tgtet2025 13.14 +0.02 TotBdAdml 11.07 ... TotBdInst 11.07 ... TotBdMkInv 11.07 ... TotBdMkSig 11.07 ... TotIntl d 14.04 +0.05 TotStIAdm 34.23 +0.02 TotStIIns 34.23 +0.02 TotStISig 33.04 +0.02 TotStIdx 34.22 +0.02 TxMCapAdm 68.50 +0.02 ValIdxAdm 21.92 +0.02 ValIdxIns 21.92 +0.02 WellsI 23.72 ... WellsIAdm 57.48 ... Welltn 33.11 +0.04 WelltnAdm 57.18 +0.06 WndsIIAdm 50.04 +0.02 Wndsr 14.03 +0.02 WndsrAdml 47.35 +0.05 WndsrII 28.19 +0.01 Waddell & Reed Adv AccumA m 8.12 +0.01 SciTechA m 10.40 +0.17 Yacktman Focused d 19.62 +0.04 Yacktman d 18.40 +0.04

THC

$5.04

5 $6.27

’12

3

Operating EPS

$0.09

est.

$0.07 1Q ’11

Price-to-earnings ratio:

1Q ’12 42

based on past 12 months’ results Source: FactSet

+5.6 +3.7 +9.8 +9.6 +9.9 +8.8 +9.9 +7.5 +16.0 +7.5 +8.5 +8.9 +9.5 +8.1 +16.1 +17.3 +7.2 +14.9 +3.0 +6.4 +9.6 +4.8 +8.1 +10.4 +12.8 +0.5 +12.5 +2.3 +7.7 +7.5 +8.9 +9.8 +6.7 +8.2 +9.4 +9.9 +1.6 +10.4 +7.3 +10.7 +4.7 +8.2 +4.9 +4.3 +3.9 +7.6 +7.8 +7.4 +2.7 +9.5 +9.6 +9.6 +6.5 +6.6 +6.6 +3.4 +6.6 +6.6 +6.0 +10.5 -1.5 -1.5 +6.7 +6.8 +9.8 +9.8 +10.6 +10.6 +7.4 +1.4 +1.4 +10.1 +12.1 +12.1 +12.1 +6.1 +6.1 +6.3 +6.2 +2.9 +4.1 +4.0 +1.1 +2.8 +2.9 +2.8 +9.6 +9.6 +9.9 +10.3 +10.3 +7.5 +7.6 +7.6 +7.2 +3.9 +3.9 +4.7 +7.7 +6.2 +10.2 +10.1 +10.2 +10.2 +10.2 +13.2 +13.3 +4.7 +2.8 +2.8 +4.0 +0.9 +0.9 +0.5 -7.6 +6.5 +6.6 +5.6 +14.2 +1.0 +1.0 +1.0 +2.1 +0.8 +2.1 +0.4 +6.7 +8.9 +9.0 +9.0 +9.0 +7.1 +10.1 +5.2 +5.9 +6.5 +7.6 +8.2 +8.4 +8.4 +4.0 +7.1 +1.7 +1.8 +1.7 +1.7 +7.5 +9.8 +9.8 +9.8 +9.8 +9.9 +7.7 +7.7 +4.3 +4.3 +6.4 +6.4 +9.4 +9.9 +9.9 +9.3 +10.5 +16.7 +4.5 +5.1


8 • Daily Corinthian

3 finalists named for Ferriss Trophy Associated Press

JACKSON — Delta State pitcher Colton Mitchell, Mississippi State pitcher Chris Stratton and Mississippi second baseman Alex Yarbrough have been named the three finalists for the C Spire Ferriss Trophy, an award that goes to the top college baseball player in the state. Mitchell, a junior from Lake, Miss., has an 8-0 record and threw Delta State’s first perfect game on April 14. Stratton leads the Southeastern Conference with a 9-0 record and 2.19 ERA. The junior from Tupelo, Miss., is also second in the league with 101 strikeouts. Yarbrough has a .407 batting average this season, which ranks second in the SEC. The junior from Allen, Texas, has committed just one error this season. The Ferriss Trophy winner will be announced on May 14 at the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame.

Shorts

Sports

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Mota gets 100-game drug suspension Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — San Francisco Giants reliever Guillermo Mota was suspended for 100 games on Monday, becoming just the third major league player penalized twice for positive drug tests. The commissioner’s office said the 38-year-old righthander tested positive for Clenbuterol. In November 2006, while with the New York Mets, Mota was suspended for the first 50 games of the next season. “We won’t have Mota for a while. It is what it is, and you move on,” manager Bruce Bochy said before the Giants began a three-game series against the Dodgers. “If we get into a situation where we need a pitcher, we’re going to have to make a change. Right now we’re going with 11 pitch-

ers, and if we have to adjust, we will. We’ve got some pretty good options, we think, and Brian (Sabean) and I will continue to talk about them.” Mota’s agent Adam Katz said in a statement that the Clenbuterol was in children’s cough syrup. “Players are responsible for what they put in their bodies. Guillermo understands that,” Katz said. “A 100-game suspension for taking a children’s cough medicine that contains trace amounts of a prohibited substance, which is what happened here, is severe and unfair and does not reflect the intention of the Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. We will appeal it.” The Major League Baseball Players Association filed a grievance challenging the suspension that will be heard

by an arbitrator. Under baseball’s drug agreement, grievances for initial positive tests are heard before a suspension is announced but cases involving second or third positives are argued after the penalty is made public. Outfielder Manny Ramirez and catcher Eliezer Alfonzo are the only previous players to twice test positive. No player has tested positive a third time, which would result in a lifetime ban. Alfonzo was suspended for 50 games in 2008 while with San Francisco and for 100 games last September while with Colorado. By the time Mota’s suspension is over, the Giants will have 34 games left on the schedule. Mota was 0-1 with a 5.06 ERA in nine games for the Giants this year. This is his 14th season in the majors. He has

been a setup man and middle reliever throughout his career. He is 39-45 with 10 saves in 726 games while playing with Montreal, the Los Angeles Dodgers, Florida, Cleveland, the New York Mets, Milwaukee and San Francisco. “I don’t much about what happened. But we lost a guy and he’s done for a while, so losing him is a big blow,” pitching coach Dave Righetti said. “He’s always been ready to pitch, and he’s been effective whether he’s a long guy or a short guy. Sometimes we’ve used him in the seventh, sometimes to finish a game. So we have a lot of confidence in him. He brings a veteran presence that comes to work every day ready to go, and he shows these guys how to work. That’s the reason we keep bringing him back.”

Senior Legion tryouts The Corinth Senior Legion baseball team will be holding tryouts on Saturday at 9:00 a.m. at Crossroads Regional Park. For more information contact Dale Bain (286-0685), Alan Wood (6643000) or Kevin Williams (415-3657). Also, if your team is still the playoffs and you can’t make the tryout, contact one of the coaches.

Golf tournaments The 8th Annual Wayne Mills Memorial Golf Tournament will be held May 19-20 at Hillandale Country Club. Entry fee for the two-man scramble is $210 and includes mulligans at one per person per day. Carts are available at $10 per person per day. Prizes awarded for topthree finishers in each flight, closest to the pin on par 3s and longest drive on No. 4. For more information, call Jim or Lisa Walker at 396-1094 or 284-8447, or the Pro Shop at 286-8020. ■ The Golf to End Hunger Tournament will be held June 2 at Shiloh Falls Golf Club. Entry fee for the 4-person scramble, which includes lunch, is $60 per person or $240 a team. Participants can also enter putting and/or power drive contests. Sponsorship opportunities are available. To register or donate contact Shiloh Falls at 731-689-5050 or 731-607-9448, or visit www.ourdailybreadministries.org

Softball/Volleyball Any youth interested in playing softball or volleyball can show up at Biggersville First Baptist Church and play starting May 7. Action will be every other Monday night at the church. For more info contact pastor Keith Fields at 662-2877807.

Cross country meeting All students along with their parents interested in running on the Corinth High School Cross Country team should attend a 6:30 p.m. meeting on May 10 at the CHS Auditorium.

Softball tournament The 18th Annual Coca-Cola Classic Women’s Tournament, an ASA sanctioned event, will be held Saturday, May 12 at Crossroads Regional Park. Entry fee is $150 and field is limited to 14 teams. One hour time limit and unlimited home runs. Deadline is May 7. For more info call Jerome West (423-2235) or J.C. Hill (293-0290).

Basketball camps A junior high basketball team camp for boys and girls will be held May 29June 1 at McNairy Central. Cost is $230 for eight games or $30 per game. A high school basketball team camp for boys and girls will be held May 29-31 at McNairy Central High. Cost is $40 per game. Call Jerry Lott 731-645-7673 or Steve Forsythe 731-610-7974 for more information.

Mango Madness 5K The 2nd Annual Mango Madness 5K is set for Saturday, May 19 at 8 a.m. at the cross country course on Droke Road across from Corinth Elementary. Entry fee is $12 by May 12 and $15 after. Over 100 awards and great T-shirt will be awarded. For more info or a entry form call 287-0766 or email lmangus1941@ att.net

Summer bowling Summer Leagues are now forming at Plaza Bowling Lanes. Monday night is a league for adult and youth. Tuesday night is a league for ladies only. Thursday night is for men and women. Join a summer league and find out why over 70 million people make bowling the number one participating sport in America.

Photo by H. Lee Smith II

Coke Cool Down Zamzam Sangau visited a cooling station after winning the female title during Saturday’s 31st Corinth Coca-Cola Classic 10K. For results by age group see Pages 9-10.

Vilma, others fight suspensions in bounty case Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — Saints linebacker Jonathan Vilma and three other players suspended in the NFL’s investigation of New Orleans’ cash-forhits bounty system challenged their punishments Monday. Vilma, named by the NFL as a ringleader of the operation, appealed his season-long suspension while the NFL Players Association notified the league it was reserving the appeal rights of Saints defensive end Will Smith and those of exSaints Anthony Hargrove and Scott Fujita.

All four players and the union argue that no appeal should be heard before NFLPA grievances are resolved questioning NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell’s authority to discipline the players and to hear their appeals. Vilma’s appeal also states the NFL has not presented any evidence linking him to a system in which players were paid to injure opponents. It asks the league to provide a range of documentation, including witness statements and the names of those witnesses. Vilma received the harshest

of the suspensions, followed by Hargrove (eight games) Smith (four games) and Fujita (three games). Hargrove now is with Green Bay. Fujita, a member of the NFLPA’s executive committee who has played for Cleveland since 2010, made his first public statement since all four suspensions were handed down last Wednesday. Like Vilma and Smith before him, Fujita denied involvement in a “bounty pool” and challenged the league’s findings. “I disagree wholeheartedly with the discipline imposed,”

Fujita said in a statement emailed to The Associated Press. “I’ve yet to hear the specifics of any allegation against me, nor have I seen any evidence that supports what the NFL alleges. “I look forward to the opportunity to confront what evidence they claim to have in the appropriate forum,” Fujita continued. “I have never contributed money to any socalled ‘bounty’ pool, and any statements to the contrary are false. To say I’m disappointed with the League would be a huge understatement.”

John Marinatto resigns as Big East commissioner Associated Press

STORRS, Conn. — Big East Commissioner John Marinatto resigned Monday after less than three years on the job, admitting he was drained by several high-profile defections and mounting pressure from school presidents upset with the departures. Pittsburgh and Syracuse made plans to leave for the Atlantic Coast Conference in September, and West Virginia bolted for the Big 12 the following month. The Big East

regrouped by adding Central Florida, Houston, Memphis, SMU and Temple for all sports and Boise State, San Diego State and Navy for football only. Marinatto told The Associated Press on Monday that trying to guide the conference through realignment took a physical and mental toll on him. He said he began talking to the conference presidents in mid-April about stepping down. “I’ve been running a marathon not only for the last eight

months but for the last 2 1/2 years,” he said. “As fulfilling as it can be, it is equally draining. All the assets are in place right now (in the Big East). It’s probably time for a commercialized kind of perspective. Clearly the collegiate model is dead.” Marinatto became the third commissioner of the Big East on July 1, 2009. He had served as the conference’s senior associate commissioner since 2002 and spent 14 years as the athletic director at Providence College.

“John helped build the Big East into what it is today, and played a critical role in our successful expansion efforts, and for all of that we thank him,” said Judy Genshaft, President of the University of South Florida and the chair of the conference. But privately, many in the conference were unhappy by the defections of Pitt and Syracuse, and some blamed Marinatto for being caught off guard, having just turned down a television contract offer from ESPN last spring.


Tuesday, May 8, 2012

9 • Daily Corinthian

Corinth Coca-Cola Classic 10K: Age Group Results Female 5-8 # Name 1 Leah Johnson 2 Pierce Peterson 3 Eva Null 4 Leah Montgomery 5 Laurie Rushing 6 Sarah Lancaster 7 Katherine Harrison 8 Alaina Parker 9 Grace Mansel 10 MacKenzie Malone

OA 779 840 860 864 973 985 1072 1075 1087 1121

Age 8 6 6 7 6 7 6 8 8 8

Time 1:18:41 1:21:39 1:23:35 1:23:57 1:32:47 1:33:40 1:42:43 1:42:55 1:44:35 1:49:34

City Saltillo Corinth Walnut Pontotoc Corinth Corinth Walnut Corinth Corinth Corinth

Male 5-8 # 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Name Scott Harville Luke Tucker Sean O'Connell Wesley Little Will Steward Alex Rose Jaxon Derryberry John Orman Jr. Archer Doran

OA 413 518 519 520 909 924 1048 1138

Age 8 8 8 7 7 8 7 5 6

Time 1:00:53 1:05:50 1:05:53 1:05:58 1:27:20 1:28:56 1:40:28 1:50:10 1:51:24

City Glen Corinth Corinth Hueytown Rienzi Corinth Ramer Corinth Glen

Female 9-11 # Name 1 Mycah Sanders 2 Macy Moore 3 Ava Newhouse 4 Emma Williams 5 Kate Bailey 6 Sarah O'Conner 7 Trinity Heavener 8 Molly Johnson 9 Jordan Gates 10 Caroline Grisham 11 Carolyn Meeks 12 Carley Clement 13 Paige Morris 14 Grace Davis 15 Della Rhodes 16 Hannah Johnson 17 Amy Huang 18 Delaney Steward 19 Tayra Franco 20 Macy Butler

OA 315 453 465 575 576 577 700 805 823 831 899 900 907 919 1023 1025 1076 1079 1088 1096

Age 10 11 10 10 10 10 10 10 9 9 9 10 9 10 11 11 9 10 10 11

Time 57:12 1:02:51 1:03:23 1:07:55 1:07:56 1:07:56 1:13:32 1:20:00 1:21:00 1:21:12 1:26:40 1:26:40 1:27:14 1:28:44 1:37:17 1:37:39 1:43:08 1:43:10 1:44:40 1:45:40

City Belden Corinth Memphis Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Ramer Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Rienzi Corinth Corinth

Male 9-11 # Name 1 Brandon Newell 2 Macain Chunn 3 David Ahlmeyer 4 Daniel Laudadio 5 Rosley Smith 6 Charlie Meeks 7 Davis Brawner 8 Michael Baugus 9 Cameron Cummings 10 Alex Rowland 11 Justin Villaflor 12 Payne Sleeper 13 Christopher Moore 14 Will Wayne 15 Carson Mims 16 Frank Archer Davis 17 Braxton Hall 18 Kyle Patterson 19 Chip Peters 20 Brayden Buckner 21 Nolan Grady 22 William Wright 23 Logan Young 24 Ethan Maupin 25 Tripp Doran 26 Benjamin Rose 27 Noah Newhouse 28 Nicholas Frye 29 Grantley Grad 30 Jackson Mills 31 William Little 32 Parker Campbell

OA 88 99 167 204 214 261 285 346 352 425 447 546 606 651 690 704 763 772 800 802 845 876 883 905 912 920 1000 1080 1097 1126 1127 1140

Age 11 11 11 9 11 11 10 11 11 11 11 10 9 9 11 9 9 10 9 9 10 11 11 11 10 11 9 10 11 11 10 9

Time 46:38 47:21 50:52 52:37 52:56 55:14 56:24 58:28 58:40 1:01:18 1:02:44 1:06:56 1:08:55 1:11:16 1:13:00 1:14:17 1:18:12 1:18:30 1:19:52 1:19:52 1:22:08 1:25:15 1:25:49 1:27:04 1:28:12 1:28:46 1:34:40 1:43:11 1:45:51 1:49:43 1:49:44 1:51:31

City Blue Mountain Blue Springs Corinth Walnut Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Batesville Walnut Corinth Corinth Tuscumbia Corinth Tupelo Corinth Rienzi Saltillo Tuscumbia Tuscumbia Corinth Rienzi Ramer Corinth Glen Corinth Memphis Corinth Corinth Corinth Hueytown Glen

Female 12-14 # Name 1 KK McCarley 2 Kendra Sanders 3 Martha Chunn 4 Anna Price 5 Yvette Evans 6 Hannah Rogers 7 Sarah Duley 8 Eryn Sanders 9 Hannah Holland 10 Jacie Hudson 11 Oaklea Ragan 12 Hollie Wood 13 Kara Holden 14 Leslie Howe 15 Courtney Fiscus 16 Sarah Fiscus 17 Erin Prester 18 Hannah Duley 19 Parker Peterson 20 Hannah Harrison 21 Maggie Reeder 22 Allie Ray 23 Amber Lozada 24 Annagrace Thompson 25 Lily Null 26 Kirsten McAfee 27 Taylor Heavener 28 Trudy Berryman 29 Lora Lee Williams

OA 126 170 200 215 223 358 373 381 392 414 443 445 449 531 698 719 732 780 789 799 814 820 880 881 882 888 927 936 937

Age 14 13 14 14 12 13 12 12 13 13 13 12 14 14 13 12 14 13 14 14 14 14 13 12 12 14 14 14 14

Time 48:48 51:00 52:29 52:59 53:26 58:52 59:17 59:38 59:59 1:00:54 1:02:25 1:02:36 1:02:46 1:06:15 1:13:21 1:15:13 1:15:58 1:18:41 1:19:12 1:19:45 1:20:22 1:20:50 1:25:43 1:25:43 1:25:43 1:25:55 1:29:02 1:29:36 1:29:36

City Vicksburg Belden Blue Springs Corinth Corinth Corinth New Albany Belden Savannah Corinth Corinth Corinth Collierville Tupelo Tuscumbia Tuscumbia Brighton New Albany Corinth Walnut Tupelo Ramer Corinth Corinth Corinth Blue Mtn Corinth Ramer Ramer

30 Taylor Frye 31 Monica Cash 32 Savannah Newhouse 33 Anna Schnabl 34 Brooke Southern 35 Emily Southern 36 Madison Mayhall 37 Isabella Harrison 38 M'Adele Little 39 Olivia Dilworth 40 Tess Campbell 41 Stephanie Jones 42 Avery Little

949 951 970 995 1003 1004 1005 1073 1095 1113 1131 1155 1156

13 14 12 12 13 12 13 12 12 12 13 14 14

1:30:13 1:30:30 1:32:35 1:34:08 1:35:13 1:35:17 1:35:17 1:42:44 1:45:35 1:48:10 1:50:12 1:54:11 1:54:12

Corinth Corinth Memphis Corinth Michie Corinth Corinth Walnut Iuka Corinth Glen Corinth Corinth

Male 12-14 # Name 1 Jordan Mills 2 Ken Gassaway 3 Will Crigger 4 Dennis Dilworth II 5 Zach Shawl 6 Clay Johnson 7 David Craft 8 Nathan Fiscus 9 Hunter Murphy 10 Cole Long 11 Luke Holley 12 Nicholas Godwin 13 Peyton Ewoldt 14 Brady Patrick 15 Sam Holt 16 Manuel Franco 17 Colin Bonds 18 Evan Stripling 19 Davis Burns 20 Braddock Brawner III 21 Lakota Hal 22 Mark Chunn 23 John Witt Mercier 24 Rhett Robinson 25 Joshua McClurg 26 Parker Mims 27 Carter Chandler 28 Spencer Lee 29 Trace Johnson 30 Garrett Mills 31 Preston Snyde 32 Trase Jester 33 Lane Young 34 Caleb Smith 35 Jack Gilmore 36 Christopher Morales 37 Matthew Taylor 38 Zack Cash 39 Nicholas Haley 40 Brendan Carter 41 Riley Floyd 42 Alec McAfee 43 Tyler Hanks 44 Ben Moore 45 Bailey Butler 46 Noah Haley 47 James Shea 48 Bailey Martin 49 X'Zavius Prather 50 Jackson Strickland 51 Matt Watson 52 Skyler Wilbanks 53 Austin Digby 54 Jaden Derryberry 55 Morgan Toomer 56 Levi Seals 57 William Davis III 58 Jackson Bailey 59 Graham Brose 60 Landon McAfee 61 J.B. Fowler 62 Benjamin Thomas 63 John Harrison

OA 36 41 69 72 73 98 111 129 130 153 160 169 185 202 219 231 266 275 301 303 307 310 313 335 344 384 404 417 419 420 421 469 470 477 491 495 578 583 592 597 609 610 612 614 640 641 769 773 782 811 847 868 872 887 903 910 957 992 1085 1115 1132 1149 1166

Age 14 14 14 14 14 13 13 14 13 14 14 14 13 14 12 12 13 13 12 12 12 12 13 12 12 13 12 13 14 12 13 13 12 14 13 13 13 12 13 13 14 12 14 14 14 13 14 13 14 12 14 14 14 12 12 12 12 12 14 13 13 14 13

Time 41:10 41:43 44:37 44:46 44:49 47:17 48:03 49:10 49:11 50:09 50:27 51:00 51:54 52:36 53:19 53:39 55:35 55:57 56:51 56:54 56:59 57:05 57:08 58:00 58:22 59:44 1:00:34 1:01:00 1:01:10 1:01:10 1:01:12 1:03:39 1:03:42 1:04:05 1:04:41 1:04:49 1:07:58 1:08:13 1:08:34 1:08:42 1:09:15 1:09:22 1:09:26 1:09:27 1:10:49 1:10:50 1:18:23 1:18:34 1:18:49 1:20:12 1:22:23 1:24:18 1:24:59 1:25:53 1:26:44 1:27:31 1:31:15 1:33:57 1:43:49 1:48:25 1:50:14 1:52:37 1:58:37

City Corinth Tupelo Corinth Corinth Corinth Saltillo Sheffield Tuscumbia Corinth Saltillo Corinth Rienzi Savannah Iuka Corinth Corinth Iuka Iuka Corinth Corinth Rienzi Blue Springs Corinth Corinth Corinth Tupelo Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Selmer Ramer Glen Shannon Tupelo Pocahontas Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Blue Mtn Selmer Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Michie Corinth Corinth Ramer Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Guys Glen Corinth Walnut

OA 75 77 121 154 195 218 235 255 320 342 356 462 473 532 540 542 552 681 720 740 797 859 911 926 1040 1077 1092 1104 1108 1123 1124 1125 1135 1144 1158

Age 19 15 17 19 17 18 19 16 18 17 15 15 17 16 18 18 19 16 15 15 18 16 15 17 16 18 16 18 15 16 15 15 18 18 16

Time 45:01 45:23 48:43 50:15 52:22 53:12 53:51 55:05 57:24 58:19 58:49 1:03:14 1:03:52 1:06:16 1:06:45 1:06:54 1:07:08 1:12:31 1:15:16 1:16:35 1:19:40 1:23:33 1:27:33 1:29:01 1:39:57 1:43:09 1:45:19 1:46:24 1:47:01 1:49:40 1:49:40 1:49:41 1:50:33 1:52:13 1:54:35

1164

16

1:58:28

Iuka

Male 15-19 # Name OA 1 Lucas Peiser 16 2 Brayden Timmons 20 3 Jose Valle 26 4 Christian Lawton 30 5 Drew Kerby 31 6 Cameron Wilbanks 33 7 Claudius Waterton 47 8 Brian McDonnieal 60 9 Kaleb Digby 86 10 Bryan Cook 104 11 BJ Dickey 192 12 Stanley Pearce 194 13 Jesus Rodriguez 208 14 Davis Shoulders 245 15 Kody Mask 252 16 John Dodd 259 17 Matthew Killough 274 18 Brian McCaliseter 276 19 Marshall Adams 277 20 Alex Lingelbach 380 21 Kyle Denton 397 22 Timothy Larue 427 23 Landers Pannell 440 24 Alex Tull 503 25 Jonmark Gardner 506 26 Reid Burns 512 27 Karl Trace 551 28 Brandon Strickland 691 29 Matthew Vandevander 693 30 Jake Garrett 723 31 Andy Lunsford 775 32 Jordan Woodruff 803 33 Robert Parker 922 34 Denzel Toomer 1142

Age 19 16 18 16 18 17 17 19 17 19 16 15 19 19 18 18 15 16 19 15 16 18 16 15 15 15 18 18 16 17 15 19 15 16

Time 37:32 39:08 40:13 40:44 40:52 41:01 42:07 43:45 46:21 47:42 52:13 52:20 52:43 54:14 54:52 55:07 55:55 55:58 56:07 59:37 1:00:18 1:01:21 1:02:05 1:05:08 1:05:13 1:05:27 1:07:07 1:13:01 1:13:10 1:15:28 1:18:37 1:19:56 1:28:53 1:51:50

City Fayetteville Pontotoc Blue Springs Florence Corinth Corinth Memphis Corinth Corinth Myrtle Selmer Corinth Belmont Maryville Ramer Kossuth Shannon Corinth McEwen Counce New Albany Savannah Tupelo Corinth Corinth Cortinth Booneville Corinth Bolivar Booneville Savannah Corinth Corinth Corinth

Female 20-24 # Name 1 Allison Martin 2 Ivy Price 3 Hannah Leach 4 Allison Rogers 5 Meredith Shepard 6 Amanda Lane 7 Katherine Beckett 8 Suzanne Ford 9 Sara Tucker 10 Lane Maxcy 11 Robin Franks 12 Annie Goodwin 13 Rachael Turner 14 Lindsey Doxtate 15 Megan Tippett 16 Mallory Stutts 17 Jennifer Keenum 18 Lizzy Gilbert 19 Trellany Rickman 20 Bethany Rowsey 21 Lindsey Taylor 22 Mary Dickey 23 Ashton Glover 24 Rachel Looser 25 Valerie Wender 26 Heather Serio 27 Molly Young 28 Brittany Garvin 29 Brittany Berryman 30 Chappell Ford 31 Tasha Carroll 32 Samantha Jordan 33 Coral Brimingham

OA 57 94 133 211 221 253 265 385 431 441 444 458 536 543 647 684 717 752 759 790 804 810 828 829 832 851 929 983 997 1020 1070 1091 1106

Age 20 22 23 21 22 22 24 23 22 23 21 22 21 24 22 22 24 21 23 23 20 23 22 23 22 23 24 21 23 23 23 23 24

Time 43:20 47:07 49:15 52:54 53:20 54:58 55:34 59:45 1:01:26 1:02:07 1:02:32 1:03:07 1:06:27 1:06:54 1:11:08 1:12:38 1:15:07 1:17:36 1:18:06 1:19:13 1:19:57 1:20:09 1:21:08 1:21:08 1:21:12 1:23:03 1:29:20 1:33:32 1:34:20 1:37:12 1:42:40 1:45:08 1:46:59

City Jackson Corinth Newville Henderson Henderson Tupelo Florence Booneville Henderson Amory Starkville Belden Sugar Land Corinth Henderson Ramer Muscle Shoals Henderson Stantonville Selmer Corinth Memphis Iuka Muscle Shoals Leighton Corinth Corinth Corinth Iuka Corinth Corinth Tishomingo Booneville

Male 20-24

Female 15-19 # Name 1 Kelsea Hendrix 2 Brynn Holden 3 Jessie Groch 4 Kacie Harris 5 Olivia Johnson 6 Nikki Taylor 7 Carlie McGrew 8 Molly Warren 9 Aimee Walker 10 Mary Wayne 11 Sierra Maness 12 Amanda Blair 13 Abby Null 14 Margaret Chunn 15 Tage Philamlee 16 Emilee Holder 17 Callie McGrew 18 Vanessa Proctor 19 Taylor Bordeleau 20 Kaeleigh Wren 21 Abby Dickey 22 Leslie Gunter 23 Jennifer Southern 24 Baylie McAfee 25 Cayla Redmon 26 Anna Barbe 27 Trystan Hamilton 28 Mary Sharkey 29 Jacey Borden 30 Lucy Berryman 31 Christa Sides 32 Maggie Whitaker 33 Elle Malone 34 Shawnee Jones 35 Tori Smith

36 Laken Jones

City Glen Collierville Florence Tupelo Saltillo Booneville Booneville Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Blue Springs Red Bay Saltillo Booneville Olive Branch Glen Saltillo Adamsville Tupelo Corinth Guys Selmer Baldwyn Iuka Walnut Iuka Ramer Ramer Ramer Corinth Corinth Selmer

# Name OA 1 Drew Kellum 8 2 John Epting 10 3 Will Napier 25 4 Andy McElyea 39 5 Colby Phillips 61 6 Chris Tucker 71 7 James Taylo 79 8 Bobby Locke 82 9 Evan Blair 84 10 Charles Smothers 87 11 Tim Chism 105 12 Joshua Walden 106 13 Paden Buckley 125 14 Cory Holbin 159 15 Robert Merritt 163 16 Carlos Vargas 186 17 Chris Windsor 220 18 Zachary Trace 234 19 Nicolas Laudadio 236 20 Phillip Collins 243 21 Thomas Massengill 249 22 Mark McEwen 257 23 Tim Stevens 284 24 Brad Young 288 25 Zeb Taylor 289 26 Nick Holder 376 27 Benjamin Ford 378 28 Will Riley 415 29 Joseph Jackson 463 30 John Milender 521 31 Creighton Nelms 560 32 Humberto Albarran 586 33 Richard Davis 725 34 Jaime Samudio 966 35 Michael Mathis 1049

Age 23 22 20 20 21 22 21 23 20 24 20 24 24 24 24 20 22 20 20 23 22 21 20 22 22 21 21 21 21 24 22 24 21 20 23

Time 34:59 35:51 39:55 41:17 43:46 44:45 45:27 46:06 46:20 46:24 47:51 47:52 48:47 50:21 50:34 51:56 53:19 53:49 53:54 54:09 54:33 55:06 56:24 56:30 56:30 59:28 59:36 1:00:55 1:03:20 1:05:59 1:07:29 1:08:26 1:15:31 1:32:12 1:40:30

City Saltillo Baldwyn Corinth Walnut Florence Burnsville Arlington Selmer Corinth Corinth Corinth Starkville Henderson Michie Horn Lake Belmont Burns Booneville Walnut Selmer Corinth Michie Myrtle Corinth Corinth Saltillo Booneville Sheffield Saltillo Savannah Corinth Corinth Iuka Corinth Corinth


Tuesday, May 8, 2012

10 • Daily Corinthian

Corinth Coca-Cola Classic 10K: Age Group Results Female 25-29 # Name OA 1 Joanna Ozbirn 158 2 Stacey Schwarzmann 224 3 Angie Taylor 256 4 Kim Lee 273 5 Loren Duke 308 6 Amy Smithey 350 7 Jessica Robbins 353 8 Amy Roach 357 9 Mindy Thompson 379 10 Catie Haynes 393 11 Amy Ray 405 12 Whitney Spence 454 13 Jessica Williams 459 14 Beth Dennis 490 15 Kim Bucci 568 16 Leah Nave 596 17 Lindsay Kerr 598 18 Lindsey Thornton 639 19 Alysa Pounders 642 20 Krisi Boren 644 21 Kala Marsh 659 22 Ashlee Christensen 667 23 Courtney Stuart 678 24 Audriana Smith 685 25 Stefanie Bishop 705 26 Trinity Rickman 712 27 Samantha Jones 738 28 Kimberly Lancaster 754 29 Sheena Holstein 787 30 Prentiss Butler 791 31 Hope Harrelson 796 32 Heather Johnson 884 33 Brittany Burcham 893 34 Monica Cook 894 35 Lindsey McFalls 901 36 Angel Quinn 902 37 Rebekah McPheters 904 38 Avalon Grimes 935 39 Amanda Maxwell 941 40 Amber Hendrix 954 41 Alesha Provins 961 42 Rebecca Rhea 964 43 Ashley Wilbanks 978 44 Jessica Long 979 45 Merideth Timbes 980 46 Anna Johnson 981 47 Amy Hammock 982 48 Misty Picard 998 49 Leah Parker 1012 50 Nikki Polk 1050 51 Mary Anderson 1054 52 Loren Ramsey 1058 53 Candi Childers 1063 54 Andrea Little 1068 55 Dawn Hardin 1078 56 Shannon Smith 1107 57 Kelly Essary 1133 58 Greta Kemp 1148 59 Kayla Felks 1150

Age 28 29 29 26 28 29 27 26 25 25 25 28 28 29 28 27 26 26 25 27 28 26 28 25 29 27 26 27 28 27 25 27 27 27 29 27 27 26 29 26 26 25 26 29 27 27 29 29 25 27 29 25 29 26 25 28 29 27 28

Time 50:19 53:28 55:05 55:53 57:04 58:33 58:40 58:51 59:37 1:00:03 1:00:35 1:02:54 1:03:11 1:04:38 1:07:38 1:08:42 1:08:44 1:10:46 1:10:50 1:11:00 1:11:31 1:11:58 1:12:13 1:12:45 1:14:26 1:14:58 1:16:19 1:17:48 1:18:59 1:19:20 1:19:36 1:25:50 1:26:18 1:26:21 1:26:41 1:26:41 1:26:49 1:29:34 1:29:51 1:30:42 1:31:41 1:32:07 1:33:19 1:33:26 1:33:31 1:33:31 1:33:31 1:34:21 1:36:20 1:40:31 1:41:06 1:41:40 1:41:55 1:42:32 1:43:09 1:47:00 1:50:16 1:52:17 1:53:51

City New Albany Germantown Ramer Belden Corinth New Albany Michie Corinth New Albany Baldwyn Southaven Corinth New Albany Savannah Saltillo Corinth Florence Rogersville Corinth Aberdeen Corinth Baldywn Iuka Clinton Savannah Ramer Corinth Corinth Iuka Corinth Booneville Corinth Corinth Ramer Corinth Corinth Corinth Tupelo Middleton Glen Iuka Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Rienzi Michie Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Corinth Belmont Corinth

Male 25-29 # Name 1 Bryan Baddorf 2 Heath White 3 Cory Lee 4 Adam Morris 5 Nathan Judd 6 Benjamyn Wilson 7 Brett Hawkins 8 Chris Lyles 9 Justin Tucker 10 Nate Alexander 11 Kyle Taylor 12 Frank Leonard 13 Justin Waldrop 14 Paul Volansky 15 Justin Duke 16 Chris Boatwright 17 Drew Williams 18 David Jourdan 19 Frederick Serio 20 Cory Jones 21 Marcus McGee 22 Dustin Insell 23 Logan Hendrix 24 Eric Hartfelder 25 Blake Grisham 26 Matt Kettleman 27 Gene Polk Jr

OA 7 19 40 54 64 76 124 149 174 182 184 225 306 317 333 400 496 507 571 587 618 626 716 721 991 1031 1051

Age 29 29 27 28 28 25 26 29 29 29 29 29 29 25 28 25 26 28 27 25 29 28 26 26 26 25 28

Time 34:03 37:53 41:23 42:54 44:01 45:09 48:46 49:53 51:19 51:42 51:54 53:29 56:59 57:20 57:53 1:00:21 1:04:54 1:05:16 1:07:48 1:08:26 1:09:32 1:10:04 1:15:06 1:15:19 1:33:52 1:39:03 1:40:32

City Memphis Florence Belden Belden Finger Selmer Corinth Bethel Springs Tupelo Corinth Russellville Corinth Tupelo Corinth Corinth Russellville Glen Iuka Corinth Glen Corinth Henderson Glen Nashville Booneville Corinth Corinth

Female 30-34 # Name 1 Andrea Hall 2 Jackie Hill 3 Jessica Ferguson 4 Amy Chandler 5 Melanie Mills 6 Emily Borden 7 Mandy Dockendor 8 Sandy Thompson 9 Meredith Taylor 10 Audrey Phillips 11 Jocelyn Woods 12 Jennifer Sisson 13 Sara Russo 14 Ginny Hale 15 Jenni Lambert

OA 97 116 138 146 157 166 168 178 206 212 280 283 286 287 383

Age 34 33 34 31 30 31 32 33 31 31 33 30 33 30 34

Time 47:12 48:22 49:31 49:48 50:18 50:52 50:57 51:27 52:41 52:55 56:12 56:21 56:29 56:29 59:40

City Nashville Ripley Starkville Corinth Corinth Haleyville Waynesville Henderson Jackson Memphis Memphis Germantown Batesville Tupelo Corinth

16 Gina Johnson 17 Lindsey Cardwell 18 Rebecca Groves 19 Mary Johns Pittman 20 Misty Ballard 21 Jenny Camp 22 Christy Collier 23 Denise McAnally 24 Terra McLemore 25 Wendy Sain 26 Beth White 27 Sommer Quinn 28 Natasha Brown 29 Shanna Wall 30 Shanna Renfrow 31 Mandy Blakely 32 Shiela Smith 33 Anna Worley 34 Casey Pickle 35 April Timmons 36 Stacy Dewees 37 Stephanie Briggs 38 Amanda Williams 39 Maranda Nave 40 Christy Burns 41 Tonya Kuhl 42 Melody Brown 43 Amanda Coke 44 Tara Wilburn 45 Rachael Montgomery 46 Patrica Wilbanks 47 Kelly Stacks 48 Leanna Roemer 49 Beth Mitchel 50 Angie Eaton 51 Angela Indardeo 52 Brandi Stokes 53 Jennifer Pickens 54 Clairie Harris 55 Carroll Elam 56 Jennifer Talle 57 Laine Glover 58 Amy Guth 59 Tara Grall 60 Kristy Thomas 61 Amber Calton 62 Edith Boren 63 Patricia Derryberry 64 Andrea Rose 65 Julie Jackson 66 Keebie Cummings 67 Heather Lindsey 68 Renee Holcomb 69 Leslie Wright 70 Jessie Waldrep 71 April Logan 72 Kayce Hayes

418 434 448 461 494 500 524 581 591 613 619 620 631 645 657 682 686 689 703 722 761 768 808 825 835 838 843 849 850 865 869 871 873 891 918 934 940 942 960 962 965 972 974 994 1021 1032 1038 1052 1086 1099 1111 1112 1114 1116 1117 1146 1174

31 31 31 34 31 34 31 32 33 33 34 31 31 32 34 31 32 33 30 32 30 34 32 30 32 30 31 33 31 31 32 32 33 32 32 34 32 30 30 30 33 30 33 34 33 30 34 32 32 33 34 32 34 30 32 31 30

1:01:04 1:01:41 1:02:44 1:03:13 1:04:48 1:05:00 1:06:04 1:08:08 1:08:33 1:09:27 1:09:33 1:09:34 1:10:25 1:11:05 1:11:30 1:12:33 1:12:51 1:12:59 1:13:46 1:15:23 1:18:11 1:18:21 1:20:08 1:21:01 1:21:19 1:21:31 1:21:55 1:22:46 1:22:59 1:23:58 1:24:35 1:24:59 1:24:59 1:26:09 1:28:32 1:29:34 1:29:51 1:29:55 1:31:35 1:31:46 1:32:09 1:32:45 1:32:58 1:34:02 1:37:12 1:39:14 1:39:40 1:40:34 1:44:08 1:46:00 1:47:12 1:47:28 1:48:13 1:48:33 1:48:33 1:52:15 2:16:50

Olive Branch Walnut Germantown Corinth Rienzi Corinth Guntown Booneville Savannah Corinth Iuka Ripley Baldwyn Memphis Corinth Ramer Booneville JacksoN Michie Booneville Ramer Michie Murfreesboro Murfreesboro Booneville Saulsbury Michie Oakland Guys Pontotoc Corinth Selmer Ramer Corinth Corinth Tupelo Pontotoc Stantonville Glen Memphis Corinth Cordova Canton Schaumburg Daphne Pocahontas Corinth Ramer Corinth Booneville Corinth Corinth Iuka Glen Corinth Columbus Glen

Male 30-34 # Name 1 Jim Brown 2 Thomas Parker 3 Eddie Morrow 4 Bobby Gallaghe 5 Randy Sheffield 6 John Cartwright 7 William Bo Butle 8 Taylor Worley 9 Brad Guth 10 Efrain Leon 11 Adam Coward 12 Kevin Kimbrough 13 Tyler Moss 14 Joseph Babb 15 Alex Scrimpshire 16 Tony Nguyen 17 Cole Sanders 18 Ben Albarracin 19 J.R. Mooneyhan 20 James Jones 21 Joel Kerr 22 Corey White 23 Christopher Waldrep 24 Kevin Williams 25 Wesley Johnson 26 Brian Capshaw 27 Zach White 28 Christopher Spencer 29 Amol Patil 30 James Tucker 31 Brandon Weaver 32 Jeffrey Dewees 33 Johnny Ballard 34 Michael Picard 35 David Ray 36 Richard Hawk 37 Charlie Millinder 38 Neil Addams 39 Jeremy Blakely 40 Eric Evans 41 Richard Brandon 42 Josh Smith 43 Josh Logan

OA 11 17 23 32 70 81 134 135 161 164 173 189 197 237 240 263 297 299 328 334 343 354 402 460 516 548 556 564 570 617 743 762 777 793 807 836 863 879 892 932 986 1136 1145

Age 33 32 32 30 34 31 31 33 33 33 31 32 34 30 31 32 30 33 31 34 34 33 31 32 34 32 32 32 30 33 31 32 31 32 31 34 34 32 34 34 31 31 31

Time 35:56 37:35 39:34 40:53 44:43 46:05 49:17 49:22 50:27 50:43 51:11 52:06 52:24 53:59 54:08 55:20 56:41 56:47 57:43 57:55 58:21 58:41 1:00:34 1:03:12 1:05:46 1:07:04 1:07:21 1:07:35 1:07:42 1:09:32 1:16:49 1:18:12 1:18:38 1:19:29 1:20:02 1:21:21 1:23:54 1:25:38 1:26:11 1:29:25 1:33:41 1:50:56 1:52:14

City Tupelo Jackson Booneville Memphis Fulton Florence Corinth Jackson Canton Corinth Belden Rienzi Corinth Tupelo Oxford Corinth Corinth Corinth Saltillo Senatobia Florence Ramer Corinth New Albany Olive Branch Selmer Birmingham Corinth Corinth Corinth Walnut Ramer Rienzi Michie Southaven Olive Branch Stantonville Kennesaw Ramer Corinth Alabaster Athens Columbus

Female 35-39 # 1 2 3 4 5

Name Caroline Blatti Jane Shettles Misty Thompson Jessica Myers Bridgett Jolly

OA 51 52 67 74 78

Age 37 39 35 38 37

Time 42:31 42:39 44:21 45:00 45:26

City Memphis Tupelo Belden Arlington Tupelo

6 Anita Beth Adams

131

36

49:13

Flowood

7 Tanya Collum

143

37

49:41

Russellville

8 Misty Phillips

147

36

49:49

Oxford

9 Kristi Wren

156

35

50:16

Saltillo

10 Rashni Barath

176

36

51:21

Tupelo

11 Joy Gray

188

35

52:05

Corinth

12 Whitney Hodum

260

39

55:13

Ripley

13 Tu Stone

267

38

55:36

Batesville

14 Tammy Hall

268

38

55:41

Columbus

15 Delicia Thompson

281

39

56:12

Memphis

16 Jennifer Johnson

295

38

56:39

Saltillo

17 Dawn Hilliard

298

35

56:47

Corinth

18 Tracy Perkins

321

39

57:25

Counce

19 Hope Bain

337

36

58:01

Leedy

20 Jennifer Garrett

348

37

58:31

Corinth

21 Jennifer Marcum

361

37

58:56

Bolivar

22 Tanya Watson

367

39

59:08

Michie

23 Amy Counce

387

35

59:54

Tupelo

24 Shelly Hutson

401

35

1:00:27

Henderson

25 Grace Richards

408

35

1:00:43

Tupelo

26 Ginger Green

422

35

1:01:15

Corinth

27 Donna McCormack

435

39

1:01:44

Corinth

28 Lynn Mims

436

39

1:01:47

Tupelo

29 Jennifer Sexton

442

37

1:02:12

Corinth

30 Beth Brumley

452

36

1:02:50

Tuscumbia

31 Robin Arnwine

467

36

1:03:25

Ramer

32 Stephanie Phifer

472

35

1:03:52

Tuscumbia

33 Stephanie Flake

481

38

1:04:16

Corinth

34 Lindley Brawner

489

39

1:04:36

Corinth

35 Lori Whiteside

523

35

1:06:03

New Albany

36 Lisa Newell

539

37

1:06:37

Blue Mountain

37 Tawanna Rickard

544

37

1:06:55

Tuscumbia

38 Jennifer Bagwell

554

36

1:07:15

Pontotoc

39 Amy Bennett

567

39

1:07:38

Olive Branch

40 Kimberly Hosea

595

35

1:08:41

Savannah

41 Julie Watson

615

38

1:09:31

Jackson

42 Tricia Matthews

636

37

1:10:37

Walnut

43 Alicia Doran

637

35

1:10:45

Glen

44 Krista Scott

648

38

1:11:13

Red Bay

45 Amy Smith

649

38

1:11:15

Selmer

46 Michelle Graves

655

36

1:11:27

Memphis

47 Leah Lockett

658

35

1:11:30

Tuscumbia

48 Jaime Whitsitt

660

36

1:11:32

Lexington

49 Dana Moore

670

36

1:12:01

Tuscumbia

50 Tammie Blount

697

36

1:13:20

Savannah

51 Amanda Murner

702

36

1:13:40

Tuscumbia

52 Jennifer Morris

713

36

1:14:58

Ramer

53 Julie McAfee

714

39

1:15:00

Blue Mtn

54 Rachel Carter

742

39

1:16:44

Corinth

55 Stacey Blackwelder

745

39

1:16:56

Savannah

56 Tiffany Sparks

770

36

1:18:25

Corinth

57 Belinda Goad

776

38

1:18:38

Counce

58 Allison Cornelius

816

37

1:20:25

Corinth

59 Angie Petty

817

37

1:20:32

Henderson

60 Heather Duley

826

35

1:21:03

New Albany

61 Beverly Grisham

833

37

1:21:12

Corinth

62 Takeitha Chambers

841

39

1:21:42

Memphis

63 Trina Lindsay

858

39

1:23:25

Savannah

64 Elizabeth Elliott

862

35

1:23:47

Ripley

65 Misty Weaver

877

35

1:25:18

Finger

66 Christy Clement

885

37

1:25:51

Corinth

67 Jennifer Edwards

895

39

1:26:29

Corinth

68 Kim Stanfill

906

39

1:27:08

Savannah

69 Sandy Blackard

916

39

1:28:32

Corinth

70 April Lathrop

946

37

1:30:03

Corinth

71 Jojo Gardne

990

38

1:33:49

Corinth

72 Brooke Manning

996

36

1:34:17

Corinth

73 Kerry Newhouse

1001

39

1:34:44

Memphis

74 Tracy Cornelius

1006

37

1:35:28

Corinth

75 Lisa Gilmore

1008

39

1:35:30

Shannon

76 Nicole Belflower

1011

39

1:35:45

Cordova

77 Andrea Mathis

1024

37

1:37:25

Booneville

78 Cathlyn Stanfill

1030

37

1:38:54

Savannah

79 Jennifer Orman

1036

37

1:39:19

Corinth

80 Kristy Black

1057

38

1:41:40

Trinity

81 Krista Barrier

1059

37

1:41:40

Corinth

82 April Boren

1062

38

1:41:54

Corinth

83 Anjanette Ratliff

1064

38

1:42:08

Corinth

84 Jennifer Harrsion

1090

38

1:45:08

Walnut

85 Brandi Williams

1109

35

1:47:11

Tupelo

86 Tabitha Patterson

1110

36

1:47:12

Michie

87 Sonya Haley

1143

36

1:52:02

Corinth

88 Jaclyn Burdette

1154

36

1:53:58

Ramer

89 Wendy Gannon

1161

36

1:55:06

Savannah

90 Honey Stivers

1169

37

2:03:20

Corinth

91 Donna Alexander

1170

36

2:10:22

Savannah

See upcoming editions this week for the rest of the age group results.


Wisdom

11 • Daily Corinthian

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Boyfriend’s cheating heart leaves an electronic trail DEAR ABBY: I have been with my boyfriend “Paul� for four years. We have a child together, and we each have a child of our own. We have lived together for three years, and our family life is great. However, when I was pregnant with our son, Paul contacted an ex on a social network. One day he left his computer open, and I saw that their conversations were less than innocent. I was upset and I said something immediately. We have stayed together, but ever since then I’m having a hard time trusting Paul. Because he had also been calling the woman, I now check our phone records. Yesterday I found a text of his

to a former boss’s daughter. Paul was telling her how “hot� is. Abigail sheAbby, am Van Buren I overreactDear Abby ing when I think Paul is going to cheat? — ALARMED IN NORTH CAROLINA DEAR ALARMED: You’re not overreacting. Paul is cheating on you emotionally, and doesn’t appear to be entirely committed to your relationship. In fact, it appears he is looking for some outside adventures. You should not only be concerned, you should also be furious about what he’s

doing. This won’t stop until you draw the line. DEAR ABBY: My parents divorced during my junior year of high school. I am now a sophomore in college. I have done my best to maintain a good relationship with Dad, although I chose to live with my mother during the custody battle. Since the divorce, Dad has verbally, emotionally and financially abused me to the point that I no longer want him as part of my life. I miss having a father figure, even though no amount of counseling could ever mend our broken relationship. We went through two years of counseling, and the only thing I learned was

that Dad believes he has done nothing wrong and my feelings about him are because of Mom. How can I get over the pain and hurt my dad has caused me? — HEARTBROKEN IN MICHIGAN DEAR HEARTBROKEN: It will probably take one-on-one counseling for you to establish enough emotional independence to toughen up. Your father’s unwillingness (or inability) to take responsibility for his mistakes is an indication that, as much as you may need and want a father, he will never be the parent you would like him to be. It will take time and work on your part to get beyond this loss -- and

it IS a loss -- so the ideal place to begin your journey would be by talking to a psychologist at the student health center. DEAR ABBY: My 6-year-old cousin wanted to make a lemonade stand, so my sister and I helped her, but she got discouraged because nobody would buy any. She was so angry she started yelling, then she crossed the line and dropped the F-word. My sister and I were shocked that a 6-year-old would know that word. She said her classmate told it to her. (They’re in kindergarten.) We told our parents, but we’re not sure if we should tell her mother because she might think my sister and I taught

it to her. Should we tell her mother or let it slide hoping she will forget the word and move on? — NOT SURE IN SAN DIEGO DEAR NOT SURE: Your parents should tell your aunt about the incident, just in case your cousin doesn’t “forget� the word. That way her mother can explain to her that there are certain words polite people don’t use because they are unacceptable. (Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Write Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.)

cept the better you’ll understand your options. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You are not in the mood to wait around, and you make that clear with your behavior. Because you place such a high value on your time and energy, others

will do the same. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You deserve to be prosperous, and you believe that others deserve this, too, so you’ll help them get where they want to be. This in turn builds your business. All is working as it should.

Horoscopes by Holiday BY HOLIDAY MATHIS Mercury scoots into the financial realm of Taurus with a cellphone in one hand and a credit card in the other. There will be more to buy and more to sell, and it will happen faster than ever. Though it would be unwise to mistake retail therapy for therapy that can bring about true healing, there’s no denying that commerce can be a lot of fun. ARIES (March 21-April 19). You have a basic recipe for taking care of yourself. Realizing that you’re a little bored with the basics, today you’ll add special extras and secret ingredients to that formula. TAURUS (April 20May 20). Physical exertion during the day helps

you fall into a deeper and more restful sleep at night. It will be difficult to gain a winning perspective if you are tired. Therefore, getting rest is a top priority. GEMINI (May 21June 21). Things get complicated. Right now you’re not sure who is on your side; you’re not even sure whether you are on your own side. Start there. How can you better support yourself? CANCER (June 22July 22). The one who is very charming is not trying to get you to do anything in particular. There’s an affection growing here. As a result, you have a way of unwittingly drawing this person out. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). When things seem

much harder than they should be, you take notice and start asking questions. What am I putting out that attracted this tone to me? How can I adjust to create greater ease in my life? You quickly turn things around. VIRGO (Aug. 23Sept. 22). Life doesn’t always go as planned. You’re not into forcing life to bend to your will. Anyway, that wouldn’t work. You’ll deal with what you’re given and see the potential. You’re creative. LIBRA (Sept. 23Oct. 23). You’ll get an extra dose of optimism from the stars. Your stellar attitude allows you to start fresh, no matter how many times you’ve failed in the past. You let go and stay open to the unexpected.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24Nov. 21). You are quite purposeful now. You will be sure to accomplish your top three priorities. If you want to stay on track, be sure to celebrate those accomplishments. Otherwise, you’ll quickly lose steam. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). If you believe that things happen for a reason, you don’t always have to know what that reason is at every moment. You trust that it’s right. And trust can’t happen unless there’s a factor of the unknown involved. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). You’ll sense that you need to release your resistance to an idea, but you may not feel ready to do so. Accept your feelings and your current place. The more you ac-

( ! & %

# ! ! (Payment Plans available) ) % # + $ ( " * ) #

' & , " " #

# ' $ "#

Contact Laura Holloway at 662-287-6111 ext. 308 to advertise your Law Firm on this page.

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Contact Announces the Re-establishment of Offices at Laura Holloway 601 Main Street, Walnut, Mississippi 38683 Tippah County by appointment atHours Office 1-662-223-6895 And 662-287-6111 Nashville area office: 9005 Overlook Blvd. •Brentwood, Tennessee 37027 ext. 308 Hours by appointment Office 1-615-242-0150 • Fax 1-615-274-4948 toFor advertise information e-mail: Hodumlaw1@aol.com Other location: your Collierville, Tennessee 38017 Office 1-901-853-8110 • Fax 1-901-853-0473 Law Firm Continuing to serve West and Middle Tennessee and onandthis Northern Middle Mississippi with representation in: Family Law – Criminal Defense – Contract and page. Corporate – Personal Injury – Entertainment Law Web site: Hodumlaw.com


12 • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

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Attorney & Counselor at Law 605 Taylor St • P.O. Box 992 Corinth, MS 38835-992 662-286-9211 • Fax 662-286-7003 www.corinthlawyer.com “Supporting Education”


Variety

13 • Daily Corinthian

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Baby Blues

Barney Google and Snuffy Smith

Tuesday, May 8, 2012


14 • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Why Newspapers?

The newspaper continues to be a powerful medium for reaching consumers who are in the market for a broad range of products and services. It is a portable and convenient source of advertising information. The newspaper delivers customers unlike any other medium each and every day -- with unsurpassed advertising impact.

Top 10 Reasons To Advertise In A Newspaper:

1. Newspapers reach the majority of adults daily and on Sundays. 2. Higher-income-earning adults are more avid newspaper readers. 3. People with higher education are more likely to read newspapers. 4. People in higher responsibility professional positions read newspapers more frequently than the average person. 5. Newspaper advertising can be targeted by section - and reader. 6. Newspaper advertising can target specific geographical locations. 7. You can select advertising alternatives from preprint inserts or full- or partial-page ads. 8. With short deadlines, newspaper advertising can be tailored for immediacy. 9. Newspapers are portable and convenient. 10. Newspaper advertising builds business credibility and momentum.


Daily Corinthian • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • 15

0180 Instruction MEDICAL CAREERS begin here - Train ONLINE for Allied Health and Medical Management. Job placement assistance. Computer available. Financial Aid if qualified. SCHEV certified. Call 877-206-5185. www.CenturaOnline.com

Lawn & Garden

0521 Equipment

TORO PUSH mower, 22" self-propelled, bagger, used 2 times, $275. 262-496-8392.

0533 Furniture

2 ENTERTAINMENT centers, holds TV, VCR, WORK ON JET ENGINES - DVD, speakers & has Train for hands on Avia- built-in CD/DVD racks, tion Career. FAA ap- $100 ea. 286-8257. proved program. Financial aid if qualified - Job 0533 Furniture placement assistance. CALL Aviation Institute of M a i n t e n a n c e . 7-PC. LARGE coffee table, 2 end tables, 1 ac866-455-4317. cent table, 2 large mirrors, 1 large lamp, all EMPLOYMENT matching, beautiful, $150 for all 286-8257.

Medical/ 0220 Dental

ANTIQUE DRESSERETTE w/mirror & casters on the lake. $95. DOCTOR'S OFFICE seek- 262-496-8392. ing receptionist, send resume w/salary expec- COMPUTER DESK, solid tations to: Box 288, c/o white, very good shape, Daily Corinthian, P.O. $ 2 0 0 . 287-4319 or Box 1800, Corinth, MS 396-1854. 38835. NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! COUCH & LOVESEAT, $150. 662-415-6085.

0232 General Help

CAUTION! ADVERTISEMENTS in this classification usually offer informational service of products designed to help FIND employment. Before you send money to any advertiser, it is your responsibility to verify the validity of the offer. Remember: If an ad appears to sound “too good to be true”, then it may be! Inquiries can be made by contacting the Better Business Bureau at 1-800-987-8280.

0244 Trucking

Made

DELIVERY DRIVER needed with Class B lic. $500 wk. guar. plus bonus. Email americanpizz aco@yahoo.com. DRIVER TRAINEES NEEDED FOR Schneider National Local CDL Training No Experience Needed Weekly Home Time Call Today! 1-888-540-7364

Money

PETS

with

0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets 3 FEIST pups (1 bobtail) , $50 ea. 287-6664.

Classifieds!

COUCH & Recliner $50 for both. Good condition. Call 662-212-2755.

COUNTRY STYLE wooden dining room set, table w/6 chairs, custom cut glass, like brand new, $500. 662-603-3522.

CREAM COLORED & green checked reclining love seat, $100. 287-2648.

DINING T A B L E w/3 straight back chairs, $75. 662-415-6085. SINGER SEWING machine with cabinet, $30. 662-462-5702.

VERY LARGE 3-pc. dining room hutch, Walnut color, $150. 286-8257.

VERY NICE solid Oak w/stained glass fold-out hide-a-bed, $300. 286-8257.

Machinery & 0545 Tools

DEWALT MITER saw on stand, $50. 286-2655.

Wanted to 0554 Rent/Buy/Trade

M&M. CASH for junk cars & trucks. We pick up. 662-415-5435 or 731-239-4114.

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

CKC REG Boston Terri- 2000 HOLIDAY Barbie in ers. $250, 2 male and fe- the orig. box - $30. male. S/W 662-284-5742. 662-287-7821

CKC REG. Min. Dachs- 2001 HOLIDAY Barbie in hund puppies, 1st the orig. box - $30. shots, $ 1 5 0 . 662-287-7821 662-415-6209. 2002 HOLIDAY Barbie in FREE: 8 kittens/6 grn the orig. box - $30. cats (good mousers). 662-287-7821 603-9082, 286-9432. 2003 HOLIDAY Barbie in NEEDS HOME. 5yr old the orig. box - $30. cat. 662-837-5288 or 662-287-7821 662-286-2941. 2004 HOLIDAY Barbie in the orig. box - $30. FARM 662-287-7821

0450 Livestock

2005 HOLIDAY Barbie in the orig. box - $30. 662-287-7821

RABBITS, FEEBIE GIANTS, 2006 HOLIDAY Barbie in $8 & $14. 731-632-9616. the orig. box - $30. 662-287-7821

ANNOUNCEMENTS

0107 Special Notice CLASSIFIED ADVERTISERS When Placing Ads 1. Make sure your ad reads the way you want it! Make sure our Ad Consultants reads the ad back to you. 2. Make sure your ad is in the proper classification. 3. After our deadline at 3 p.m., the ad cannot be corrected, changed or stopped until the next day. 4. Check your ad the 1st day for errors. If error has been made, we will be happy to correct it, but you must call before deadline (3 p.m.) to get that done for the next day. Please call 662-287-6147 if you cannot find your ad or need to make changes!

0503 Auction Sales

5 BOXES all kinds books, $.25 to $1.00 each. AUCTION. SAT., May 19 at 287-4319 or 396-1854. 10 A.M. Kiddy Enterprises, 1301 Cardinal Dr., 58 PIECES Cavalier eggCorinth, MS. Real Estate shell Homer Laughlin china, $100. 5+ acres with office & U S A shop, 15 trucks, 10 van 662-223-9764 if intertrailers, tools, equip- ested. ment, furniture. Retiring & everything sells! 76 PIECES Forever 10% buyers premium. Spring pattern, Johann Tony Neill, TFL# 1468, Haviland Bavaria, GerMS# 1091F-1090, MB# many china, 12-place 17315. Savannah, TN. setting, like new, $175. 731-926-3133. www.to- 662-223-9764. nyneill.com ABSOLUTELY BEAUTIFUL size 14 evening dress, must see to appreciate. AUCTION. SAT., May 19. Spaghetti straps, short Kiddy Trucks, Trailers, cap sleeved jacket, moEquipment & Office, cha color, worn once, $125. shop, 5 acres. Cardinal s l i m m i n g , Drive, Corinth. 10% buy- 662-808-1002. ers premium. Tony Neill, BOX OF approx. 100 boy TFL# 1468, MLS#1090 & scout patches, $25. 1091F. Ph. 731-926-3133. 665-1133. www.tonyneill.com. CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS, $.25 to $2.00 Household each. 287-4319 or 0509 Goods 396-1854.

COLEMAN CAMPING cook CENTRAL HEAT & AIR stoves, $20 ea. 286-8257. split unit, gas heat, $ 4 5 0 . COLEMAN LANTERNS ADOPT: A young 1st 4 - t o n , w/plastic carrying case, time Mom & Dad prom- 662-415-1281. $15 ea. 286-8257. ise your baby a loving, secure home. Expenses DINING TABLE with 4 chairs. $50.00. pd. Jessica & ChristoGE R E F R I G E R A T O R , 662-415-8180. pher, 1-888-449-0803. white, top freezer, good cond., $129. ELECTRIC SCOOTER Chair GARAGE /ESTATE SALES 901-299-0089 10am-8pm. - $500. Call 662-286-2661.

0135 Personals

You never know what you might find in the Daily Corinthian Classifieds. From a new car to a new home to a new job, the Classifieds deliever!

Call 662-287-6111

Garage/Estate 0151 Sales

YARD SALE SPECIAL

MAYTAG REFRIGERATOR, black, s/s w/water, ice dispenser, nice, good cond., $335. 901-299-0089 10am-8pm.

ANY 3 CONSECUTIVE DAYS Ad must run prior to or day of sale!

NICE WHITE fridge with freezer on top, ice cold, works great. $125. 665-1133.

(Deadline is 3 p.m. day before ad is to run!) (Exception-Sun. deadline is 3 pm Fri.)

Musical 0512 Merchandise

5 LINES (Apprx. 20 Words)

1978 GIBSON J-45 acoustic with hard case, $1200. 662-416-4904.

$19.10 Lawn & Garden

(Does not include commercial business sales) ALL ADS MUST BE PREPAID We accept credit or debit cards Call Classified at (662) 287-6147

0521 Equipment

19 HP 46" cut mower, $450. 286-2655. ACE MOWER, 14.5 HP, 42" cut, $250. 286-2655. SELF-PROPELLED MOWER, 21" cut, $75. 286-2655.

FOR SALE: cain pole 50 cent each good to use in gardens--662-396-1326

FREE ADVERTISING Advertise any item valued at $500 or less for free. The ads must be for private party or personal merchandise and will exclude pets & pet supplies, livestock (incl. chickens, ducks, cattle, goats, etc), garage sales, hay, firewood, & automobiles. To take advantage of this program, readers should simply email their ad to: freeads@dailycorinthian. com or mail the ad to Free Ads, P.O. Box 1800, Corinth, MS 38835. Please include your address for our records. Each ad may include only one item, the item must be priced in the ad and the price must be $500 or less. Ads may be up to approximately 20 words including the phone number and will run for five days.


16 • Tuesday, May 8, 2012 • Daily Corinthian

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Misc. Items for 0563 Sale

Homes for 0710 Sale

TREADMILL, HUD OpGIRL'S CLOTHES, size MULTI-FUNCTION, PUBLISHER’S 7-14, $1.00 e a c h . tional cross walk arms, NOTICE optional incline, like 287-4319 or 396-1854. All real estate advernew, $250 obo. John, tised herein HUDis subject LAMPS, $2.00 EACH. 662-660-0423. to the Federal Fair PUBLISHER’S 287-4319 or 396-1854. HousingNOTICE Act which LARGE COLLECTION of REAL ESTATE FOR RENT All makes illegal adverto adrealit estate camping tents & gear, vertise any preference, tised herein is subject $200. 286-8257. limitation, or discrimito the Federal Fair Unfurnished nation based race, Housing Act onwhich LARGE COLLECTION of 0610 color, itreligion, makes illegal to sex, adApartments fishing equipment, handicap, familial status any preference, 2 BR, stove/refrig. furn., vertise $200. 286-8257. or national origin, or inor for discrimiW&D hookup, CHA. limitation, Homes tention to make any 0710 Sale nation based on race, LARGE HOME Interior 287-3257. such color,preferences, religion, limisex, pictures that includes 2 501 CRUISE. 1BR or 2BR, tations discriminahandicap,orfamilial status other pictures, exc or national origin, or incond., $50. 662-396-1380. downtown. Dep. req'd. tion. W/D. 643-5923. State laws tention to forbid make disany crimination in the limisale, such preferences, LAWN MOWER- 20hp Unfurnished rental, of tationsororadvertising discriminaB&S 46" cut. $400.00 0610 real estate based on tion. Apartments OBO. 662-415-8180. factors in addition to State laws forbid disNEW BALANCE shoes, FREE MOVE IN (WAC): 2 those protected crimination in theunder sale, $1.00 a pair. 287-4319 or BR, 1 BA, stove & refrig., federal law. We will not rental, or advertising of W&D hookup, CR 735, 396-1854. knowingly real estateaccept based any on Section 8 apvd. $400 advertising for real esfactors in addition to NICE JACUZZI w/cover, mo. 287-0105. $500 obo. 286-8257. tate is in under violathosewhich protected tion of the law. All perPRO FORM Eliptical ex- WEAVER APTS 504 N. federal law. We will not sons are hereby inercise machine, space Cass 1 br, scr.porch. knowingly accept any formed that all dwellsaver, computer w/fan, w/d $375+util, 286-2255. advertising for real esings which advertised are tate is in violafold up, exc. cond., available anAllequal tion of theon law. perHomes for $250. 262-496-8392. 0620 Rent opportunity basis. sons are hereby inPROPANE WALL HEATER, formed that all dwell$ 5 0 . 2BR, 1BA 2nd St. CH/A ings advertised are 5-brick, 662-415-8180. $360 mth. 540-539-5333 available on an equal opportunity basis. STORAGE BLDG, car- or 662-643-8848. ports, play centers. 3 BR, 1 BA, Glen area, 3 BR, 2 BA, newly rewww.secureportable W&D incl. $450 mo., $200 modeled, on 5-fenced building.com. dep. 662-415-1397. acres. 662-415-9384. 662-415-8180. SUNVISION TANNING 3 BR, 2 BA, Rockhill, 70 0734 Lots & Acreage bed, used in summers CR 174, $650 mo., $650 only, very clean, w/pa- dep. 662-279-9024 or 1.25 ACRES land. 3 miles from Pickwick lake & pers, $500 f i r m , 415-8101. Tenn. River. Private 662-808-1002, leave mes4 BR, 2 BA fully furn., no place, $5,500. Don sage. utils. $575 mo./no dep.; 731-438-2001. TAKE VIAGRA? 100 mg. 2 BR, 1 BA, $150 mo./no CIALIS 20 mg. 40 pills + 4 dep. Walnut School Dist. 42 ACRES, CR 400, by FREE. Only $99. #1 male 662-223-9158. Hurricane Creek Waterenhancement! Discreet shed, approximately shipping. Save $500. Buy NICE 2 BR, S. of Corinth, 600' road frontage, the Blue Pill Now! $485 mo. 462-8221 or $ 1 5 0 0 per acre. 415-1065. 1-888-746-5615. 662-808-0935.

0840 Auto Services

Mobile Homes 0741 for Sale ANNIVERSARY SALE Who said you couldn't buy a new home in the 20's anymore! New 2 BR homes starting at $25,950.00. New 3 BR, 2 ANNIVERSARY BA homes starting at SALE $29,950.00. Who said you couldn't VOTED BEST OF SHOW buy a new home in the Spacious 4 BR, 20's anymore! New2 2BA, BR $44,500.00. homes starting at All homes delivered $25,950.00. New 3 BR, & 2 set on your lot with BA up homes starting at central air. Hurry! Lim$29,950.00. ited # at theseOF prices. Mobile Homes VOTED BEST SHOW 0741 CLAYTON for Sale Spacious 4 HOMES BR, 2 BA, SUPERCENTER $44,500.00. OF CORINTH All homes delivered & HWY WEST set up on 72 your lot with 1/4 mile west Limcentral air. Hurry! of hospital ited # at these prices. CLAYTON HOMES SUPERCENTER OF CORINTH HWY 72 WEST 1/4 mile west of hospital

0868 Cars for Sale '08 CHEVY HHR LT, ltr, moon roof, 33k, $11,900. 1-800-898-0290 or 728-5381.

0876 Bicycles OLD ANTIQUE 3-wheel bike w/2 baskets, $100 obo. 665-1133.

OLD LADY'S bike from Birmingham, England. $100 obo. 665-1133.

FINANCIAL

Defendant in the suit filed in this Court by Audrey Elizabeth Moses Hilliard, seeking a determination of heirs. 0955 Legals You are summoned to appear and defend against the complaint or petition filed against you in this action at 9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 30th day of May, 2012, in the Courtroom of the Alcorn County Chancery Building in Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appear and defend, a judgment will be entered against you for the money or other things demanded in the complaint or petition. You are not required to file an answer or other pleading but you may do so if you desire. Issued under my hand and the seal of said Court, this the 19 day of April, 2012.

LEGALS

BOBBY MAROLT, CHANCERY CLERK ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI BY: W. Justice DEPUTY CLERK

0955 Legals IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

TRLR FOR sale. Single wide 2 BR, 1 BA. 662-223-4279 or IN THE MATTER OF 223-0608. THE ESTATE OF BRENDA K. MOSES, TRANSPORTATION DECEASED

3t 4/24, 5/1, 5/8/12 13679 SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE'S SALE

son was appointed substitute trustee or Lisa N. Stanley as Co-Trustee in instrument 201201780; and the owner of 0955 the debtLegals secured having requested the undersigned to advertise and sell the property described in and conveyed by said Deed of Trust, all of said indebtedness having matured by default in the payment of a part thereof, at the option of the owner, this is to give notice that Brittan Webb Robinson or Lisa N. Stanley as Co-Trustee will on Tuesday, May 29, 2012 commencing at 11:00 at the south door of the Courthouse in Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, and proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best bidder for cash, the following described property situated in the County of Alcorn, State of Mississippi, to wit: Lot No. 4-A of Timberling Hills Subdivision, Addition #1, according to the map or plat of said subdivision on file in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi and recorded in Plat Book 3 at Page 65. Property address: 42 CR 233, Corinth, MS All right and equity of redemption, Statutory and otherwise, homestead and dower are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is believed to be good, but Brittan Webb Robinson or Lisa N. Stanley as Co-Trustee will sell and convey only as substitute trustee.

0955 Legals IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF SADIE L. MATHIS, DECEASED

NO. 2012-0259-02 ? NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Notice is hereby given that Letters of Administration were on the 1st day of May, 2012, issued to the undersigned by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, on the Estate of SADIE L. MATHIS, Deceased, and all persons having claims against the said estate are hereby notified to present the same to the Clerk of said Court for probate and registration according to law within ninety (90) days from May 8, 2012, the date of the first publication or they will be forever barred.

THIS the 30th day of April, Default having been made 2012. in the payment of the debts CAUSE NO. and obligations secured to be 0860 Vans for Sale Mike Tynan, 2012-0234-02 paid in a certain Deed of Administrator of the Trust executed on September '10 WHITE 15-pass. van, 3 Estate of Sadie L. Mathis, SUMMONS 8, 2011 by Leslie Luce to to choose from. Deceased Janice W. Welch, CEO, Trus1-800-898-0290 or STATE OF MISSISSIPPI tee as same appears of record 728-5381. This is an attempt to col- Publish on May 8, 15 and 22 COUNTY OF ALCORN in the Office of the Register 2012 Trucks for of Alcorn County, Tennessee lect a debt and any informa13701 0864 Sale TO: Unknown Heirs of in instrument 201104391, the tion obtained will be used for Brenda K. Moses, beneficiary being Kimberly that purpose. '05 GMC Crew Cab LTR, Deceased Clark Credit Union. Subse38k, #1419. $16,900. quently Brittan Webb RobinBrittanWebb Robinson 1-800-898-0290 or You have been made a son was appointed substitute as Substitute Trustee 728-5381. Defendant in the suit filed in trustee or Lisa N. Stanley as '08 DODGE RAM 1500, this Court by Audrey Eliza- Co-Trustee in instrument 4x4, crew cab, red, beth Moses Hilliard, seeking a 201201780; and the owner of Publication Dates: Tuesday, $23,400. 1-800-898-0290 determination of heirs. the debt secured having re- May 8, 15, 22, 2012 or 728-5381. quested the undersigned to 13702 You are summoned to ap- advertise and sell the proppear and defend against the erty described in and concomplaint or petition filed veyed by said Deed of Trust, against you in this action at all of said indebtedness having 9:00 o'clock A.M. on the 30th matured by default in the payday of May,truck, 2012,SUV, in boat, the ment of amotorcycle, part thereof,RV at & theATV here for $39.95 UNTIL SOLD! Here’s How It Works: Put your automobile, tractor, Courtroom of the Alcorn option of the owner, this is to County Chancery1Building Your ad will be composed columninwide 2 inches deep.Webb The ad will run each day in the Daily Corinthian until your giveand notice that Brittan Corinth, Alcorn County, Mis- Robinson or Lisa N. Stanley vehiclesissippi, sells. and Ad must include photo, description, and price. in case of your as Co-Trustee will on Tues- You provide the photo. Certain restrictions apply. failure to2.appear and defend, only day, May 29, 2012 1. No dealers. Non-commercial 3. Must pay incommencadvance. No exceptions. 4. Single item only. 5. Categories a judgment will be entered ing at 11:00 at the south door included are auto, motorcycle, tractor. boat, RV and ATV 6. After every 30 DAYS, advertised price of listing needs to be against you for the money or of the Courthouse in Corinth, other things demanded in the Alcorn County, Mississippi, reduced. 7. NO REFUNDS for any reason 8. NON-TRANSFERABLE. Call 287-6147 to place your ad! complaint or petition. and proceed to sell at public outcry to the highest and best to bidder for cash, the832 following 864 864 You are not required 816 832 832 file an answer or other plead- described property situated in TRUCKS/VANS TRUCKS/VANS RECREATIONAL MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ MOTORCYCLES/ ing but you may do so if you the County of Alcorn, State VEHICLES SUV’S SUV’S ATV’S ATV’S ATV’S desire. of Mississippi, to wit:

GUARANTEED Auto Sales 470 868 FARM/LAWN/ AUTOMOBILES GARDEN EQUIP.

868 AUTOMOBILES

FOR SALE 1979 FORD LTD II SPORT LANDAU 2009 CRAFTSMAN LAWN MOWER T4500, 54” cut, 26 HP Kohler eng., electric start, 61 hrs.

$1,700 662-603-1485

BUSH HOG 61” ZERO TURN, COM28 HP KOEHLER, 45 HOURS, NEW MERCIAL,

$7900 662-728-3193 804 BOATS

REDUCED

Exc. cond. inside & out. Mechanically sound cond. Leather seats, only 98,000 mi reg.

2011 IMPALA LT ALMOST NEW, PS, PB,

$7500 731-934-4434

$15,900

DUAL AIR, REMOTE ENTRY, REMOTE START, BUG LIGHTS, DRL, STEEL WHEELS, TILT, CRUISE, CONSOLE, COMPUTER, APPX. 35 MPG, AM/FM CD, LOW MILES, 100K MILE WARR., MUST SELL. call Iuka.

256-577-1349

CLASSIC Z, 1978 DATSUN 280Z 85,000 actual miles,

$3,500 662-286-9476 or 662-603-5372

662-287-5413.

662-286-1732

1998 Chevy S-10 LS,

$3150

$2200 obo

662-287-1834.

662-415-6262.

662-415-9007.

2000 DODGE CARAVAN,

2 dr. hardtop (bubble top), sound body, runs.

$1500. 731-645-0157 AFTER 4 P.M.

$10,000 Days only, 662-415-3408.

2000 CHRYSLER SEBRING JXI, new paint, new top, gold package, fully loaded

$4800

$13,995

extended cab, 3rd door, low rider, 5-spd., 2.2 ltr., 4 cyl., runs great,

$13,000 OBO.

868 AUTOMOBILES

662-665-6000

2005

extras to list, good travel or work van, will trade or sell.

black, quadra steer (4-wheel steering), LT, 80k miles, loaded, leather, tow package, ext. cab.

1961 CHEV.

$4,000

$3650 662-286-1400 or 662-643-3534

BOBBY MAROLT, CHANCERY CLERK

864 TRUCKS/VANS SUV’S

2002 INTERNATIONAL, Cat. engine

$15,000 REDUCED

287-3448

‘01 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE GT red with new tan top, 5-speed, 4.6, V-8, Cooper 17” tires, runs great, asking price $5200.

1999 CHEROKEE SPORT 4X4, 6 cyl., all works good except for A/C

731-645-4928

662-665-1143.

$4000.

$8,995 $75,000. demption, Statutory and oth662-462-7158 home erwise, homestead and dower 662-287-7734 or 731-607-6699 cell

are expressly waived in said Deed of Trust, and the title is D CE REDU believed to be good, but Brittan Webb Robinson or Lisa N. Stanley as Co-Trustee will sell and convey only as substi2007 Franklintute pulltrustee.

1985 GMC Custom Deluxe work truck, heavy duty bed, estate property, $1300. 287-5549 between 9am-5pm.

$15,000

662-423-3908 423-8829

camper, 2 slides, fiberglass ext., awning, holding tanks, full sofa sleeper, refrig., micro., glass shower, recliner, sleeps 6,

$18,500 662-223-0056.

1995 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPORTSTER 1200

2008 Jayco Eagle 5th Wheel 38’, 4 slides, exc. cond., $28,000 firm. Trailer located in Counce, TN. 425-503-5467

731-212-9659 731-212-9661.

MTR., GOOD TIRES,

$6500 OR TRADE 1979 CHEVY 1 TON DUMP TRUCK, $3500 J.C. HARRIS 700 TRENCHER,

$4000. Call 662-423-6872 or 662-660-3433

Screaming Eagle exhaust, only 7K miles, like new, 662-415-8135

$4900 286-6103

$5,000

1998 SOFTAIL,

GOLF CART Very good cond. w/ charger, 48 volt, good batteries,

39,000 MILES,

$7500

$2150

662-415-8180.

662-415-0084

832 MOTORCYCLES/ REDUCED ATV’S

2005 HONDA ATV TRX 250 EX “New” Condition

$1995

215-666-1374 662-665-0209

2003 Honda 300 EX 2007 black plastics & after market parts.

$2,000 $2,500 462-5379

Mtr. & Trans., New Tires, Must See

$10,500 $12,000

662-415-8623 or 287-8894

'97 HONDA GOLD WING, 1500 6 cylinder miles, 3003 Voyager kit. 662-287-8949

1980 HONDA 750-FRONT (TRI) 4-CYC. VOLKSWAGON

2006 YAMAHA FZI 3k miles, adult owned, corbin seat, selling due to health reasons, original owner.

2000 Custom Harley Davidson 2005 Sunset Creek by Sunny Brook 2-drs., LR & DR slide-outs, kept nice & clean, come with hitch, sway bar, front elect. jack. Kept under shed. $12,500 662-415-1463

3010 Model #KAF650E, 1854 hrs., bench seat, tilt bed, 4 WD & windshield, well maintained. Great for farm or hunting. $6500.

Publication Dates: Tuesday, 662-603-4786 662-415-8549 May 8, 15, 22, 2012 13702

2006 FORD EXPLORER WHITE, EDDIE BAUER EDITION, 42K MILES LOADED, EXC. COND.

2004 KAWASAKI MULE

camper, 36’, lots This of is an2003 attemptYAMAHA to collect a2 debt and any informaV-STAR space, 2 A/C units, tion obtained will be used for slide outs, 2 doors, CLASSIC that purpose. looks & rides real shower & tub, 20’ awning, full kitchen, BrittanWebb good! Robinson as Substitute Trustee W&D, $13,000. $3000

2006 Wildcat 30 ft. 5th wheel

816 RECREATIONAL VEHICLES

1991 Ford Econoline Van, 48,000 miles, good cond., one owner, serious interest. $7000 287-5206.

CED

REDU Lot No. 4-A of Timberling Hills Subdivision, Addition #1, according to the map or plat of said subdivision on file in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis‘03 HARLEY sissippi and recorded in Plat Book 3 at Page 65. HERITAGE

2006 GMC YUKON ALCORNAIRSTREAM COUNTY, Exc. cond. inside & out, MISSISSIPPI LAND YACHT BY: W. Justice 106k miles, 3rd row 30 ft.,CLERK with slide out DEPUTY Property address: 42 CR SOFTTAIL seat, garage kept, front & built-in TV antenna, 233, Corinth, MSexc. cond., & rear A/C,tow pkg., 3t 4/24, 5/1, 5/8/122 TV’s, 7400 miles. loaded 13679 All right and equity of re-

'03 CHEVY SILVERADO,

FOR SALE

70 HP Mercury, 4 seats, trolling motor,

142,000 miles, loaded, exc. condition.

2000 Dodge Ram 1500 Van, too many

ALUMA CRAFT 14’ BOAT, 40 H.P. Johnson, trolling mtr., good cond., includes trailer, $1200 obo or will trade. 731-6108901 or email for pics to aylasisco@gmail.com

16’ Aqua bass boat

1999 FORD VAN

Issued under my hand and the seal of said Court, this the 19 day of April, 2012.

2001 HONDA REBEL 250 WITH EXTRAS, BLUE, LESS THAN 1500 MILES,

$1850 662-287-2659

RAZOR 08 POLARIS

30” ITP Mud Lights, sound bars, 2600 miles.

$7500

662-808-2900

’04 HONDA SHADOW 750 $

3900

662-603-4407


0955 Legals IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF ALCORN COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI IN RE: IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JOHN ANTHONY NUNLEY, DECEASED NO. 2012-0077-02 NOTICE TO CREDITORS

Letters of Administration having been granted on the 19 day of April, 2012, by the Chancery Court of Alcorn County, Mississippi, to the undersigned, upon the said John Anthony Nunley, deceased, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against said estate to present the same to the Clerk of said Court for probate and registration according to law, within ninety (90) days from this date, or they will be forever barred.

This the 31st day of January, 2012. SUSAN BARNETT, ADMINISTRATOR

GREGORY D. KEENUM, P.A. ATTORNEY AT LAW 219 WEST COLLEGE STREET BOONEVILLE, MS 38829 TELEPHONE: (662-728-1140 FACSIMILE: (662-728-1340

3t 4/24, 5/1, 5/8/12 13681

NOTICE OF SALE BY SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE WHEREAS, NANCY HIGHT, made, executed and delivered to DONALD RAY DOWNS, PA ATTY, as Trustee for the benefit of SOUTHBANK, certain Deeds of Trust as follows: A) Dated February 25, 2005, recorded in land Trust Deed Book 676, Page 51-59, in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi; B) Dated June 10, 2008, recorded as Instrument No. 200803450, in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi. C) Dated September 29, 2009, recorded as Instrument No. 200905336, in the office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi.

WHEREAS, SOUTHBANK , legal holder and owner of said Deeds of Trust and the indebtedness secured thereby, substituted W. JETT WILSON as Substitute Trustee, in said Deeds of Trust by instrument dated May 3, 2012, and recorded in the Office of the Chancery Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, as Instrument No.201202137; WHEREAS, default hav ing been made in the terms and conditions of said Deeds of Trust and the entire debt secured thereby, having been declared to be due and payable in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust, and the legal holder of said indebtedness, SOUTHBANK, having requested the undersigned Substitute Trustee to execute the trust and sell said land and property in accordance with the terms of said Deeds of Trust for the purpose of raising the sums due thereunder, together with attorney's fees, Substitute Trustee's fees, and expense of sale. NOW, THEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that I, the undersigned Substitute Trustee, on the 30th day of May, 2012, at the South front door of the Alcorn County Courthouse, in the City of Corinth, Alcorn County, Mississippi, within the legal hours for such sales (being between the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), will offer for sale and sell, at public outcry to the highest bidder for cash, the following property conveyed to me by said Deed of Trust described as follows: TRACT NO. 1:

Commencing at the Southwest Corner of the Northeast Quarter (1/4) of the Southeast Quarter (1/4) of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point being a marked 8 inch diameter creosote post at a fence corner; Thence run North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along an old wire fence and tree line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch diameter elm tree; Thence continue along said oldComputer 0515 wire fence and tree fence North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East 353.118 feet to an iron pin; Thence run North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along said old fence and tree line 87.520 feet to a concrete right of way marker found on the West right of way line of U.S. Highway 45 South; Thence run North 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds East along said right of way line 249.739 feet to an iron pin; Thence continue North 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds East along said right of way line 159.756 feet to an iron pin for the Point of Beginning; Thence run North 88 degrees 12 minutes 51 seconds West 45.537 feet along the back of a curb (BOC)(L1); Thence run North 83 degrees 11 minutes 07 seconds West 17.010 feet along said BOC (L2); Thence run North 74 degrees 38 minutes 32 sec-

Southeast Quarter (1/4) of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point 0955a Legals being marked 8 inch diameter creosote post at a fence corner; Thence run North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along an old wire fence and tree line 390.586 feet to a 10 inch diameter elm tree; Thence continue along said old wire fence and tree fence North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East 353.118 feet to an iron pin; Thence run North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along said old fence and tree line 87.520 feet to a concrete right of way marker found on the West right of way line of U.S. Highway 45 South; Thence run North 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds East along said right of way line 249.739 feet to an iron pin; Thence continue North 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds East along said right of way line 159.756 feet to an iron pin for the Point of Beginning; Thence run North 88 degrees 12 minutes 51 seconds West 45.537 feet along the back of a curb (BOC)(L1); Thence run North 83 degrees 11 minutes 07 seconds West 17.010 feet along said BOC (L2); Thence run North 74 degrees 38 minutes 32 seconds West 14.076 feet along said BOC (L3); Thence run North 62 degrees 11 minutes 08 seconds West 18.922 feet along said BOC (L4); Thence run North 234.534 feet to an iron pin; Thence run North 89 degrees 55 minutes 53 seconds East 95.204 feet to an iron pin found on the West right of way line of US Highway 45 South; Thence run South 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds West along said right of way line 251.044 feet to the point of beginning, containing 0.540 acres, more or less. TRACT NO. 2: Commencing at the Southwest Corner of the Northeast Quarter(1/4) of the Southeast Quarter (1/4) of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point being a marked 8 inch diameter creosote post at a fence corner; Thence run North 01 degree 39 minutes 33 seconds East along an old wire fence and tree line 330.568 feet to an iron pin found for the Point of Beginning; Thence run North 01 degree 39 minutes 33 seconds East along said old fence and tree line 330.172 feet to an iron pin at a fence corner; Thence run South 89 degrees 58 minutes 35 seconds East along the remnants of an old wire fence line 610.574 feet to an iron pin; Thence run North 89 degrees 55 minutes 53 seconds East 211.200 feet to an iron pin; Thence run South 21 degrees 09 minutes 48 seconds West 171.991 feet; Thence run South 68.470 feet to a point on the back of a curb (BOC); Thence run South 53 degrees 10 minutes 11 seconds West 35.427 feet along said BOC (L13); Thence run South 75 degrees 59 minutes 47 seconds West 18.681 feet along said BOC (L14); Thence run North 67 degrees 21 minutes 49 seconds West 18.681 feet along said BOC (L15); Thence run North 35 degrees 27 minutes 36 seconds West 30.005 feet along said BOC (L16); Thence run North 46 degrees 11 minutes 38 seconds West 36.103 feet along said BOC (L17); Thence run North 60 degrees 11 minutes 21 seconds West 51.953 feet along said BOC (L18); Thence run North 79 degrees 25 minutes 22 seconds West 39.890 feet along said BOC (L19); Thence run South 87 degrees 52 minutes 39 seconds West 44.248 feet along said BOC (L20); Thence run South 73 degrees 50 minutes 43 seconds West 36.031 feet along said BOC (L21); Thence run South 60 degrees 16 minutes 52 seconds West 41.328 feet along said BOC (L22); Thence run South 46 degrees 49 minutes 21 seconds West 35.586 feet along said BOC (L23); Thence run South 37 degrees 58 minutes 03 seconds West 49.212 feet along said BOC to the end of said curb (L24); Thence run South 65 degrees 32 minutes 33 seconds West 17.631 feet along the edge of asphalt pavement (EOP)(L25); Thence run North 76 degrees 43 minutes 06 seconds West 14.063 feet along said EOP (L26); Thence run North 42 degrees 26 minutes 10 seconds West 38.929 feet along said EOP (L27); Thence run North 53 degrees 30 minutes 18 seconds West 36.637 feet along said EOP (L28); Thence run North 67 degrees 50 minutes 11 seconds West 27.473 feet along said EOP(L29); Thence run North 80 degrees 36 minutes 18 seconds West 46.691 feet along said EOP (L30); Thence run South 89 degrees 54 minutes 03 seconds West 82.019 feet along said EOP (L31); Thence run South 79 degrees 43 minutes 27 seconds West 45.616 feet along said EOP (L32); Thence run South 64 degrees 29 minutes 01 seconds West 46.293 feet along said EOP (L33); Thence run South 41 degrees 40 minutes 02 seconds West 47.572 feet along said EOP (L34); Thence run South 23 degrees 45 minutes 57 seconds West 41.792 feet along said EOP (L35); Thence run South 07 degrees 57 minutes 10 seconds West 32.635 feet along said EOP (L36); Thence run West 27.857 feet along said EOP (L37) to the point of beginning, containing 3.876 acres, more or less. EASEMENT: An easement for egress and ingress: Commencing at the Southwest Corner of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point being an eight

along said EOP (L30); Thence run South 89 degrees 54 minutes 03 seconds West 82.019 feet along said EOP (L31); 0955 Legals Thence run South 79 degrees 43 minutes 27 seconds West 45.616 feet along said EOP (L32); Thence run South 64 degrees 29 minutes 01 seconds West 46.293 feet along said EOP (L33); Thence run South 41 degrees 40 minutes 02 seconds West 47.572 feet along said EOP (L34); Thence run South 23 degrees 45 minutes 57 seconds West 41.792 feet along said EOP (L35); Thence run South 07 degrees 57 minutes 10 seconds West 32.635 feet along said EOP (L36); Thence run West 27.857 feet along said EOP (L37) to the point of beginning, containing 3.876 acres, more or less. EASEMENT: An easement for egress and ingress: Commencing at the Southwest Corner of the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 33, Township 2 South, Range 7 East, Alcorn County, Mississippi, said point being an eight inch diameter creosote post; Thence run North 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 seconds East along a wire fence and tree line 1296.376 (1296.107) feet to a concrete right of way marker on the West right of way line of U.S. Highway 45 South; Thence run North 00 degrees 23 minutes 13 seconds East along the West right of way line of said Highway 279.948 feet to an iron pin set; North 00 degrees 27 minutes 03 seconds East along the West right of way line of said Highway 129.551 feet to an iron pin set for the Point of Beginning for this easement; Thence run North 88 degrees 12 minutes 51 seconds West 45.537 feet along the back of a curb (BOC) (L1); Thence run North 83 degrees 11 minutes 08 seconds West 17.010 feet along said BOC (L2); Thence run North 74 degrees 48 minutes 32 seconds West 14.076 feet along said BOC (L3); Thence run North 62 degrees 11 minutes 08 seconds West 18.922 feet along said BOC (L4); Thence run North 59 degrees 47 minutes 10 seconds West 23.730 feet along said BOC (L5); Thence run North 65 degrees 55 minutes 45 seconds West 31.044 feet along said BOC (L6); Thence run North 78 degrees 41 minutes 26 seconds West 27.280 feet along said BOC (L7); Thence run North 87 degrees 35 minutes 01 seconds West 39.546 feet along said BOC (L8); Thence run South 89 degrees 40 minutes 29 seconds West 238.920 feet along said BOC (L9); Thence run South 83 degrees 44 minutes 12 seconds West 25.221 feet along said BOC (L10); Thence run South 72 degrees 46 minutes 45 seconds West 23.639 feet along said BOC (L11); Thence run South 60 degrees 31 minutes 38 seconds West 30.165 feet along said BOC (L12); Thence run South 53 degrees 10 minutes 11 seconds West 35.427 feet along said BOC (L13); Thence run South 75 degrees 59 minutes 47 seconds West 18.681 feet along said BOC (L14); Thence run North 67 degrees 21 minutes 49 seconds West 18.681 feet along said BOC (L15); Thence run North 35 degrees 27 minutes 36 seconds West 30.005 feet along said BOC (L16); Thence run North 46 degrees 11 minutes 38 seconds West 36.103 feet along said BOC (L17); Thence run North 60 degrees 11 minutes 21 seconds West 51.953 feet along said BOC (L18); Thence run North 79 degrees 25 minutes 22 seconds West 39.890 feet along said BOC (L19); Thence run South 87 degrees 52 minutes 39 seconds West 44.248 feet along said BOC (L20); Thence run South 73 degrees 50 minutes 43 seconds West 36.031 feet along said BOC (L21); Thence run South 60 degrees 16 minutes 52 seconds West 41.328 feet along said BOC (L22); Thence run South 46 degrees 49 minutes 21 seconds West 35.586 feet along said BOC (L23); Thence run South 37 degrees 58 minutes 03 seconds West 49.212 feet along said BOC to the end of said curb (L24); Thence run South 65 degrees 32 minutes 33 seconds West 17.631 feet along the edge of asphalt pavement (EOP)(L25); Thence run North 76 degrees 43 minutes 06 seconds West 14.063 feet along said EOP (L26); Thence run North 42 degrees 26 minutes 10 seconds West 38.929 feet along said EOP (L27); Thence run North 53 degrees 30 minutes 18 seconds West 36.637 feet along said EOP (L28); Thence run North 67 degrees 50 minutes 11 seconds West 27.473 feet along said EOP(L29); Thence run North 80 degrees 36 minutes 18 seconds West 46.691 feet along said EOP (L30); Thence run South 89 degrees 54 minutes 03 seconds West 82.019 feet along said EOP (L31); Thence run South 79 degrees 43 minutes 27 seconds West 45.616 feet along said EOP (L32); Thence run South 64 degrees 29 minutes 01 seconds West 46.293 feet along said EOP (L33); Thence run South 41 degrees 40 minutes 02 seconds West 47.572 feet along said EOP (L34); Thence run South 23 degrees 45 minutes 57 seconds West 41.792 feet along said EOP (L35); Thence run South 07 degrees 57 minutes 10 seconds West 32.635 feet along said EOP (L36); Thence run West 27.857 feet along said EOP (L37); Thence run South 01 degrees 39 minutes 33 seconds West 32.112 feet along said EOP (L38); Thence run North 89 degrees 59 minutes 13 seconds East 44.562 feet to a point on the back of a curb BOC (L39); Thence run North 09 degrees 30 minutes 03 seconds West 16.003 feet along said BOC (L40); Thence run North 02 degrees 23 minutes 38 seconds West

seconds West 46.691 feet 22 seconds East 16.842 feet along said EOP (L30); Thence along said EOP (L72); Thence run South 89 degrees 54 min- run North 77 degrees 30 utes 03 seconds West 82.019 minutes 58 seconds East Legals 0955along 0955 Legals feet along said EOP feet said EOP (L31); 16.961 Thence run South 79 degrees (L73); Thence run North 84 43 minutes 27 seconds West degrees 10 minutes 36 sec45.616 feet along said EOP onds East 20.548 feet along (L32); Thence run South 64 said EOP (L74); Thence run degrees 29 minutes 01 sec- South 88 degrees 22 minutes onds West 46.293 feet along 22 seconds East 20.207 feet said EOP (L33); Thence run along said EOP (L75); Thence South 41 degrees 40 minutes run South 81 degrees 12 min02 seconds West 47.572 feet utes 16 seconds East 19.008 along said EOP (L34); Thence feet along said EOP (L76); run South 23 degrees 45 min- Thence run South 74 degrees utes 57 seconds West 41.792 20 minutes 05 seconds East feet along said EOP (L35); 18.574 feet along said EOP Thence run South 07 degrees (L77); Thence run South 64 57 minutes 10 seconds West degrees 32 minutes 40 sec32.635 feet along said EOP onds East 25.394 feet along (L36); Thence run West said EOP (L78); Thence run 27.857 feet along said EOP South 56 degrees 06 minutes (L37); Thence run South 01 49 seconds East 21.765 feet degrees 39 minutes 33 sec- along said EOP (L79); Thence onds West 32.112 feet along run South 46 degrees 43 minsaid EOP (L38); Thence run utes 08 seconds East 33.890 North 89 degrees 59 minutes feet along said EOP (L80); 13 seconds East 44.562 feet Thence run South 36 degrees to a point on the back of a 54 minutes 21 seconds East curb BOC (L39); Thence run 29.020 feet along said EOP North 09 degrees 30 minutes (L81); Thence run South 29 03 seconds West 16.003 feet degrees 53 minutes 18 secalong said BOC (L40); Thence onds East 10.362 feet along run North 02 degrees 23 said EOP (L82); Thence run minutes 38 seconds West South 08 degrees 44 minutes 16.323 feet along said BOC 21 seconds East 49.624 feet (L41); Thence run North 04 along said EOP (L83); Thence degrees 36 minutes 37 sec- run East 36.240 feet to a onds East 15.538 feet along point on the back of a curb said BOC (L42); Thence run (BOC) (L84); Thence run North 11 degrees 11 minutes North 12 degrees 23 minutes 40 seconds East 14.413 feet 34 seconds East 13.406 feet along said BOC (L43); Thence along said BOC (L85); Thence run North 19 degrees 16 run North 21 degrees 34 minutes 28 seconds East minutes 51 seconds East 20.101 feet along said BOC 19.625 feet along said BOC (L44); Thence run North 28 (L86); Thence run North 32 degrees 00 minutes 29 sec- degrees 43 minutes 46 seconds East 18.266 feet along onds East 14.338 feet along said BOC (L45); Thence run said BOC (L87); Thence run North 36 degrees 50 minutes North 42 degrees 25 minutes 36 seconds East 21.132 feet 50 seconds East 16.644 feet along said BOC (L46); Thence along said BOC (L88); Thence run North 46 degrees 33 run North 51 degrees 04 minutes 44 seconds East minutes 33 seconds East 22.198 feet along said BOC 13.937 feet along said BOC (L47); Thence run North 60 (L89); Thence run North 61 degrees 41 minutes 10 sec- degrees 06 minutes 11 seconds East 20.872 feet along onds East 22.702 feet along said BOC (L48); Thence run said BOC (L90);Thence run North 68 degrees 40 minutes North 72 degrees 45 minutes 19 seconds East 21.825 feet 33 seconds East 19.877 feet along said BOC (L49); Thence along said BOC (L91); Thence run North 76 degrees 46 run North 83 degrees 32 minutes 23 seconds East minutes 14 seconds East 21.488 feet along said BOC 19.506 feet along said BOC (L50); Thence run North 84 (L92); Thence run North 89 degrees 04 minutes 37 sec- degrees 40 minutes 29 seconds East 20.824 feet along onds East 238.524 feet along said BOC (L51); Thence run said BOC (L93); Thence run North 87 degrees 46 minutes South 87 degrees 34 minutes 51 seconds East 41.258 feet 45 seconds East 37.648 feet along said BOC (L52); Thence along said BOC (L94); Thence run South 88 degrees 24 min- run South 80 degrees 24 minutes 30 seconds East 39.162 utes 55 seconds East 16.931 feet along said BOC (L53); feet along said BOC (L95); Thence run South 83 degrees Thence run South 72 degrees 40 minutes 47 seconds East 03 minutes 33 seconds East 22.226 feet along said BOC 21.621 feet along said BOC (L54); Thence run South 76 (L96); Thence run South 54 degrees 19 minutes 45 sec- degrees 44 minutes 16 seconds East 21.222 feet along onds East 19.981 feet along said BOC (L55); Thence run said BOC (L97); Thence run South 68 degrees 33 minutes South 46 degrees 35 minutes 34 seconds East 24.698 feet 59 seconds East 18.569 feet along said BOC (L56); Thence along said BOC (L98); Thence run South 55 degrees 58 min- run South 38 degrees 18 minutes 51 seconds East 20.732 utes 46 seconds East 10.037 feet along said BOC (L57); feet along said BOC (L99); Thence run South 50 degrees Thence run South 32 degrees 13 minutes 31 seconds East 49 minutes 16 seconds East 13.260 feet along said BOC 9.636 feet along said BOC (L58); Thence run South 44 (L100); Thence run South 25 degrees 07 minutes 52 sec- degrees 26 minutes 32 seconds East 22.728 feet along onds East 16.785 feet along said BOC (L59); Thence run said BOC (L101); Thence run South 37 degrees 19 minutes East 45.474 feet along said 45 seconds East 17.438 feet BOC (L102); Thence run along said BOC (L60); Thence North 39 degrees 44 minutes run South 19 degrees 13 min- 00 seconds East 8.405 feet utes 20 seconds East 20.750 along said BOC (L103); feet along said BOC (L61); Thence run North 54 degrees Thence run South 11 degrees 43 minutes 25 seconds East 15 minutes 31 seconds East 7.326 feet along said BOC 16.199 feet along said BOC (L104); Thence run North 65 (L62); Thence run East 28.181 degrees 27 minutes 54 secfeet to the edge of asphalt onds East 5.203 feet along pavement (EOP) (L63); said BOC (L105); Thence run Thence run North 12 degrees North 75 degrees 57 minutes 55 minutes 26 seconds East 12 seconds East 6.394 feet 25.476 feet along said EOP along said BOC (L106); (L64); Thence run North 24 Thence run North 86 degrees degrees 18 minutes 12 sec- 47 minutes 45 seconds East onds East 18.568 feet along 6.796 feet along said BOC said EOP (L65); Thence run (L107); Thence run North 87 North 30 degrees 11 minutes degrees 44 minutes 20 sec15 seconds East 20.707 feet onds East 9.807 feet along along said EOP (L66); Thence said BOC to the west right of run North 37 degrees 10 way line of US Highway 45 minutes 14 seconds East (L108); Thence run North 00 25.894 feet along said EOP degrees 23 minutes 13 sec(L67); Thence run North 44 onds East 29.230 feet to the degrees 14 minutes 48 sec- point of beginning of this onds East 21.326 feet along easement (L109). said EOP (L68); Thence run North 50 degrees 37 minutes Although the title to said 38 seconds East 11.808 feet along said EOP (L69); Thence property is believed to be run North 56 degrees 31 good, I will sell and convey minutes 19 seconds East only such title in said prop18.537 feet along said EOP erty as is vested in me as Sub(L70); Thence run North 63 stitute Trustee. degrees 57 minutes 43 secSIGNED, POSTED onds East 19.756 feet along said EOP (L71); Thence run AND PUBLISHED on this North 71 degrees 04 minutes the 8th day of May, 2012. 22 seconds East 16.842 feet /s/ W. Jett Wilson along said EOP (L72); Thence W. JETT WILSON run North 77 degrees 30 MSB# 7316 minutes 58 seconds East SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE 16.961 feet along said EOP WILSON & HINTON, P.A. (L73); Thence run North 84 Post Office Box 1257 degrees 10 minutes 36 secCorinth, MS 38835 onds East 20.548 feet General Helpalong (662) 286-3366 0232EOP (L74); Thence run said South 88 degrees 22 minutes 22 seconds East 20.207 feet Publish 4 times: along said EOP (L75); Thence May 8, May 15, May 22, May run South 81 degrees 12 min- 29, 2012 utes 16 seconds East 19.008 13703 feet along said EOP (L76); Thence run South 74 degrees 20 minutes 05 seconds East 18.574 feet along said EOP (L77); Thence run South 64 degrees 32 minutes 40 sec(Newspaper Carrier) onds East 25.394 feet along said EOP (L78); Thence run South 56 degrees 06 minutes 49 seconds East 21.765 feet along said EOP (L79); Thence run South 46 degrees 43 minutes 08 seconds East 33.890 feet along said EOP (L80); Thence run South 36 degrees Excellent Earnings Potential 54 minutes 21 seconds East 29.020 feet along said EOP Requirements: (L81); Thence run South 29 degrees 53 minutes 18 seconds East 10.362 feet along • Driver’s License said EOP (L82); Thence run • Dependable South 08 degrees 44 minutesTransportation 21 seconds East 49.624 feet • Light Bookwork Ability (will train) along said EOP (L83); Thence run East 36.240 feet to a • Liability Insurance point on the back of a curb (BOC) (L84); Thence run North 12 degrees 23 minutes 34 seconds East 13.406 feet Please come by the along said BOC (L85); Thence run North 21Daily degrees 34 Corinthian and minutes 51 seconds East fi ll out a questionaire. 19.625 feet along said BOC (L86); Thence run North 32 degrees 43 minutes 46 seconds East 14.338 feet along said BOC (L87); Thence run North 42 degrees 25 minutes 50 seconds East 16.644 feet along said BOC (L88); Thence

WANTED INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS Rienzi Area

DAILY CORINTHIAN 1607 S. Harper Rd. Corinth, MS

/s/ W. Jett Wilson onds East 49.623 feet; South Commencing at the SouthDaily Tuesday, May 8, 2012 17 Corner of the • NorthW. JETT WILSON 71 Corinthian degrees 00 • minutes 12 west MSB# 7316 seconds East 52.603 feet; east Quarter (1/4) of the SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE North 87 degrees 46 minutes Southeast Quarter (1/4) of Legals Legals 0955 0955 0955 Legals 33, Township 2 WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 46 seconds East 61.634 feet; Section Post Office Box 1257 North 65 degrees 07 minutes South, Range 7 East, Alcorn Corinth, MS 38835 04 seconds East 55.870 feet; County, Mississippi, said point (662) 286-3366 North 45 degrees 25 minutes being a marked 8 inch diame25 seconds East 47.037 feet; ter creosote post at a fence Publish 4 times: Thence continue along a line comer; Thence run North 89 May 8, May 15, May 22, May that is 5.0 feet West of and degrees 58 minutes 42 sec29, 2012 parallel to the existing said onds East along an old wire drive the following: North 27 fence and tree line 390.586 13703 degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- feet to a 10 inch diameter elm onds East 51.119 feet; Thence tree; Thence continue along leaving said line run South 88 said old wire fence and tree NOTICE OF SALE degrees 08 minutes 23 sec- line North 89 degrees 58 BY SUBSTITUTE onds East 47.007 feet to the minutes 42 seconds East TRUSTEE backside of a curb; Thence 465.153 feet to an iron pin run along the backside of said for the Point of Beginning; WHEREAS, BRAD curb the following: South 33 Thence continue North 89 HIGHT , made, executed degrees 26 minutes 20 sec- degrees 58 minutes 42 secand delivered to DONALD onds East 32.940 feet; South onds East along said old wire RAY DOWNS, PA 55 degrees 12 minutes 23 fence and tree line 353.118 ATTY , as Trustee for the seconds East 36.389 feet; feet to an iron pin; Thence benefit of SOUTHBANK, South 76 degrees 43 minutes run North 25.000 feet; certain Deeds of Trust as fol- 48 seconds East 39.985 feet; Thence run South 89 degrees lows: South 89 degrees 54 minutes 58 minutes 42 seconds West 13 seconds East 7.600 feet to 353.116 feet; Thence run A) Dated November 30, a PK nail; Thence leaving said South 00 degrees 00 minutes 2005, recorded as Instrument curb, run South 00 degrees 11 seconds West 25.000 feet No. 200509456, in the office 00 minutes 11 seconds West to the point of beginning, of the Chancery Clerk of Al- 228.307 feet to an iron pin on containing 0.203 acres, more corn County, Mississippi; an old wire fence and tree or less. B) Dated January 30, line; Thence run South 89 de2007, recorded as Instrument grees 58 minutes 42 seconds LESS AND EXCEPT a perpetNo. 200700632, in the office West 465.153 feet along said ual non-exclusive easement of the Chancery Clerk of Al- old wire fence and tree line and right-of-way for the folcorn County, Mississippi. to the point of beginning, lowing purposes; namely, the containing 2.325 acres, more right to enter upon the hereWHEREAS, SOUTH- or less. inafter described land and to BANK , legal holder and do any and all work necessary owner of said Deeds of Trust TRACT NO. 2: to build, maintain and repair a and the indebtedness secured Commencing at the South- road, together with the right thereby, substituted W. west Corner of the North- to use said easement for the JETT WILSON as Substi- east Quarter (1/4) of the purpose of, ingress and egress tute Trustee, in said Deeds of Southeast Quarter (1/4) of and for public utilities all over, Trust by instrument dated Section 33, Township 2 upon and across the following April 12, 2012, and recorded South, Range 7 East, Alcorn described parcels of land: in the Office of the Chancery County, Mississippi, said point Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- being a marked 8 inch diame- PARCEL A: A strip of land 25 sissippi, as Instrument ter creosote post at a fence feet wide, being 25 feet South No.201201799; comer; Thence run North 89 of and parallel to the followdegrees 58 minutes 42 sec- ing described line: WHEREAS, default hav - onds East along an old wire ing been made in the terms fence and tree line 390.586 Commencing at the Southand conditions of said Deeds feet to a 10 inch diameter elm west corner of the Northeast of Trust and the entire debt tree; Thence continue along Quarter of the Southeast secured thereby, having been said old wire fence and tree Quarter of Section 33, Towndeclared to be due and pay- line North 89 degrees 58 ship 2 South, Range 7 East, able in accordance with the minutes 42 seconds East Alcorn County, Mississippi, terms of said Deeds of Trust, 465.153 feet to an iron pin; said point being an eight inch and the legal holder of said in- Thence continue North 89 diameter creosote post; debtedness, SOUTH- degrees 58 minutes 42 sec- thence run North 89 degrees BANK, having requested the onds East along said old wire 58 minutes 42 seconds East undersigned Substitute Trus- fence and tree line 353.118 along a wire fence and tree tee to execute the trust and feet to an iron pin for the line 1296.376 feet to a consell said land and property in Point of Beginning; Thence crete right-of-way marker on accordance with the terms of run North 234.267 feet to a the West right-of-way line of said Deeds of Trust for the point 2.5 feet South of an ex- U.S. Highway 45 South; purpose of raising the sums isting curb; Thence run along thence run North 00 degrees due thereunder, together a line that is 2.5 feet South of 23 minutes 13 seconds East with attorney's fees, Substi- and parallel to said curb the along the West right-of-way tute Trustee's fees, and ex- following: North 56 degrees line of said Highway 279.948 pense of sale. 56 minutes 40 seconds East feet to an iron pin set for the 13.413 feet; North 78 de- point of beginning of this NOW, THEREFORE, grees 59 minutes 40 seconds easement; thence run along NOTICE IS HEREBY East 35.321 feet; North 88 the North line of said easeGIVEN that I, the under- degrees 05 minutes 38 sec- ment the following: North 88 signed Substitute Trustee, on onds East 43.317 feet an iron degrees 39 minutes 37 secthe 30th day of May, 2012, at pin on the West right of way onds West 89.105 feet to a the South front door of the line of U.S. Highway 45 South; nail being on the West edge Alcorn County Courthouse, Thence run South 0 degrees of a curb on an existing 25 in the City of Corinth, Alcorn 23 minutes 13 seconds West feet wide asphalt drive; County, Mississippi, within along the West right of way thence run along said curb the legal hours for such sales line of U.S. Highway 45 South the following: South 31 de(being between the hours of 249.739 feet to an iron pin at grees 22 minutes 56 seconds 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), will a concrete right of way West 17.705 feet; South 46 offer for sale and sell, at pub- marker; Thence leaving said degrees 28 minutes 00 seclic outcry to the highest bid- right of way line, run South onds West 22.124 feet; South der for cash, the following 89 degrees 58 minutes 42 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 property conveyed to me by seconds West along said old seconds West 32.055 feet; said Deed of Trust described wire fence and tree line South 75 degrees 21 minutes as follows: 87.520 feet to the point of 03 seconds West 21.689 feet; beginning, containing 0.500 South 89 degrees 19 minutes TRACT NO. 1: 51 seconds West 159.434 acres, more or less. Commencing at the Southfeet; North 89 degrees 54 west Corner of the North- TRACT NO. 3: minutes 13 seconds West east Quarter (1/4) of the Commencing at the South- 120.218 feet to a nail set, Southeast Quarter (1/4) of west Corner of the North- North 89 degrees 54 minutes Section 33, Township 2 east Quarter (1/4) of the 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; South, Range 7 East, Alcorn Southeast Quarter (1/4) of North 76 degrees 43 minutes County, Mississippi, said point Section 33, Township 2 48 seconds West 39.985 feet; being a marked 8 inch diame- South, Range 7 East, Alcorn North 55 degrees 12 minutes ter creosote post at a fence County, Mississippi, said point 23 seconds West 36.389 feet; corner; Thence run North 89 being a marked 8 inch diame- North 33 degrees 26 minutes General Help 0232 degrees 58 minutes 42 sec- ter creosote post at a fence 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; onds East along an old wire comer; Thence run North 89 thence leaving said curb run fence and tree line 390.586 degrees 58 minutes 42 sec- North 88 degrees 08 minutes feet to a 10-inch diameter onds East along an old wire 23 seconds West 47.007 feet elm tree for the Point of Be- fence and tree line 390.586 to a point being 5 feet West ginning; Thence run North 08 feet to a 10 inch diameter elm of an existing 10 feet wide asdegrees 55 minutes 13 sec- tree; Thence continue along phalt drive; thence run along onds East 279.132 feet to a said old wire fence and tree a line that is 5.0 feet West of PK nail being 5.0 feet East of line North 89 degrees 58 and parallel to said asphalt an existing 10 feet wide as- minutes 42 seconds East drive the following: South 27 phalt drive; Thence run along 465.153 feet to an iron pin degrees 04 minutes 20 seca line that is 5.0 feet East of for the Point ofAT Beginning; onds West 51.119 feet; and parallel to the existing Thence continue North 89 thence continue along a line said drive the following: South degrees 58 minutes 42 sec- that is 5.0 feet North of and 14 degrees 05 minutes 41 onds East along said old wire parallel to the existing said seconds East 11.050 feet; fence and tree line 353.118 drive the following: South 45 South 33 degrees 13 minutes feet to an iron pin; Thence degrees 25 minutes 25 sec40 seconds East 38.849 feet; run North 25.000 feet; onds West 47.037 feet; South Thence continue along a line Thence run South 89 degrees 65 degrees 07 minutes 04 that is 5.0 feet North of and 58 minutes 42 seconds West seconds West 55.870 feet; parallel to the existing said 353.116 feet; Thence run South 87 degrees 46 minutes drive the following: South 49 South 00 degrees 00 minutes 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; degrees 14 minutes 47 sec- 11 seconds West 25.000 feet North 71 degrees 00 minutes onds East 49.623 feet; South to the point of beginning, 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; 71 degrees 00 minutes 12 containing 0.203 acres, more North 49 degrees 14 minutes seconds East 52.603 feet; or less. 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; North 87 degrees 46 minutes thence continue along a line 46 seconds East 61.634 feet; LESS AND EXCEPT a perpet- that is 5.0 feet East of and North 65 degrees 07 minutes ual non-exclusive easement parallel to the existing said 04 seconds East 55.870 feet;General and right-of-way Help for the fol- drive the following: North 33 North 0232 45 degrees 25 minutes lowing purposes; namely, the degrees 13 minutes 40 sec25 seconds East 47.037 feet; right to enter upon the here- onds West 38.849 feet; Thence continue along a line inafter described land and to North 14 degrees 05 minutes that is 5.0 feet West of and do any and all work necessary 41 seconds West 11.050 feet, parallel to the existing said to build, maintain and repair a and to the end of easement. drive the following: North 27 road, together with the right degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- to use said easement for the PARCEL B: A strip of land 10 onds East 51.119 feet; Thence purpose of, ingress and egress feet wide, being 10 feet South leaving said line run South 88 and for public utilities all over, of and parallel to the followdegrees 08 minutes 23 sec- upon and across the following ing described line: onds East 47.007 feet to the described parcels of land: backside of a curb; Thence Commencing at the Southrun along the backside of said PARCEL A: A strip of land 25 west corner of the Northeast curb the following: South 33 feet wide, being 25 feet South Quarter of the Southeast degrees 26 minutes 20 sec- of and parallel to the follow- Quarter of Section 33, Townonds East 32.940 feet; South ing described line: ship 2 South, Range 7 East, 55 degrees 12 minutes 23 Alcorn County, Mississippi, seconds East 36.389 feet; Commencing at the South- said point being an eight inch South 76 degrees 43 minutes west corner of the Northeast diameter creosote post; 48 seconds East 39.985 feet; Quarter of the Southeast thence run North 89 degrees South 89 degrees 54 minutes Quarter of Section 33, Town- 58 minutes 42 seconds East 13 seconds East 7.600 feet to ship 2 South, Range 7 East, along a wire fence and tree a PK nail; Thence leaving said Alcorn County, Mississippi, line 1296.376 feet to a concurb, run South 00 degrees said point being an eight inch crete right-of-way marker on 00 minutes 11 seconds West diameter creosote post; the West right-of-way line of 228.307 feet to an iron pin on thence run North 89 degrees U.S. Highway 45 South; an old wire fence and tree 58 minutes 42 seconds East thence run North 00 degrees line; Thence run South 89 de- along a wire fence and tree 23 minutes 13 seconds East grees 58 minutes 42 seconds line 1296.376 feet to a con- along the West right-of-way West 465.153 feet along said crete right-of-way marker on line of said Highway 279.948 old wire fence and tree line the West right-of-way line of feet to an iron pin set; thence to the point of beginning, U.S. Highway 45 South; run along the North line of containing 2.325 acres, more thence run North 00 degrees said easement the following: or less. 23 minutes 13 seconds East North 88 degrees 39 minutes along the West right-of-way 37 seconds West 89.105 feet TRACT NO. 2: line of said Highway 279.948 to a nail being on the West Commencing at the South- feet to an iron pin set for the edge of a curb on an existing west Corner of the North- point of beginning of this 25 feet wide asphalt drive; east Quarter (1/4) of the easement; thence run along thence run along said curb Southeast Quarter (1/4) of the North line of said ease- the following: South 31 deSection 33, Township 2 ment the following: North 88 grees 22 minutes 56 seconds South, Range 7 East, Alcorn degrees 39 minutes 37 sec- West 17.705 feet; South 46 County, Mississippi, said point onds West 89.105 feet to a degrees 28 minutes 00 secbeing a marked 8 inch diame- nail being on the West edge onds West 22.124 feet; South ter creosote post at a fence of a curb on an existing 25 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 comer; Thence run North 89 feet wide asphalt drive; seconds West 32.055 feet; degrees 58 minutes 42 sec- thence run along said curb South 75 degrees 21 minutes onds East along an old wire the following: South 31 de- 03 seconds West 21.689 feet; fence and tree line 390.586 grees 22 minutes 56 seconds South 89 degrees 19 minutes feet to a 10 inch diameter elm West 17.705 feet; South 46 51 seconds West 159.434 tree; Thence continue along degrees 28 minutes 00 sec- feet; North 89 degrees 54 said old wire fence and tree onds West 22.124 feet; South minutes 13 seconds West line North 89 degrees 58 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 120.218 feet to a nail set; minutes 42 seconds East seconds West 32.055 feet; North 89 degrees 54 minutes 465.153 feet to an iron pin; South 75 degrees 21 minutes 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; Thence continue North 89

is looking for a responsible people person to fill full time Circulation Clerk position.

Ideal Candidate has experience in reception, bookkeeping and computers. General hours: 8am-5pm Mon.-Fri. Competitive Pay. Benefits: Health Insurance, 401K Vacation, Dental, Paid Holidays Please send resume to Human Resources Dept. P.O. Box 1800 Corinth, MS (662) 287-6111


120.218 feet to a nail set, onds West 47.037 feet; South west corner of the Northeast North 33 degrees 26 minutes South 80 degrees 11 minutes 18 •89Tuesday, May 8, 65 2012 • Daily Corinthian North degrees 54 minutes degrees 07 minutes 04 Quarter of the Southeast 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; 33 seconds West 31.715 feet; 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; seconds West 55.870 feet; Quarter of Section 33, Town- thence leaving said curb run South 89 degrees 02 minutes North 76 degrees 43 minutes South 87 degrees 46 minutes ship 2 South, Range 7 East, North 88 degrees 08 minutes 58 seconds West 82.619 feet; 0955 Legals Legals Legals Legals 0955 0955 0955 Legals 0955 0955 81Legals Home Improvement Storage, Indoor/ County, Mississippi, 23 degrees 33 minutes 48 seconds West 39.985 feet; 46 seconds West 47.007 feet North seconds West 61.634 feet; Alcorn Outdoor IN THE CHANCERY North 55 degrees 12 minutes North 71 degrees 00 minutes said point being an eight inch to a point being 5 feet West 16 seconds West 45.146 feet; & Repair 23 seconds West 36.389 feet; 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; diameter creosote post; of an existing 10 feet wide as- North 64 degrees 06 minutes COURT OF ALCORN BUTLER, DOUG: FoundaMORRIS CRUM North 33 degrees 26 minutes North 49 degrees 14 minutes thence run North 89 degrees phalt drive; thence run along 50 seconds West 38.933 feet; COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI tion, floor leveling, MINI-STOR., 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; 58 minutes 42 seconds East a line that is 5.0 feet West of North 46 degrees 43 minutes bricks cracking, rotten 72w., 3 locs. RE: LAST WILL AND thence leaving said curb run thence continue along a line along a wire fence and tree and parallel to said asphalt 37 seconds West 46.501 feet; TESTAMENT OF wood, b a s e m e n t s , Unloading docks/ North 88 degrees 08 minutes that is 5.0 feet East of and line 1296.376 feet to a con- drive the following: South 27 North 22 degrees 56 minutes BRENDA K. MOSES, shower floor. Over 35 Rental trucks, 23 seconds West 47.007 feet parallel to the existing said crete right-of-way marker on degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- 10 seconds West 37.498 feet; DECEASED yrs. exp. Free est. 286-3826. to a point being 5 feet West drive the following: North 33 the West right-of-way line of onds West 51.119 feet; North 05 degrees 22 minutes 731-239-8945 or CAUSE NO. 662-284-6146. of an existing 10 feet wide as- degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- U.S. Highway 45 South; thence continue along a line 10 seconds West 32.239 feet PROFESSIONAL 2012-0234-02 phalt drive; thence run along onds West 38.849 feet; thence run North 00 degrees that is 5.0 feet North of and to the end of easement. I DO IT ALL! Painting Int. SERVICE DIRECTORY a line that is 5.0 feet West of North 14 degrees 05 minutes 23 minutes 13 seconds East parallel to the existing said & ext., pressure washNOTICE TO and parallel to said asphalt 41 seconds West 11.050 feet, along the West right-of-way drive the following: South 45 The property described CREDITORS ing: driveways, patios, line of said Highway 279.948 degrees 25 minutes 25 sec- herein constitutes a part of drive the following: South 27 and to the end of easement. decks, houses; carpenfeet to an iron pin set; thence onds West 47.037 feet; South Forrest Memorial Park a plat degrees 04 minutes 20 secLetters Testamentary hav- try, plumbing, laminate onds West 51.119 feet; PARCEL B: A strip of land 10 run along the North line of 65 degrees 07 minutes 04 of which is filed for record in ing been granted on the 17 flooring installation & thence continue along a line feet wide, being 10 feet South said easement the following: seconds West 55.870 feet; the Office of the Chancery day of April, 2012, by the more. If you need it that is 5.0 feet North of and of and parallel to the follow- North 88 degrees 39 minutes South 87 degrees 46 minutes Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis- Chancery Court of Alcorn fixed, don't hesitate to 37 seconds West 89.105 feet 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; sissippi, in Plat Book 3 at page County, Mississippi to the unparallel to the existing said ing described line: dersigned Executrix of the Es- call. No job too small. to a nail being on the West North 71 degrees 00 minutes 10. drive the following: South 45 tate of Brenda K. Moses, De- Free est. 662-284-6848. degrees 25 minutes 25 sec- Commencing at the South- edge of a curb on an existing 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; ceased, notice is hereby given onds West 47.037 feet; South west corner of the Northeast 25 feet wide asphalt drive; North 49 degrees 14 minutes to all persons having claims Although the title to said against said estate to present 65 degrees 07 minutes 04 Quarter of the Southeast thence run along said curb 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; Paint/Wallcover seconds West 55.870 feet; Quarter of Section 33, Town- the following: South 31 de- thence continue along a line property is believed to be the same to the Clerk of this South 87 degrees 46 minutes ship 2 South, Range 7 East, grees 22 minutes 56 seconds that is 5.0 feet East of and good, I will sell and convey Court for probate and regis- INT. & EXT painting. No too small. 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; Alcorn County, Mississippi, West 17.705 feet; South 46 parallel to the existing said only such title in said prop- tration according to law, j o b within ninety (90) days from North 71 degrees 00 minutes said point being an eight inch degrees 28 minutes 00 sec- drive the following: North 33 erty as is vested in me as Sub- the first publication of this 662-603-1084. 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; diameter creosote post; onds West 22.124 feet; South degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- stitute Trustee. notice, or they will be forever North 49 degrees 14 minutes thence run North 89 degrees 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 onds West 38.849 feet; Storage, Indoor/ barred. 0320 Cats/Dogs/Pets 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; 58 minutes 42 seconds East seconds West 32.055 feet; North 14 degrees 05 minutes SIGNED, POSTED Outdoor This the 17 day of April, thence continue along a line along a wire fence and tree South 75 degrees 21 minutes 41 seconds West 11.050 feet AND PUBLISHED on this AMERICAN 2012. that is 5.0 feet East of and line 1296.376 feet to a con- 03 seconds West 21.689 feet; to the point of beginning for the 8th day of May, 2012. MINI STORAGE parallel to the existing said crete right-of-way marker on South 89 degrees 19 minutes the easement; thence run AUDREY ELIZABETH 2058 S. Tate drive the following: North 33 the West right-of-way line of 51 seconds West 159.434 North 14 degrees 05 minutes MOSES HILLIARD, Across from degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- U.S. Highway 45 South; feet; North 89 degrees 54 41 seconds West 59.441 feet; /s/ W Jett Wilson Executrix of the Last Will and World Color onds West 38.849 feet; thence run North 00 degrees minutes 13 seconds West South 88 degrees 55 minutes W. JETT WILSON Testament of North 14 degrees 05 minutes 23 minutes 13 seconds East 120.218 feet to a nail set; 52 seconds West 32.352 feet; Brenda K. Moses, MSB# 7316 287-1024 Deceased 41 seconds West 11.050 feet, along the West right-of-way North 89 degrees 54 minutes South 13 degrees 41 minutes SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE and to the end of easement. line of said Highway 279.948 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; 06 seconds West 52.537 feet; WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 4/24, 5/1, 5/8/12 feet to an iron pin set; thence North 76 degrees 43 minutes South 38 degrees 42 minutes Post Office Box 1257 3t 13680 PARCEL B: A strip of land 10 run along the North line of 48 seconds West 39.985 feet; 49 seconds West 62.250 feet; Corinth, MS 38835 feet wide, being 10 feet South said easement the following: North 55 degrees 12 minutes South 63 degrees 11 minutes (662)286-3366 Handyman of and parallel to the follow- North 88 degrees 39 minutes 23 seconds West 36.389 feet; 45 seconds West 40.483 feet; ing described line: 37 seconds West 89.105 feet North 33 degrees 26 minutes South 80 degrees 11 minutes Publish 4 times: OUTSIDE & INSIDE. Carto a nail being on the West 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; 33 seconds West 31.715 feet; May 8, May 15, May 22, May pentry, plumbing, deck, Commencing at the South- edge of a curb on an existing thence leaving said curb run South 89 degrees 02 minutes 29, 2012 roofing, tile, rotten (4)corner KITTENS. to a good 2 gray,asphalt 2 black. west of the Northeast 25 home. feet wide drive; North 88 degrees 08 minutes 58 seconds West 82.619 feet; 13704 wood repair, painting, Quarter the Southeast thence 662-415-7962. run along said curb 23 seconds West 47.007 feet North 81 degrees 33 minutes home siding, remodelBornof3/11/12. Male & female. Quarter of Section 33, Town- the following: South 31 de- to a point being 5 feet West 16 seconds West 45.146 feet; ing. 731-239-2601. ship 2 South, Range 7 East, grees 22 minutes 56 seconds of an existing 10 feet wide as- North 64 degrees 06 minutes Alcorn County, Mississippi, West 17.705 feet; South 46 phalt drive; thence run along 50 seconds West 38.933 feet; Services said point being an eight inch degrees 28 minutes 00 sec- a line that is 5.0 feet West of North 46 degrees 43 minutes diameter creosote post; onds West 22.124 feet; South and parallel to said asphalt 37 seconds West 46.501 feet; thence run North 89 degrees 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 drive the following: South 27 North 22 degrees 56 minutes 58 minutes 42 seconds East seconds West 32.055 feet; degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- 10 seconds West 37.498 feet; along a wire fence and tree South 75 degrees 21 minutes onds West 51.119 feet; North 05 degrees 22 minutes line 1296.376 feet to a con- 03 seconds West 21.689 feet; thence continue along a line 10 seconds West 32.239 feet crete right-of-way marker on South 89 degrees 19 minutes that is 5.0 feet North of and to the end of easement. the West right-of-way line of 51 seconds West 159.434 parallel to the existing said U.S. Highway 45 South; feet; North 89 degrees 54 drive the following: South 45 The property described thence run North 00 degrees minutes 13 seconds West degrees 25 minutes 25 sec- herein constitutes a part of 23 minutes 13 seconds East 120.218 feet to a nail set; onds West 47.037 feet; South Forrest Memorial Park a plat along the West right-of-way North 89 degrees 54 minutes 65 degrees 07 minutes 04 of which is filed for record in line of said Highway 279.948 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; seconds West 55.870 feet; the Office of the Chancery feet to an iron pin set; thence North 76 degrees 43 minutes South 87 degrees 46 minutes Clerk of Alcorn County, Misrun along the North line of 48 seconds West 39.985 feet; 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; sissippi, in Plat Book 3 at page said easement the following: North 55 degrees 12 minutes North 71 degrees 00 minutes 10. North 88 degrees 39 minutes 23 seconds West 36.389 feet; 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; 37 seconds West 89.105 feet North 33 degrees 26 minutes North 49 degrees 14 minutes to a nail being on the West 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; Although the title to said edge of a curb on an existing thence leaving said curb run thence continue along a line property is believed to be 25 feet wide asphalt drive; North 88 degrees 08 minutes that is 5.0 feet East of and good, I will sell and convey thence run along said curb 23 seconds West 47.007 feet parallel to the existing said only such title in said propthe following: South 31 de- to a point being 5 feet West drive the following: North 33 erty as is vested in me as Subgrees 22 minutes 56 seconds of an existing 10 feet wide as- degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- stitute Trustee. West 17.705 feet; South 46 phalt drive; thence run along onds West 38.849 feet; degrees 28 minutes 00 sec- a line that is 5.0 feet West of North 14 degrees 05 minutes SIGNED, POSTED onds West 22.124 feet; South and parallel to said asphalt 41 seconds West 11.050 feet AND PUBLISHED on this 59 degrees 15 minutes 30 drive the following: South 27 to the point of beginning for the 8th day of May, 2012. seconds West 32.055 feet; degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- the easement; thence run South 75 degrees 21 minutes onds West 51.119 feet; North 14 degrees 05 minutes 03 seconds West 21.689 feet; thence continue along a line 41 seconds West 59.441 feet; /s/ W Jett Wilson South 89 degrees 19 minutes that is 5.0 feet North of and South 88 degrees 55 minutes W. JETT WILSON SELDOM YOUR LOWEST BID 51 seconds West 159.434 parallel to the existing said 52 seconds West 32.352 feet; ALWAYS YOUR HIGHEST QUALITY MSB# 7316 feet; North 89 degrees 54 drive the following: South 45 South 13 degrees 41 minutes SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE minutes 13 seconds West degrees 25 minutes 25 sec- 06 seconds West 52.537 feet; WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 120.218 feet to a nail set; onds West 47.037 feet; South South 38 degrees 42 minutes Post Office Box 1257 North 89 degrees 54 minutes 65 degrees 07 minutes 04 49 seconds West 62.250 feet; Corinth, MS 38835 13 seconds West 7.600 feet; seconds West 55.870 feet; South 63 degrees 11 minutes Guaranteed Lowest Price! (662)286-3366 North 76 degrees 43 minutes South 87 degrees 46 minutes 45 seconds West 40.483 feet; • SAME PHONE # & ADDRESS SINCE 1975 48 seconds West 39.985 feet; 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; South 80 degrees 11 minutes Publish 4 times: • LIFETIME WARRANTIED OWENS CORNING –Install 33 seconds West 31.715 feet; May 8, May 15, May 22, May North 55 degrees 12 minutes North 71 degreesLoans 00 minutes SHINGLES W/TRANSFERABLE WARRANTY $20-$20,000 23 seconds –Pool liners (NO SECONDS) NeckWest Pain36.389 • Backfeet; Pain12 seconds West 52.603 feet; South 89 degrees 02 minutes 29, 2012 North 33 degrees 26 minutes North 49 degrees 14 minutes 58 seconds West 82.619 feet; 13704 • METAL, TORCHDOWN, EPDM, SLATE, TILE, –All type Disc Problems 20 seconds West 32.940 feet; 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; North 81 degrees 33 minutes SHAKES, COATINGS. Spinal Decompression Therapy maintenance thence continue along a line 16 seconds West 45.146 feet; thence leaving said curb run • LEAK SPECIALIST North 88 degrees 08 minutes that is 5.0 feet East of and North 64 degrees 06 minutes WE INSTALL SKYLIGHTS –Years of exp. Most Insurance Accepted 23 seconds West 47.007 feet parallel to the existing said 50 seconds West 38.933 feet; & DO CARPENTRY WORK to a point being 5 feet West drive the following: North 33 North 46 degrees 43 minutes Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 9-5 of an existing 10 feet wide as- degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- 37 seconds West 46.501 feet; Lowest prices anywhere! phalt drive; thence run along 3334 N. Polk Streetonds West 38.849 feet; North 22 degrees 56 minutes a line that is 5.0 feet West of North 14 degrees 05 minutes 10 seconds West 37.498 feet; Corinth, MSasphalt 3883441 seconds West 11.050 feet North 05 degrees 22 minutes JIM BERRY, and parallel to said Years for 10 seconds West 32.239 feet (662) 286-9950 drive the following: South 27 to the point of40beginning OWNER/INSTALLER degrees 04 minutes 20 sec- the easement; thence run to the end of easement. onds West 51.119 feet; North 14 degrees 05 minutes thence continue along a line 41 seconds West 59.441 feet; The property described that is 5.0 feet North of and South 88 degrees 55 minutes herein constitutes a part of parallel to the existing said 52 seconds West 32.352 feet; Forrest Memorial Park a plat drive the following: South 45 South 13 degrees 41 minutes of which is filed for record in degrees 25 minutes 25 sec- 06 seconds West 52.537 feet; the Office of the Chancery onds West 47.037 feet; South South 38 degrees 42 minutes Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis65 degrees 07 minutes 04 49 seconds West 62.250 feet; sissippi, in Plat Book 3 at page Laminate Flooring seconds West 55.870 feet; South 63 degrees 11 minutes 10. ¢ ¢Sq.¢ South 87 degrees 46 minutes 45 seconds West 40.483 feet; Best Selection .......... to Ft. 46 seconds West 61.634 feet; South 80 degrees 11 minutes Shingles Although the title to said North 71 degrees 00 minutes 33 seconds West 31.715 feet; $ 95Sq. Architectural Reg. $79.95.......... 12 seconds West 52.603 feet; South 89 degrees 02 minutes property is believed to be North 49 degrees 14 minutes 58 seconds West 82.619 feet; good, I will sell and convey Laminate Flooring ¢Sq. 47 seconds West 49.623 feet; North 81 degrees 33 minutes only such title in said prop20 Yr. Warranty...................................................... Ft. thence continue along a line 16 seconds West 45.146 feet; erty as is vested in me as Sub1x6 or 1x8 White Pine that is 5.0 feet East of and North 64 degrees 06 minutes stitute Trustee. $ 00 per 1000’ ............................................. parallel to the existing said 50 seconds West 38.933 feet; drive the following: North 33 North 46 degrees 43 minutes SIGNED, POSTED $ 95 Roll Roofing Sq. .......................... degrees 13 minutes 40 sec- 37 seconds West 46.501 feet; AND PUBLISHED on this onds West 38.849 feet; North 22 degrees 56 minutes the 8th day of May, 2012. Fancy Handle Locks Mow / Weed eat / Cleanup $ 95 North 14 degrees 05 minutes 10 seconds West 37.498 feet; Ea. Reg. $129.95 ............................................... 41 seconds West 11.050 feet North 05 degrees 22 minutes Residential/ to the point of beginning for 10 seconds West 32.239 feet /s/ W Jett Wilson $ 95 Commercial the easement; thence run to the end of easement. W. JETT WILSON Ea. Pine Plywood ½” 4x8 ................ North 14 degrees 05 minutes MSB#www.grassmasterllc.com 7316 Tile Porcelain & Fulton MSdescribed • 662-287-2151 41 seconds 1505 West 59.441 feet;Dr., TheCorinth, property SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE ¢ ¢¢ Ea. to Ceramic ........................ South 88 degrees 55 minutes herein constitutes a part of WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 52 seconds West 32.352 feet; Forrest Memorial Park a plat Post Office Box 1257 Handicap $ 95 South 13 degrees 41 minutes of which is filed for record in Corinth, MS 38835 Commodes Reg. $89.95................ 06 seconds West 52.537 feet; the Office of the Chancery (662)286-3366 South 38 degrees 42 minutes Clerk of Alcorn County, Mis$ 95 49 seconds West 62.250 feet; sissippi, in Plat Book 3 at page Publish 4 times: Storm Doors White & Bronze . South 63 degrees 11 minutes 10. May 8, May 15, May 22, May $ 95 45 seconds West 40.483 feet; 29, 2012 Vent-A-Hood Reg. 69.95 ............. South 80 degrees 11 minutes 13704 33 seconds West 31.715 feet; Although the title to said Gas $ 95 South 89 degrees 02 minutes property is believed to be Water Heaters................... 58 seconds West 82.619 feet; good, I will sell and convey Electric North 81 degrees 33 minutes only such title in said prop$ 95 Crushed Lime Stone (any size) 16 seconds West 45.146 feet; erty as is vested in me as SubWater Heaters................... Iuka Road Gravel North 64 degrees 06 minutes stitute Trustee. $ 95 Washed gravel 50 seconds West 38.933 feet; Ea. 3/8T-1-11 Siding................... North 46 degrees 43 minutes SIGNED, POSTED Pea gravel 37 seconds West 46.501 feet; AND PUBLISHED on this Fill sand $ 95 North 22 degrees 56 minutes the 8th day of May, 2012. Air Compressors ........... Masonry sand 10 seconds West 37.498 feet; Black Magic mulch North 05 degrees 22 minutes Natural brown mulch 10 seconds West 32.239 feet /s/ W Jett Wilson Top soil to the end of easement. W. JETT WILSON “Let us help with your project” MSB# 7316 “Large or Small” The property described SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE 412 Pinecrest • Corinth, MS herein constitutes a part of Bill Jr., 284-6061 WILSON & HINTON, P.A. Forrest Memorial Park a plat Post Office Box 1257 G.E. 284-9209 662-287-2221 of which is filed for record in Corinth, MS 38835 the Office of the Chancery (662)286-3366 Clerk of Alcorn County, Mississippi, in Plat Book 3 at page Publish 4 times: May 8, May 15, May 22, May 10. 29, 2012 13704 Although the title to said property is believed to be good, I will sell and convey only such title in said property as is vested in me as Substitute Trustee.

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BUSINESS & SERVICE GUIDE

RUN YOUR AD FOR ONLY $200 A MONTH ON THIS PAGE (Daily Corinthian Only 165)

In The Daily Corinthian And The Community Profiles $

PRUDENTIAL 1ST REAL ESTATE

CHIROPRACTOR

GLEN LISTING:

3 BR, 2 BA, on almost 4 acres. Private w/lg. front porch. Reduced & looking for offers.

Dr. Jonathan R. Cooksey

$79,000.

662-279-3902 or 662-279-3679.

GRAPHIC DESIGN & COMMERICAL PRINTING Business cards, brochures, catalogs & much more. Photography included!

662-415-0858

Available immediately at our modern manufacturing plant. No long wait and we can fix any kitchen or bath. We also stock a large number of counter top colors and styles for your convenience. Trained personnel to assist with your plans.

CLEAN-UP/ SPEED UP

GRASS MASTER

Best prices in Mississippi! SMITH CABINET SHOP

Bill Phillips Sand & Gravel

1299 Hwy 2 West (Marshtown) Corinth, MS 38834

Community Profiles

Community Profiles

PARKER POOLS 662-396-1888 or 662-665-1686. Leave message

662-665-1133 662-286-8257

39 99 62 79 662-842-2728 500 12 49 14 39 79 69 119 46 359 259 13 Community Profiles 126 Smith Discount Home Center

Community Profiles

Quality Tractor and Backhoe Services

• Garden Tilling • Bush Hogging • Blading • Water Lines • Ditching • Septic Lines • Debris Removal, Etc. FREE ESTIMATES Call or Text 662-279-9066

AUTO SALES ALES

HOUSE FOR SALE

Brand new 1200 sq. ft. 3 BR, 2 BA home w/single carport, SIGNED, POSTED AND PUBLISHED on this great starter home for the 8th day of May, 2012. family or great rental for investor. Located /s/ W Jett Wilson W. JETT WILSON behind Farmington MSB# 7316 Water Assoc. on CR SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE WILSON & HINTON, P.A. 212. $79,500. Post Office Box 1257 Corinth, MS 38835 284-9238 or (662)286-3366 287-7192.

$1,000,000 LIABILITY INSURANCE

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662-808-1000

Professional & Affordable Lawn Care Service

In-ground or Above-ground Pools

COMPUTER

662-415-0858

NEW KITCHEN CABINETS

JIMCO ROOFING.

Community Profiles

Community Profiles

See LynnParvin Parvin Lynn General Sales Manager

JONES GM 545 Florence Road, Savannah, TN 731-925-4923 or 1-877-492-8305 www.jonesmotorcompany.com

Community Profiles

Community Profiles


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