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The South Reporter VOLUME 149 (USPS-504320) HOLLYSPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI 38635 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2014 NUMBER 43 Sports Potts Camp, Byers end volleyball seasons N EWS B RIEFS Absentee voting continues until Nov. 1 Absentee voting continues in the Marshall County Circuit Clerk’s office for the November 4 general elec- tion. Regular office hours for absentee voting are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The circuit clerk’s office will also be open for absentee voting the last two Saturdays before the elec- tion until noon – October 25 and November 1. Saturday, Nov. 1, at 12 noon is the deadline for voting absen- tee in person at the office. Circuit clerk Lucy Carpenter reminds every- one that Voter ID will be required. If a voter does not have a proper photo ID, he or she can come to the cir- cuit clerk’s office and get one. On election day, Nov. 4, polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. The ballot includes contested races for U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, Chancery Court Judge (District 18, Places 1 and 2), Circuit Court Judge (District 3, Place 2). For a sample bal- lot, see page 15. Town Hall Meeting scheduled October 27 The City of Holly Springs announces a Town Hall Meeting next Monday, Oct. 27, at 6 p.m. It will be held at the Eddie L. Smith Multi- Purpose Building, 235 North Memphis Street. The agenda includes a city update from Mayor Kelvin Buck and a conservation and TVA energy savings workshop. MDOT sets forum on Hwy. 4 bridge work The Mississippi Depart- ment of Transportation will host a public meeting Thursday, Oct. 30, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at the Holly Springs High School cafete- ria. The purpose is to discuss plans to replace the Highway 4 East Bridge over the railroad track on Salem Avenue in the city limits of Holly Springs. Citizens are invited to attend the meeting to learn important information and express their opinions or concerns on replacing the existing bridge. Byhalia police officers respond to 46 calls The Byhalia Police Department responded to 46 calls last week. Chief Gary Looney released the following report – miscellaneous, 8; escorts, 2; juveniles, 1; dis- turbances, 3; animals, 3; motor vehicle accidents, 1; assists, 1; medical, 14, harassment, 1; and alarm calls, 12. Byhalia officers made four arrests last week. Opinion Mississippi’s recent football success may trigger “Flutie Effect” Your Community Newspaper Since 1865 • Phone 662-252-4261 • Email: [email protected] • Online at www.southreporter.com Many benefits to new meters Police make burglary arrest Breast Cancer Awareness Walk Nov. 1 By SUE WATSON Staff Writer The Holly Springs Board of Aldermen recently approved a November 1 one- mile fun walk to raise awareness of breast cancer and other cancer. The project is the dream of Sanchez and Natasha Blake. The walk will take place within the downtown area, beginning at 8 a.m. that Saturday, and will have police escorts. Private donations are being accepted to raise about $200 for decorations. Alderman Tim Liddy promptly volun- teered to make a donation from his busi- ness to help pay for decorations. Mayor Kelvin Buck also agreed to help raise private donations for the event. Event sponsors will have their names listed on the back of T-shirts. Ashland substation upgrade Bill Duke, customer service manager with the Tennessee Valley Authority, vis- ited the mayor and board of aldermen in October to explain plans for the upgrade of the Ashland substation and the con- struction of a new service line to the sub- station at TVA’s expense. HSUD will build a new substation and TVA will spend $15 million to replace the new line to the new substation, Duke said. By SUE WATSON Staff Writer The city has decided to catch up and keep up with the pace of technolo- gy by installing Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI meters) through- out the Holly Springs Utility Depart- ment power distribution system, said mayor Kelvin Buck. The bulk of the installation of new digital meters, that remotely read the kilowatts consumed by each customer, has been done. HSUD serves about 12,000 customers over a wide rural area including portions of Marshall and Benton counties. Automatic meters will be installed on water and gas meters after the elec- tricity meters have been switched out. Billy Mack Kinard, project manag- er for the GE AMI system at HSUD, explained the benefits of the digital metering to customers and to HSUD at a recent board of aldermen meeting. GE (General Electric) and the City of Holly Springs have a 10-year con- tract to provide service which includes installing the new meters, installing the data collecting system, collecting the data and providing it to HSUD. GE will also provide the servers that keep the AMI system up and running. Benefits to the customer Kinard said customers will be able to track their daily usage of electricity so they have a good idea of how much they use hourly. They then can decide to conserve if the usage is getting higher than they are comfortable with. The system also has an outage detection system so customers do not have to call or wait to get a call in to report an outage. The system automat- ically detects single outages and reports them to HSUD. The distribu- tor can send text messages or email messages to let the customer know By SUE WATSON Staff Writer The annual spaghetti supper to raise funds for the Humane Society’s Adoption Shelter was a big success, according to Carmen Marlin with the Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family Life Center, which Marlin said worked out very well for the event due to adequate space and parking. The local shelter rescues about 100 animals a year and finds homes for the pets once they are treated and ready for a new family. About 500 spay/neuter surgeries are performed each year by the organi- zation and volunteer veterinarians, Marlin said. To schedule a spay/neuter surgery, to volunteer, to make a donation, or to receive other information call 662-564- 2900. Leave a message and someone will return your call as quickly as possi- ble. Or contact the society by email at [email protected]. Monthly meetings of the local Humane Society chapter are held the third Thursday each month at 6 p.m. at the adoption center on Highway 311 North. The shelter is on the right just past the intersection of Highway 7 North and Highway 311. Those interested in the meeting may call to confirm the meeting time at the number above. For additional informa- tion visit www.marshallcountyhumane- society.org. Humane Society active in Marshall County Photo by Sue Watson Serving spaghetti supper plates are (from left) Deann Reed, Maggie Holmes and Jeanine Kahrs. By SUE WATSON Staff Writer Holly Springs police offi- cers made an arrest in a bur- glary that took place Monday around noon, according to chief Dwight Harris. He said watchful citizens provided information critical to developing a suspect. Residents returned home for lunch Monday around 12:30 p.m. to find their home had been robbed, he said. A burglar made entry through a back window while no one was at home at the residence in the 600 block of West Street. Items missing from the home have not been recov- ered as of Monday but included an Xbox 360, a 32- inch flat screen television, a PlayStation, a pair of Timberland boots and an e- reader. After watchful citizens provided a vehicle tag num- ber and description of the vehicle the suspect was driv- ing, police officer Coya Jackson and Capt. Elijah Wilson made the arrest about 1:25 p.m. Monday, Harris said. Tarvaris Rooks, 18, of the Rolfing Road area was arrest- ed and charged with one count burglary of a resi- dence, the chief said. Meth lab explodes By SUE WATSON Staff Writer A Holly Springs man was taken to the Regional One Medical Center (The Med) after an explosion of chemi- cals used in making metham- phetamine caused extensive burns to his body, according to sheriff Kenny Dickerson. A call came in to 911 about 4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17, to 73 Tara Road off Highway 7 North reporting that a 43- year-old male had burns to his body, the sheriff said. Deputies with the Marshall County Sheriff’s Department and paramedics responded to find the victim had severe burns to the face, neck and body, Dickerson said. He remained in the hospital Tuesday at press time. Further investigation revealed evidence the victim had been cooking methyl amphetamine outdoors and his car trunk had also caught fire. Evidence from an apparent meth lab was seized. Dickerson said the name of the victim is being withheld until the man is charged. Evidence will be presented to the next grand jury in January, he said. Dickerson said explosions and fires are common when Photo by Kerry Reid Everyone loves a parade The Byhalia High School homecoming parade rolled through the streets of the town Friday afternoon, October 10. Pictured, enjoying their ride, are members of the Byhalia High School Class of ’95 and others on the pickup. For more photos, see page 18. See ARREST page 17 See METERS page 17 See LAB page 17 See CITY BOARD page 17

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Page 1: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

The South ReporterVOLUME 149 (USPS-504320) HOLLY SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI 38635 • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2014 NUMBER 43

Sports

PPoottttss CCaammpp,, BByyeerrss eennddvvoolllleeyybbaallll sseeaassoonnss

NEWS BRIEFSAbsentee votingcontinues until Nov. 1Absentee voting continues

in the Marshall CountyCircuit Clerk’s office for theNovember 4 general elec-tion.Regular office hours forabsentee voting areMonday through Fridayfrom 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.The circuit clerk’s office will

also be open for absenteevoting the last twoSaturdays before the elec-tion until noon – October 25and November 1. Saturday,Nov. 1, at 12 noon is thedeadline for voting absen-tee in person at the office.Circuit clerk Lucy

Carpenter reminds every-one that Voter ID will berequired. If a voter does nothave a proper photo ID, heor she can come to the cir-cuit clerk’s office and getone.On election day, Nov. 4,

polls will be open from 7a.m. to 7 p.m. The ballotincludes contested races forU.S. Senate, U.S. House ofRepresentatives, ChanceryCourt Judge (District 18,Places 1 and 2), CircuitCourt Judge (District 3,Place 2). For a sample bal-lot, see page 15.

Town Hall Meetingscheduled October 27The City of Holly Springs

announces a Town HallMeeting next Monday, Oct.27, at 6 p.m. It will be held atthe Eddie L. Smith Multi-Purpose Building, 235North Memphis Street.The agenda includes a city

update from Mayor KelvinBuck and a conservationand TVA energy savingsworkshop.

MDOT sets forum onHwy. 4 bridge workThe Mississippi Depart-

ment of Transportation willhost a public meetingThursday, Oct. 30, from 4p.m. to 6 p.m. at the HollySprings High School cafete-ria.The purpose is to discuss

plans to replace theHighway 4 East Bridge overthe railroad track on SalemAvenue in the city limits ofHolly Springs.Citizens are invited to

attend the meeting to learnimportant information andexpress their opinions orconcerns on replacing theexisting bridge.

Byhalia police officersrespond to 46 callsThe Byhalia Police

Department responded to46 calls last week.Chief Gary Looney

released the followingreport – miscellaneous, 8;escorts, 2; juveniles, 1; dis-turbances, 3; animals, 3;motor vehicle accidents, 1;assists, 1; medical, 14,harassment, 1; and alarmcalls, 12.Byhalia officers made four

arrests last week.

OpinionMississippi’s recent football successmay trigger “Flutie Effect”

Your Community Newspaper Since 1865 • Phone 662-252-4261 • Email: [email protected] • Online at www.southreporter.com

Many benefits to new meters

Policemakeburglaryarrest

Breast Cancer Awareness Walk Nov. 1By SUE WATSON

Staff WriterThe Holly Springs Board of Aldermen

recently approved a November 1 one-mile fun walk to raise awareness of breastcancer and other cancer.

The project is the dream of Sanchezand Natasha Blake.

The walk will take place within thedowntown area, beginning at 8 a.m. thatSaturday, and will have police escorts.

Private donations are being acceptedto raise about $200 for decorations.

Alderman Tim Liddy promptly volun-teered to make a donation from his busi-ness to help pay for decorations.

Mayor Kelvin Buck also agreed tohelp raise private donations for the event.

Event sponsors will have their nameslisted on the back of T-shirts.

AAsshhllaanndd ssuubbssttaattiioonn uuppggrraaddeeBill Duke, customer service manager

with the Tennessee Valley Authority, vis-ited the mayor and board of aldermen inOctober to explain plans for the upgradeof the Ashland substation and the con-struction of a new service line to the sub-station at TVA’s expense.

HSUD will build a new substation andTVA will spend $15 million to replace thenew line to the new substation, Dukesaid.

By SUE WATSONStaff Writer

The city has decided to catch upand keep up with the pace of technolo-gy by installing Advanced MeteringInfrastructure (AMI meters) through-out the Holly Springs Utility Depart-ment power distribution system, saidmayor Kelvin Buck.

The bulk of the installation of newdigital meters, that remotely read thekilowatts consumed by each customer,

has been done. HSUD serves about12,000 customers over a wide ruralarea including portions of Marshalland Benton counties.

Automatic meters will be installedon water and gas meters after the elec-tricity meters have been switched out.

Billy Mack Kinard, project manag-er for the GE AMI system at HSUD,explained the benefits of the digitalmetering to customers and to HSUDat a recent board of aldermen meeting.

GE (General Electric) and the Cityof Holly Springs have a 10-year con-tract to provide service which includesinstalling the new meters, installingthe data collecting system, collectingthe data and providing it to HSUD. GEwill also provide the servers that keepthe AMI system up and running.

BBeenneeffiittss ttoo tthhee ccuussttoommeerrKinard said customers will be able

to track their daily usage of electricityso they have a good idea of how much

they use hourly. They then can decideto conserve if the usage is gettinghigher than they are comfortable with.

The system also has an outagedetection system so customers do nothave to call or wait to get a call in toreport an outage. The system automat-ically detects single outages andreports them to HSUD. The distribu-tor can send text messages or emailmessages to let the customer know

By SUE WATSONStaff Writer

The annual spaghetti supper to raisefunds for the Humane Society’sAdoption Shelter was a big success,according to Carmen Marlin with theMarshall County Humane Society.

This year’s supper was held at theEpiscopal Church Family Life Center,which Marlin said worked out very wellfor the event due to adequate space andparking.

The local shelter rescues about 100

animals a year and finds homes for thepets once they are treated and ready fora new family.

About 500 spay/neuter surgeriesare performed each year by the organi-zation and volunteer veterinarians,Marlin said.

To schedule a spay/neuter surgery,to volunteer, to make a donation, or toreceive other information call 662-564-2900. Leave a message and someonewill return your call as quickly as possi-ble. Or contact the society by email at

[email protected] meetings of the local

Humane Society chapter are held thethird Thursday each month at 6 p.m. atthe adoption center on Highway 311North. The shelter is on the right justpast the intersection of Highway 7North and Highway 311.

Those interested in the meeting maycall to confirm the meeting time at thenumber above. For additional informa-tion visit www.marshallcountyhumane-society.org.

Humane Society active in Marshall CountyPhoto by Sue Watson

Serving spaghetti supper plates are (from left) Deann Reed, Maggie Holmes and Jeanine Kahrs.

By SUE WATSONStaff Writer

Holly Springs police offi-cers made an arrest in a bur-glary that took placeMonday around noon,according to chief DwightHarris.

He said watchful citizensprovided information criticalto developing a suspect.

Residents returned homefor lunch Monday around12:30 p.m. to find their homehad been robbed, he said.

A burglar made entrythrough a back windowwhile no one was at home atthe residence in the 600block of West Street.

Items missing from thehome have not been recov-ered as of Monday butincluded an Xbox 360, a 32-inch flat screen television, aPlayStation, a pair ofTimberland boots and an e-reader.

After watchful citizensprovided a vehicle tag num-ber and description of thevehicle the suspect was driv-ing, police officer CoyaJackson and Capt. ElijahWilson made the arrestabout 1:25 p.m. Monday,Harris said.

Tarvaris Rooks, 18, of theRolfing Road area was arrest-ed and charged with onecount burglary of a resi-dence, the chief said.

Meth labexplodes

By SUE WATSONStaff Writer

A Holly Springs man wastaken to the Regional OneMedical Center (The Med)after an explosion of chemi-cals used in making metham-phetamine caused extensiveburns to his body, accordingto sheriff Kenny Dickerson.

A call came in to 911 about4 p.m. Friday, Oct. 17, to 73Tara Road off Highway 7North reporting that a 43-year-old male had burns to hisbody, the sheriff said.

Deputies with the MarshallCounty Sheriff’s Departmentand paramedics responded tofind the victim had severeburns to the face, neck andbody, Dickerson said. Heremained in the hospitalTuesday at press time.

Further investigationrevealed evidence the victimhad been cooking methylamphetamine outdoors andhis car trunk had also caughtfire.

Evidence from an apparentmeth lab was seized.Dickerson said the name ofthe victim is being withhelduntil the man is charged.Evidence will be presented tothe next grand jury inJanuary, he said.

Dickerson said explosionsand fires are common when

Photo by Kerry Reid

Everyone loves a paradeThe Byhalia High School homecoming parade rolled through the streets of the town Friday afternoon, October 10. Pictured, enjoying theirride, are members of the Byhalia High School Class of ’95 and others on the pickup. For more photos, see page 18.

See ARREST page 17

See METERS page 17

See LAB page 17

See CITY BOARD page 17

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Brenda Joyce CossittBrenda Joyce Cossitt, 66, of Hickory Flat, died Oct. 17,

2014, at Sanctuary Hospice House in Tupelo. She began as aMedicaid case worker and eventually went to work forNortheast MS Planning and Development. She was a Baptist,and she worked as an RN for 42 years.

Services were held at 2 p.m. on Oct. 19 at First BaptistChurch of Hickory Flat. Burial was in Flat Rock Cemetery.Bro. Danny Estes and Bro. Brownie Tohill officiated. HollySprings Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements.

She leaves her husband of 40 years, Glenn Cossitt; twosons, Billy Hughey, Lee Cossitt, both of Hickory Flat; a broth-er, Lloyd Hobbs (Phyliss) of Southaven; and six grandchil-dren.

She was preceded in death by a son, Scottie Cossitt; adaughter, Bonnie Moffitt; and brothers Richard Hobbs andBobby Hobbs.

Memorials may be sent to Sanctuary Hospice House, 5159West Main, Tupelo, MS 38801.

For online condolences visit www.hsfuneralhome.com.

Jerry W. LucasJerry W. Lucas, 67, of Byhalia, died Oct. 18, 2014, at his

home. He retired from Saia Motor Freightin 2011 as a truck driver, and was a memberof New Community Church in HollySprings, where he was a deacon.

Visitation will be Oct. 24, 2-7 p.m. andwith family from 6-7 p.m. at the funeralhome and Oct. 25 from 1:30-2:25 at thechurch.

Services will be held at New DimensionSalt and Light Ministries in Holly Springs with burial inCottrell Memorial Garden. Elder Robert Stephens will offici-ate. J.F. Brittenum and Son Funeral Home is in charge ofarrangements.

He leaves his wife, Annie Moffitt Lucas; five daughters,Deborah Matthews of Byhalia, Stacey Hardin of Atlanta, Ga.,Shayla Lucas of Memphis, Tenn., Kimberly Dowdy of Byhalia,Kasonia Moffitt of Memphis; three sons, Derrick Moffitt ofNorfolk, Va., Warren Moffitt of Memphis, Jerrious Hearn ofByhalia; three sisters, Rose McCoy of Memphis, MattieGarza, Helen Taylor, both of Red Banks; six brothers, WillieLucas of Holly Springs, Rufus Lucas Jr., Roosevelt Lucas,Walter Lucas, all of Victoria, Andrew Lucas of Red Banks,Lester Lucas of Memphis; 13 grandchildren and a special god-son, Ahmad Walker of Jacksonville, Fla.

Roberta Delbridge MullinsRoberta Delbridge Mullins, 84, of Benton County, died Oct.

14, 2014, at Tippah County Hospital inRipley. She was the widow of James F.Mullins.

Services were held at 11 a.m. on Oct. 18at Royston Chapel CME Church in PottsCamp, where she was a member. Burial wasin the church cemetery. Pastor GwendolynNelson officiated. J.F. Brittenum and SonFuneral Home was in charge of arrange-ments.

She leaves seven daughters, Josephine Boga, Hattie MaeMullins, both of Memphis, Tenn., Ellen Elliott, Gloria JeanCornelious, both of Holly Springs, Paul Ruth Corner, MaxinePerkins, Diane Anderson, all of Benton County; three sons,James Carruthers of New Albany, James Edward Mullins,George Frank Mullins, both of Benton County; six sisters,Carrie Mae Williams of Memphis, Birdie Johnson, JosephineDelbridge, Maggie Delbridge, all of Abbeville, NovellerMarion of Waterford, Sandy Lee of Clarksdale; three brothers,Lovely Goolsby, B.J. Delbridge, both of Grand Rapids, Mich.,Stanley Delbridge of Abbeville; 22 grandchildren, 26 great-grandchildren and 10 great-great-grandchildren.

She was preceded in death by a son, Sammie Lee Mullins.

Victor Saul PeytonVictor Saul Peyton, 71, of Holly Springs, died Oct. 17, 2014,

in Holly Springs. He was a member of Reid’sGift MB Church, a church deacon, a churchusher and choir member. He was a retiredmachine operator with Chrysler inBelvedere, Ill., in 2001.

Visitation will be Oct. 24, 2-7 p.m. at thefuneral home, and Oct. 25 from 9:30-10:25a.m. at the church.

Services will be held at 10:30 a.m. on Oct.25 at Chulahoma MB Church in Holly Springs. Burial will bein Reid’s Gift MB Church Cemetery in Potts Camp. PastorGene Peyton will officiate. J.F. Brittenum and Son FuneralHome is in charge of arrangements.

He leaves his wife, Shirley Sims Peyton; two daughters,Portia Peyton of Nashville, Tenn., Tomika Washington ofMemphis, Tenn; two sons, Victor Peyton Jr. of Phoenix, Ariz.,Markcedes Peyton of Holly Springs; three sisters, OdessaWalker, Naomi Lester, both of Potts Camp, Mary Vance ofTexas; three brothers, Charles Peyton of Seattle, Wash., GenePeyton of Ft. Worth, Texas, Bernard Peyton of Compton,Calif.; five grandchildren and one great-grandchild.

James Curtis SpearsJames Curtis Spears, 76, of Potts Camp,

died Oct. 15, 2014. He was a Baptist, ahotel/motel manager and a U.S. Navy veter-an.

Services were held at 11 a.m. on Oct. 17at Holly Springs Funeral Home. Burial was in Hill CrestCemetery.

He leaves two brothers, Travis Spears of Potts Camp,Sammie Spears of New Albany; two sisters, Jean Johnson,Ruby Skelton, both of Potts Camp.

He was preceded in death by a sister, Myrtle Hesslin.For online condolences visit www.hsfuneralhome.com.

John Albert TiceJohn Albert Tice, 54, of Byhalia, died Oct. 5, 2014, in

Barstow, Calif. He was a Mormon and a truck owner and oper-ator.

Services were held at 2 p.m. on Oct. 18 at Holly SpringsFuneral Home Chapel. Burial was in John C. SkeltonCemetery.

He leaves his wife, Cybil Tice; his son, Wesley Tice ofSouthaven; four daughters, Nicole Tice of Walls, AmandaDryja of San Antonio, Texas, Jacquelyn Lackey of Ashland,Winter Lackey of Memphis, Tenn.; six brothers, David Tice ofMyrtle, Alfred Tice of Grand Junction, Bobby Miller ofAshland, Clifton Tice of Newbern, Tenn., Terry Tice ofSomerville, Tenn., Leroy Tice of Oakland, Tenn.; three sisters,Mickie Hinton of Coldwater, Pauline Sexton, Sherry Orman,both of Lamar; and nine grandchildren.

For online condolences visit www.hsfuneralhome.com.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 2

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THANK YOUThe family of Mr. Tarther “Jack” Thompson, Jr.would like to thank everyone near and far for allyour acts of kindness. We want each of you toknow that your love moved and touched us.Thank you for your prayers, cards, phone calls,visits, flowers, food and monetary donationsduring our time of bereavement. But most of allfor your love and support. Our prayer is thatGod will continue to bless and keep each of youin perfect peace.

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Fit 4 Life Breast CancerOne-Mile Fun Walk will beheld November 1, 8 a.m.,beginning and ending on theHolly Springs square.

All proceeds will be dis-tributed to AllianceCharitable Foundation whichpays for mammograms,physicians, etc. for patientsneeding assistance.

Register before October24 by mailing payments to319 Lester Road, Holly

Springs, MS 38635 andreceive a T-shirt. On-site reg-istration will be held the dayof the race, 6:15 a.m. to 7:30a.m. Fees are ages 7-16, $14;ages 17 and up, $20; add $2for all 2X and 3X shirts. T-shirts for on-site registrationwill be limited, but will not beordered.

You may contact LatoshaS. Blake for additional infor-mation at 404-435-2977,[email protected].

Fit 4 Life Breast CancerOne-Mile Fun Walk

Employee recognizedNortheast Mississippi HealthCare, Inc., named employeeDenetta Williams as “Employeeof the Month” for August 2014.Williams serves as front office-dental clerk and has been withthe health center for one year.Northeast Mississippi HealthCare Inc. would like to thankDenetta Williams for her hardwork and dedication.

News Update Via Twitter@SouthReporter and

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Page 3: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

Devonte Smith will begraduating in a ceremony onThursday, Oct. 30, at 11 a.m.,at Baker Theater, FortLeonard Wood, Mo. Pvt.Smith completed an inten-sive, 10-week program thatincluded training in militarydiscipline, physical fitness,basic warfare principles andskills.

A native of Holly Springs,he is a 2014 graduate of HollySprings High School and theson of Carolyn and Henry D.Smith. He is the brother ofVonta Faulkner and Nevaeh.He is the grandson of the lateJulia A. and Woodrow

Faulkner Sr., the late HenrySmith Sr. and Annie B. Smithof Ripley.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 3

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PoliticalAnnouncements

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Alliance Hospital - 662-252-1212Williams Medical Clinic - 662-252-1599

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Elderly Elite Revitalization ProgramQuick (2-3 day) stay for the sick who need

IV Antibodies, Medication Adjustments24-Hour Physician Staffed ER-Level 4 Trauma Center

“Serving Marshall and Benton Counties”

“My grandmother was a mid-wife and she told me about Dr. Williams. My aunt Idella Ayerswas never sick, but was always going to see Dr. Williams; she used to say she just liked look-ing at him. This was back in 1999; I've been a patient since. Dr. Williams and Dr. Stallworthtake great care of me and my grandson. Years ago my grandson suffered from asthma; I’vespent many nights at Alliance Hospital with him. The staff is always treating me like fami-ly. I am more than comfortable at the hospital or the clinic. It is great when you go to a hos-pital where people know you. It makes a difference; they always give me extra care andexplain everything they are doing. My grandson is 13 years old. Just like Dr. Stallworth said,he has grown out of asthma. He is healthy, physically fit, has a great appetite, and is doinggreat in school. Thank you to Alliance Hospital and Williams Medical Clinic for taking careof me and my family.”

Judith Collins Owens

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Winner of the $200 grocery raffle The Byhalia Lions Club and Piggly Wiggly sponsored their annual $200 grocery raffle recently. Picturedabove, from left: store manager, David Mattox; James Patterson Jr., the son of winner James PattersonSr., who was unable to be there; Lion Jim Stutz, and Lion president Sam Wilbanks. The Byhalia Lionsexpress their gratitude to everyone for another successful raffle, especially Reed’s Piggly Wiggly, whosupports the Lions’ projects. Proceeds from the raffle will be used to help people who can’t afford eye-glasses to be able to get them.

95th Birthday CelebrationFriends and family of Corinne (Hurdle) Curtis, a resident of BentonCounty for over 60 years, gathered August 30 in Little Rock to cel-ebrate her 95th birthday. Guests came from Mississippi,Tennessee, Louisiana and Texas to join in the celebration. BentonCounty guests included Jan and Larry Roberson from the AbelStore community and Craig Hopper from Lamar. A lovely center-piece sent by Harris Chapel, Mrs. Curtis’s home church, graced theserving table. Many cards were received from other area residentswho were unable to attend. A birthday cake with the many namesthat Mrs. Curtis has acquired over the years was served to theguests and residents of Emeritus Senior Living complex.

Twenty million peoplehave died from smoking-relat-ed illnesses since 1964, whenthe first U.S. SurgeonGeneral’s report on smokingand health was released. Ofthose 20 million who died, 2.5million died from exposure tosecondhand smoke. Tobaccouse is the number one killer inthe U.S., killing 480,000 ayear; 4,700 in Mississippialone.

To remember those whohave died due to smoking-related illnesses, on October 7the Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention(CDC) Office on Smokingand Health launched its 20milllion Memorial. Everyoneis invited to share stories andphotos of friends and familymembers who have lost theirlives to smoking.

“The memorial is a greatplace to celebrate the life of aspouse, friend, parent or otherfamily member and also toeducate future generations onthe devastation that smokingcan cause to families,” saidLinda Turner, director of theMississippi Tobacco-FreeCoalition of Union, Bentonand Marshall Counties.

Nearly 540,000 Mississippiadults smoke cigarettes. Eachyear 2,700 Mississippi chil-dren under the age of 18become smokers, and about69,000 Mississippi childrenwill die prematurely fromsmoking.

“Smoking harms nearlyevery organ in your body,”says Roy Hart, director of theMississippi State Departmentof Health (MSDH) Office ofTobacco Control. “It is linkedto several different types ofcancer, heart disease, type 2diabetes, and reduced fertilityin both women and men.Tobacco is the leading pre-ventable cause of death in theUnited States.”

Memorials can be postedthrough social media with thehashtag #20million. All sub-missions will be added to theCDC’s website,www.cdc.gov/20million.

Follow us on Facebook atwww.facebook.com/MSTobaccoFree.

Pvt. DeVonte Smith

Everyone is invited to thehistorical Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum onSaturday, Oct. 25, from 12 to2 p.m. to meet a nativeMississippian, ThomasArmstrong. He will be pre-senting and signing his book,“Autobiography of aFreedom Rider.”

The book is the life of afoot soldier for Civil Rights, inwhich he tells of his experi-ences in the early civil rightsmovement in Mississippi,from 1958-1963 while attend-ing Tougaloo College.

A day toremember

Smith completes military training

The 14th Annual VeteransDay Celebration will be heldat Ida B. Wells-BarnettMuseum Tuesday, Nov. 11 at6 p.m.

Everyone is invited tocome and learn about theAmerican and AfricanAmerican soliders whoserved our great country.

Everyone is invited. Foradditional information call662-252-3232. Refreshmentswill be provided.

The musuem is located at220 North Randolph Street,Holly Springs.

Veterans DayCelebration atIda B. Wells

Book signing,presentationplanned forSaturday at Ida B.Wells

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Margaret Abram, of Ipswich, Suffolk,England gave herself an early 80th birth-day present by arriving in NorthMississippi for a visit with Nancy Lane inWaterford.

While visiting mutual friends inWichita Falls, Texas, the two becamefriends and while visiting and talkingabout things to do in this area, she wasanxious for a visit to this part of theUnited States.

The Peabody Hotel was one of thethings she most wanted to visit, and thatbecame a reality while here. Theyenjoyed a Sunday buffet, saw the walk ofthe ducks, and visited the home of theducks on the roof.

“The Peabody was beyond my wildestdreams,” she said. “It was wonderful. Ihave heard so much about it, and neverthought I would get to go. If I went to thePeabody every week, I would be as big asa house. Their pastries are out of thisworld.”

She also got a taste of the South by eat-ing at Phillips Grocery, Southern Eatery,and other local restaurants; and, she andher hostess visited Tupelo and the ElvisPresley Birthplace.

Something else she always wanted tosee was a cotton field. That was alsoaccomplished when she visited one of theMarshall County cotton fields of GuyHendrix. The timing was right as on theday of this visit, the cotton was open, andthe fields were white.

“That was a big plus,” she stated.She loved being able to see and touch

the open boll straight from the field.

This is howher trip wassummed up.

“It has beenwonderful and Ihave beenspoiled. I havemet all of Nancy’sfriends, and verymuch liked thefriendly and easyway of the peoplehere. They aremore open and friendly than in Englandand made me feel at home and not like astranger. They also take you at face value- everyone made me feel welcome. I alsoenjoyed lots of fresh fruits and vegeta-bles, homemade vegetable soup, and

especially enjoyed the delicious corn-bread made by Margaret Hart.

“Nancy is a wonderful friend andspoiled me dreadfully. I think I will takeher home in my suitcase. It was so lovelyto meet her friends that she has so oftenspoken of, and to visit in their homes.When I go back home, and she tells meabout the different ones she is visitingand talking to, I will know whom she isspeaking of and will be able to see theirhomes as well. It was a trip I will never for-get!”

On Thursday before she departed forher home, she and Nancy were able toview the harvesting of a stand of pinetrees and all that is associated with thistype of business. It was a very interestingand educational day, they said.

Back in 1984, diminutive but grittyBoston College quarterback DougFlutie heaved a desperation “Hail Mary”pass to wide receiver Gerald Phelan togive BC a 47-45 win over defendingnational champion the University ofMiami. It ranks in the minds of many asone of the most memorable and unlikelymoments in American sports history.

The next year at Boston College, thenumber of applications for admission tothe university soared – and thus wasborn the debate over the “Flutie Effect”– the notion that having a successfulsports team can and does increase thepopularity and prominence of the univer-sity and in many cases actually increasesacademic enrollment.

As Mississippi State and Ole Missbask in the glow of the 2014 football sea-son – which has seen both schools gainthe national spotlight – the question ofthe “Flutie Effect” is already beingasked. How will multiple trips by sportsnetwork TV shows like ESPN GameDayand SEC Nation, climbs to the top of thenational polls and wall-to-wall mediaexposure impact the two schools mov-ing forward?

Well, a little food for thought – afterAuburn won the BCS national champi-onship in 2010, enrollment increasedapplications by some 2,100 from the pre-vious year.

A number of reputable academicstudies at the University of Chicago,Brigham Young University and Cal-Berkeley have examined the relation-ship between athletic success and uni-versity growth and found examples likethis: Butler University, after its firstappearance in the NCAA Tournamentchampionship game in 2010, saw appli-cations jump from 6,760 to 9,518.

According to a study by professorsDevin Pope of the University of Chicagoand his brother, Jaren Pope of BYU, win-

ning an NCAAnational champi-onship in basket-ball or footballproduces anincrease in appli-cations of abouteight percent onaverage.

Cal-Berkeleyfound thatthere is “robustevidence thatfootball successincreases athletic donations, increasesthe number of applicants, lowers aschool’s acceptance rate, increasesenrollment of in-state students, increas-es the average SAT score of incomingclasses, and enhances a school’s aca-demic reputation. The estimates aremore than twice as large as comparableestimates from the previous literature.There is less evidence that football suc-cess affects donations outside of athleticprograms.”

In short, successful athletic programsat public universities not only have eco-nomic impact on the town-and-gowncommunities where they are located,those programs actually drive enroll-ment and serve as a primary recruitingtool for the academic side of the univer-sity as well.

There’s another consideration aboutthis strange and wonderful football sea-

son. No less than the Wall Street Journaltook note of the fact that while MSU wasranked No. 1 in both the AP andCoaches polls on Oct. 12, the school wasfar behind in football spending.

America’s financial newspaper ofrecord had this to say: “The Starkville,Miss., school spent $15.3 million on foot-ball in fiscal 2013, according to the mostrecent data available from the U.S. Dept.of Education. That makes MississippiState thriftier than every SEC memberand all but seven of the 65 schools in thefive richest conferences (including inde-pendent Notre Dame). Alabama, whichhosts Mississippi State on Nov. 15, spent$41.5 million on football expenses. It allo-cates almost as much for coaches’salaries ($11.8 million) as MSU does forits entire football program.”

The long and short of it is that theWSJ took note of how MSU did morewith less.

What the academic side of all eightMississippi universities have longargued is that the chemistry professors,English instructors, and talentedresearchers can say the very same thing– year in and year out.

The fact is that this has been the bestshake that Mississippi has had in thenational media in a number of years. Thevalue of the national exposure alreadyreceived for our state – regardless offootball loyalties – is immeasurable.Here’s hoping this great ride continues.

During the month ofOctober, scenes of hard-working farmers bringing inthe year’s harvest are com-monplace in Mississippi.More than 42,000 farms pop-ulate our landscape, growingcommodities such as poultry,catfish, cotton, corn, soy-beans, and peanuts.According to the MississippiDepartment of Agricultureand Commerce, the industrytotaled $7.5 billion in 2013,making it the largest job cre-ator in the state.

Congress took steps earli-er this year to provide farm-ers and ranchers across thecountry with a number of keyprogram revisions. Thesenew tools were included in acomprehensive “Farm Bill,”which was signed into law inFebruary 2014. The U.S.Department of Agriculture(USDA) recently reportedthat progress has been madeon “every (part) of the FarmBill including risk manage-ment tools, farm loan pro-grams, agricultural research,and disaster relief to farmersand ranchers.” But morework remains to be done.CCeerrttaaiinnttyy aanndd SSttaabbiilliittyy ffoorr

FFaarrmmeerrssFarming and ranching

operations are highlydependent on cooperatingweather and consumerdemand. They constantly bat-tle razor-thin profit margins.To combat these challenges,USDA is in the process ofimplementing the law’s newrisk management tools,including price and revenueprotections, and crop insur-ance reforms. These reformswill help provide farmers cer-tainty and stability whenmaking decisions about pro-duction loans, equipment,and crop insurance costs.Producers and taxpayersshould soon begin to see theresults of these criticalimprovements.

One of the most signifi-cant parts of the law is thereduction in overall mandato-ry spending -- $23 billion overthe next 10 years, includingvital reforms to the nation’sfood stamp program.Mississippi is fortunate tohave Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., leading the way ondeveloping the new FarmBill. As the lead Republicanon the Senate Agriculture,Nutrition, and ForestryCommittee, he saw that thelaw was both fiscally respon-sible and beneficial to everyMississippian.

SSaaffeegguuaarrddiinngg tthheeCCaattffiisshh MMaarrkkeett

For years, Mississippi’scatfish industry has beenconstantly undercut by

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 4

Fielder’s ChoiceBy Barry Burleson

Opinion

Good Ol’Boys Syndicate

By Sid Salter

EDITORIAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINESThe South Reporter welcomes Letters from Our Readers. The newspaper reserves the right toreject or edit letters which it deems potentially libelous or in bad taste.

All letters must include a current phone number and full address. Unsigned letters will not bepublished. Submissions are limited to one guest column or letter per month. Publication will bewithheld pending verification of authorship. Letters and columns printed do not necessarily repre-sent the editorial views of The South Reporter or its staff.

Send mail to: Letters to the Editor, P.O. Box 278, Holly Springs, MS 38635

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Pam and I ventured intonew territory last week as weescaped our day-to-day routineto celebrate our 25th weddinganniversary about six weeksearly.

We vacationed on HiltonHead Island in South Carolina.It was our first trip there.

It was all great, except thedrive there Monday night andTuesday morning. Thestorms and heavy rainfall fol-lowed us.

Once, between Hamilton,Ala., and Jasper, Ala., I had topull over because it was rain-ing so hard. Other times I wasdriving 30 miles per hour.

The weather had calmeddown once we reachedDouglasville, Ga., to spend thenight. Then the next morning,as we left Atlanta, Ga., thedownpour greeted us again.For the entire 10-hour trip, thewindshield wipers were turn-ing for about eight hours.

We arrived at Hilton HeadTuesday afternoon andunloaded our stuff at thecondo, about two miles fromthe nearest beach.

We kicked off our seafoodeating extravaganza that nightat The Crazy Crab.

The next morning, blueskies greeted us and contin-ued the rest of the week. Theweather was wonderful.

Pam picked up breakfast atthe nearby French Bakery,and then it was off for aboutfive hours at the beach.

Hilton Head, as we discov-ered, is much different fromOrange Beach, Ala., or GulfShores, Ala., which are ournormal vacation spots.

Beach access is limited atHilton Head. You can’t actuallydrive along the beach, but youcan park and walk just a shortdistance.

After our beach stay, wepicked Aunt Chiladas EasyStreet Cafe, because I wantedto eat and watch the KansasCity Royals vs. BaltimoreOrioles game. It was perhapsour best restaurant experi-ence of the trip. The fried keylime pie was divine.

We took in a movie, “GoneGirl,” that night at the nearbytheater. The mystery/thriller,which we watched from reclin-ers, was good.

The next day I had to getmy shopping out of the way –hitting the outlet mall withPam. Of course, that wasn’t allthe shopping on this trip. Wehit the boardwalk of shopsadjacent to one of the publicbeaches a few times. Ourfavorite there was a candleshop, where we bought a pairwith college logos – Universityof Alabama and University ofSouthern Mississippi.

Other restaurant adven-tures included The Salty DogCafe. My oyster experiencethere wasn’t great, but the restwas just fine.

Our favorite seafood choicehad to be Hudson’s SeafoodHouse on the Docks. We wentthere Friday for lunch andenjoyed sitting outside, adja-cent to the water, and watch-ing shrimpers leave for a day’swork. The meal was fabulous– some of the best shrimp I’veever put in my mouth.

Also Friday, we went to adifferent beach area, playedsome putt-putt golf and ate alate dinner at the Frosty FrogCafe. We had to start withshrimp but finished with somenon-seafood – pizza.

We will actually celebrateour 25th wedding anniversaryon November 25.

We decided to take the tripbefore then – prior to colderweather arriving. That choiceworked out beautifully.

Our next trip on the agendais Gulf Shores.

But we’re already talkingabout possibly going back toHilton Head sometime nextyear and taking all the family.

It’s always nice to take abreak, and this was one of ourbest ever.

Football success may trigger ‘Flutie Effect’

U.S. SENATOR ROGER WICKER

Seafoodand beach

See BILL page 5

Mississippireaping benefits ofFarm Bill

Guest from England gets taste of South

Guest ColumnistMary Minor

Margaret Abram enjoys her visit to the Marshall County cotton fields.

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 5

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OCTOBER 22• Holly Springs Intermediate School will hold Report Card pick-up andParent Teacher Conferences from 3 till 6 p.m.The PTA will hold a mem-bership drive in Frazier 1 Hallway. Parents please join for $5.• Revival, Davis Temple Outreach Ministry, 635 West St., Holly Springs,Elder Robert Davis. Oct. 22-24, 7:30 p.m. nightly. If you need a ride call662-512-8514.

OCTOBER 23• The Lessye Lee Davis 4-H Club will meet Thursday, October 23, at theMarshall County Library at 6 p.m. Bring your binder, wear your T-shirtand be prepared to recite the 4-H pledge.• Holly Springs Intermediate School will hold a parent training sessionon “Helping my Child with Common Core Skills” Thursday, October 23,at 5:30 p.m. in the cafeteria. Presenter will be Principal Susie Brown.Out-of-uniform passes will be given to children whose parents attendthe training session.

OCTOBER 24• The Victoria Volunteer Fire Department will have a Haunted Houseopen October 24-31, 7 p.m. Concessions available. $2 admission.

OCTOBER 25• Mt. Ollie MB Church will be having their Women’s and YouthConference; breakfast at 8 a.m.; conference starts at 9 a.m.• Keep The Faith Ministries will have their Second Annual CommunityAwards Banquet, 6 p.m., at Rust College Shaw Cafeteria.Honorees areGeorge Zinn, Kevin Thomas, Lincoln Martin, Flick Ash, Annie MoffittLucas, Marsha Powell, Cheri Powers-Page, and Betty Williams.Tickets$15 each, 2/$25 and $20 at the door. Tickets can be purchased atMatthew’s Liquor Store, Byhalia, and Annie’s Restaurant, Holly Springs.• Singing, Evangel Full Gospel Assembly, Holly Springs, 7 p.m. Bro.Malcolm Lindsey will be guest singer. Everyone welcome.• Friendship Baptist Church, Old Hernando Road, Fall Festival, 3 p.m.Pastor Bro. Romey Waldrop and congregation invite everyone.• Book presentation and signing at Ida B. Wells-Barnett Museum, 12-2p.m. Meet native Mississippian Thomas Armstrong.• Sat., Oct. 25, Neighborhood Clean-Up. Meet at Faith House of PrayerChurch, 9 a.m., next door to laundromat at the corner of Van Dorn andChesterman St. All communities invited. Refreshments will be available.Sponsored by Concerned Citizens, Alderman Ward 3 Mark Miller andthe Holly Springs Street Dept.

OCTOBER 26• Brookside Baptist Church fall revival Oct. 26-29 with guest speakerSteve Hale. For more info., please contact the church office at 662-890-4063.• Greenfield Presbyterian Church is having their Pastor and Wife’s LoveDay during the 11 a.m. service. All are invited.• Kimbrough Chapel Baptist Church will host their 119th church anniver-sary. Guests will be Pastor Curlie Reliford and Strawberry BaptistChurch, 11 a.m. Rev. J.W. Smith, host pastor.• Mt. Ollie MB will celebrate Women’s Day Program. Guest speaker formorning services, apostle Mae L.Palmer from Aurora, Ill., will start at 11a.m. Special guest speaker for 2:30 p.m. will be Annie Jean Spight fromHopewell No. 2. Everyone is invited.• Installation service for Rev.Micheal Gordon as the new pastor of SmithGrove Church, 3 p.m. Guest speaker will be Pastor McArthur King andJeffries Chapel Church family of Oxford. All are invited to come out andwelcome him into the community.• Homecoming-Old Fashioned Day - First Baptist Church, 6874 ChurchAve., Potts Camp, 9:45 a.m. Message by Bro. Herbert Luther, formerFBC member, now pastor of Pleasant Hill Baptist Church in Ashland.Singing by local talent. Buffet meal at noon. Bro. Paul Hicks, pastor; Bro.Larry Tate, music director.• Pastor and Wife’s Love Day for Tracy and Shreda Jeffries will be heldat New Faith Outreach Ministries, 2:30 p.m.Guests will be Pastor PatrickWashington and the Greenwood Church family.The church is located at1296 S. Red Banks Road.• Free Branch MB Church will host a breast cancer/domestic violenceawareness ceremony Oct. 26, 9 a.m.The community is invited.• Annual Harvest Day program, St. Paul CME Church, Lake Center,Sun., Oct. 26, 2:30 p.m. Guests will be Rev. Michael Paul James andSmith Chapel CME Church of Abbeville. Pubic is invited.• Holly Springs High School Class of 1986 will meet Sun., Oct.26, 3 p.m.at Mr. Chic’s Barber Shop. All classmates please attend.

OCTOBER 27• Revival at Potts Camp Methodist Church will be held on October 27and 28. Rev. Brownie Tohill will be the speaker, music by Mitch Stone.

OCTOBER 28• Attention: Relay for Life team The Stepping Sensations’ fund-raiser atPizza Hut, 4-6 p.m. Bring your questions about the importance of hav-ing a will, living will and power of attorney. Contact 662-216-0450.Rosemary Brown, team captain.

OCTOBER 30• The Lessye Lee Davis 4-H Club will have a Halloween Party at PizzaHut, Thursday, October 30, at 6 p.m. Members must wear a costume; aprize will be given for the best costume. Parents must accompany theirchild. For more information contact M. Hicks at 662-252-5920.

OCTOBER 31• Citizens Bank is having a food drive for Hearts and Hands Ministry atthe main bank in Byhalia, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. For a donation of non-perish-able foods, you can get a hotdog, hamburger, chips and drink.Giveaways for children also.• “A Community Affair” Harvest Festival fun with the Children’s SuperChurch of Friendship Assembly of God. The fun-filled night begins at 6p.m. with inflatables, games, hay rides, good eats and much more.Thechurch is located at Victoria, Exit 18, off of Hwy. 178.• Hallelujah Night will be held at Asbury United Methodist Church from6-9 p.m.There will be games, prizes, free food, a costume contest andfree giveaways.• Chewalla Assembly of God on Higdon Road will have fall festivities, 5p.m.-10 p.m. Everyone come and enjoy food, games and giant slide.• Spring Hill Baptist Church, Waterford, will have a Hallelujah HarvestFestival at the Waterford community Center, Oct. 31, 6-8. Live Christianmusic, food and annual “Trunk or Treat.” Bring your lawn chairs.

Picture from the Past

Many of the pictures in the newspaper’s old files have no names ordates. If you know anything about the photo and would like to sharethe information with our readers, please call 662-252-4261 or sendan email to [email protected]. Last week’s photo was notidentified.

Recipes from Martha Ruth Leonard11999944 BBeesstt RReecciippeess YYeeaarrbbooookk

Better Homes and Gardens

Mexican Stromboli

1 lb. lean ground beef or 5-oz. can dark red kidney ground turkey beans or pinto beans,1-1/2 cups salsa rinsed and drainednon-stick spray coating 2 10-oz. pkgs. refrigerated3/4 cup shredded low-fat pizza doughMonterey Jack cheese milk1 tbsp. yellow cornmeal

For filling, in a large skillet cook the beef or turkey til nolonger pink; drain off fat. Stir in half the beans and all of thesalsa. Mash the remaining beans with a fork or potato mash-er; add beans to the meat mixture. Bring to boiling; reduceheat. Simmer, uncovered, about 5 minutes or until most ofthe liquid has evaporated. Cool about 5 minutes.

Spray a 15x10x1 baking pan with nonstick coating; set aside.On a lightly floured surface, roll one sheet of pizza doughinto a 12x10 rectangle. Trim dough to a 10-inch square,reserving trimmings.

Spoon half of the shredded cheese down the center of thedough square. Spoon half the meat mixture over the cheese.Moisten the dough edges with milk. Bring the edge sides ofdough together over the filling; stretch and pinch to sealwell. Fold the ends up and pinch to seal.

Repeat the process with the remaining dough, cheese andmeat mixture.

With the leftover dough, cut out designs and place on top.Sprinkle tops with 1/2 tbsp. each of cornmeal.

Bake for 30 minutes or until golden brown in a 400° pre-heated oven. Slice into serving size pieces. Serve with extrasalsa if desired.

Pages from the Past

25 Years Ago - October 26, 1989Dedicated: Chamber office named historic site

The Holly Springs Chamber of Commerce, occupant of the building whichserved as the First Presbyterian Church in 1836, was presented a plaque desig-nating the building as a National Presbyterian Historic Landmark during morn-ing worship Sunday.Chamber & IDA invite entrants for revival of Christmas parade

Holly Springs will have a Christmas parade this year! The Chamber ofCommerce and the IDA are sponsoring a Christmas Parade Dec. 2. The paradewill coincide with the lighting of the Christmas tree on the Square Nov. 30.

50 Years Ago - October 22, 1964City Electric Dept. offers cash bonuses during laundry special

Beginning Oct. 22, City of Holly Springs Electric Dept. will pay cash bonusesto customers who purchase and install certain electric laundry appliances.Bonuses will be awarded for these appliances: automatic washer, $10; electricclothes dryer, $15; electric water heater, $25; electric water system, $25.Reminiscing through Pages of the Past

The Holly Springs Reporter, Oct. 11, 1889: General G.Y. Freeman was in townthis week visiting his mother Mrs. Kate Freeman (Clark). The Holly SpringsSouth, Oct. 14, 1914: J.V. Tyson has passed his examination before theMississippi Board of Pharmacy and will receive his license soon.

10 Years Ago - October 21, 2004Korean War vets hold reunion in Holly Springs

Fifteen U.S. Navy veterans, all who served on flight crews in the PhilippineSea were in Holly Springs recently for the group’s 50th reunion. Fitch Farmsserved as headquarters for the men and their wives. General DouglasMacAuthor was Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers in Japan at the timeof the conflict: a full-fledged United Nations war that was never declared.Rust receives new organ for music department

The halls are alive with the sound of music! An Allen electric organ wasrecently given to the music department at Rust College. It was obtained througha request made by Dr. Norman Chapman, associate professor of music at Rust.

By BARRY BURLESONEditor

The Haunted Holly Fall Celebration isjust a week away.

The three-day event kicks offWednesday, Oct. 29, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.with Photos, Potions and Paintings host-ed by The Gallery @156 with the ByhaliaArts Council.

Pre-registration ends October 24 –only a $5 registration fee.

On Thursday, Oct. 30, from 6 p.m. to 8

p.m., the downtown square will comealive with “Square Crows,” featuring sec-ond graders and sweets with the HollySprings Main Street Chamber.

Enjoy the “Scare-Affair on the Square”and watch the ghouls and goblins pres-ent a themed “Square Crow.” The win-ning school will receive a $100 prize for amovie and popcorn party.

Activities start at 5:30 p.m. on Friday,Oct. 31, Halloween Day. It’s a family“Spoof-Fair” around the square.

Participants are urged to put on theirfavorite costumes and ride downtownHolly Springs for a fun night with thefamily. There will be free games andgoodies.

Also, the Haunted Holly Mansion willbe open from 8:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. Thesupernatural experience will take place at305 Craft Street.

For more information, contact theHolly Springs Tourism and RecreationBureau, 662-252-2515.

City of Holly Springs employees recently took down the bankon the south side of the Eddie Lee Smith Multi-PurposeBuilding on North Memphis Street and around the walking trail.Work will commence on creating some pads for family cook-

outs and picnicking around the park and near the splash pad.Pictured on the job are Viez Todd (left, foreground), HowardWashington (on front end loader), Jarvis Lane and PatrickGatewood (right, foreground).

Park improvements in city

Photo by Sue Watson

Haunted Holly activities Oct. 29-31

underpriced frozen fish filletsfrom Asia. The Farm Bill pro-tects American producers byhelping to level the playingfield. The law directs theUSDA to finish implementingthe catfish inspection pro-gram. This program requiresall producers of catfish –domestic and international –to abide by the same foodsafety standards.

Unfortunately, the pro-gram has been stalled bybureaucratic entanglementsat the Office of Managementand Budget. That agency isrequired to sign off before

implementation of USDA’scatfish inspection programcan begin. I am hopeful thatthe administration willapprove the program soon.Safeguarding the catfish mar-ket from foreign counterfeitsis not only important for pro-ducers but also for con-sumers who have a right tohave access to clean farm-raised catfish.

RReegguullaattoorryy OOvveerrrreeaacchhTThhrreeaatteennss FFaarrmmeerrss

Despite the impact of theFarm Bill, it seems theObama Administration islooking for new ways to

obstruct the positiveprogress of our nation’s farm-ers and small businesses. InApril, the EnvironmentalProtection Agency (EPA)and U.S. Army Corps ofEngineers proposed a newrule to expand federal author-ity under the Clean Water Actto regulate even smallstreams, farm ditches, wet-lands, and ponds. Theirbroadened definition of the“waters of the United States”flies in the face of long-stand-ing Congressional intent andSupreme Court rulings.

In the Senate, my col-

leagues and I have worked toprevent overreach by EPAand the Corps under theClean Water Act. I am acosponsor of the “ProtectingWater and Property RightsAct of 2014,” a bill introducedby Sen. John Barrasso, R-Wyo., to stop the agencies’proposed rule from beingfinalized.

I am committed to work-ing with producers in ourstate to ensure agricultureremains an integral part ofour economy and our way oflife. The new farm bill is agood step in that direction.

BILLContinued from page 1

Marshall County Sheriff Kenny Dickerson thanked everyone who par-ticipated in a fund-raiser Friday to help defray expenses for jail admin-istrator Bobby Harris, who is undergoing chemotherapy at West Clinicfor pancreatic cancer. The sheriff’s cooking team included, from left,

Patricia Glass, Peggy Backen, Larry Rankin, Cathy Brittenum, BobbyHarris, Stacey Richmond, Yolanda Jones, Jennifer Jones, StevellaFaulkner, Karla Burns and Al “Squirrel” Holbrook. More than 1,000plates were sold.

Photo by Beth Breithaupt

Successful fund-raiser for Harris

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By MARTH HARDYCornersville-Blythe

I hope all my readers areenjoying this wonderful coolweather as much as I am.Sunday was a beautiful sun-shine-filled day and this oneis starting off that way aswell.

I have been wondering ifanyone else has experienceda new strange phenomenonin nature. I have noticed avery remarkable lack of birdsin my yard. We have manytrees all around my houseand my place backs up to theHolly Springs NationalForest. We moved back toMississippi in the early 1960sand have always had manybirds of all kinds around theplace. Early in the summer,my sister, who lives inCornersville, asked me if wehad any wild birds. She hadbeen discussing this withour brother, who lives inByhalia. They were thinkingthey had not seen any or atleast not very many birds thisyear. I had not really noticedat the time, but as time goesby, I realized I have not seenany either, or just a few.

Another strange thing -- inyears past I have had somany red tiger lilies (AKAnaked ladies), that one yearwe dug up three bushels andgave away to friends andeven sold some of them, asthey needed to be thinned.

The following year theyhad recovered and did greatand multiplied once again.They are supposed to bloomin late August or even up intomiddle September and earlyOctober. This year we did nothave but a very few in bloom.However, in the past week, Ihave noticed that otherfoliage is coming up all overthe place. This means noth-ing has bothered the bulbs.Also some of my plants thatwere supposed to bloom inspring failed to do so and arenow in bloom and myhydrangeas are loaded withblossoms and buds. Just won-dering!

My friends Betty andDavid Greer will be celebrat-ing 52 years of married lifeon October 27. Betty tells methat it does not seem possiblethat it has been this long.This speaks volumes for themarriage, and for the factthat David has been a goodhusband. Here’s hoping youtwo will enjoy many moreyears of wedded bliss.

Congratulations are inorder for Jay and RoxanneRowland. They are the proudparents of a fine baby boy,who was born on Friday,October 17. GrandmotherSue tells me that they areboth doing fine. They namedthe baby Zachary AlexanderRowland and he is welcomedhome by big brotherChristopher, sister Jayne,and brother Brendan.

Bill and Sue are now thegrandparents of 14 grands.

What a wonderful time theymust have at Christmas withall these grands.

Another grandson of Billand Sue, Daniel Smothers,celebrated a birthday onSaturday at his home in OliveBranch. Daniel will be 15 onOctober 24. He is the son ofdaughter Rhonda. Bill andSue went to the party andtook along the children of Jayand Roxanne and the chil-dren of the other son Jon.

A great big HappyBirthday wish is sent toDaniel -- may you have manymore.

My son Norman calledSaturday to ask if any of thefamily down this way wouldlike to go to the air show inMillington, Tenn., with him,as no one at his house want-ed to go. So son Austin wentup and they enjoyed the BlueAngels Air Show.

Yesterday at church I

asked Billie Cooper if hergrandaughter Chase was nota little apprehensive aboutflying due to the Ebola scare.Chase is an international air-line hostess. Billie said no,she is not fearful, and hadbeen spending a week herewith family.

This is all I have for thisweek, but leave you with thisthought I read recently in alittle inspirational booklet. Itsays, “I heard God’s voicewhen I was tired, andsearched in vain for sleep,and when I was happy, and itseemed the world was mineto keep. To what great lengthHe went to prove He is mygreatest friend. No matterwhen I call to Him He neverfails to hear, of that I have nofear.”

Call me or [email protected]; land-line, 662-988-3685, cell, 662-316-8963.

Life is a wonderfulthing. We have ourups and downs, wesuffer from illness,loss of loved ones,but we seem to over-come the hurdles inlife.

We pray beforebed, we thank Godupon rising the nextday.

As we rise from a goodnight’s sleep and look out ourwindows, we are amazed atthe beauty of each morning –birds singing, a light windblowing, flowers blooming,trees green in the summer,turning different colors thisfall.

Winter can be a bitdepressing – grass brown,trees bare of leaves, no flow-ers. Then it snows, and every-thing is bright, clean andwhite, a quiet time, a time toreflect on how beautiful eachseason is to us. Thank God foreach season; each has its pur-pose, God blesses each.Before bed, thank Him foryour well-being, thank Himfor allowing you to rise eachmorning and see another dayand its beauty.

If you have children, spend

time with them, talkwith them, show yourinterest in their dailyroutines and especial-ly their school activi-ties. Our childrenneed more attentionand family time. Doyour part and you willhave loving andresponsible children.

Hug and kiss your spouseand children daily. Have atleast one family meal sittingdown at the table. Go to thechurch of your choice as afamily. Remember, “the familythat prays together, staystogether.”

Young people, listen toyour parents, teachers andother older adults. We havebeen where you are trying togo. We have experiencedmore than you can imagine.Young people, you have life soeasy. Love and respect yourparents, teachers and peers.

Remember to hug and kissyour spouse, your childreneach and every morning andbefore bed. Life is short thesedays. Tell them daily you lovethem. That’s for adults andyoung people too.

This week, let’s spreadmore love and care among

our parents, peers, our teach-ers and our Christian broth-ers and sisters, then our worldwill be better. Love and youshall be loved.

Have a great week. I knowI will. I love each and all myreaders and those who do notread my articles.

Jesus said inMatthew 11:28-30:“Come unto me, all yethat labour and areheavy laden, and I willgive you rest. Take myyoke upon you, andlearn of me; for I ammeek and lowly inheart: and ye shallfind rest unto yoursouls. For my yoke is easy, andmy burden is light.”

Sympathy is extended tothe family of James Spearswho passed away Wednesday,Oct. 15. Services were heldFriday, Oct. 17, at HollySprings Funeral Home withburial in Hill Crest Cemetery,also in Holly Springs.

Condolences are also sentto the family of Brenda Cossittwho passed away Friday, Oct.17, at Sanctuary HospiceHouse in Tupelo. Serviceswere held Sunday, Oct. 19, atFirst Baptist Church inHickory Flat with burial inFlat Rock Cemetery nearHickory Flat. She worked as aregistered nurse for 42 years,was a Medicaid caseworker,and also worked forNortheast MississippiPlanning and Development.

Congratulations toThomas Goode and CourtneyBlair on their wedding,October 11, at Como BaptistChurch. Courtney’s parentsare Mike Sumner of Como,and the late Judy Sumner, andMr. and Mrs. Frank Collins ofSenatobia. Thomas is the sonof Kenny and Edna FayeGoode of this community. Hisgrandparents were the lateJ.T. and Bertha Jones and thelate Delmer and Mary Goode,also of this community.

Congratulations to Jay andRoxanne Rowland on thearrival of a son, ZacharyAlexander Rowland, Friday,Oct. 17, 2:43 p.m., at BaptistMemorial Hospital, Oxford.He weighed seven poundsand five ounces and was 19-1/4 inches long. Zachary isalso being welcomed into thefamily by his brothers,Christopher and Brendan,and his sister, Jayne.

Louise Jennings celebrat-ed her birthday Tuesday, Oct.14, with most of her family inattendance. She said theywere all there except theHuntsville, Ala., group andthey came for the weekend.She enjoyed spending timewith her grandson, KenDaniels, his wife, Haven, andespecially their twins, Wesleyand Selah. This was the twins’first time to visit family inMississippi.

Friday, Oct. 17, the TippahRiver Road off Hwy. 349 wasdedicated in honor and mem-ory of the late Fred K.Whaley. A resolution was readby Ronnie Joe Bennett, presi-dent of the Marshall CountyBoard of Supervisors; KentSmith welcomed everyone tothe event; and Rodney

Whaley said a fewwords on behalf ofthe family. The occa-sion was attended bythe large Whaley fam-ily, relatives andfriends. It was ahappy occasion, hon-oring a great manwho was a descen-dent of the first settler

of Potts Camp, Col. ErasmusPotts.

Margaret Abram ofIpswich, England, who hasbeen visiting Nancy Lane, leftfor her home last Saturdayafter having a wonderful timein North Mississippi. She andNancy had several adventureswhile she was here. Margaretsaid she enjoyed visiting all ofNancy’s friends and it was sadfor her to leave.

David Fuller attended theFuller family reunion atRiverside in Lafayette Countythis past Sunday afternoon. “Isaw several family memberswho I do not see often, andenjoyed the day with every-one,” he said.

The Potts Camp peeweefootball team played Mariettaat home on Saturday. Onetouchdown was made byCody Stewart of the Cardinalswith a final score of 6-0. It wasa good game. The varsity foot-ball team will play Coahomaon October 24 at 7 p.m.; thepeewees will play Fulton at 10a.m. on Oct. 25; and on Oct. 27there will be a 5 p.m. jr. highbasketball game at Ashland.

The Potts Camp juniorhigh and high school pageantwill be October 23 in the PottsCamp Auditorium. The juniorhigh pageant will begin at 6p.m., and the high school pag-eant will follow.

Revival services were heldat Cornersville UnitedMethodist Church Monday,Oct. 20-21, continued atBethlehem UMC on Oct. 22-23, and will end with two serv-ices on Oct. 27 and 28 at FirstUnited Methodist Church inPotts Camp at 7 p.m.Everyone is welcome.

The Marshall CountyGenealogy meeting will beheld Saturday, Oct. 25, at theMarshall Co. Library at 10:30a.m. All are welcome toattend.

Don and Ladine Randolphcontinue to work on their“bucket list.” Recently theytraveled 5,000 miles up anddown the Atlantic Coast andvisited 12 states and theDistrict of Columbia. Theirtraveling companions wereJim and Lorene (Janie) Miller(Ladine’s twin sister) ofSomerville, Tenn. The Millershad made this trip before andwere excellent tour guides.

Highlights of the trip wereseeing the foliage in full colorwith mountains and the oceanin the background; coveredbridges; visiting Randolph,Vermont, and having lunch inthe old railroad depot; seeing

the lighthouses and formerPresident George Bush’scompound inKennebunkport, Maine; andthe beautiful homes along thesea coast of Rhode Island.They also visited withLorene’s daughter, Lee AnnOverall, in Washington, D.C.,where she works for theVeterans Affairs Department.They enjoyed seeing the mag-nificent White House andCapitol, as well as all of thememorials. They traveledthrough Boston andFoxborough, Massachusetts;saw the Gillette Stadium(home of the New EnglandPatriots); and saw TomBrady’s football home, whichwas exciting.

They also went to Hershey,Penn.; toured the HersheyCandy Factory on SweetStreet; saw Three Mile Island(where the nuclear meltdownoccurred in 1979); rode a loco-motive train through theAmish farms and visited theAmish market; and in theevening went to the Sight andSound Theatre where theysaw the Bible come to life onstage in the story of “Moses,”which was fantastic, they said.

Other sights were thenational park at Yorktown, Va.,where they viewed a film onthe defeat of the British andthe end of the RevolutionaryWar; drove through the Cityof New York (saw the NewTrade Center, Empire StateBuilding, and YankeeStadium); in New Jersey theysaw the football home of EliManning and the New YorkGiants; went shopping at L.L.Bean in Freeport, Maine; andenjoyed many of the othershops in New England.

Don and Dene said if youhave not visited and traveledthrough New England duringthe fall, you need to add thetrip to your own “bucket list”because it is unbelievable andindescribable.

Happy Birthday to: DanielSmothers (Oct. 24), ElizabethColhoun (Oct. 25), Joey Hart(Oct. 28), Caleb Knight (Oct.29), Marion Askew (Oct. 30),Lela R. Stevens (Oct. 31).

Those on the prayer listinclude: Gayle Ash, SandraBeaver, John Bowen, LindaBumpas, Madeline Clifton,Joann G. Cox, Phil Cox,Talmadge and MarieEdwards, Tim Gholston, JimGilliam, Gale Goode, PaulineHutchens, Terri Kitchens,Troy and Lucille Leopard,Robert Luther, Jean King,Mary Mills, Elizabeth Morris,Junior Overall, Irene Pipkin,Scotty Rhea, Orville Rhynes,Larry Robbins, KatherineShaw, Billy Smith, VelmaWilkerson, James and DellaRose Williams.

To place news, birthdays,prayer requests, etc. in thiscolumn, call 662-333-7054, orsend email to: [email protected].

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 6

Community News

Potts Camp NewsMary Minor

Angel’s CornerAnnie Reid

LETTER TO THE EDITORDear Editor;

I am writing this letter because I am concerned that political parties and pri-vate money may be gaining an unfair advantage with the judiciary by pour-ing money and influence into the campaigns for individuals in what is sup-posed to be a nonpartisan race for Chancery Judge in our area.

I would like to put forth my strong support and recommendation for the elec-tion of Helen Kennedy Robinson in the upcoming election for the ChanceryCourt Judge for Benton, Calhoun, Lafayette, Marshall and Tippah Counties.She has pledged to handle all cases promptly, show no favoritism and to treateveryone with respect. I know Helen Robinson, and I and all those who haveengaged her as their attorney during the past two decades also know that thisis true. She will also work harder and do the most thorough job possible onall her cases. She has practiced in the Chancery Court for 23 years and isknowledgeable and experienced about the rules and processes in Chancerycourt, much more so than her opponents in this race.

If you want a conservative, fair judge who understands the process, the sys-tem and the underlying issues of matters that come before Chancery Court;if you want a judge who is not beholden to any particular law firms or pri-vate interests; if you want a judge who will diligently pursue the fair out-come of all issues that come before her in a timely matter;

PLEASE GO OUT AND VOTE FOR HELEN KENNEDY ROBINSON ON NOVEMBER 4.

Joanne Huffpaid advertisement

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Don and Dene Randolph tour New England

Love and caring will make the world better

Betty and David Greer celebrate anniversary

GRACING THE TABLEand

Strawberry Plains Audubon Centerwill host

An African Libation andDiscussion

Libation ceremonies have been practiced forthousands of years. They are not “religious” ceremonies but serve the purpose of giving

thanks to nature and to our ancestors, as everyliving thing is our ancestor.

Contact Educational DirectorMitch Robinson at (662) 252-1155for information on this free event.

A light lunch will be served following the ceremony.

Saturday, October 251:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.

at Strawberry Plains Audubon Center

Pastor Lyons guest speaker atAnnual Men’s Day Program

“I said days should speak,and multitude of years shouldteach wisdom. But there is aspirit in man: and the inspi-ration of thealmighty giveth themu n d e r s t a n d i n g .Great men are notalways wise. Neitherdo the aged under-stand judgement. Job32:7-9.

Pastor W. JamesLyons delivered aninspiring messageat GreenfieldChurch on Sunday,Oct. 19, in the morning wor-ship service. His sermonwas taken from Matt. 6:14and 15, and Job. 2:25.

Guests at GreenfieldChurch were his relatives,Mattie Lyons Abrams andClavin Abrams, New Creslon

minister, Atlanta, Ga., andPastor Billy R. Johnson;Belinda Robinson, City ofFaith minister, Atlanta, Ga.,;

Apostle Dr. WillieWoods; andMarquis Gloverfrom Holly Springs.Visitors are alwayswelcome to worshipat Greenfield.

Sunday after-noon Pastor Lyonsand congregationattended the annualMen’s Day Programat Persimmon Hill

MB Church. Pastor Lyonswas the guest speaker. Thetheme was – A Servant ForChrist. Scripture – The Lordis my Shepherd, I shall notwant. Psalm 23:1. Rev.Anders Fluker is the pastor.We had a wonderful time.

Waterford NewsElmira Curry

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Mr. and Mrs. SidneyGoings of Biloxi are proud toannounce the engagementand forthcoming marriage oftheir daughter, MeghanElizabeth, to Robert Byron“Robbie” Lundine, son of Mr.and Mrs. Joe Lundine ofSlayden.

The bride-elect is thegranddaughter of Mr. andMrs. John Humphries, thelate Mr. Henry S. Goings,and Mr. and Mrs. WilliamFurr, all of Biloxi.

She is a 2008 graduate ofBiloxi High School and a2013 graduate of Mississippi

State University with aBachelor of Science degreein animal science. She isemployed with DeSotoCounty Schools at Horn LakeMiddle School as a scienceteacher.

The prospective groom isthe grandson of the late Mr.and Mrs. Byron Hurdle ofSlayden and Pat Lundine andthe late Robert Lundine ofBiloxi.

He is a 2009 graduate ofMarshall Academy and a2013 graduate of MississippiState University with aBachelor of Science degreein computer engineering. Heis employed as a technicalanalyst with FedEx Servicesin Collierville, Tenn.

The couple will exchangevows at 2:30 p.m. onNovember 8, 2014, at TheHewlett Barn in Starkville. Areception will follow. Familyand friends are invited.

After their marriage, thecouple will reside in OliveBranch.

Martha Fitchspent the weekend inClarksdale vistingwith an old friend,Scarlett Hurdle. Theyenjoyed a wonderfuldinner at the DoubleL fish and steakhouse. Saturday, theytraveled to Clevelandto the October Festand Sunday they praised theLord at the Riverside BaptistChurch – all-in-all, the twohad a wonderful weekend.

Hamilton and JimMoriarty of Bentonville, Ark.,and Ann and Ben Seale Jr., ofJackson, were the weekendguests of Robin and BenSeale. They all attended thehomecoming game in Oxfordbetween Ole Miss andTennessee.

Melinda Skelton is recov-ering nicely at home after hersecond hip replacement.

Here’s to a veryspeedy recovery!

A big thank you toJennifer McMinn andher staff for sendingme to Dr. MauriceSmith at Semmes-Murphey whenthings were not look-ing too spiffy. It tookhim one MRI to fig-

ure out what the problemwas and he surgically fixed ita few days afterwards.

Who knew a disc couldcause so much trouble in aback? One thing I havelearned is if you have anissue walking, go to the doc-tor. I was not far away frombeing paralyzed and my stub-bornness could have landedme that way.

Big props to people whodonate their bodies to sci-ence. I was given the oppor-tunity to use part of my hip

bone for the fusion. Theother option was donor bone,which I chose. I have a new-found respect for donors.

Being homebound for a lit-tle bit also helped me toappreciate my Momma (KayWheeler) even more than Ialready did. She tended tome like I was a small child.There is no love greater inthe whole wide world than amother’s love for her child, orvice versa. Words cannotexpress how much shehelped me and how deeply Iadore her!

(To put your news in CityPersonals, please [email protected]; mailto City Personals, The SouthReporter, P.O. Box 278, HollySprings, MS 38635 or call662-252-4261. You may alsoe-mail your City Personal newsto [email protected]).

RowlandJay and Roxanne Rowland

of Potts Camp announce thearrival of their fourth child, ason, Zachary AlexanderRowland, on Friday, October17, 2014, at Baptist MemorialHospital in Oxford. Heweighed seven pounds, fiveounces and was 19-1/4 inch-es long.

Maternal grandparentsare Mark and Birdie Savageof Lynchburg, Ohio, and thelate Brenda Savage of RedBanks. Great-grandparentsare David and VirginiaSavage of Olive Branch.

Paternal grandparents areBill and Sue Rowland of PottsCamp.

He is also being welcomedinto the family by his twobrothers, Christopher andBrendan, and his sister,Jayne.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 7

Society

City PersonalsMary Clay

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Walter Webb, admiring a Kate Freeman Clark landscape

By SHERRY CHILDERSHolly Springs Garden

Club hosted its first meetingof the 2014-2015 year atMontrose recently. Guestsand members were wel-comed with a delicious bever-age and delectable dessertplate by hostesses StephanieCavender, Jan Cooper, andLeslie Howell. Linda Seale,club president, proceeded tocall the meeting to order,introducing guest speakerWalter Webb, new director ofthe Kate Freeman Clark ArtGallery in Holly Springs.

Webb gave an informativepresentation regarding KateFreeman Clark’s life as wellas the beginnings of the artgallery. During his time asdirector, he has generated anextensive inventory of theartist’s work, catalogingthem into the categories oflandscapes, portraits, still lifepaintings, figure studies, mis-cellaneous, and five WilliamMerritt Chase paintings,which also reside in thegallery.

Webb said that the gallery

is open Tuesday throughFriday from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Amembership drive as well asan “adopt-a-painting” pro-gram are now available topatrons who wish to supportthe gallery.

According to Webb, theKate Freeman Clark ArtGallery hosts four eventseach year. Recently, works byRandy Hayes and VadahCochran were exhibited.

December 13 will high-light the works of Ann Seale,wife of Holly Springs’s ownDr. Ben Seale Jr.

Webb closed the programby informing the group of theupcoming gala in 2015,where an original KateFreeman Clark painting willbe sold to raise money forneeded restorations.

The club and guests weremost appreciative of thedelightful and informativeprogram presented by Webband thanked him for takingtime to share his wealth ofinformation about this won-derful gallery and the historybehind it.

Old friends enjoy visiting together

Meghan Goings and Robbie Lundine

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 8

MMAARRSSHHAALLLL CCOOUUNNTTYY DDEEVVOOTTIIOONNAALL PPAAGGEE

TThhiiss DDeevvoottiioonnaall && DDiirreeccttoorr yy iiss mmaaddee ppoossssiibbllee bbyy tthheesseebbuussiinneesssseess wwhhoo eennccoouurraaggee aallll ooff uuss ttoo aatttteenndd wwoorrsshhiipp sseerr vviicceess

CCHHUURRCCHH DDIIRREECCTTOORRYYASSEMBLY OF GOD• Chewalla Assembly of God, 1511Higdon Road, Holly Springs, TerrellStacks, pastor, 662-292-3210.• Friendship Assembly of God, Victoria,Pastor Virgil Scherff, 838-4000• First Assembly of God, 730 S. ByhaliaRoad, Collierville, TN. 853-9952. PastorRev. Jason MurphyBAPTIST• Antioch Baptist Church, 838-7606,Victoria, MS., Rev. Roger Daniels• Ashland Baptist Church, Ashland, 224-6473• Baptist Hill M.B. Church, Potts Camp,Pastor, Rev. Lacy Scott• Believers Baptist Church Fant Ave., Holly Springs• Bethany Baptist Church, Rt.1 PottsCamp• Bell Grove MB Church, 853 Tyro Road,Chulahoma, 662-564-4511 • Bett Baptist Church, 2665 Bett Road,Coldwater, MS 38618, Pastor AlvinWhitehead Sr. 662-292-2964• Brookside Baptist Church, 4993 Hwy.302 E, Olive Branch, 662-890-4069, Rev.Marvin Tharnish• Braybourne Baptist, 13311 E. Goodman,Olive Branch, 662-893-LORD, Dr. FrankHuddleston, • Calvary Baptist Church, 665 E. RisingStar Rd, 252-4453, Jerry Moore Pastor• Carey Chapel, Rt. 1 Red Banks• Cayce Baptist Church, Bro. EddieJohnson, • Charity Baptist Temple, Watson, 838-2478• Chewalla Primitive Baptist Church, 40Lacy Ivy Road, Off Hwy. 178, Elder JerryWise• Chewalla Baptist, 2020 Higdon Road• Chulahoma MB Church, 5509 Hwy. 4West, 662-564-2895• Clear Creek Baptist Church, Lamar,Pastor Andy Skelton• Cornerstone Baptist Church, PastorJimmy Wilbanks, Hickory Flat, Sun.Afternoon 1:30 p.m.• Barton Baptist Church, Rt. 5 Byhalia, Dr.John McMullen• BridgeWay Baptist, 107 Taska Road, Mt.Pleasant, Gary Adams• Concord Baptist Church, Slayden, 252-5440• Emmanuel Missionary Baptist Church,Red Banks Road• Faith Haven Baptist Church, Red Banks,252-5706• Faith Baptist Church, Old Hwy. 178,Hickory Flat • Faith South Victoria, Rt. 1 Red Banks• Faith Baptist Church, 3964 Hwy. 309 N,Barton, 895-4360• Fellowship Baptist Church, Byhalia838-4377

• Finley Grove Missionary Baptist, 2250Hwy. 7 N, Holly Springs, James Green• First Baptist Church, Byhalia, 838-2250• First Baptist Church, (SBC) Byhalia 838-3621• First Baptist Church, Holly Springs, 185E. College, 252-2627• First Baptist Church, Hickory Flat,Rev.Gary Linville, Pastor, 333-7752• First Baptist Church, Potts Camp, 333-7602• Free Branch M.B. Church, 2233 HigdonRoad, Holly Springs, Joe Louis Tunstall,Pastor, 662-551-1050• Friendship Baptist Church, OldHernando Rd., Pastor Bro. Justin Haynes, SS 9:45, Worship 11, 662-213-7939• Grace Baptist Church, 5285 Cayce Rd,Johnathan Cates, Pastor, 901-647-9906• Harris Chapel, Hoover Rd, Ashland, MSRev. McArthur King, Pastor• Hearn Grove MB Church, Byhalia,Pastor Rev. Archie Bowens• Hebron Missionary Baptist Church,Lamar Rd., Ashland 224-8733• Hickory Flat Baptist Church, Hickory Flat 333-7752• Hillcrest Baptist, 1580 Hwy. 309 S,Warsaw, Pastor Jim Buchanan• Holly Hill Baptist Church, Hwy. 7S, 662-544-0418• Hopewell Baptist No. 1, 365 Bonner,Holly Springs, Rev. Leroy James• Hopewell Baptist No. 2, 1115 Hwy. 7 N,Holly Springs• Jones Grove Baptist Church, Hwy. 7, 252-3990• Kimbrough Chapel Church, Hwy. 7, 252-4629• Liberty Hill MB Church, Hernando Road,838-8520, Rev. Calvin Rayborn Sr., pas-tor, 901-949-0771• Macedonia Baptist Church, Byhalia838-2550• Marshall County Baptist Assn., 440 Hwy.78 W 252-5110• McIntrye MB Church, 88 McIntrye Road,Pastor, Robert Garrison• Meadowbrook Baptist Church, 3115 OldPigeon Roost Rd., 838-6337, Pastor,Oscar Geeslin• First Baptist Church, Mt. Pleasant,Pastor Bro. Mike Pennock, 662-851-7230• Mt. Ollie M.B. Church, Hwy. 349, Rev.Anthony Marion Pastor• Mt. Newell MB Church, Red Banks, Rev.Arthur Fitzpatrick, Jr., 252-2015• Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, Laws Hill 252-2116• Mt. Moriah Baptist Church, Marianna Rd564-3595• Mt. Peel Baptist Church, Laws Hill,252-5504

• Mtn. Gillian Missionary Baptist, Church,County Line Rd. 838-2330• Mt. Sinai MB Church, 1855 Mt. SinaiRoad, 564-2271, Rev. Chris Williams.• Mt. Zion Baptist Church, Mt. Zion Road,Red Banks 851-7187• Marianna Baptist Church, Hwy 309 S, 1mile north of Hwy 4• Opulent Life Church, 619 Hwy. 7 South,behind Popeye’s Chicken. Telsa DeBerry,252-8308• New Harmony Baptist Church, Old Hwy.7 N. 252-2450• New Hope M.B. Church, Laws Hill, 3120Hwy. 310, Waterford, MS 38685, Dr.Bessie Tables, pastor, 662-252-1118• New Hope Baptist Church, Slayden, BillyAdair, 877-3949

• Open Door Baptist Church, Hwy. 78Between Hickory Flat & Potts Camp, 333-4490, Pastor David M. Helmic• Pleasant Grove Missionary BaptistChurch, Red Banks• Pine Grove Baptist Church, Pine Grove224-8622• Powell Chapel MB, High 4 East, Eddie L.Walker, 252-7875• Providence Baptist Church, 295 WhittersAve, Holly Springs• Red Banks Baptist Church, 252-7468• Red Banks Freewill Baptist Church, RedBanks Road• Reid’s Gift Baptist, Potts Camp, 333-4291, Rev. Jerry Lee Williams• Rising Star M.B. Church, Chewalla LakeRd.• Salem Baptist Church, Potts Camp• Sandhill Baptist Church, Hwy. 7, 252-5157• Sims Chapel Missionary Baptist Church,Michigan City-Early Grove Rd. 224-8466• Slayden Baptist Church, 252-4559• Smith Grove Baptist, 5776 Smith GroveRd.• Spring Hill Baptist Church, Waterford 252-5131• Strawberry Missionary Baptist, Hwy. 311,252-5997 • St. Marks Baptist, Hwy. 78 East, 252-5656• St. Matthew Baptist. Byhalia, MS838-5441

• St. Mark Baptist, Hwy. 78 E HollySprings, 252-5656• St. Paul MB, Rev. Andrew Cheairs, Hwy.309 Byhalia 838-4774• Temperance Hill Baptist, Church, Hwy.78 E, 333-7421• True Vine Missionary Baptist, 525 WestStreet, Holly Springs• Union Valley M.B. Church, 1264 UnionValley Rd, PO Box 413, Byhalia, PastorLondon Joe Richmond, 662-564-3111• Victoria Heights Baptist Church, VictoriaRoad, Joe Nunley, pastor• Victory Baptist Church, 2550 WalHill Rd.,Independence, 233-2208, DewayneWilkerson• Wyatte Baptist Church, 30721 Hwy. 4East, Senatobia, MS 38668, 662-562-6587, Pastor Scott RogersCATHOLIC• St. Joseph Catholic Church, 305 E. VanDorn 252-3138CHURCH OF CHRIST• Ashland Church of Christ, 224-6704• Byhalia Church of Christ, 70 Algee St.Bro. Brad Pettis pastor• Church of Christ, Hwy. 178 Potts Camp,William Coates, Minister, 333-7684• Church of Christ, Holly Springs, Hwy. 4E, 252-2680• Hernando Road Church of Christ, 252-1808• Laws Hill Church of Christ, Just off Hwy.310 West, Michael Baggett• Victoria Church of Christ, 192 FriendshipRd, 662-292-6076, Minister David Jackson• Wall Hill Church of Christ, 1484 Wall HillRd., Marvin N. BairdCHURCH OF GOD• Miracle Temple Overcoming Church ofGod, Alan Corner Rd. 252-1854CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST• Miracle Temple Church of God in Christ,14420 E. Goodman Road, 838-4176• Christ Temple Church of God in Christ,210 W. Park Ave. 252-5741• Faith Temple Church of God in Christ,Roberts Chapel Rd. 252-4654• Hopewell Church of God in Christ,Byhalia, 838-3476• St. Luke Church of God in Christ, OldSalem Rd East, Ashland, MS, PastorElder Nathaniel Holleman, 224-6353• Watson Church of God in Christ,Watson, 838-3225EPISCOPAL• Christ Episcopal Church, 100 N.Randolph, 252-2584ISLAMIC• Nation of Islam, 165 N. Memphis, HollySprings, 252-6738JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES• Jehovah’s Witnesses Kingdom Hall, Hwy.178 W, 252-6426LUTHERAN• Grace Lutheran Church, 945 Hwy. 311N., Holly Springs 252-4224METHODIST/CME• Adolphus Chapel CME Church,Marianna Road, Pastor Billy L. Williams• Anderson Chapel, Hwy. 78 W 252-1938• Asbury United Methodist Church, 225 W.College, 252-1766• Barton United Methodist Church, 895-3189• Berry’s Chapel CME Church, MichiganCity• Beverly Chapel CME, 1095 Old Hwy. 4West, Pastor Rev. Kenneth Rogers.• Calvin Chapel United Methodist Church,Hwy. 78, Holly Springs-252-7958, Rev.C.D. Miller, Pastor-252-4330• Early Grove United Methodist, PastorWayne Sheffield• Emory Independent Methodist Church,Rev. Leon Burton, Pastor, Byhalia,838-7878• First United Methodist Church, 175 E.Van Dorn, 252-1439• Free Springs United Methodist Church,Harmontown, Troy Barton, Pastor• Gray’s Chapel CME• Hamilton Chapel CME Church, 19Hamilton Rd, Waterford, MS 252-6943,Pastor Charles E. Dooley• Hebron Chapel CME, Old HernandoRoad• Hickory Flat Methodist, Rev. Neal Vick• Isaac Chapel C.M.E. Church,Rev. WillieWard, Pastor, 838-4680 Osborne BellHwy. (309)• New Hope CME Church, Red Banks,Pastor Rev. Doris Alexander, 662-551-2345• Nichols Chapel CME Church, AlgeeStreet, Byhalia, Pastor Rev. Tony Wilkins,838-7556• United Methodist Church, Byhalia,838-2237• United Methodist Church, Potts Camp,Rev. Don Newton, Pastor 333-6335• United Methodist Church, Cornersville,Rev. Don Newton, Pastor 333-6335

• United Methodist Church, Bethlehem,Rev. Don Newton, Pastor 333-6335• United Methodist Church, Waterford, MS• Hopewell No. 2 M.B. Church,Hudsonville, Rev. R. B. Hardaway,Pastor• Hudsonville C.M.E. Church, SouthSlayden Road, Elder Bobby G. Wilson,252-1515• Isom Chapel CME Church, Slayden,1436 Isom Chapel Road, Pastor, Rev. JoeT. Lester, 252-2859• Mt. Pleasant United Methodist, 851-7301• Newell Chapel CME, Pastor Rev.Spencer Mathis, Moore Road, Victoria838-4822• Mt. Comfort, 120 Mt. Comfort Road, 252-4552, Rev. Charlton Johnson, Pastor• Mt. Gilead CME, 4025 Hwy. 4 West,Holly Springs, Rev. Eddie LeSure Sr. andRev. Dr. Mary LeSure, 662-519-1724• Mt. Pisgah C.M.E. Church, 3877 CayceRd, Eddie Joe Wilson, pastor• Mt. Teamer CME Church, 813 MusgrayRoad, 662-551-1655, Holly Springs, WillieHarper• Mt. Zion CME Church, Little Snow CreekRoad, Ashland, MS. 224-3278.• Rice Chapel United Methodist, PastorWayne Sheffield• Roberts Chapel, Slayden, MS, PastorGene Jeffries• St. Paul CME Church, 4759 HigdonRoad, Lake Center, 601-252-4746. PastorRev. Charles E. Dooley• Taylor’s Chapel United MethodistChurch, 154 French Road, Victoria, Ms.,Rev. Juanita Booker, Pastor, 838-2260• Victoria-Red Banks Methodist, Rev. AnitaLawson• Walton Chapel CME Church, Waterford• Wilkins Chapel CME, Waterford, PastorRobert Odum• Winborn United Methodist Church, Bro.Danny Estes• Yarbrough Chapel CME, 2997 Old Hwy.4 . Tony Wilkins, pastorPENTECOSTAL• Apostolic Lighthouse U.P.C., 7015 Hwy. 4West, Terry Teddlie, pastor, 662-416-1858• Apostolic Church of Jesus Christ, 178Stonewall Rd., Byhalia, 601-838-4601• Bethlehem Church of the Lord JesusChrist, Bethlehem 333-7046• United Pentecostal Church, Byhalia,838-2740

• United Pentecostal Church, Victoria, 838-6952• Evangel Full Gospel Assembly, EvangelDr., Holly Springs, 252-2756• 1st Pentecostal Church of Holly Springs,Old Hwy. 78 East, 252-3057• Church of the Living God, Davis Temple,635 W. Street, Holly Springs, Elder R.L.Davis• Heritage Apostolic Church, 400 HeritageDrive, Holly Springs• Mt. Calvary Pentecostal Church, 3993Cayce Rd, 662-851-7509, Pastor BillyWatkinsPRESBYTERIAN• First Presbyterian Church, 252-4678• First Presbyterian, Byhalia 838-2235• Greenfield Presbyterian, Waterford, 252-3311, Pastor, Rev. W. James Lyons• Hernando Presbyterian Church, 2070Mt. Pleasant Road, Pastor Steve Woods,662-449-0120OTHER• A Place Called Hope, Pastor EvelynFinley Moore, 8939 Mid South Dr., OliveBranch, MS• Anointed Christian Faith Center, 1426 SRed Banks Road, Pastor Floyd Moore• Church of Living Gospel, Byhalia, 838-4661• Church of Lord Jesus Christ, Byhalia838-3674

• Landmark Temple Of Jesus Christ, Hwy.78 W. 252-1728• Faith Christian Church, 117 CollinsCircle, 252-5905, Percy Craine, Min.• First Church of Jesus Christ, Barton,MS., Rev. Joseph M. Cupp, 895-3133• Church of Jesus Christ of Latter DaySaints, Lamar, Ms, President MichaelErickson, 662-365-8185• Harvestime Apostolic Church, 693Skating Rink Rd., Pastor Carl Waldrop, 901-268-8087• House of Prayer, 553 Tunstall andMocking Bird Road, Byhalia, CommandaLeSure, pastor, 662-560-7078• Latter Rain Church, 519 Hwy. 178W,Holly Springs, MS 252-6350• The Bahai Faith Study Group, 252-5282• Tabernacle of Prayer, Overcoming,Church of God, Woodward Ave., HollySprings, Elder Jeremiah Lesuere, Sr.• Mt. Sinia Church of God in Christ, RedBanks, MS Elder Curtis Pritchard 851-7381• New Dimension Salt & Light Ministry,185 McAlexander Rd, Red Banks, PastorActavatis Allen, 662-551-1569• Red Banks Road House of Praise &Worship, 252-4316, Pastor Ricky Barnett• Dominion of Faith Ministeries. 252-3036,Holly Springs, Pastor Henry L. Gillespie,Jr.• Byhalia Church of God, 2550 Hwy. 309S., Pastor Billy Smith, 662-838-6891• Community Temple Holiness Church,1331 Mt. Zion Rd, 662-851-3388, PastorElder Frank Moore.• New Fellowship Christian Church, 122Watson-DeSoto Rd, Byhalia, MS 38611,Pastor Michael Hughes, Sr., 838-2330.• Mighty God Ministries, Victoria, MS,Pastor Marvin Brooks, 838-2788• Victory Church, 103 Lowry Drive,Byhalia, Pastor Melvin Shackelford, 901-831-7623• New Faith Outreach Ministries, 1296 S.Red Banks Road, Pastor Tracy Jeffries,629-0360.• Jordan Temple of Deliverance, 1273McAlexander Road, Holly Springs, PastorBishop Earnest Jordan, 901-220-9415• Mustard Seed Ministries, 3213 Hwy. 309South, Byhalia, Pastors Virgil & VanessaEzekiel, 901-487-8084.• Opulent Life Church, 118 S. Memphis,St., Holly Springs

MMeemmbbeerrFFDDIICC

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Design•Fabricate•InstallASME Pressure Vessels•Heat

Exchangers•API Storage TanksBulk Solids Handling • Process Piping

Custom Steel & Alloy Fabrication

BOYCE DELASHMIT MIKE CLARKSONCONTRACT FABRICATORS

105 Rolfing Road • P.O. Box 758 • Holly Springs, MS662-252-6330 • Fax 662-252-4013

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MMEEMMBBEERRFFDDIICC Equal Housing Lender

Serenity Funeral Home

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“Quality Service Within The Means of All”

Marsha TaylorRealtor-Associate®

#1 Realty Group, LLC

129 Van Dorn Ave., Holly Springs, MS 38635Business: 662-252-5527 Ext. 112Toll Free: 800-748-8553 Ext. 112Fax: 662-252-3700email: [email protected] office is independently owned and operated

MILLION DOLLARCLUB

GRI

B&B ConcreteCo., Inc.

Serving North MS Since 1949

Holly Springs - 252-4262

Professional Services40 Homan Drive, Potts Camp, MS 333-9009 333-6333 (fax)

Office Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. (Weeknight & Saturday Appts. Available)

JENNIFER L. SHACKELFORD, Attorney at Law

DIANE G. TAYLOR, Abstractor

First State BankYou Can’t Do Better Than First

146 W. College Ave., Holly Springs, MS662-252-4211

1-800-206-6252 Fax 662-252-1845Equal Housing

LenderMember FDIC

JOHNSON’SFURNITURE SHOWROOM

2128 W. JACKSON AVE.OXFORD, MS • 234-7711

COOPER TRUCK LINEAND WAREHOUSE415 East Industrial Park RoadP.O. Box 699 - 662-252-5505

Tim and Brad Cooper, Owners

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Byhalia, MS662-838-2865

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Jerri MooreBranch Manager

Equal OpportunityEmployer

• Phone/Computer Cabling• Business Systems• Paging Equipment• Fiber Optics• Voice Mail

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TELEPHONE COMMUNICATIONSJoe Fant

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Mobile: 901-485-8215Fax: 662-252-4526

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Church Directory!

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I desire to do your will, O my

God; your law is within my

heart.

—Psalms 40:8

Page 9: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 9

TThhee DDuunnggeeoonnHaunted Attraction At

Wall Doxey State ParkBrought To You By Boy Scout Troop 43

October 24 & 257 p.m.-10 p.m.

$5.00 admission

Activities for younger kids include games and hayrides on Saturday!

HOMECOMINGOLD-FASHIONED DAYFirst Baptist Church6874 Church Ave., Potts Camp, MS

Sunday, October 26, 2014beginning at 9:45 a.m.

Message by Bro. Herbert Luther, former FBC member,now pastor of Pleasant Hill Baptist Church in Ashland.

Singing by local talent.Buffet meal about noon will conclude services.

PLEASE JOIN US for a wonderful day of preaching,singing, fellowship, and memories.

Several memory books will be available during mealtime in the

Fellowship Hall.

Pastor - Bro. Paul Hicks - Music Director - Bro. Larry TatePhone: (662) 333-7602

In President Obama’s 2012 State of the Union Address, he laid out a blue-print for an economy built to last. The President’s plan affirms that thestrength of the American economy is inextricably linked to the strength ofAmerica’s education system. Particularly in times of economic challenge,American employers need a workforce that is skilled, adaptable, creativeand equipped for success in the global market. With the same token, ourstudents need a more rigorous, better tailored education to acquire theskills they need to compete, to follow a clear pathway into the middle classand to continue to prosper.

If we are to educate our way to a better economy, public officials and pol-icymakers must ensure that every student in our country graduates from ahigh school prepared for college and a successful career. A world-class edu-cation that provides high quality job training opportunities will reduce skillshortages, spur business growth, encourage new investment and hiring,spark innovation and promote continued economic growth.

These educational goals are central to rebuilding our economy and secur-ing a brighter future for our nation. Our career and technical education(CTE) system plays a critical part in accomplishing these goals. To putmoney where the mouth is, $1.14 billion in funding – Carl D. Perkins Careerand Technical Education Act has been invested for the Fiscal Year 2012.The Obama Administration’s FY 2013 proposes a $1.1 billion investment tosupport the transformation of the Perkins Program.

Let’s talk about growing a community and or the economy. Some nursescoming through Health Science at the Holly Springs Career & TechnicalCenter earn an excess of $100,000 per annum. Many Automotive ServiceTechnology students coming through HSC&T are employed by companiessuch as Mercedes Benz of Memphis – earning $80,000-$100,000 per year.We offer Fundamentals of Business and Marketing classes in which wehope to grow entrepreneurs – Remember Sam Walton? We have innovativenew programs – Teacher Academy and Law and Public Safety, where weplan to grow our own teachers, principals, superintendents, police officersand police chiefs, etc. We are not Vo-Tech; we are high tech. We have addedICT 1 and ICT II components to develop IT professionals. We have incorpo-rated STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) whichrepresents all sectors of the workforce.

In closing, jobs in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics areexpected to grow by 17% between 2008 and 2018, nearly double the growthof all other fields, reports the U.S. Dept. of Commerce. STEM jobs also paymore. The average wage for all STEM occupations was $77,000 in May 2009and only 4 of the 97 STEM occupations had mean wages of below the U. S.average of $43,460, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Let us help your child prepare for the 21st century. We intend to help Holly Springs grow!

We are the Holly Springs Career & Technical Center where HAWKS learn to soar.

Education is the GREAT EQUALIZER.

First Baptist Church Activity Center190 E. College Avenue - Holly Springs

FALL FESTIVALFriday, October 31

5:30-7:30 p.m.Admission Fee:

1 Non-Perishable Food Item For Our Food Pantry

Ice cream partyWednesday, September 24, the kids at 289 W. Valley Apartment Complex, (Holly Springs HousingAuthority) came out for ice cream and cookies, served up by Mayor Kelvin Buck. A question and answertime between the kids and Mayor Buck, chief of police Dwight Harris and Capt. Bowen was entertain-ing for all, and everyone in attendance had a great time.

Grandparents’ DayGrandparents had a blast at the “Grand Celebration” held in their honor at Friendship ChristianAcademy. Grandparents were welcomed to “Paradise Island” complete with palm trees and banners.Everyone enjoyed face painting, potato sack races with grandparents and teachers, basketball throw,floor games, photo shots of grandparents with grandchildren in funny getups with a beach backdrop.The “Food Shack Cafe” was busy with “tourists” enjoying snacks, refreshments and lots of treats on theisland. Christian music on surround sound set the scene as laughter filled the air.

Students of the WeekRobbie Parks, character education coach at Holly Springs Intermediate School, presented herOctober 13-17, Student of the Week Good Character Awards. Each student received a goody bag anda certificate. Pictured are (from left:) Brashayla Balfour, Devin Price, and Zanavian Jones. Back row:Damya Buford, Demar Leasure, and Daijah Malone.

New PTA officersHolly Springs Intermediate School elected its new PTA officers on Thursday, October 9, in the cafete-ria. Pictured, from left: Angela Isom, PTA president; Monique Washington, PTA vice-president; CharisseHarris, secretary; Shanell Collins, treasurer; Cassandra Faulkner, fund-raiser chair; KatrinaWashington, fund-raiser chair; and Sharita Smith, membership chair. Smith is asking parents tobecome a part of the PTA by joining with a fee of $5.

Education

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The communityof Orange Mound,Tenn., will be thetopic of conversa-tion during aM i s s i s s i p p iH u m a n i t i e sC o u n c i lH u m a n i t i e sTeacher Awardslecture at RustCollege at 6 p.m.Wednesday, Oct.22 at the Heard Auditoriumof the McCarty-VarnellBusiness, Computer Science& Social Science Center.

The lecture comes as partof the MississippiHumanities Council’s pro-gram, which honors out-standing humanities instruc-tors from each of the state’suniversities and colleges.These awards serve simulta-neously to celebrateMississippi’s humanities

teachers and to pro-mote the continuedinterest in thehumanities through-out the state.

This year’s RustCollege awardee isDr. CharlesWilliams, director ofresearch and specialprojects at the Roy

Wilkins and EarnestA. Smith Institute of

Health Equity and SocialJustice.

Williams, a 1969 RustCollege graduate, will pres-ent the findings of hisresearch which resulted inthe book, “African Life andCulture in Orange Mound:Case Study of a BlackCommunity in Memphis,Tenn. 1890-1980.”

Williams, an anthropolo-gist, earned a master’sdegree and doctorate the

University of Illinois atChampagne Urbana. Thisparticular community hasbeen of interest to Williamssince the 1980s and was partof his dissertation.

“Many people don’t realizethat this community wasonce a plantation,” Williamssaid of Orange Mound.“Black people in this countrycame out of slavery and werenot welcomed into society.Residents of Orange Moundmade it into a place theycould be proud of. I think it istransformative. I am fascinat-ed by the study of this com-munity and how it has devel-oped during this 90-year peri-od.”

The event is free and opento the public. A reception willbe held after the lecture.

This year, the ByhaliaElementary School physicaleducation department isagain using the Project FitAmerica curriculum.

Project Fit America is anationwide non-profit organi-zation that works with otherorganizations to provideequipment, funding, and sup-port for schools throughoutthe USA.

In Mississippi, PFA part-ners with Blue Cross/BlueShield of Mississippi toaccomplish their mission ofhelping our children tobecome more healthy. PFAsupplied BES with the cur-riculum, supplies, and equip-ment for many fun and chal-lenging activities that stress“teamwork, communication,and cooperation” while thestudents work towardsbecoming more physically fit.

C.B. McClatchy is theByhalia Elementary Schoolphysical education teacher forall K-5 students.

One aspect of the curricu-lum is called “Chart andChallenge.” This is a competi-tion among the BES third-fifth

grade students in variousactivities. It is designed to befun and to help motivate thestudents to strive to becomemore physically fit.

Students have recentlycompleted the Hubba HubbaHoop Challenge. The HubbaHubba Hoop Challenge usesa three pound exercise hulahoop and tests the studentson how long they can continu-ously keep the hoop turning.

The next challenge will bethe Balance Beam Challenge,which tests the student’s abili-ty to balance on the low beamas they travel from end to endof the beam.

The challenge results areposted on the P.E. bulletinboard. Awards are designatedas Bronze, Silver, Gold, andKong. Bronze is the begin-ning award and Kong is thehighest award. The KongAward winners from eachgrade level then compete todetermine their Top Kong Kid(girl and boy).

Congratulations to our TopKong Kid award winners inour Hubba Hubba HoopChallenge. Third grade girl –

Ja’niya Wilkins, 10 minutes;third grade boy – KeatonWhite, 10 minutes; fourthgrade girl – MadelynThompson, two hours, 11minutes, 15 seconds; fourthgrade boy – Rayshun Starks,two hours, 45 minutes, 15 sec-onds; fifth grade girl – LillianaLopez, two hours, 25 seconds;fifth grade boy – CodyHutchens, 41 minutes.

A special congratulationsgoes to our BES ChampionKong Kid, Rayshun Starkswith his time of two hours, 45minutes, 15 seconds!

All the winners were pre-sented with award certificatesto keep, as well as theirachievements being postedon the PFA bulletin board inthe gym.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 10

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Kong Kid winners

Rayshun StarksChampion Kong Kid winner

Lataisha Jackson

State RepresentativeLataisha Jackson of Comowill be the guest speaker forthe NAACP annual FreedomFund Banquet to be heldSaturday, Nov. 1, at 7 p.m. inthe Shaw Cafeteria on RustCollege campus. This year’stheme is, “All In For JusticeAnd Equality.”

Representative Jacksonhas served in the MississippiHouse of Representatives,District 11 – Panola and Tatecounties from 2013 to thepresent. She is a member ofAlpha Kappa Alpha SororityInc. and an active member ofAskew Grove BaptistChurch.

The Holly Springs High School Class of 1986 will meetSunday, Oct. 26, at Mr. Chic’s Barber Shop at 3 p.m. All class-mates are asked to please attend.

Dr. CharlesWilliams

Byhalia Elementary students excelin physical fitness challenge

Mississippi Humanities Council lecture at Rust

Freedom FundBanquet atRust Nov. 1

HS High School Class of 1986 to meet Sunday

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By BEVERLY PHILLIPSHolly Springs

Intermediate School held itsfirst PTA meeting onThursday, October 9. BeverlyPhillips, parent liaison, wel-comed the parents and DianeBarrentine, regional managerof Domino’s Pizza.

Holly Springs Inter-mediate School PTA is askingparents and the community to“Hop On Our Bus” withDomino’s Pizza’s school fund-raiser and help us out.Twenty percent of theamount ordered goes to thePTA. Free pizza was served toeveryone present, courtesy ofDomino’s Pizza, regionalmanager Diane Barrentine.

Our first Domino’s night

will be November 6.Domino’s flyers and stickerswill go home November 4.

Congratulations to ournew PTA officers! They arepresident Angela Isom, vicepresident MoniqueWashington, secretaryCharisse Harris, treasurerShanell Collins, fund-raiserchairman CassandraFaulkner, fund-raiser KatrinaWashington, and member-ship chairman Sharita Smith.PTA dues are $5. Parents areencouraged to join the PTA atthe Jr. High School and HollySprings High School.

Holly SpringsIntermediate School will holdits first dance on Friday,October 17, from 6 till 9 p.m in

the gym. Admission is $3.Holly Springs Jr. High

School homecoming pageantwill be held on October 16, inthe high school auditorium at6 p.m. Admission is $3.

We invite parents in theHolly Springs School Districtto drop by the Parent Center,located on the IntermediateSchool campus. It servesgrades four-12.

We have five computersparents can use. Our missionis to educate students whocan compete in the globalcommunity. Our vision is toincrease student achievementuntil we are an A-plus schooldistrict with all A-plus schools.Our motto is “TeamworkMakes the Dream Work.”

Michael Harris and DawnFitzpatrick were crownedH.W. Byers Middle SchoolHomecoming King andQueen on September 30.

Last year’s homecomingqueen, Shakira Foster,crowned the new homecom-ing queen, presented herwith a sash, and a bouquet offlowers. Principal EquanAshe crowned the new home-coming king and presentedhim with a sash.

Michael Harris is a mem-ber of Hudsonville CMEChurch and Dawn Fitzpatrickis a member of AsburyUnited Methodist Church.Michael is the grandson ofLewis and Charletta Harris.He was escorted by a school-mate, Dallas Fitzpatrick.

Dawn is the daughter ofDonald Fitzpatrick and JoslynFitzpatrick. She was escortedby her grandfather, Rev. F.H.Brown.

They are both eighthgraders and are active in vari-ous extra-curricular activities.

The eighth grade home-coming maids were MeganClarkson, escorted byZimbalist Coleman, andAlexus Hunter, escorted byher father, Cedric Hunter.The homecoming king alter-nate was Cameron Laprell,escorted by his aunt,Shannon Laprell.

The homecoming courtconsisted of Mr. and Miss

Kindergarten, ZacharySellers and Zoe Olson; Mr.and Miss First Grade,Anterrio Guy and KassidyBriggs; Mr. and Miss SecondGrade, Earven Hughes andFlor Sanchez; Mr. and MissThird Grade, Madarian Euelland Sarah Roberts; Mr. andMiss Fourth Grade, AaronLyles and Allison Skelton;Mr. and Miss Fifth Grade,Devin Moore and BrooklynHall; Mr. and Miss SixthGrade, Skylyn Hardeman

and Kyra Morrison; and Mr.and Miss Seventh Grade,Kendric Stephens and JadenHarris.

The sweethearts wereLashavia Brittenum, MissBasketball; Reyna Delgado,Miss Hip-Hop; DallasFitzpatrick, Miss Pom Pom;Brinaya Martin, MissFootball; and GlonesiaPritchard, Miss Cheerleader.

The H.W. Byers Lionsdefeated the Walnut Tigerswith a score of 26-22.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 11

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Monday thru Friday 8:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m.Saturday and Sunday 8:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m.

Amy Bolton-Curley Ga’Ray Bobo Tony Boone

She may not be a house-hold name or have a celebritystatus by Hollywood defini-tion, but it’s a Bearcat prideto know that a Rust Collegealumna is the mastermindbehind some of Tyler Perry’shit movies and stage playDVDs, the BET series“Sunday Best,” The TrumpetAwards, and The StellarAwards.

Amy Bolton-Curley, theCEO and executive producerof Bolton-Curley MediaProductions, Inc., and 1985mass communications gradu-ate, will keynote the 11thAnnual MassCommunications Weekassembly at Rust, Thursday,Oct. 23.

Bolton-Curley is an award-winning producer and direc-tor with over 20 years experi-ence in media productionwith national and internation-al credits in entertainmentgenres. Her major clientsinclude The Tyler Perry

Company, Lions Gate Films,BET, TV-One, and The TomJoyner Foundation.

Other outstanding filmproducers and presenters forthe Mass CommunicationsWeek program are alumniTony Boone ’97 and Ga’RayBobo ’12.

Boone, a TV/film instruc-tor at Lincoln Humanitiesand CommunicationsMagnet School in Dallas,Texas, has produced severaldocumentaries including:“Through the Eyes of theNext Generation, Tracing theSteps of President BarackObama” and The SteveHarvey Mentorship docu-mentary, “The Road NotTaken”, which premiered atthe Dallas International andLondon Film Festivals.

Most recently, he haspitched TV show ideas toNBC and Amazon Studios inSanta Monica, Calif. Boonepreviously worked as mediaplanner for Tapestry

Partners, a multiculturaladvertising division of LeoBurnett Worldwide inChicago, Ill., as well as mediamanager at Danielle AshleyCommunications and BurrellCommunications Group.

Boone, who is from HollySprings, still has family here.

Bobo, CEO and owner ofKey Insight (KIS) Films inrecent years has worked withJuicy J, Trey Songz, Yo Gotti,2 Chain and other major rapand R&B artists in the enter-tainment industry.

Bobo’s works includecommercials for BETAwards in 2013, K97 andHOT 107 radio stations inMemphis, Tenn. He travelsaround the U.S. producingvideos that can be seen onMTV Jams and World StarHip Hop.

The young budding filmproducer did his collegeinternship with InterscopeRecords and Memphis radioHOT station.

Body walkMrs. James and her fourth graders from Marshall Academy attended the Body Walk recently at theEddie Lee Smith Multi-Purpose Building in Holly Springs. Students received important health andnutrition messages at the Body Walk exhibit. Front (from left:) Noah Robinson, Addison Potts, CalebClifton, Ava Rodgers, Trevor Knox, Mikayla Hill, and Nalisa Prak. Back (from left:) Mrs. James, WinstonFant, Jack Whaley Smith, Gavin Coleman, Karlie Pipkin, Presley Allen, and Joley Ann Valentine.

Hollywood homecoming at Byers

Movie producer keynote speaker at Rust

Dawn Fitzpatrick and Michael Harris

Making the connection between home and school

Page 12: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 12

Legal NoticesDeadline

5 p.m. Mondays

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATEEDGAR JONES, SR., DECEASED

CAUSE NO.2014-0046ORA JONES, ADMINISTRATRIX

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetters of Administration having been grant-

ed on the 13th day of June, 2014, by theChancery Court of Marshall County, Mississippi,to the undersigned, upon the Estate of EdgarJones, Sr., Deceased, notice is hereby given toall persons having claims against said Estate topresent the same to the Clerk of Said Court forprobate and registration within ninety (90) daysfrom the date of the first publication of this Notice,or they will forever be barred.

This the 24th day of September, 2014./s/Ora Jones

Administratrix, of the Estate ofEdgar Jones, Deceased

PREPARED BY:Brent Hazzard, MSB#99721HAZZARD LAW, LLCPost Office Box 24382Jackson, Mississippi 39225Tel: 601.977.5253Fax: 601.977.5236Email: [email protected] W. Espy, MSB#102424Christopher W. Espy, Attorney at Law, PLLCPost Office Box 13722Jackson, Mississippi 39236-3722Phone: (601) 812-5300Fax: (601) 500-5719E-mail: [email protected]

Publication Dates:10/23, 10/30, 11/6, 2014

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Dave Caudill

Sanctuary choir concertFirst Presbyterian Church in Byhalia presents the BethelPresbyterian Church sanctuary choir in concert, Sun., Oct. 26, 4p.m., with Dave Caudill, director of music and organist.The concertis promoting the Heart and Hands Ministries of Byhalia. The con-cert is free. Donations of dry and canned goods are gladly accept-ed. For more information, email Rev. Bill Connolly,[email protected], or call cell 662-587-6513.

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFELVIRA TODD SUMLAR, INTESTATE

CAUSE NO. 2014-0567WJONATHAN N. SUMLAR, PETITIONER

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetters of Administration having been grant-

ed on the 16th day of October, 2014, by theChancery Court of MARSHALL COUNTY,Mississippi, IN Civil Action No. 2014-0567W, tothe undersigned, Administrator of the Estate ofELVIRA TODD SUMLAR, Deceased, notice ishereby given to all persons having claims againstsaid estate to present the same to the Clerk ofthis Court for probate and registration accordingto law, within ninety (90) days from the first publi-cation of this notice, or they will be forever barred.

THIS the 17th day of October, 2014./S/ Jonathan N. Sumlar, Jr.

JONATHAN N. SUMLAR, JR.ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF

ELVIRA TODD SUMLAR, DECEASED/s/Sharon D. GipsonTHE GIPSON LAW FIRM PLLCPOST OFFICE BOX 474HOLLY SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI 38635PHONE: 662-333-1097/601-291-9691

(43-45c)–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFGRANVILLE REED, DECEASED INTESTATE

CAUSE NO. 2014-0647RULE 81 SUMMONS

(SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION)THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

TO: The unknown heirs, executors, adminis-trators, devisees, legatees, or statutory benefici-aries of GRANVILLE REED, deceased, and anyand all person claiming or having a legal or equi-table interest in the Estate of GRANVILLE REED,deceased.

The unknown heirs, executors, administra-tors, devisees, legatees, or statutory beneficiariesof Granville Reed, deceased,

You have been made a Respondent in thePetition filed in the Court by Kayla Reed, et al todetermine heirs at law of Granville Reed,deceased.

Respondents other than you in this actionare: None.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst the Complaint or Petition filed against youin this action at 9:30 o’clock a.m., on the 12th dayof December, 2014, in Marshall County,Mississippi, Courtroom B, and in case of yourfailure to appear and defend a judgment will beentered against you for the money or other thingsdemanded in the Complaint or Petition.

You are not required to file an answer orother pleading but you may do so if you desire.

Issued under my hand and the seal of saidCourt, this 21sst day of October, 2014.

C. W. (CHUCK) THOMASChancery Clerk of

Marshall County, Mississippi/s/Marshall Powell, DC

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE: THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFGRANVILLE REED DECEASED INTESTATE

CAUSE NO. 2014-0647NOTICE TO CREDITORS

LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION havingbeen granted on the 17TH day of October, 2014,by the Chancery Court of Marshall County,Mississippi to the undersigned upon the Estate ofGranville Reed, deceased, notice is hereby givento all persons having claims against said estate,now due or to become due, to present the sameto the Clerk of said Court for probate and regis-tration according to law within ninety days fromthis date, or they will be forever barred.

THIS, the 21st day of October, 2014./S/KAYLA REED

KAYLA REED, ADMINISTRATRIXJENNIFER L. SHACKELFORD,MSB# 10840 ATTORNEY FOR ESTATE OF GRANVILLE REEDPOST OFFICE BOX 130POTTS CAMP, MISSISSIPPI 38659TEL: 662-333-9009

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OFETHEL P. BETTS a/k/a EMMA ETHER, PINSON BETTSDECEASED TESTATE

CAUSE NO. 2014-0648SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPITO:

1. Unknown heirs of Ethel P. Betts a/k/aEmma Ether Pinson Betts, whose names, placesof residence and post office addresses areunknown after diligent search and inquiry;

2. Unknown heirs of Henry T. Betts, whosenames, places of residence and post officeaddresses are unknown after diligent search andinquiry;

3. Unknown heirs of Michael Betts, whosenames, places of residence and post officeaddresses are unknown after diligent search andinquiry;

The property which is the subject matter ofthis complaint is located and situated in MarshallCounty, Mississippi, and is described as follows:

Tract I:COMMENCE at the Northwest Corner of

Section 26, Township 2 South, Range 2 West,Marshall County, Mississippi; thence North 86degrees 31 minutes East 676.37 feet: thenceSouth 3 degrees 10 minutes East 2794.28 feet tothe POINT OF BEGINNING at the SouthwestCorner of the James Anderson 7.0 acre tract,thence North 36 degrees 44 minutes East alongthe South line of said 7.0 acre tract 1206 feet;thence Southeastwardly along the meandering ofthe West line of Rook-Early Grove Road 1310feet; thence South 86 degrees 44 minutes West2212 feet; thence North 3 degrees 10 feet Westalong wire fence line 944 feet; thence North 86degrees 44 minutes East 634 feet; thence North3 degrees 10 feet West 314 feet to the POINT OFBEGINNING and containing 56.0 acres, more orless, and according to plat and survey thereofprepared by Eddie C. Boatwright, dated May 12,1982.

Tract II:BEGINNING at an iron pin 634 feet East of

the Northwest Corner of Section 26, Township 2South, Range 2 West, Marshall County,Mississippi; thence South 447 feet; thence West634 feet; thence South with wire fence 406 feet;thence West 60 feet; thence North 545 feet;thence North 39 degrees 15 minutes West 196feet to center of public road; thenceNortheastwardly along center of public road 236feet; thence South 245 feet; thence North 77degrees 0 minutes East with wire fence 350 feet;thence North 155 feet; thence North 57 degrees0 minutes East 103 feet; thence North 75degrees 0 minutes East 35 feet; thence East 148feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING and contain-ing 6.0 acres, less public road right of way andaccording to survey thereof prepared by EddieBoatwright, dated August 15, 1983.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst the Complaint filed against you in thisaction at 9:30 O'Clock A.M. on the 12TH day ofDecember, 2014, in the Marshall CountyCourthouse B at Holly Springs, Mississippi, andin case of your failure to appear and defend ajudgment will be entered against you for themoney or other things demanded in theComplaint.

You are not required to file an answer orother pleading but you may do so if you desire.

Issued under my hand and seal of saidCourt, this the 21st day of October, 2014.

C. W. (CHUCK) THOMASCHANCERY CLERK

By: /S/ MARSHALL POWELL, DC(43-46c)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on December 21, 2004, FloraB. Street executed a certain deed of trust to JerryBaker, Trustee for the benefit of MortgageElectronic Registration Systems, Inc., as nomi-nee for First Horizon Home Loan Corporationdba First Tennessee Home Loans which deed oftrust is of record in the office of the ChanceryClerk of Marshall County, State of Mississippi inBook 371 at Page 524; and

WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was subse-quently assigned to Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), a corporation organ-ized and existing under the laws of the UnitedStates of America by instrument dated April 29,2014 and recorded in Instrument No.2014003192 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk'soffice; and

WHEREAS, Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), a corporation organ-ized and existing under the laws of the UnitedStates of America has heretofore substitutedShapiro & Massey, LLC as Trustee by instrumentdated September 23, 2014 and recorded in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk's Office in InstrumentNo. 2014004338; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe terms and conditions of said deed of trust andthe entire debt secured thereby having beendeclared to be due and payable in accordancewith the terms of said deed of trust, FederalNational Mortgage Association ("Fannie Mae"), acorporation organized and existing under thelaws of the United States of America, the legalholder of said indebtedness, having requestedthe undersigned Substituted Trustee to executethe trust and sell said land and property in accor-dance with the terms of said deed of trust and forthe purpose of raising the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shapiro & Massey,LLC, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, willon November 13, 2014 offer for sale at public out-cry and sell within legal hours (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the SouthDoor of the County Courthouse of MarshallCounty, located at Holly Springs, Mississippi, tothe highest and best bidder for cash the followingdescribed property situated in Marshall County,State of Mississippi, to-wit:

2.14 acres, being Lot 51, Twin Oaks EastSubdivision, Phase I, located in Section 3,Township 2 South, Range 4 West, MarshallCounty, Mississippi, being more particularlydescribed as follows:

Lot No. 51, of Twin Oaks East Subdivision,Phase I, recorded in Plat File 1010A & B in theOffice of the Chancery Clerk of Marshall CountyMississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested inme as Substituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 20thday of October, 2014.

Shapiro & Massey, LLCSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC1080 River Oaks DriveSuite B-202Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

3654 Cayce RoadByhalia, MS 3861114-009447BE

Publication Dates:October 23, 30 and November 6, 2014

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Substitute Trustee’s Notice of SaleSTATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Marshall

WHEREAS, on the 7th day of January,2006, and acknowledged on the 7th day ofJanuary, 2006, Curtis Aldridge, and wife, andConnie Aldridge, jointly as an estate in the entire-ty with full rights of survivorship, executed anddelivered a certain Deed of Trust unto CTC RealEstate Services, Trustee for Mortgage ElectronicRegistration Systems, Inc., as nominee forCountrywide Home Loans, Inc., Beneficiary, tosecure an indebtedness therein described, whichDeed of Trust is recorded in the office of theChancery Clerk of Marshall County, Mississippi,in Book 402 at Page 163; and

WHEREAS, on the 8th day of April, 2011,Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc.,as nominee for Countrywide Home Loans, Inc.,assigned said Deed of Trust unto The Bank ofNew York Mellon fka The Bank of New York, AsTrustee for the Certificateholders CWABS, Inc.,Asset-backed Certificates, Series 2006-6, byinstrument recorded in the office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk in Instrument# 2011001666; and

WHEREAS, on the 24th day of October,2011, the Holder of said Deed of Trust substitut-ed and appointed Michael Jedynak by instrumentrecorded in the office of the aforesaid ChanceryClerk in Instrument# 2012000460; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe payments of the indebtedness secured by thesaid Deed of Trust, and the holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested the undersigned so to do,on the 13th day of November, 2014, I will duringthe lawful hours of between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m., at public outcry, offer for sale and will sell, atthe south door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse at Holly Springs, Mississippi, forcash to the highest bidder, the followingdescribed land and property situated in MarshallCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

The following described real property situatein the city of Holly Springs, county of Marshall,and state of Mississippi, to wit:

The following land and property located andsituated in Marshall County, Mississippi,described as follows, to-wit:

Commencing at the Northwest corner ofsaid Southwest Quarter, thence South 00degrees 11 minutes 45 seconds West a distanceof 260 feet to a rebar set at the point of beginning;thence North 86 degrees 36 minutes 37 secondsEast a distance of 432.53 feet to a rebar set;thence South 01 degree 14 minutes 12 secondsEast a distance of 199.62 feet to a rebar found atthe Northeast corner of Lot 16 of Lamar Farms,said point being 32 feet West of the center line ofBeverly lane; thence South 86 degrees 37 min-utes 08 seconds West along the North line of saidLot 16 a distance of 457.52 feet to a rebar found;thence North 00 degrees 11 minutes 45 secondsEast a distance of 199.80 feet to the point ofbeginning and containing 2.0 acres, all as moreparticularly shown described and depicted uponthat certain plot and boundary survey preparedby Newton E. Land, III, PLS #2501, datedFebruary 10, 2000.

By fee simple deed from Curtis Aldridge asset forth in Deed Book 312, Page 807 andrecorded on 9/19/2000, Marshall CountyRecords.

By fee simple deed from Roger L. Woods toCurtis Aldridge as set forth in 308, Page 396 andrecorded 3/27/2000, Marshall County Records.

I will only convey such title as is vested in meas Substitute Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this 16th dayof October, 2014.

Michael JedynakSubstitute Trustee

855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste. 404, Bldg. 400Ridgeland, MS 39157(318) 330-9020jkw/F11-0466PUBLISH: 10-23-14 / 10-30-14 / 11-6-14

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on May 29, 2008, BradMcCaskill and Megan McCaskill executed aDeed of Trust to ATTORNEYS CHOICE AllianceTitle & Escrow LLC, as Trustee for Delta TrustMortgage Corporation, as Lender, and MortgageElectronic Registration Systems, Inc. (“MERS”),as Beneficiary, which is recorded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Marshall County asInstrument Number 2008-003412 and re-record-ed as Instrument Number 2008-004687;

WHEREAS, on June 2, 2014, said Deed ofTrust was thereafter assigned to TrustmarkNational Bank as Instrument Number2014002570;

WHEREAS, on September 19, 2014,Trustmark National Bank substituted JamesEldred Renfroe as Trustee in the aforementioneddeed of trust with this recorded as InstrumentNumber 2014004179;

WHEREAS, there being a default in theterms and conditions of the Deed of Trust andentire debt secured having been declared to bedue and payable in accordance with its terms,Trustmark National Bank, the holder of the debthas requested the Trustee to execute the trustand sell said land and property pursuant to itsterms in order to raise the sums due, with attor-ney’s and trustee’s fees, and expenses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, James EldredRenfroe, Trustee for said Deed of Trust, will onNovember 14, 2014, offer for sale at public outcry,and sell within legal hours (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m., and 4:00 p.m.) at the southmain door of the Marshall County Courthouse inHolly Springs, MS, to the highest and best bidderfor cash, the following described property situat-ed in Marshall County, MS, to-wit:

Lot 12, Forest Ridge Subdivision, situated inSection 15, Township 2 South, Range 5 West,Marshall County, Mississippi, as per plat of recordin Plat File 898-B in the Chancery Clerk’s Officeof Marshall County, Mississippi. PropertyAddress: 533 Sandy Ridge, Byhalia, MS 38611.

Being the same property conveyed toCentral Builders, LLC, a Tennessee LimitedLiability Company, by Quit Claim Deed fromGeorge G. Lee, dated 04/18/2002 filed for recordon 04/24/2002 in Book 326, Page 279 in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk’s Office.

Also, being the same property conveyed toBradley N. McCaskill and wife, Megan M.McCaskill by Warranty Deed from CenteralBuilders, LLC, dated 05/10/2007 filed for recordon 05/21/2007 in Book 374, Page 412 in theaforesaid Chancery Clerk’s Office.

I will convey only such title as is vested in meas Trustee, with no warranties.

WITNESS my signature this 9th day ofOctober, 2014.

JAMES ELDRED RENFROE, TrusteeJames Eldred Renfroe, 648 Lakeland East Dr., Ste A, Flowood, MS 39232, Phone 601-932-1011Publish: 10/23, 10/30, 11/6, 11/13

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SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on the 10th day of May, 2006,Reeves Sherrod a/k/a Reeves J. Sherrod andSusan M. Sherrod executed a certain Deed ofTrust to Thomas F. Baker, IV, Trustee for the ben-efit of First Tennessee Bank National Association,which Deed of Trust was recorded in the office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Marshall County,Mississippi, and recorded in Deed of Trust Book410 at Page 90 of the land records; and,

WHEREAS, T. Frank Collins has been sub-stituted in the place and stead of Thomas F.Baker, IV, Trustee for First Tennessee BankNational Association, said Appointment ofSubstitute Trustee being recorded as InstrumentNo. 2011004728 of the records of the ChanceryClerk of said County; and,

WHEREAS, fee simple title is vested inReeves J. Sherrod and wife, Susan M. Sherrod;and,

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe terms and conditions of said Deed of Trustand the entire debt secured thereby having beendeclared to be due and payable in accordancewith the terms of said Deed of Trust, the legalholder of said indebtedness, First TennesseeBank National Association, having requested theundersigned Substituted Trustee to execute thetrust and sell said land and property in accor-dance with the terms of said Deed of Trust and forthe purpose of raising the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, T. Frank Collins,Substituted Trustee in said Deed of Trust, will onthe 17th day of November, 2014, offer for sale atpublic outcry and sell within legal hours (beingbetween the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.),at the South Door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse, 128 East Van Dorn Avenue, HollySprings, Mississippi to the highest and best bid-der for cash the following described property sit-uated in Marshall County, State of Mississippi, to-wit:

The following described land, in MarshallCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Beginning at the Northwest Corner ofSection 4, Township 2 South, Range 3 West,thence run South along the center line of the RedBanks-Mt. Pleasant Rd. 179 feet to a point; runthence East 550 feet to a point; thence run North179 feet to a point; run thence West 550 feet tothe point of beginning, containing 2.26 acres,more or less.

I WILL CONVEY only such title as is vestedin me as Substituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 12thday of September, 2014.

/s/ T. Frank CollinsT. Frank Collins, Substituted Trustee

Prepared By:T. Frank Collins, Esq.Collins & Associates, PLLC100 Webster Circle, Suite 2Madison, Mississippi 39110Telephone: (601) 853-4400Dates of Publication:October 23, October 30, November 6 andNovember 13, 2014

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SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on July 31, 2007, Charlotte B.Worsham and Daniel Worsham, married execut-ed a certain deed of trust to Southern Trust Title,Trustee for the benefit of Mortgage ElectronicRegistration Systems, Inc. as nominee for EvolveBank & Trust, its successors and assigns whichdeed of trust is of record in the office of theChancery Clerk of Marshall County, State ofMississippi in Book 447 at Page 13; and

WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was subse-quently assigned to Federal National MortgageAssociation ("Fannie Mae"), a corporation organ-ized and existing under the laws of the UnitedStates of America by instrument dated March 14,2014 and recorded in Instrument No.2014001342 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk'soffice; and

WHEREAS, Federal National MortgageAssociation ("FNMA"), a corporation organizedand existing under the laws of the United Statesof America has heretofore substituted Shapiro &Massey, LLC as Trustee by instrument datedMarch 27, 2014 and recorded in the aforesaidChancery Clerk's Office in Instrument No.2014001574; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe terms and conditions of said deed of trust andthe entire debt secured thereby having beendeclared to be due and payable in accordancewith the terms of said deed of trust, FederalNational Mortgage Association ("FNMA"), a cor-poration organized and existing under the laws ofthe United States of America, the legal holder ofsaid indebtedness, having requested the under-signed Substituted Trustee to execute the trustand sell said land and property in accordancewith the terms of said deed of trust and for thepurpose of raising the sums due thereunder,together with attorney's fees, trustee's fees andexpense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shapiro & Massey,LLC, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, willon November 20, 2014 offer for sale at public out-cry and sell within legal hours (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the SouthDoor of the County Courthouse of MarshallCounty, located at Holly Springs, Mississippi, tothe highest and best bidder for cash the followingdescribed property situated in Marshall County,State of Mississippi, to-wit:

Land situated in Marshall County,Mississippi to wit:

Lot No. 14 of the Chatham HeightsSubdivision as shown by plat of said subdivision,direct reference to which is hereby made, filed inPlat Book No. 2 at Page 57 now filed in Slide 96Ain the Office of the Chancery Court Clerk ofMarshall County, Mississippi, and more particu-larly described as follows, to-wit:

Begin at the Northeast corner of City BlockNo. 8, according to the official map, plat and sur-vey of the City of Holly Springs, Mississippi, inSection 5, Township 4 South, Range 2 West;thence go South along the West Right-of-Wayline of Chesterman Street for a distance of 17 feetand 2 inches to a point; thence South 89 degreesand 10 minutes West a distance of 267 feet to aPoint; thence North a distance of 162 feet to apoint in the Southeast corner of said Lot 14, thispoint being also the Point of Beginning of thisdescription; run thence South 89 degrees and 10minutes West along the North Right-of-Way lineof Ridgecrest View a distance of 80 feet to a pointwhich is the Southwest corner of said Lot 14, runthence North 162 feet to a point; thence South 67degrees 30 minutes East a distance of 87 feetand 6 inches to a point; thence South 130 feet toa point which is the Point of Beginning of thisdescription.

Being the same property conveyed tograntor, First Horizon Home Loan Corporationf/k/a FT Mortgage Companies d/b/a FirstTennessee Mortgage Company, Inc., herein bySubstitute Trustees Deed of record in Book 358,Pages 691-693, dated July 7, 2005, filed July 21,2005, in the Chancery Court Clerk's Office ofMarshall County, Mississippi.

Being the same property conveyed tograntor, Secretary of Housing and UrbanDevelopment, herein by Special Warranty Deedof record at Book 362, Pages 83-84, datedDecember 14, 2005, filed December 15, 2005, inthe Chancery Court Clerk's Office of MarshallCounty, Mississippi.

Being the same property conveyed tograntor, Daniel A. Worsham and Charlotte B.Worsham, as tenants by the entirety with fullrights of survivorship and not as tenants in com-mon, herein by Special Warranty Deed of recordin Book 374, Pages 432-433, dated May 16,2007, filed May 22, 2007, in the Chancery CourtClerk's Office of Marshall County, Mississippi.

I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested inme as Substituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 17thday of October, 2014.

Shapiro & Massey, LLCSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC1080 River Oaks DriveSuite B-202Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

390 Ridgecrest DriveHolly Springs, MS 3863514-009181AH

Publication Dates: October 23 and 30, 2014 andNovember 6 and 13, 2014

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NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LANDUnder and by virtue of the authority vested

in me as Trustee in that certain Deed of Trustdated June 26, 2009 executed by DonnaC.Young unto William F. Schneller as Trustee, tosecure an indebtedness therein described toBank of Holly Springs, said Deed of Trust being ofrecord as Instrument No. 2009003027 of the landrecords of the Clerk of the Chancery Court ofMarshall County, Mississippi; and default havingbeen made in the payment of the indebtednessthereby secured, and the undersigned havingbeen requested by the legal holder of said indebt-edness to foreclose said Deed of Trust, notice ishereby given that I, as Trustee aforesaid, will,within lawful hours, at the South front door of theMarshall County Courthouse, in the City of HollySprings, Mississippi, on Friday, November 14,2014 offer for sale and sell at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, the following describedproperty, situated in the County of Marshall, Stateof Mississippi, to wit:

Begin at the Northeast corner of theSouthwest Quarter of Section 26, Township 3South, Range 3 West Marshall County,Mississippi and run thence South along an oldfence line to the center of the Country Club Roadthence run along said center line North 58degrees 20 minutes West a distance of 450 feetto the northwest corner of that 3.7 acre tractbelonging to George P Robinson et al, which isthe point of beginning of the tract to be conveyed,from said point run thence South 31 degrees 30minutes west a distance of 371 feet to the south-west corner of the George P Robinson tractwhich is on the right of way of the Highway 78 ByPass; run thence along said right of way North 39degrees 28 minutes West a distance of 581 feetto a point, thence run North 31 degrees 30 min-utes East a distance of 191.7 feet to a point in thecenter of the Country Club Road, thence runEastwardly a distance of 549 feet to the point ofbeginning.

LESS AND EXCEPT the followingdescribed parcel to-wit: Commencing at thenortheast corner of the Southwest Quarter ofSection 26 Township 3 South Range 3 WestMarshall County, Mississippi thence South alongan old fence 1193.0 feet to the center of theCountry Club Road; thence along center of saidroad North 58 degrees 20 minutes West 450 feetto the northwest corner of the George PRobinson 3.7 acre tract, said point being the pointof beginning of the herein described survey,thence from said point of beginning run South 31degrees 30 minutes West 370.6 feet to a point onthe north right of way line North 39 degrees 21minutes West 282.2 feet, thence North 31degrees 30 minutes East 283.1 feet to a point inthe Country Club Road, thence South 57degrees 24 minutes East 266.6 feet to the pointof beginning.

ALSO LESS AND EXCEPT: Commence atthe northeast corner of the Southwest Quarter ofSection 26 Township 3 South Range 3 WestMarshall County, Mississippi; thence South alongold wire fence line 1193 feet to the center ofPublic Road North 58 degrees 20 minutes Westalong center of said road 450 feet, thence North57 degrees 24 minutes West along center of saidroad, 266.6 feet to the point of beginning at thenorthwest corner of Lawson 2 acre tract, thenceSouth 31 degrees 30 minutes West 283.1 feet tothe north right of way line of US Interstate 78Highway, thence North 39 degrees 21 minutesWest along said north right of way line 165 feet,thence North 31 degrees 30 minutes East 231feet to the center of Public Road thence South 57degrees 24 minutes East along said center ofsaid road 155 feet to the point of beginning.

The purchaser will be required to pay the fullamount of his bid in cash at the time of the sale.I will sell and convey only such title as is vested inme as Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this the 15thday of October, 2014.

William F. Schneller, TrusteePublishing Dates:

October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2014(43-46c)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LANDUnder and by virtue of the authority vested

in me as Trustee in that certain Deed of Trustdated June 16, 2008 executed by William Minorunto William F. Schneller as Trustee, to secure anindebtedness therein described to Bank of HollySprings, said Deed of Trust being of record asInstrument No. 2008003668 of the land recordsof the Clerk of the Chancery Court of MarshallCounty, Mississippi; and default having beenmade in the payment of the indebtedness there-by secured, and the undersigned having beenrequested by the legal holder of said indebted-ness to foreclose said Deed of Trust, notice ishereby given that I, as Trustee aforesaid, will,within lawful hours, at the South front door of theMarshall County Courthouse, in the City of HollySprings, Mississippi, on Friday, November 14,2014 offer for sale and sell at public outcry to thehighest bidder for cash, the following describedproperty, situated in the County of Marshall, Stateof Mississippi, to wit:

Lot 17 Crestview Subdivision a subdivisionlocated in Section 30, Township 3 South, Range2 West Marshall County, Mississippi according toa map or plat thereof in which is on file and ofrecord in the office of the Chancery Clerk ofMarshall County, Mississippi.

The purchaser will be required to pay the fullamount of his bid in cash at the time of the sale.I will sell and convey only such title as is vested inme as Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this the 7thday of October, 2014.

William F. Schneller, TrusteePublishing Dates:

October 23, 30, November 6, 13, 2014(43-46c)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

WYNONA J. SANDERLIN, DECEASEDVS. CAUSE NO. 2014-0544SUSAN S. MINOR, ADMINISTRATRIX

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetters of Administration were granted to the

undersigned on the Estate of Wynona J.Sanderlin, Deceased, by the Chancery Court ofMarshall County, Mississippi, on September 2,2014, and notice is hereby given to all personshaving claims against said estate to present thesame to the Clerk of said Court for probate andregistration within ninety (90) days from the datethis notice is first published, or they will be forev-er barred.

Witness my signature this the 4th day ofSeptember, 2014.

/s/ SUSAN S. MINORSUSAN S. MINOR

JAMES E. WOODS, MSB#7386JONES WALKER LLPP.O. Box 14566897 Crumpler Blvd., Suite 100Olive Branch, MS 38654(662) 895-2996Solicitors for the Estate ofWYNONA J. SANDERLINRun three (3) times

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Legal Notices

Sports booster ads$20 per weekcall Barry or Barbara 662-252-4261

Mentoring speakersHolly Springs Chief of Police Dwight Harris and Captain Darryl Bowen were the Gamma Nu Chapterof Sigma Pi Phi Fraternity mentoring program speakers on Thursday, October 9, at Holly SpringsIntermediate School. Chief Harris and Captain Bowen encouraged the group of boys to listen to theirparents and teachers, stay off the streets late at night, let their parents know where they are, to nothang with the wrong crowd, have goals in life, and do their best in school.The group had plenty of ques-tions to ask the chief of police and Captain Bowen. Dr. Paul Lampley is spearheading the mentoringprogram.

Photo by Beverly Phillips

Federal programs committee meetingHolly Springs Intermediate School held its first Federal Programs/School Improvement Committeemeeting on October 1. Pictured above are committee members (seated, from left): Sharita Smith,Tywana Hunt, Shauneille Mason, and Dornetta Howell Martin. Back row (standing, from left) AundreaHigh, Angela Isom, Dorlean Gibson, Dorothy Bean, Penny Floyd, Vicki Washington, Angela Mayfield,Cassandra Faulkner and Lemon Phelps. Not pictured are committee members Tracy Jeffries andBeverly Phillips.

Keep The Faith Ministries will have their second Annual CommunityAwards Banquet, October 25 at 6 p.m., at Rust College Shaw Cafeteria.Honorees are George Zinn, Kevin Thomas, Lincoln Martin, Flick Ash,Annie Moffitt Lucas, Marsha Powell, Cheri Powers-Page and BettyWilliams. Tickets can be purchased at Matthew’s Liquor Store in Byhaliaand Annie’s Restaurant in Holly Springs.

Community awards banquet

Page 13: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 13

Legal Notices

SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on October 27, 2007 DianeUpton and Raymond Upton, wife and husband,executed a certain Deed of Trust to MichaelLyons, Trustee for Quicken Loans, Inc., benefici-ary, which Deed of Trust was recorded in theoffice of the Chancery Clerk of Marshall CountyMississippi by Instrument No. 2007011787 andre-recorded by Instrument No. 2007012298; and,and,

WHEREAs, subject deed of trust wasassigned to Green Tree Servicing LLC by virtueof an assignment of mortgage/deed of trust andrecorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk ofsaid County by Instrument No. 2014002256; and,

WHEREAS, Green Tree Servicing LLC, thepresent owner of the indebtedness and holder ofthe above described Deed of Trust, appointedJeff D. Rawlings in the place in stead of MichaelLyons or any subsequently appointed substitutedtrustee, said Substitution of Trustee, beingrecorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk ofsaid County by Instrument No. 2014004115 and,

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe terms and conditions of said Deed of Trustand the entire debt secured thereby having beendeclared to be due and payable in accordancewith the terms of said Deed of Trust, Green TreeServicing LLC, the legal holder of said indebted-ness, having requested the undersignedSubstituted Trustee to execute the trust and sellsaid land and property in accordance with theterms of said Deed of Trust and for the purposeof raising the sums due thereunder, together withattorney's fees, trustee's fees and expenses ofsale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Jeff D. Rawlings,Substituted Trustee in said Deed of Trust, will onthe 31st day of October, 2014, offer for sale atpublic outcry and sell within legal hours (beingbetween the hours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.),at the South Door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse, located at 128 East Van DornAvenue, Holly Springs, Mississippi to the highestand best bidder for cash the following describedproperty situated in Marshall County, State ofMississippi, to-wit:

Lot 53, HOLIDAY ESTATES SUBDIVISION,as shown on plat of record in Plat File 382 A andB, in the Register’s Office of Marshall County,Mississippi to which plat reference is herebymade for a more particularly description of saidproperty.

Commonly known as: 371 Croft Road,Byhalia, Ms. 38611

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this the 1st dayof October 2014.

Jeff D. Rawlings, Substituted Trustee forGreen Tree Servicing LLC

Jeff RawlingsRawlings & MacInnisP.O. Box 1789Madison, Ms. 39130601-898-1180Dates of Publication:October 9, 16, 23, 30, 2014

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

MARTHA FANT PLAINTIFFVS. CAUSE NO: 2014-0624ATWIN OAKS LTD. A/K/ATWIN OAKS CORPORATION, WILLIAM F.SCHNELLER, J.W. ARMOUR, MARSHALLCOUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, BEN CREEKMORE inhis capacity as Marshall County DistrictAttorney, JIM HOOD in his capacity asMississippi Attorney General, and ALLPERSONS HAVING OR CLAIMING ANYLEGAL OR EQUITABLE INTEREST IN THE LAND DESCRIBED HEREIN,

DEFENDANTSCOMPLAINT TO QUIET AND

CONFIRM TAX TITLETO THE HONORABLE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI:

COMES NOW, MARTHA FANT, and pur-suant to Miss. Code Ann. § 11-17-1 and §11-17-19 and files this suit against Twin Oaks Ltd.,William F. Schneller, J.W. Armour, MarshallCounty, Mississippi, Ben Creekmore in hiscapacity as Marshall County District Attorney, JimHood in his capacity as Mississippi AttorneyGeneral, and all persons having or claiming anylegal or equitable interest in the land describedherein to Quiet and Confirm Title in the abovestyled and numbered cause and would showunto the court the following:

1. The parties:a. Martha Fant, an adult resident citizen of

the State of Mississippi. She may be served withprocess at 800 E. Salem Road, Holly Springs,MS 38635.

b. Twin Oaks Ltd., a Mississippi corporationwhose principal place of business is 33Commerce Square, P.O. Box 96, Mt. Pleasant,MS 38649. Twin Oaks Ltd, may be served withprocess through their Registered Agent forService of Process, William F. Schneller, 126 N.Spring Street, P.O. Box 417, Holly Springs, MS38635.

c.William F.Schneller is an adult resident cit-izen of the State of Mississippi and Trustee pur-suant to a Deed of Trust executed in favor of J.W.Armour. He may be served at 126 N. SpringStreet, P.O. Box 417, Holly Springs, MS 38635.

d. J.W. Armour, is an adult resident citizen ofthe State of Mississippi and beneficiary pursuantto the aforementioned Deed of Trust. He may beserved at 3896 Cayce Road, Byhalia, Mississippi,38611.

e. Marshall County, Mississippi is a countylocated within the State of Mississippi which maybe served through Ronnie J. Bennett, thePresident of the Board of Supervisors, 128 E.VanDorn Avenue, Holly Springs, Mississippi 38635and is a necessary party defendant pursuant toMississippi Code Annotated §11-17-19.

f. Ben Creekmore in his capacity as DistrictAttorney for Marshall County may be served at1301 Monroe Avenue, Oxford, Mississippi 38655and is a necessary party defendant pursuant toMississippi Code Annotated § 11-17-19.

g. Jim Hood in his capacity as MississippiAttorney General may be served at Walter SillersBuilding, 550 High Street, 12thFloor, Jackson,Mississippi 39201 and is a necessary partydefendant pursuant to Mississippi CodeAnnotated §11-17-19.

h. Any and all person having or claiming tohave any legal or equitable interest in the landhereinafter described whose identity has notbeen discovered by Plaintiff Martha Fant by dili-gent search and inquiry.

2. The Plaintiff is the owner in fee simple ofthe following land in Marshall County, Mississippidescribed as follows:

Lot No. 76 Twin Oaks East PH IIIDeed Book 344 Page 319S/T/R 3-2-4PPIN# 26722Parcel# 192-03-111003. The Plaintiff is the owner of the property

as the land was sold by the Tax Collector ofMarshall County, Mississippi on August 29, 2011for the taxes thereon due for the year of 2010when the Plaintiff became the purchaser thereof.The sale was certified to the Chancery Clerk inthe manner and within the time required by law;the tax sale remained on file in the Office of theChancery Clerk for redemption for two years andthe Chancery Clerk gave all notice required bylaw to the former owner after the time for redemp-tion had expired; the Chancery Clerk made anddelivered a Tax Deed to the Plaintiff and thePlaintiff caused the same to be recorded in thebooks of Marshall County, Chancery Clerk’sOffice as Instrument No. 2013004045. A true andcorrect copy of the Tax Deed is attached heretoas Exhibit “A” and made a part of this Complaint.

4. The said land at the time of the tax salewas assessed to the Defendant Twin Oaks Ltd.The said defendant, Twin Oaks, Ltd. claimed toown said property through a chain of title extend-ing back to February 11, 2004, when the proper-ty was purchased from J.W. Armour and wife,Virginia R. Armour. J.W. Armour purchased theproperty on April 2, 1962 from Harry G. Brooksand his wife Lois C. Brooks.

5. Pursuant to Mississippi Code Annotated§11-17-19, further deraignment of title is not nec-essary.

6. After diligent search and inquiry, Plaintiff isunable to give the residences, or post officeaddresses of any persons other than those here-in mentioned who have any claim to any interestin this land, but because of the long number ofyears since the patented land was issued, it ispossible that there may be others not now asretainable after diligent search and inquiry by thePlaintiff.

WHEREFORE PREMISES CONSIDERED,Plaintiff prays that summons issued to the defen-dant in the time and manner required by law andthat the summons by publication be made forunknown Defendants and the known Defendantand all persons claiming any legal or equitableinterest in the land herein described in the man-ner provided by law in such cases, requiring eachand all of said Defendants to answer the com-plaint and that on final hearing, a Decree beentered confirming that said tax title as validagainst all of said Defendants. Plaintiff also praysfor such general relieve as this court deemsappropriate.

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED this the 22day of September 2014.

Martha FantMARTHA FANT

KENT E. SMITH, MSB #9031SMITH WHALEY P.L.L.C.P.O. DRAWER 849HOLLY SPRINGS, MS 38635(662) 252-3003Fax: (662) [email protected] Attorney for Plaintiff

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

MARTHA FANT PLAINTIFFVS. CAUSE NO. 2014-0624ATWIN OAKS LTD. A/K/ATWIN OAKS CORPORATION, WILLIAM F. SCHNELLER,J.W. ARMOUR,MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, BEN CREEKMORE in his capac-ity as Marshall County District Attorney, JIMHOOD in his capacity as Mississippi AttorneyGeneral, and ALL PERSONS HAVING OR CLAIMINGANY LEGAL OR EQUI-TABLE INTERESTIN THE LAND DESCRIBEDHEREIN, DEFENDANTS

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATIONTHE STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF MARSHALLTO: TWIN OAKS LTD. A/K/A TWIN OAKS COR-PORATION, WILLIAM F. SCHNELLER, J.W.ARMOUR, MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, BEN CREEKMORE in his capac-ity as Marshall County District Attorney, JIMHOOD in his capacity as Mississippi AttorneyGeneral, and ALL PERSONS HAVING OR CLAIMING ANY LEGAL OR EQUITABL EINTEREST IN THE LANDDESCRIBED HEREIN.

You have been made a Defendant in the suitfiled in this Court by Martha Fant, Plaintiff, seek-ing to Quiet and Confirm Tax Title. Defendantsother than you in this action are Twin Oaks Ltd.A/K/A Twin Oaks Corporation, William F.Schneller, J.W. Armour, Marshall County,Mississippi, Ben Creekmore in his capacity asMarshall County District Attorney, Jim Hood in hiscapacity as Mississippi Attorney General, or allpersons or entities having or claiming any legal orequitable interest in the land described herein,whose identities and whereabouts are unknown.

The subject property may be described asfollows:

Lot No. 76 Twin Oaks East PH IIIDeed Book 344 Page 319S/T/R 3-2-4PPIN# 26722Parcel# 192-03-11100

You are required to mail or hand deliver awritten response to the Complaint filed againstyou in this action to:Kent E. SmithAttorney for the PlaintiffP.O. Drawer 849120 East College AvenueHolly Springs, Mississippi 38635

Issued under My Hand and the Seal of SaidCourt, this the 24th day of September, 2014.

CHUCK THOMAS, ClerkMarshall County Chancery Court

By: Marshall Powell, D.C.PUBLICATION DATES:

Oct. 9, Oct. 16, Oct. 23, 2014(41-43c)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LANDUnder and by virtue of the authority vested

in me as Trustee in that certain Deed of Trustdated January 13, 2014 executed by Lisa V.Porter unto Karen B. Schneller as Trustee, tosecure an indebtedness therein described toDDD Land Company, LLC said Deed of Trustbeing of record as Instrument No. 2014000188 inthe land records of the Clerk of the ChanceryCourt of Marshall County, Mississippi;

Deed of Trust dated March 13, 2014 execut-ed by Lisa V. Porter unto Karen B. Schneller asTrustee, to secure an indebtedness thereindescribed to DDD Land Company, LLC saidDeed of Trust being of record as Instrument No.2014001182 in the land records of the Clerk ofthe Chancery Court of Marshall County,Mississippi; and default having been made in thepayment of the indebtedness thereby secured,and the undersigned having been requested bythe legal holder of said indebtedness to foreclosesaid Deed of Trust, notice is hereby given that I,as Trustee aforesaid, will, within lawful hours, atthe South front door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse, in the City of Holly Springs,Mississippi, on FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2014offer for sale and sell at public outcry to the high-est bidder for cash, the following described prop-erty, situated in the County of Marshall, State ofMississippi, to wit:

Lot No. 7 of Greenbriar Subdivision in theCity of Holly Springs, Marshall County,Mississippi, being situated in Section 5, Township4 South, Range 2 West, all according to the platrecorded in Plat Book 10 at pages 55-56, beingthe final plat, in the office of the Chancery Clerkof Marshall County, Mississippi, subject to restric-tive covenants appearing on the face of said platof subdivision and further subject to the subdivi-sion and buildings restrictions and zoning ordi-nances of the City of Holly Springs, Mississippi.

The purchaser will be required to pay the fullamount of his bid in cash at the time of the sale.I will sell and convey only such title as is vested inme as Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this the 1stday of October, 2014.

Karen B. Schneller, TrusteePublishing Dates: Oct. 9, 16, 23, 30, 2014

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TRUSTEE’S NOTICE OF SALEWHEREAS, on December 3, 1999, Edward

B. McClain and Brenda Lee McClain executed apurchase money Deed of Trust to T.Harris Collier,III as Trustee for Trustmark National Bank,Beneficiary, which is recorded in the office of theChancery Clerk of Marshall County, MS, in Book259 at Page 456;

WHEREAS, on September 12, 2014,Trustmark National Bank substituted JamesEldred Renfroe as Trustee in the aforementioneddeed of trust with this recorded in Instrument No.2014004094;

WHEREAS, there being a default in theterms and conditions of the Deed of Trust andentire debt secured having been declared to bedue and payable in accordance with its terms,Trustmark National Bank, the holder of the debthas requested the Trustee to execute the trustand sell said land and property pursuant to itsterms in order to raise the sums due, with attor-ney’s and trustee’s fees, and expenses of sale;

NOW, THEREFORE, I, James EldredRenfroe, Trustee for said Deed of Trust, will onOctober 31, 2014, offer for sale at public outcry,and sell within legal hours (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m., and 4:00 p.m.) at the southmain door of the Marshall County Courthouse inHolly Springs, MS, to the highest and best bidderfor cash, the following described property situat-ed in Marshall County, MS, to-wit:

Part of the SW1/4 SE1/4, Section 34, T-3-S,R-4-W, and part of the NW1/4 NE1/4, Section 3,T-4-S, R-4-W, Marshall County, Mississippi, moreparticularly described as follows, to-wit:Commencing at a rebar in the North line of saidSection 3, said rebar being 31 feet East of thecenterline of Richmond Road; thence S07°27'28" E a distance of 101.58 feet to a nail inthe centerline of said road, said point being thePoint of Beginning; thence S 47°35'00" W a dis-tance of 894.99 feet to a rebar set; thence N17°44'29" W a distance of 705.52 feet to a rebarset in the centerline of Misty Ridge Road; thenceN 83°06'35" E along said centerline of MistyRidge Road a distance of 95.90 feet to the begin-ning of a curve; thence along said centerline ofroad, a curve to the left having a delta of34°51'21", a radius of 475.00 feet, an arc dis-tance of 288.97 feet, a chord of N 65°40'54" E-584.53 feet to the end of said curve; thence N48°15'14" E along said centerline of road a dis-tance of 304.48 feet; thence N 25°16'32" E alongsaid centerline of Misty Ridge Road a distance of83.37 feet to the centerline of Richmond Road;thence S 17°23'13" E along said centerline ofRichmond Road a distance of 31.07 feet to thebeginning of a curve; thence along said centerlineof Richmond Road, a curve to the left having adelta of 20°24'34", a radius of 800.00 feet, an arcdistance of 284.97 feet, a chord of S 27°35'30" E- 283.47 feet to the end of said curve; thence S37°47'47" E along said centerline of RichmondRoad a distance of 127.32 feet to the beginningof a curve; thence along said centerline of road, acurve to the right having a delta of 29°27'58", aradius of 200.00 feet, an arc distance of 102.86feet, a chord of S 23°15'09" E-101.61 feet to thePoint of Beginning and containing 10.0 acres,more or less.

I will convey only such title as is vested in meas Trustee, with no warranties.

WITNESS my signature this 26th day ofSeptember, 2014

JAMES ELDRED RENFROE, TrusteeJames Eldred Renfroe, 648 Lakeland East Dr., Ste A, Flowood, MS 39232, Phone 601-932-1011Publish: 10/9, 10/16, 10/23, 10/30, 2014

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Substitute Trustee’s Notice of SaleSTATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Marshall

WHEREAS, on the 9th day of May, 1998,and acknowledged on the 9th day of May, 1998,Larry Robinson, an unmarried individual, andEartha E. McAuley, an unmarried individual, exe-cuted and delivered a certain Deed of Trust untoCharles M. Mooney, Sr., Trustee for First HomeMortgage, Inc., Beneficiary, to secure an indebt-edness therein described, which Deed of Trust isrecorded in the office of the Chancery Clerk ofMarshall County, Mississippi in Book 236 at Page397; and

WHEREAS, on the 12th day of April, 2010,the present holder of said Deed of Trust filed aDeclaration of Interest in the land records ofMarshall County, Mississippi, recorded inInstrument# 2010001605; and

WHEREAS, on the 7th day of April, 2010,the Holder of said Deed of Trust substituted andappointed Emily Kaye Courteau by instrumentrecorded in the office of the aforesaid ChanceryClerk in Instrument# 2010001633; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe payments of the indebtedness secured by thesaid Deed of Trust, and the holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested the undersigned so to do,on the 30th day of October, 2014, I will during thelawful hours of between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m., at public outcry, offer for sale and will sell, atthe south door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse at Holly Springs, Mississippi, forcash to the highest bidder, the followingdescribed land and property situated in MarshallCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Beginning at the Northeast corner of theJohn W. McAuley and wife Bessie K. McAuley(Bk.113, Pg. 312) in the SE 1/ 4 of Section 21, T-2-S, R-4-W, Marshall County, Mississippi, saidpoint being on the West Line of Victoria-CayceRoad; thence South, along the West line of saidroad, 107.5 feet; thence South 85 degrees and10 minutes West, parallel with the McAuley NorthLine, 395.87 feet; thence North 5 degrees and 00minutes West, along the McAuley West Line107.1 feet, more or less; thence North 85degrees and 10 minutes East, along the NorthLine of McAuley, 405.24 feet to the point of begin-ning. Containing 1.0 acre, more or less.

This being the same property as conveyedby Bessie McAuley to Eartha E. McAuley, in theWarranty Deed Book 201, Page 660, dated01/11/85, and recorded 01/28/85 in the ChanceryClerk's Office of Marshall County, Mississippi.

I will only convey such title as is vested in meas Substitute Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this 26th dayof September, 2014.

Emily Kaye CourteauSubstitute Trustee

855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste. 404, Bldg. 400Ridgeland, MS 39157

(318) 330-9020amt/F10-0232

PUBLISH: 10.9.14/10.16.14/10.23.14(41-44c)

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IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

ED HIPPCHEN PLAINTIFFVs. CAUSE NO. CV2014-142GREGORY HILL DEFENDANT

NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALEWHEREAS, September 18, 2014 a Write of

Execution was issued by the Circuit Clerk ofMarshall County, Mississippi, directing the under-signed Sheriff of Marshall County, Mississippi, tolevy execution upon the hereinafter describedreal estate owned by Gregory Hill.

NOW, THEREFORE, pursuant to the saidWrit of Execution and in accord with theMississippi Code of 1972, as amended, I, KennyDickerson, Sheriff of Marshall County,Mississippi, will on October 30, 2014, within thelegal hours, offer for sale and will sell at publicauction in outcry to the highest bidder for cash atthe South door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse, Holly Springs, Mississippi, the here-inafter described real estate, and any other per-sonal property that is not claimed as exemptowned by Gregory Hill:

TRACT I:A tract of land commonly known as being

Farm No. 1 containing 25.00 acres in DowdyRoad, located in Section 10, Township 2 South,Range 2 West Marshall County, Mississippi andmore particularly described as follows: Begin at a1/2" rebar set located East 5272.20 feet and1099.00 feet South of a 1" crimp top pipe foundat the northwest corner of Section 10, Township2 South, Range 2 West in Marshall County,Mississippi and run South 00 degrees 15 minutes02 seconds West for a distance of 526.21 feet toa 3/8" rebar set; run thence North 89 degrees 39minutes 29 seconds West for a distance of1980.89 feet to a 1/2 rebar set in a public pavedroad (Dowdy Road) run thence North 43 degrees03 minutes 31 seconds West along said publicpaved road for a distance of 94.02 feet to a point;run thence North 40 degrees 33 minutes 02 sec-onds West along said public paved road for a dis-tance of 46.33 feet to a point; run thence North 27degrees 21 minutes 59 seconds West along saidpublic paved road for a distance of 7.22 feet to a1/2 rebar set; run thence North 00 degrees 15minutes 02 seconds East leaving said publicpaved road for a distance of 416.48 feet to a 1"pipe found; run thence South 89 degrees 39 min-utes 29 seconds East for a distance of 2079.00feet to the point of the beginning. Said tract con-tains 25.00 acres more or less.

TRACT II:A tract of land commonly known as being

Farm No. 2 containing 21.66 acres in DowdyRoad located in Section 10, Township 2 South,Range 2 West Marshall County, Mississippi andmore particularly described as follows: Begin at a3/8" rebar set located East 5269.97 feet and1625.21 feet South of a 1" crimp top pipe foundat the Northwest corner of Section 10, Township2 South, Range 2 West in Marshall County,Mississippi and run South 00 degrees 15 minutes02 seconds West for a distance of 542.17 feet toa 3/8" rebar set; run thence North 89 degrees 39minutes 29 seconds West for a distance of1620.60 feet to a 1/2" rebar set in a public pavedroad (Dowdy Road); run thence along said publicpaved road the following 16 chord bearings andlengths: North 32 degrees 49 minutes 28 sec-onds West 30.22 feet to a point;North 14 degrees12 minutes 24 seconds West 30.11 feet to apoint; North 00 degrees 52 minutes 21 secondsEast 64.63 feet to a point; North 01 degree 13minutes 28 seconds West 35.21 feet to a point;North 20 degrees 35 minutes 31 seconds West38.47 feet to a point; North 28 degrees 39 min-utes 43 seconds West 44.57 feet to a point; North31 degrees 12 minutes 31 seconds West 53.02feet to a point; North 30 degrees 29 minutes 06seconds West 31. 63 feet to a point; North 31degrees 39 minutes 44 seconds West 51.54 feet;North 40 degrees 30 minutes 56 seconds West47.23 feet to a point; North 47 degrees 28 min-utes 22 seconds West 49.09 feet to a point; North51 degrees 36 seconds 17 seconds West 51.20feet to a point; North 55 degrees 40 minutes 23seconds West 53.17 feet to a point; North 52degrees 57 minutes 23 seconds West 43.09 feetto a point; North 47 degrees 00 minutes 35 sec-onds West 51.33 feet to a point;North 43 degrees03 minutes 31 seconds West 8.86 feet to a 1/2”rebar set; run thence South 89 degrees 39 min-utes 29 seconds East leaving said public pavedroad for a distance of 1980.89 feet to the point ofbeginning, said tract contains 21.66 acres moreor less.

TRACT III:One (1) acre, more or less, at the Quarter

Section corner between Section 30 and Section31, Township 3 South Range 2 West, MarshallCounty, Mississippi, more particularly describedas follows: Begin at the Quarter Section cornerbetween Section 30 and Section 31, Township 3South, Range 2 West, Marshall County,Mississippi; thence run South 07 degrees 00 min-utes East, along the West line of the old HollySprings-Mount Pleasant Road, for a distance of139.6 feet to a point; thence run South 01degrees 40 minutes East, along said road, for adistance of 49.3 feet to a point; thence run North75 degrees 45 minutes West 228.78 feet to apoint on the East line of Mississippi Highway No.7; thence run North 08 degrees 27 minutes West,along said Highway right-of-way for a distance of192.7 feet to a point; thence run South 75degrees 45 minutes East for a distance of 238.9feet to the POINT OF BEGINNING, and contain-ing one (1) acre, more or less, all according tosurvey prepared by Freddie C. Johnson,Mississippi Registered Land Surveyor MLS#1475, dated March 18, 1977.

A Deed will be delivered to each buyer of theabove described tracts upon payment of cash forsame. Only the title possessed by the Defendant,Gregory Hill, will be conyeted to any purchaser ofthe above described real properties.

This the 2 day of October, 2014Kenny Dickeron

Kenny DickersonSheriff of Marshall County

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

JANICE P. ALLEN, DONALD PARKER,TAMARA STEWART, ROBERT W. STEWARTAND ERIC THOMAS STEWART,

PLAINTIFFSVS NO. 2014-0628UNKNOWN HEIRS OF WESLEY T. PARKER,BEATRICE F. PARKER AND CHARLOTTESTEWART DEFENDANTS

SUMMONS IN RULE 81 ACTIONSTO:The Unknown Heirs of Wesley T. Parker,

Deceased, The Unknown Heirs of Beatrice F.Parker, Deceased, The Unknown Heirs ofCharlotte Stewart, Deceased, whose places ofresidence and post office addresses areunknown after diligent search and inquiry.

You have been made a Defendant in the suitfiled in this Court by Janice Allen, Plaintiff, seek-ing determination of heirs. You are the onlyDefendants in this action.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst the complaint or petition filed against youin this action at 9:30 o'clock, A.M., on the 14thday of November, 2014, in the courtroom of theMarshall County Courthouse at Holly Springs,Mississippi, and in case of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will be entered againstyou for the money or other things demanded inthe complaint or petition.

You are not required to file an answer orother pleading, but you may do so if you desire.

Issued under my hand and the seal of saidCourt, this the 2nd day of October, 2014.

C.W. “CHUCK” THOMAS, CHANCERY CLERK

OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPIBy: KAREN COOK, D.C.

Publish: October 9, 16, 23, 2014Jones & Schneller, PLLC

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SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE

WHEREAS, on November 21, 2001, MarkClark, a married man, and Paula Clark, a marriedwoman, executed a certain deed of trust to Jim B.Tohill, Trustee for the benefit of Long BeachMortgage Company which deed of trust is ofrecord in the office of the Chancery Clerk ofMarshall County, State of Mississippi in Book 293at Page 545; and

WHEREAS, said Deed of Trust was subse-quently assigned to U.S. Bank NationalAssociation, as trustee, successor in interest toWachovia Bank, National Association, FKA FirstUnion National Bank as Trustee for Long BeachMortgage Loan Trust 2001-4 by instrument datedJune 27, 2014 and recorded in Instrument No.2014003052 of the aforesaid Chancery Clerk'soffice; and

WHEREAS, U.S. Bank NationalAssociation, as Trustee, Successor in Interest toWachovia Bank, National Association, (formerlyknown as First Union National Bank) as Trustee,for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust 2001-4 hasheretofore substituted Shapiro & Massey, LLC asTrustee by instrument dated September 5, 2014and recorded in the aforesaid Chancery Clerk'sOffice in Instrument No. 2014004118; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe terms and conditi ons of said deed of trustand the entire debt secured thereby having beendeclared to be due and payable in accordancewith the terms of said deed of trust, U.S. BankNational Association, as Trustee, Successor inInterest to Wachovia Bank, National Association,(formerly known as First Union National Bank) asTrustee, for Long Beach Mortgage Loan Trust2001-4, the legal holder of said indebtedness,having requested the undersigned SubstitutedTrustee to execute the trust and sell said land andproperty in accordance with the terms of saiddeed of trust and for the purpose of raising thesums due thereunder, together with attorney'sfees, trustee's fees and expense of sale.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shapiro & Massey,LLC, Substituted Trustee in said deed of trust, willon October 30, 2014 offer for sale at public outcryand sell within legal hours (being between thehours of 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m.), at the SouthDoor of the County Courthouse of MarshallCounty, located at Holly Springs, Mississippi, tothe highest and best bidder for cash the followingdescribed property situated in Marshall County,State of Mississippi, to-wit:

A Lot 80 feet by 75 feet off the West end ofLot #2 of the Hurdle Subdivision of Lot 297according to the plan of City of Holly Springs,Mississippi on Section 6, Township 4, Range 2West of Marshall County, Mississippi. And beingmore particularly described as: Beginning at apoint 160 feet West of the Southeast corner ofsaid Lot #2, and running thence North 75 feet toa point on the North boundary line of said Lot #2;thence West 80 feet to the Northwest corner ofsaid Lot #2, thence South 75 feet to theSouthwest corner of said Lot #2, thence East tothe southern boundary line of said Lot #2 to thePoint of Beginning.

I WILL CONVEY only such title as vested inme as Substituted Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this 2nd dayof October, 2014.

Shapiro & Massey, LLCSUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE

Shapiro & Massey, LLC1080 River Oaks Drive, Suite B-202

Flowood, MS 39232(601)981-9299

182 Hurdle CircleHolly Springs, MS 3863514-009949BEPublication Dates: Oct. 9, 16 and 23, 2014

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

MELVIN W. FARROW COMPLAINANTvs. 2013-0676WTHE INTESTATE ESTATE OF CENTRALASALEE FARROW, DECEASED, KELON FAR-ROW, BETTY F. WILLIAMS, DELORIS F.MOORE, LENOARD FARROW, MELVIN W.FARROW, JACK FARROW, ANGELO FARROW, MAVIS F. JOHNSON, JOHNNIEFARROW, TIFFANY FARROW, JONDRALYNFARROW, FELICIA MOORE WASHINGTON,FELIX MOORE, JR., FELIX MOORE III ANDANY UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF CENTRAL ASALEE FARROW, DECEASED

DEFENDANTSSUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

STATE OF MSCOUNTY OF MARSHALL

TO: Kelon Farrow, Betty F. Williams, DelorisF.Moore, Lenoard Farrow, Melvin W.Farrow, JackFarrow, Angelo Farrow, Mavis F. Johnson,Johnnie Farrow, Tiffany Farrow, JondralynFarrow, Felicia Moore Washington, Felix Moore,Jr., Felix Moore III and any unknown heirs at lawof Central Asalee Farrow, deceased.

You have each been made a Defendant inthe suit filed in this Court by Melvin W. Farrow,Complainant, seeking to open the estate ofCentral Asalee Farrow, deceased, and to nameMelvin W. Farrow as the Administrator of theestate. The remaining defendants in this actionare Kelon Farrow, Betty F. Williams, Deloris F.Moore, Lenoard Farrow, Melvin W. Farrow, JackFarrow, Angelo Farrow, Mavis F. Johnson,Johnnie Farrow, Tiffany Farrow, JondralynFarrow, Felicia Moore Washington, Felix Moore,Jr., Felix Moore III and any unknown heirs at Lawof Central Asalee Farrow, deceased.

You are hereby summoned to 14 November2014 at 9:30 a.m. be and appear before theChancery Court of Marshall County, MS at 9;30a.m. on 14 November 2014 in the courtroom ofthe Marshall County Chancery Courthouse atHolly Springs, MS to defend the pendingComplaint to Open the Intestate Estate of CentralAsalee Farrow, deceased, and to name theAdministrator of this Estate as Melvin W. Farrow,wherein you are a party-defendant and in case ofyour failure to appear and defend a judgment willbe entered against you for the money or otherthings demanded in the complaint or petition.

You are required to mail or hand deliver awritten response to the Complaint filed againstyou in this action to Cynthia C. Woodington,Attorney for the Complainant, whose address is1107 Jefferson Avenue, P.O. Box 903, Oxford,MS 38655. Your response must be mailed ordelivered not later than thirty (30) days from thedate of this publication 9 October 2014, which isthe date of the first publication of this summons.If your answer is not mailed or delivered, a judg-ment by default may be entered against you forthe money or other relief demanded in theComplaint.

You must also file the original of yourresponse with the clerk of this Court within a rea-sonable time afterward.

ISSUED UNDER MY HAND AND SEAL OFSAID COURT on this the 6th day of October2014.

Chuck ThomasMarshall County Chancery Clerk

P.O. Box 219Holly Springs, MS 38635

Marshall Powell, DCDeputy Clerk

Publication Dates:October 9, 2014, October 16, 2014, October 23,2014, October 30, 2014.

(41-44p)_________________________________

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN RE:THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE ESTATEOF HENRY W. CRAWFORD, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2014-0154ATO: ALL THE UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OFHENRY W. CRAWFORD, DECEASED

You have been made defendants in CivilCause Number 2014-0154A, filed in this Court bythe Administrator of the Estate of Henry W.Crawford, Deceased who has filed in said Courther Petition asking for a judicial determination ofheirs of said decedent.

Said Petitioner has set forth that the dece-dent’s spouse Katie Crawford (now deceased)and his children, Ruby Watkins (now deceased),Henry Crawford, Jr. (now deceased), Katie L.Anderson, Thornial L. Crawford, and BessieLawrence were the sole surviving heirs-at-law ofHenry W. Crawford on the date of his death.

Ruby Watkins was survived by her childrenMartha Cobbins, Horace Watkins, Ida Watkins,James Watkins, Erma J. Wilbourn, CharlesWatkins, Leon Watkins, and Ruby Tate.

Henry Crawford, Jr. was survived by his wifeIziala Crawford and his children Curtis Crawford,Henry Crawford, III, Marivus Ray Crawford, andKevin Crawford.

The above named Katie L. Anderson,Thornial L. Crawford, Bessie Lawrence, MarthaCobbins, Horace Watkins, Ida Watkins, JamesWatkins, Erma J. Wilbourn, Charles Watkins,Leon Watkins, Ruby Tate, Iziala Crawford, CurtisCrawford, Henry Crawford, III, Marivus RayCrawford, and Kevin Crawford are the only peo-ple who claim to be heirs at law of Henry W.Crawford.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst the complaint or petition filed against youin this action at 9:30 o’clock a.m., on the 14th dayof November, 2014, at the Lafayette CountyChancery Building in Oxford, Mississippi, and incase of your failure to appear and defend, a judg-ment will be entered against you for the money orother things demanded in the complaint or peti-tion.

You are not required to file an answer orother pleading but you may do so if you desire.

Issued under my hand and seal of saidcourt, this the 7th day of October, 2014.

CHUCK THOMAS, CHANCERY CLERK

By: Marshall PowellCLERK/DEPUTY CLERK

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

ESTATE OF JOHN F. MONAHAN, SR.DECEASED CAUSE NO.: 2014-0443

SUMMONS TO UNKNOWN HEIRSSUMMONS BY PUBLICATION TO: TheUnknown Heirs, Executors, Administrators,Devisees, Legatees of John F. Monahan, Sr.,Deceased, and any all persons claiming or hav-ing a legal or equitable interest in the Estate ofJohn F. Monahan, Sr., Deceased.

You have been named as Defendant in thesuit filed in this Court by John F. Monahan, Jr.,and Timothy R. Monahan, praying that the heirsat law of their father, John F. Monahan, Sr., beestablished. Such suit names the three (3) chil-dren of John F. Monahan, Sr., namely, John F.Monahan, Jr., Timothy R. Monahan, and ThomasM. Monahan, and his wife, Donna Monahan, andno children and no descendants of any deceasedchildren, as his only heirs at law.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst said Petition filed against you in thisaction at 9:30 O’clock a.m. on Friday the 14th dayof November, 2014, in Court Room B of theMarshall County Courthouse located at 107South Market Street, Holly Springs, Mississippi,and in case of your failure to appear and defenda judgment will be entered against you for themoney or the other things demanded in theComplaint.

No answer is required in this matter, howev-er, you may mail or hand deliver a writtenresponses to the Petition filed in this action toJoseph R. Dulaney, 986 Harris Street, P.O. Box188, Tunica, MS 38676, attorney for John F.Monahan, Jr., and Timothy R. Monahan.

Issued under my hand and the seal of saidCourt, this 6th day of October, 2014.

C.W. “Chuck” Thomas, Chancery ClerkClerk of the Marshall County, Mississippi

Chancery CourtMarshall Powell, DC

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NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE OF LANDUnder and by virtue of the authority vested

in me as Trustee in that certain Deed of Trustdated February 3, 2009 executed by FranciscoAlvarado and Stephanie Alvarado unto William F.Schneller, as Trustee, to secure an indebtednesstherein described to Merchants and FarmersBank, said Deed of Trust being of record asInstrument No. 2009000937;

Deed of Trust dated May 3, 2012 executedby Francisco Alvarado and Stephanie Alvaradounto William F. Schneller, as Trustee, to securean indebtedness therein described to Merchantsand Farmers Bank, said Deed of Trust being ofrecord as Instrument No. 2012002365; anddefault having been made in the payment of theindebtedness thereby secured, and the under-signed having been requested by the legal hold-er of said indebtedness to foreclose said Deed ofTrust, notice is hereby given that I, as Trusteeaforesaid, will, within lawful hours, at the Southfront door of the Marshall County Courthouse, inthe City of Holly Springs, Mississippi, on Friday,October 24, 2014 offer for sale and sell at publicoutcry to the highest bidder for cash, the followingdescribed property, situated in the County ofMarshall, State of Mississippi, to wit:

Lot 21 of Holly Springs Lake EstatesSubdivision in Section 36, Township 4 South,Range 2 West, Marshall County, Mississippi, aplat of which was originally recorded in Plat Book2 page 26, 27 and 29 and is now reindexed asPlat Files 72A&B, 73A&B, 74A&B, 76A&B,77A&B and 78A&B, all of the records of the officeof the Clerk of the Chancery Court of MarshallCounty, Mississippi.

Together with the right in common with otherowners of lots in said subdivision to use for allusual purposes the street, ways, beaches, recre-ation areas and all other public areas as shownon the said plat and the right in common with theother owners of lots in said subdivision to use thelake and beaches for swimming, fishing and boat-ing.

The purchaser will be required to pay the fullamount of his bid in cash at the time of the sale.I will sell and convey only such title as is vested inme as Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE on this the 24thday of September, 2014.

William F. Schneller, TrusteePublishing Dates: Oct. 2, 9, 16, 23, 2014

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF PAUL MACLEOD, DECEASED

CAUSE NO. 2014-0486WNOTICE TO CREDITORS

Letters of Administration having been issuedto the undersigned by the Chancery Court ofMarshall County, Mississippi on the 25th day ofJuly, 2014, as Administratrix of the Estate ofTheodore Gorman, Jr., Deceased.

NOTICE is hereby given to all persons hav-ing claims against said estate to have the sameprobated, registered, and allowed by the Clerk ofthe Court within ninety (90) days from the date offirst publication, and failure to do so, will foreverbar said claim or claims.

This the 2nd day of October, 2014.Brenda Young

BRENDA E.YOUNG,ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF

THEODORE GORMAN, JR. DECEASEDPhillip K. KnechtPHILLIP K. KNECHTPOST OFFICE BOX 338 HOLLY SPRINGS, MISSISSIPPI 38635PHONE: 662-252-7590

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IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

LARRY HURT PLAINTIFFVS. CAUSE NO. 2014-0633WSTACY L. TURNAGE DEFENDANT

SUMMONS IN RULE 81 ACTIONSTO: Stacy L. Turnage whose residence isunknown.

You have been made a Defendant in the suitfiled in this Court by Larry Hurt, Plaintiff, seekingComplaint for Determination of Paternity,Custody and Child Support.

You are summoned to appear and defendagainst the complaint or petition filed against youin this action at 9:30 o'clock, A.M., on the 14thday of November, 2014, in the courtroom of theMarshall County Courthouse at Holly Springs,Mississippi and in case of your failure to appearand defend a judgment will be entered againstyou for the money or other things demanded inthe complaint or petition.

You are not required to file an answer orother pleading, but you may do so if you desire.

Issued under my hand and the seal of saidCourt, this the 2nd day of October, 2014.

C.W. CHUCK THOMAS CHANCERY CLERK

OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPIBy Marshall Powell, D.C.

Publish: October 9, 16, 23, 2014.(41-43c)

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OF MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

NANCY C. HOLCOMB PLAINTIFFVS. CAUSE NO. 2014-0016AJESSE ARDELL MARCUS DECEDENT

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetters of Administration were granted to the

undersigned on the Estate of Jesse ArdellMarcus, deceased, by the Chancery Court ofMarshall County, Mississippi, on April 9, 2014,and notice is hereby given to all persons havingclaims against said estate to present the same tothe Clerk of the Court for probate and registrationaccording to law within ninety (90) days from thedate of this notice is first published, or they will beforever barred.

Witness my signature this the 10th day ofApril, 2014.

Nancy C. HolcombNANCY C. HOLCOMB, ADMINISTRATRIX

Wallace C. AndersonWallace C. AndersonAttorney for PetitionerP.O. Box 64Olive Branch, MS 38654MSB# 1596

(41-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Substitute Trustee’s Notice of SaleSTATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF Marshall

WHEREAS, on the 20th day of January,2006, and acknowledged on the 20th day ofJanuary, 2006, Christine Finley and AndrewFinley, wife and husband, executed and delivereda certain Deed of Trust unto Donald P. Herron,Trustee for Montgomery Bank, N.A., Beneficiary,to secure an indebtedness therein described,which Deed of Trust is recorded in the office of theChancery Clerk of Marshall County, Mississippi,in Book 401 at Page 461; and

WHEREAS, by various assignments onrecord said Deed of Trust was ultimately assignedto Federal National Mortgage Association byinstrument recorded in the office of the aforesaidChancery Clerk in Instrument# 2014000815; a

WHEREAS, on the 18th day of September,2014, the Holder of said Deed of Trust substitut-ed and appointed Michael Jedynak by instrumentrecorded in the office of the aforesaid ChanceryClerk in Instrument# 2014004130; and

WHEREAS, default having been made inthe payments of the indebtedness secured by thesaid Deed of Trust, and the holder of said Deed ofTrust, having requested the undersigned so to do,on the 6th day of November, 2014, I will duringthe lawful hours of between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00p.m., at public outcry, offer for sale and will sell, atthe south door of the Marshall CountyCourthouse at Holly Springs, Mississippi, forcash to the highest bidder, the followingdescribed land and property situated in MarshallCounty, Mississippi, to-wit:

Lot 17, Phase I, The Meadows Subdivision,Located in Section 1, Township 4 South, Range 3West, Marshall County, Mississippi, as shown onplat of record in Plat Book 13-14, in the Office ofthe Chancery Clerk of Marshall County,Mississippi, to which plat reference is herebymade for a more particular description of saidproperty.

I will only convey such title as is vested in meas Substitute Trustee.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this 8th day ofOctober, 2014.

Michael JedynakSubstitute Trustee

855 S Pear Orchard Rd., Ste. 404, Bldg. 400Ridgeland, MS 39157(318) 330-9020jkw/F14-1108PUBLISH: 10-16-14 / 10-23-14 / 10-30-14

(42-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

STATE OF MISSISSIPPICOUNTY OF MARSHALL

NOTICE TO BIDDERSPlease be advised that sealed bids will be

received by the Marshall County Board ofSupervisors of Marshall County, Mississippi inthe office of the County Administrator, 111 SouthMarket Street, Post Office Box 219, HollySprings, MS 38635, 662-252-3663, until 10:00a.m. on Monday, November 3, 2014, pursuant toMississippi Code Section 19-5-105, for thecleanup of property located at 3345 Cayce Road(parce 192-4-37, Lot#11 of Collierville FarmsSubdivision), Byhalia, MS. Cleanup will includecutting of grass and weeds on entire lot, removalof trash, rubbish and debris.

Board of Supervisors reserves the right toreject any and all bids and to waive any and allformalities in the best interest of Marshall County.

Note: Verification of insurance($1,000,000.00) should be attached to each bid.Cleanup of all lots should be completed withintwo (2) weeks after bid awarded.

This the 14th day of October, 2014.Ken Jones, Zoning Administrator

(42-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

IN THE CHANCERY COURT OFMARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

IN THE MATTER OFTHE ESTATE OF MARCELLA J. BANECK, DECEASED No. 2014-0645

NOTICE TO CREDITORSLetters Testamentary having been granted

to the undersigned by the Chancery Court ofMarshall County, Mississippi, on the Estate ofMarcella J.Baneck, Deceased, on the 10th day ofOctober, 2014, notice is hereby given to all per-sons having claims against the said Estate tohave their claims probated and registered by theClerk of the Chancery Court of Marshall County,Mississippi, within ninety (90) days from the firstpublication of this notice, and that failure to pro-bate and register the claims with the Clerk withinthat time will forever bar the claim.

WITNESS MY SIGNATURE, this 10th dayof October, 2014

Elaine A. VowellELAINE A. VOWELL

Estate of Marcella J. Baneck, DeceasedThe Law Office of Daniel C. ShumakeDaniel C. ShumakeDaniel C. Shumake (MS Bar No. 100323)999 Shady Grove, Suite 110Memphis, TN 38120(901) 628-1548

(42-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

PUBLIC NOTICEA public auction will be held Thursday,

November 6, 2014 at 10:00 a.m. on the premisesof Gene Gossett Auto Parts, Inc. 7891 Highway72 Byhalia, MS 38611 (three miles southeast ofCollierville, TN) for the purpose of selling the fol-lowing vehicles abandoned on our premises.Thissale is in accordance with the State of Mississippi“Abandoned Motor Vehicle Act” Section 63-23-5“Sale of Vehicle” MS Code of 1972 as amended.

2001 white Pontiac Grand Prix 4 door VIN 1G2WK52J51F207655

2006 burned Chevrolet Impala 4 door VIN 2G1WS551769414452

2002 black Infiniti I35 4 door VIN JNKDA31A72T013285

1998 red & blue Ford F-150 pickup VIN 1FTZX0729WKA75495

2012 tan Mazda6, 4 door VIN IYVHZ8DH2C5M18598

(42-44c)–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

NOTICEATTENTION: 21st Mortgage CorporationYour Property located at 3345 Cayce RoadMarshall County, MSParcel No.: 192-4-37, Lot #11Collierville Farms Subdivision

The Marshall County Board of Supervisorshereby notifies you as owner of the real propertylocated at 3345 Cayce Road (Parcel #192-4-37,Lot #11 of Collierville Farms Subdivision)Marshall County, Mississippi, that said property isin such a state of uncleanliness as to be a men-ace to the public health and safety of the commu-nity as well as being an eyesore to residents andpassersby. Due to complaints received regardingthe above referenced real property, the Board willhold a public hearing at 10:00 a.m. on Monday,November 3, 2014, pursuant to §19-5-105 of theMississippi Code Annotated (1972, as amend-ed).

The hearing shall be held at the regularlyscheduled meeting of the Marshall County Boardof Supervisors in the Board Room located at103B Market Street, Holly Springs, Mississippi.You, as well as any other interested party, mayappear and present any relevant evidence orfacts that you may have with regard to this issueat said time and place. If, at that time, the Boarddetermines that the condition of the referencedreal property is such that it is a menace to thepublic health and safety of the community, thencounty employees or contract labor will beinstructed to proceed with the cleaning and clear-ing of the property consistent with the provisionsof the statue.

Issued by the Marshall County Board of Supervisors

(42-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Public NoticeThe Marshall County Planning Commission

will meet for their regular scheduled meeting onThursday, November 13, 2014 at 2:00 p.m. in theMarshall County zoning Office at 590 OldHighway 78-East, Holly Springs, Mississippi.Thepublic is invited to attend.

The following requests will be on the agen-da:

ITEM 1: Mr. Marrio Holpe is requesting to beallowed to use his property at 299 ChulahomaRoad for a trucking terminal locatio n to store histhree (3) trucks and four (4) trailers and be able towork on them as needed. The property in ques-tion contains approximately 13.03 acres andzoned Agricultural.

ITEM 2: Mr. Luther Grammer requests to beallowed to construct a building on his property at816 Victoria Road for a hair salon and rent thislocation out. The building would be a 16x16. Theproperty in question is part of Lot #7 of AllisonValley Subdivision, contains approximately four(4) acres and zoned Agricultural-Residential.

ITEM 3: Mr. Tom Green III requests to beallowed to use land for a duck hunting preserve tohave two (2) hunts a week and use an old barnlocated on the property for weddings venue andhost parties.The property in question is located at2867 Highway 309 North, contains approximate-ly 152 acres and zoned R-E.

ITEM 4: Mrs. Dorothy Cox requests to beallowed to reapply to open a convenience storewith gas station at 1942 Old Highway 4 West (oldMarshall Scruggs building). Mrs. Cox wasapproved by the Planning Commission onOctober 8, 2009. The property in questions con-tains approximately one (1) acre and zonedAgricultural.

ITEM 5: Mr. Clayton Moore and Mr. MattWymer are requesting to be allowed for construc-tion and operation of a 2,000 square feet struc-ture that will be used for the distilling of spiritsfrom locally sourced crops.The structure will be ared barn in appearance.No sell on site.Access tothe facility will be restricted to Highway 7 Southand will not be visible from the site.The site is 0.5miles to the nearest home and 1.1 miles to thenearest church.The property in question is locat-ed at the corner of Wilson Golden Road andHighway 7 South, contains 80 acres and zonedAgricultural.

ITEM 6:Mr.Jim Ferguson is requesting to beallowed to use Lot #5 of McCrae RoadSubdivision to store RV’s that are waiting for partsor customer pickup.The lot in question has an oldtrailer on it and grown up. He will clean the lot andmake neighborhood nicer. the property in ques-tion contains approximately two (2) acres andzoned R-E.

ITEM 7: Mr. Dwight Caffin request to beallowed to park his business trucks and equip-ments, four (4) work trucks, 1-mini excavator andfive (5) work trailers in back yard for his plumbingbusiness on property located at 2075 BubbaTaylor Road. His office is in the truck, five (5)employees will be coming to the property daily topick up work trucks and equipments. No cus-tomers and will be coming to the property. Theproperty in question contains approximately 3.3acres and zoned R-1.

(43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Notice The following parties are delinquent in stor-

age fees.Contents to be sold at auction if not paidfor in full by Nov. 1, 2014.Josh Hood #32Mark Hurdle #1Tisa Miller #40 and #42Ethella Drake #34Kimberly Garrison #50Tracey Pride #16

(43-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

The following vehicles will be auctioned tothe highest bidder at Davis Wrecker Service,4124 Hwy 178 W, Red Banks, MS 38611 at 9a.m. on October 31, 2014.

Jeep CherokeeVIN 1J4G258N1YC387345

Chevrolet TahoeVIN 1GNEC13V94R238612

Ford TaurusVIN 1FAFP53U64G1388

(43-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Page 14: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

Members of the ByhaliaArea Arts Council board (pic-tured) Bettye KayeCarrington (left) MargaretWilliams, Faye Woods andMarylane Koch met withMayor Phil Malone andByhalia Area Chamber ofCommerce staff SarahSawyer and Montie Hamblen(not pictured) on futuregrants and plans for the his-toric Old School Commonsauditorium in Byhalia. Thebuilding will be a venue forthe arts, music, theater andcommunity.

In 2008, a small group ofByhalia residents assembledto dream about an arts coun-cil. Working with the ByhaliaArea Chamber of Commerce,Town of Byhalia, andMississippi Main Street initia-tive in 2010, they carved out afuture for the arts in theByhalia area.

In early 2011, the vision ofthose few, with the help ofmany, become a reality as theByhalia Area Arts Council(BAAC) was established as anon-profit organization. TheBAAC continues to work withthe Town of Byhalia and theByhalia Area Chamber ofCommerce on projects, pro-grams and events.

The mission of the BAACis to support and enhance cul-tural arts opportunities for allresidents of Marshall County.BAAC collaborates with localartists, libraries, schools, busi-nesses, civic organizations,foundations, and individualsto offer diverse arts educationand activities in all creativearts: visual arts, performingarts, and literary arts.

An arts council can benefitthe community by supportinglocal economy and business-es, attracting tourists, andenhancing quality of life with-

in the community. BAAC welcomes member-

ship donations and sponsor-ship from individuals, busi-nesses, and organizations.

For more information, visitus on the web atbyhaliaarts.org, email [email protected], or checkus out on Facebook.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 14

For the November 4th General Election,Mississippi voters are required to show a photo ID to vote in personat the polls or to cast an absentee ballot in person at the clerk’s office.

As Chancellor,Bob Whitwell hasworked hard to

Bob Whitwell hasa record of serviceto our community

Please VOTE Tuesday, November 4 forBob Whitwell - Chancery Judge - Place 2

Receives awardThe BACC Sustaining Member Profile was selected by a drawingat the quarterly luncheon meeting. Daylon and Angie Cannon aremembers in three categories: Wildflower Farm Honey, The BodyWorker and Individual Members. They are residents of Byhalia andDaylon serves as a town alderman. Angie serves on the ByhaliaArea Chamber board and as vice president for the Byhalia GardenClub. They are known to donate time, gifts and service to civic andChamber causes. Having been in the bee business for six years, ithas become a family business with son Kade helping out at harvesttime.The BACC thanks the Cannons for their involvement, partner-ship and investment. For more information, contact the BACC at662-838-8127.

Byhalia BeautifulAutoZone in Byhalia was selected for recognition from ByhaliaBeautiful for landscape design and cleanliness of a property. Tonominate an industry, business or residence for recognition fromByhalia Beautiful, call 662-838-8127.

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Byhalia Area Arts Council meets with mayor

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Congratulations are inorder to the Mississippi HillsHeritage Area Alliance.

Three years and 800 pageslater, the management planfor the organization has theseal of approval from the fed-eral government. On October9, in Tupelo, a formalannouncement of the govern-ment’s approval of the man-agement plan was presentedby K. Lynn Berry, programmanager for the NationalHeritage Area.

“You want to raise theawareness of what you have ina National Heritage Area, andthe management plan lays outhow to do that,” said K. LynnBerry. To develop the plan,$150,000 in federal grantmoney was matched by thestate. With the plan’sapproval, Berry said, up to$300,000 is available with arequired dollar-for-dollarmatch.

The plan will help guidecultural and heritage develop-ment of the 30-county area,which stretches over all of 19counties and parts of 11 oth-ers mostly in the northeasternpart of the state. The designat-ed area is bordered byTennessee, Alabama,Interstate 55 and U.S.Highway 14.

This plan is an accomplish-ment for those like BobbyKing, program manager,Mississippi Hills HeritageArea Alliance, who says,“Dream makers, and part-ners, we the people have themoment to pause and live inMississippi, where dreams docome true.” King goes on toelaborate that the ultimategoal of the plan is to tell theuntold stories of the area notonly to its own residents, butalso to people outside theregion. And as people get abetter understanding andappreciation of the vast andrich cultural heritage of theMississippi Hills, the morethey’ll want to explore andspend time here.

Senator Nancy Collins,Tupelo, District 6, recallschildhood memories of herand family members gather-ing for what she reflects as“real camping” experiences inMississippi; memories thatshe feels honored to pass onto her children and grandchil-dren. These are the storiesthat our visitors want to hear,to experience, Senator Collins

mentioned, as she went on tosay that when communitieswork together, we see com-mendable results.

The revenue that touristspending brings into thesecommunities and the jobs cre-ated, provide hope for thefuture, and “I am proud to callMississippi my home,”Senator Collins noted.

Cultural Heritage inMississippi serves as an eco-nomic driver for communitiesas more money is spent inhotels, restaurants and attrac-tions. “Heritage tourists spendabout five nights per trip, com-pared to three nights for othertourists,” said Phil Walker ofthe Walker Collaborative inNashville, Tenn., earlier thisyear. “In addition, they spendabout $62 a day more thanother tourists. “The HillsHeritage Alliance’s next stepduring the 2015 fiscal year –which began Oct. 1 with

newly elected officers – is totalk to every community inthe region that wants to knowmore about the alliance and tojoin the alliance.

The MHNHA is one of 49designated sites nationwide,and one of three inMississippi. In the words ofBobby King, “Stories areworth saving and promoting,because they are untold. It isone thing to stand in the backand watch the magic beingdone, but it is another feelingall together when you arestanding in the midst of some-thing great being done toimprove the places that wecall home.”

By LaKisha Mitchell-Buffington, executive director,Holly Springs Tourism andRecreation Bureau, andKierrya S. Isaac, studentintern, Rust College MassCommunications/ PrintJournalism.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 15

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MARSHALL COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

GENERAL ELECTION

Tuesday, November 4, 2014

TO VOTE: Darken the oval ( )completely. USE ONLY a #2 pencil or a black pen.

Do not use a red pen or a red pencil

Do not cross out or erase. If you make a mistake, you may request a new ballot.

For United States Senate NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION

Vote for One For Circuit Court 3

Travis W. Childers Democrat Circuit Court Judge, District 03

Thad Cochran Republican Place 1

Shawn O'Hara Reform Vote for One

____________________________________ Andrew K. Howorth Nonpartisan

Write-in ____________________________________

For US House of Representatives Write-in

1st Congressional District NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION

Vote for One For Circuit Court 3

Ron E. Dickey Democrat Circuit Court Judge, District 03

Alan Nunnelee Republican Place 2

Danny Bedwell Libertarian Vote for One

Lajena Walley Reform Shirley C. Byers Nonpartisan

____________________________________ J. Kizer (Ki) Jones Nonpartisan

Write-in Kelly Luther Nonpartisan

NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION ____________________________________

For Court of Appeals Judge Write-in

District 1, Position 1 NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION

Vote for One For Circuit Court 3

Jimmy Maxwell Nonpartisan Circuit Court Judge, District 03

____________________________________ Place 3

Write-in Vote for One

NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION John A. Gregory Nonpartisan

For Chancery Court 18 ____________________________________

Chancery Court Judge, District 18 Write-in

Place 1 For School Board 5

Vote for One School Board, District 5

Glenn Alderson Nonpartisan Vote for One

Carnelia Pettis Fondren Nonpartisan Terry L. Cook

Tina Dugard Scott Nonpartisan ____________________________________

____________________________________ Write-in

Write-in STATEWIDE

NONPARTISAN JUDICIAL ELECTION Initiative Measure No. 1

For Chancery Court 18 House Concurrent Resolution 30

Chancery Court Judge, District 18

Place 2 This proposed constitutional amendment

establishes hunting, fishing, and the harvesting of

wildlife, including by the use of traditional methods,

as a constitutional right subject only to such

regulations and restrictions that promote wildlife

conservation and management as the Legislature

may prescribe by general law.

Vote for One

Helen Kennedy Robinson Nonpartisan

Robert Q. (Bob) Whitwell Nonpartisan

____________________________________

Write-in

yes

no

END OF BALLOT

Pastor and Wife’s Love DayApostle Tracy and Evangelist Shreda Jeffries will celebrate sixyears of service at The New Faith Outreach Ministries Church,October 26 at 2:30 p.m., located at 1296 S. Red Banks Rd. Guestspeaker will be Pastor Patrick Washington and guests theGreenwood Church family.

Nancy Carpenter, Columbus CVB; LaKisha M. Buffington, vice president, Holly Springs Tourism; KimTerrell, Desoto County CVB; Neal McCoy, president, Tupelo CVB; Christy Burns, treasurer, CorinthArea CVB; Stephanie Moody-Coomer, Tupelo CVB. Not pictured are Jennifer Gregory, secretary,Starkville CVB; Theresa Cutshall, Tishomingo County Tourism Council; Mary Allan Hedges, OxfordCVB; and Sean Johnson, New Albany Marketing & Tourism.

Mississippi Hills management plan gets approval

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Page 16: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

By SUE WATSONStaff Writer

Holly Springs Rotarianswere introduced to the con-cept of preventing starvation,blindness and cancer in thirdworld countries with theintroduction of geneticallymodified rice – Golden Rice.

Scott Beggs said two mil-lion people die each year dueto vitamin A deficiency.

Many of these deaths andcases of blindness could beavoided if Golden Rice wasavailable in the diets of peopleof the Philippines and othercountries where rice is themain daily ration.

Vitamin A, or betacarotene, is an essential nutri-ent for all living species, hesaid. Beggs said Golden Rice,a genetically modified plant,could be made available freeby the developer to a billionpeople who live on rice in thetropics, where the most casesof blindness and death arecaused by the dearth of vita-min A.

The Rockefeller Founda-tion is helping Golden Riceobtain regulatory approval incountries like Bangladesh,India, Indonesia and thePhilippines. The Bill GatesFoundation is supportingGolden Rice and the fight toeradicate polio.

Two scientists, IngoPotrykus and Peter Beyer areco-inventors of Golden Rice.

Beggs asked if the localRotary Club would like to askRotary International to takethe Golden Rice initiative onas a project, much as it hashelped fight the polio virus.

“Rotarians decided to fightto eradicate polio because it isan attainable goal,” Beggssaid.

The battle to finish poliooff is taking place in India,which must make an entireyear without a single case tobe declared polio-free.

Other countries wherepolio is being battled arePakistan, Afghanistan, andNigeria. The last child para-lyzed by polio in India gotsick on January 13, 2011.

In discussions followingBeggs’ presentation, JohnJones asked why anyonewould oppose the introduc-tion of Golden Rice.

Beggs said some peoplehave zero tolerance to anygenetically modified food.

Greenpeace and GMWatch are two groups thatoppose Golden Rice, he said.

Test plots of Golden Riceare being grown in thePhilippines, China and Africa,

but some ecoterrorists havedestroyed these crops, Beggssaid.

Some groups are againstgenetically modified foods onreligious grounds and thereis the question of whethergenetically modified cropsmay be implicated in the col-lapse of the honeybee popula-tions.

Gary Adams, past presi-dent of the Holly Springs clubwho is serving as assistantdistrict governor, asked whatRotary’s role would be.

Beggs said Rotary couldmake Golden Rice a priorityand ask Greenpeace and GMWatch to explain why theyobject to the food.

“We have children in theUnited States eating thewrong foods and overeating,”said Beggs.

Adams said it could taketwo to three years to get it onthe Rotary Internationalagenda.

Other facts gleaned frommedia sources:

• One bowl of Golden Ricecontains 60 percent of thedaily requirement for vitaminA, enough beta carotene tokeep a person from sufferingfrom vitamin A deficiency dis-ease.

• The use of Golden Ricein China is controversial. Anews report, that Greenpeacecharged the Chinese peoplewere being used as guineapigs in a nutritional study, ledto three Chinese authors whowere helping do the study tolose their jobs. Chinese offi-cials said the researchers didnot get all the approvals theyneeded before conductingthe study. Greenpeace Chinasaid researchers failed to noti-fy all individuals involved inthe study that the rice wasgenetically modified.

• Golden Rice got caughtin the larger argument of whobenefits most from genetical-ly modified rice crops. Neth

Dano, who works on behalf ofsmall farmers in thePhilippines, said GMO indus-tries (genetically modifiedorganisms) are not con-cerned with the poor but withthe industry that is driven byprofit. Dano thinks GoldenRice is useful but it is moreexpensive and less effectivethan traditional nutrition pro-grams.

• Golden Rice developerGerard Barry said the GMOcould benefit a billion peoplenutritionally.

Dano is now working forthe International RiceResearch Institute in thePhilippines, where theGolden Rice was engineered.Golden Rice producers willtry to get government regula-tors to approve the use of therice breeds in the Philippinesand Bangladesh and will wantto incorporate the betacarotene genes into popularvarieties of rice grown byfarmers in these countries.

• The final test will be toconvince the poorest peoplein the world to ask for the riceand understand the value ofit.

• The gene for the betacarotene inserted into GoldenRice comes from cornattached to a gene from a bac-terium.

• Other GMO foodsinclude grapes endowed witha gene to fight off a deadlyvirus in France, wheat con-taining a gene to lower theglycemic index in Australia,and sugar beets in Oregondesigned to tolerate an herbi-cide.

Commonly geneticallymodified crops designed toresist herbicides and insecti-cides include soybeans, cornand cotton.

• If Golden Rice isapproved for use in thePhilippines, the seeds will besold to farmers at the samecost as non-GMO rice and thefarmers will be free to savethe seeds, Barry said.

• Golden Rice is improvedand made available bySyngenta, a company thatsubstituted the gene for betacarotene from the daffodilwith that from corn.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 16

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Monday, October 27, 20146 p.m.

Multi-Purpose Building235 N. Memphis St.Holly Springs, MS

AgendaCity Update from the Mayor

ConservationTVA Energy Savings Workshop

PUBLIC HEARING NOTICEFOR INITIAL HEARING

Marshall County is considering applying to the MississippiDevelopment Authority (MDA) for a HOME Investment PartnershipsHomeowner Rehabilitation Program Grant. The State of Mississippihas allocated approximately $3.9 million that will be made available tocities and counties on a competitive basis to undertake homeownerrehabilitation/reconstruction activities.

The activities for which these funds may be used are in the areas ofaffordable housing for low and very low-income persons. More specif-ic details regarding eligible activities, program requirements, and therating system will be provided at a public hearing which will be held atthe Marshall County Boardroom, 111 S. Market St., Holly Springs, MS,on Thursday, November 6, 2014 at 12:00 noon. The purpose of thishearing will be to obtain citizen input into the development of the appli-cation.

Applications for homeowner eligibility may be picked up at the CountyAdministrator’s Office. When completed, the application and therequired documentation must be returned there at the earliest possibletime. After documents are verified, the home must be inspected by theadministrators of the project to determine the extent of the health andsafety hazards present. The structure must be severely deficient in thefollowing areas to qualify: roof, foundation, plumbing, electrical wiringand heating equipment.

Persons with disabilities requiring special accommodations shouldcontact Larry Hall, County Administrator, at 662-252-7903. MarshallCounty is pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achieve-ment of equal housing opportunity throughout the Nation. We encour-age and support an affirmative advertising and marketing program inwhich there are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race,color, religion, sex, national origin, familial status, age or handicap (dis-ability).

Ronnie Joe Bennett, President

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Law enforcement training at high schoolChief Dwight Harris and Capt. Darryl Bowen, with the Holly Springs Police Department, recently con-ducted Traffic Stop Exams for the Law Enforcement and Public Safety Class at the Holly Springs HighSchool Career and Technical Center. The purpose of the class is to give students a firm foundation inlaw enforcement, fire, public and private security, military and corrections.There are 19 students in thisparticular class – 60 students overall since the program started. From left are Chief Harris, BriannaKing, Jasemine Robinson, Travian Jefferies, Wynya Alexander and Captain Bowen.

Rotarians consider new project

Photo by Sue Watson

Scott Beggs

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Leaves fallingTony Howell (left), Randy Jones and Glen Bridgeforth (driver) vacu-um leaves on Gholson Avenue. Cleaning up the leaves as they fallkeeps them from washing down to the storm drains and clogging thedrains. Residents are encouraged to pile the leaves up on the lawnabove the curb and gutter so they do not get washed down into thestorm drains.

Page 17: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 17

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We accept most insurances, Medicaid,Medicare, MS CAN, Magnolia, Windsor,

CIGNA, TRICARE and Am Better.DOT Certified Provider.

Jennifer McMinn, FNPTina Joyner, FNP

WALK-INS WELCOME

METERSContinued from page 1

Haunted Holly Fall Celebration

Haunted Holly Mansion

Friday, October 31Treats on Helms5:30-8 p.m.

Wednesday, Thursday, FridayOct. 29, 30, 31

8:30-11 p.m.

Bring the children to the Holly Springs Square forfree games and goodies!

Treat or Treat on wheels or Monster Mash with“Ole Guys of Laws Hill” - Old Dominion.

305 Craft Street, The hair-raising Pink House on the left!

$5 will get you in...but nothing may be able to pull youout.

For More Information, Registration, or VolunteerOpportunity Contact

148 East College Avenue,Holly Springs, MS

[email protected]

The Holly Springs Tourism and Recreation Bureau

Wednesday, Oct. 29, 6-8 p.m.

Thursday, Oct. 30, 6-8 p.m.

Photos, Potions and Paintingshosted by The Gallery @156 with The Byhalia Area Arts Council

Kids Ages 5-13. Pre-registration ends Oct. 24.Only $5 To Participate.

“Square Crows”Second Graders, from Marshall County and Holly Springs Schools, &

Sweets with Holly Springs Main Street Chamber on the Square.Come watch these ghouls and goblins.

The winning school will receive a $100 Prize.

individuals are cooking methbecause the ingredients arehighly combustible.

“I have on more than oneoccasion responded to vehi-cles traveling whose meth labcontents have exploded in thetrunk,” Dickerson said.

Common ingredientssometimes found in the mix-ture is pseudoephedrine, lithi-um chemicals from car batter-ies, and anhydrous ammonia.The liquid is heated to evapo-rate off the flammables into asmall amount of liquid whichcan be injected intravenously,the sheriff said.

“You can imagine what itdoes to the internal organs,but the high and sensationsresulting is extremely addic-tive,” he said.

Only about one in 10,000individuals addicted tomethamphetamine are able toget off the drug, he said.

“It is much more addictivethan cocaine,” the sheriff said.

Harris thanked the com-munity for being watchful andaware of unusual or suspi-cious activity and reporting itto the police.

“This shows what we as acommunity can do to look outfor one another,” Harris said.“This shows that we will notaccept this activity from asmall element who prey uponour community.”

AAnniimmaall ccoonnttrroollStray dogs reported by citi-

zens are being picked up bythe animal control officers,Harris said.

Any pet owner who is miss-ing their dog can call police toask if their pet has beenpicked up and is being held.

Harris said pets whoseowners are identified arereturned to their homes, andthose who do not have a homeare being adopted out to newfamilies.

Citizens should call policeto report a dog loose on thestreets or to check on a miss-ing pet, the chief said.

Call 662-252-2122 to inquireabout missing dogs, to offer toadopt a pet or to report anysuspicious or unusual activityin a neighborhood.

“Service will be greatlyimproved,” Duke said.

The problem with outagesoften is caused when limbs fallon lines in the Holly SpringsNational Forest on the 15miles from the substation toHolly Springs, Duke said. Theold wood poles will bereplaced with steel poles andwill last quite a long time, hesaid.

The project is scheduled tobe complete in September2018.

Duke said TVA wants tobuy back the existing line atthe price HSUD paid TVA forit. The project will includeacquisition of additionalrights-of-way for the new line.

The new and old substationwill be side by side so therewill be no significant customer

outage while constructiontakes place. No power outageswill be due to construction,Duke said. A short period ofoutage will take place whenthe service to the new substa-tion is cut over.

HSUD will remove the oldline.

In questioning that fol-lowed, alderman SharonGipson asked why the old linewas sold to the city in the firstplace.

Duke said it was sold to thecity in the 1980s so the citycould combine delivery pointsto lower the cost of simpledelivery.

TVA will bear the operationand maintenance costs of thenew line. A portion of that costwill be borne by HSUD byincreasing the wholesale cost

of power by $2,000 per month.TVA purchased the old line for$36,000.

HSUD spends from $1.2million to $1.9 million a monthto purchase wholesale elec-tricity, Duke said.

Buck said letting the linego back will be a considerablesavings to HSUD and hehopes the line-loss willdecrease. Now the line-loss ofelectricity runs HSUD over $1million a year, he said, so anadditional $2,400 a month onthe wholesale side is negligi-ble, he said.

Duke said he thinks thenew line will offset most of theline-loss.

HSUD is working on theiroutage. And the system willknow when a customer’spower has been restored.

Customers who have elec-tricity to cabins or weekendhomes will know when theirpower has been interrupted.

A water leak detection sys-tem is provided by the newwater meters that will alertHSUD if a customer is meter-ing more than their usual con-sumption of water. The cus-tomer can then look for leaks.

HSUD will connect servic-es and disconnect servicesremotely, both saving moneyand resources and almosteliminating the need to look atmeters manually. The automa-tion saves the customermoney in the long run byreducing the trucks and man-power and man hoursrequired to disconnect orreconnect service.

The new meters willincrease the accuracy ofmetering. The voltage overthe system will be monitoredand HSUD will be able to pin-point power sags and monitorvoltage remotely over the sys-tem from a central location.This will reduce blinks andbrownouts.

The city will benefit fromimproved cash flow and thereduction of debt that resultsfrom delinquent payments. Atime-of-use program that willeventually be implemented byTVA will be easily implement-ed.

GE is bearing the financialrisk and HSUD will be keptabreast of technology.

“I think these are greatbenefits,” said Kinard. “Thebig improvement is easing thepain of outages. This systemmakes it easier.”

MMaayyoorr BBuucckkaaddddss ccoommmmeennttss

“If you do not upgrade

your system, you really stifleyour own economy,” Bucksaid.

“The overall upgrading ofthe system makes sense.Companies come in and findout you are on these old sys-tems and they bypass HollySprings.”

HSUD is one of the largestmunicipally-owned utilities inthe area. He said the largelyrural system requires thattrucks be sent all the way toTennessee to turn on a meteror disconnect one or to readone.

“This is absolutely the wayutilities are going,” the mayorsaid. “The consequences ofnot doing it – like the upgrad-ing of the lagoon – is that bidsincrease because the city hasnot upgraded. Agencies pres-sure the city and will fine thecity. We owe it to our citizens.”

When the city learned thelagoon had to be upgraded,the estimated cost was about$600,000. Now the estimatedcost of the same work is closeto $1 million because of theincrease in cost of materials.

There is a cast-ironreplacement project that mustbe done in the city. The cityhas been cited by theEnvironmental ProtectionAgency for not upgrading thegas lines to industry stan-dards.

“We are one of a few citiesstill on cast-iron,” Buck said.“The price was $6 million andnow it is $10 million. Pricesare going up while you wait.

“Our infrastructure isaging. We have to do some-thing. The old meters are athing of the past. We do it nowor pay later. Customers willbenefit.”

Buck said ideas are notbeing brought forward tohurt citizens. A public meet-ing with GE was held before

the city brought GE on board.The new digital metering

system will make the systemmore reliable and improve theeconomy in the area due tobetter service, the mayorsaid.

“Some things are betterwith age, like wine. Somethings are not,” Buck said.

The more customers thereare in a mile, the cheaper it isto deliver service, he said.Oxford has 12 customers amile while HSUD has eight.

Buck said the utility is try-ing to put the city on a levelplaying field with its neigh-bors.

AAllddeerrmmaann’’ss qquueessttiioonnssAlderman Sharon Gipson

asked what are some disad-vantages of the new meteringsystem.

Kinard said sometimesservice will be interruptedwhen a meter is changed out.Water meters may require a20-minute, out-of-service time.

Gipson asked who has themeters.

Kinard said about 2,000meters are installed in the Mt.

Pleasant area. Within weeks,most residential customerswill be switched over.

Gipson asked how old theold meters are, say 30 years?

Kinard said the meters areabout that old but some arenot. Some TS-1 meters thatwere read over the power linein the Ashland area are not.

Gipson said some peopleare worried that the newmeters will catch fire.

Kinard said if there is a hotsocket at a customer’s houseor in a customer’s breakerbox, it will be fixed. Newmeters have heat sensors andworkers can go out and checkon them. No meters haveactually caused a fire, he said.

Gipson said she has oneexample of such a case. Sheasked if the customer’s billactually does go up. Somecustomers have said theyhave, she said.

She reported some billsincreased and others werelower, and others stayedabout the same after the newmeter was installed.

Kinard said it is important

to see what caused the bill togo up.

Gipson cited one cus-tomer’s health concerns. Shewants customers to beallowed to opt out. She willask for it to go on the agenda.

“I am all about progress,but Holly Springs has suf-fered so much,” she said.“Keeping up with the Joneses,I don’t know if we are quiteready for it.”

As for the meters beingread in real time, Gipson said,“They refer to it as ‘BigBrother’ watching you.”

Kinard said only themetered electricity will beknown. The system will notknow if anyone is at home ornot.

Gipson asked about highdeposits.

Kinard said with the newsystem, customers can pre-pay for their electricity inincrements and not have toput up a deposit.

“I want to allow opt out andsome of us just may not wantto be in the hands of GE,”Gipson said.

Tarvaris Rooks

ARRESTContinued from page 1

LABContinued from page 1

Photo by Sue Watson

Billy Mack Kinard talks about the AMI meters during a recent board of aldermen meeting. In backare clerk Belinda McDonald and attorney Shirley Byers.

CITY BOARDContinued from page 1

October Officer of the MonthHolly Springs Police Department wants to recognize officer ChinaPool as October’s Officer of the Month for her hard work and devotionto the community. “Congratulations and thank you for your continuedservice; you are greatly appreciated,” Chief Dwight Harris said.

Col. Joseph Brown,instructor with theJROTC at HollySprings High School,Chazmoniqua Jacksonand Gary Tunstall Jr.present the flag for theNational Anthem priorto the Hawks’ October10 football game ver-sus Water Valley.

Salute

Photo by Barry Burleson

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Descendants of MaryValentine Carpenter dedicateda grave marker for her onOctober 4 at the PittmanCemetery on the 100thanniversary of her death.

On hand for the dedicationwere – Embry D. “Nick” Gary,her grandson (and his wifePatricia); Jeff Gary (and hiswife Lisa), her great-grand-son; Lisa Gary Smith, hergreat-granddaughter andHolly Gary, her great-great-granddaughter. Local friendsalso attended the brief dedica-tion ceremony.

Carpenter was buried in anunmarked grave at thePittman Cemetery, located inMt. Pleasant.

“We were pleased to honorMary’s memory and her self-less sacrifice,” Jeff Gary said.“After learning the details ofher life and death, we weredetermined to make sure thatshe was remembered. Timingthe dedication with the 100thanniversary of her deathseemed an appropriate occa-sion for the remembrance.”

Mary Valentine Carpenterwas born on April 30, 1889, inMarshall County. She was thethird child of GeorgeWashington Valentine andSarah Louise (Curl) Valentine.She had seven siblings (whowere born from the mid-1880sthrough the early 1900s). In1905, she married SylvanusPittman Carpenter and theyhad one child, Annie LouiseCarpenter (Gary).

By 1910, the family hadmoved to Memphis, Tenn.,and lived on North 2nd Streetnear downtown. According tothe 1910 U.S. census,Sylvanus was then working atthe True Test Paint Companyas a putty maker.

Around that time, Marywas taking care of a sickneighbor and was exposed totuberculosis. She contractedthe disease. The young familymoved back to MarshallCounty so Mary’s parents and

siblings could help care forher and her young daughter.

On October 4, 1914, Marydied as a result of complica-tions from tuberculosis andwas buried at the PittmanCemetery.

“We’re so thankful for allthe support and encourage-ment we have received fromour friends in MarshallCounty,” Jeff said. “After The

South Reporter published my‘Letter to the Editor,’ as wewere seeking any informationabout Mary and the locationof her burial site, so many peo-ple came forward to offerinformation, encouragementand assistance. We treasurethese new friendships wehave made through thisprocess and we thank every-one for all the support.”

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 1 - Page 18

Liddy’s HealthMartPharmacy

www.liddyshealthmart.com

575 Craft Street - Hwy. 7 SouthHolly Springs, MS

Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Closed Sunday

662-252-2285

Thanks for 25 YearsWe appreciate our faithful customers who have done

business with us over the past 25 years.We will continue to offer personal, friendly and

dedicated service!We offer:

– Convenient Drive-Thru Service –– Great Selection of Vitamins and Supplements –

– Private Consultation Rooms –– Large Selection of Wound Care Supplies –

– Medication Adherence/Synchronization Program –

Established 1989

Marker dedicated for Carpenter

Nick Gary, right, the grandson of Mary Valentine Carpenter, and JeffGary, left, her great-grandson, dedicated a marker (above andbelow) in her memory at the Pittman Cemetery on October 4, 2014,the 100th anniversary of her death.

• Letter to Editorhelpful to family

Photos by Kerry Reid

Parading in ByhaliaHaving a good time participating in the Byhalia High School homecoming parade October 10are a group of cheerleaders (top), senior maid Chelsey Brock (middle, left), Miss VolleyballMarkelia Moore (middle, right) and the Rust College Band (bottom photo).

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SportsReportThe South Reporter Thursday, October 23, 2014 Section 2, Page 1

Behind The ScoreboardBy Claude Vinson

SEC topfour of five

Good Luck Area Teams On AWinning Season!

MURPHY’SCUSTOM BRICK, Inc.

Shirley C. Byers,Attorney at Law

Holly Springs City AttorneyTelephone 662-252-6530

BYERS LAW FIRM125 East Van Dorn Avenue

Post Office Box 5008Holly Springs, MS 38634-5008

The fans had yet anotherweekend to celebrateacross the SEC nation. Andthis is a fair, if shallow, warn-ing – there might be a hand-ful of more weekendswhere we will be captivatedby that glowing feeling thatSEC football is the best andMississippi SEC football isthe greatest.

The eighth week haseclipsed and Mississippistill insists upon picking upmore records. The numberone team (MississippiState) was off, but I can’tsee any reason for a changein ratings or rankings. Asgood as the game wasbetween Florida State (#2)and Notre Dame (#5), theOle Miss–Tennessee game(almost a blowout) wasgreat entertainment. We’llhave more to say about thata little later.

First, let us look at theTop 25 and see whereeverybody else stands.Would you believe that afterall the years of collegiatefootball we have had, theSEC is the first conferenceto claim four of the five topspots in the AP Poll? Andthey all roost on the “WestDivision” poll. Florida Statehas to feel the heat beingthe only “outsider” in thistop five (and also thedefending national champi-on). LSU and Georgia makeseven “roosters” in the top25 from the SEC.

And this seems like theideal time to depart thisanecdote for retired bishopJoe Potocnak. HisExcellency says that he waslistening to a radio show aweek or so ago and a callerasked the host why the SECteams were so consistentlygood. The host adroitlyanswered, “They (the SEC)don’t have a salary cap.”

I suppose that therecould be found any numberof reasons why SEC fanswould want Notre Dame totopple Florida State.Personally, I think it wouldhave given the SEC a lockon the first five slots. Thegame ended in controversyalthough the call at the endof the game was ruled legit.The officials ruled that theNotre Dame offensive play-er had “blocked” theSeminole defender whohad a clear chance at theball.

The term isn’t used any-more but the pass patternwhich the Irish receiverwas running was called a“button hook.” The intend-ed receiver runs into acrowd of players (defendersand receivers), stops sud-denly and turns, placinghimself in position to catchthe thrown ball. In this casethe officials said that he hadblocked the defender whohad “clear intent” to inter-cept.

Brian Kelly, head coachof the Irish, in my opinionwas justifiably upset. Thecommentators explainedthat the call isn’t made thatoften because the officialsfind it hard to defend.

Maybe it is time to takeanother look at the rule.

All Patriots play in 58-12 win

HawksdownCatsin OT

Cardinals battle hardin loss at Strayhorn

By BARRY BURLESONEditor

Coach Matt Gehrke sawprogress Friday night inPotts Camp’s 26-6 loss atStrayhorn.

“We played better offen-sively and defensively,” hesaid. “We blocked better upfront, our running backs ranbetter, and our quarterbackplayed better.

“And defensively, exceptfor three long runs, weplayed pretty well.”

The Cardinals went to 1-7overall and 0-3 in District 2-2A.

They sliced their score-board deficit to 14-6 midwaythrough the second quarterFriday on the road and trailed

20-6 at halftime.“We kept it close, but com-

ing out for the second half,we received the ball and fum-bled and gave it right back tothem,” Gehrke said.

Jordan Pinion scored allfour of Strayhorn’s touch-downs.

His runs of 28 and 15yards gave the Mustangs a14-0 advantage.

Then Dylan Goode scoredon a 1-yard quarterbacksneak with 6:14 to go in thesecond quarter to get PottsCamp within eight.

Pinion got loose again inthe last minute of the firsthalf. He scored on a 25-yardrun.

By CLAUDE VINSONSports Editor

The Holly High Hawks’playoff future was lookingbleak indeed until a fifthquarter was added to theirgame against the homestanding Wildcats last Fridaynight.

Holly High had enteredthe District 2-3A portion oftheir season with an overallrecord of 4-2. Then theystumbled, first a loss toNorth Panola October 3 andthen another follow-up set-back to Water Valley October10.

The Hawks had to travelFriday for game three of thedistrict race against theWildcats of Independence.

On a night which could betermed perfect for football,the Wildcats won the toss butdeferred until the secondhalf. Danny Crumb was call-ing the signals for the Hawksand went to Ben Normanright away. Norman led thevisitors to 2 yards outside thered zone. They lost groundand then lost the ball.

The Hawks contained theWildcats around midfield,caused a fumble and got theball back. They went threeand out after picking up a 15-yard penalty in their favor.They had to punt but got agood kick which pinned theWildcats inside their 10.

By BARRY BURLESONEditor

All the Patriots, including the ninth gradersrecently moved up from the junior high, con-tributed Friday night in Marianna, Ark.

Marshall Academy clobbered the LeeCougars 58-12 in a District 1-A matchup, settingup a showdown this Friday at DeSoto School forthe district championship.

“Everybody got a lot of playing time,” saidcoach Sam Pearson, whose team moved to 8-1overall and 3-0 in the district. “We worked on asubstitution plan all week. It wasn’t random sub-stitution. We tried to keep everybody involvedmost of the night. It worked out well. We wereable to follow the plan.”

Six different Patriots ran the football and sixcaught passes.

It took MA just three plays to strike for its firstPhoto by Tammy McGreger

Marshall’s Colt Lindsey (4) outraces a Cougar as he scores a touchdown Friday night.

Marshall County rivals Potts Camp and H.W. Byers met on the vol-leyball court October 7 with the Lady Cardinals winning the match,3-2. Pictured at the net are Potts Camp’s Jakayla Johnson (7) and

Byers’ Cassie Sanderson (9, right). In the foreground is LadyCardinal Dana Jeffries (8). For more photos from the game andinformation on the two volleyball teams, see page 3.

Photo by Kerry Reid

Ray Maxey (31) follows his blocker, Hunter Snow (55), for a gain Friday night at Strayhorn.

See PATRIOTS page 4

See CARDINALS page 4

Photo by Ronnie Day

Intracounty volleyball clash

See HAWKS page 2

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 2

Holly Springs Football 2014Aug. 22 Byhalia 14-0 (W)Aug. 29 H.W. Byers 35-14 (W)Sept. 5 Northpoint Christian 26-38 (L)Sept. 12 Coahoma County (HC) 68-21 (W)Sept. 19 Potts Camp 59-0 (W)Sept. 26 Coahoma AHS 8-26 (L)Oct. 3 •North Panola 7-50 (L)Oct. 10 •Water Valley 33-61 (L)Oct. 17 •Independence 21-14 (W)Oct. 24 •MS Palmer Home 7:00Oct. 30 •Charleston Away 7:00

• District 2-3A Games

Marshall Academy 2014Aug. 22 Kirk Academy 70-22 (W)Aug. 29 Oak Hill Academy 49-35 (W)Sept. 5 •Tunica Academy 55-6 (W)Sept. 12 Magnolia Heights 40-69 (L)Sept. 19 •West Memphis (HC) 41-6 (W)Sept. 26 Fayette Academy 50-8 (W)Oct. 3 North Delta 49-7 (W)Oct. 10 Benton County 40-28 (W)Oct. 17 •Lee (Ark.) 58-12 (W)Oct. 24 •DeSoto (Ark.) Away 7:00

• District 1-A Games

Good Luck Athletes!Mt. Moriah Auto Sales2571 Mt. Moriah - Memphis, TN

901-368-5505Joe Faulkenbery - Cell 901-493-8422

Sports updates available viaTwitter – @SouthReporter

“Best of Luck to all Marshall County Teams!”from

Jerry Moore, Superintendentand

School Board Members: Mark Turner (District 1),

Harvey Garrison (District 2), Janice Wagg (District 3),

Daniel Ables (District 4), and Terry Cook (District 5)

Byhalia Indians Football 2014Aug. 22 Holly Springs 0-14 (L)Aug. 29 North Panola 0-40 (L)Sept. 5 Center Hill 6-45 (L)Sept. 12 Southwind 0-20 (L)Sept. 19 Eupora 0-35 (L)Sept. 26 OpenOct. 3 •Tunica Rosa Fort 6-62 (L)Oct. 10 •New Albany (HC) 6-35 (L)Oct. 17 •Senatobia 6-41 (L)Oct. 24 •Ripley Home 7:00Oct. 31 •Lafayette County Home 7:00

Bernita FountainHolly Springs Alderman - Ward 1

Best Wishes for aHealthy,

Winning Season!

Good Luck Athletes!Stinnett Dental Care,

LLCDr. Beth Stinnett

283 Alexander Ave.Holly Springs, MS

(662) 252-1461Dentistry For The Entire Family!

Hours:Monday-Friday9 a.m.-6 p.m.

Saturday9 a.m.-3 p.m.

Timothy L. Liddy, R.Ph., Owner575 Craft Street - Holly Springs, MS

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4600 Northcentral Way, Olive Branch, MS 38654Mailing Address: P.O. Box 405, Byhalia, MS 38611

405 E. Industrial Park Rd.Holly Springs, MS

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Christy OwensHolly Springs Alderman - Ward 4

Good Luck to all Holly Springs and

Marshall County teams!

Booker Hardware“On The Square ”

119 S. Market - Holly Springs, MS

Hardware - PlumbingElectrical Supplies

Ph. 662-252-2331 - Fax 662-252-9823Mike Moore, Owner

By BARRY BURLESONEditor

In the midst of a rebuild-ing year, coach KendrickSmith saw some newfoundenergy Friday night.

Byhalia trailed District 2-4A foe Senatobia 35-0 at half-time and ended up losing 41-6, but in the second half heliked his team’s showing.

“The first half was a disas-ter,” he said. “We didn’t play

well.“But in the second half we

were a different team. I sawpositive things. We playedwith heart and played withemotion. We showed somefight.”

Coach Smith said fresh-man quarterback TyricoRichmond is “a playmaker,and he made the offense go.”

“Plus, the offensive linedid a lot better job of sustain-

ing blocks.”Jeremy Hearn caught a

pass for the Indians’ second-half touchdown on the road.

“We really started gettingafter it in the second half, andwe looked like an entirely dif-ferent team,” he said.

“I’m proud of the kids.”Smith said his young

Indians are learning andgrowing.

“We have a lot of youth,”

he said. “We have to learn toput a complete game togeth-er.”

The Indians (0-8 overalland 0-3 in the district) closethe season at home with twotough district opponents –Ripley this Friday night andthen Lafayette County onOctober 31.

The Ripley Tigers are 6-3overall this season and 2-1 inthe district.

A three-day HunterEducation Class will be heldNovember 3-5 from 6 p.m. to9 p.m. at Potts Camp HighSchool.

The school is located onHwy. 178 in Potts Camp.

Persons must be at least10 years of age to be certi-fied. Bring Social Security

number.Persons must attend each

day of the class to be certi-fied.

For more information,please contact theMississippi Department ofWildlife, Fisheries and ParksNorth Region office at 662-563-6222.

Hunter Education ClassNov. 3-5 at Potts Camp

Byhalia sees improvement in loss

HAWKSContinued from page 1

Sign-up is now available for the Holly Springs Parks andRecreation Department adult basketball league.

The league is for ages 18 and up, and the fee is $150 perteam (10 player maximum).

Registration forms can be picked up at the Eddie L. Smith

Multi-Purpose Building or contact Sanchez Blake at 662-544-4177 or e-mail [email protected].

Registration for the adult basketball league will continuethrough November 28. Sign up now and play for the cashprize and bragging rights.

Sign-up underway for Holly Springs basketball league

Photos by Jane Ann Autry

All-starsTwo Marshall Academy seniors, Maura Jane Autry (left) and KatMoore, recently participated in the Mississippi Association ofIndependent Schools All-Star Softball Game. They played forthe North, which beat the South 7-4. Autry played center fieldand pitched two innings. Moore played third base, center fieldand left field. The game was played at Jackson Prep.

The Hawks were in controlagain when Keivis Reavespicked off an Independenceaerial. A portion of the run-back was erased by a Hawkpenalty.

The quarter ended withHolly High threatening toscore deep inside Wildcat bot-tom.

The Hawks tried to punchit in but went out on downs,leaving the ball on theIndependence 2.

Johnathan Jackson gavethe hosts a big chunk of realestate with a run down the leftside. They kept down the mid-dle and on the ground. Theycrossed into the red zone and,with time running out,attempted a field goal. But itwas short and wide right. Athalftime, it was a 0-0 score.

The Wildcats exercisedtheir option to receive to open

the second half but theHawks caused and captured afumble.

Crumb picked up a firstdown, and backed it up withanother at the 25. Once againHolly High was within scor-ing distance. The Hawkswere again stopped on fourthdown and the ’Cats took over.

Brandon Hailey, who hadbeen directing the Indepen-dence defense all evening,met a lot of Hawk resistancebefore picking up a firstdown. The ’Cats still had topunt three plays later.

Crumb called his luckynumber seven and put up sixwith a 20-yard run. DeangeloRobles used his lucky toe tomake it 7-0 just before thethird quarter ended.

Holly High held the ’Catsand then lost the ball via afumble.

The Wildcats crossed intothe red zone. Hailey thenfound Jackson for six. Theextra point was booted andthe score tied 7-7 with 8:33left.

The Hawks relied onCrumb, who called his num-ber again and trucked 57yards to put the Hawks ahead14-7 after the boot by Robles.

The ’Cats bounced back toscore and collected the one-pointer which tied it 14-14with 3:21 left.

Regulation ended in thedeadlock.

The Hawks got a touch-down from Jaleyone Young inovertime and a kick fromRobles for the thrilling 21-14victory.

They improved to 5-4 over-all and 1-2 in the district.Independence dropped to 4-5and 1-2.

Crumb ran the ball 14times for 154 yards and twoTDs.

“It was one of the mostexciting games I’ve ever beena part of,” coach DonaldDeans said. “It was a hardfought first half and then wewere able to pull it out in theend.”

Holly High’s last homegame of the regular seasonwill be this Friday at SamCoopwood Park versus dis-trict opponent Palmer (fromMarks).

“It’s another big one forus,” Deans said. “We’re tryingto get into the playoffs. Itwould be a big step in build-ing the program and give usnew life.”

After the home game ver-sus Palmer, the Hawks willtravel to Charleston onThursday, Oct. 30.

Photo by Willie Ann SheltonThe Holly Springs High School Hawks and Independence Wildcats battle in the trenches Friday night.

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 3

Potts Camp Football 2014Aug. 22 Hamilton 27-43 (L)Aug. 29 Bruce 7-41 (L)Sept. 5 East Union 21-20 (W)Sept. 12 Benton County 0-36 (L)Sept. 19 Holly Springs 0-59 (L)Sept. 26 OpenOct. 4 •Coahoma AHS 0-56 (L)Oct. 10 •West Tallahatchie (HC) 7-64 (L)Oct. 17 •Strayhorn 6-26 (L)Oct. 24 •Coahoma County Home 7:00Oct. 31 •H.W. Byers Home 7:00

• District 2-2A Games

H.W. Byers Football 2014Aug. 22 Benton County 30-16 (W)Aug. 29 Holly Springs 14-35 (L)Sept. 5 Coldwater (HC) 60-26 (W)Sept. 12 OpenSept. 19 Overton (Memphis) 30-22 (W)Sept. 26 OpenOct. 3 •West Tallahatchie 28-30 (L)Oct. 10 •Coahoma County 50-0 (W)Oct. 17 •Coahoma AHS 0-50 (L)Oct. 24 •Strayhorn Home 7:00Oct. 31 •Potts Camp Away 7:00

• District 2-2A Games

Good luck to all area teams!State Senator

Bill StoneMarshall, Benton & Tippah Counties

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It was just “one of thosenights,” coach Chris Danielssaid, and one he cares noth-ing about repeating.

His H.W. Byers Lions tookit on the chin, 50-0, Fridaynight at Coahama AHS.

“They are a good footballteam – very athletic at a lot ofpositions,” he said about theTigers, who lead the District2-2A race. “We couldn’t main-tain any drives.”

Byers had only 90 yardstotal offense and also com-mitted a pair of turnovers, afumble and an interception.

“It was one of thosegames where you don’t goback and look at the film, you

just go on to the next week,”Daniels said.

Byers dropped to 4-3 over-all and 1-2 in the district.Coahoma AHS upped itsmarks to 7-1 and 3-0.

Coach Daniels said theTigers scored on their firstpossession, in about sixplays.

“Then they kicked off tous and we took it back for atouchdown but got called fora block in the back,” he said.“Well, that broke my kids’backs, and it made for a longnight.”

Senior running backMarquis Moore suffered ashoulder injury in the loss.

Coach Daniels said it isunknown whether or not

Moore will get to play thisFriday when the Lions hostStrayhorn on “Senior Night.”

“We will have to checkand see if his doctor OKshim,” he said. “I know he willwant to be out there.”

Joseph Gomez wastabbed by the coach as theLions’ most valuable playerfor the game at CoahomaAHS. He had six and a halftackles.

Byers is still in the playoffhunt. The top four teams inthe district will go to the post-season.

“We’re playing for third orfourth,” Daniels said. “If webeat Strayhorn and beatPotts Camp (October 31), wewill be 3-2 and probably be

looking at third.”He said his team’s focus,

right now, has to be on a verygood Strayhorn team.

“They’re tough,” he said.“We will have to be well pre-pared. They’re going to runthe football. It’s no secret.They will get in that wish-bone formation and runnorth and south.

“We have to be able tostop the run. It’s a big gameas far the playoff possibili-ties, and it’s ‘Senior Night.’”

The Lions and theMustangs will kick off at 7p.m. on the Byers campus,adjacent to Highway 72 inthe Mt. Pleasant community.

Strayhorn is 5-3 overalland 2-1 in the district.

Byers drops district road game

Potts Camp and H.W. Byers completed their volleyball seasons lastweek. On Tuesday, Oct. 7, the two teams played each other at PottsCamp. In the left photo are Lady Cardinals Shelby Jenkins (14) andKayla Brown (18). At right are Lady Lions Dana Walker (2) andLakeisha Reynolds (12). Potts Camp won the close match, 3-2. TheLady Cards, led by coach Brad Wren, finished 3-11 overall and 3-7in Class I Region 2. “This is only the second year of our volleyballprogram at Potts Camp; so we are still in a building and learning peri-od,” he said. “The team worked very hard all season and improvedgreatly from the beginning of the year to the end. We finished 3-1,which we were very proud of, against the other county schools. It isalways nice to do well against county rivals. We are moving forward

and are developing a great plan for the offseason. We are planningto play in a summer league and attend a team camp for the first time.We will also be hosting the first annual Lady Cardinal VolleyballCamp for grades 4-6 in the summer. We have already set a teamgoal for next season. We want to be the first volleyball team in PottsCamp history to qualify for the playoffs.” The Lady Lions finished 4-12 overall and 4-6 in the district. “We just barely lost the tiebreakerfor third place to get into the playoffs,” coach Danielle Malin said. Shewas assisted by Tiffany Smith, who guided the team while Malin wason maternity leave. “They did a great job in my absence and hadsome great successes. We had a lot of close matches in which wejust couldn’t quite come out on top.”

Photos by Ronnie Day

Lady Cardinals vs. Lady Lions

Photo by Mary Minor

TouchdownThe Potts Camp pee wee football team beat Marietta 6-0Saturday at the Potts Camp Sportsplex. Cody Stewart (20,back) scores a touchdown for the Cardinals as his teammatescelebrate in the foreground.

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Both defenses stood tall inthe third quarter beforePinion iced the win forStrayhorn on a 6-yard touch-down run with 11:08 to go inthe game.

“Watching the film, wehad hands on him all night,but we missed tackles hereand there, and he got behindus,” Coach Gehrke said.

“Basically, they come outand run right at you in thewishbone.

“We had a great game planbut just missed tackles. Theygot out of the wishbonemaybe one play all nightlong.”

With the win, theMustangs improved to 5-3overall and 2-1 in district play.

“It was nice to see us mak-ing progress,” Gehrke saidabout the game at Strayhorn.“But we have to get better.”

Next on the agenda for theCardinals is a home contestthis Friday night at 7 versusCoahoma County. The RedPanthers will enter with a 2-6overall record and 0-3 in thedistrict.

“They’re struggling a bit,

but they’re very talented withgood team speed,” Gehrkesaid.

“Our kids are starting torealize that good preparation

in practice leads to a betterperformance on Friday night.We need good practices thisweek. We have to keepimproving.”

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 4

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points. Devin McGregerreeled in a 48-yard pass fromDakota Dailey.

Christian Compton nailedeight of eight extra-pointkicks on the night.

The Cougars picked up apair of first downs courtesy ofPatriot penalties, but then theMarshall defense stopped thehome squad on a fourth-down try.

Dailey took to the air-waves for strikes to CanaanPearson (21 yards) and ColtLindsey (11 yards) and thenthe quarterback kept for a 32-yard gain. The Pats’ nexttouchdown came on a 13-yard catch by Lindsey.

Cordarius Thomas’s inter-ception halted Lee’s next pos-session.

The teams then swappedturnovers – on the same play.

MA, back in possession atits own 26, struck for morepoints in just a few plays. TheDailey-to-Lindsey connectionworked twice, once for 64yards, and then again for 5yards and a touchdown. Itwas 21-0 with 5:15 left in thefirst quarter.

The Cougars used severalpass plays to move the foot-ball, and then got on thescoreboard via a 1-yard run.The two-point try failed.

The Patriots struck againquickly. Jordon Harris hauledin a 42-yard pass and Pearsonsnagged a 10-yarder for thescore.

MA was up 28-6 followingthe first period.

As the second quarterbegan, Lee put up its lastpoints of the game. Thetouchdown came on a 23-yard pass play. The Cougarscouldn’t convert the two-point attempt.

The explosive Patriotsscored three more timesbefore the half.

McGreger got loose for 49yards and a touchdown.

The other two came onJordon Harris’ 65-yard inter-ception return and a 28-yardpass from Dailey to Pearson.

At the break, the scorewas 49-12.

Marshall picked up a safe-ty early in the third quarter.

On the Pats’ last scoringdrive of the evening, StephenElgin had a 23-yard catch andTucker Fant a 30-yard recep-tion. Elgin then scored on a 1-yard run.

Dailey was 12 of 18 pass-ing for 297 yards. Lindseyhad three catches for 88 andPearson three for 55.

Samuel Morris led theteam in tackles with six, plushe and Tyler Harden shareda sack. Other top tacklerswere Thomas and McGregerwith four each and CortezeLove with three pass break-ups and three tackles.

Next up for MA, to closethe regular season, is theroad trip to West Helena,Ark., to face DeSoto. TheThunderbirds are 4-5 overallbut also 3-0 in district play.

“DeSoto has battled a lotof injuries the whole season,”Coach Pearson said. “It has

hurt their consistency. I’msure they will have every-body who can go, ready forus this Friday night.”

The Class A state playoffswill begin the following week,Friday, Oct. 31.

With a win at DeSoto, thePatriots will secure a numberone or two seed in the post-season, which means homefield advantage until thechampionship game, whichwill be played on a neutralfield.

PATRIOTSContinued from page 1

All-starMarshall Academy senior M.C.Hutchens (above and at right,12) represented the school inthe recent Mississippi Asso-ciation of Independent SchoolsAll-Star Soccer Game inJackson. She played midfieldthe first half and defense thesecond half for the Northsquad. The game was tied 2-2at halftime and then the Southscored two goals in the secondhalf to take the 4-2 win.

Courtesy photos

CARDINALSContinued from page 1

Marshall Academy is host-ing a girls basketball tourna-ment this week to tip off the2014-15 season.

Both the junior high andvarsity Lady Patriots,coached by Keith Taylor,faced Tunica AcademyMonday and West MemphisChristian Tuesday.

The tourney continuesThursday and Saturday.

The schedule forThursday includes – 4 p.m.,Oak Hill vs. West Memphis(junior high); 5:15 p.m., OakHill vs. West Memphis (varsi-ty); 6:30 p.m., Marshall ver-sus a home school team, theMemphis Mustangs (juniorhigh); 7:45 p.m., Marshallversus Mustangs (varsity).

The schedule for Saturdayincludes - 2 p.m., Tunica vs.Mustangs (junior high); 3:15p.m., Tunica vs. Mustangs(varsity); 4:30 p.m., Marshallvs. Oak Hill (junior high);5:45 p.m., Marshall vs. OakHill (varsity).

MA girlshostingtournament

Photos by Theresa Bolden-Devore

Stephen Elgin carries for the Patriots in the second half.

Photos by Kerry Reid

Potts Camp’s Keenan Kearney (1) and Alex Hawkins (22) take down a Strayhorn ball-carrier.

Potts Camp quarterback Dylan Goode (12) lofts a pass over aMustang defensive player Friday night.

NOTICE:VarsityBasketballCoaches

We needyour

schedules!FAX 252-3388 or e-mail

[email protected]

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 5

Open Forum

PUBLIC MEETING

STATE ROUTE 4/BNRR BRIDGE

MARSHALL COUNTYThe Mississippi Department of Transportation will be conducting an open

forum public meeting to discuss plans to replace the State Route 4 Bridge at

the Burlington North Railroad (BNRR) in Marshall County. The meeting will

take place from 4:00-6:00 pm on Thursday, October 30 at the Holly Springs

High School Cafeteria, 165 North Walthall Street, Holly Springs, MS.

Citizens are invited to attend this meeting to learn important information

and express their opinions or concerns on replacing the existing bridge.

WE ENCOURAGE YOU TO ATTEND Thursday, October 30, 2014 4:00-6:00 p.m.

165 North Walthall StreetHolly Springs, MS

Any individual who needs auxiliary aids or special accommodations to attend the meeting should advise MDOT of their needs by calling the Environmental Division at (601) 359-7920.

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Potts Camp High School held its homecoming activities Friday night, Oct.10, when the Cardinals hosted West Tallahatchie. (Above) Members ofthe homecoming court are Marlicia Carr, Kayla Brown, Reagann Bing,Zoe Clark and Owen Feathers (in front of Reagann), Kylie Gurley andDevin Sanders, Alea Gurley, homecoming queen Terri Peace, football

queen Jessica Hudson, Hayden Wilkerson, Victoria Lester, MorgannBing, Anniston Jordan and Cayden Bridges, Jocelyn Green, DestineeHannah, Shelby Jenkins. At right are Terri Peace and her father, TerrancePeace, shortly after she was crowned Potts Camp High School home-coming queen for 2014.

Photos by Kerry Reid

Peace selected Potts Camp queen

Byhalia High School held its homecoming festivities Friday night, Oct.10, when the Indians hosted New Albany. (Above) Members of thecourt are (from left) Zalihyan Nichols, Devondre Bassett, KarlaCabrera, Andre Moore, queen Aneshia Moore, Chelsey Brock, Darrell

Brock, Larry Pollard, Fertisha Wilson, Trooper Baird, Chiquilla Rooker,Tia Smith, Marlon Hullett, Jeremiah Tunstall, Mariella Ortega. (Leftphoto) Pictured are Andre Moore and Aneshia Moore, crowned byVicky Rodriguez (Miss BHS).

Photos by Willie Ann Shelton

Moore chosen Byhalia queen

Photo by Willie Mae Shelton

Members of the Byhalia High School cheerleading squad enjoy the homecoming game. Picturedare (front row, from left) Aariyl Faller, Shakali Falkner, Kristalyn Jones, Biby Garza; and (back row)Sheletha Fant, Dernarius Taylor, Grace Fuquey, Jessice Humphreys, Shadedra Butler, RoneishaIsom, Annette McGee, Kelsey Phflar, Paris Liggins, Ruby Rogers.

Cheering for the Indians

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The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 6

MARSHALL COUNTY GENERAL FUNDRECEIPTS

3281 CITY OF HOLLY SPRINGS 1476.783282 TIPPAH DRAINAGE 10.203283 TIF FUND 10091.32, 19210.223301 CITY OF HOLLY SPRINGS*POLICEDEPARTMENT 75.00

Department Total 30863.52BOARD OF SUPERVISORS3072 GARY ANDERSON 2916.673073 SMITH WHALEY, PLLC 3366.663078 HANCOCK BANK 711.973090 PITNEY BOWES GLOBAL FIN.SERVICES LLC 349.003122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS -13.22

3138 MAGNOLIA RIVER GEOSPATIAL, INC.750.00

3142 BILLY CLARK CONSTRUCTION500.00

3154 SAM’S CLUB 180.003183 MDH/BOILER SAFETY BRANCH

42.00, 40.003184 MDH/BOILER SAFETY BRANCH

40.00, 40.003192 THE SOUTH REPORTER 37.32

175.00, 42.39, 78.673200 PITNEY BOWES INC 70.963202 PURCHASE POWER 4000.003207 DEMENT PRINTING COMPANY 81.133220 IDVILLE 348.933230 COPYWRITE INC. 79.00, 149.003172 EDDIE DIXON 237.443173 TEC 4.03, 6.553243 SMITH WHALEY, PLLC 12262.503311 CENTURYLINK 110.103313 AT&T 40.22, 45.27, 148.56, 80.223319 AT&T MOBILITY 62.51, 82.763321 AT&T MOBILITY 51.34, 74.523335 WATKINS, WARD AND STAFFORD,PLLC 49900.00

3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 15523.332444.93, 946.10, 221.26, 4248.85, 48.40

3342 PURCHASE POWER 4287.053350 ACTIVE DATACOMM 15378.003350 ACTIVE DATACOMM 999.00

Department Total 121188.42CHANCERY CLERK’S DEPARTMENT3084 RJ YOUNG COMPANY INC. 156.10MARSHALL COUNTY GENERAL FUNDCHANCERY CLERK’S DEPARTMENT 3084RJ YOUNG COMPANY INC. 156.103084 RJ YOUNG COMPANY INC. 50.283110 COPYWRITE INC. 160.003116 C. W. “CHUCK” THOMAS 39.203118 DEMENT PRINTING COMPANY14.40

15.80, 18.203122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 20.30, 29.62, 13.22, 78.96

35.88, 9.99, 12.99, 21.363189 COPYWRITE INC. 74.703173 TEC 51.323313 AT&T 74.223302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 12886.34

2173.52, 120.00, 441.64, 208.55, 416.632431.36, 988.87, 231.27, 4457.30, 50.77

Department Total 25438.89CIRCUIT CLERK’S DEPARTMENT3100 MISSISSIPPI VITAL RECORDS 21.00

5.003122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACE SOLUTIONS 38.703173 TEC 13.293313 AT&T 109.193302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1801.94

6188.05, 2177.88, 2439.67, 613.26, 143.433399.08, 38.72

Department Total 16989.21TAX ASSESSOR’S DEPARTMENT3104 BRYANT APPRAISALS 2000.003113 COPYPLUS INC. 160.973122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 4.453173 TEC 18.083293 L.A.W. PUBLICATION 198.003295 EXTENSION CENTER FOR GOV. &COMM. DEV. 250.00

3313 AT&T 74.443327 BRYANT APPRAISALS 2000.003302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 20489.45

5583.60, 4106.51, 1596.37, 373.36, 5675.683302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 64.66

Department Total 42595.57TAX COLLECTOR’S DEPARTMENT3113 COPYPLUS INC. 244.023136 G E CONSUMER FINANCE 2.91

5.37, 1.88, 6.48, 7.97, 2.49, 3.47, 3.243215 LAWRENCE PRINTING 252.473173 TEC 18.993296 THE SOUTH REPORTER 4584.00

4417.50, 38.943310 CENTURYLINK 388.833313 AT&T 74.443302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 22392.28

5875.00, 4452.09, 1689.68, 395.17, 8497.703302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 96.80

Department Total 53451.72ZONING ADMINISTRATION

3123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 9.00, 9.003182 THE SOUTH REPORTER 43.323187 COPYPLUS INC. 110.123211 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 29.79

3173 TEC 24.153313 AT&T 172.703302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3712.94

1990.44, 3293.30, 1416.97, 555.72, 129.972549.31, 29.04

3343 REV. R J WILSON 100.00100.00, 100.00

3344 ROBERT D. BONDS 100.00, 100.003345 KENT FALKNER 100.00

100.00, 100.003346 JOE HURDLE 100.00, 100.003347 J M ASH 100.003348 SMITH WHALEY, PLLC 312.50

Department Total 15488.27COUNTY ADMINISTRATION DEPT 3122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 10.68305.97, 179.50, 18.99, 23.99, 264.80, 359.00

3211 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 1.99, 1.99, 59.583173 TEC 9.843313 AT&T 70.653330 XMC SALES, LLC 213.823302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1858.68

9925.65, 1856.03, 717.90, 167.88, 3583.143302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 40.82

Department Total 19670.90FINANCIAL ADMINISTRATION 3084 RJ YOUNG COMPANY INC. 247.523302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 9925.27

563.24, 599.60, 140.22, 2165.27, 24.67Department Total 14665.79

SUPERINTENDENT OF ED DEPART3097 TEL-TECH, INC. 205.503173 TEC 65.143313 AT&T 498.38, 66.683334 AT&T 583.92

Department Total 1419.62MAINT OF BUILDINGS & GROUNDS3069 MERCHANTS & FARMERS BANK

2817.193075 FIRST STATE BANK 2357.513076 BANK OF HOLLY SPRINGS 2529.513094 ACTION PEST CONTROL INC. 40.003102 TYCO INTEGRATED SECURITY LLC

101.81, 95.503117 TAILORED JANITORIAL SUPPLIES

48.66, 37.613120 THE RENTAL BARN 36.00, 3.603123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 36.00, 9.00, 36.00, 9.003127 NEWELL PAPER CO. 199.75

314.00, 59.55, 84.373134 BOOKER HARDWARE 1.50

4.90, 1.35, 6.00, 2.98, 2.10, 6.27, 2.52, 4.201.69, 1.75, 4.49, 3.50, 8.35, 5.39, 16.29, 59.6517.75, 3.05, 18.99, 19.50, 10.95, 1.20, 12.00

24.70, 3.38, 15.00, 6.25, 5.00, .98, 4.09, 11.453.00, 199.50, 3.05, 7.55, 4.19, 10.59, 6.75

4.49, 9.65, 1.65, 18.85, 8.89, 1.89, 15.89, 3.853.29, 16.95, 5.39, 2.59, 1.59, 4.80, 5.04, 1.50

20.85, 4.993135 COOKS AUTO PARTS 18.173136 G E CONSUMER FINANCE 23.76

17.97, 2.97, 1.92, 29.64, 5.973137 AMERICAN HEATING & A/C 1350.003145 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.

421.69, 33.67, 125.843146 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.

1487.30, 820.713149 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.

395.24, 179.25, 450.48

3150 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.20.59, 89.57, 1327.33

3151 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.185.88, 20.59, 21.16

3152 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.491.47, 288.18

3188 ACTION PEST CONTROL INC.40.00

3197 THYSSENKRUPP ELEVATOR 775.863198 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.

260.15, 260.153203 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.

9.50, 9.793208 GOOLSBY EXCAVATION & TRUCKING

4750.003217 NEWELL PAPER CO. 98.80

112.96, 197.80, 199.75, 205.95, 349.403222 J & R SERVICES 121.003226 BOOKER HARDWARE 74.95

11.58, 2.40, 24.70, 3.95, 9.50, 9.35, 4.153227 G E CONSUMER FINANCE 50.643228 BI-COUNTY FARM SUPPLY INC.

45.003229 AMERICAN HEATING & A/C 85.003229 AMERICAN HEATING & A/C 90.003234 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.

78.61, 78.61, 78.61, 78.613165 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.

515.083156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 7082.05

1060.31, 430.90, 100.773157 COREY CULVER 648.003158 RODRICO MOSS 697.503159 CARLOS RAIMEY 580.003288 NORTHCENTRAL MS ELECT. POWERASS’N 178.08, 82.18

3290 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.38.18, 35.77, 270.53

3291 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.2281.38, 1927.70, 2630.42,, 8790.41

3292 NORTHCENTRAL MS ELECT. POWERASS’N 26.01

3320 AT&T MOBILITY 36.22, 42.983323 AT&T MOBILITY 39.753324 NORTHCENTRAL MS ELECT. POWERASS’N 688.21, 98.37

3331 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.20.59, 82.49

3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND10005.88

1575.93, 607.49, 142.07, 3399.08, 38.723303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 6092.40

904.44, 371.60, 86.90, 3399.08, 38.723337 NORTH EAST MISS ELECTRICPOWER ASSOC. 27.913338 COREY CULVER 756.00

3339 RODRICO MOSS 522.003340 CARLOS RAIMEY 638.00

Department Total 82485.28COMPUTER SYSTEMS COST3091 PREMISE, INC 400.003098 NORTHEAST MS PLANNING &DEVELOPMENT 1000.00, 525.003105 THREE RIVERS PDD INC. 550.00

50.00, 50.003199 DELTA COMPUTER SYSTEMS, INC.850.00, 100.00, 710.00, 910.00, 90.00, 150.00

520.003167 AT&T 85.003298 NORTHEAST MS PLANNING &DEVELOPMENT 1000.00, 525.00

Department Total 7515.00VETERAN SERVICE OFFICE

3173 TEC 6.313313 AT&T 50.803322 AT&T 75.003302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1159.40

71.88, 16.81Department Total 1380.20

SCHOOL ATTENDANCE OFFICER3173 TEC 10.163313 AT&T 69.61

Department Total 79.77CHANCERY COURT3107 JEAN M. SPARKS 62.723112 KATHY C. BRUCE 392.003185 STATE TREASURY FUND 3053

3156.363173 TEC 1.633313 AT&T 103.08

Department Total 3715.79CIRCUIT COURT3081 DANA RAKESTRAW 117.603185 STATE TREASURY FUND 3053

4054.343186 ANITA M. MOSS 92.963194 CHRISTY ADAIR 78.403235 CHRISTY ADAIR 39.203236 CHRISTY L. ADIAR 165.053173 TEC 1.623244 BEATRICE SEALS 50.00, 44.803245 BOBBY ALLEN CARTER 25.003245 BOBBY ALLEN CARTER 22.403246 VERONICA COLLINS DUKES 50.003246 VERONICA COLLINS DUKES 11.203247 SHERRY ANN SHIPLEY 50.003247 SHERRY ANN SHIPLEY 38.083248 WANDA JUNE HARWOOD 25.003248 WANDA JUNE HARWOOD 28.003249 ANNA VIRGINIA CROW 50.003249 ANNA VIRGINIA CROW 31.363250 OLLIE MAE INGRAM 50.00, 44.803251 MICHAEL MALONE 25.00, 26.883252 SHARON ANN EVANS 50.00, 29.123253 SUSAN ELAINE JORDAN 50.003254 MAE RUTH CHASE 50.003255 BARRY JAMES LOONEY, JR 25.003255 BARRY JAMES LOONEY, JR 22.403256 ANDREW LEONARD ROE 50.003256 ANDREW LEONARD ROE 26.883257 MATTIE M. LUCAS 50.00, 33.603258 YOLANDA FORD 25.003259 STACY LAQUETTE BUTLER 50.003259 STACY LAQUETTE BUTLER 42.563260 JAMES STEVEN RODGERS 25.003260 JAMES STEVEN RODGERS 22.403261 PATRICIA LEVERNE STROTER

25.00, 12.323262 ELLA M. OLIVER 50.003263 SHANDA CAFFEY 50.00, 17.923264 WILLIAM LEE BULLARD 25.003264 WILLIAM LEE BULLARD 21.283265 JAMES MARTIN BERKSHIRE 50.003265 JAMES MARTIN BERKSHIRE 29.123266 CELESTINE BELFOURE 25.003267 BARNEY RAY GRAHAM 25.003267 BARNEY RAY GRAHAM 13.443268 AMANDA JEAN MCCORD 25.003268 AMANDA JEAN MCCORD 23.523269 DON SHAW 25.00, 16.803270 ANDREW BROCK ALLEN 25.003270 ANDREW BROCK ALLEN 13.443271 JERRY PHILLIP CHANDLER, JR

25.00, 16.803272 ROBERT JASON MINK 25.00, 22.403273 MATWAYNE CORTEZ ISOM 25.003273 MATWAYNE CORTEZ ISOM 8.963274 DERRICK ANDERSON 25.00, 28.003275 MELONIE C. RICHARDS 25.003275 MELONIE C. RICHARDS 17.923276 DARLA JEAN EAVES 25.00, 22.403277 KATHY G. MAYS 25.00, 3.363278 JAMES MANNING BASSFORD 25.003278 JAMES MANNING BASSFORD 22.403313 AT&T 103.083315 J. KIZER JONES 1170.003325 STACY LAQUETTE BUTLER 42.563326 STACY LAQUETTE BULTER 50.003336 UNITED STATE TREASURY 690.00

Department Total 8544.37JUVENILE COURT

3085 JENNIFER L. SHACKELFORD 400.003181 XEROX CORPORATION 46.38, 195.673173 TEC 20.813156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3321.75

523.17, 201.21, 47.063313 AT&T 141.953323 AT&T MOBILITY 65.323302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1787.79

1800.00, 440.97, 220.90, 51.67, 940.3810.71

3303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3321.75523.17, 201.21, 47.06, 1699.54, 19.36

Department Total 16027.83LUNACY COURT 3099 REGION IV MENTAL HEALTH 350.003106 REGION IV 200.003114 C. W. “CHUCK” THOMAS 185.003115 C. W. “CHUCK” THOMAS 185.003190 C. W. “CHUCK” THOMAS 185.003191 REGION IV 200.003238 ALLISON A. WORLEY 125.00

125.00, 125.003302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 200.00

31.50, 12.40, 2.90, 84.98, .97Department Total 2012.75

JUSTICE COURT 3086 NIXON POWER SERVICES 69.003087 GE CAPITAL 188.623089 XMC SALES, LLC 39.453103 MISSISSIPPI COURT COLLECTIONS,INC. 1093.08

3123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 9.00, 9.003160 JOHNNIE A. JOHNSON 123.003160 JOHNNIE A. JOHNSON 440.163161 KATRINA WASHINGTON 123.003161 KATRINA WASHINGTON 440.163162 ANDREAN B. AUTRY 123.003162 ANDREAN B. AUTRY 440.163163 KALI ROWLAND 123.00, 440.163173 TEC 19.183242 MISSISSIPPI COURT COLLECTIONS, INC. 1093.083294 UNIVERSITY OF MS*MJC 922.003313 AT&T 431.553317 AT&T MOBILITY 87.64, 96.773302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3346.987019.68, 6733.32, 625.00, 2791.69, 1066.01

249.30, 5787.23, 65.92Department Total 33996.14

CORONER AND RANGER3082 SCALES BIOLOGICAL LAB., INC.

900.003083 J. F. BRITTENUM & SON FUNERAL

230.003178 MISSISSIPPI MORTUARYSERVICE,INC. 75.00, 705.60

3179 MISSISSIPPI MORTUARYSERVICE,INC. 75.00, 705.60

3180 MSME 150.00150.00, 150.00, 150.00, 150.00, 150.00

1000.00, 1000.00, 1000.00, 1000.00, 1000.003180 MSME 1000.003239 J. RICHARD ANDERSON 255.363240 J. RICHARD ANDERSON 67.203323 AT&T MOBILITY 41.123302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 625.00

900.00, 633.94, 212.61, 49.72, 849.779.68, 2500.00

Department Total 15735.60DISTRICT ATTORNEY 3237 LAFAYETTE COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI

1252.35, 135.55Department Total 1387.90

COUNTY ATTORNEY3140 SA’SHA B. MARSH 500.003302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3366.66

530.25, 208.73, 48.82, 849.77, 9.683349 SA’SHA B. MARSH 500.00

Department Total 6013.91PUBLIC DEFENDER 3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 6000.00

945.00, 372.00, 87.00, 1699.54, 19.36Department Total 9122.90

ELECTIONS3289 HOLLY SPRINGS UTILITY DEPT.

91.91, 20.59, 29.353314 TED HOWELL 3760.003316 CHICKASAW ELECTRIC CO. 15.963302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 40.71

9.52, 1699.54, 19.36, 756.003337 NORTH EAST MISS ELECTRIC POWER ASSOC. 45.81

Department Total 6488.75SHERIFF ADMINISTRATION3077 FIRST STATE BANK 1456.963079 BANCORPSOUTH EQUIPMENTFINANCE 738.23

3080 BANCORPSOUTH EQUIPMENTFINANCE 1241.69

3086 NIXON POWER SERVICES 69.003096 XMC SALES, LLC 51.243101 SBA TOWERS IV, LLC 631.003108 DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 14.753119 TIRE CENTER OF HOLLY SPRINGS,LLC 45.00, 17.99

3122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 27.90, 33.98, 43.98, 9.05

50.94, 29.99, 57.98, 11.96, 172.35, 43.985.98, 115.46, 25.92

3123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 18.00, 4.00, 9.00, 4.00

3125 SAM’S CLUB/GECRB 159.9834.96, 219.00, 39.86

3128 CHEAPER THAN DIRT 353.803128 CHEAPER THAN DIRT 165.153130 HOME DEPOT CREDIT SERVICES

150.003131 HEROGEAR LLC 58.00, 26.003135 COOKS AUTO PARTS 33.98

12.15, 11.61, 9.20, 28.91, 7.50, 52.83, 34.4816.99, 47.93, 164.66, 67.70, 155.60, 6.82

1.20, 5.99, 3.43, 399.99, 23.34, 12.76, 50.59123.46, 162.40, 119.60, 38.72, 74.30, 1.80

2.70, 6.59,1.20, 340.713139 FOSTER’S BODY SHOP ANDGLASS 175.48

3143 M.A.G.I. 300.003144 FUELMAN 4726.583147 XMC SALES, LLC 199.64, 162.553148 AT&T MOBILITY 2962.813153 AT&T PRO-CABS 158.51, 3.313196 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 98.003204 DPS CRIME LAB 200.003209 LINDSEY BROS. USED PARTS

1200.003211 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 12.10, 43.98, 28.56

11.97, 9.69, 13.98, 39.98, 35.50, 57.9859.58, 9.87

3212 HOMER SKELTON FORD 187.513212 HOMER SKELTON FORD 76.563214 WILLOW BEND ANIMAL CLINIC

30.00, 17.40, 32.25, 40.003219 PREMIUM REFRESHMENT SERVICE

7.853221 WHALEY’S POTTS CAMP PARTS, INC.

53.443226 BOOKER HARDWARE 7.90

45.00, 29.09, 4.75, 32.85, 9.50, 5.75, 37.903.00, 48.99, 9.98

3227 G E CONSUMER FINANCE 68.943228 BI-COUNTY FARM SUPPLY INC.

51.90, 234.90, 90.00, 44.753233 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.

16.50, 16.503166 AT&T 3.21, 3.003168 XMC SALES, LLC 1379.49, 116.603170 COMCAST 81.043171 AT&T 322.123173 TEC 75.483156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND

36047.46, 1261.75, 9040.01, 7037.252784.71, 651.28

3175 FUELMAN 4072.433284 METROCAST COMMUNICATIONS

411.973285 DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 16.003286 FUELMAN 3880.643287 AT&T 605.903297 TRACY JEFFRIES 164.003306 AT&T 4.003310 CENTURYLINK 388.833312 GREATAMERICA FINANCIALSERVICES 43.00

3313 AT&T 459.553328 BANCORPSOUTH 949.76, 364.533329 FUELMAN 4020.663332 DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 16.003332 DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 16.003302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 7916.67

1246.88, 482.11, 112.75, 849.77, 9.683303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 35486.39

1261.75, 9040.01, 7048.74, 2743.60, 641.6724188.39, 275.53

3352 FUELMAN 4651.27Department Total 190041.38

DRIVERS LICENSE3313 AT&T 46.62

Department Total 46.62CUSTODY OF PRISONERS3109 DESOTO COUNTY SHERIFFDEPARTMENT 402.00, 810.003111 TYSON DRUGS 44.984.00, 6.00, 32.04, 4.00, 5.97, 4.00, 8.00, 4.00

15.60, 25.00, 8.00, 5.34, 4.00, 11.48, 4.0023.40, 14.60, 123.78, 4.70, 4.00, 51.54, 4.00

4.00, 7.55, 36.07, 5.97, 28.50, 4.00, 9.053.99, 30.15, 4.00

3123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 27.00, 18.003124 C D W GOVERNMENT 268.053125 SAM’S CLUB/GECRB 74.22

25.88, 22.98, 26.96, 26.96, 21.98, 19.9612.98, 13.94, 24.96, 16.97, 59.68, 71.92

17.98, 129.81, 15.98, 199.86, 49.98, 14.6871.96, 10.48, 6.98, 14.32, 1.76, 23.56, 27.16

3125 SAM’S CLUB/GECRB -267.333127 NEWELL PAPER CO. 189.96

125.76, 53.36, 69.88, 114.00, 58.50, 97.80

96.90, 55.74, 42.95, 38.45, 157.20, 143.373127 NEWELL PAPER CO. 148.603134 BOOKER HARDWARE 33.15

9.79, 16.05, 1.40, 4.99, 3.15, 5.95, 9.504.89, 96.60, 6.21, 3.95, 2.00, 39.00, 19.90

2.45, 5.95, 4.19, 10.59, 239.00, 26.373176 STINNETT DENTAL CARE, LLC

303.003177 TRINITY SERVICES GROUP

9744.003206 TAILORED JANITORIAL SUPPLIES103.92, 185.20, 264.56, 115.16, 86.91, 67.44

50.73, 58.96, 55.76, 52.25, 53.54, 95.96, 37.2585.98, 108.75, 138.80

3213 RICHMOND SERVICES 45.003217 NEWELL PAPER CO. 142.47

53.36, 69.88, 99.60, 75.60, 96.90, 150.6655.74, 85.90, 38.45, 165.12, 148.60, 142.47

53.36, 69.88, 57.84, 114.00, 75.80, 96.9055.74, 158.40, 85.90

3225 MOMAR, INC 371.003226 BOOKER HARDWARE 55.60

55.60, 83.40, 139.00, 27.80, 27.80, 3.1822.65, 13.00, 9.50, 10.90, 25.50, 6.00, 6.40

10.00,15.00, 6.95, 4.95, 2.553156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1326.64

16586.51, 2821.33, 1083.26, 253.343299 SHAPIRO 7.513300 SHAUN L. HELMHOUT, MD, PC

500.003333 POTTS CAMP FAMILY MEDICAL CLINIC 87.32, 133.42, 118.96, 52.18

52.18, 52.18, 52.18, 52.18, 147.65, 71.8152.18, 52.18, 153.05, 52.18, 61.08, 80.30

86.51, 133.42, 154.12, 133.42, 110.81, 96.1652.18, 26.57, 72.61, 99.27, 215.84, 224.40

122.73, 180.60, 135.46, 52.18, 80.30, 78.8453.85, 98.17, 224.23, 133.42, 80.30, 153.05

101.13, 198.87, 52.18, 100.73, 129.60, 102.5980.30, 170.15, 52.18, 172.72, 122.26

3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1331.20209.66, 82.53,19.30

3303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 2158.6415915.01, 2846.60, 1093.18, 255.67, 12703.443303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 144.713351 ALLIANCE HEALTH CARE 872.20

605.00, 1038.93, 2327.91, 481.00, 6769.233648.65, 2926.60, 4070.55, 783.10, 4735.86

1900.93, 1614.64, 1109.00, 2094.11, 149.421086.14, 424.00, 1418.77, 2556.93, 45.00

Department Total 124856.08CONSTABLE SOUTH

3317 AT&T MOBILITY 89.113302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 70.88

26.78, 6.26, 460.72, 5.25, 450.003304 ANTJUAN LESTER 1125.00

Department Total 2234.00CONSTABLE NORTH3319 AT&T MOBILITY 37.59

3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 70.8726.90, 6.29, 550.21, 6.27, 450.00

3305 JOHN FITCH 1945.00Department Total 3093.13

EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT3144 FUELMAN 109.703201 XEROX CORPORATION 202.673224 O’REILLY 15.44, 3.99, 16.723231 OFFICE DEPOT 251.09, 67.19, 54.593173 TEC 2.813174 METROCAST COMMUNICATIONS

142.763175 FUELMAN 154.833286 FUELMAN 194.043313 AT&T 42.573320 AT&T MOBILITY 215.543321 AT&T MOBILITY 34.623302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3369.73

530.73, 200.83, 46.97, 825.89, 9.413352 FUELMAN 91.88

Department Total 6584.00SANITATION AND WASTE REMOVAL

3088 ASCO & WASTE SERVICES OF MS 337.75

3092 ASCO & WASTE SERVICES OF MS5490.00

3126 LIBERTY TIRE RECYCLING, LLC 474.00, 495.00

3193 ASCO & WASTE SERVICES OF MS755.08

3195 ASCO & WASTE SERVICES OF MS95.70

3216 LIBERTY TIRE RECYCLING, LLC540.75, 518.25

3156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1772.29202.11, 109.88, 25.70

3241 ASCO & WASTE SERVICES OF MS6100.00

3303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1727.83202.11, 107.13, 25.06

Department Total 18978.64RABIES AND ANIMAL CONTROL3228 BI-COUNTY FARM SUPPLY INC.

35.903156 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1480.11

233.12, 90.46, 21.153303 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1480.11

233.12, 90.49, 21.16, 892.88, 10.17Department Total 4588.67

HEALTH CENTERS-CLINICS3064 MARSHALL COUNTY HEALTH DEPT.

14366.583066 COMMUNICARE 3901.58

Department Total 18268.16HOSPITAL & AMBULANCES3074 MEDSTAT EMS, INC. 14500.003141 ALLIANCE HEALTH CARE 25023.353341 BYERS LAW FIRM TRUST ACCOUNT

100000.003353 ALLIANCE HEALTH CARE 100000.00

Department Total 239523.35WELFARE ADMINISTRATION3070 MARSHALL COUNTY LITERACYCOUNCIL 281.08

Department Total 281.08COUNCIL ON AGING

3173 TEC 18.013313 AT&T 87.23

Department Total 105.24HUMAN RESOURCE AGENCY3071 NORTHEAST MS COMMUNITYACTION 6403.00

Department Total 6403.00FOOD STAMPS3121 TEDDY’S DISCOUNT BLDG. SUPPLY,INC. 7.79, 5.95, 8.32, 9.92, 147.7515.96, 51.20, 25.62, 8.32, 99.95, 29.95, 27.38

29.88, 11.99, 8.69, 41.07, 6.993122 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 31.08, 2.843123 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 44.70, 37.253127 NEWELL PAPER CO. 120.25

52.71, 68.25, 57.00, 35.71, 101.853129 ED’S SUPPLY COMPANY INC.

12.60, 83.16, 10.803132 ACOUSTICAL WHOLESALES SUPPLY, INC 164.24, 124.22, 113.62, 56.79, 229.20

382.00, 113.58, 113.62, 30.303133 QUALITY CARPETS & INTERIORS

362.40, 23.96, 181.203134 BOOKER HARDWARE 8.30

23.99, 14.49, 5.34, 3.50, 278.00, 11.453.10, 3.45, 2.00, 5.05, 1.95, 4.19, 5.35, 6.49

1.00, 1.38, 14.983210 TEDDY’S DISCOUNT BLDG. SUPPLY, INC. 99.95, 147.753211 BAREFIELD WORKPLACESOLUTIONS 9.693217 NEWELL PAPER CO. 10.88

75.50, 69.88, 101.853218 ED’S SUPPLY COMPANY INC.

53.00, 10.803223 FIRST STATE BANK 144.82, 28.703226 BOOKER HARDWARE 12.25

8.95, 20.79, 2.00, 1.38, 11.75, 16.6510.40, 3.19

3173 TEC 82.853307 AT&T 10.533313 AT&T 794.183302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 673.60

1772.48, 385.26, 147.55, 34.51, 849.773302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 9.68

Department Total 9084.66LIBRARIES

3068 MARSHALL COUNTY LIBRARY11666.67

Department Total 11666.67COMMUNITY CENTERS

3226 BOOKER HARDWARE 193.492.30, 3.78, 59.95, 6.95, 6.65, 6.65, 3.50

26.25, 3.89, 5.45, 19.85, 4.84, 5.39, 4.959.94, 1.00, 18.85, 102.45, 6.85, 1.65, 2.50

1.003232 LOWE’S 407.833164 AT&T 82.313292 NORTHCENTRAL MS ELECT. POWER

ASS’N 112.01, 13.133309 CENTURYLINK 39.88, 46.48, 41.853324 NORTHCENTRAL MS ELECT. POWERASS’N 178.27

3337 NORTH EAST MISS ELECTRICPOWER ASSOC. 82.42

Department Total 1502.31EDUCATION3155 MARSHALL COUNTY SCHOOLDISTRICT 157200.003279 MARSHALL COUNTY SCHOOLDISTRICT 1776.04, 215.04, 49.013279 MARSHALL COUNTY SCHOOLDISTRICT 95.093280 HOLLY SPRINGS SCHOOL DISTRICT

2880.14Department Total 162215.32

COUNTY EXTENSION 3093 COPYPLUS INC. 280.42

3095 THE SOUTH REPORTER 25.003226 BOOKER HARDWARE 3.25

1.79, 3.15, 5.05, 9.00, 2.103169 AT&T 380.003173 TEC 7.303313 AT&T 72.753302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 878.51

623.52, 497.58, 669.50, 165.49, 38.70Department Total 3663.11

SOIL CONSERVATION3067 SOIL CONSERVATION 2764.25

Department Total 2764.25ADVERTISING COUNTY RESOURCES 3062 HOLLY SPRINGS CHAMBER OFCOMMERCE 468.50

3063 BYHALIA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE468.50

3065 MARSHALL COUNTY MUSEUM1561.67

Department Total 2498.67OTHER ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT-IDA3302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 5416.67

2569.33, 1257.80, 489.67, 114.52, 1699.543302 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 19.36

Department Total 11566.89Fund Total 1356243.33SENATE BILL TAX ASSESSOR’S DEPARTMENT23 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1045.88

291.40, 210.62, 81.60, 19.08, 272.71, 3.10Department Total 1924.39

Fund Total 1924.39TOBACCO FUNDOTHER SHERIFF

31 SHAPIRO 139.9095.98, 139.95, 20.00, 47.95, 10.00, 69.95

209.85, 143.97, 99.95, 30.00, 47.99, 10.00209.85, 23.50, 95.98, 20.00, 47.99, 10.00

20.00, 209.85, 95.98, 139.9532 COMSERV SERVICES LLC 21.00520.00, 1525.0032 COMSERV SERVICES LLC 500.00 45.0042.00, 18.00, 225.00, 110.00, 149.00, 149.00, 525.00, 21.00, 260.00, 1525.00, 500.00 45.00,260.00, 42.00, 18.00, 225.00, 110.00, 149.00,

149.00, 525.0034 MS. POLICE SUPPLY CO., INC. 685.0033 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 1724.00

271.53, 98.73, 23.0935 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 4442.00

699.62, 273.56, 63.98, 1304.71, 14.87Department Total 19197.68

Fund Total 19197.68MARSHALL COUNTY DRUG CONTROL

OTHER SHERIFF80 BAREFIELD WORKPLACE SOLUTIONS

249.4981 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 18.00, 14.0082 GRAPHIC DESIGNS INTERNATIONAL,INC. 115.00, 75.00, 90.61

83 HOWARD TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS219.00

85 BAREFIELD WORKPLACE SOLUTIONS149.04, 147.33, 201.48, 105.54, 100.74

84 TRANSUNION RISK & ALTERNATIVE 112.25

86 AT&T 114.95Department Total 1712.43

Fund Total 1712.43ROXUL PROJECTOTHER ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT19 LANDMARK CONSTRUCTION 39750.0120 NORTHEAST MS PLANNING &DEVELOPMENT 2750.0021 LANDMARK CONSTRUCTION

87438.00Department Total 129938.01

Fund Total 129938.01EMERGENCY 911 FUNDCOMMUNICATION SERVICES201 NIXON POWER SERVICES 69.00202 CRYSTAL SPRINGS WATER OFMISSISSIPPI 9.00

203 CENTER FOR GOV. & COMMUNITYDEVELOPMNT 495.00, 495.00, 495.00

495.00, 495.00206 INTEGRATED COMMUNICATIONS, INC.

3422.47207 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGYSERVICE 224.00205 TEC 16.90204 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND

13358.16, 2103.90, 799.04, 186.87208 AT&T 2060.003308 CENTURYLINK 331.70211 AT&T 468.44212 AT&T MOBILITY 46.25209 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 3512.63

2949.35, 1017.76, 389.17, 91.02, 1699.5419.36

210 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 13288.462092.94, 794.70, 185.86, 7647.93, 87.12

Department Total 59346.57Fund Total 59346.57MARSHALL COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

OTHER CULTURE & RECREATION 23 MARSHALL COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

86.9724 MARSHALL COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

13406.71Department Total 13493.68

Fund Total 13493.68VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT

FIRE DEPARTMENT34 POTTS CAMP FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0035 POTTS CAMP FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0036 BARTON FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0037 WATSON FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0038 RED BANKS FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0039 WYATTE-CHULAHOMA FIREDEPARTMENT 5000.0040 SLAYDEN-MT. PLEASANT FIREDEPARTMENT 5000.0041 VICTORIA FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0042 CAYCE FIRE DEPARTMENT 5000.0043 BYHALIA FIRE DEPARTMENT

5000.0044 BYHALIA FIRE DEPARTMENT(STATION 2) 5000.00

45 WATERFORD FIRE DEPARTMENT5000.00

46 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 97.431204.74, 205.10, 80.50, 18.83, 23.88, .27

Department Total 61630.75Fund Total 61630.75ROAD MAINTENANCE FUND

RECEIPTS 749 CITY OF HOLLY SPRINGS 383.96750 TOWN OF BYHALIA 109.61751 TOWN OF POTTS CAMP 26.54

Department Total 520.11ROAD MAINTENANCE FUNDROAD AND BRIDGES 701 HANCOCK BANK 1208.31702 HANCOCK BANK 3883.29703 HANCOCK BANK 4410.63704 HANCOCK BANK 4462.87705 BANCORPSOUTH EQUIPMENTFINANCE 3033.54

708 TIRE CENTER OF HOLLY SPRINGS,LLC 420.00, 42.60

709 HOLLY TOOL & DIE, INC. 120.00710 CUSTOM PRODUCTS CORP 32.47710 CUSTOM PRODUCTS CORP 45.12711 FOSTER TIRE & ROAD SERVICE

2800.00, 323.40712 COOPER FEED & FERTILIZER

2150.00713 HOMER SKELTON FORD 57.48

187.00, 15.00

714 DURACO INDUSTRIES 574.07715 BILLY GRAY INC. 23288.35716 FRANK’S TECH SUPPLY, INC.

24.00, 5.00, 1.00, 26.00, 10.00, 8.00717 G & O SUPPLY COMPANY, INC.

161.76, 14.79, 29.58, 17.76, 29.58, 35.53240.00, 8.88, 176.80, 240.00, 295.92, 161.76

718 COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTORS145.00, 115.00, 220.00

719 TRACTORS & EQUIPMENT, INC16.46, 39.13

720 O’REILLY 20.89721 THE SOUTHERN CO. INC. 175.0087.40, 567.86, 535.71, -535.71, 350.00, 87.40722 ERGON ASPHALT & EMULSIONS, INC

10900.856.12, 9451.94, 5.25, 11062.51, 6.22, 11230.90

6.32, 220.00, 400.00, 100.00723 A C C REBUILDERS INC 269.45

49.98, 7.98, 2.50724 BOOKER HARDWARE 1.542.30, 1.90, 89.00, 11.98, 26.75, 72.00, 32.00

10.70725 COOKS AUTO PARTS 6.3012.99, 14.52, 22.60, 19.32, 6.50, 14.00, 105.72

25.91, 13.36, 10.27, 34.22, 24.86, 7.72, 8.7520.40, 22.66, 96.69, 50.37, 26.39, 41.76

7.36, 16.95, 15.44, 13.58, 5.56, 26.71, 56.1412.84, 21.28, 73.53, 14.21, 31.97, 19.78

71.26, 22.07, 24.65, 48.39, 16.51, 14.17,11.485.56, 5.97, 59.83, 105.72, 15.00, -15.00

726 G E CONSUMER FINANCE 88.96727 THOMPSON MACHINERY CO. 125.60159.60, 95.66, 86.12, 74.00, 133.72, 39.04728 TRI-STATE TRUCK CENTER INC.

220.36, 42.00, 40.69, 16.84, 168.06, 69.60932.43, 405.00, 10.92, 9.73, -405.00, 2512.60

244.98729 BI-COUNTY FARM SUPPLY INC.

2196.00730 FLEET PRIDE PARTS CO. 35.76

120.32, 64.56, 47.64, 26.80, 50.65, 17.003205 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.

361.77, 364.72, 361.77, 367.67734 BOONEVILLE TRUCKING 3357.01

187.00, 3245.73, 7577.42, 7651.40, 3323.17540.44, 7799.48, 7871.77, 6758.13, 7742.66

7863.29, 6794.60735 CUSTOM PRODUCTS CORP 59.36735 CUSTOM PRODUCTS CORP 65.98736 BEST-WADE PETROLEUM, INC

1419.36737 FOSTER TIRE & ROAD SERVICE

352.00, 20.00738 COOPER FEED & FERTILIZER

240.00, 112.00, 79.00739 BILLY GRAY INC. 25203.69, 22365.00740 G & O SUPPLY COMPANY, INC.

849.40, 3397.60, 212.34, 290.16, 121.601560.00, 1854.00, 380.88, 65.00, 138.3650.67, 1854.00, 360.00, 161.76, 323.52

14.79741 COMMERCIAL DISTRIBUTORS

172.00742 CNH 161.63743 JOHNNY GARRISON EQUIPMENT CO

106.96, 24.00, 27.00744 ERGON ASPHALT & EMULSIONS, INC

11173.316.29, 11011.65, 6.19, 11977.59, 6.77,12550.96

6.89, 11027.14, 6.20, 11098.80, 340.00745 COLD MIX, INC. 17178.42746 BOOKER HARDWARE 15.95747 TRUCKPRO, INC. 329.98748 THOMPSON MACHINERY CO. 54.75

44.92, 28.44732 TEC 4.00731 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 56236.28

4198.64, 9518.49, 3628.12, 848.53756 AT&T 107.38757 AT&T MOBILITY 644.45754 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 6722.48

1058.79, 411.45, 96.23, 665.71, 7.58755 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 58957.31, 4198.64, 9947.04, 3797.09,888.03, 35690.34

755 PAYROLL CLEARING FUND 406.56Department Total 522366.21

OTHER PUBLIC WORKS706 STOP ALARMS, INC, 89.85707 TAILORED JANITORIAL SUPPLIES

323.10709 HOLLY TOOL & DIE, INC. 75.00724 BOOKER HARDWARE 3.00, 9.90725 COOKS AUTO PARTS 2.16

5.73, 50.51, 7.40, 13.08, 1.60, 27.36, 88.9138.50, -38.50, 8.66

733 PARAMOUNT UNIFORM RENTAL, INC.71.30, 71.30, 71.30, 71.30

Department Total 991.46EDUCATION752 HOLLY SPRINGS SCHOOL DISTRICT

1508.62753 MARSHALL COUNTY SCHOOLDISTRICT 3562.27

Department Total 5070.89Fund Total 528948.67COUNTY OFFICE COMPLEX/PIG BLDG

COUNTY OFFICE COMPLEX/PIG BLDG 127 ALL IN ONE 40.00, 40.00, 50.00128 KONX COMPANY 311.00129 FLOIED FIRE EXTINGUISHER & STEAM

2395.00Department Total 2836.00

Fund Total 2836.00M.C. JUDICIAL CLEARING FUND RECEIPTS44 STATE TREASURER 312.00, 12893.00

1846.50, 193.50, 1447.75, 3483.50, 2004.001114.00, 40.00, 610.00, 175.50, 1330.00

130.00, 35.00, 940.00, 470.00, 100.00, 50.003760.00

45 CRIME VICTIM’S COMPENSATION754.50

46 MISSISSIPPI CRIME LAB 344.0046 MISSISSIPPI CRIME LAB 60.0047 MISS DEPT OF PUBLIC SAFETY

1744.25, 385.25Department Total 34222.75

Fund Total 34222.75M.C. PAYROLL CLEARING FUND

RECEIPTSTOTAL NET PAY 104307.89300 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK 18452.62

4315.58, 10490.58TOTAL NET PAY 146915.62TOTAL NET PAY 106502.65

301 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK 45535.4210649.50, 29718.71

302 BUREAU OF REVENUE 13800.00303 DEFFERED COMP 1905.00304 PUBLIC EMPLOYEES RETIREMENTSYSTEM 128815.94

305 AFLAC 4415.31306 GUARDIAN 10420.12307 AETNA INC. 154400.54308 U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

468.26309 BUFORD FURNITURE 86.18310 EZ CASH 118.50311 HENLEY, LOTTERHOS & HENLEY PLLC

352.42312 CHARLES D. WRIGHT 503.52313 LOCKE D BARKLEY 418.00314 LOCKE D BARKLEY 652.00315 LOCKE D BARKLEY 170.00316 INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE

75.00317 DEPARTMENT OF REVENUE 617.31318 CRDU 140.00, 553.00, 189.00

355.00, 274.00, 200.00319 CRDU 705.00320 CRDU 455.00321 CRDU 670.00322 CRDU 364.00, 340.00323 RECEIPTING UNIT 315.00324 TENNESSEE CHILD SUPPORT

250.00325 KIMBERLY ANN GOODE 200.00326 TREASURER OF VIRGINIA 355.00

Department Total 799471.67Fund Total 799471.67NORTHWEST MS. JUNIOR COLLEGE

EDUCATION23 NORTHWEST MS COMMUNITYCOLLEGE 162.66

24 NORTHWEST MS COMMUNITYCOLLEGE 25593.92

Department Total 25756.5823 NORTHWEST MS COMMUNITYCOLLEGE 162.66

24 NORTHWEST MS COMMUNITY COLLEGE 25593.92

Department Total 25756.58Fund Total 51513.16

MARSHALL COUNTY BOARD PROCEEDINGS, SEPTEMBER - 2014

By LEMON PHELPSExtension Agent III, ANR/4-H, MSU ES

Is the forest productsindustry important toMississippi's economy?

In a word, “yes.” Forestryand the forest products indus-try are economically impor-tant to Mississippi in severalways:

• About 65 percent ofMississippi’s land is in forest.This is about 19.6 millionacres according to the latestforest survey taken in 2006.

• The value ofMississippi’s timber harvesthas exceeded $1 billion eachyear since 1993 and reachedan all-time record of $1.45 bil-lion in 2005.

Mississippi’s forest prod-ucts industry consists of fourmajor sectors:

• Solid wood productswhich include pine and hard-wood lumber, plywood, poles,

oriented strand board, andother “composite” forest prod-ucts.

• Pulp and paper whichincludes fine writing papers,“liner-board” used for card-board boxes, tissue andabsorbent papers, and marketpulp.

• Wood furniture and relat-ed products which consistmostly of upholstered woodfurniture such as couches,love seats, and recliners.

• Timber harvestingwhich includes the harvestingand transportation sector.

According to a 2008 studyby James Henderson and IanMunn of MSU:

• The total industry outputof Mississippi’s forest prod-ucts industry generates aneconomic impact of nearly$17.4 billion annually.

• The forest productsindustry accounts for $7.1 bil-lion annually in value added

economic impact for the state. • The MS forest products

industry contributes to 8.3percent of all jobs inMississippi. An estimated123,659 full or part-time jobshave their “roots” inMississippi’s forest productsindustry. (This total includesdirect, indirect, and inducedemployment).

• In terms of wages andsalaries paid annually,Mississippi’s forest productsindustry generates astatewide economic impact of$4.4 billion.

• In 2007, Mississippi’s for-est landowners, mostly pri-vate, non-industry owners,collected $630.8 million fortheir standing timber sold thatyear.

Timber is an importantagricultural crop in the localeconomy of virtually everycounty outside the Delta.Forestry and the forest prod-

ucts industry are a major com-ponent of Marshall County’seconomy.

Forest-related economicsectors generate value notonly within the forest-relatedsectors but also in other sec-tors of the economy. The eco-nomic contribution of forestrelated sectors and theirimpacts on other sectors canbe estimated using input-out-put analysis.

Using 2007 data, it is esti-mated that forestry and forestproducts created a total out-put of $54 million in MarshallCounty. In any year, timberwill be among the top threemost valuable agriculturalcrops in 65 to 70 counties outof 82 total counties in MS.

For more information youmay call the Marshall CountyExtension Service at 662-252-3541, [email protected]. ormsucares.com.

Forestry - a major component of the county’s economy

Attention beagle lovers! Attention all beagle lovers! Riley is an adult beagle and a sweet guy!He loves human attention and needs some love! He recentlyreceived treatment for heartworms but is doing fine now. He’s about2 years old. Call the Marshall County Humane Society to see him,662-564-2900 or [email protected]. His $100 fee includesall shots and heartworm and flea preventatives up to date, plusmicrochip. See HumSocMs.petfinder.com for complete list of ouradoptable animals..

Page 25: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

• HOMES FOR SALE

3BD, 2BA immaculate brick homeon 3.1 acres, 280 Tina Dr., $169,900.Mt. Pleasant. Great neighborhood.Jeremy Ryan Crye-Leike Realtors901-488-8461. (14tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––3BD 2BA, super nice & clean, newroof, floors, cabinets, 2.5 acres, 4-stall barn, saltwater pool. 38 SadikCove, Barton area. $177,500.Jeremy Ryan Crye-Leike Realtors901-488-8461. (18tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––230 BARRY RD.- 3700 sq. custombuilt, rare home on 56 very secludedacres with 40x60 workshop. 1/2 pas-ture, 1/2 wooded with small pond.Very nice place. Call for details.$649,900. Jeremy Ryan Crye-LeikeRealtors 901-488-8461. (29tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––HOME FOR SALE, 1857 MooreRd., Red Banks, 3BD, 2BA, brick,on 2 acres. $145,000, $7,500 down,$798 month, plus taxes and insur-ance. WAC. 662-252-9224, 662-252-2511. (42-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––HOUSE AND 1 acre on CountryChurch Rd. in Benton County.Freshly remodeled inside and outwith new floors, paint, metal roof,etc. 3BD, 1BA, $69,000. Financingavailable WAC. 901-827-5669, 662-274-4444. (43tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––LEASE/PURCHASE 3BD, 2BA,double attached garage. $2,000down, $700 per month. 662-551-6640. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––GOODMAN RD., Cayce Rd. area,1,500 sq. ft., 3BD, 1BA, 2.33 fencedacres, wrought-iron, auto. drivewaygate. $119,500. 901-827-2701 formore info. No lease to purchasecalls. (43-45p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• MOBILE HOMESCREDIT A little low? With a qualifiedincome we can get you approved ona new home with a score as low as575 and only 10% down. And that iswith a fixed interest rate! WindhamHomes, Inc., Corinth, 888-287-6996.(04tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

MOBILE HOME for sale, 2 acres, inPotts Camp area. Financing avail-able. 662-544-1901. (13tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––1830 SQ. FT., 3BD, 2BA mobilehome for sale, on 1.5+ acres, Byhaliaarea. Call Patricia Young, 901-485-2559. (31tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––SAVE $ SAVE $ SAVE $. Red tagclearance event, over 15 modelsmust go. Save thousands on modelprice cuts. These homes are loaded.Hurry now for for best selection.Clayton Homes of Corinth, MS, 3802Hwy. 72 W., 1 mile west of hospital.(38-12c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––DOUBLE WIDE For Sale, 28x42,3BD, 2BA. Fresh paint and new floorcovering in the baths. Delivered andset up for $24,500.Call 662-419-9762 (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––IN GREAT SHAPE, 16x80 3BD,2BA singlewide for sale. CHA,fridge, new carpet. Home is move-inready. $17,500 incl. delivery & setup. Call 662-760-2120. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––28X70, 4BD, 2BA Southridge dou-blewide for sale.Vinyl siding, shingleroof, CHA, all kit. appliances. Homeneeds a little TLC. $21,900 incl.delivery & set up. CASH ONLY. Call662-760-2120. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• FOR RENT ALL RENTAL PROPERTY adver-tised herein is subject to the FederalFair Housing Act, which makes it ille-gal to advertise any preference, limi-tation or discrimination based onrace, color, religion, sex, handicap,familial status, or national origin, orintention to make any such prefer-ence, limitation or discrimination. Wewill not knowingly accept any adver-tising for real estate which is in viola-tion of the law. All persons are here-by informed that all dwellingsadvertised are available on an equalopportunity basis. For more informa-tion on the Fair Housing Act, go towww.hud.gov. (tfn)––––––––––––––––––––––––––NO PETS: 1BD apt., fully furnished,$390. 2BD and 3BD also. 3BD haslarge yard, carport and den. Depositrequired. No calls before 8 a.m. orafter 5 p.m. 662-252-2177. (51tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––THE GROVE AT CAYCE Anupscale, manufactured home com-munity. Country living, nice, safeneighborhood. 2BD, 2BA, 3BD, 2BA,pay weekly, utilities and water includ-ed. Move in today. Playground andswimming pool. 662-851-3572.(21tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

NICE 2BD trailer for rent, privateproperty, 6 miles east of Slayden,4380 Hwy. 72, Lamar. 662-216-3565. (41-48c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––HOUSE FOR RENT, Cayce Rd.,4BD, 2BA, detached garage, $800dep., $800 rent., 901-288-6556.(41-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––COTTAGE FOR RENT, $500 amonth, utilities furnished, up to $100a month. 5209 Hwy. 4 East, HollySprings. 901-493-7640, 901-288-5459. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

VICTORIA MOBILE Home Park,1BD and 2BD mobile home availablefor rent. 662-838-4949. (41tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––HOME FOR RENT, brick, 3BD,1BA, carport, large lot, 3 milessouth of Holly Springs, Old Hwy. 7South. $695 dep. $695 rent. 901-378-9520. (43-46p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2BD MOBILE home for rent, 5644Liberty Rd. No pets. Rent, securitydep. and water required. 662-224-9036, 662-224-3343. (43-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• COMMERCIALOFFICE SPACE for lease, locatedbehind Cousin’s Shell, 621 Hwy. 7South, Holly Springs, MS. Phone:662-252-3150. (42-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• REAL ESTATE2 ACRES, Byhalia area. Ownerfinancing. Call 662-544-1007.(20tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2 ACRES for sale, 10 minutes southof Collierville at Roper Plantation.Only $29,995 with $295 down; 9%APR, payments only $238.97 permonth. Call 662-544-1007 forbrochure. (20tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––LEASE/PURCHASE HOMES. 6lots, 3 to 6 acres each. Will finance,land, house or doublewide. 1878 S.Slayden Rd. Hunting land. 662-316-2821. (30tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––29.3 ACRES, Slayden area, heavilywooded with excellent homesitesand plenty of game. $99,000,Jeremy Ryan Crye-Leike Realtors901-488-8461. (12tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––134 ACRES, 8 acre spring fedstocked lake, rolling pastureland,fenced, beautiful views! Hwy 349 Sof Potts Camp. $2495/acre. JeremyRyan Crye-Leike Realtors 901-488-8461. (15tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––3,200 SQ. FT. building with paintbooth on .7 acres. Currently rentedand used as a body shop. There isalso a 411 sq. ft. office on property.Located in a high traffic area acrossfrom NAPA Auto Parts in HollySprings. Call Doug at 662-544-9333.(42tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––FOR SALE: 54 acres, 540Hudsonville Rd. & 670 North WestSt. Holly Springs, MS. $99,000.$5,000. Down $545. Per month,3.5% interest, VAR, 240 monthsWill divide, 35 acres with lake$79,000, $4,000 Down, $450.Month 3.98% fixed. 19 acres$28,500, $1,500 Down, $199. Month6.3%. 662-252-9224. (40-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––LAND FOR SALE, 5 acres, CayceRd. at Dogwood, half mile south ofHwy. 302. 901-734-8510. (42-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

110 ACRES south of Potts Campalong Brownlee Rd. Fenced, 1-pond100% pasture. Perfect for livestock.$1695/acre. Jeremy Ryan Crye-Leike Realtors 901-488-8461.(18tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––NATURE LOVER'S paradise in MS,25 miles from Collierville. For sale: 7beautiful acres with pond, roads,cabin, mobile home, storage, RVsetups. Call 901-491-2572. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––52 ACRES in Benton County onOld Hwy. 72 and Medlock Rd. Goodlaying land with lots of road frontageon a nice paved road. May divide.$94,500. Owner financing available,$3,000 down $599/month. Call ortext, 662-274-4444, 901-827-5669.(43tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––1.5 ACRES in Benton County onOld Hwy. 72. Beautiful large oaktrees with nice homesite. No restric-tions, Nice paved road. $19,900,owner financing available, $1,000down, $170/month. Call/text: 662-274-4444 901-827-5669. (43tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––50 ACRES pasture land, wateraccess, 662-252-7653. (43-44p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2-5 ACRE LOTS for sale, RedBanks on Moore Rd. $16,500; also,25 acres in Tate County. 662-306-0321. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2 LOTS IN subdivision in PottsCamp, $8,900, $500 down, $65month, 7% for 240 months. 662-252-9224. (43-46c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• AUTOS364 MLK JR. Dr., Holly Springs,662-252-4533. New tire sale:225/60/16s, $69.99; 215/60/16s$69.99; 205/60/15s, $59.99;235/75/15s $79.99. Over 3,000 usedtires. Fix flats, repair tires, tire rota-tion. Mon.-Fri., 8-5, Sat., 8-3. OwnerJohn Alan Hayes. (18tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2004 IMPALA, sunroof, leather,$2,850, $600 down, financing avail-able, WAC. 2006 Impala, $3,150,$600. WAC. 662-252-3233,www.autoplaceinc.com. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2009 MERCURY Mariner, 4 cyl.,great gas mileage, black leather inte-rior, auto, extra clean, 70,000 miles,$8,900. 901-299-2625, HollySprings, (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2000 CHEV. Silverado Z71, 4x4, ext.cab, extra clean, good tires, 81,000miles, $6,600. 901-299-2625, HollySprings. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––1940 PLYMOUTH B coupe, 350Chevy 700 R trans. Ford 9 in. rearend. No interior, new tires. $15,000obo. 901-438-9403. (41-44p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

2001 GMC Sonoma crew cab, 4x4,clean, V-6 auto, $5,300. 901-299-2625, Holly Springs, (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––1993 CHEV. van, new tires, newbrakes, all in good cond. One owner.No oil use. 662-851-7948, 662-403-0855. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2010 CHEVY Cobalt LS, auto, 4 dr.,4 cyl., 80,000 miles, $6,250. 901-299-2625, Holly Springs. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2012 FOCUS, black interior, 4 cyl.,great gas mileage, 67,000 miles,extra clean. $9,150. 901-299-2625,Holly Springs. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––1997 OLDSMOBILE Silhouette, 7-passenger van, new serpentinebelt, new battery, new brakes. Verygood cond., inside and out. Powereverything. Privacy glass. $2,800,154K miles, 662-838-2554. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––2001 EXPEDITION, $2,500; 1995F250, diesel, $3,000; 1988 F150,4x4, $2,500; tractor, 574International, $7,000. RobertSexton, 662-252-6462. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• FARM EQUIPMENT5000 FORD tractor, diesel, powersteering, hydraulics, good cond.,$5,500. 731-658-8396. (42-43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

•MISC. FOR SALECATFISH FOR SALE - Filet andwhole. Call 662-838-2444 (46tfnc)–––––––––––––––––––––––––1ST CHOICE Thrift Store. Free DVDmovie of your choice with a purchaseof $20 or more. New and used itemsarriving daily. 540 Hwy. 178 E, next toQuality Carpet.10 a.m.-6 p.m., Mon.-Sat., 662-544-2338. (07tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––BIG ROUND bales of hay, $50-$60.662-838-7094, 662-838-6123.(36tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––PORCH SWINGS Call for details662-838-9889; cell, 662-255-1342.(11tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––TWO WHEEL trailer with stepsidebed from antique truck. $500, 901-299-2625, Holly Springs. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––TWO WHEEL trailer, 4x10, goodcedar floor, good tires, $285, 901-299-2625, Holly Springs. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––TANDEM AXLE trailer, car hauler,$750 obo. 901-493-0039. (43p)

HAY, 6X6, big rolls, fertilized, $40each. 662-252-7653. 43-44p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––FREEZER, UPRIGHT, white, 13cubic ft., $125 obo. 901-848-2717.(43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––WASHER AND dryer for sale,Whirlpool Cabrio, $300. 662-252-1691. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––ITEMS FOR SALE: Farm equip-ment, hay, large bales; trees: shadetrees, crepe myrtle, maple, oaks,magnolias, cypress and manymoore. 901-921-5373. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––CAMPER TRAILER for sale. 662-224-9036, cell or 662-224-3343,home. (43-44c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• YARD SALESYARD SALE, 570 Williams Road,Byhalia. 10/24, from 2 p.m. untildusk. 10/25, daylight until 4 p.m.Lots of antique farm implements,wagon wheels, plows, misc. house-hold items. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––YARD SALE, Sat., Oct. 25, 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Sweetwater Farms. Severalfamilies. Look for balloons. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––GARAGE SALE, rain or shine, 7a.m.-4 p.m., Fri.-Sat., 3182 MooreRd., Red Banks, off Cayce Rd.(43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––BIG OUTDOOR yard sale, Oct. 23-25, all clothes 50¢ each or 3 for $1.Hwy. 309 S., Warsaw area, 1531Byhalia Rd., corner of 309 and St.Paul Rd. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––YARD SALE, 662-252-4469, 300 E.Van Dorn. Weedeaters, electrictools, hand tools, small refrigera-tors, bed rails, bookshelves, winterjackets, coats, sweaters, shirts,jeans, pants, dresses, tennis shoes,shoes, bags, hats, jewelry, glass-ware, dishes, 6 ft. metal trailer, andmany other items. (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

• HELP WANTEDLOCAL COMPANY seeking moti-vated, career-oriented customerservice representative for part-timeposition. Experience in finance, col-lections and customer service a plus.Send resume to P.O. Box 490, HollySprings, MS 38635 or [email protected].(42-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 7

southreporter.com

All Classified Ads Run in The South Reporter • Pigeon Roost News & THE WORLD WIDE WEB!

Classifieds on the InternetOnly 662-252-4261

1-800-468-3820

For 20 Words25¢ peradditionalword.$2.00 billing

$800Major Credit Cards

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DEADLINE MONDAY 10 A.M.

B&B CONCRETE, CO., INC.On The Grow in North Mississippi!

Truck Drivers for Holly Springs

B&B CONCRETE CO., INC.522 East Industrial Park Road

Holly SpringsTelephone calls will not be accepted.

Equal Opportunity Employer

Need good drivers. Full-time employees desired. Must beat least twenty-one years of age. Must have validMississippi Commercial Driver’s License and a cleandriving record. Good benefits and retirement.

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A customized mix of mobile, social media, and searchsolutions to help businesses find and keep customers.97% of customers research online before making a

purchase.Translation: if potential customers can’t find your business online,

you’re missing out on a huge chunk of your market.Now is the time to do your research and let Dixie Net help you get

more customers with web hosting and web design.“Dixie-Net now offers web hosting plans that put you in the driver’s

seat, with an all new user friendly control panel.”With a web site from Dixie net you can update new products,display special events, and advise of the latest happenings at

your business.During these economic times ALL businesses should have a

web site,No business is too big or too small!

Do your self a favor and call Dixie Net to get your web site up andgoing and even update your old web site at 800 918 9023.

Dixie Net –bringing the world to your hometown

Eddie Norton - Dixie-Net662 993 2120

[email protected]

For Sale By Owner: Northeast MS Planning and DevelopmentDistrict

Telephone: 662-728-6248 ext. 311Contact: Donna Hester, Loan Officer

Total 1.61 acres, more or less located at 190, 192, 194, 196, and198 N. Memphis Street and 200 N. Memphis Street, Holly Springs

Open House on Friday, October 17, 2014 from 11:00 to 12:00 forSpringhollow Plaza and 12:00 to 1:00 p.m. for Moffitt Hair Care

Salon or other hours by appointment.Building #1 Springhollow Plaza: 8,939 total sq. ft. Formerly Annie’sRestaurant at 198 N. Memphis and PrymeTime Bar & Grill plus 3rental spaces. More information can be viewed online athttp://www.nempdd.com/properties/198nmemphis.

Building #2 Moffitt Hair Care Salon at 200 N. Memphis Street, HollySprings, MS: 1,724 sq. ft. Commercial building currently occupied as a beauty salon. Central heating/air conditioning.Has 8’x10’ storage building in back. Can be seen online athttp://www.nempdd.com/properties/200nmemphis.

Written offers will be accepted through 3 p.m. on November 10, 2014, atNEMPDD, P.O. Box 600, Booneville, MS, 38829. Serious offers will be considered on November 13, 2014. NEMPDD reserves the right to negotiatewith any offer or in the best interest of NEMPPDD.

-

Wyatte Community - E. of Senatobia3736 Wyatte Tyro Rd. Senatobia

EXC. DEER and TURKEY HUNTING OPPORTUNITY

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***WANTED***Holly Springs School District

Full-Time and Part-Time Bus Drivers for theremainder of the 2014-15 school year. You

must have a Commercial Driver’s License tobe employed. Competitive pay and Health

Insurance provided to full-time drivers.Contact Adam F. Andrews at

252-2183 if interested.

Welcome Home To 43 Rachel Cove, Byhalia, MS

LISTED AT $425,000This custom-built home has hardwood floors up and down. The keeping roomwith vaulted ceiling is a sight not to be missed. The den/living room has a gasfireplace. Large kitchen with Silestone countertops and a walk-in pantry. Themaster suite has a luxury bath with HUGE walk-in closet. Upstairs is a largemedia room, all video equipment and seating remain. There are 2 bedroomsup and a full bath. The lawn and landscape have a sprinkler system connect-ed to your own well. The home also has an automatic generator. WOW! Somuch to see! Call Gerald for your personal tour, 901-413-2233.

Gerald Williams - Weichert Realtor - Benchmark 901-202-2000

FOR SALE600 Highway 4 W

Holly Springs

3 bedroom, 2 bath, withlarge bonus room that couldbe bedroom or game room.

Price $219,000. $10,000down with approved credit.

$209,000, financed at3.25%, Var. $909.00 mo.,360 payments plus taxes

and insurance.

662-252-9224

GROUND FLOOR BUSINESSOPPORTUNITY

A new ground floor company is inter-viewing for a unique and prosperousbusiness opportunity. The companyoffers part-time and full-time, thepotential to earn a career levelincome, and freedom to work on yourown terms. Training and support pro-vided.

Contact me now to partner with aBillion dollar company and change

your life today! Free gift to the first 10 to

contact me!731.300.2575

HOLLY SPRINGS SCHOOL DISTRICTJob Description

Technology Specialist/Fixed Asset Clerk

Qualifications:• Completion of a 2-year technical school or 2 years ofcollege or university.• One year prior computer, telecommunications, and/orelectronic data processing experience with PC hard-ware. Also, extensive equipment support experiencewith Desktop and Server Operating Systems. OfficeSuites and a working knowledge of current network pro-tocols and standards including TCP/IP, IPX, DHCP andDNS.• Such alternatives to the above qualifications as theBoard may find appropriate and acceptable.

Job Summary:To maintain all computer equipment, backend of appli-cations and networks to ensure optimum performancethat maximizes educational use at all times and prepareand maintain depreciation schedule in conformancewith Governmental Accounting Standards (GASB-34-Fixed Assets).

You must go to the district website to fill out the application at www.hssd.k12.ms.us.

Joseph Selman, Technology Director 840 Highway 178 East

Holly Springs, MS 38635662.252.2183

Page 26: The South Reporter - eType Servicesarchives.etypeservices.com/Holly1/Magazine67295/... · Marshall County Humane Society. This year’s supper was held at the Episcopal Church Family

By JAMES L. CUMMINSDuring the past several

weeks, we have witnessed thewarmer temperatures of sum-mer change to fall-like tem-peratures. Since fall is in fullswing, wildlife enthusiaststhroughout Mississippi willbe engaged in new activi-ties...hiking, fall fishing andsquirrel and deer hunting!

Mississippi’s hikers,anglers and hunters arespending many hours in thewoods and on the water thistime of year. If you are one ofthem, you may want to consid-er keeping a logbook of yourtime spent outdoors. Some ofthe most productive anglersand hunters I know keepaccurate and detailed recordsof their trips. I firmly believethat this record keeping is abig part of what makes themso successful.

Logbooks can be extreme-ly helpful to you in the comingyears. You will be able to lookback through your book toexamine successful trips tofind out what made them so

successful.When beginning your log-

book, enter as much data aspossible about each outing.Many years from now, youmay not be able to remembera certain hike or certain hunt-ing or fishing trip, but if youhave taken the time to recorddetailed information aboutthat trip as it took place, youwill have everything you needin black and white.

When compiling data froman outing, you will need torecord all pertinent informa-tion about that outing. Thingssuch as date, time, weatherconditions, river stages, areaswhere you saw wildlife and/orcaught fish, areas where youdid not see wildlife and/orcatch fish, depths which wereproductive, baits and luresthat were productive (includ-ing sizes, types and colors),species of fish which werecaught and who you werefishing or hunting with. All ofthis information will be valu-able in the future.

You should develop your

own system of recording thisdata. A system that is person-ally tailored will serve youbest. After all, if you cannotinterpret what you have writ-ten, your records will be virtu-ally useless to you.

Keep in mind that log-books can be used for all sortsof outdoor activities. Squirreland deer hunters would bewell served by keeping adetailed log. We have all hunt-ed certain areas that, duringcertain times of the season,are more productive than oth-ers. Some of these areas youmay have hunted for the firsttime and you want to makesure you will be able to findthe area again in the future.Keep a record of it and youwill!

Keeping a logbook of allyour outdoor activities willenable you to be a more suc-cessful hunter, angler orwildlife viewer whether youare in the field or on the water.

James L. Cummins is exec-utive director of Wildlife

Mississippi, a non-profit, con-servation organization found-ed to conserve, restore and

enhance fish, wildlife andplant resources throughoutMississippi.

The South Reporter - Thursday, October 23, 2014 - Section 2 - Page 8

AVIATION MANUFACTURINGCAREERS - Get trained as FAA certifiedAviation Technician. Financial aid forqualified students. Job placement assis-tance. Call AIM 866-367-2510.

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AVERITT EXPRESS New Pay IncreaseFor Regional Drivers! 40 to 46 CPM +Fuel Bonus! Also, Post-Training PayIncrease for Students! (Depending onDomicile) Get Home EVERY Week +Excellent Benefits. CDL-A Required. 888-602-7440. [email protected] Opportunity Employer - Females,Minorities, Protected Veterans andIndividuals With Disabilities AreEncouraged To Apply.

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CHURCH FURNITURE: Does yourchurch need pews, pulpit set, baptistery,steeple, windows? Big Sale on new cush-ioned pews and pew chairs. 1-800-231-8360. www.pews1.comREDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL! Get awhole home satellite system installed atNO COST and programming starting at$19.99/month. FREE HD/DVR upgrade tonew callers, so CALL NOW. 1-877-381-8004.SAWMILLS FROM ONLY $4,397 -MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your ownbandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. Instock, ready to ship. FREE info/DVD:www.norwoodsawmills.com 1-800-578-1363, Ext. 300N.

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NEW!!!MONROE FLEA MARKET

Open EVERY Weekend!!Indoor/Outdoor

12,000 Square Feet Heated and CooledVendors - Get your space today while they last.

Half-Price for 6 months signup for the first 30 vendors. Located at Okolona Hwy. 45 Alt.

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Okolona, MS 38860(former location of Eden’s Antiques and Sterling Antique Mall)

For vendor information call Kim at662-447-5110 • 662-436-2285

WANTED: Jewelry repair, watch repair, furniture cleaning and hardwaresupplies, food, knives, signs, furniture repair, clothing, pets, fruit, vegetables, antiques, electronics, computer repair, cell phones, jewelry, cell phone repair,hunting supplies, tools, framing, bird houses, lawn furniture, arts and craftsitems, storage unit, gazebos, plants, western items, candles and more!

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Kelly Luther has the background to know how the system works…he has the experience to rule fairly — to punish those who would take advantage of the vulnerable members of our community.

Paid for & approved by the Committee to Elect Kelly LutherNovember 4 Post Office Box 11, New Albany, MS 38652

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OTR TRUCK Drivers Wanted,Experience Required, Apply inPerson, 80 Homan Rd., PottsCamp, MS, 662-333-9400. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DRIVERS Regional, HomeWeekends. $1,000 minimum pay perweek! CDL-A with 1 yr. experience.Call DM Bowman today. 800-609-0033. (41-44p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––DRIVERS: CARTER EXPRESS.CDL-A: Solos up to 38 cpm to start.Teams up to 47 cpm to start. HomeWeekly. No Slip Seat. No Touch,Newer Equipment. Recent DriverGrads Welcome. 855-347-9590. (41-44p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––DRIVER NEEDED for 18 wheelFreight Liner. Must have CDLlicense and at least 5 or more yearsof road experience. Need to submita resumé of past work exp. Contact:Beard’s Trucking, 662-333-7827.(41-43p) ––––––––––––––––––––––––––BOOTH SPACES available forbeauticians. Rental or commission.Also need a massage therapist andnail technician. 662-890-5144, 901-489-5276. (42-45c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––

• SERVICESNEED TO MOVE? Call Ed’s MovingService. 662-252-2641 (51tfnc)–––––––––––––––––––––––––LET US CLEAN your carpets.Residential or commercial. Free esti-mates, no hidden costs. New state ofthe art equipment. Master CarpetCleaning Service, 662-252-2641(46tfnc)–––––––––––––––––––––––––MLC CONSTRUCTION - specializ-ing in remodeling, additions, con-crete work, sun decks, painting,wood fences, roofing. MikeCummins, 901-335-8842. (17tfnc)–––––––––––––––––––––––––APPLIANCE REPAIR and refrigera-tion. Over 35 yrs. exp. All majorbrands, 662-252-3654, 901-603-6352. (02tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––TIRED OF dingy ceilings? We repairand paint ceilings. Repair sheetrock,roofing, fencing, decks. All carpentrywork. Ref. available, insured. 901-606-3319. (05tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––ROBERT’S COMPUTER SERVICE.Virus removal, computer repair,tablets, phones, camera systems,networking, WiFi and more.662-504-4041, 662-274-1878;[email protected]. (10tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––DOZER, TRACKHOE and backhoework, driveways, house pads, ponds,clearing, etc. Specializing in mobilehome prep. 662-587-3363. (46tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––NEED JUNK hauled off? Call 901-299-4044. Also buy junk cars andhaul off any scrap metal, no charge.(03tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––WE REPAIR all makes and modelsof TVs. Any electronics, any smallappliances. Specialize in big screenTVs. 662-629-0614. (43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––PHILLIPS TREE SERVICE is aninsured, accredited business, withthe Better Business Bureau, servingsouthwest Tenn. and northwestMiss. 662-216-9369. (37-48c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––PRO IMAGE Lawncare. Mowing,edging, yard cleanup, tree trimming,etc. Rates starting as low as $25 peryard. Free weed killer treatment onall driveways and sidewalks. Seniorcitizen discounts. Licensed. Tommy,901-828-6748 for free estimates.(13tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––SUMMERS LANDSCAPE Services.Lawn mowing, trimming, mulchingbeds, licensed and insured. All yourlandscape needs. Member BBB.Free estimates. 901-489-1120.(20tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––CHILD CARE services available,flexible hours, meals, snacks provid-ed. Clean, smoke-free home. Greatenvironment. All ages. 20+ yearsexp., pre-school activities, $80week. Call Terri, 662-838-2306,901-651-4914. (39tfnc)––––––––––––––––––––––––––FENCING: all types, new andrepairs, chain link, wood, rails, decksand arbors, years of exp. No job toosmall. 901-428-4066. (40-43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––W.I. PAVING, gravel, sand, dirt, whiterock, residential renovations, trenchdigging. Concrete and asphalt drive-ways. Call Roy Ramsey, 901-292-3689. (35tfnc odd)––––––––––––––––––––––––––BYHALIA BARBER SHOP, 2437Church St. Open Tues., Thursday,Fri. and Sat., 9-3. Barbers, Charles,662-551-6217; Paul, 901-568-7988.(40-43c)––––––––––––––––––––––––––TUTORIAL SERVICES, 1st through6th grades. Reading and mathskills. 662-420-8365. (40-43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––• PERSONALS“MOST ASSUREDLY I say to you,unless one is born again, he cannotsee the Kingdom of God.” John 3:3.Our brothers, where art thou? (43p)––––––––––––––––––––––––––THE SOUTH REPORTER makes everyeffort to screen the legitimacy of our clas-sified advertisers. However, we cannotguarantee their legitimacy, so we adviseyou to beware of offers that appear toogood to be true, misleading ads and thosethat ask you to send money. (01t

Conservation CornerKeeping accurate and detailed records of fishing/hunting trips

HELP WANTEDHousecleaning

ServiceExperience necessary,

honest, trustworthy,dependable.

Part-time will work intofull-time.

Mon.-Fri. (Daytime)Starting From

Collierville Area.901-494-8598

Classifieds continued

SSppaaccee SSaavveerrSSttoorraaggeePPEERRSSOONNAALL

SSTTOORRAAGGEE UUNNIITTSSRRVV && BBOOAATTSSTTOORRAAGGEE

666622--554444--22997700Hwy. 7 North and

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MASONWATER WELLS662-838-5550

7 DAYS A WEEK- INSTALLATION -

SALES -- SERVICE -