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Commercial Dispatch Eedition 4-29-19

Commercial Dispatch eEdition 4-29-19

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
543 views12 pages

Commercial Dispatch Eedition 4-29-19

Commercial Dispatch eEdition 4-29-19

Uploaded by

The Dispatch
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Established 1879 | Columbus, Mississippi

CDISPATCH.COM 75 ¢ Newsstand | 40 ¢ Home Delivery


Monday | April 29, 2019

Zachary’s ‘will be back’ after fire


Electrical fire damages downtown restaurant Sunday; Eric Ford (left)
and Wilson

more than $10K raised to help employees Beck remove


wall hangings
from inside
By AMANDA LIEN “I’m choking back tears here.” Zachary’s
alien@cdispatch.com Firefighters with Columbus Fire and following an
Rescue responded to the call at the down- electrical fire
In the aftermath of the fire that badly town restaurant at about 5:15 a.m. Sunday, that rendered
damaged Zachary’s restaurant Sunday, according to CFR Assistant Chief Duane the restaurant
Eric Ford and Zachary’s general manager Hughes. They contained and extinguished completely
Wilson Beck had a difficult task: removing the fire, believed to be electrical in origin, inoperable
the photographs, signs and other singed within half an hour, CFR Public Informa- Sunday. Most of
memorabilia from the walls of the restau- tion Officer Anthony Colom said. the photographs
rant. No injuries were reported, but Zacha- and memorabil-
“There’s a lot of memories right here,” ry’s will have to close, at least temporarily. ia can be saved,
Beck said, al-
said Ford, a longtime Zachary’s patron, as Hughes said while the most damage
though some of
Beck passed him a framed photograph. was in the kitchen and back part of the them will need
“You’re telling me,” Beck replied, pull- building, there was extensive smoke dam- new frames.
ing his baseball cap lower on his forehead. See Zachary’s, 6A Amanda Lien/Dispatch Staff

Under the
MONDAY PROFILE Capitol Dome

Restoring
voting rights
arduous in
Mississippi
The Associated Press

JACKSON — Mississippi has a diffi-


cult system for people to regain voting
rights after being convicted of some
felonies.
Legislators did nothing to change
that during their recent session, and a
federal court case that is pushing for
change has seen little action in recent
months.
The Mississippi Constitution strips
voting rights from people convicted of
10 felonies, including forgery and biga-
my. The attorney general later expand-
ed that list to 22, adding crimes that
included including timber larceny and
carjacking.
Mississippi has almost 3 million res-
idents. About 218,000 of them with felo-
ny records remained disenfranchised in
Amanda Lien/Dispatch Staff 2016, and only about 7 percent of those
Columbus-based artist Andre Ray shows a few of many paintings he stores in his shed-turned-art studio on were still imprisoned, according to the
Highway 45 Sunday. His specialty is landscapes, but he also enjoys painting portraits, he said. Sentencing Project, a national advocacy
group that seeks to eliminate racial dis-
parities in the criminal justice system.

Andre Ray brings collaborative To regain voting rights in Mississip-


pi, a former convict must go win permis-
sion from two-thirds of the Legislature

spirit to art at area recovery center and, eventually, the governor. Only a
minuscule number of people find suc-
cess in that process.
During Republican Gov. Phil Bry-
By AMANDA LIEN ant’s first seven years in office, he let 18
alien@cdispatch.com voting rights restoration bills become

O
law without his signature. Each bill is
ne of Andre Ray’s favorite for one person only. There were zero in
parts about art is its collabo- 2012, one in 2013, three in 2014, four in
rative nature. 2015, zero in 2016, six in 2017, and four
When he’s not painting in his in 2018. Bryant also vetoed one suffrage
shed-turned-studio on Highway 45, restoration bill last year.
he’s working as an art therapist at Now in his final year in office, Bryant
The Pines and Cady Hill Recovery signed bills to restore voting rights to
Center, an in-patient addiction 14 people. He let two others become law
treatment facility in downtown Co- without his signature.
lumbus. He holds regular sessions Bryant’s office declined a request
with clients there, teaching them from The Associated Press for an in-
the basics of painting and drawing. terview with the governor about why
“Right now the ladies are doing he signed suffrage bills this year after
a mural,” he said. “We’ve got an previously taking a passive approach.
eight-foot-by-four-foot space to His spokesman, Knox Graham, said
work with. I kind of get them start- the governor and his staff thoroughly
ed and then let them go ahead and Amanda Lien/Dispatch Staff review each bill that lands on his desk.
keep going.” Andre Ray shows a landscape painting he brought to a session at Pines “In years past, he has let suffrage
Ray has found that teaching and Cady Hill. One of his clients there suggested he add the goat near bills become law without his signature,
See Profile, 3A the lower left corner. but decided to sign many of them this
year due to the evolution of criminal
See Capitol Dome, 3A

Weather Five Questions Calendar Local Folks Public


1 What exercise machine was used for Tuesday, April 30 meetings
prisoner reform in Britain in the 18th and April 30:
■ Walk a Mile in Her Shoes: The
19th centuries? Lowndes County
2 What Shakespeare character inspired W’s Counseling Center invites males
Supervisors, 9
the first name of the title character in the from the community to don high heels
a.m., County
graphic novel “Y: The Last Man”? and Walk a Mile in Her Shoes, bring-
Courthouse
3 What NFL team was caught videotaping ing awareness to the issue of sexual
New York Jets coaching signals in a 2007 May 6:
Allie Pounders assault. The walk, rescheduled due to
scandal that became known as “Spygate”? Lowndes County
Third grade, Caledonia severe weather, begins at 5 p.m. in The
4 What type of cuisine is the cabbage dish Supervisors, 9
W Room on campus.

84 Low 59
kimchi? a.m., County
High 5 Who had a hit song in the ‘90s that Courthouse
Clear and mild
begins, “In the time of chimpanzees I was
a monkey”?
Thursday, May 2 May 7: Columbus
Full forecast on ■ Day of Prayer observance: The City Council regular
page 2A. community is invited to an observance meeting, 5 p.m.,
Answers, 6B
of the National Day of Prayer at noon in Municipal Complex
front of the Lowndes County Courthouse, Courtroom
505 Second Ave. N., Columbus. Seating May 15:
Inside available. Sponsored by the non-denom- Lowndes County
Classifieds 6B Dear Abby 5B inational citizens group Christian Com- Kel Mitchell enjoys playing Supervisors, 9
Comics 5B Obituaries 5A munity in Prayer. For information, email basketball and spending time a.m., County
140th Year, No. 42 Crossword 4B Opinions 4A christiancommunityinprayer@gmail.com. with his family. Courthouse

DISPATCH CUSTOMER SERVICE 328-2424 | NEWSROOM 328-2471


2A Monday, April 29, 2019 The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com

Monday
Did you hear?
‘Avengers: Endgame’ obliterates
records with $1.2B opening
The Associated Press movie market, until two

NEW YORK — The


universe belongs to Mar-
vel. “Avengers: Endgame”
weeks after its debut.)
“Endgame” set a new
weekend record in China,
too, where it made $330.5
A Thousand Words
shattered the record for million.
biggest opening weekend In one fell swoop, “End-
with an estimated $350 game” has already made
million in ticket sales do- more than movies like
mestically and $1.2 billion “Skyfall,” ‘’Aquaman” and
globally, reaching a new “The Dark Knight Rises”
pinnacle in the blockbust- grossed in their entire
er era that the comic-book runs, not accounting for
studio has come to domi- inflation.
nate. Alan Horn, Disney
The “Avengers” finale chairman, credited Marvel
far exceeded even its own
Studios and its president,
gargantuan expectations,
Kevin Feige, for challeng-
according to studio esti-
ing “notions of what is pos-
mates Sunday. The movie
sible at the movie theater.”
had been forecast to open
“This weekend’s monu-
between $260 million and
$300 million in U.S. and Ca- mental success is a testa-
nadian theaters, but mov- ment to the world they’ve
iegoers turned out in such envisioned, the talent in-
droves that “Endgame” volved, and their collective
blew past the previous passion, matched by the
record of $257.7 million, irrepressible enthusiasm
set last year by “Aveng- of fans around the world,”
ers: Infinity War” when it Horn said in a statement.
narrowly surpassed “Star To accommodate de-
Wars: The Force Awak- mand, the Walt Disney
ens” ($248 million or about Co. released “Endgame”
$266 million in inflation ad- in more theaters — 4,662
justed dollars.) in the U.S. and Canada —
“Endgame” was just than any opening before.
as enormous overseas. Advance ticketing ser-
Worldwide, it obliterated vices set new records. Ear-
the previous record of ly ticket buyers crashed
$640.5 million, also set by AMC’s website. And start-
“Infinity War.” (“Infinity ing Thursday, some the-
War” didn’t open in China, aters even stayed open 72
the world’s second largest hours straight.

CONTACTING THE DISPATCH


Office hours: Main line: Ellie Ketchum, daughter
n 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon-Fri n 662-328-2424 of Michael and Mary
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n news@cdispatch.com n Download forms at www.
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Physical address: 516 Main St., Columbus, MS 39701


Mailing address: P.O. Box 511, Columbus, MS 39703-0511
Starkville Office: 101 S. Lafayette St. #16, Starkville, MS 39759
In the nation

SUBSCRIPTIONS Jewish community will ‘stand tall’


HOW TO SUBSCRIBE
By phone................................. 662-328-2424 or 877-328-2430
after synagogue shooting
Online.......................................... www.cdispatch.com/subscribe The Associated Press on Saturday morning and one of his fingers in the unclear if he had an attor-
opened fire. “I didn’t see shooting. ney.
RATES POWAY, Calif. — my dad. I thought he was And then, Goldstein Police searched Ear-
Eight-year-old Noya Da- dead.” said, “miraculously the nest’s house and said he
Daily home delivery + unlimited online access*..........$13.50/mo.
han had finished praying The onslaught on the gun jammed.” was also being investigat-
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and gone to play with oth- last day of Passover, a In the moments that ed in connection with an
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er children at her South- Jewish holiday celebrat- followed, Goldstein said arson attack on a mosque
Online access only*.......................................................$8.95/mo. ern California synagogue
1 month daily home delivery................................................... $12 ing freedom, wounded he wrapped his bloodied in nearby Escondido, Cal-
when gunshots rang out. Dahan, her uncle Almog hand in a prayer shawl ifornia, on March 24.
1 month Sunday only home delivery........................................ $7 Her uncle grabbed her
Mail Subscription Rates....................................................$20/mo. Peretz and the congrega- and addressed congre- There were indications
and the other children, tion’s rabbi. The attack gants gathered outside an AR-type assault weap-
* EZ Pay rate requires automatic processing of credit or debit card. leading them outside to killed beloved congre- the building, vowing to on might have malfunc-
safety as her leg bled gant Lori Kaye, 60. stay strong in the face of tioned after the gunman
from a shrapnel wound. Authorities said the the deadly attack target- fired numerous rounds
The Commercial Dispatch (USPS 142-320) “I was scared, really, 19-year-old gunman ing his community. inside, San Diego County
Published daily except Saturday. Entered at the post office at Columbus, Mississippi.
Periodicals postage paid at Columbus, MS really scared,” said Noya, opened fire as about 100 “We are a Jewish na- Sheriff William Gore said.
POSTMASTER, Send address changes to: recalling how the group people were worshipping tion that will stand tall. An off-duty Border Patrol
The Commercial Dispatch, P.O. Box 511, Columbus, MS 39703
Published by Commercial Dispatch Publishing Company Inc., of children cried out of exactly six months after a We will not let anyone agent fired at the shooter
516 Main St., Columbus, MS 39703 fear after a gunman en- mass shooting in a Pitts- take us down. Terrorism as he fled, missing him
tered Chabad of Poway burgh synagogue. like this will not take us but striking the getaway
Rabbi Yishoel Gold- down,” Goldstein recalled vehicle, the sheriff said.
stein said he was pre- telling the community. Shortly after fleeing,
paring for a service and Authorities said sus- Earnest called 911 to re-
heard a loud sound, pect John T. Earnest, who port the shooting, San
turned around and a saw had no previous contact Diego Police Chief Da-
a young man wearing with law enforcement, vid Nisleit said. When an
sunglasses standing in may face a hate crime officer reached him on
front of him with a rifle. charge in addition to ho- a roadway, “the suspect
“I couldn’t see his micide charges when pulled over, jumped out of
eyes. I couldn’t see his he’s arraigned later this his car with his hands up
soul,” Goldstein said. He week. He was being held and was immediately tak-
raised his hands and lost without bail, and it was en into custody,” he said.

8 shot, 1 fatally, in a crowd on foot and began these shootings.”


firing in what he called “a The shooting comes
Baltimore shooting very tragic, very cowardly roughly six weeks after
BALTIMORE — Bal- shooting.” Speaking at the Harrison’s swearing-in last
timore city leaders urged scene afterward, Harrison month as Baltimore police
witnesses to share what said the shooting appeared commissioner, when he
they know with police af- “extremely targeted.” promised to make the city
ter a gunman fired indis- Both the chief and safer and lead the depart-
criminately into a crowd the acting mayor, Jack ment through sweeping
enjoying Sunday after- Young, urged people in reforms required by a
noon cookouts, killing a the community to help in- federal consent decree.
man and wounding seven vestigators identify those It’s a daunting task in one
other people. responsible and whatever of the country’s poorest
Police Commissioner motives they had for the major cities where there
Michael Harrison said violence. were more than 300 homi-
SOLUNAR TABLE the gunfire erupted after
The solunar period indicates
peak-feeding times for fish and game.
“Someone knows some- cides in each of the past
Major
Mon.
9:09a
Tues.
9:52a 5 p.m. on a block in the thing,” Young said. “These two years. Harrison is the
Minor 3:34a 4:05a city’s western district of things ... they don’t hap- city’s 14th police leader
Major 9:30p 10:13p
Minor 2:47p 3:42p brick row homes. Harri- pen by happenstance. since the mid-1990s.
son said a man approached People know who’s doing — The Associated Press
Courtesy of Mississippi Department
of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks
@
Monday, April 29, 2019 3A

MSU SPORTS BLOG ONLINE SUBSCRIPTIONS


Visit The Dispatch MSU Sports Blog for breaking For only $1.50 per month, print subscribers can get unlimited
Bulldog news: www.cdispatch.com/msusports access to story comments, extra photos, newspaper archives
and much more with an online subscription. Nonsubscribers can
purchase online access for less than $9 per month.
Go to www.cdispatch.com/subscribe

230-year-old water mill still making cornmeal and grits


By BRIAN BROOM north-northwest of De Kalb a why would anyone go to the bottom stone is stationary and been in the Sciple family for
The Clarion Ledger rarity. trouble of driving to Kemper weighs 2,100 pounds. The up- about 160 years, it dates back
“It’s the oldest one we know County to buy his products per stone rotates and weighs further.
DE K ALB — Tucked away of that still grinds for the pub- or have them shipped? Sciple 1,600 pounds. “The original mill was built
in rural Kemper County on lic,” Sciple said. “During the said it’s simple — taste. How much power the tur- in 1790, they say,” Sciple said.
the bank of Running Tiger fall of the year we get real “Our grits, nothing is tak- bine produces is unknown. “It was originally built by Dr.
Creek sits one of Mississippi’s busy. I’ve got customers from en out,” Sciple said. “You’ve Sciple said his father Edward Hunnerly.
oldest businesses. Its weath- Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, got all the nutrients. Sciple, who died in 2015, “He came here from South
ered clapboard exterior and Tennessee and everywhere in “You’ve got the germ, thought it generated between Carolina and built it. Our fam-
rusted metal roof speak of its between.” which is the soft part. In com- 250 and 300 horsepower. Sci- ily bought it from a lady that
age. And the price of his service mercial grits they remove ple said research he’s done ended up with it. Her name
Inside, old farm imple- has never changed. that. It’s got a tiny bit of oil in indicated it creates closer to was Rose McMannis. I think
ments, hand tools and other “We still charge the same it and that reduces the shelf 50 horsepower. Either way, there was a family or two (that
antiques have a coating of we did in 1790, an eighth,” life, so they remove that.” the 140-year-old technology is owned the mill) between Hun-
dust from the grain that is Sciple said. “If you bring in a His cornmeal differs, too. powerful. nerly and McMannis.”
milled there. That dust is also bushel, I get a gallon of it. “It’s different in taste and “It’s enough they ran a saw- Sciple teaches at a nearby
a part of Sciple’s Mill owner “I’ll grind that up and bag texture,” Sciple said. “You mill off it, they ran a cotton community college, so mill-
Eddie Sciple’s DNA. it and sell it. That’s how I get don’t have to add flour to it to gin off it and the grist mill,” ing is a part-time job for him.
“I’ve been around it since paid.” make cornbread. Sciple said. But owning a water mill is a
I was born,” Sciple, 53, said. Most of the milling is done “It’s a smoother texture. The sawmill is still there, full-time responsibility that he
“I used to help my grandpa from 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. on Sat- It’s ground slow. It’s not over- but the cotton gin is gone. The describes as “very confining.”
when he was milling. urdays. People come to see heated. All of that makes a dif- mill house was destroyed by a He said any trips he plans de-
“I helped my daddy mill, the process, tour the mill, and ference. Everything but the tornado in 1973. It was rebuilt pend on rainfall. If there is
too. Our family bought it buy cornmeal, flour, grits and flour is gluten-free. It’s just using some of the original ma- rain in the forecast he has to
around 1850 or 1860 — some- fish fry. At other times cus- 100 percent corn.” terial and some new, but the stay home to adjust the gates
where around that time frame. tomers can get products from The mill operates much second floor that housed the in the dam so nothing is dam-
I’m the fifth-generation own- a box located outside and as it did over 200 years ago. gin was not rebuilt. aged. When there are heavy
er. We have seven generations leave their money in an honor It is powered by creek water According to Sciple, mills rains at night, adjusting gates
that have worked at it.” box. Sciple said he also sells that is dammed with gates. like his were once common. comes before sleep.
Of the four other mills that to a restaurant, about 15-20 The water turns a Leffel tur- “At one time there were five Even so, he doesn’t foresee
operated on Running Tiger stores and he takes orders by bine that replaced the orig- mills on the creek we’re on,” leaving the life of a miller and
Creek, only one remains and phone and ships them. inal wooden turbine when Sciple said. “Every little com- his family tradition anytime
Sciple said it has not oper- Sciple charges $6 for 10 the mill was renovated in munity had one. soon.
ated since the 1950s. Most pounds of cornmeal or $3 for 1880. Corn and wheat are “Not all of them were water “It’s not something you can
other grist mills disappeared, 3 pounds. His grits and fish ground into grits, cornmeal mills. Some were steam pow- really retire from,” Sciple said.
too, making the mill about fry are $3 for 2 pounds and and flour between two round ered.” “You just keep doing it until
eight miles (13 kilometers) flour is $3 for 3 pounds. But 42-inch-diameter stones. The While the grist mill has you can’t anymore.”

Profile
Continued from Page 1A
art to Pines and Cady the goat, so I did. Mississippi State Univer- “You spend so much same pride in the cre- creative that can keep
Hill residents has taught “I don’t know,” he add- sity and the Columbus time on it that you actual- ation of art in his clients them busy instead of
him as much as it has his ed, laughing. “It was such Arts Council, and has ly want to show it off,” he at Pines and Cady Hill. going back to their old
clients. a serious suggestion. I recently begun submit- said. “You want someone “I try to give them lifestyle. It’s supposed to
“It’s so interesting. couldn’t help it.” ting art to juried shows, to witness it.” something to succeed at,” be something that’s fun,
The men think it’s...not When he’s not with where the art to be Although their art may he said. “I want them to something they can do to
something they should his clients, Ray is in displayed is selected by a not appear in galleries, see it as a viable option express themselves. I try
be doing,” he said. “They the studio with his oil group of judges, usually Ray wants to imbue that for something to do that’s to keep it that way.”
kind of complain about paints, his canvasses art professors or profes-
it before they get into it. and his collection of sional artists.
But the ladies, they’re old records. As a child, “I’ve probably been
like ‘yeah, let’s paint!’ he was inspired by the showing my art since
and I’m kind of along work of his grandmother, 1999 or 2000,” he said.
for the ride with them. I great-grandmother and “It’s honestly hard to
just let them decide what great-aunt, all of whom believe I’ve been painting
we’re doing.” were artists in their own for that long.”
Ray also shows them time. Because of their What Ray likes the
his own art. He paints influence, he went on most about art shows is
mostly in oils on canvas- to earn a bachelor’s of the lack of a competitive
es of all shapes and sizes. fine arts in painting and spirit. Artists, for the
His specialty, he said, is drawing from Mississippi most part, like to support
landscapes of areas in University for Women in each other, he said.
and around Columbus 2000. “As an artist, you’re
— mostly on the water — “I’m real fascinated always looking for com-
but sometimes he does with the process,” he munity,” he said. “Most of
portraits. said. “I always wanted to them just want to spread
“I brought this in (to know why artists choose the love of art.”
Pines and Cady Hill) one what they do. It’s a beau- On a personal level,
day,” he said, holding tiful way of expressing Ray finds sharing his art
aloft a picture-frame size yourself.” through social media,
landscape, the browns As part of that self-ex- galleries and juried
and reds interrupted by pression, Ray submits shows rewarding. It’s
the small white silhouette his artwork to shows and nice to see something
of a goat near the lower exhibits both locally and he spent hours painting
left corner. “One of my regionally. He has been hanging on a wall, he
clients suggested I add featured in exhibits at said.

Capitol dome
Continued from Page 1A
justice reform in Missis- governor and Cabinet, War a number of South-
sippi,” Graham said in a acting as the Board of ern states tailored their
statement Thursday. Executive Clemency. In disenfranchisement pol-
“The two he didn’t November, Florida vot- icies with the intent of
sign were due to the na- ers adopted a state con- disenfranchising black
ture of the criminal of- stitutional amendment males who had recent-
fenses associated with to automatically restore ly gained the right to
the individuals,” Graham voting rights to most con- vote,” the Sentencing
said. “Each suffrage bill victed felons once they Project says. “These ac-
that passes is complex in complete their sentenc- tions came about at the
its own way.” es, with the exception of same time states were
One of the bills that those convicted of mur- adopting poll taxes and
became law without Bry- der or sex offenses. It literacy requirements.
ant’s signature this year will affect about 1.4 mil- In a number of Southern
was for a man with mul- lion people. states, including Missis-
tiple convictions between The practice of disen- sippi, voting restrictions
1987 and 2007, including franchising people with were adopted based on
forgery and perjury. The some — but not all — fel- prevailing perceptions of
other was for a woman ony convictions is rooted the racial composition of
convicted of armed rob- in racist beliefs prevalent particular offense cate-
bery in 2001. when the current Mis- gories. Crimes believed
Florida is shedding sissippi constitution was to be committed primar-
its system that required written in 1890 during ily by blacks would lead
people with felony re- the backlash to Recon- to disenfranchisement,
cords to seek restoration struction. while offenses identified
of voting rights from the “Following the Civil with whites would not.”

Help us help them.


The Humane Society
662-327-3107
Opinion
4A Monday, April 29, 2019
PETER BIRNEY IMES Editor/Publisher
BIRNEY IMES III Editor/Publisher 1998-2018
BIRNEY IMES JR. Editor/Publisher 1947-2003

Dispatch
The
BIRNEY IMES SR. Editor/Publisher 1922-1947

ZACK PLAIR, Managing Editor


BETH PROFFITT Advertising Director
MICHAEL FLOYD Circulation/Production Manager
MARY ANN HARDY Controller

Possumhaw
All creatures bright and big
“A land turtle crawled turning aside way. Sam removed her, as she can be
for nothing, dragging his high-domed a danger. Loggerheads will attack the
shell over the grass, not really walking, ducks’ feet and leave them lame, and
but boosting and dragging his shell then the ducks themselves.
along.” Interestingly, loggerheads capture
— John Steinbeck, “Grapes of Wrath” fish by wiggling a pink appendage
on their tongue that fish assume is a

T
here worm, then snap. A few years back Sam
in the captured two large loggerheads in the
woods, big lake and took them to neighbor Ed
eyes were Phillips. Ed was known to cook just
shining back about anything. Ed cooked them up in a
at me from turtle soup and feasted with his bud-
the light of the dies. I doubt if there was anything wild
flashlight when Ed hadn’t cooked.
I was looking Believe it or not, there is a turtle
for Harry and farm in Strafford, Missouri, where
Wilhelmina, you can buy loggerhead turtles for the
the cats. The love of turtles. Owner John Richards
eyes were the Shannon Bardwell describes himself as a turtle/reptile
height of a man enthusiast with a lifelong dream to own
and spooky. a turtle farm.
Many nights there are eyes in the dark. The critter fun did not end there.
Usually they are low to the ground them in a mason jar with holes poked fixed on something. Following their While raking leaves behind the boat
— those of a deer bedded down or a in the top. The next morning, I awoke stares, I saw in the grass, quite camou- shed, Sam found three large holes dug
raccoon or possum, perhaps a feral cat. and all the lightning bugs were on the flaged, a loggerhead snapping turtle. under the foundation. Armadillos were
That night they disappeared until one ceiling. I lay there watching the bugs Loggerheads are prehistoric looking suspected, so he set up traps. Armadil-
flashed again about 3 feet to the right. and wondering if I was going to be in and menacing; they can get up to 100 los are not easy to catch as there really
Ah, lightning bugs. As I continued to trouble. I was entranced by them. Light- pounds. Their heads do not entirely isn’t a bait to attract them. The first
patrol, I saw more. Whether or not the ning bugs were about the most wonder- retract back into their shell, nor do morning we found the trap hurled away
rains brought more lightning bugs I ful thing I could think of. My thoughts their tails and legs. Sam says they have about 3 or 4 feet. After the trap was se-
don’t know, but there seemed to be an that night were not so different. Harry no need to retract — nothing bothers cured, the armadillo was caught on the
increase. It brought back childhood and Wilhelmina were found and bedded them. The turtle was making her way second morning. He was a big one.
memories of catching lightning bugs for the night. from the small pond to the lake, per- Email reaches Shannon Bardwell of
when they were abundant and putting The next morning both cats were haps to lay her 50 leathery eggs on the Columbus at msdeltachild@msn.com.

Letter to the editor Cartoonist view


Voice of the people
Thoughts from Sunday paper
Nobody but Mississippians should
determine what our state flag looks
like. The Gov. of New Jersey ordered
our flag removed from a display of
each State’s flag at, of all places, Lib-
erty Park. Who died and made him
overseer of our business? Why was it
removed? Because the flag doesn’t fit
his liberal view of “diversity.” Liberals
are all inclusive, as long as you toe
their line. They defend your right to
free speech as long as you agree with
their agenda.
I won’t shed a tear if our state flag
is redesigned, but it isn’t his call to
make. Liberals claim the “Confed-
erate battle flag” in the upper left
corner is a reminder of slavery. If
that’s what you want to believe, OK.
To others it is a symbol of something
else entirely.
Alabama has a memorial to the
memories of those lynched during
the ‘50’s and ‘60’s. OK. They are me-
morializing a bad time in our history,
but displaying the “Confederate battle
flag” is bad? Statues of Confederate
officers and soldiers are bad? You
can’t have it both ways. The War
Between the States was OVER more
than one hundred and fifty years ago. MUSINGS
Let that sleeping dog lie. Lynching
is over, too, so why keep beating that
dead horse? The only reason I can
see is to keep us Americans divided.
Folding chair politics
Don’t ignore the past, but learn from Someone who may not map. want is a short video of Pres. Donald
it so it won’t be repeated. Slavery was, have spent enough time Right now, American na- Trump hitting Hillary Clinton with a
is, and always will be wrong. Slavery sitting on a folding chair tional politics are interest- folding chair. We want the fiery crash
still happens in Africa and Middle at a school committee ing because of all of those of a candidate smacking into another
East/Muslim countries today. Do meeting once wrote that things, which means that candidate, the screech, the twisted
something about that, because that small town politics are so the government is poorly metal, the flaming death. Which of
can be changed. The past cannot. serious because the stakes run. If it weren’t poorly the two candidates is better at plan-
To Birney: I spent six months in are so low. run, it would be a matter of ning ahead? Who cares? Let’s see a
Saudi Arabia in the late ‘70’s, and it This is a wise-sounding gray-faced elected officials knockout! Better yet, hit below the
was fairly common to see a camel rid- saying that has no basis and unseen bureaucrats belt! We love the contorted face of
ing in the bed of a Toyota or Datsun in the reality of school paying for new bridges in pain.
pickup. I saw a double layer of sheep board meetings in towns of Alabama, and slowly reduc- If offered boring, rational, fin-
in the bed of one, once! I only saw one 20,000 people, only 1,500 Marc Dion ing the national debt. That gers-tapping-on-the-calculator govern-
Ford vehicle there. I was told Fords of whom voted in the last kind of government is as ment, would we even want it anymore?
were banned due to the fact they built election. interesting as paying your Could we endure a scandal-free term?
an assembly plant in Israel. You could Small town politics are so serious bills at the end of the month, anoth- When former Pres. Barack Obama
buy Pepsi products all day long, but because everyone on every town coun- er process that’s only interesting if failed to produce sexual/ethical/mon-
no Cokes, for the same reason. Is that cil, committee and board has every you’re in some kind of trouble. etary scandals, we invented some for
spiteful or paranoia? It doesn’t matter. inch of their personality wrapped up Right now, American government him, just to stay interested.
It is their country to do as they see fit. in every minute of every meeting. The centers on which candidate kissed A robot with no genitals and a
The Saudi army used a lot of Toyota stakes are ruinously high. The voters a woman on the neck, and the poor brilliant mind for global politics and
vehicles that resembled Jeeps, with stay home. The reporters struggle to people of Flint, Michigan, continue to economics could be elected president
tie-died covers on the spare tires. pull a story out of the meeting. The drink poison. It’s interesting as hell, in the next go-round, and, even if
It looked just like a bulls-eye target members of the school committee, unless you’re one of the poisoned, in the robot did not have the power of
going down the road. meanwhile, are sneaking up behind which case you may be too brain-dam- speech, we’d immediately start mak-
I have a few pictures of my time each other with daggers. aged to concentrate on the evening ing up things he said, and insisting
I once heard a successful candidate news. This is a great blessing to your he was only concealing his man parts
there, but they’re all packed up, ready
for the zoning board of appeals say state rep., who can now make his in an attempt to hide his affair with a
to move.
she had “completely destroyed” her speeches much, much shorter. Toyota Corolla.
Cameron Triplett
opponent. If you go to a professional wres- Pres. Donald Trump has been in a
Brooksville
Hail Caesar! tling match, you are disappointed if professional wrestling ring, which ex-
Every reporter (if she’s been someone doesn’t get hit over the head plains most of his political career. The
paying attention) knows that properly with a folding chair. Others prefer to robot never watches wrestling. He
run government is boring as hell. Bills go to an auto race and hope for a fiery knows it’s fake, and he thinks people
Our View: Local Editorials come in. Bills get paid. The bleachers crash. who watch it are gullible. He’s boring,
Local editorials appearing in this space at the softball field get a new coat of It’s the same thing with national and may be an elitist.
represent the opinion of the newspaper’s
paint. politics. We’ve seen so many people Marc Dion, a nationally syndicated
editorial board: Peter Imes, editor and
publisher; Zack Plair, managing editor; Only disaster, theft, corruption, get hit over the head with folding columnist, is a reporter and columnist
Slim Smith and senior newsroom staff. To sexual misconduct, physical violence, chairs that our attention cannot be for The Herald News, the daily news-
inquire about a meeting with the board, madness and unwise public state- held by dollars and cents, efforts to paper of his hometown, Fall River,
please contact Peter Imes at 662-328- ments make politics interesting, in help hurricane victims or by boring Massachusetts. For more on Dion, go to
2424, or e-mail voice@cdispatch.com. small towns or anywhere else on the old plans to build new roads. What we go to www.creators.com.
The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com Monday, April 29, 2019 5A

Around the World


Spain’s political without a parliamentary ling, an expert on contem- and it still needs to make agree on a common ap- 2014, heads a list of no-
majority. porary Spanish politics tough political decisions in proach to peace talks with shows.
future may be hazy for Spain’s political right is at Cardiff University in order to govern. the Taliban, but the gath- Former President Ha-
months, experts say fractured. The tradition- Wales. With only 123 seats in ering may further aggra- mid Karzai, who also is
MADRID — Spain’s po- al conservative Popular “If the Socialist party the 350-seat Congress of vate divisions within the not attending, told The
litical future is no clearer Party suffered a humili- wants to stay in power Deputies, Spain’s parlia- U.S.-backed government. Associated Press on
after a third election since ating defeat. On the other for the next four years, it ment, the Socialists will President Ashraf Ghani Monday that holding the
2015, with experts saying hand, though, the election needs to find mechanisms need to negotiate the sup- hopes to showcase unity council at this time risks
Monday that it won’t be marked the rise of the far- of accommodation to en- port of smaller rival parties at the four-day meeting “delaying and causing an
anytime soon before the right and a high point for sure a degree of stability,” to pass legislation. — known as Loya Jirga impediment to the peace
muddle is resolved. an expanding center-right he said. — that brings together process.” He also voiced
The incumbent prime party. Sánchez hailed the cen- politicians, tribal elders, concern that by sidelining
minister, Pedro Sánchez, All in all, the result did ter-left Socialists’ victory
Afghan leader holds many prominent figures his chief executive, Ghani
celebrated after his So- little to dispel government as an antidote against a re- council to set agenda and others. could trigger suspicion
cialist party won the most uncertainty in the euro- actionary wave of national for Taliban talks But Chief Executive that personal ambitions
votes in Sunday’s ballot. zone’s No. 4 economy. populism, pledging to help KABUL, Afghanistan Abdullah Abdullah, his may have partly driven
But Spanish politicians It could take weeks or strengthen the European — Afghanistan’s president partner in a unity gov- him to hold the Loya Jirga
were doing the math on months for Spain’s politi- Union. opened a grand council ernment brokered by the now.
how Sánchez might sur- cal future to be clarified, But the Socialist party on Monday of more than United States after a bit- — The Associated Press
vive the next four years according to Andrew Dow- won only 29% of the vote, 3,200 Afghans seeking to terly disputed election in

Area obituaries
Megan Pike E. and Arnetta Leisure. Chapel with James Tow- Memorials may Leonard; and sister,
VERNON, Ala. — She was formerly em- ery officiating. Burial be made to the West Julie Leonard Smith.
Megan Elise Langley ployed as a restaurant will follow in Memorial Point/Clay County He was a 1966 grad-
Pike, 31, died April 27, and bar manager. Garden Cemetery in Animal Shelter, 5122 uate of Blountstown
2019, in Vernon, Ala- In addition to her West Point. Visitation Old Tibbee Road, West High School in Florida
bama parents, she was pre- will be two hours Point, MS 39773. and the University of
Services are at 7 ceded in death by her prior to services at the Southern Mississippi.
p.m. at Chandler Funer- brothers, Jerry Leisure funeral home. Calvert Mark Leonard He was formerly em- Verda Laws
and Ronnie Leisure. Funeral Home of West ployed as a disc jockey Visitation:
al Home Chapel with COLUMBUS — Tuesday, April 30 • 5-7 PM
Walter Butler officiat- She is survived by Point is in charge of the Mark Hampton Leon- and as an insurance Main Street Presbyterian Church
ing. Burial will follow at her husband, Billy Joe arrangements. ard, 71, died April 27, adjuster and manager Services:
Wednesday, May 1 • 11 AM
Green Springs Ceme- Lovett of Millport; son, Mr. Fair was born 2019, at his residence. with USF&G. He was Main Street Presbyterian Church
tery in the Pea Ridge Christopher Evans of March 1, 1928, in New Services will be also formerly employed Burial
Austin, Texas; sisters, Friendship Cemetery
Community in Marion Albany, to the late at 2 p.m. Tuesday at with 4-County Electric Memorial Gunter Peel
County. Visitation is Jean Dye and Jackie George Marshall and First United Methodist Power Association and Funeral Home
three hours prior to Davis, both of Xenia, Lela Hogue Fair. He Caledonia Natural Gas. 2nd Ave. North Location
Church in Columbus.
services at the funeral Ohio and Janice Cooper was a self-employed He is survived by his
Graveside services
home. Chandler Funer- of Springfield, Ohio; row crop farmer and will be held at Morgan- wife, Deborah Barretta Mark Leonard
two brothers, Don Lei- a heavy equipment Visitation:
al Home is in charge of town Baptist Chapel Leonard of Columbus; Tuesday, April 30 • 12-2 PM
arrangements. sure of Cincinnati, Ohio operator. sons, Wade Hampton First United Methodist Church
Cemetery in Sturgis.
Mrs. Pike was born and Tommy Leisure of In addition to his Leonard and James Services:
Xenia, Ohio; and two Visitation is two hours Tuesday, April 30 • 2 PM
Nov. 17, 1987, in Amo- parents, he was pre- prior to services at Williamson Leonard, First United Methodist Church
ry, MS, to Tommy and grandchildren. ceded in death by his Graveside Services:
the church. Memorial both of Columbus; Morgan Chapel Cemetery
Lisa Langley. She was son, Larry Fair; sisters, Gunter Peel Funeral daughter, Charlsie Sturgis, MS
formerly employed as a Verda Laws Jean Bessey and Elaine Home and Crematory, Morgan Leonard of Memorial Gunter Peel
speech pathologist. COLUMBUS — Ver- Freeman; and brothers, Funeral Home
Second Avenue North Columbus; stepdaugh- 2nd Ave. North Location
In addition to her da Johnson Laws, 87, Paul and Malcolm Fair. location, is in charge of ters, Kelly Jean Talley,
parents, she is survived died April 28, 2019, at He is survived by arrangements. Kimberly Denise Finch Karen Coleman
by her husband, Chris Baptist Memorial Hos- his wife, Lillian Fair of Mr. Leonard was and Casey Lee Clark, Incomplete
Pike of Vernon; and pital-Golden Triangle. West Point; daughter, all of Columbus; two Memorial Gunter Peel
born in 1948, in Mar-
sisters, Erin Lolley and Services will be at Lisa Seales of Pontotoc; grandchildren; and six
Funeral Home
iana, Florida, to the College St. Location
Amanda Lyons, both of 11 a.m. Wednesday at sons, Lanny Fair and step-grandchildren.
late Henry Clarence
Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Main Street Presbyteri- Teddy Fair, both of
and Vivian Williamson Memorials may
an Church with the Rev. West Point, Randolph
Leonard. be made to St. Jude
Judith Lovett Todd Matocha officiat- Fair of Huntsville,
In addition to his Children’s Hospital, 262
MILLPORT, Ala. — ing. Burial will follow at Alabama and Jeff Fair memorialgunterpeel.com
parents, he was preced- Danny Thomas Place,
Judith Ann Lovett, 64, Friendship Cemetery. of Aberdeen; sisters,
Visitation will be from ed in death by his first Memphis, Tennessee
died April 26, 2019, at Emily Wynns and Joyce
5-7 p.m. Tuesday at wife, Marilyn Greene 38105.
her residence. O’Brian, both of Ol-
A memorial service the church. Memorial ive Branch; brothers,
will be held at 11 a.m. Gunter Peel Funeral Steve Fair of Lubbock,
Monday at Christian Home and Crematory, Texas and Lenzy Fair of
Chapel with Travis Second Avenue North Blytheville, Arkansas;
Brown officiating. Visi- location, is in charge of 10 grandchildren; 17
tation will be one hour arrangements. great-grandchildren;
prior to the service at and one great-great-
the church. Chandler Leroy Fair grandchild.
Funeral Home is in WEST POINT — Pallbearers will be
charge of arrange- Leroy Fair, 91, died Larry Christopher Fair,
ments. April 28, 2019, at his Christopher Michael
Mrs. Lovett was born residence. Fair, Brandon Fair,
Oct. 23, 1954, in Wash- Services will be at Robert Fair, Jake Fair,
ington Court House, 11 a.m. Wednesday at Pallas Fair and Carson
Ohio, to the late Robert Calvert Funeral Home Poss.
6A Monday, April 29, 2019 The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com

TOP: Spaces where


frames and other
memorabilia used to hang
on the walls of Zachary’s
are now empty. Owner
Doug Pellum said the
interior of the building
and all its furnishings
are “almost a total loss,”
but says the building will
be rebuilt. RIGHT: An
electrical fire in the kitchen
early Sunday morning
rendered Zachary’s
completely inoperable for
the next few months, said
owner Doug Pellum. Most,
if not all, of the furniture
and other supplies inside
the building are completely
unsalvageable. — Photos
by Amanda Lien/Dispatch
Staff

Zachary;’s
Continued from Page 1A
age throughout. It’s Pellum’s turn to more than 1,000 times. pi Community College)
“It’s going to be months be on the receiving end “That response has would come here every
before we open again,” of the community fund- been incredible,” Pellum Wednesday or Thursday,”
Zachary’s owner Doug raising he so often en- said Sunday at Zachary’s. he said, tapping the table
Pellum told The Dispatch. courages. Beck’s wife “We’ve had people com- with his fingers. “We’d sit
“But we will be back.” Lindsey, who works for ing by here offering to right here, actually.
Ford, who lives a few The Dispatch, started an help, sending messages. “These are 18 years
blocks away from the online fundraiser through It’s amazing.” worth of memories,” he
restaurant, heard about GoFundMe to help pay Across the restaurant, added. “But it’s not over. ...
the fire and chose to re- Zachary’s staff, who won’t near the bar area, Ford It’s like the phoenix rising
spond in a personal way. be able to work until the stepped through an inch from the ashes. Literally.”
Armed with power drills building is reopened. Af- of water left from fire hos- Dispatch reporter Slim
he loaned to the handful ter 20 hours of circulating es and carefully laid a pic- Smith contributed to this
of other volunteers and online, the campaign has ture frame on a booth. report.
employees on site, he set raised $10,890 and has “My colleagues and
about helping Beck and been shared on Facebook I from (East Mississip-
Pellum assess what was
salvageable.
Turns out, it wasn’t
much.
“All the tables and
chairs have to go out be-
cause of the smoke dam-
age,” Pellum said. “We
really can’t save anything
we have in here.”
Zachary’s opened
downtown in 2001 and
quickly became a fixture
in Columbus, not only for
its food and laid-back am-
biance, but because of its
connection to the commu-
nity.
Pellum’s restau-
rant has held scores of
fund-raising events, most
of them for area charities
or citizens in need. Last
year alone, Zachary’s
raised more than $40,000
through fundraisers, also
contributing more than
$30,000 worth in in-kind
services.
In February, the
restaurant was awarded
the Restaurant Neighbor
Award from the National
Restaurant Association
Educational Foundation
for the second year in a
row. The award honors
restaurants that go above
and beyond in community
service and philanthropy.
It aims to inspire other
restaurateurs to stay in-
volved in their local com-
munities.

Visit us
on the web at
cdispatch.com
Sports
mississippi state baseball
SPORTS LINE
662-241-5000
THE DISPATCH n CDISPATCH.COM n MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2019

msu roundup
B
SECTION

MSU
WIN-WIN-WIN sweeps
Mizzou
FROM SPECIAL REPORTS

The Mississippi State


softball team secured a
Southeastern Conference
sweep for the first time
this season Sunday with a
10-2 run-rule victory over
Missouri.
It was the first time
MSU swept an SEC oppo-
nent since taking three of
three from Arkansas April
4-6, 2015.
Sophomore Mia David-
son and senior Kat Moore
both recorded two-run
home runs in the bottom
of the fifth inning to close
the win.
For Davidson, the ho-
mer was her 25th of the
season — tying the SEC
single-season record. It
was also the 44th long ball
of her career, tying the
MSU all-time record.
Sunday, every Bull-
dog in the starting lineup
notched at least one hit.
Junior Fa Leilua was 3-for-
3 at the plate with a double
Chris McDill/Special to the Dispatch and a home run.
Jordan Westburg of Mississippi State dives home to score a run in Sunday’s game against Georgia at Dudy Noble Field. Redshirt sophomore
Montana Davidson was
Plumlee finishes off Georgia with solid pitching performance 2-for-3 at the dish with a
home run and a double.
Her 4 RBIs were a career
BY BEN PORTNOY
high.
bportnoy@cdispatch.com
Sophomore pitcher Em-
Peyton Plumlee looked downtrodden. ily Williams improved to
Wandering off the mound after 6.1 in- 11-7 on the mound. She
nings pitched Sunday, the senior righty tossed five innings of four-
kept his head peering toward the grass, hit ball, walking six and
almost sulking. striking out two while giv-
There was subtle disappointment in ing up just two runs.
not finishing the seventh inning for the With the win, MSU im-
first time all season, yet it was also a look proved to 30-19 and 7-14
of triumph. in conference play. It is
As he headed toward the dugout, the the seventh time in head
8,204 fans in attendance at Dudy Noble coach Vann Stuedeman’s
Field presented him with a deafening eight years in Starkville
standing ovation. the Bulldogs have reached
Plumlee had allowed just one hit 30 wins.
and no runs on the day — his best out- MSU will conclude the
ing since an eight-inning, three-hit day regular season against No.
against Indiana State on Feb. 25, 2017 — 7/10 Florida next weekend
as No. 9 Mississippi State took down No. in Gainesville. Game one
4 Georgia, 6-5. of the three game set will
“To have that feeling, to walk off, and begin Friday at 5 p.m.
today to have everybody behind me and MEN’S TENNIS:
all my teammates get so excited, that was MSU will discover its
a really special moment for me,” he said. NCAA tennis tournament
Plumlee has been an enigma of sorts fate Monday at 5 p.m.
this season. For each great outing, a mid- Head coach Matt Rob-
dling appearance seems to follow. erts and the team will
But after being chased in two innings host a watch party for the
against Arkansas last weekend, he com- NCAA Championship se-
bined for 10.1 innings pitched, one run, lection show at the Leo
four hits and eight strikeouts in outings Seal, Jr. Football Complex.
against No. 19 Ole Miss on Tuesday and MSU starting It is not open to the public.
Georgia on Sunday. pitcher Peyton The Bulldogs won the
“How about the whole week for (Plum- Plumlee, above, SEC Championship.
lee)?” MSU coach Chris Lemonis said. allowed just one This year’s tournament
“Going back to at Arkansas, then bounc- hit in his best will use a similar format to
ing back from that tough start and giving game for the Bull- the NCAA baseball tour-
us a great one Tuesday night and giving dogs in more than nament. Sixty-four teams
us a great start today. Man, really happy a year. At right, will be chosen to compete
for Peyton. He was really good today.” he gets a happy in 16 regionals. The win-
Plumlee appeared poised for another handshake from ner of each regional ad-
head coach Chris
mediocre performance in the first inning vances to two-team super
Lemonis.
Sunday. An error by sophomore Justin regional events, followed
by the national champion-
See bulldogs, 4B
Chris McDill/Special to
the Dispatch ships.

Herndon has the right weight for Golden Egg Spring Nationals
Thrash’s car disqualified following race
By DAVID MILLER ify him and award runner-up finisher TJ
Special to The Dispatch Herndon the win was because “that car
sponsored the series.” Thrash later de-
Chad Thrash waited angrily at the clined to confirm which car he was ref-
scales Saturday at Magnolia Motor erencing, nor did he want to speak about
Speedway, as the rest of the top-five fin- the decision.
ishers in the Golden Egg Spring Nation- “No comment,” Thrash said.
als remained in the queue behind him. Herndon, a Tennessee native,
The results of the $5,000-to-win clinched his fourth feature win of the
Street Stocks feature would be delayed season. Herndon said he isn’t involved
for more than a half hour before it was “at all” with either the Mississippi Street
announced that Thrash had been dis- Stock Series or Mid-South Big-10 Street
qualified for being five pounds light Stock Series, both of which co-sanc-
of the required 2,950-pound post-race tioned the race.
weight requirement. TK King, Spencer Hughes, Kyle Liv-
Thrash, who had dominated the race ingood and Neil Brown rounded out the David Miller/Special to the Dispatch
and led all 50 laps, told race officials at TJ Herndon (1) holds off Jamey Boland (232) on Lap 47 of the Golden Egg Spring
the scales that their decision to disqual- See magnolia, 4B Nationals race on Saturday at Magnolia Motor Speedway.
2B Monday, April 29, 2019 The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com

briefly CALENDAR Baseball


Clemson 11, Georgia Tech 7
Coll. of Charleston 10, UNC Wilmington 3
Coppin St. 14, Md.-Eastern Shore 4
J. Holmes/B. Watson
J. Henry/T. Hoge
K. Bradley/J. Curran
64-70-66-75—275
67-68-66-74—275
64-71-69-75—279
American League Elon 3, Northeastern 0 S. Im/W. Kim 64-72-73-73—282

Baseball Prep Baseball


At A Glance
All Times EDT
By The Associated Press
FAU 8, Old Dominion 7
FIU 2, Charlotte 1
Florida 12, Kentucky 8
R. Díaz/D. McCarthy
J. Garber/C. Gribble
63-73-70-76—282
61-75-76-70—282

Late rally not enough for Alabama in loss to LSU Today’s Games
East Division
W L Pct GB
Florida Gulf Coast 6, North Alabama 5
Georgia St. 15, Coastal Carolina 11 PGA Champions
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Alabama’s late rally was not enough as Victory Christian at Starkville Christian, 4 p.m. Tampa Bay 18 9 .667 — High Point 9, UNC Asheville 4 Sunday
Hofstra 10, James Madison 5 Purse: $1.8 million
the Crimson Tide fell, 5-4, to 14th-ranked LSU. Following Sunday’s New York 17 11 .607 1½
Jacksonville 7, Liberty 4 Ridgedale, Mo.
Toronto 14 14 .500 4½
matchup, the Tide is now 26-19 overall and 5-16 in Southeastern Boston 11 17 .393 7½ Jacksonville St. 6, Morehead St. 2 At Top of the Rock (Host Course), Yardage
Conference play. Tuesday’s Games Baltimore 10 19 .345 9 Kansas 15, Furman 1 2,808; Par 54
Central Division Lamar 4, New Orleans 2 At Ozarks National, Yardage 7,036; Par 71
“I was really proud of the way our guys competed, and I really hurt Victory Christian vs. Tabernacle, 4 p.m. W L Pct GB Lipscomb 3, Stetson 2 Final
Minnesota 16 9 .640 — Louisville 14, Alabama A&M 3 Scott Hoch, $171,000 62-48-46—156
for them,” said Alabama head coach Brad Bohannon. “I was really Cleveland 15 12 .556 2 LSU 5, Alabama 4 Tom Pernice Jr., $171,000 62-48-46—156
proud of the bullpen, they were outstanding today. They gave us a Friday’s Games Detroit 12 14 .462 4½ Lynn 6, Augusta 3 Paul Broadhurst, $91,125 50-67-44—161
Chicago 11 14 .440 5 Mercer 6, ETSU 0 Carlos Franco, $91,125 52-63-46—161
chance to scratch back and the kids fought all day, it just wasn’t quite Round 3 MHSAA Playoffs Kansas City 9 19 .321 8½ Miami 2, Virginia Tech 0 Vijay Singh, $91,125 52-63-46—161
enough.” West Division Mississippi St. 6, Georgia 5 Kirk Triplett, $91,125 50-67-44—161
W L Pct GB Murray St. 8, E. Kentucky 7 Jeff Maggert, $58,500 51-62-49—162
Alabama trailed 5-2 entering the final two innings. The Crimson Nicholls 10, San Jose St. 7 Jesper Parnevik, $58,500 51-62-49—162
Prep Softball
Houston 17 11 .607 —
Tide pushed across one in the eighth to narrow the gap to two headed Seattle 18 13 .581 ½ North Carolina 5, Virginia 4 Paul Goydos, $42,750 47-66-51—164
Texas 14 13 .519 2½ North Florida 4, Florida A&M 0 Brandt Jobe, $42,750 52-63-49—164
to the ninth. That final frame saw UA score one and load the bases Today’s Games Oakland 14 16 .467 4 Norfolk St. 3, Delaware St. 2, 10 innings Scott McCarron, $42,750 52-63-49—164
up with two down, but a strikeout swinging ended the game in favor of Los Angeles 12 17 .414 5½ NC A7T 7, Bethune-Cookman 4 Kevin Sutherland, $42,750 47-66-51—164
LSU. Tigers starter Landon Marceaux (3-2) earned the win while Devin Victory Christian at Starkville Christian, 4 p.m. Radford 7, Gardner-Webb 6 Michael Allen, $26,280 50-65-50—165
Saint Louis 5, Davidson 4 Billy Andrade, $26,280 50-65-50—165
Fontenot (6) picked up the save despite a shaky ninth. Saturday’s Games Samford 6, Wofford 1 Olin Browne, $26,280 66-49-50—165
Savannah St. 6-2, NC Central 2-12 Roger Chapman, $26,280 63-51-51—165
Graduate Jeremy Randolph (1-2) suffered the loss with 3.0 innings Tuesday’s Games Detroit at Chicago White Sox, ppd. SC Upstate 4, Longwood 2 John Daly, $26,280 50-65-50—165
Minnesota 9, Baltimore 2 South Alabama 6, Georgia Southern 2
of work, but the Tide bullpen was able to keep things close following his Victory Christian vs. Tabernacle, 4 p.m. Toronto 7, Oakland 1 South Florida 4, Houston 3
Joe Durant, $26,280 50-65-50—165
David Frost, $26,280 63-51-51—165
exit. The trio of redshirt junior Davis Vainer, sophomore Brock Guffey Houston 4, Cleveland 3, 10 innings Southern 15, Grambling St. 3 Lee Janzen, $26,280 51-65-49—165
N.Y. Yankees 6, San Francisco 4 Southern Miss 6, Middle Tennessee 5
and junior Deacon Medders limited the Tigers to only two hits and one Rocco Mediate, $26,280 51-65-49—165
run while combining for six strikeouts. Guffey contributed a career-high College Baseball Tampa Bay 2, Boston 1
Kansas City 9, L.A. Angels 4
Texas St. 10, Louisiana-Lafayette 8
Tulane 9, East Carolina 8
Steve Pate, $26,280
Gene Sauers, $19,800
66-49-50—165
46-69-51—166
Texas 15, Seattle 1 UAB 6, Marshall 5
3.0 innings and added two punchouts while Medders tossed the final Tuesday’s Games UCF 7, Memphis 6
Ken Tanigawa, $19,800
Bart Bryant, $16,650
46-69-51—166
64-51-52—167
2.0 stanzas, striking out three Tigers. Junior College Baseball Sunday’s Games UNC Greensboro 8, The Citadel 3 Brad Bryant, $16,650 64-51-52—167
VCU 9, George Washington 7
On offense, Brett Auerbach continued his hot hitting for the week- Tampa Bay 5, Boston 2 Steve Flesch, $16,650 50-68-49—167
EMCC at Northeast (DH), 2 p.m. Toronto 5, Oakland 4, 11 innings VMI 9, W. Carolina 8, 10 innings Billy Mayfair, $16,650 66-50-51—167
end, finishing 3-for-5 with a pair of runs scored. Fellow junior Morgan Chicago White Sox 4, Detroit 1 Wake Forest 16, Florida St. 12 Colin Montgomerie, $16,650 51-67-49—167
McCullough paced the Crimson Tide in RBI with two, while sophomore Mississippi Delta at Itawamba (DH), 3 p.m. Minnesota 4, Baltimore 1 Larry Nelson, $16,650 66-50-51—167
MIDWEST Mark O’Meara, $16,650 51-67-49—167
Tyler Gentry homered on Sunday for his team-leading 10th roundtripper L.A. Angels 7, Kansas City 3 Ball St. 2, Bowling Green 1
N.Y. Yankees 11, San Francisco 5 David Toms, $16,650 50-68-49—167
Bradley 6, Missouri St. 5
of the season. Wednesday’s Games Texas 14, Seattle 1 Cent. Michigan 11, W. Michigan 8
Retief Goosen, $13,530
Mark McNulty, $13,530
68-52-48—168
68-52-48—168
Gentry homered to lead off the eighth, making it a two-run game Ole Miss at Southern Miss, 6 p.m.
Houston 4, Cleveland 1 Cincinnati 10, Wichita St. 4 Shaun Micheel, $13,530 63-52-53—168
Columbia (Mo.) 26, Harris-Stowe 4
for the Tide going into the ninth. A single from Auerbach with one on Monday’s Games Creighton 5, Xavier 0
Larry Mize, $13,530 64-54-50—168
Scott Parel, $13,530 64-54-50—168
and one down gave UA a pair of baserunners in the final half inning. Oakland (Montas 4-1) at Boston (Rodriguez Dayton 2, Saint Joseph’s 1 Corey Pavin, $11,880 68-51-51—170
Freshman T.J. Reeves then drew a walk to load them up before a Mc- Thursday’s Games 2-2), 7:10 p.m. E. Michigan 6, Toledo 5
Grand Canyon 7, Chicago St. 0
Duffy Waldorf, $11,880 68-51-51—170
Houston (Verlander 4-0) at Minnesota (Odor- Miguel Angel Jiménez, $11,250 49-69-53—171
Cullough grounder to second went for out No. 2 but also crossed a run. Mississippi State at Texas A&M, 6:30 p.m. izzi 2-2), 7:40 p.m. Illinois 6, Nebraska 5 José María Olazábal, $11,250 49-69-53—171
Baltimore (Means 3-2) at Chicago White Sox Indiana 7, Minnesota 1
Gentry was hit by a pitch in the next at-bat to pack the bags once again, Indiana St. 7, S. Illinois 4 Fred Funk, $10,125 70-52-50—172
(Banuelos 1-0), 8:10 p.m. Jay Haas, $10,125 50-70-52—172
but a strikeout swinging ended things at 5-4 in favor of the Tigers. Jamestown 4-0, Doane 3-1
College Softball Tampa Bay (Stanek 0-0) at Kansas City (Keller
2-2), 8:15 p.m.
Michigan 4, Rutgers 1, 10 innings
N. Illinois 13, Miami (Ohio) 3
Hale Irwin, $10,125
Peter Jacobsen, $10,125
68-52-52—172
50-70-52—172
Sandy Lyle, $10,125 51-67-54—172
Tuesday’s Games North Greenville 10, Mount Olive 7
Dana Quigley, $10,125 70-52-50—172
LeBlanc drives in 4 runs; Southern Miss completes sweep Junior College Softball
Tuesday’s Games
Detroit (Ross 1-3) at Philadelphia (Velasquez
Notre Dame 4, NC State 1
Ohio 1, Kent St. 0 Wes Short, Jr., $10,125 68-52-52—172
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. -- Southern Miss came out smoking 1-0), 7:05 p.m. Ohio St. 5, Iowa 1 Ian Woosnam, $10,125 51-67-54—172
Itawamba at Coahoma (DH), 2 p.m. Cleveland (Bauer 3-1) at Miami (Alcantara 1-2), Oklahoma 6, Kansas St. 3 Bob Tway, $9,000 69-53-51—173
after a weekend in the Smokey Mountains. 7:10 p.m. Oral Roberts 14, Purdue Fort Wayne 0 Scott Verplank, $9,000 69-53-51—173
Brad Faxon, $8,550 52-71-51—174
The Golden Eagles (29-13, 17-4 Conference USA) polished off Oakland (Brooks 2-2) at Boston (Porcello 1-3), Purdue 6, SE Missouri 2
Dudley Hart, $8,550 52-71-51—174

on the air
7:10 p.m. S. Dakota St. 6, Omaha 4, 13 innings
a sweep of Middle Tennessee Sunday with a come-from-behind 6-5 Valparaiso 6, Evansville 2 Bruce Fleisher, $8,100 71-52-52—175
Houston (Cole 1-4) at Minnesota (Pineda 2-1), Tom Jenkins, $8,100 71-52-52—175
victory that extended Southern Miss’ winning streak to eight games. 7:40 p.m. William Penn 15, Grand View 14
Mark Brooks, $7,695 68-56-52—176
Wright St. 5, UIC 2
More importantly, the Golden Eagles hold a two-game lead over Pittsburgh (Lyles 2-1) at Texas (Sampson 0-1), John Huston, $7,695 68-56-52—176
Florida Atlantic atop the C-USA standings. Today 8:05 p.m.
Baltimore (Cashner 4-1) at Chicago White Sox
UT-Martin 4, E. Illinois 1
Youngstown St. at Oakland, ccd. Andy North, $7,695 50-75-51—176
Tom Watson, $7,695 50-75-51—176
Southern Miss outfielder Hunter LeBlanc drove in four runs and BOWLING (Nova 0-3), 8:10 p.m. SOUTHWEST Woody Austin, $7,290 55-68-54—177
Tampa Bay (Snell 2-2) at Kansas City (Junis Mark Calcavecchia, $7,290 55-68-54—177
Southern Miss took advantage of five MTSU errors Sunday. Six of the 8 p.m. — PBA: PBA Playoffs, Round-of-16 match- 2-2), 8:15 p.m.
Arkansas 4, Tennessee 3, 10 innings
Baylor 12, TCU 1 John Cook, $7,020 51-70-57—178
Golden Eagles’ five runs were unearned. es, Portland, Maine, FS1 N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 1-0) at Arizona (Kelly Dallas Baptist 11, Illinois St. 4 Joey Sindelar, $7,020 51-70-57—178
2-2), 9:40 p.m. Houston Baptist 4, Cent. Arkansas 2 Dan Forsman, $6,750 71-53-55—179
The Golden Eagles trailed 3-0 after MT (16-31, 9-12) scored twice COLLEGE BASEBALL Incarnate Word 9, Ark.-Pine Bluff 3 Mike Reid, $6,750 71-53-55—179
Toronto (Buchholz 0-1) at L.A. Angels (Canning
in the first inning on Blake Benefield’s double and a throwing error. Brett 0-0), 10:07 p.m. McNeese 7, Abilene Christian 6, 10 innings Bob Gilder, $6,480 68-56-57—181
Stratinsky made it 3-0 in the second inning with a solo homer. 6 p.m. — Missouri State at Missouri, ESPNEWS Chicago Cubs (Hamels 3-0) at Seattle (Hernan- Rice 2, Louisiana Tech 2, 10 innings Morris Hatalsky, $6,480 68-56-57—181
Sam Houston St. 6, UConn 5 Wayne Levi, $6,210 68-59-55—182
In the seventh inning, Southern Miss loaded the bases with two COLLEGE SOFTBALL dez 1-2), 10:10 p.m.
Stephen F. Austin 5, Northwestern St. 3 Scott Simpson, $6,210 68-59-55—182
Tom Kite, $5,940 71-53-60—184
outs on two walks and an error before LeBlanc tripled into the left-center 6 p.m. — Notre Dame at Pittsburgh, ESPNU Texas 10, West Virginia 2
National League Texas Rio Grande Valley 7, Seattle 6, 10 in- Gil Morgan, $5,940 71-53-60—184
field gap to put the Golden Eagles ahead 6-3. GOLF East Division nings
Texas A&M-CC 5, SE Louisiana 3
Sean Tweedy (6-1) picked up the win, allowing two runs on two hits 2 p.m. — PGA Golf: PGA Professional Champion-
Philadelphia
W L Pct GB
16 12 .571 — Texas Southern 7, Prairie View 0 LPGA Tour
in two innings, walking none and striking out five. New York 14 13 .519 1½ Texas Tech 5, Oklahoma St. 2 Sunday
LeBlanc finished with a triple and two singles, collecting half of
ship, second round, Bluffton, S.C., GOLF Atlanta 13 14 .481 2½ UALR 4, Troy 3 At Wilshire CC
UL Monroe 4, Arkansas St. 2 Los Angeles
Southern Miss’ six hits. Matt Wallner had two singles, walked once and MLB BASEBALL Washington
Miami
12 14 .462
8 20 .286 8
3
W. Kentucky 4, UTSA 2 Purse: $1.5 million
Yardage: 6,465; Par: 71
scored twice. 6 p.m. — Oakland at Boston, ESPN Central Division
FAR WEST Final
W L Pct GB
Southern Miss returns to Hattiesburg for a four-game homestand, 9 p.m. — LA Dodgers at San Francisco OR St. Louis 17 10 .630 — Arizona St. 11, Washington 6 Minjee Lee, $225,000 66-69-67-68—270
Chicago 14 12 .538 2½ Cal St. Fullerton 4, UC Irvine 3 Sei Young Kim, $139,217 70-70-68-66—274
starting at 6 p.m. Wednesday when Ole Miss visits Pete Taylor Park. Baltimore at Chicago White Sox (games joined in Milwaukee 15 14 .517 3 CS Northridge 6, Hawaii 3 Annie Park, $89,559 70-72-66-67—275
Pittsburgh 12 14 .462 4½ CSU Bakersfield 7, Utah Valley 6 Morgan Pressel, $89,559 71-66-70-68—275
progress), MLB Cincinnati 11 16 .407 6 Gonzaga 12, San Francisco 3 Amy Yang, $45,809 71-71-70-64—276
Softball NBA BASKETBALL West Division
W L Pct GB
Grand Canyon 3-7, Chicago St. 0-0
Loyola Marymount 5, Pepperdine 1
N. Colorado 6, California Baptist 1
Gaby Lopez, $45,809
Megan Khang, $45,809
Jin Young Ko, $45,809
69-68-73-66—276
72-72-64-68—276
70-70-67-69—276
Alabama drops extra-inning marathon to Kentucky 7 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, TNT Los Angeles
San Diego
19 11
16 12
.633
.571

2 Nevada 26, Air Force 15 Inbee Park, $45,809 68-70-68-70—276
New Mexico 6, Fresno St. 6, tie Brooke Henderson, $28,709 68-73-69-68—278
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – Alabama and Kentucky battled for 13 9:30 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, TNT Arizona
Colorado
16 13
13 15
.552
.464

5 New Mexico St. 3, Sacramento St. 2 Stacy Lewis, $28,709 65-73-71-69—278
innings in Sunday’s series rubber match, with the Wildcats ultimately NHL HOCKEY San Francisco 11 17 .393 7 Oregon 12, California 4
Oregon St. 2, Washington St. 0
Danielle Kang, $28,709 72-66-70-70—278
Nanna Madsen, $25,000 69-67-67-76—279
coming through to defeat the Crimson Tide, 3-2. 6:30 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD, Saturday’s Games Portland 13, Santa Clara 9 Dani Holmqvist, $21,037 70-69-74-67—280
Alabama (47-6, 15-6 SEC) found itself in an early 2-0 hole after St. Louis 6, Cincinnati 3 San Diego 8, Saint Mary’s 5 Chella Choi, $21,037 71-73-67-69—280
NBCSN N.Y. Yankees 6, San Francisco 4 Southern Cal 11, Cal Poly 5 Mariajo Uribe, $21,037 71-72-68-69—280
Kentucky (32-19, 14-10 SEC) scored runs in the first and third innings. San Diego 8, Washington 3, 10 innings Stanford 13, Arizona 3 Lizette Salas, $21,037 68-71-71-70—280
Two runs in the sixth, including an RBI double from senior Reagan 9 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD , Philadelphia 12, Miami 9 UC Davis 6, Long Beach St. 5, 11 innings Hannah Green, $21,037 65-73-71-71—280
Milwaukee 8, N.Y. Mets 6 UC Santa Barbara 15, UC Riverside 4 Mi Jung Hur, $16,322 74-66-75-66—281
Dykes, tied the game up and neither team scored in the seventh, forcing NBCSN Colorado 9, Atlanta 5 UCLA 6, Utah 4 So Yeon Ryu, $16,322 70-69-74-68—281
extra innings. After five scoreless innings, an RBI single by the Wildcats Chicago Cubs 9, Arizona 1 UNLV 5, San Diego St. 1 Mirim Lee, $16,322 71-74-67-69—281
L.A. Dodgers 3, Pittsburgh 1 Carlota Ciganda, $16,322 73-68-71-69—281
in the top of the 13th broke the tie. The Tide got the potential tying run Azahara Munoz, $16,322 71-70-71-69—281
on base in the bottom half but could not bring her in. Tuesday Sunday’s Games Auto racing Ashleigh Buhai, $16,322 70-71-70-70—281
Ally McDonald, $16,322 71-69-70-71—281
Philadelphia 5, Miami 1
The 13 innings marks the longest game for Alabama since playing COLLEGE BASEBALL N.Y. Mets 5, Milwaukee 2 Sarah Schmelzel, $13,224 72-72-71-67—282
14 at LSU on April 8, 2011. Junior Elissa Brown was 3-for-6 in the 6 p.m. — Southeast Missouri vs. Missouri, SEC Atlanta 8, Colorado 7
Washington 7, San Diego 6, 11 innings
NASCAR Christina Kim, $13,224
Jenny Shin, $13,224
70-71-72-69—282
71-71-70-70—282
leadoff spot, also swiping a pair of bases. Her first stolen bases marked Sunday
St. Louis 5, Cincinnati 2 Kristen Gillman, $13,224 69-74-67-72—282
COLLEGE SOFTBALL At Talladega Speedway
Gemma Dryburgh, $10,627 72-73-71-67—283
the 100th of her career, becoming the seventh player in program history N.Y. Yankees 11, San Francisco 5 Talladega, Ala.
In-Kyung Kim, $10,627 71-73-69-70—283
to reach the milestone. Of the six previous to do so, only three hit triple 6 p.m. — DePaul at Illinois, FS1 Chicago Cubs 6, Arizona 5, 15 innings
L.A. Dodgers 7, Pittsburgh 6
(Pole position in parentheses)
Angela Stanford, $10,627 70-73-70-70—283
1. (11) Chase Elliott, Chevrolet, 188.
digits in their junior season. GOLF 2. (9) Alex Bowman, Chevrolet, 188. Aditi Ashok, $10,627
Haeji Kang, $10,627
70-71-71-71—283
71-71-69-72—283
Monday’s Games 3. (30) Ryan Preece, Chevrolet, 188.
Dykes also caught a runner stealing in the ninth, tying her with 2 p.m. — PGA Golf: PGA Professional Champion- St. Louis (Wacha 1-0) at Washington (Corbin 4. (8) Joey Logano, Ford, 188. P Anannarukarn, $10,627 70-70-71-72—283
Kendall Dawson (2009-12) for the career record at Alabama with 44. 2-0), 7:05 p.m. 5. (5) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 188. Jing Yan, $10,627 68-71-71-73—283
ship, third round, Bluffton, S.C., GOLF Cincinnati (Roark 1-1) at N.Y. Mets (Wheeler 6. (14) Kurt Busch, Chevrolet, 188. Maria Torres, $8,278 71-73-72-68—284
Dykes and junior Bailey Hemphill tallied the two other multi-hit efforts 2-2), 7:10 p.m. 7. (24) Ryan Newman, Ford, 188. Wichanee Meechai, $8,278 74-71-69-70—284
for Alabama in the loss. Freshman Montana Fouts (13-3) took the loss MLB BASEBALL San Diego (Margevicius 2-2) at Atlanta (Soroka 8. (29) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 188. Angel Yin, $8,278 68-76-70-70—284
1-1), 7:20 p.m. 9. (2) Aric Almirola, Ford, 188. Katherine Kirk, $8,278 71-71-72-70—284
in relief, with the go-ahead run as her only run allowed over 10.2 innings 6 p.m. — St. Louis at Washington OR Detroit at Colorado (Freeland 2-3) at Milwaukee (Davies 10. (22) Kyle Busch, Toyota, 188. Brittany Lang, $8,278 73-71-67-73—284
pitched. 2-0), 7:40 p.m. Pernilla Lindberg, $6,631 70-73-74-68—285
Philadelphia, MLB L.A. Dodgers (Maeda 3-2) at San Francisco
11. (36) Corey LaJoie, Ford, 188.
12. (16) Daniel Suarez, Ford, 188. Hee Young Park, $6,631 73-70-73-69—285
Alabama concludes the regular season next weekend with a three- NBA BASKETBALL (Samardzija 2-1), 9:45 p.m. 13. (4) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 188. Lauren Stephenson, $6,631 72-70-72-71—285
game series in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, against LSU (40-12, 14-7 SEC) 14. (1) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 188. Sarah Jane Smith, $6,631 68-74-71-72—285

starting Friday at 6 p.m. 7 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, TNT Tuesday’s Games
Detroit (Ross 1-3) at Philadelphia (Velasquez
15. (7) Ryan Blaney, Ford, 188. Lydia Ko, $6,631
Charley Hull, $6,631
70-73-69-73—285
71-69-70-75—285
16. (17) Paul Menard, Ford, 188.
9:30 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, TNT 1-0), 7:05 p.m.
St. Louis (Wainwright 2-2) at Washington (San-
17. (13) Ty Dillon, Chevrolet, 188. Ariya Jutanugarn, $5,216 73-71-73-69—286
18. (37) Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet, 188. Anne van Dam, $5,216 74-71-70-71—286
NHL HOCKEY chez 0-3), 7:05 p.m. 19. (27) Erik Jones, Toyota, 188. Brittany Altomare, $5,216 72-72-70-72—286
No. 9 Tennessee tops Ole Miss, 2-1 6:30 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD ,
Cincinnati (Castillo 3-1) at N.Y. Mets (Vargas
1-1), 7:10 p.m.
20. (20) Martin Truex Jr, Toyota, 188. Klara Spilkova, $5,216
Shanshan Feng, $5,216
69-72-73-72—286
68-70-76-72—286
21. (25) William Byron, Chevrolet, 188.
OXFORD – No. 17 Ole Miss (36-12, 13-7 SEC) and No. 9 Tennes- Cleveland (Bauer 3-1) at Miami (Alcantara 1-2), 22. (33) Jeffrey Earnhardt, Toyota, Accident, Lindsey Weaver, $5,216 70-73-69-74—286
see (37-12, 12-9 SEC) went back-and-forth all afternoon long Sunday NBCSN 7:10 p.m. 187. Isi Gabsa, $5,216 68-71-73-74—286
San Diego (Paddack 1-1) at Atlanta (Teheran 23. (15) David Ragan, Ford, Accident, 187. Amy Olson, $4,192 75-70-72-70—287
in a pitchers’ duel at the Ole Miss Softball Complex, with the Volunteers 9 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD , 2-3), 7:20 p.m. 24. (10) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, Accident, 187. Pornanong Phatlum, $4,192 74-71-72-70—287
coming out on top 2-1 in Game 3 of the series. Colorado (Marquez 3-1) at Milwaukee (Chacin 25. (6) Ricky Stenhouse Jr, Ford, Accident, 187. Eun-Hee Ji, $4,192 71-73-71-72—287
NBCSN 2-3), 7:40 p.m. 26. (34) Ross Chastain, Chevrolet, 187. Mina Harigae, $4,192 71-73-70-73—287
Molly Jacobsen was the tough-luck loser in the circle despite not al- Pittsburgh (Lyles 2-1) at Texas (Sampson 0-1),
SOCCER 8:05 p.m.
27. (35) Parker Kligerman, Toyota, 186. Jaclyn Lee, $4,192 71-67-76-73—287
lowing a single earned run. The junior was charged with one unearned N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 1-0) at Arizona (Kelly
28. (40) Cody Ware, Ford, 184. Dana Finkelstein, $4,192 74-70-69-74—287
run on four hits in 7.2 frames. Brittany Finney pitched 1.1 innings out of 2 p.m. — UEFA Champions League: Tottenham 2-2), 9:40 p.m.
29. (3) Clint Bowyer, Ford, 182. Ryann O’Toole, $3,735 69-71-75-73—288
30. (31) Chris Buescher, Chevrolet, Accident, Kris Tamulis, $3,582 71-73-72-73—289
the bullpen, surrendering a run on three hits. vs. Ajax, TNT L.A. Dodgers (Buehler 2-0) at San Francisco
(Pomeranz 1-2), 9:45 p.m.
181. Mel Reid, $3,582 72-71-71-75—289
31. (26) Matt DiBenedetto, Toyota, Accident, Anne-C Tanguay, $3,582 67-74-73-75—289
On the other side, Ole Miss struggled to find their footing against Chicago Cubs (Hamels 3-0) at Seattle (Hernan- 181. Cheyenne Knight, $3,392 73-71-74-72—290
Vols starter Matty Moss, who earned the win in a complete-game dez 1-2), 10:10 p.m. 32. (38) Justin Haley, Chevrolet, Accident, 180. Pavarisa Yoktuan, $3,392 74-70-72-74—290
showing, allowing one run on four hits and a pair of walks. Wednesday 33. (21) Jimmie Johnson, Chevrolet, 178. Cristie Kerr, $3,239 70-72-74-75—291

With neither side showing much life offensively through three and COLLEGE SOFTBALL Braves box 34. (32) Landon Cassill,, Chevrolet, 154.
35. (39) Stanton Barrett, Chevrolet, Suspen-
Madelene Sagstrom, $3,239 70-74-71-76—291
Emma Talley, $3,062 70-74-76-72—292
sion, 132. Lee-Anne Pace, $3,062 73-72-74-73—292
a half innings, Ole Miss broke through in the fourth. Abbey Latham got 6 p.m. — UMKC at Missouri, SEC Colorado Atlanta
ab r h bi ab r h bi
36. (23) Denny Hamlin, Toyota, Accident, 80. Stephanie Meadow, $3,062 70-73-74-75—292
things started with a one-out double down the left field line, with Katelin 37. (18) Matt Tifft, Ford, Accident, 11.
GOLF Blckmon rf 4 1 3 1 Albies 2b 5 3 3 2 38. (19) Kevin Harvick, Ford, Accident, 11.
Cooper coming in to pinch run. A deep fly ball advanced Cooper to third
1:30 p.m. — PGA Golf: PGA Professional Cham-
Story ss 4 1 2 0 Dnldson 3b 3 2 1 3
D.Mrphy 1b 5 1 1 3 F.Frman 1b 3 1 2 2
39. (28) Bubba Wallace, Chevrolet, Accident, Transactions
and Gabby Alvarez came up clutch with a looping single to right, plating 10.
Arenado 3b 5 0 0 0 Acn Jr. cf-lf 3 0 0 0 40. (12) Michael McDowell, Ford, Accident, 10. BASEBALL
the speedy freshman. pionship, final round, Bluffton, S.C., GOLF Dahl lf 5 0 0 0 Mrkakis rf 5 0 1 0 American League
Desmond cf 3 3 2 1 Camargo lf 4 1 1 0 Race Statistics
Tennessee struck back to tie the game in the sixth, leading off the 9:30 p.m. — European Tour Golf: China Open, Hampson 2b 4 0 0 0 Minter p 0 0 0 0 Average Speed of Race Winner: 161.331 mph.
BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Placed RHP Alex
Cobb on the 10-day IL, retroactive to April 27.
inning with a single off the third base bag and eventually knotting the Wolters c 2 1 1 1 L.Jcksn p 0 0 0 0
first round, China, GOLF Ty.Andr p 1 0 0 0 D.Swnsn ss 3 0 1 1
Time of Race: 3 Hours, 5 Minutes, 59 Seconds.
Margin of Victory: Under Caution Seconds.
Designated C Jesús Sucre for assignment. Op-
tioned RHPs Jimmy Yacabonis and Luis Ortiz
score with a sacrifice fly to center field. D.Jhnsn p 0 0 0 0 Flowers c 4 1 1 0
1:30 a.m. (Thursday) — European Tour Golf: B.Shaw p 0 0 0 0 Gausman p 2 0 0 0
Caution Flags: 6 for 21 laps. to Norfolk (IL). Recalled RHPs Branden Kline
Jacobsen and Moss continued to do work in their respective half M.Rynld ph 0 0 0 0 Winkler p 0 0 0 0
Lead Changes: 38 among 16 drivers. and Luis Ortiz and C Austin Wynns from Norfolk
innings, sending the game into extras, where the Volunteers took China Open, first round, China, GOLF Estevez p 0 0 0 0 Joyce ph 1 0 0 0
(IL). Claimed RHP Shawn Armstrong off waiv-
Lap Leaders: A. Dillon 0; B. Keselowski 1-7; ers from Seattle.
advantage of a Rebel error to score what turned out the be the winning MLB BASEBALL Tapia ph 1 0 0 0 Blevins p 0 0 0 0
Oh p 0 0 0 0 Sobotka p 0 0 0 0
J. Logano 8; R. Blaney 9; J. Logano 10-13; CHICAGO WHITE SOX — Placed OF Eloy
Gaughan, 14; J. Logano 15-16; A. Almirola Jiménez and RHPs Nate Jones and Ryan Burr
run. The Rebs brought the tying run to third in the home half but couldn’t 7 p.m. — Houston at Minnesota, ESPN Dunn p 0 0 0 0 J.Webb p 0 0 0 0 17-30; J. Logano 31-32; A. Almirola 33; K. Lar- on the 10-day IL. Recalled LHP Aaron Bummer
Incarte ph-cf 1 0 0 0
keep the rally going, allowing Tennessee to salvage a win in Game 3. NHL HOCKEY Totals 34 7 9 6 Totals 34 8 10 8
son 34; A. Almirola 35-46; M. Truex Jr 47-49; and RHP Thyago Vieira from Charlotte (IL).
T. Dillon 50-56; C. Elliott 57-60; A. Bowman CLEVELAND INDIANS — Recalled OF Jordan
Ole Miss will look to bounce back in the final series of the regular Colorado 004 101 010—7 61-67; B. Keselowski 68-70; J. Logano 71-73;
season, heading to Athens for a three-game set with Georgia Friday 6 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD, USA Atlanta 301 100 03x—8 R. Blaney 74-75; K. Busch 76; R. Blaney 77;
Luplow from Columbus (IL). Optioned OF Greg
Allen to Columbus (IL).
E_Camargo (3), D.Murphy (1). LOB_Colora- R. Stenhouse Jr 78-90; K. Busch 91-92; R.
through Sunday. 6:30 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD , do 7, Atlanta 9. 2B_Blackmon (7), Story (5), Stenhouse Jr 93; C. Elliott 94-112; Gaughan,
LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Recalled RHP
John Curtiss from Salt Lake (PCL). Optioned
Desmond (7), Markakis (9), D.Swanson (5).
NBCSN 3B_Camargo (1). HR_D.Murphy (2), Desmond
113-114; C. Elliott 115-132; Gaughan, 133-134;
E. Jones 135-138; J. Logano 139-143; M. Truex
RHP Jaime Barria to Salt Lake.
(2), Albies 2 (5), Donaldson (5), F.Freeman (5). MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed C Willians As-
FIU outslugs Southern Miss in series finale SOCCER SB_Blackmon (2). SF_Wolters (1), D.Swanson
Jr 144-151; J. Logano 152-154; M. DiBenedetto
155; R. Chastain, 156-164; R. Stenhouse Jr
tudillo on the 10-day IL. Recalled OF Jake Cave
(3). S_Ty.Anderson (1). from Rochester (IL).
MIAMI, Fla. – The Southern Miss Golden Eagles (29-19, 12-9 2 p.m. — UEFA Champions League: FC Barcelona 165-166; J. Logano 167-173; K. Busch 174; J. TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Agreed to terms with
Logano 175-184; C. Elliott 185-188. OF Ben Reverea on a minor league contract.
C-USA) fell to the FIU Panthers (25-23, 6-14 C-USA) by a final score vs. Liverpool, TNT IP
Colorado
H R ER BB SO
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps
of 8-6 in Sunday afternoon’s series finale at the FIU Softball Stadium Anderson 4 2-3 4 5 5 4 9 Led): Chase Elliott 4 times for 45 laps; Joey Lo-
National League
Johnson 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 ATLANTA BRAVES — Acquired LHP Jerry
in Miami. gano 9 times for 37 laps; Aric Almirola 3 times
Southern Miss started the game off well, scoring two runs in the Thursday Shaw H,1 1 1 0 0 0 0
Estevez H,3 1 1 0 0 1 1
for 27 laps; Ricky Stenhouse Jr 3 times for 16
laps; Martin Truex Jr 2 times for 11 laps; Brad
Blevins from Oakland for cash considerations.
Optioned RHP Wes Parsons to Gwinnett (IL).
Transferred RHP Arodys Vizcaíno to the 60-
top of the first inning. Lacey Sumerlin produced the first run of the game COLLEGE BASEBALL Oh L,1-1 BS,1 2-3 4 3 3 1 0
Dunn 1-3 0 0 0 0 0
Keselowski 2 times for 10 laps; Ross Chastain, day IL.
1 time for 9 laps; Ty Dillon 1 time for 7 laps; Alex
for the Golden Eagles after driving an RBI double to right center field 6 p.m. — Dallas Baptist at Missouri State, Atlanta Bowman 1 time for 7 laps; Brendan Gaughan,
LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Activated LHP
Gausman 5 5 5 5 2 5 Rich Hill from the 10-day IL. Placed LHP Caleb
to score Destini Brown. Sumerlin currently leads Southern Miss with a ESPNU Winkler 1 1 1 1 0 1
3 times for 5 laps; Ryan Blaney 3 times for 4 Ferguson on the 10-day injured list.
laps; Erik Jones 1 time for 4 laps; Kyle Busch
total of 37 RBIs on the season. Blevins 1-3 0 0 0 1 0 3 times for 4 laps; Kyle Larson 1 time for 1 lap;
NEW YORK METS — Designated C Travis
After Sumerlin’s double, Tata Davis ripped an RBI single down 6 p.m. — Mississippi State at Texas A&M, SEC Sobotka 1 1-3 1 1 0 1 2 Matt DiBenedetto 1 time for 1 lap.
d’Arnaud for assignment. Recalled C Tomás
Webb W,1-0 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Nido from Syracuse (IL).
the right field line that allowed Sumerlin to cross the plate, putting the COLLEGE LACROSSE Minter H,1 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Placed 1B
Golden Eagles on top, 2-0.
FIU answered immediately in the bottom of the first inning by
4 p.m. — Big 10 Tournament: Teams TBD, semi- Jackson S,1-2 2-3 0 0 0 0 0
HBP_by Sobotka (Story). Golf Ryan Zimmerman on the 10-day IL. Recalled
RHP Erick Fedde from Harrisburg (EL).
final, BTN Umpires_Home, Angel Hernandez; First, Ed PGA FOOTBALL
scoring three runs via a Natalie Orcutt RBI single, a hit-by-pitch with the Sunday National Football League
bases loaded and a Deven Kennedy RBI single.
5:30 p.m. — Big East Tournament: Teams TBD, Hickox; Second, Carlos Torres; Third, Dana
DeMuth. At TPC Louisiana JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS — Agreed to terms
semifinal, CBSSN Avondale, La. with CBs Tae Hayes, Picasso Nelson Jr., Mar-
Southern Miss rallied for two runs late in the game but the rally T_3:47. A_33,919 (41,149). Purse: $7.3 million quez Sanford, Saivion Smith and Brandon Wat-
fell short. Sarah Van Schaik lifted a sacrifice fly to right field in the top 6:30 p.m. — Big 10 Tournament: Teams TBD, Final
Yardage: 7,425; Par: 72 son; Ss Andrew Wingard and Zedrick Woods;
DE Shane Bowman, WR Tyre Brady, DT Khairi
of the sixth inning that allowed Brown to score and Brown roped an semifinal, BTN College scores R. Palmer/J. Rahm 64-65-64-69—262 Clark, OL Donnell Greene, LB Joe Giles-Har-
RBI double to left center in the top of the seventh inning, scoring Bre EAST T. Fleetwood/S. Garcia 65-68-64-68—265 ris, WR Raphael Leonard, TE Carson Meier,
8 p.m. — Big East Tournament: Teams TBD, Albany (NY) 12, Maine 3 B. Gay/R. Sabbatini 60-70-66-71—267 WR Dredrick Snelson, G Bunchy Stallings,
Blankenship. Army 3-3, Holy Cross 0-4 M. Every/K. Lee 65-69-65-68—267 LB Connor Strachan, WR Michael Walker, WR
Southern Miss starter Abby Trahan (14-11) suffered the loss in the semifinal, CBSSN Brown 11, Princeton 5 H. Lebioda/C. Luck 67-66-64-71—268 Papi White, DT tackle Andrew Williams and DT
Bucknell 6, Lehigh 5 D. Hearn/S. Power 68-68-64-68—268 Roderick Young.
circle while FIU starter Megan Kugelmann (8-5) earned the win. FIU GOLF Bryant 3, Wagner 2 R. Castro/C. Tringale 65-69-66-68—268
reliever Allison Muraskin was credited with her third save of the season. CCSU 6, Mount St. Mary’s 1 S. Brown/K. Kisner 62-69-68-69—268
9 a.m. — PGA Tour Golf: Wells Fargo Champion-
ship, first round, Charlotte, N.C., GOLF
Georgetown 4, St. John’s 1
Harvard 10, Columbia 9, 14 innings
B. Hurley III/P. Malnati
M. Laird/N. Taylor
63-67-66-73—269
62-74-64-69—269 Basketball
Track and field
Lafayette 5, Navy 2 C. Hoffman/N. Watney 65-70-63-71—269
Marist 5, Niagara 3 S. Horsfield/I. Poulter 67-69-66-67—269
1 p.m. — PGA Tour Golf: Wells Fargo Champion- Monmouth (NJ) 5, Manhattan 2 K. Kraft/K. Tway 63-72-64-71—270 NBA playoffs
All Times EDT
Southern Miss Open brings personal bests ship, first round, Charlotte, N.C., GOLF NJ Tech 7, Kennesaw St. 6
Rhode Island 7, George Mason 6
B. Horschel/S. Piercy
A. Cejka/A. Prugh
66-68-66-70—270
63-71-64-72—270 CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
HATTIESBURG – The Golden Eagles hosted the third annual 5 p.m. — LPGA Tour Golf: Mediheal Champion- Richmond 9, St. Bonaventure 3 T. Mullinax/S. Stallings 61-70-62-77—270 (Best-of-7; x-if necessary)
Rider at Quinnipiac, ppd. A. Hadwin/J. Knous 66-68-65-71—270 Saturday, April 27
Southern Miss Open, with Senior Day and personal bests set. ship, first round, Daly City, Calif., GOLF Sacred Heart 9, LIU Brooklyn 3 J. Dahmen/B. Harkins 63-71-63-74—271 Toronto 108, Philadelphia 95, Toronto leads
Callie Jones had personal bests in the 800m, the 100m hurdles, as St. Peter’s 5, Fairleigh Dickinson 1 L. Glover/C. Reavie 62-70-68-71—271 series 1-0
1:30 a.m. (Friday) — European Tour Golf: China Seton Hall 9, Butler 4 R. Blaum/R. Henley 65-67-65-74—271
well as the high jump. Jasmine Griffin had a personal best in the 100m Stony Brook 3, UMBC 2, 11 innings G. McDowell/H. Stenson 65-67-66-73—271 Sunday, April 28
hurdles. Sarah McMillon had a personal best in the 1500m. Monika Open, second round, China, GOLF Towson 4, William & Mary 3 T. Merritt/R. Streb 66-68-66-72—272 Boston 112, Milwaukee 90, Boston leads se-
UMass 5, La Salle 2 J. Kokrak/C. Stroud 65-69-68-70—272 ries 1-0
Gebarzewska also had a personal best 1500m time. NBA BASKETBALL UMass-Lowell 3, Fordham 2, 10 innings A. Cook/A. Landry 65-70-62-75—272 Golden State 104, Houston 100, Golden State
Eric Washington had a personal best in the long jump. Mamadou Villanova 8, Delaware 4 R. Knox/B. Stuard 62-69-66-75—272 leads series 1-0
7 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, ESPN Yale 7, Dartmouth 4 S. Jaeger/J. Poston 62-70-67-73—272
Seck had a personal best in the 400-meter hurdles. Christian Strong A. Lahiri/S. Sharma 67-69-65-71—272 Monday, April 29
9:30 p.m. — NBA Playoff: Teams TBD, ESPN SOUTH B. Koepka/C. Koepka 67-68-63-74—272 Philadelphia at Toronto, 8 p.m.
had a personal best in the 200m. Tyrese Allen also had a personal-best Portland at Denver, 10:30 p.m.
in the 200m, as did Chedlin Sagesse. Elijah Burton had personal-bests NHL HOCKEY Alabama St. 7, Jackson St. 6
Alcorn St. 14, MVSU 12, 12 innings
M. Jones/J. Spaun
C. Conners/M. Hughes
67-69-64-72—272
67-68-68-70—273
in both the 100 and 200m. 6 p.m. — Stanley Cup Playoff: Teams TBD, USA Appalachian St. 8 Texas-Arlington 4
Austin Peay 13, SIU Edwardsville 11
B. Haas/S. Stefani
A. Romero/J. Etulain
65-69-68-71—273
64-69-65-73—271
Tuesday, April 30
Boston at Milwaukee, 8 p.m.
— From Special Reports Belmont 9, Tennessee Tech 5 B. Grace/J. Harding 65-68-61-80—274 Houston at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com Monday, April 29, 2019 3B

auto racing Baseball recruit


Chase adds an Elliott win in Talladega
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS home, so that’s cool, and reaching higher speeds do it, but it depends on
they made me feel that than NASCAR wanted in the car behind you and
TALLADEGA, Ala. — way. practice, so officials tried where he goes. It would
Chase Elliott felt right at “I couldn’t ask for to slow them down with a have been fun to try.
home, embraced by fans much more there.” late rules tweak. But the LATE MELEE: Mar-
at a track a few hours His father was back in changes made the cars go tin Truex Jr.’s race essen-
from home and one where Georgia driving in a vin- even faster, leaving many tially ended with seven
his father celebrated vic- tage cars race. (He won, veterans wary of the clos- laps to go.
tory a couple of decades too), ing speeds and potential Aric Almirola turned
before. Hendrick Motorsports for chaos and high-speed Chris Buescher, who was
This time it was teammate Alex Bowman crashes. vying for the 10th spot,
Chase’s turn. finished second, followed But the race was most- coming out of Turn 2 and
Elliott won the Cup by rookie Ryan Preece, ly wreck-free — until the caused a four-car wreck
Series race Sunday at Tal- Joey Logano and another final lap. that included Truex and
ladega Superspeedway, rookie, Daniel Hemric. Elliott’s victory end- brought out a red flag.
giving Chevrolet its first Elliott is the sixth driv- ed a seven-race winning Buescher slammed into
victory of the season. He er to win through 10 Cup streak for Ford at Talla- the wall and started spin-
finished well in the clear races this season and dega. Penske Racing had ning.
from a race-ending crash locked up a playoff spot. won six of the last nine. Matt DiBenedetto
that flipped Kyle Larson a Elliott credited a meet- But it was a Chevy cel- had nowhere to go and
half-dozen times. ing with all Chevy drivers ebration — for a change. rammed into Buescher’s
Elliott took the lead for the late-race team- “We needed to win rotating Chevy, lifting it
shortly after a restart work. this,” said Alan Gus- several feet off the track.
with four laps to go and The race ended under tafson, Elliott’s crew Buescher car then hit
worked with three oth- caution after David Ra- chief. “We needed to Truex and Justin Haley. Courtesy photo

er Chevy drivers to hold gan hit William Byron, consolidate our efforts. EARLY EXITS: It Hatley High School held a signing ceremony recently for
former Columbus resident Avery Brenson, who is going
off the rest of the field. who tagged Kyle Lar- We needed to break the didn’t take long for the to attend school and play baseball at Freed-Hardeman
He won for the first time son and sent him sliding streak that one of our ri- first wreck at Tallade- University in Henderson, Tennessee.
since October and went across the track. Larson vals has here.” ga Superspeedway. The
to victory lane about 150 then flipped half a dozen Bowman didn’t get a first one caught up Stew-
miles from his hometown times before coming to a chance to try any last- art-Haas Racing team-
in Georgia.
His Hall of Fame fa-
stop.
“That was probably
gasp attempts to pass his
Hendrick Motorsports
mates Clint Bowyer and
Kevin Harvick.
Brenson signs with
ther Bill Elliott won twice
at Talladega in the 1980s.
“Dad’s history, obvi-
the longest flip I’ve ever
had,” Larson said. “I ha-
ven’t seen a replay of it.
teammate because of the
caution.
“Well, I’m not just go-
Bubba Wallace and
Ryan Blaney tangled on
Lap 10 to touch off the
Freed-Hardeman
ously very cool,” Chase I didn’t know if it would ing to let him win, right?” crash that also caught up FROM SPECIAL REPORTS and has a .500 batting av-
Elliott said. “To me the ever stop. I knew I was Bowman said. “I’ve got to Daytona 500 winner Den- Avery Brenson, who erage with 37 RBIs and
biggest piece of today was flipping and was just hop- try. I knew I could get to ny Hamlin. grew up in Columbus 4 home runs for Hatley.
just how much of a home ing that I wasn’t going to his quarter panel. I was Wallace went low, got and now plays baseball at He will play in the NEM-
race it felt like after the get any closer to the catch pretty confident I could sideways and then slid Hatley High School, has CABB All-Star game in
race. I was blown away by fence, so it was a little bit get to his quarter panel back across the track, signed a letter-of-intent Corinth on June 1.
the people and how fired scary, but thankfully I’m in the tri-oval and who slamming into Michael to play with Freed-Hard- Also signing with
up everybody was. That all right.” knows who’s going to get McDowell and causing eman University in Hen- Freed-Hardeman was his
was an unbelievable ex- The 2019 aerodynam- to the line first at that heavy damage to both derson, Tennessee. teammate, infielder Matt
perience. We are close to ics package had cars point. I thought I could cars. Brenson is a catcher Swan.

pro golf

Odd couple Palmer, Rahm


rule at Zurich Classic
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “I’m really happy I said around 6 feet, one from 7,
yes” to Palmer’s proposal one from 8 and one from
AVONDALE, La. — to team-up, Rahm contin- 11.
Ryan Palmer had to find ued. “I can say to Jordan “What got us going for
a teammate if he was go- and Wesley: ‘Sorry, we the most part was a lot of
ing to get back to New already have a partner for those par putts that Ryan
Orleans, one of his favor- next year.’” made,” said Rahm, who
ite PGA Tour stops for Palmer-Rahm finished figured out the greens on
reasons ranging from the at 26-under 262 at the the back nine, making a
food to his friendship with TPC Louisiana, which 13-foot birdie putt on 10
Saints coach Sean Payton. had dried out consider- and a 24-footer to save par
Palmer’s past partner ably since heavy rain de- on 15.
at the Zurich Classic team layed the first round by “It’s hard when you
event, Jordan Spieth, had more than seven hours play slower greens that
changed his schedule and forced many players have been wet for three
and was taking the week to play more than 18 holes days and you come to
off, and Palmer knew Jon on Friday and Saturday these,” Palmer said. “But
Rahm’s previous team- to get the event back on what a day to buckle down
mate, Wesley Bryan, schedule. and make the ones we
couldn’t play because Opening the final needed to.”
of shoulder surgery. So round tied atop the lead- The Zurich format was
Palmer reached out to erboard with Scott Stall- best-ball in the first and
Rahm, unsure if a 24-year- ings and Trey Mullinax, third rounds, allowing
old Spaniard wanted any- Palmer and Rahm surged players to be more ag-
thing to do with a Texan to a two-stroke lead in gressive. But bad shots
nearly two decades his just two holes after Stall- held the potential to derail
senior. ings-Mullinax bogeyed alternate-shot rounds be-
The odd couple from the first hole and Rahm cause players had to deal
different continents and nearly holed out from the with the lies their team-
generations combined fringe to set up Palmer’s mates left them.
for a 3-under 69 in the al- 1-foot birdie putt on the Palmer and Rahm
ternate-shot final round par-5 second. Palmer and didn’t misfire often, but
Sunday to win the tour’s Rahm never lost the lead when one did, the other
only team event by three after that, making birdies responded well.
strokes over Sergio Gar- on 13 and 14 at virtually LEE WINS LPGA
cia and Tommy Fleet- the same time Garcia and EVENT: Minjee Lee won
wood. Fleetwood were making the Hugel-Air Premia
“I shot him a text, birdies on 17 and 18 — LA Open on Sunday at
hoping he would bite,” highlighted by Garcia’s Wilshire Country Club for
Palmer recalled. “When 29-foot birdie putt in front her fifth LPGA Tour title,
a 42-year-old player is of the grandstand on 17. closing with a 3-under 68
calling him, he’s probably “Proud of how well we for a four-stroke victory.
like, ‘Why does he want to played,” Fleetwood said The 22-year-old Aus-
play with me?’ But he ac- after he and Garcia’s fi- tralian was projected to
cepted and what an awe- nal-round 68. “Neither of jump from fourth to sec-
some week.” us hardly missed a shot. ond in the world ranking
The victory was the ... To shoot 68 that easy in Monday after her fourth
fourth on the tour for foursomes is a very, very top-three finish in her last
Palmer, but first in nearly good day.” seven starts.
a decade. Having last won The teams of Kyo- “Coming in, the first
in 2010 at the Sony Open ung-Hoon Lee-Matt Ev- half of the year that I’ve
in Hawaii, Palmer waved ery and Brian Gay-Rory had, I’ve been hitting it
and gave a thumbs-up as Sabbatini tied for third, pretty solid and playing
he walked up the 18th five shots behind. Four pretty solid,” Lee said.
fairway with a throng of teams tied for fifth at 20 “I felt like it was close. I
fans applauding the im- under, four more for ninth feel pretty good with this
pending triumph. at 19 under and defending one.”
“It was nice playing champions Billy Horschel Lee made a 15-foot
the last hole with a three- and Scott Piercy were birdie putt on the par-3
shot lead. That’s for sure,” among five teams at 18 18th to finish at 14-under
Palmer said. under. 270. She led the last three
Rahm took his third The winners each took days, shooting 66-69-67
PGA Tour victory — one home $1.05 million, mov- to take a one-stroke ad-
each in his first three sea- ing Rahm up to nearly vantage over Nanna Koer-
sons. He finished in the $3.1 million this season. stz Madsen into the final
top 10 for the seventh time Three days of sunshine round.
this year, including a tie made the greens increas- “It’s definitely a sec-
for ninth at the Masters a ingly “crusty” Palmer ond-shot golf course,” Lee
couple weeks earlier. said, and faster. A number said. “I feel like my iron
“When Wesley told me of players struggled to play is pretty solid and
he was having shoulder adjust Sunday, regularly usually I can be accurate
surgery a few months rolling putts past the hole. with them. I think it suits
before the event, I was in Yet Palmer and Rahm me and my game. If my
no-man’s land,” Rahm re- handled it well. Palm- putter is running hot then
called. er made two putts from I have a good chance.”
4B Monday, April 29, 2019 The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com

Sudoku YESTERDAY’S ANSWER


Sunday’s answer
Sudoku
Sudoku is a number-
YESTERDAY’S
5 1
ANSWER
9 3 8 4 7 2 6
placing puzzle
Sudoku based on
is a number-
a 9x9 grid
placing with based
puzzle severalon 8 3 7 5 2 6 9 1 4

2019 Conceptis Puzzles, Dist. by King Features Syndicate, Inc.


agiven
9x9 grid with several
numbers. The object 4 6 2 7 1 9 8 3 5
given numbers.
is to place The object
the numbers
is
1 5 4 2 6 7 3 9 8
1 to place
to 9 in thethe numbers
empty spaces
1sotothat
9 ineach
the empty spaces
row, each 9 7 8 1 4 3 5 6 2
Chris McDill/Special to the Dispatch
Jeffery Simmons, a Mississippi State football player who was drafted in the first round by the Tennessee Titans,
so that each
column row, each
and each 3x3 box 3 2 6 9 5 8 1 4 7
column
containsand theeach
same3x3 box
throws the ceremonial first pitch prior to Sunday’s game between MSU and Georgia. contains the same number
number 7 4 5 6 3 1 2 8 9
only once. The difficulty

Bulldogs
only once. The difficulty 2 8 3 4 9 5 6 7 1
level increases from
level increases from
Monday to Sunday. 6 9 1 8 7 2 4 5 3
Monday to Sunday. Difficulty Level 4/27

Continued from Page 1B


Foscue and a single by Georgia’s Cole Gordon then walked the “He hung a changeup with two
Riley King put the first two runners bases loaded before striking out strikes and I was able to put a bar-
of the game aboard. Patrick Sullivan to close the inning. rel on it and run one down the line,
Instead of imploding, Plumlee Junior Colby White furthered drive a few runs in and got us a lit-
battled. He struck out the side to the trend when he allowed a solo tle momentum and we went from
end the threat and the inning. home run to Austin Biggar and a there” he said.
“I just knew that I couldn’t get too three-run shot to LJ Talley in the Allen added another run in the
big,” Plumlee said. “I couldn’t try to ninth, cutting the MSU lead to one. seventh inning when he smoked a
overpower people. I had to stick to White then drew a fly out to cen- sacrifice fly to right-center field to
what I know, moving the ball down ter and struck out Shepherd to end score senior Jake Mangum.
in the zone, in and out, and knowing the game. One inning later, Skelton sin-
Sunday’s Cryptoquote:
if I was going get those guys to put “They’re fine,” Lemonis said of gled home Foscue before senior
it in play or maybe to a two-strike his relievers. “We’ve had a couple Marshall Gilbert grounded into
count then maybe I can just get guys have a tough outing or two, a fielder’s choice that brought in
them on their toes.” but that’s going to happen in this sophomore Rowdey Jordan for the
The MSU bullpen was shaky for league.” decisive run.
the second straight game. After After scoring 28 runs in the first MSU earned its second SEC
Plumlee was pulled mid-at-bat, red- two games of the series, MSU need- sweep of the season with the win.
shirt junior Trysten Barlow walked ed every bit of its six runs Sunday. The first came against Alabama
the only two batters he faced to load Junior Dustin Skelton notched during Super Bulldog Weekend
the bases with one out. his fifth RBI of the weekend with a April 12-14.
Senior Jared Liebelt ended the sacrifice fly to left that plated soph- Lemonis’ bunch are now 36-9
threat, earning a fly out and a three- omore Justin Foscue in the second and 13-8 in conference play. They
pitch strikeout, but ran into his own inning. are tied for second in the SEC West
troubles in the eighth. Sophomore Tanner Allen aided with Ole Miss and LSU.
Liebelt allowed a leadoff double the cause in the fifth inning when “We’re just going to stay even
Tucker Maxwell and hit John Cable he roped a two-RBI double down keel,” Allen said. “Don’t get too low
to put two runners on. Cam Shep- the right field line and moved to on the lows and don’t get too high
herd’s RBI single ended his day. third on a throw home. on the highs.”

college football

Former
EMCC
standout
to Rams
FROM SPECIAL REPORTS
ACROSS
SCOOBA – Lineback- 1 Hound’s hands
er Dakota Allen became 5 Satchel part
the sixth East Mississippi 10 Baghdad’s nation
Community College play- 11 Less taut
er in the last seven years 13 Lima’s nation
David Miller/Special to the Dispatch
to be selected in the NFL 14 Relaxed
Chad Thrash (54) tries to hold off Jamey Boland (232) for the lead at the midway
Draft after being picked in 15 Qualify
point of the 50-lap Street Stocks race during the Golden Egg Spring Nationals on
Saturday at Magnolia Motor Speedway. the seventh round by the 17 Workout unit
reigning NFC champion 18 Hospital’s recre-

Magnolia Los Angeles Rams during ation space


last week’s NFL Draft held 19 Salt Lake City
in Nashville. player
Continued from Page 1B 20 Ewe’s mate
Allen, who spent his
top 5. drivers to the top or bot- Hughes, Randall Beck- sophomore season helping 21 Highlands family
“I hate to take [the tom and making passing with, Ryan Colby and Bra- 22 Gave a hoot
lead the 2016 EMCC Lions
win] like that, but I’ll take almost impossible. den Mitchell rounded out 25 Heart’s place
to an 11-1 record and No.
them any way I can get “The track was just the top 5. 2 national ranking in the
26 Ship frame Sunday’s answer
‘em,” Herndon said. treacherous to try and 27 “Vive le —!”
Tyler Burgess won final NJCAA poll, was the DOWN 23 Coin-op eatery
Albert Rich, who run on,” Herndon said. 28 “— Now or
the 602 Sportsman fea- 37th pick of the seventh Never” 1 Played like Pan 24 “Goosebumps”
manned the scales for the “We were just doing the ture. Nick Thrash, Colby round and 251st selection 29 Places of 2 Sports site author
Midsouth Big 10 Street best we could. Chad had Ponds, Tody Ratcliff and overall in this year’s NFL worship 3 Like a 16-Down 25 Robin Cook book
Stock Series Saturday a good car; I didn’t have Corey Pennington round- Draft. 4 Acorn lover 27 Overnight flight
33 Period
night, said cars are scaled nothing for him all race Allen sandwiched his 5 Ski event 29 Small pies
ed out the top 5. 34 Unyielding
at 3,000 pounds before long.” one standout year on the 35 Asylum seeker 6 Tribe symbol 30 Islands veranda
Cody Chism won the
the race and are allowed a Boland, who regular- Scooba campus between 37 Take apart 7 Fish eggs 31 Send a Dear
Factory Stocks feature.
one-pound burn-off of fuel ly runs Durrence Layne three solid seasons at Tex- 38 Marbles, so to 8 Generally John letter
for each lap of the race. Late models, competed in Scooter Ware rebounded
as Tech University. As speak 9 Old Spanish 32 Purloined
Rich said Thrash told him his third Street Stock race from losing his entire rear money 36 Martini base
a two-time team captain 39 Finger feature
he missed weight because of the season. Boland shot end in the Friday feature 40 Past, present, or 12 Advice to sinners
for the Red Raiders, Al-
of the 11 caution flags to second on a restart on to finish second Saturday future 16 Frog’s cousin
len was credited with 262
during the race. lap 22 and raced side-by- night. John A Beard Jr., career tackles, including 41 Flying toy 21 4-Down cousin
“Granted, there were side with Thrash for a few Brad Gable and Corey 18.5 stops behind the line 22 Berates
a lot of cautions, but as a laps before Thrash again Adank rounded out the of scrimmage, along with
team, they need to under- opened up his lead. top 5. four pass interceptions, 11
stand that it could be like “I got a good restart on Lee Hutchinson won pass breakups, three fum-
that,” Rich said. “So they the outside,” Boland said. the Hot Shots feature. ble recoveries and a forced
need to add more fuel or “We started running hot Friday’s results: fumble. This past year as
extra weight if there’s any and I moved down. But Randall Beckwith won a senior, the Humble, Tex-
question.” (Thrash) had a good car. the Durrence Layne Late as, native was Texas Tech’s
Herndon float- It would have been a good Model feature. Evan Ellis, second-leading tackler
ed through the top 5 race.” Spencer Hughes, Matt with 73 stops, including
throughout the race af- Boland said he had a Brazil and Tommy Reed 6.5 tackles for loss. The
ter nursing carburetor car good enough “to win rounded out the top 5. 6-foot-1, 232-pound line-
issues that began in hot any race around here.” He backer also totaled 102
Blake Ray won the 602
laps. He took over second said his late-race gamble tackles as a junior and 87
Sportsman feature. Chace
place when Jamey Boland, that resulted in a cut tire stops as a redshirt fresh-
Pennington, Tony Shel-
the only driver to chal- was “bad luck.” man for the Red Raiders.
lenge Thrash in the race, “I thought it was going ton, Jamie Pickard and
As a sophomore at East
charged hard through to be enough room, but Jason Milan rounded out Mississippi, Allen ranked
the middle on lap 47 and we just barely touched the top 5. eighth nationally among
connected with Thrash’s and cut my tire down,” Brad Gable won the NJCAA leaders with 117
right side, losing momen- Boland said. Factory Stocks feature. total tackles in addition
tum and drifting up the In other race ac- Alex Johnson, John John- to having an interception,
track after cutting a tire. tion, Cliff Ross won the son, Cody Chism and five pass breakups, a fum-
The middle chewed up Durrence Layne Late John A Beard, Jr. founded ble recovery and a forced WHATZIT ANSWER
at both corners, forcing Models feature. Spencer out the top 5. fumble.
Log cabin
The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com Monday, April 29, 2019 5B

major league baseball

Donaldson’s 3-run homer helps Braves outslug Rockies, 8-7


THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ozzie Albies, who hit two hom- Braves closer A.J. Mint- right there,” Snitker said. out with one walk in the seventh
ers, before Donaldson’s blast. er gave up singles to Charlie It was a much-needed win- in his Atlanta debut. Blevins,
ATLANTA — Josh Donald- “Those are the games you Blackmon and Trevor Story to ning performance for the bull- 35, posted a 4.85 ERA in 64
son and Luke Jackson provided win in those kind of situations open the ninth. Minter, who pen. Atlanta has lost leads in 11 games with the New York Mets
big lifts for the Atlanta Braves, that can really turn around the was charged with a blown save of its 14 losses and blew a 3-0 last season. He had a 1.69 ERA
who needed reminders of how season for you,” said Freddie and loss while giving up four lead on Sunday as Murphy hit in seven games with Triple-A
to win at home and how to pro- Freeman, who hit a two-run ho- runs in Saturday night’s 9-5 a three-run homer in a four-run Las Vegas this season. Atlanta
tect a lead. mer in the first and was on deck loss, was pulled after Daniel third. optioned RHP Wes Parsons to
Donaldson hit a three-run when Donaldson hit the oppo- Murphy’s fly ball to center field Ian Desmond’s homer in the Triple-A Gwinnett and trans-
homer in the eighth, Atlanta’s site-field homer. for the first out. sixth off Dan Winkler gave the ferred RHP Arodys Vizcaíno to
fourth home run of the game, “He’s been hitting the ball Jackson earned his first save Rockies a 6-5 lead. the 60-day injured list.
and Jackson helped the Braves’ hard and it’s been getting when Nolan Arenado hit a fly Atlanta’s Kevin Gausman TRAINER’S ROOM:
bullpen survive a ninth-inning caught,” Freeman said. “... I ball to shallow left field, caught gave up five runs in five innings. The Blevins trade addressed
scare for an 8-7 victory over the knew that one was out.” by a charging Johan Camargo, Colorado’s Tyler Anderson gave a shortage of left-handers in
Colorado Rockies on Sunday. The Braves ended a stretch and David Dahl grounded out to up five runs in 4 2/3 innings. the bullpen with Jesse Biddle
Right-hander Seunghwan of five straight home losses, in- the mound. Jacob Webb (1-0) recorded (right thigh contusion, right
Oh (1-1) flung his glove into the cluding the first two games of Braves manager Brian Snit- the final out in the eighth. groin strain) and Jonny Venters
air in frustration as he stood the three-game series with the ker said he turned to Jackson BLEVINS MAKES AT- (right calf strain) on the IL.
on the mound and watched Rockies. for a better matchup against LANTA DEBUT: Left-hander The Braves are being patient
Donaldson’s homer land in the Oh gave up three runs on Arenado. Jerry Blevins, acquired before with Venters, who has been out
right-field seats. Oh gave up four hits while recording two “Luke’s been on attack mode the game from the Oakland since April 15 and is eligible to
singles to Tyler Flowers and outs. and that was a big, big moment Athletics for cash, recorded one return.

Comics & Puzzles


DILBERT
Dear Abby
D
EAR ABBY: IC NORTHWEST trust her or if there are other
I think a DEAR TESTED: things going on. We still plan
person in If you are sure to get engaged when the time
my life, “Janine,” that Janine has is right, but should I believe
has kleptoma- kleptomania, it she’ll be faithful and truthful,
nia. I have seen would be a kind- or should I find someone else I
her take things ness to caution know I can trust? — LET DOWN
from my house, your mutual IN ILLINOIS
and I know she friends about it so DEAR LET DOWN: Give her
steals clothing they can protect props for being honest with you
from stores (as their belongings. about the kissing and fondling,
evidenced by the I would certainly but before making up your mind,
ZITS security clips still want to know if I clarify exactly what the “etc.”
on them). were inviting her means. You should also make
A friend to MY home. sure you have a clear definition
witnessed her DEAR ABBY: I about what “socializing” means.
take boxes of have been seeing (There is socializing and then
doughnuts from
Dear Abby a girl I met in there is SOCIALIZING.) If your
my wedding. When high school and definitions don’t line up, then
my friend confronted her about went with for a year. We both break up.
it, Janine said that she “de- went our separate ways for DEAR ABBY: My mother com-
served” them. She even took a couple of years because I mitted to going to my son’s first
my husband’s glasses and then, moved far away with my family. College National Honor Society
a year later, set them on the We started college in different induction ceremony. My broth-
kitchen counter — next to her states, but got back together er’s wife’s grandmother passed
purse. She has other sporadic over spring break a year ago. away, and her wake/funeral
behaviors as well. This year we got pinned to each is the same day. My mother
GARFIELD I’m struggling to be under- other. However, even though we backed out of her commitment
standing about kleptomania, are committed to each other, to my son and is now going to
knowing that it’s a mental because we are so far apart, the wake/funeral. Should I feel
illness. I don’t want to lose we agreed we would go out on angry that she did this? Which
my personal belongings or my dates and socialize until we are event should she commit to? —
relationships! engaged. HURT IN THE EAST
We’re no longer comfortable After a few months, I found DEAR HURT: Calm down.
having Janine in our home. I’m out she had gone home with a You stated that this will be your
reluctant to talk to her about it co-worker after work when he son’s “first” induction into the
because she can be combative offered to fix her dinner. Dinner National Honor Society, which
and defensive. Is it socially led to wine and more than a implies that there may be more.
acceptable to bring up this be- few drinks, and then to kissing, Your mother will have but one
havior with our mutual friends, fondling, etc. I was extremely opportunity to pay respects to
or should we keep our mouths hurt when she confessed it to her in-law, which is why she
shut? — TESTED IN THE PACIF- me, and now I’m not sure I can changed her plans. Accept it.
CANDORVILLE
Horoscopes
TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (April have to ignore, tolerate or work rid of perfectly good stuff, do
29). Don’t be surprised if you around. some testing to isolate the
find yourself moving -- furniture, TAURUS (April 20-May 20). problem.
your body, your address. A new Like a very effective personal LEO (July 23-Aug. 22).
you takes over this solar return, trainer, fear can be your ally, Something to watch out for: Giv-
and life quickly snaps to fit the motivating you to improve, push ing can be a way of controlling
fresh identity. You love people yourself and ultimately become people’s attention. Think: magi-
for who they are, not for what stronger. Bonus: Fear comes cian producing a bunny from a
you need or who they might with a rush of energy you can hat. It’s a trick. Something hap-
become. Relationships thrive apply to the task. pens when the audience isn’t
under your sincere attention. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). looking ... then it’s all cuteness
Investments pay in July. Scorpio As a rule, you walk your talk. and awe.
BABY BLUES and Gemini adore you. Your But like all people, you have VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22).
lucky numbers are: 5, 28, 1, 19 moments of falling out of align- You’re no chameleon. You don’t
and 41. ment. This can be fixed with 10 change or blend in for anyone
ARIES (March 21-April 19). minutes of introspection and a unless and until you decide
Like a strong tree that bends decision. there’s something in it for you.
with the wind, you’ve great CANCER (June 22-July 22). You can’t totally control how
integrity but you’re not rigid. There’s no need to hold on to you change, but you can aim
Good, because people around what isn’t working. The only yourself in a direction.
you are going to do things you trouble is, you’re not sure which LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23).
don’t approve of — things you’ll part is broken. To avoid getting Because of the GPS system on
many people’s phones, they can
go anywhere without a map.
But there’s still no GPS for the
emotional landscape. And yet,
here you go bravely heading into
BEETLE BAILEY new territory.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
21). The universe is massive,
but thanks to the genius of
our senses, we can count on
observations that are the right
size for our comprehension —
usually. You might feel a little
stretched in this way today.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec.
21). Strong emotions are sig-
nals there’s something in need
of expression. Maybe expres-
sion isn’t appropriate or socially
acceptable in one moment or
MALLARD FILLMORE in one way, but there’s always
another. Resolve to find it.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19). You see similarities among
people because you look for
them. You’re also looking for
something to like, ways people
can work together and, of
course, opportunities to have
fun.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18). People have a right to
make their own choices. The
peaceful, respectful way is to
keep reminding yourself of this
FAMILY CIRCUS today as you watch people do
things that you wouldn’t choose
for them.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20). When people get their
feelings hurt, they tend to come
to you for comfort, and to vent.
Do you mind hearing so much
complaining? That’s what you
get for being a trusted friend!

Rising inflation
SOLUTION:
6B MONDAY, APRIL 29, 2019 The Dispatch • www.cdispatch.com
/s/ Lee Ann S. Turner
Lee Ann S. Turner
Miss. Bar No. 10438
The Winfield Law Firm,
Legal Notices 0010 P.A.
Legal Notices 0010 General Services 1360 Tree Services 1860 Auctions 4120 Apts For Rent: Starkville 7070 Houses For Rent: Northside
224 East Main Street 7110
IN THE CHANCERY Post Office Box 80281

classifieds
HILL’S PRESSURE A&T TREE SERVICE 2BR/2BA. COTTON
COURT OF LOWNDES Starkville, MS 39759 WASHING. Commercial/ Bucket truck & stump ESTATE AUCTION District in Starkville.
662.323.3984 – Tel COLONIAL
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI residential. House, removal. Free est. 14650 Bone Camp Call 662−617−3356.
662.323.3920 – Fax TOWNHOUSES. 2 & 3
concrete, sidewalks & Serving Columbus Rd., Coker, AL. bedroom w/ 2−3 bath
IN RE: ESTATE OF BRI- lturner@winfieldlawfirm. Sat. May 4th, 9 am.
AN LANE BOBITT, DE- com mobile washing. Free since 1987. Senior Apts For Rent: Other 7080 townhouses. $600 to
Attorneys for Petitioner, Large Collection of
Easy online self-service for CEASED
James K. Hall, Jr.
est. 662−386−8925. citizen disc. Call Alvin @
242−0324/241−4447 antique Tractors, 1, 2, 3 BEDROOM
$695. 662−549−9555.
Ask for Glenn or text.
Cars, Motorcycles,
your classified ads available BLANCHE N. BOBITT,
EXECUTRIX PUBLISH: 4/15, 4/22,
"We’ll go out on a limb
for you!" Furniture. Don’t
apartments &
townhouses. Call for Houses For Rent: West 7150
at ads.cdispatch.com or call CAUSE NO. 2019-0068-
& 4/29/2019 THE SHINNIN WINDOW
CLEANING SERVICE,
miss seeing this
collection. Farm
more info. 662−328−
SMALL COTTAGE 1BR/
Good Things To Eat 2150 8254.
662.328.2424 PDE Building & Remodeling 1120 INC.
Call Shirley @ 662−549
House on 14 Ac & 1BA, all appl. incl.
TOMATO HOUSE Vine− Outbuildings. Water & trash incl. in
NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUGGS CONSTRUCTION −2087. Free estimate. Clydette Hughes
ripened hydroponic lease. Near MSU &

deadliNes
CO. Building, roofing, No job to big or small. AL 1275 EMCC. No pets. $500
Letters Testamentary remodeling, & home
tomato. Located next to
have been granted and Noxubee County High 205−612−4221 per mo. $400 dep.
issued to Blanche N. repair. Licensed & Lawn Care / Landscaping assetliquidator.biz App/refs/lease req.
School. 662−352−
(Deadlines subject to change.) Bobitt, Executrix of the Bonded. 662−242− 1470 1270 or 662−425− 662−242−2923.
For Placing/Canceling Estate of Brian Lane
Bobitt, deceased, by the
3471, 662−574−8470.
COMMERCIAL BUSH
9116.
Farm Equipment & Supplies Mobile Homes for Rent 7250
Classified Line Ads: Chancery Court of HOME REPAIRS & HOGGING weed eating, 4420
Lowndes County, Mis- Clerical & Office 3050
Sunday .................. Thursday 3:00 p.m. sissippi, on the 17th
CONSTRUCTION WORK tiling & leveling, & 3BR/2BA TRAILER,
WANTED. Carpentry, clearing overgrown lots. LOCAL COMPANY New Hope school dist.
Monday.................... Friday 12:00 p.m. day of April, 2019. This small concrete jobs, Owner, Operator looking for receptionist/
2016 CAT SKIDSTEER
299XHP HIGH FLOW $500/mo & $500 dep.
is to give notice to all
Tuesday.................Monday 12:00 p.m. persons having claims electrical, plumbing, licensed & insured. 17 secretary. Previous ex- w/ mulcher & forestry No pets, no drugs, no
Wednesday ........... Tuesday 12:00 p.m. against said estate to roof repairs, pressure years experience. Willie perience helpful but not kit. <1,000 hrs, partying. Call between
Probate and Register washing and mobile Murray Jr. 662−242− necessary. Computer $82,500. 10a−7p. 662−386−
Thursday ........ Wednesday 12:00 p.m. same with the Chan- home roof coating and 8809. Free estimates. skills a must. Send 205−329−1790. 4292. NO TEXT
Friday .................. Thursday 12:00 p.m. cery Clerk of Lowndes underpinning. No job Quotes by job not acre. resume to: MESSAGES.
County, Mississippi, Box 664, c/o The
LEGAL NOTICES must be within ninety (90) days
too small. 549−7031.
TERRA CARE
Commercial Dispatch,
FOR SALE Hay baler, RENT A fully equipped
submitted 3 business days prior to after the first publica- PO Box 511, Columbus, camper w/utilities &
TOM HATCHER, LLC LANDSCAPING L.L.C. MS 39703. rake, and cutter. Call
first publication date tion of this Notice to Phone: 662−549−1878 Ernie at 662−549− cable from $145/wk −
- Creditors. A failure to so Custom Construction, $535/month. Columbus
Probate and Register Restoration, Landscaping, Property General Help Wanted 3200 8948 for more info.
• All ads must be paid for in advance and are Clean Up, Plant Care, & County School
said claim will forever Remodeling, Repair,
locations. 662−242−
non-refundable after the first insertion. bar the same. Insurance claims. Bush Hogging, Herbicide FIRST CUMBERLAND Furniture 4480
Presbyterian Church 7653 or 601−940−
• Please read your ad on the first day of 662−364−1769. Spraying.
/s/ Blanche N. Bobitt seeks part-time secret- 2BR/1BA LOCATED in 1397.
publication. We accept responsibility only for Licensed & Bonded. BLACK BEDROOM SET,
Blanche N. Bobitt, Exec- FOR YOUR Spring & ary to work 4 hours per incl full sz sleigh bed, Historic Downtown
the first incorrect insertion. Office Spaces For Rent 7300
utrix Carpet & Flooring 1150 Summer lawn care day, M-F. Excellent cler- dresser w/ mirror, chest Columbus. 2,000 sqft.
• The Publisher assumes no financial ical, communication,
needs, call Robinson & night stand, $600. Hardwood floors
responsibility for errors nor for omission of OF COUNSEL: and organizational skills throughout. Open floor.
HISTORIC DOWNTOWN
Lawn Service, 662−435 required. Strong com- New full sz mattress, COLUMBUS Office,
copy. Liability shall not exceed the cost of that Aubrey E. Nichols, MB # Very nice. Incl W&D.
3842 −8746. puter and social media still in plastic, $250. Retail, Restaurant
portion of space occupied by such error. $1200/mo. Call 662−
• All questions regarding classified ads currently The Nichols Firm, PLLC skills imperative includ- Bissell carpet cleaner, Space available. Call
Post Office Box 1081 JESSE & BEVERLY’S ing experience with Mi- $80. Two sets of black 328−8655. 662−328−8655 or 662
running should be directed to the Classified Columbus, MS 39703- LAWN SERVICE. crosoft Office products. Toyota Camry floormats, −574−7879.
Department. 1081 Mowing, cleanup, Applicants should email $80. Cash Only. 662− FIRST FULL MONTH
• All ads are subject to the approval of this (662) 243-7312 landscaping, sodding, & cover letter and resume 242−2884. Leave a OFFICE SPACE: 2,000
RENT FREE! 1 & 2
paper. The Commercial Dispatch reserves the anichols@thenichols- tree cutting. 356−6525. to fcpcsecretary@ message. Bedroom Apts/ square feet. 294
right to reject, revise, classify or cancel any firm.net gmail.com. Chubby Dr. Flexible
Townhomes. Stove &
advertising at any time. PUBLISH: 4/22, 4/29,
MULCHING & DEBRIS
Sporting Goods 4720 refrigerator. $335− leasing terms. Available
& 5/6/2019 DAVID’S CARPET & REMOVAL SERVICE TECHNICIAN now. 662−328−8254.
aUTO / PeTs
$600 Monthly. Credit
UPHOLSTERY Using Skidsteer. for local pest control ELLIPTICAL MACHINE
company. Applicant check & deposit. Houses For Sale: East 8200
CLEANING Call for estimate, Sole Elliptical E35 in Coleman Realty, 662−
must be organized, de-
MeRcHaNdise
1 Room − $40 662−251−3001. excellent condition. Nice 329−2323.
2 Rooms − $70 pendable, work well with BEAUTIFUL GARDEN
IN THE CHANCERY the public, and have quiet machine. $450
Moving & Storage 1590 HOME. 56 Collanwood
Good: 6 Days.......................$12 COURT OF LOWNDES
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
3+ Rooms − $30 Ea
Rugs−Must Be Seen
good driving record with 662−574−1561
FISHERMAN’S DREAM Cove. Great
valid driver's license.
Better: 12 Days....................$18 Car Upholstery MOVING??? I can help Drug test required. 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath, neighborhood. East
IN THE MATTER OF THE Business For Sale 6350 Columbus Area off
Best: 30 Days.......................$30 LAST WILL AND TESTA-
Cleaning Available pack, organize and/or
coordinate your move.
Apply at 107 Gardner furnished apartment on
Warpath Rd.
662−722−1758 Blvd. No phone calls. the Elk River. Boat
MENT OF JAMES K. RESTAURANT FOR
6 lines of text; addtl. lines $1 each. HALL, SR., DECEASED
Includes help selling
SALE OR LEASE
access. $79 per night. 2 Bedrooms, 2 Full
unwanted items. Weslyn Rogersville Al. Call Tracy Baths. Built in 2003,
OFFICE WORKER, Part Opportunity to own/
General Services 1360 Wood 214−674−9514. Time, at least 21 yrs 931−205−0471. 1216 sq ft. $129,500.
JAMES K. HALL, JR.
seRVices / fiNaNcial
operate an established 662−386−3027.
EXECUTOR old. High school gradu- profitable strong
HOME MAKEOVER & Painting & Papering 1620 ate. Must pass drug
customer base and HUGE DOWNTOWN Houses For Sale: Other 8500
Real esTaTe / HealTH
CAUSE NO. 2019-0056- ESTATE CLOSEOUT screen & background
SERVICES. Generate SULLIVAN’S PAINT check. Must be profi- excellent reputation For STUDIO. Exposed brick
PDE walls line this loft−style
cash from the sale of SERVICE cient in Microsoft applic- info please email: RIVER HOME, NICE!
Good: 12 Days.....................$25 NOTICE TO CREDITORS unwanted items. I will Certified in lead ations; Outlook, Word & thisisforsell@yahoo.com apartment with an open GREAT AREA IN WP.
Best: 24 Days.......................$40 help organize & coordi− removal. Offering Excel. Approx 18 hours floor plan. Large Across from water with
Letters Testamentary nate the removal of special prices on or more per week, Mon- Apts For Rent: Northside 7010 windows look down on access to Tenn−Tom
6 lines of text; addtl. lines $1 each. having been issued by unwanted furniture & interior & exterior Fri. Customer service is Fifth Street. Full kitchen, Waterway. 4BR/2BA
the Chancery Clerk of key with strong commu- FOX RUN APARTMENTS hardwood floors, walk− with 2 acres & large
clutter from homes. painting, pressure nication skills & the
Lowndes County, Mis- washing & sheet rock ability to multitask. 1 & 2 BR near hospital. in closet, laundry. 109 screened in room.
Creative makeover
gaRage sales
sissippi, on the 5th day $595−$645 monthly. 5th St S. $750/mo. $212,000. Call: 662−
of April, 2019, to the solutions from profess− repairs. Apply in person at
Free Estimates 1771 Stinson Creek Rd. Military discount, pet Call or text Peter: 245−4273 or 662−889
undersigned as Execut- ional interior designer
Good: 1 Day.........................$10 or of the Estate of included for free! Call 435−6528 Columbus, MS 39705. area, pet friendly, and 662−574−1561. −1228.
Office: 662-434-0171 furnished corporate
Better: 3 Days......................$18 James K. Hall, Sr., De-
ceased, in Cause No.
Contact: Weslyn Wood
Stump Removal 1790 apts. 24−HOUR Lots & Acreage 8600
COLEMAN
214−674−9514.
Best: 6 Days.........................$34 2019-0056-PDE, in said Medical / Dental 3300 PROFESSIONAL GYM.
court, notice is hereby ON SITE SECURITY. SUMMER SPECIAL.
4 lines of text; addtl. lines $1 each.
WORK WANTED:
given to all persons hav- Licensed & Bonded− RENTALS 1.75 acre lots. Good/
HELP WANTED ON SITE MAINTENANCE.
TOWNHOUSES & APARTMENTS
Includes FREE Garage Sale signs. Rain ing claims against the CARE CENTER OF ON SITE MANAGEMENT. bad credit. 10% down,
Estate of James K. Hall, carpentry, painting, &
on the day of your sale? Call and we will Sr., Deceased, to have demolition. Landscap−
ABERDEEN 24−HOUR CAMERA 1 BEDROOM as low as $299/mo.
RN SUPERVISOR Eaton Land. 662−361−
re-run your ad the next week FREE! the same probated and ing, gutters cleaned, M-F, 8A-4:30P
SURVEILLANCE. Benji @
662−386−4446.
2 BEDROOMS 7711.
registered by the Clerk bush hogging, clean−up
of the Chancery Court of work, pressure washing,
LPN 3P-11P 3 BEDROOMS
CNA 6A-2P
eMPlOYMeNT & legals
LOT FOR Sale in
Lowndes County, Mis- moving help & furniture CNA 2P-10P Apts For Rent: West 7050
LEASE,
Starkville. Will need
© The Dispatch

sissippi, within ninety Apply in person at

VIP
repair. 662−242−3608. cleared. 818 N. Jackson
(90) days from the date
All employment and legal notices must be of first publication here- ALLSTUMP
Care Center
505 Jackson St,
DEPOSIT St. Lot 5, City Block 97.

Rentals
placed via email, phone or in-person. All of, that failure to pro- CASA CARE SERVICES:
GRINDING SERVICE Aberdeen AND
662−465−7611, 662−
bate and register any Offers services such as: EOE 418−9096 or 662−418
other ads may be placed online. such claim within said residential janitorial,
GET ’ER DONE!
CREDIT CHECK −4176.
We can grind all
Apartments
fRee BaRgaiN cOlUMN
ninety (90) day period lighting & decorating,
your stumps. Hard Truck Driving 3700 Boats & Marine 9250
& Houses 662-329-2323
will forever bar the emergency repairs,
same. to reach places,
preventative mainten−
Bargain Column ads must be submitted ance, moving &
blown over roots, EXPERIENCED TRUCK
1 Bedrooms 2013 TAHOE 195
Witness my signature driver w/ Class A Li-
online at ads.cdispatch.com or in person. No this the 10th day of
shipping assistance &
hillsides, backyards,
pastures. Free cense needed to haul 2 Bedroooms 2411 HWY 45 N
DECKBOAT. V8 engine
w/ low hours. Runs
phone calls or emails. April 2019. pressure washing.
estimates. You find scrap metal & flat cars.
3 Bedrooms COLUMBUS, MS great. Ready to hit the
662−549−1878. Call 662-434-0007 or
it, we’ll grind it! 662-364-6303. water. Located in
0 Legals 4390 Computer Equipment /s/ James K. Hall, Jr. 662−361−8379 Furnished & Starkville. Call or text
4420 Farm Equipment & James K. Hall, Jr., Ex- RETAINER WALL,
Commercial Property For
1000 Service Supplies ecutor of the Estate of driveway, foundation, Air Conditioners 4030 Unfurnished Rent 7100
662−341−0374.
1030 Air Conditioning & Heating James K. Hall, Sr., de- concrete, masonry Tree Services 1860
4450 Firewood
1060 Appliance Repair 4460 Flea Markets
ceased restoration, remodeling, CENTRAL A/C UNIT 1, 2, & 3 Baths Autos For Sale 9150
Lease, Deposit
OFFICE FOR RENT.
1070 Asphalt & Paving 4480 Furniture /s/ Lee Ann S. Turner
basement foundation, J&A TREE REMOVAL Only used 1 day, too 2015 CHEVY IMPALA
30x15. Separate air
1090 Automotive Services 4510 Garage Sales Lee Ann S. Turner repairs, small dump Work from a bucket small for space. Revolv
& Credit Check conditioner & bathroom. Blk, 4dr, 6cyl, 82k mi,
1120 Building & Remodeling 4540 General Merchandise Miss. Bar No. 10438 truck hauling (5−6 yd) truck. Insured/bonded. brand, 2.5 btu, 208− showroom clean, local
1150 Carpeting/Flooring The Winfield Law Firm, load & demolition/lot Call Jimmy for free 230 volt−age. $1000, viceinvestments.com $400/mo. Located in
owner, $10,200. See @
327-8555
4570 Household Goods P.A. cleaning. Burr Masonry, estimate, Crawford, MS. 662−497 Caledonia. Call 662−
1180 Childcare 4630 Lawn & Garden 574−0082. 59 Amanda Dr. in New
224 East Main Street 662−242−0259. 662−386−6286. −2754. Hope Park Subdivision
1210 Chimney Cleaning 4660 Merchandise Rentals Post Office Box 80281
1240 Contractors off of Yorkville Rd. E.
4690 Musical Instruments General Help MS
Starkville, Wanted 3200
39759 FOR RENT LOCATED
1250 Computer Services 662−327−3081.
4700 Satellites 662.323.3984 – Tel NEAR DOWNTOWN.
1270 Electrical 662.323.3920 – Fax
1300 Excavating
4720 Sporting Goods
4750 Stereos & TV’s
lturner@winfieldlawfirm.
com
3,000 sq. ft. truck
terminal, 9,500 sq. ft.
Five Questions:
1320 Fitness Training 4780 Wanted To Buy Attorneys for Petitioner, shop & 3,200 sq. ft.

1 Treadmill
1330 Furniture Repair & James K. Hall, Jr. office/shop. Buildings
Refinishing 5000 Pets & Livestock can be rented together
1360 General Services 5100 Free Pets PUBLISH: 4/15, 4/22, or separately. All w/
5150 Pets & 4/29/2019
2 Yorick
1380 Housecleaning excellent access & Hwy.
1390 Insulation 5200 Horses/Cattle/Livestock 82 visibility. 662−327−
Employment Employment Services-General
1400 Insurance 5250 Pet Boarding/Grooming 9559.
L. E. TUCKER & SON, INC. - CDL DIRECTV NOW. No Satellite Needed.
5300 Supplies/Accessories
3 New
1410 Interior Decorators Mississippi DRIVERS needed to run from S.E. to $40/month. 65 Channels. Stream
1440 Jewelry/Watch Repair 5350 Veterinarians Dept. of Corrections Breaking News, Live Events, Sports & On
Houses For Rent: Northside
West Coast. Late model conventional
1470 Lawn Care/Landscaping
1500 Locksmiths
5400 Wanted To Buy HIRING tractors. Home weekly. Benefits package.
Pearl, MS. 601-939-8088.
Demand Titles. No Annual Contract. No
Commitment. CALL 1-866-616-8331
7110
England
1530 Machinery Repair
6000 Financial
6050 Business Opportunity
CORRECTIONAL
OFFICERS
www.tuckerandson.com DISH NETWORK $69.99 For 190
Channels. Add High Speed Internet for Patriots
1560 Mobile Home Services 6100 Business Opportunity Classes / Training ONLY $14.95/month. Best Technology. ALL BRICK 3BR/2BA
1590 Moving & Storage Join and Get a 5% In-
4 Korean
Best Value. Smart HD DVR Included. FREE
Wanted crease in Starting Pay
AIRLINES ARE HIRING - Get FAA
Installation. Some restrictions apply. Call
house for rent. Big yard.
1620 Painting & Papering 6120 Check Cashing approved hands on Aviation training. Carport. W/D hookup.
1-877-628-3143
1650 Pest Control 6150 Insurance
Financial aid for qualified students. Nice neighborhood.
1680 Plumbing Join The Mississippi Department Career placement assistance. Call Services-Financial
5 Beck
6200 Loans $780 per month. 70 W
of Corrections (MDOC) and get Aviation Institute of Maintenance, 1-866-
1710 Printing 6250 Mortgages 367-2510. OVER $10K IN DEBT? Be debt free in Thomas Dr. 3 min from
an immediate 5 percent in-
1740 Roofing & Guttering 6300 Stocks & Bonds crease in your starting pay, if HEALTHCARE CAREER TRAINING 24 to 48 months. No upfront fees to CAFB. 504−813−1200.
1770 Saws & Lawn Mowers ONLINE. Start a new career in Medical enroll. A+ BBB rated. Call National Debt
6350 Business for Sale you have a college degree or
Billing and Coding. Medical Relief 844-719-8928.
1780 Sitting with Elderly/Sick experience in the workforce. SAVE YOUR HOME! Are you behind
1790 Stump Removal 7000 Rentals The starting pay is $2,075.27 Administrative Assistant. To learn more,
call Ultimate Medical Academy. 1-844- paying your MORTGAGE? Is the bank
7050 Apartments monthly. FOUR (4) WEEKS OF
1800 Swimming Pools PAID ONSITE TRAINING. 664-5478 threatening foreclosure? CALL
1830 Tax Service 7100 Commercial Property PHARMACY TECHNICIAN - ONLINE Homeowner's Relief Line now for Help! 1-
7150 Houses TRAINING AVAILABLE! Take the first 866-833-1513
1860 Tree Service STATE PRISON LOCATIONS:
7180 Hunting Land step into a new career! Call now: 1-866-
1890 Upholstery •Central Mississippi Correctional Services-Medical
Facility (CMCF) 3794 Highway 664-4140
1910 Welding 7190 Land for Rent/Lease A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation's
468, Pearl, MS
7200 Mobile Homes For Sale largest senior living referral service.
2000 Announcements 7250 Mobile Home Spaces
•Mississippi State Penitentiary
CHURCH FURNITURE: Does your Contact our trusted, local experts today!
(MSP) 708 Parchman Road,
2050 Card of Thanks 7300 Office Spaces Parchman, MS church need pews, pulpit set, baptistery, Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL
2100 Fraternal & Lodge 7350 Resort Rentals •South Mississippi Correctional steeple, windows? Big Sale on new cush- 1-877-224-1236
2150 Good Things To Eat Institution (SMCI) 22689 Hwy. ioned pews and pew chairs. 1-800-231- LIFE ALERT. 24/7. One press of a button
7400 River Property 63 North, Leakesville, MS 8360. www.pews1.com sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Burglar.
2200 In Memorial 7450 Rooms Even if you can't reach a phone! FREE
2250 Instruction & School 7500 Storage & Garages WALK-IN INTERVIEW Insurance Brochure. CALL 877-824-559
2300 Lost & Found 7520 Vacation Rentals DATES/TIMES: DENTAL INSURANCE. Call Physicians
2350 Personals 7550 Wanted to Rent •Saturday, May 4, 2019 -- Appli- Mutual Insurance Company for details.
2400 Special Notices cants will be admitted from 8:00 NOT just a discount plan, REAL coverage
7600 Waterfront Property a.m. to 10:00 a.m.
2600 Travel/Entertainment •Monday thru Friday, May 13 -
for 350 procedures. 855-397-7045 or
8000 Real Estate http://www.dental50plus.com/mspress.
3000 Employment 8050 Commercial Property
17, 2019 -- Applicants will be ad-
mitted from 8:00 a.m. – 10:00
Ad# 6118
3050 Clerical & Office FREE AUTO INSURANCE QUOTES.
8100 Farms & Timberland a.m. and 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m.. See how much you can save! High risk
3100 Data Processing/ Computer 8150 Houses - Northside •Saturday, May 18, 2019 -- Ap- SR22 driver policies available! Call 844-
3150 Domestic Help plicants will be admitted from

Call
8200 Houses - East 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m.
714-2407
3170 Engineering 8250 Houses - New Hope FREE MEDICARE SUPPLEMENT
3200 General Help Wanted QUOTES! Top providers. Excellent cov-
8300 Houses - South MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS: erage. Call for a no obligation quote to
3250 Management Positions 8350 Houses - West •21 years of age and proof of see how much you can save. Toll free:
3300 Medical/Dental 8450 Houses - Caledonia H.S. diploma or G.E.D. 855-400-8352

328-2424
3350 Opportunity Information •Males between the ages of 21-
8500 Houses - Other 25 proof of Selective Service Medical Supplies
3400 Part-Time 8520 Hunting Land Registration
3450 Positions Wanted 8550 Investment Property •A Valid Driver’s License ATTENTION: OXYGEN USERS! Gain
3500 Professional •No felony or domestic violence freedom with a Portable Oxygen
8600 Lots & Acreage Concentrator. No more heavy tanks and
3550 Restaurant/Hotel 8650 Mobile Homes refills! Guaranteed Lowest Prices! Call
3600 Sales/Marketing 8700 Mobile Home Spaces
INTERVIEW SCREENING
CONSIST OF: the Oxygen Concentrator Store: 844- to place an ad in the
3650Trades 8750 Resort Property •Interview, Math Test, Report 567-5899
3700Truck Driving Writing Exercise VIAGRA and CIALIS USERS! 50 Pills
8800 River Property SPECIAL $99.00 FREE Shipping! 100%
Place Your Classified Ad
•1 mile walk/run within 18 min-
4000 Merchandise 8850 Wanted to Buy
8900 Waterfront Property
utes and Tower climb guaranteed. CALL NOW! 844-821-3242 STATEWIDE
4030 Air Conditioners (Appropriate athletic clothing
Miscellaneous In 95 Newspapers!
4060 Antiques and tennis shoes may be worn)
9000 Transportation DONATE YOUR CAR TO CHARITY.
4090 Appliances 9050 Auto Accessories/Parts For additional information, Receive maximum value of write off for STATEWIDE RATES:
4120 Auctions
4150 Baby Articles
9100 Auto Rentals & Leasing contact MDOC Personnel
Services at (601) 359-5696 or
your taxes. Running or not! All condi-
tions accepted. Free pickup. Call for
Up to 25 words...........$210
1 col. x 2 inch.............$525 How else are you
9150 Autos for Sale 1 col. x 3 inch.............$785
4180 Bargain Column
4210 Bicycles
9200 Aviation
the Personnel Department at
each facility: CMCF (601) 932-
details. 855-400-8263
Services-General
1 col. x 4 inch...........$1050
going to sell that
9250 Boats & Marine 2880 ext. 6701; MSP (662) 745- Nationwide Placement Available
4240 Building Materials
4250 Burial Plots
9300 Camper/R.V.’s 6611 ext. 2366; or SMCI (601)
394-5600 ext. 1217.
DIRECTV AND AT&T. 155 Channels
and 1000s of Shows/Movies On Demand To Place Your Ad Order Call:
stuff in your
9350 Golf Carts
4270 Business Furniture &
Equipment
9400 Motorcycles/ATVs Individuals may also apply
(w/SELECT Package.) AT&T Internet 99
Percent Reliability. Unlimited Texts to 120
MS Press Services garage?
9450 Trailers/Heavy Equipment online at the Mississippi State Countries w/AT&T Wireless. Call 4 FREE 601-981-3060
4300 Camera Equipment 9500 Trucks, Vans & Buses Personnel Board website, Quote - 1- 855-978-3110.
4330 Clothing 9550 Wanted to Buy www.mspb.ms.gov.
Week of April 28, 2019
4360 Coins & Jewelry

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