Thursday, Nov. 3

Transcription

Thursday, Nov. 3
LOCAL, 3-A
SPOR TS, 1-B
BETHEL
CHRISTIAN
ACADEMY REOPENS
St. Martin
boys claim
tournament title
S e r v i n g
P a s c a g o u l a ,
O c e a n
S p r i n g s ,
M o s s
Old Crab
When my mother-in-law
gets her next facelift, she’ll
need dadburn MDOT
engineers for the reconstruction.
®
P o i n t ,
G a u t i e r
a n d
L u c e d a l e
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
25¢
thursday, november 3, 2005
www.gulflive.com Our online affiliate
Drakeford selected as MP police chief Family loses
home to
Katrina, son
to Iraq war
By DONNA HARRIS
The Mississippi Press
MOSS POINT — After several
weeks as interim chief of police,
Demetrius Drakeford was promoted Tuesday to head the Moss
Point Police Department.
Drakeford replaces Michael
Ricks, who tendered his resignation in September.
Alder man C ha rles Mold en
made the motion to promote
Drakeford to chief, with a second
by Alderman Shorty Middleton.
Others in favor of Drakeford’s
promotion were Alderwoman
Nancy Mims Norvel and Alderman James Smith.
Voting against Molden’s motion
were Alderwoman-at-large Ane-
ice Liddell and Alderman Al Bodden.
Alderman Tommy Hightower
abstained from the vote.
The city did not advertise for
the position, and did not interview candidates.
Middleton said he supported
Drakeford as chief because he has
been an effective leader in the
interim position.
“Some citizens have made complaints and Drakeford got those
things done,” Middleton said. “He
took care of complaints from prior administrations that weren’t
taken care of.”
Prior to the motion to promote
See POLICE CHIEF, Page 8-A
Bridge stays put, but gets a facelift
By AMANDA CREEL
The Mississippi Press
OCEAN SPRINGS — The city has accepted
the Mississippi Department of Transportation’s
proposal for the construction of the new bridge
between Biloxi and Ocean Springs.
Under the MDOT proposal, the bridge will be
reconstructed in its present location. However,
the new bridge will have a much different
appearance than the original bridge that was
washed away by Hurricane Katrina.
“We did agree to go along with the MDOT
proposal, but not without significant input,”
said Mayor Connie Moran.
The proposed bridge will be 120 feet wide,
will have see-through rails, a combined pedestrian and bicycle path and will have a pedestrian crosswalk beneath the underpass to connect the yacht club and the proposed ferry site
between the railroad bridge and the fishing
bridge, Moran said.
Ocean Springs city officials are most concerned with the aesthetic presentation of the
bridge, including the color of the concrete, the
lighting and emblems chosen for the bridge.
Another concern of the city is the landscaping
in the medians and at the entrance to the bridge
and the preserving of the live oak gateway to the
city.
MDOT has already agreed to the preservation
of the live oak trees.
“We want to maintain our gateway, our beautiful gateway of trees,” said Angela Mohar, assistant city planner for Ocean Springs.
The live oaks on the side will remain, but
the live oaks in the median will be taken up and
replanted on the right of way on the side, Moran
said.
Mississippi Sen. Billy Hewes, chairman of
the Senate Transportation Committee, agrees
that the bridge should be unique in design and
aesthetically pleasing.
Hewes said the he is concerned with “creating
a sense of place.”
“I think our bridges, just like our landmarks,
should be distinctive,” Hewes said.
The bridge from Ocean Springs to Biloxi will
be one of the first design-build projects to be
built in Mississippi, said Larry Brown, MDOT
executive director.
A design-build project is unique because it
allows for only one point of contact for both the
design and construction of a project.
“We are going to replace this with something
good for the future, as well as something aesthetically pleasing now,” Brown said.
He added, “We are going to make everyone on
the Mississippi Gulf Coast very, very proud.”
By HOLBROOK MOHR
The Associated Press
JACKSON — Elaine Oneto was trying to
rebuild her own life after Hurricane Katrina
when she was informed her soldier son had
lost his life in Iraq.
Now, coping with the loss of her home is
taking a back seat to a new challenge — helping make a future for three
young children who lost their
father.
1st Lt. Robert C. OnetoSikorski of Bay St. Louis was
on a foot patrol near al
Haswah, in an area west of
Baghdad, on Monday when
he was killed by a roadside
bomb, military officials said.
He is the 18th Mississippi Oneto-Sikorski
Guard soldier to die since the
Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the Pentagon and World Trade Center.
The news came at a time when the National Guard soldier’s family was reeling from
the Aug. 29 hurricane. Oneto-Sikorski’s home,
like his mother’s home, was flooded by the
storm surge.
Oneto-Sikorski, 33, and Claire Rager, the
mother of his children, were both stationed in
Iraq with the 155th Brigade Combat Team,
Oneto said.
Rager has been granted emergency leave
and will return home for Oneto-Sikorski’s
funeral, but she will be coming back to a community virtually wiped off the map by the
worst natural disaster to ever befall the state.
Oneto-Sikorski’s children — ages 6, 8, and
11 — are staying with relatives near Memphis, Tenn., where they relocated after the
See SOLDIER, Page 8-A
Archivists take stock
after Katrina claims
historic documents
By CARYN ROUSSEAU
The Associated Press
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Reporter Amanda Creel can be reached at The bridge between Biloxi and Ocean Springs, as seen looking east after Hurricane
Katrina. Ocean Springs agreed to a new bridge as long as it is aesthetically appealing.
acreel@mspressonline.com.
PASS CHRISTIAN — As Hurricane Katrina approached, local historians were confident a vault filled with precious pre-Civil
War pictures, maps and documents cataloguing the history of this Gulf Coast community
would be safe.
Hopes were high after the storm passed.
The former bank building that served as the
Pass Christian Historical Society headquarters washed away, but its vault still stood.
See HISTORY, Page 8-A
Mississippi Press reopens Pascagoula office
From Staff Reports
Page
designer
Sheila Vice
lays out
“The
Gautier
Press” in
the newly
renovated
Mississippi
Press office
on Jackson
Avenue in
Pascagoula.
Carisa Anderson/The Mississippi Press
LOCAL, 3-A
LOCAL, 4-A
‘The Spirit of Jackson
County’ arrives
in Fontainebleau
Jackson County debris
removal paperwork
deadline nears
NEWSROOM: 762-0033
PASCAGOULA — We’re back.
Forced out of Jackson County by
Hurricane Katrina two months
ago, The Mississippi Press returned to its offices on Jackson
Avenue this week.
Many are heralding the local
newspapers return with warm
greetings.
“We’re damn glad to have you
back in town. We’ve missed y’all,”
said downtown merchant Richard
Chenoweth, owner of Scranton’s
Restaurant.
“I am ready for y’all to come
back,” said Carla Todd, executive
director of the Jackson County
Chamber of Commerce.
Ellen Cole of The First, a bank
located across the street from the
newspaper’s main office, said the
downtown area is steadily rebuilding and showing signs of regrowth.
“By coming back, y'all are showing your commitment to this community,” she said. “Every day, it
gets a little better. Every day something good happens.”
Todd said the newspaper is vital
in the rebuilding effort to “get the
good news out and motivate people
and inspire people about the good
things that are going on around
here. I think that’s what we need.”
The circulation, advertising,
graphics and editorial departments
of The Mississippi Press have operated out of its sister newspaper,
the Mobile Register, in downtown
LOCAL, 1-B
INDEX
Local 4A teams
battling for final
playoff spot
Advice . . . . . . . . . . . .5-A
Classified . . . . . . . . .4-B
Comics . . . . . . . . . . .3-B
ADVERTISING: 762-1111
Mobile, Ala., since Hurricane Katrina on Aug. 29. Both are owned by
Advance Publications.
Damage to the main office in
Pascagoula and the administrative offices in Gautier were substantial. Renovations to both
spaces are continuing, however,
the Pascagoula office was ready
for business this week.
Publisher Wanda Jacobs said the
staff of The Mississippi Press is
thrilled to be back home.
“We better serve our community
being in our community,” she said.
Jacobs said the circulation
department is re-evaluating routes
since many who subscribed to
See PRESS, Page 8-A
Crossword . . . . . . . . .3-B
Editorial . . . . . . . . . . .6-A
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . .1-B
TV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5-A
Vol. 159 — No. 317, 16 Pages ©
2-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
TODAY
Clear
77°
58°
FRIDAY
Partly cloudy
79°
61°
SATURDAY
Partly cloudy
79°
66°
ALMANAC
First quarter
Nov. 8
Record High
86° (1935)
Full moon
Nov.15
Record Low
26° (1966)
Last quarter
Nov. 23
Yesterday’s High
75°
New moon
Dec. 1
Yesterday’s Low
51°
Yesterday’s Rain
0.01”
27.7 ppt
This Month’s Rain
0.38”
71°
Year to Date Rain
68.19”
MISSISSIPPI SOUND
Salinity
Water temperature
TIDES
SUNRISE/SET
Rise
Set
Thur.
7:46 am L
9:55 pm H
Thur.
6:10 am
5:05 pm
Fri.
9:02 am L
9:55 pm H
Fri.
6:11 am
5:04 pm
Sat.
10:32 am L
Sat.
6:12 am
5:03 pm
Sun.
12:28 am H 11:51 am L
Sun.
6:15 am
5:03 pm
Mon.
12:51 am H 12:49 pm L
Mon.
6:13 am
5:02 pm
Tues.
1:53 am H
1:35 pm L
Tues.
6:14 am
5:01 pm
Wed.
2:56 am H
2:08 pm L
Wed.
6:15 am
5:01 pm
RIVER STAGES
MARINE FORECAST
Pascagoula River (Cumbest Bluff)
1.99’
Pascagoula River (Merrill)
3.58’
Chickasawhay River (Leakesville)
9.11’
mispress@themississippipress.com
(228) 934-1458
FOR THE RECORD
MISSISSIPPI COAST WEATHER
LUNAR STAGES
East winds 10 knots.
Seas 2 to 3 feet.
A light chop in
protected waters.
Crimes & Emergencies
Pascagoula Crime
Pelican Street, an officer recovered a white
1995 Taurus.
3502 Warwick, Mark Robichaux reported an
attempted auto burglary.
5003 Pelican, Lee Ford reported an auto burglary in which change and pepper spray were stolen
and later recovered.
5003 Pelican, Jacqueline Thompson reported
an attempted auto burglary.
4219 Evie, Michael Powe reported an auto burglary. Nothing was reported missing at the
time.Gautier crime
State Farm Claims, 3900 Denny Ave., Neil Bailey reported vandalism on two tires.
907 Martin, Vernon McGary reported the theft of
an 80-gallon Dayton air compressor.
4203 Nathan Hale, Debbie Diedrick reported the
theft of a 30-gallon tote containing clothing and
CDs.
Pascagoula High School, 1716 Tucker,
Bernadette Brossett reported the theft of a wallet
and contents.
3821 Victor, Terance Pugh, 20, of 4900 Old
Mobile was arrested for simple possession of marijuana and resisting arrest.
Wal-Mart, 4253 Denny Ave., Jamison Efferson,
30, of 26370 John L Lane, Baton Rouge, La., was
arrested for shoplifting.
I.G. Levy Park, 4000 Nathan Hale, Michael
Morrison reported a disturbance of the peace.
1002 14th St., Leta Ferrington reported an auto
burglary in which cash, a purse and a CD/TV combination were taken.
1812 Prospect, Kelly Andrews reported an auto
burglary.
Eden Manor Apartments, 3214 Eden St.,
Andre Wallace reported a robbery.
908 Sea Cove, Marcus Gibbs reported the theft
of a 1999 KIA Sephia. The car was later recovered.
Azalea Park Apartments, 3015 Eden St., Wanda Harris reported the theft of a 1994 Buick Century.
Gautier Crime
Friday, Oct. 28
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Oscar Walley Jr., 34, 7413 Afton St., Escatawpa,
was arrested for contempt of court.
Exit 50, Fleet Gas Station, James Timothy Holt,
34, 14929 Cable Bridge Road, Gulfport, was arrested for contempt of court.
his vehicle without permission.
Bonita Road, Anthony Doby reported damage
to his vehicle.
U.S. 90, La La Land, Kimberly Wells filed a
complaint.
Saturday, Oct. 29
Dolphin Drive/Neptune Avenue, Joseph M.
Duke, 33, 1206 13th Court, Pascagoula, was
arrested for driving under suspension.
Wednesday, Nov. 2
1606 Dailey Road, Christina Hall reported damage to her vehicle.
2708 Robert Hiram Drive, Matthew Dozier Nelson, 18, 2708 Robert Hiram Drive, Gautier, was
arrested for careless driving and failure to yield to
blue lights.
Sunday, Oct. 30
2101 Coast Meadows, John Cook reported
damage to his vehicle.
950 Susan Circle, Raymond Langford reported
some guns missing.
5118 Gautier-Vancleave Road, Magnolia Storage #51 and #52, Amanda McLain reported a TV
missing from her storage unit.
1416 River Side Drive, Denise Glaude filed a
complaint.
Monday, Oct. 31
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Aretha M. Mitchell, 27, Holiday cruise ship,
Pascagoula, was arrested for contempt of court.
1604 White Wood Drive, Christie Medina filed a
complaint.
2207 Dolphin Road, Virginia Jolly filed a complaint.
U.S. 90, Paul James Sullivan, 47, 3521 Borrough Ave., Pascagoula, was arrested for public
drunkenness, disorderly conduct and resisting
arrest.
3520 Bonita Road, Marshall Robinson filed a
complaint.
College Drive, Agatha Matthews filed a complaint.
We honor all PRE-PLANNED &
BURIAL Insurance policies 100%
from other funeral homes
475-5448
4412 Main Street • Moss Point
KEYS
Ms. Betty D. Keys, 58, of
Moss Point, Miss., was born
Jan. 25, 1947, in Chatom, Ala.
She passed on to eternal life
on Sunday, Oct. 30, 2005, at
Singing River Hospital in Pascagoula, Miss.
She leaves to cherish her loving memories to four daughters, Marie (Vincent) Jenkins,
Priscilla (Walter) Gains, Denise
(Tony) Jones, and Schenovia
Keys, all of Moss Point, Miss.;
two sons, Jeffery Keys of Seattle, Wash., Willie Lee (Delia)
Young of Minneapolis, Minn.;
11 grand-kids, Alisha Keys,
Sheneitha Keys, Shautile Keys
and Kellum Keys, all of Moss
Point, Jasmine Bullock of Seattle, Wash., Mercedes Williams
of Moss Point, Allegra Keys
and Azaria Keys, both of Seattle, Wash., Khair Keys, Jabari
Williams, both of Moss Point,
Katelynn Young of Minneapolis, Minn.; three great-grandchildren, Alkeria Keys, Ablessing Keys and Jasmine Keys,
all of Moss Point; four sisters,
Mary Ann Buckhalter of Wiggins, Miss., Gladys Franks of
Mobile, Ala., Earlene McIntyre
and Darlene McIntyre of Moss
Point; six brothers, Walter
Keys of Detroit, Mich., Otha
Janies (Willie Cal) Keys of Deer
Park, Ala., Bishop C. (Patricia)
Hughs of Mobile, Ala., Willie
Fred (James Etta) Hughs of
Dallas, Texas, James (Dorothy)
Covan of Moss Point, Willie
Jerome (Paula) McIntyre of
Pascagoula; six devoted
friends, Hattie T. Richardson,
Mary Bush, Alice Marsalis, Jay
Williams, Willie Montgomery,
Minister Carolyn Hester; one
devoted nephew, Condale
McCovery, and a host of nieces,
nephews, relatives and friends.
Viewing will be held from 11
a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 5,
2005, at Christian Love Church
of The Living God on Chillis
Street in Moss Point, Miss.
Funeral services will begin
promptly at 1 p.m. from the
church with Overseer D. A.
Graham officiating. Interment
will be in Gabriel Cemetery,
Pascagoula, Miss.
All Arrangements by Millender ’s Funeral Home, Moss
Point, Miss.
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Publication USPS 354420 — ISSN: 1059-7166
The Mississippi Press continues The Chronicle, The Chronicle Star and the
Moss Point Advertiser, published daily. Second class postage paid at Pascagoula, Miss. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The Mississippi
Press, P.O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568-0849.
Wanda Heary Jacobs, Publisher
CIRCULATION
BillyCIRCULATION
Wilder, Circulation Director
General
Subscriptions: Director
Billy Wilder,
Circulation
Monday - Friday 9AM - 5PM - (866) 843-8911
General
(866)
Saturday Subscriptions:
and Sunday - 8AM - Noon
- (228) 843-8911
875-8144
Home Delivery:
3 mos.
— -$27
6 mos. Ext.
— $54
Billing
Inquiries
(800) 239-1340
5411 1 yr. — $108
HomeHome
Delivery:
3 mos.
——$27
mos.——$54
$541 yr.
1 yr.
— $108
Delivery:
3 mos.
$27 6
6 mos.
— $108
ADVERTISING
Tommy Chelette, Advertising Director
General Advertising: (228) 762-1111
NEWS
Steve Cox, Editor
Newsroom: (228) 934-1458
msnews@themississippipress.com
news@mspressonline.com
All submissions become the property of The Mississippi Press and will not be
returned; submissions may be edited and may be published or otherwise reused in
any medium.
All carriers, dealers and distributors are independent contractors, keeping their
own accounts free from control. Therefore, The Mississippi Press, Inc., is not
responsible for advance payments made to them, their agencies, or representatives.
However, we do have a Pay-by-Mail Subscription Department, whereby you can pay
directly to The Mississippi Press for your newspaper in advance.
HANSHAW
Mrs. Yvonne I. Hanshaw,
82, of Moss Point, Miss., passed
away on Saturday, Oct. 29,
2005, at Singing River Hospital. She was born May 18,
1923, in Ford, Miss., and had
been a life long resident of the
Jackson County area. Mrs.
Yvonne was of the Baptist faith
and a faithful member of Good
Hope Missionary Baptist
Church of Moss Point. She was
employed with Jackson County
Head Start for numerous years
and worked with the Senior
Companion program until her
health failed. She was preceded in death by her parents, the
Rev. and Mrs. Samuel (Celia)
Lewis; husband, Bora G. Hanshaw; two brothers, Gilliam E.
Lewis and Samuel D. Lewis;
one daughter, Beverly (Roe)
Johnson; and one sister, Ora
Mae Patton.
She is survived by her sons,
Larry (Alice) Gladney of
LaGrange, N.C., George (Tony)
Gladney, Donald (Mary) Wells
of Moss Point, Kermit Wells of
Grand Bay, Ala., Lionel Hanshaw of Moss Point; one brother, Bernard (Rannie) Lewis of
Moss Point; two loving sisters,
Sarah B. Harris of Moss Point
and Esther Bovines of New
Orleans; a devoted niece,
Nadine (Sam) Jones of Moss
Point; devoted grandsons,
Aaron Wells of Moss Point and
Shawn (Niokie) Johnson of
Gautier; a devoted granddaughter, Shavay (Terry)
Gaines of Moss Point; 24
grandchildren; 16 great-grandchildren; and a host of nieces,
nephews, cousins, other relatives and friends.
Funeral services will begin
at 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 5,
2005, at Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church, 4224 Dr.
Martin Luther King Drive,
Moss Point, Miss.
Visitation will be held from 9
to 11 a.m. The Rev. Robert E.
Coker will officiate.
Interment will follow in Good
Hope Cemetery in Moss Point.
Arrangements by Robinson's
Friendly Funeral Home, Inc.,
Moss Point, Miss.
Jackson County Crime
Monday, Oct. 31
25140 Yellow Bluff Road, Wade, Jerry Vincent
Ladnier reported two shotguns, a .22 caliber rifle,
.22 caliber pistol, pellet rifle, television, two VCRs,
two DVR/VHS machines and a Direct TV receiver
were taken from his residence.
Riverbend Drive, Escatawpa, Angel Finn
reported her daughter’s bicycle was taken from a
neighbor’s yard.
Miss. 613, Escatawpa, Joseph R. Womble, 23,
of 11312 Miss. 613, Escatawpa, was arrested on
charges of having a switched tag, driving under
suspension and not having insurance.
Frank Snell Road, Hurley, Samuel Ray Koster,
44, of 9708 Frank Snell Road, Hurley, was arrested
on charges of driving under suspension and having
no insurance.
Miss. 614, Hurley, Sarah English, 24, of 8100
English Lane, Vancleave, was arrested on a charge
of possession of methadone.
Coast Calendar
Special Events
Tuesday, Nov. 1
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department,
Rochelle Miskel, 25, 2101 Eden St., Pascagoula,
was arrested for contempt of court.
3330 U.S. 90, Gautier Police Department, Benny J. Mire, 41, 2901 Fairview Drive, Gautier, was
arrested for possession of marijuana and possession of schedule IV drugs.
3501 Gautier-Vancleave Road, Advanced
Auto Parts, John Nelson reported someone took
OBITUARIES
Millender’s Funeral Home
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
SMITH
Ruthie L. (nee Daughrity) Smith of Montgomery,
Ohio. Loving mother of William
L. (Marsha) Smith, proud
grandmother of Patti Brown
and Kym (Bo) Lewis, precious
great grandmother of Gracie
Lewis, devoted sister of Helen
Howell, dear aunt of Patti
(Tom) Hunt and nephew Paul
(Karan) Stout, died Sunday,
Oct. 30, 2005, in her 85th year.
A graveside service will take
place at Pine Crest Cemetery
in Gautier, Miss. on Saturday,
Nov. 5, 2005 at 2 p.m.
Tufts Schildmeyer Family
Funeral Home, Loveland, Ohio,
and Holder-Wells Funeral
Home, Moss Point, Miss., caring for the family.
Please visit www.tuftsschildmeyer.com
AREA DEATHS
MRS. LESSIE R. FALLON,
89, of Lucedale, Miss., died
Nov. 1, 2005. George County
Funeral Home, Lucedale, Miss.
ERMA CHANEY, 72, of
Moss Point, Miss., died Nov. 2,
2005. Robinson’s Friendly
Funeral Home, Moss Point,
Miss.
FRED AUBREY BARRY,
JR., 82, of Pascagoula, Miss.,
died Nov. 2, 2005. Holder-Wells
Funeral Home, Moss Point,
Miss.
“Obituaries over one inch in
length are paid advertisements.”
Alabama man
arrested for
cable truck theft
From Staff Reports
Biloxi police arrested Neville
Lane Brooks, 30, of Huntsville,
Ala., on Tuesday for allegedly
stealing a Cable One service
truck and leading police on a
two-county chase.
Brooks was charged with
grand larceny of an auto and
willfully failing to stop a vehicle.
Brooks’ arrest resulted from
a report filed by a Cable One
representative who observed a
truck being stolen from the
Cable One yard on Martin
Luther King Boulevard in Biloxi.
Officers with the Biloxi Police
Department saw the vehicle in
the area and initiated a traffic
stop, which led to a pursuit. The
chase continued into Jackson
County and Ocean Springs
where Brooks was apprehended
at the intersection of Hilltop
Street and U.S. 90 after all four
tires were disabled by spike
strips.
THUNDER’S TAVERN O p e n 7 D a y s a We e k
1340 MARKET ST. PASCAGOULA D r i v e - U p W i n d o w
Open 24/7
769-1531
• Today — VFW in Pascagoula will host a bingo
starting at 7:30 p.m.; the VFW regular hours are 1
to 5 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday
and Sunday and 1 to 10 p.m. Wednesday and Friday; call (228) 769-8387 for details.
Blood Drives
• Saturday, Nov. 5 — Girl Scout Troop 462 is
sponsoring a blood drive from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at
the Hurley community center. Call (228) 588-4852
or (228) 588-7051 for details.
George County men charged
with illegally hunting deer
From Staff Reports
LUCEDALE — Two George
County men face fines and the
loss of their hunting and fishing
privileges if convicted of
charges brought against them
Tuesday.
Adam Moore, 22, and Daniel
Corey Tootle, 19, were arrested
by game wardens Jay Holman
and Sgt. Kevin McDonald at
approximately 10:30 Tuesday
night and charged with head
lighting, hunting from a public
road and illegal shot size, possession of beer in a dry county
and other charges. Tootle was
also charged with three counts
of failure to appear in court.
“People who do this,” McDonald said, “are not real hunters.
This is not hunting. It is not
legal and it is not ethical.”
McDonald said headlighting,
a form of poaching, is actually
theft. It is stealing game from
legitimate hunters and the public, he said.
Weapons seized in the arrest
included a loaded .270 caliber
rifle and a loaded .22 caliber
rifle. If the two are convicted,
their weapons will be forfeited
and sold with the proceeds
going to the Mississippi Department of Fish, Wildlife and
Parks.
“We take this crime very seriously,” McDonald said. “From
October through February we
concentrate on night hunting
crimes. This is the time when
we get the most complaints
about this. Ninety percent of
the time the people that do this
are also charged with possession or using drugs or alcohol.”
McDonald said people who
illegally hunt are not doing so
to support for their families.
“The people that do this are
usually doing it as a game — a
way to get their kicks. Or, they
are selling the carcass. We have
caught people with eight or 10
deer carcasses.”
Moore and Tootle did not
have any illegal game animals
in their possession, McDonald
said.
“They had shot, but they
apparently missed,” he said.
There are severe penalties
for illegal game slaughter,
McDonald said. Each man, if
convicted, may be facing fines
as high as $5,000 for the just
the headlighting charge. They
may also lose their privileges to
hunt, fish or trap for three
years in addition to forfeiting
their weapons.
“Justice Court judges take
these crimes seriously as well,”
McDonald said.
“So far we have gotten a conviction in every case taken to
Justice Court. The judges are
required to impose at least the
$2,000 minimum fine. They
cannot suspend that. The only
way it can be suspended is by
appealing it to the Circuit
Court.”
Reporter Royce Armstrong
may be reached at rarmstrong@mspressonline.com or
(601) 947-9933.
Shuttle tank plant back in business
NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
Nine weeks after Hurricane
Katrina devastated eastern
New Orleans, the NASA plant
that builds the external fuel
tank for the space shuttle is fully operational, the plant’s general manager says.
The Michoud Assembly Facility, owned by Lockheed Martin
Space Systems Co., is trying to
find short-term housing for
about half of its 2,000 employees, while focusing on a possible
shuttle launch in May.
General manager Marshall
Byrd said 600 Michoud workers lost their homes in the storm
and another 300 cannot return
to their houses for some time. A
company-wide Katrina relief
fund set up for affected employees has raised $4 million, he
said.
About 1,600 employees were
working at the plant Tuesday, a
number expected to rise to 1,900
by next week, Byrd said. All
Michoud workers should be
back by the first of year, he said.
• Hurricane Debris Cleanup
• Tree Removal • Tractor Work
• Lawn & Shrub Maintenance
~ Fully Insured ~
Serving Pascagoula, Moss Point, Gautier, Ocean Springs
CALL 475-6048
PROFESSIONAL MOLD CONTROL
With Bora Care-Mold Care
(1 year warranty against reinfestation)
•Termite Control with Termidor
•Control of Ants, Roaches, Mice, Etc.
Certified Technicians
PERFORMING THIS WEEKEND:
Friday and Saturday Night
“Split 6”
Ladies Night
Giveaway
Free Beer Mirrors
762-5959
Pascagoula
392-3425
Biloxi
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
3-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Contact: Lance Davis, News Editor, 934-1478
E-mail address: ldavis@themississippipress.com
LOCAL
Two-car wreck claims
Moss Point man’s life
By DONNA HARRIS
The Mississippi Press
Christy Pritchett/The Mississippi Press
Jaylon Malone, center, wears a toothy grin while performing a song for Chevron
officials visiting Bethel Christian Academy Wednesday morning.
Bethel Christian Academy
gives thanks to Chevron
■ Refinery’s donations
help school reopen
after Hurricane Katrina
By ALLISON MATHER
The Mississippi Press
“I start crying every time I think about it.”
Both students and teachers were excited
to be back in school sooner rather than later.
“It’s just wonderful,” first-grade teacher
Rhonda Micell said. “Even though our lives
at home have gotten somewhat back to normal, until I share my day with the kids
again, I’m not whole.”
“We’re like a family here,” she said.
Micell said her students were thrilled to
back at school, too.
“I’m glad we’re back to school because I
though that I was going to go to another
school because it took like two weeks (extra)
to get back in school,” first-grader Samaiya
Alford said. “I missed all my friends and all
my teachers.”
Chevron spokesman Steve Renfroe said
Bethel is one of 35 daycares the company
has been repairing throughout Jackson
County. Some facilities only required minor
work, like removing fallen trees or replacing
fences.
“In some cases, like this, there was quite
extensive damage,” he said.
“The Bible asks a question, and I bet you
know the answer to it,” Renfroe told students gathered for the morning assembly.
“What does it mean to be a good neighbor?”
“If a neighbor’s in trouble, what do you
do? You help them,” he said.
Bethel’s daycare takes care of infants
through 4-year-olds.
Total school enrollment has fallen from
125 students before Hurricane Katrina to
about 100.
PASCAGOULA — Students at Bethel
Christian Academy said a special thanks
to representatives from Chevron Pascagoula
Refinery who toured the school’s daycare
facilities Wednesday morning.
Bethel students returned to class Oct. 24,
about three weeks after most public schools
in the area.
Donations of labor, furniture, school supplies and toys from Chevron accelerated
the school’s opening, so following the morning pledge and prayer, the students roared
“Thank you Chevron!”
“We would not be open if it was not for
them,” said academy director Fran Fagan.
“This place was totally devastated.”
She said about six feet of water flooded
the first floor of the school and daycare.
Elba Gunn has been at Bethel since 1982,
and currently teaches 3-year-old pre-kindergartners.
“I had 20 years worth of stuff in the classroom, and I lost it all,” she said.
Now her students play with new toys on
new carpet in a nearly-new classroom.
“We could have never had this place back
up and running if it wasn’t for Chevron,”
Gunn said.
The donations also included new appliances and kitchen cabinets for the site’s
cafeteria. Cafeteria manager Doris Hawkins
Reporter Allison Mather can be reached
was overwhelmed with gratitude.
“Words can’t explain it. They just can’t. at amather@mspressonline.com or
We would still be without walls,” she said. (228)934-1495.
BRIEFS
Governor announces small business workshop
JACKSON — Gov. Haley
Barbour announced Wednesday
plans for a series of statewide
workshops hosted by the Mississippi Development Authority and
Mississippi Procurement Technical Assistance Network.
The workshops are designed
to make the procurement
process easier and more effective for small, disadvantaged
and minority business owners.
“In the wake of Hurricane
Katrina, contracting opportunities will be available as the state
continues to recover,” Barbour
said.
“These workshops will offer
many Mississippi companies the
needed tools and resources to
take advantage of procurement
opportunities.”
The first Procurement Opportunity and Prime Contractor Networking workshop is scheduled
today from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at
the St. Martin Community Center at 15004 Lemoyne Blvd. The
session will discuss procedures
and strategies for taking advantage of procurement opportunities related to the hurricane
recovery efforts and the rebuilding of South Mississippi and the
Gulf Coast.
The workshops are free and
open to the public, but pre-registration is required.
To register contact Deirdre
Floyd with MDA at (601) 3593448, or visit
www.mississippi.org or
www.mscpc.com for details.
‘See You at the Pole’
pre-rally set for Saturday
OCEAN SPRINGS — Mississippi Gulf Coast Youth for Christ
will sponsor the annual See You
at the Pole pre-rally from 7 to
9:30 p.m. Saturday at Ocean
Springs High School’s High Pepper Stadium.
Activities will include a speaker, live band, giveaways and
prayer, said Youth for Christ
executive director Brad Holt.
The rally is a precursor to See
You at the Pole activities on Nov.
9, when students at public
schools are encouraged to gather around their campus flag pole
for an hour of prayer before
school, Holt said.
Call the Youth for Christ office
at (228) 864-0788 or (228) 4970146 for details.
‘Road Map for Seniors’
workshop on tap tonight
PASCAGOULA —
Pascagoula High School's Guidance Department and Career
Center will host the annual Education Services Foundation
workshop for seniors’ parents,
“Road Map for Seniors,” at 5:30
tonight in the PHS media center.
The workshop will educate
school parents on the new financial aid guidelines to benefit students affected by Hurricane Katrina. The federal government
has adjusted their formulas to
benefit the Gulf Coast population. Staff from Mississippi Gulf
Coast Community College will
be on hand to assist parents in
understanding the process of
applying for college financial aid
from filling out taxes, to FAFSA,
to college applications.
The school has also extended
its Media Center hours to assist
students and parents with online
search for scholarships, college
information and ACT/SAT test
preparation. The new hours are
from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Monday
through Thursday.
Suspect in 1989 NYC
murder caught in Memphis
HORN LAKE, Miss. — A 61year-old man suspected in a
1989 stabbing murder in Brooklyn, N.Y., was arrested in Mississippi on Monday after he attracted police attention by selling
power tools out of the back of
his car.
Robert Walker Jr. was carrying a Florida driver’s license with
the name Bobbie Lee Jones,
one of his known aliases. He
has been wanted on an FBI warrant for interstate flight to avoid
prosecution.
In court Tuesday, Walker
waived his rights to an extradition hearing.
Police Capt. Shannon
Beshears said he contacted the
New York Police Department,
which said Walker fled from the
city in 1990 after homicide
detectives made inquiries about
his involvement in the death of
Eddie Fisher.
— From Staff Reports
MOSS POINT — Few folks
knew Herman Jacobs. But ask
them about “Love Child” and
they’d smile in recognition.
Jacobs, a Moss Point native
home helping his mother, died
Halloween night in a two-vehicle wreck, ending a life filled
with good deeds for others.
“He was a wonderful person.
He took care of his community.
He was a helper to everybody,”
said his younger sister, Kathy
McEwen of Moss Point.
Moss Point Police charged
Albert Croon, 34, of 3318 Second St. in Moss Point with
manslaughter, driving under
suspension and failure to provide proof of liability insurance.
Croon was released on
$101,400 bond.
Croon was driving a 1982
Cadillac DeVille, which collided
with Jacobs’ 2001 Chevrolet
Silverado pickup at Second and
Billy streets in Moss Point.
Jacobs, 53, of Minneapolis,
Minn., was ejected from the
vehicle and died at the scene.
Croon was transported by
Acadian Ambulance Service to
Singing River Hospital, where
he was treated and released.
Jacobs is survived by his
companion, James Smith of
Minneapolis, his mother, 78year-old Carrie Bell Jacobs of
Moss Point and many of his
siblings. Services will be arranged by Millender’s Funeral
Home of Moss Point.
Jacobs tackled various jobs
in his life, working at thenIngall’s Shipbuilding, as a
nurse at a convalescent home
and as a student at a California
modeling school. He also took
care of his mother.
He’d often travel from Minnesota to help his mother,
which is why he had been in
Moss Point for three weeks,
McEwen said.
He would usually schedule
his trips around the holiday
season, when he could help his
mother with the cooking.
“He would come down every
year and do her fruitcakes for
the holidays,” said sister
Dorothy Dunning of Gautier.
He had plans to clean his
mother’s yard Tuesday, Dunning said.
“Mama’s yard is full,” she
said, noting the well-wishers
who have visited the family
home at 3624 Temple St.
Dunning said no one knew
her brother by his Christian
name. He was known by the
nickname he chose himself to
pay homage to his idol, Diana
Ross. “Love Child” was a hit
for Ross in 1968.
“He was crazy about Diana
Ross,” Dunning said.
She said the family is devastated at Jacob’s death.
“He was the backbone of the
family. He’s the one who held
us together,” she said. “He
wouldn’t harm a hair on his
head. The only thing he would
do is fatten you up ‘cause he
loved to cook.”
Reporter Donna Harris can
be reached at dharris@themississippipress.com or (228)
934-1448.
State agents help with cruise ship security
■ 1,400 Katrina evacuees
remain aboard the Holiday
From Staff Reports
PASCAGOULA — Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics agents are part of the security team
watching over the evacuees on board the cruise
ship Carnival Holiday, the bureau’s director
said Wednesday.
The Holiday, which is usually homeported at
the Port of Mobile, was moved and docked at the
Port of Pascagoula’s South River Facility last
Saturday. It has served as home to 1,400 Hurricane Katrina evacuees from Jackson County
and other Coast communities since early September.
Federal Emergency Management Agency officials said the ship was moved to make it more
convenient for the residents to go to work and to
work on their homes, which were damaged by
Katrina.
MBN Director Marshall Fisher said the
agents are not the only state law enforcement
officers helping a private security firm hired
by FEMA to provide security for the ship. He
said officers with the Mississippi Highway
Patrol and Bureau of Investigation are expect-
ed to also involved.
Fisher said the agents were assigned to the
ship because the officers with the security company have no arrest power.
A spokeswoman for the Mississippi Emergency Management Agency said the state’s
Department of Public Safety is the lead agency
for the security effort. She said MEMA assigned
the job to DPS because security falls under its
duties. She said the agents provide security on
the ship while the private security firm is
responsible for the outside perimeter around
the ship.
The state officers’ salaries and expenses will
be reimbursed by FEMA. “The MBN agents
will be there until Saturday,” she said. “After
that the Department of Public Safety will determine who will continue security on the ship.”
“We’re working eight to 10 on a shift,” he
said. “There is an area on the ship where the
agents can stay and sleep while they’re working
on board. We’re trying to keep it low-key so
that we don’t alarm or excite the people on
board. So far, there haven’t been any problems.”
Reporter John Surratt can be reached at
jsurratt@mspressonline.com or (228) 9341427.
‘The Spirit of Jackson County’ arrives
■ Michigan’s Jackson
County donates
pumper truck to
firefighters in Jackson
County, Miss.
By AMANDA CREEL
The Mississippi Press
FONTAINEBLEAU — The
resilient spirit of the people
of Jackson County has been
evident throughout the community since Hurricane Katrina and a tribute to this
spirit
now
sits
in
Fontainebleau.
A fire apparatus named
“The Spirit of Jackson County” was donated to the Fontainebleau Volunteer Fire
Department Wednesday from
Jackson County, Mich.
“We are real thankful to
Jackson County, Mich. for
taking us under their wings.
It’s an old truck, but it’s a
truck,” said Jerry W. Cook,
a fire commissioner for Jackson County.
The 1974 pumper truck
arrived fully equipped and
ready to go, said Ken Flanagan, Jackson County EOC
public information officer.
The truck was named by
the Weatherwax Foundation
in Jackson County, Mich.,
who donated the funds for
the truck.
“With a common name and
a common spirit, we wanted
the people of your Jackson
County to know that our
Jackson County wishes you
the best,” said Lawrence
Bullen, chairman of the
Weatherwax Foundation.
The foundation funded the
donation of the truck through
Helping Our Own organization, which was created to
Christy Pritchett/The Mississippi Press
Fontainebleau Fire Chief Michael Belton, right, and
transport driver Bill Maynard look over the tanker truck
donated to the Fontainebleau Fire Department from
Jackson County, Michigan through the ‘Helpiing Our
Own’ program.
assist fire departments in acreel@themississippineed and also is based in press.com or (228) 934Jackson County, Mich.
1428.
“We wanted the vehicle to
act as a kindred spirit between Jackson County, Mich.
and Jackson County, Miss.,”
said Mark Warnick, one of
the founders of the Helping
Our Own organization.
“It’s a neat thing, Jackson
County residents are helping
Jackson County residents,”
said Edward Flagg, assistant
chief of the Fontainebleau
fire department.
Since the hurricane, Helping Our Own has made several deliveries, one including
an ambulance and another
fire and another with turnout gear for the firefighters
2210 Denny Avenue
such as boots, helmets and
Pascagoula, MS
the leather coats they wear
228-769-9899
when fighting fires.
Reporter Amanda Creel
Have a story idea? CALL 934-1419
can be reached at
We’re Open
JD PAWN
If We Can Help –
Please, Give Us A Call
TOP DOLLAR
FOR ALL PAWNS
4-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
LOCAL/REGION
Investigators: Killer admits to at least 12 more slayings
By GARRY MITCHELL
The Associated Press
MOBILE — Jeremy Bryan Jones, a
suspected serial killer convicted in the
rape and murder of an Alabama woman,
has admitted at least 12 more slayings in
four other states since 1992, authorities
said Wednesday.
“He enjoyed raping and killing,” said
Mobile County sheriff’s Detective Paul
Burch.
Jones, 32, of Miami, Okla., faces a possible death penalty Dec. 1 on his Oct. 28
capital murder conviction in the killing of
Lisa Marie Nichols, 44, of rural Turnerville while high on methamphetamines.
He also is charged with killing a
teenage girl in Georgia and a woman in
Louisiana. He is a suspect in 10 other
deaths — seven in Oklahoma, two in
Georgia and one in Kansas — and could
be linked to the slayings of four Atlantaarea prostitutes, law enforcement officials said at a news conference. That
would bring to seven the number of possible victims in the metropolitan Atlanta
area alone.
Alabama Attorney General Troy King
described Jones as “a monster who would
kill without remorse.”
“The only person I ever saw Jeremy
Jones express any sorrow for was himself. I think that speaks a lot about the
kind of man that Jeremy Jones is,” King
said.
Jones’ custody before allowing him to
leave state prison for prosecution in
another state. He said it is important
to the Nichols’ family that his sentence
be carried out in Alabama.
“We don’t know where the investigation stands in these other jurisdictions,”
King said.
Investigators said they were unable to
comment on the other crimes during
Jones’ trial. But Burch said Jones gave
them the names of victims and locations
of the other killings.
Jones met his victims in various ways,
such as in bars, through people he knew
or just driving through a parking lot,
Burch said.
Burch said Jones publicly maintained
his innocence in the presence of his
mother and girlfriend, but privately gave
detectives details of the crimes in video
AP
and audio statements, information that
Officials from left, Mobile County Sheriff's Office Chief Deputy Mark Barhas been shared with authorities in the
low, Alabama Attorney General Troy King, Mobile County Sheriff Jack Till- other states.
man, Mobile County Sheriff's Deputy Doug Walley, Mobile County Sheriff's
Jones brought up the Atlanta prostiCpl. Paul Burch, respond to reporters' questions Wednesday during a
tute murders during the months of internews conference about Jeremy Bryan Jones in Mobile. Jones, a suspect- rogation, Burch said, and the Atlanta
ed serial killer convicted in the rape and murder of an Alabama woman,
authorities were kept informed.
Jones’ defense attorneys have said he
has admitted at least 12 more slayings in four other states since 1992,
fabricated links to other crimes, but
authorities said.
authorities Wednesday felt he was not
King said his office would assist other extradition request to send Jones to any making them up.
states in prosecuting Jones. But King is other jurisdiction.
Burch said Jones was “very nonchaseeking the death penalty for Jones in
King said Alabama authorities would lant and matter-of-fact” in recounting
Alabama and said he has not received an want “very strong assurances” about the rapes and killings.
Victims linked
to Jeremy Bryan Jones
List of 13 victims linked to serial
killings suspect Jeremy Bryan
Jones, death date, and Jones’ status:
• Jennifer Judd, 20, of Baxter
Springs, Kan., May 11, 1992. Suspect.
• Daniel Oakley, 38, and Doris
Harris, 41, of Delaware, Okla., Feb.
21, 1996. Suspect.
• Justin Hutchings, 19, of Pitcher,
Okla., Sept. 1999. Suspect.
• Kathy Freeman, 38, Danny
Freeman, 40, Ashley Freeman, 16,
and Lauria Bible, 16, of Welch,
Okla., Dec. 30, 1999. Suspect.
• Tina Mayberry, 38, of Douglasville, Ga., Oct. 10, 2002. Suspect.
• Katherine Collins, 47, of New
Orleans, Feb. 14, 2004. Charged.
• Amanda Greenwell, 16, of Douglasville, Ga., March 21, 2004.
Charged.
• Patrice Endres, 38, of Forsyth,
Ga., missing since April 15, 2004.
Suspect.
• Lisa Marie Nichols, 44, of Turnerville, Ala., Sept, 17, 2004. Convicted of capital murder.
Source: Mobile County Sheriff’s
Department.
Jackson County debris removal paperwork deadline nears
The Mississippi Press
Paperwork is as much a
part of the hurricane rebuilding process as chainsaws and
sheetrock.
City and county officials
need Jackson County residents to complete an important piece of paperwork, a
Right of Entry form, before
Nov. 26. The form grants
debris contractors permission
to come on private property
to remove debris. FEMA
extended the original deadline for residents with major
hurricane debris last week
and officials want to take full
advantage of the extra time.
“We need these Right of
Entry forms as soon as possible,” said David Groves, the
Unified Command’s debris
coordinator. “It would be best
to have the forms the week
before Nov. 26. These forms
guarantee FEMA will pay for
100 percent of the cleanup
cost. After the deadline each
city and the county will be
forced to pay part of the cost.”
Almost eight million cubic
yards of hurricane debris
remain in Jackson County.
Once the deadline expires,
each city, along with the
county, will be forced to pay
for 5 percent of the cleanup.
“Even at 5 percent, it’s
more than our city can
afford,” said Jeff Wilkinson,
councilman at large for the
city of Gautier. “We can’t
count on the deadline being
extended again, but we can
avoid this bill by just getting
in those ‘Right of Entry’
f o r m s . We n e e d t o t a k e
advantage of this extension.”
Residents can pick up a
Right of Entry form from the
following locations:
• Pascagoula — Code
Enforcement Office at 4015
14th St., (228) 938-6620, and
Wal-Mart, 4253 Denny Ave.
• Gautier — Utility Building at 3305 Gautier-Vancleave Road, (228) 497-2276,
and Singing River Mall, 2800
Hwy. 90.
• Ocean Springs — City
Hall, in the Planning Office,
at 1018 Porter St., (228) 8754236; Wal-Mart Parking Lot
3911 Bienville Blvd.; and
FEMA’s Disaster Recovery
Center, next to America’s
Thrift Store.
• Moss Point — City Hall,
in the Building Inspector’s
Office. Contact (228) 4750300) and FEMA’s Disaster
Recovery Center at Pelican
Landing.
• Jackson County- Planning Department at Jackson
County Civic Center; St.
Andrews Fire Station; Elks
Lodge on Beach View; St.
“We need these Right of Entry forms as soon as
possible. It would be best to have the forms the week
before Nov. 26. These forms guarantee FEMA will
pay for 100 percent of the cleanup cost. After the
deadline each city and the county will be forced to
pay part of the cost.”
— David Groves, Unified Command’s
debris coordinator
Martin Library; and the West
Jackson County Road Department.
After a form is submitted
a representative from the
Corp of Engineers will visit
each piece of property and
double check all information
before beginning the removal
process. Debris removal is at
no cost to residents, who, as a
result of the hurricane:
• Sustained damage of
more than 50 percent to their
homes or received significant
damage from debris from surrounding areas and
• Incurred damage that is
a threat to the public health
and safety. Homes located in
areas declared “catastrophic
damage areas” will receive
priority.
For residents who don’t
meet these requirements,
help is still available through
several non-profit or faith
based programs. One of the
largest is the Volunteer Coordination Center located at St.
Paul Methodist Church in
Ocean Springs. The Volunteer Center has already provided $2 million worth of free
cleanup in the county.
“More than 1,000 volunteers have come through our
camp and we are looking for
work. Our group will be here
until the Christmas holidays
and return after the New
Year. Call us and make an
appointment at (228) 8753416 or 875-3568,” said Mike
Malkemes, volunteer coordinator at the center.
Although it might all look
the same, Jackson County
Supervisor John McKay
explains there is a difference
between roadside debris and
commercial debris.
“Public roadside debris is
not affected by any FEMA
deadline. All roadside debris
throughout the entire county
Insurance frustrations mount for hurricane survivors
By JOHN CHRISTOFFERSEN
The Associated Press
NEW ORLEANS — Once a
proud businessman, William
Dwyer sits in a parking lot these
days begging his insurer for money.
The 57-year-old retiree said he
was quick to file claims after
Hurricane Katrina severely damaged his home in suburban
Slidell. An adjuster inspected the
property about four weeks after
the storm, but after four more
weeks he has heard nothing
about compensation aside from
a cash advance for living expenses.
“I had to beg and beg and beg,”
he said as he waited outside a
mobile insurance company unit
set up in a shopping center parking lot. “Each time I call they
refuse to say anything. They don’t
return our phone calls. It’s been
horrible. We lost everything we
had.”
After evacuating around the
country, survivors of Katrina and
Hurricane Rita are on a new journey to prove their losses so they
can rebuild tattered lives. Until
those claims are resolved, hundreds of thousands of lives and
the rebuilding of the Gulf Coast
are on hold.
“You can stand in my living
room, or my den, and count the
stars,” said Emmanuel Branch,
50, a teacher who lost his job
when the school system collapsed. “What we do or won’t do
will be dictated by insurance.”
But Branch cannot get an
adjuster out to see the stars.
Unable to get a response over the
phone, he drove three hours to
the state capital to get an interim
payment.
Branch is dealing with
Louisiana Citizens Property
Insurance Corp., a state-run
insurer of last resort for homeowners in high-risk areas unable
to get policies from private companies.
Citizens is hiring more
adjusters, billing insurers and
selling bonds to help cover an
expected $900 million in Katrina
claims and costs.
Total insured losses caused by
Katrina in Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama are about $34
billion, according to the Property
Casualty Insurers Association of
America, which has more than
1,000 members.
The Louisiana Department of
Insurance has received 1,367 consumer complaints since the storm
concerning adjusters not showing up, an inability to reach
insurers and insufficient settlements.
“What I keep telling everybody
is you have to remind yourself
you’re dealing with the largest
natural disaster in American history,” said Louisiana Insurance
Commissioner Robert Wooley.
“It’s not going to be pretty and
it’s not going to be fast.”
Many survivors are trying to
navigate the claims process without phone service, hot water and
other basics.
“I’m getting a little old for this,”
said Bette Bornside, whose husband was evacuated to a nursing home in Houston. “You wait
on the phone for 20 minutes and
the cell phone cuts off.”
Bornside has claims pending
for her residence and the knitting business she would like to
resume operating in New
Orleans — if she could get yarn
deliveries.
“It’s just waiting,” Bornside
said. “All I want to do is get back
to work.”
State insurance departments
around the country offered to
send help to respond to the complaints, but Wooley said until
recently it was hard to find hotel
rooms for them. Adjusters had
the same problem, commuting
up to three hours to assess
homes, he said.
Some homes only recently
became accessible. Facing a manpower shortage, some insurers
are relying on independent
adjusters with limited training.
“There are apparently some
fairly rude independents out
there,” said Wooley, who expects
even more serious complaints to
arise as settlement checks arrive.
Insurers say they are processing claims as fast as they can,
but evaluating the damage to
each home is time-consuming.
“We have people working 15
to 16 hours per day, seven days
per week,” said George Forbes,
unit manager with St. Paul Travelers Cos. Inc., who dealt with
Dwyer’s claim this week.
Travelers, which lost more
than $1 billion from the two hurricanes, has 1,000 claim specialists working throughout the
South, said Jennifer Wislocki, a
spokeswoman. She said the cases vary too much to say when
they’ll be resolved.
“We feel the process is going
well,” Wislocki said.
Dwyer’s claim will be processed
after a report from an adjuster is
verified, Forbes said.
CAMPER CITY
Your One-Stop Car & Truck
Accessory Super • Center
• Dog Boxes
• Chrome Trim
Accessories
• Hitches
• Camper Shells
• Cargo Covers
CAL
WARN WINCHES
NOWL
FIFTH WHEEL HITCHES
GOOSENECK HITCHES
ELECTRICAL HOOK-UPS
CALL
NOW
Open M/Fri. 8AM-5PM, Sat. 8AM-12 Noon
6933 Hwy. 49 North
Hattiesburg
1340 Denny Ave. (Hwy 90)
Pascagoula
121 N. Schillinger Rd.
Mobile
1-888-730-0432
1-228-762-6082
1-800-431-6692
will be picked up and
removed through 100 percent
FEMA funding regardless of
timetables. But this cleanup
doesn’t include commercial or
business debris. It’s just for
residents,” McKay said.
Debris crews are just beginning a second sweep through
the county. Residents with
additional debris since the
first pass should once again
stack debris next to the road
for removal.
“Remember to get the
debris within eight feet of the
pavement to make sure the
machinery will reach it,”
McKay said. “Any debris fur-
ther away then eight feet, the
crews can’t pick it up unless
you fill out a ‘Right of Entry’
or push it to the curb for the
next time.”
Residents should also continue sorting debris by keeping appliances separated
from other materials.
Corps of Engineer contractors continue to struggle with
debris being piled on top of
fire hydrants and gas meters.
Last week several cable and
gas lines were broken as
debris was being removed.
Residents are asked to stack
or move debris away from all
utilities.
FREE QUOTES
MEDICARE SUPPLEMENTS
PLAN 6: $71.60 mo. PLAN F: $90.29 mo.
Age 65-67
M I L L S I N S U R A N C E S E RV I C E
769-2511
1-888-677-1662
C a l l fo r f re e q u o t e
Building Supply & Brickyard
“ Fo r A l l Yo u r B u i l d i n g N e e d s ”
HOME REBUILDING
HEADQUARTERS
Interior
Door
Units
$
6999
Ceramic
Tile
99¢
sq. ft.
3 1/4”
White
Vinyl
Siding
$
3900
Colonial Base
Board
39¢ lnf
per square
Aluminum White
Insulated
Windows
45
$
49
Exterior Steel
Door Units
Starting at
$
89
00
- IN STOCK SUPPLIES • 15# Felt • Aluminum Windows
• Shop Vacs • Plastic Sheeting
• Mold and Mildew Cleaning Supplies
• Electrical and Plumbing Supplies
Open Monday - Friday 7-6
Saturday 8-5
S u n d a y 11 - 3
H w y. 9 0 - G a u t i e r - 4 9 7 - 9 7 5 0
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
5-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
TV/ADVICE
THURSDAY PRIME TIME TV
b
6:00
WEAR News 19
WWL News 61
WKRG
CBS
News 6222
WLOX
ABC
WPMI
NBC
AMC
ANPL
BET
CMT
COM
DIS
DISC
E!
ENC
ESPN
ESPN2
EWTN
FAM
FOOD
FSS
FX
HALL
HBO
HBO2
HBO3
HGTV
HIST
LIFE
8:30
9:00
9:30
10:00
10:30
11:00
News 21864
Everybody
Loves Raymond 54241
Everybody
Loves Raymond 30661
News 4864
News 1390
Alfonso
Realty 4406
Ent
Wheel
Jim
Robinson
The Apprentice 72574
The Apprentice 99488
Diagnosis Murder: The
Roast. 38154
ER: Dream House. 92338
ER: Dream House. 89864
Gaither: The Best of Guy
Penrod 18390
News
News
Paid
Program
Tonight Show w/Jay Leno
Tonight Show w/Jay Leno
News 67715 Alfonso
Realty
Off the Air
News 8864
Off the Air
Wheel of For- Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (PG-13, ’03) ››› (Johnny Depp,
News 3736116 Nightline
tune: NBA
Geoffrey Rush) A swashbuckler must rescue a governor’s daughter from a pirate and his mates,
(10:35)
Week. 9116
who turn into skeletons by moonlight. 549777
4980338
News 3932
Entertainment Joey: Joey
Will & Grace: The Apprentice: Back to
ER: Dream House. Dubenko
Tonight 7512 and the Poker. The Hole
School. A candidate’s derogato- tortures the staff via a robotic
2715
Truth. 3796
ry remark. 74970
TV camera. 61406
Joey 6357
Will & Grace
Joey 3883
Will & Grace
Diagnosis Murder: Write,
She Murdered. 29406
Frasier: The
Harassed.
67393
11:30
Inside Ed.
Access H.
Late Late
Show/Craig
Ferguson
Frasier 22262
Late Night
Late Night
Jim
Robinson
Jimmy Kimmel Live: (11:05)
Actor Billy Baldwin; actor Dane
Cook. 8678406
News 3754512 The Tonight Show With Jay Late Night
Leno: (10:35) Actress Nicollette With Conan
Sheridan. 3255845
O’Brien
The NewsHour With Jim
Classic Roads Mississippi
87951
Outdoors
79112
Rx for Survival: A Global Health Challenge: Back to the
Basics; How Safe Are We? Illnesses plague the developing
world. 76970
Tavis Smiley Charlie Rose 236086
44116
GED Connection 34715
My Wife and
My Wife and
Kids 62852
The O.C.: The Perfect Storm.
Sandy supports Ryan’s lifechanging decision. 34932
Reunion: 1989. Samantha
must finally choose between
Craig and Will. 43680
Everybody
Loves Raymond 23338
Everybody
Loves Raymond 50203
That ’70s
Show 37864
Everybody
Hates Chris
46512
Eve: Model
Behavior.
28883
A Different
World 79672
The
Simpsons
That ’70s
Show
Everybody
Hates Chris
Eve
8024319
My Wife and
Kids
The Bernie
Mac Show
That ’70s
Show
King of the
Hill 5746512
Malcolm in
the Middle
The Drew
Carey Show
Will & Grace
Will & Grace
Sex/City
Sex/City
Cheaters
Cops
Love, Inc.
8320951
King/Queens King/Queens Smallville: Exposed.
6:00
A&E
8:00
Reunion: 1989. Samantha
must finally choose between
Craig and Will. 41628
WXXV Kids 82932
FOX
WB
7:30
Wheel of For- The O.C.: The Perfect Storm.
tune: NBA
Sandy supports Ryan’s lifeWeek. 1932 changing decision. 25680
WMAH Lehrer 64226
PBS
WJTC
7:00
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (PG-13, ’03) ››› 855715
News
News
Nightline
Survivor: Guatemala -Maya CSI: Crime Scene
Without a Trace 4845
News
Late Show W/Letterman
Survivor: Guatemala -- The CSI: Crime Scene Investiga- Without a Trace: Viuda Negra. News 1117970 Late Show With David LetterMaya Empire: The Hidden
tion: Secrets and Flies. Young Abducted. 94796
man: (10:35) Actor Bruce
Immunity Doll. 98512
mother’s death. 74932
Willis. 6005222
Jeopardy!
WALA 6280
FOX
WDSU
WDAM
WKFK
PAX
WYES
6:30
Millionaire
The Insider
The Andy
Griffith Show
7574
6:30
7:00
7:30
Cuts
8036154
Everwood: Free Fall.
8:00
8:30
Cold Case Files: The
Bedroom Basher. 720241
9:00
9:30
The First 48: Evil Streak;
.50 Caliber. 717777
10:00
10:30
Crossing Jordan: Miracles
& Wonders. 710864
11:00
11:30
American Justice 282262
Cold Case Files: Baby for
Sale; The Barrel. 711593
Mad Max 2: The Road
Warrior (5) (R, ’81) 791864
Young Guns (R, ’88) ›› (Emilio Estevez, Kiefer
Sutherland) 791999
Young Guns II (PG-13, ’90) ›› (Emilio Estevez, Kiefer
Sutherland) 8518965
Young Guns (11:15) (R,
’88) ›› 7049883
The Most Extreme
106 & Park
BET Style
Dukes of Hazzard
Beavis
Comedy
That’s So
That’s So
Raven
Raven
Planet’s Funniest Animals
Planet’s Funniest Animals
Movie 973067
Top 20 Countdown: Host Lance Smith. 1277777
Daily Show Colbert Rep Comedy
South Park
Kim Possible: So the Drama (’05) (Christy
American
Carlson Romano, Will Friedle) 3677680
Dragon
Miami Animal Police
The Ultimate Hustler
Man/Vegas
South Park
Showbiz
The Buzz on Sister, Sister
Maggie
950311
Planet’s Funniest Animals
Jamie Foxx Jamie Foxx
CMT Greatest NASCAR
A. Carolla
South Park
Phil of the
Kim
Future
Possible
Planet’s Funniest Animals
Living Color Living Color
Dukes of Hazzard
Daily Show Colbert Rep
That’s So
That’s So
Raven
Raven
Cold Case Files: Baby for
Sale; The Barrel. 326609
MythBusters 587834
Dirty Jobs 726425
Dirty Jobs 702845
A Haunting 722609
MythBusters 725796
Dirty Jobs 324241
E! News
E! News
THS Investigates: Women Who Kill 414999
E! True Hollywood Story
H. Stern
H. Stern
Pop Stars
At the Palms
Terminal Velocity (5:15)
Mona Lisa Smile (PG-13, ’03) ›› 56079796
Love Jones (9:05) (R, ’97) ›› (Larenz Tate) 73748224
Mad Max Beyond ...
SportCenter College Football: Pittsburgh at Louisville 269222
SportsCenter 753864
NFL Live
Outside
Frankly
Import Racer Monster Shark T’rnament
Monster Shark T’rnament
Monster Shark T’rnament
Quite Frankly With Smith
Hollywood
Frankly
Daily Mass: Our Lady
Life on the Rock 3164154
Backstage
Holy Rosary Gospel
Church
Web of Faith 3163425
Daily Mass: Our Lady
Smallville 239574
The Karate Kid (PG, ’84) ››› (Ralph Macchio, Noriyuki Morita) 921929
Whose Line The 700 Club 886406
Fun Videos Fun Videos
Good Eats
Restaurant
Emeril Live 8076883
Chocolate Competition
Iron Chef America
Iron Chef 8075154
Emeril Live 2316777
Awards
Football
FullTiltPoker.net Champ.
Best Damn Sports Show
Spo. Report Best Damn Sports Show
Best Damn Sports Show
Spo. Report
’70s Show
’70s Show
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
Cops
’70s Show
’70s Show
King of Hill
King of Hill
Walker, Texas Ranger
Walker, Texas Ranger
Return to Snowy River (PG, ’88) ›› 4511845
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
M*A*S*H
REAL Sports Gumbel
Inside the NFL 164661
Collateral (R, ’04) ››› (Tom Cruise, Jamie Foxx) 184425
Real Sex
Family Bond Inside the NFL 795715
Married to the Mob (5:15)
Real Time With Bill Maher
Enthusiasm Catwoman (PG-13, ’04) ›› 38610319
Mystic River (10:15) (R, ’03) ››› 19253241
Sometimes in April (5:30) (’05) ›› (Idris Elba) 4911241
Inventing the Abbotts (R, ’97) ›› 2390593
Big Fish (PG-13, ’03) ››› (Ewan McGregor) 45267609
Curb Appeal House Hunt Small Space reDesign
Div. Design Designers
House Hunt House Hunt Design/Dime First Place
Small Space reDesign
Modern Marvels 1780425
Behind the Mask of Zorro 2312951
Modern Marvels 8074425
History
Murders
Behind the Mask of Zorro
A Murder on Shadow Mountain (’99) ›› (Michele Lee,
Murder in the Hamptons (’05) (Poppy Montgomery,
Will & Grace Will & Grace The Golden The Golden
Peter Coyote) 808628
David Sutcliffe) 870845
502932
511680
Girls
Girls
Wing Commander (7:15) (PG-13, ’99) ›› 61310338
Exorcist: The Beginning (R, ’04) › 871574
Hotel Erotica Intimate
MAX Last Action Hero (5)
The Cooler (’03) ››› (William H. Macy) 3153406
Pleasure Zone (9:45)
The Best Sex Ever (11:15)
MAX2 Gothika (6:15) (R, ’03) ›› (Halle Berry) 36260113
SpongeBob Full House
Full House
Fresh Prince Roseanne
Roseanne
3’s Comp.
Cosby Show Fresh Prince Fresh Prince
NICK OddParents Jimmy
Ultimate Shark Tourn.
Bull Riding: PBR World Finals, Round 1 2536796
Dangerous
Buckmaster Dream Hun.
OUTDOOR Ultimate Shark Tourn.
Cerberus (’05) (Greg Evigan, Garret Sato) 7003390
Project Viper (R, ’02) › (Theresa Russell) 6589932
SCIFI Chupacabra: Dark Seas (R, ’05) 7008845
Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde
The Perfect Score (8:35) (PG-13, ’04) ›› 52687845
SuicideGirls: The First Tour 2779777
SHOW Against the Ropes (5:05)
Mimic (R, ’97) ›› (Mira Sorvino) 3155864
Masters of Horror
Fahrenheit 9/11 16794777
SHOW2 Movie (4:30) Bereft (6:25) (R, ’04) ›› 58546339
CSI: Crime Scene
TNA iMPACT! 102357
UFC Unleashed 181864
CSI: Crime Scene
SPIKE CSI: Crime Scene
Elf (PG, ’03) ››› (Will Ferrell, James Caan) 5460390
Cellular (9:45) (PG-13, ’04) ›› 64611864
Bad Santa
STARZ Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (R, ’04) 4532338
Colorado Territory (’49) ››› (Joel McCrea) 7677406
The Outriders (’50) ›› (Joel McCrea) 9445796
Ride High Country (10:45)
TCM Imitation of Life (4:45)
Da Vinci Declassified
Psychic Witness 193609
Dead Tenants 173845
Da Vinci Declassified
Psychic Witness 708715
TLC Noah’s Ark: True Story
Pursued (R, ’04) 5996311
Toolbox Murders (8:35) (R, ’04) ›› 71440319
Triggermen (R, ’02) ›› 2830796
TMC 30 Years to Life (5:15)
NBA Basketball: Indiana Pacers at Miami Heat 846715
NBA Basketball: Phoenix Suns at Los Angeles Lakers 559777
TNT Law & Order 453628
Billy/Mandy Billy/Mandy Codename
Ed, Edd
Cartoon
Code Lyoko Yu-Gi-Oh!
Futurama
Family Guy Squidbillies Evangelion
TOON Imaginary
Good Times Good Times Little House on the Prairie
Andy Griffith Sanford/Son Good Times All in Family 3’s Comp.
Night Court Cheers
Sanford/Son
TVL
Law & Order: Intent
The Jackal (R, ’97) ››› (Bruce Willis, Richard Gere) 189512
Law & Order: Intent
USA Law & Order: SVU
Grave Secrets: The Legacy of Hilltop Drive 348357
News 629609
Sex/City
Becker
Da Vinci’s Inquest 337241
WGN Funniest Home Videos
Everybody,
WTBS Raymond
Everybody,
Raymond
Friends
258574
You fit, they
fit; so go up
The Law of Total Tricks
was the brainchild of
Frenchman Jean-Rene
Vernes.
Its primary conclusion is
that if your side does not
have the high-card values
for game,
bid as
high as
the combined
number of
trumps
you hold.
With eight
trumps,
go at least
to the
Philip
two-level; Alder
with nine
trumps,
get to the three-level.
Given that preamble, look
at the South hand. Since it
is a tad too strong for a preemptive opening, you start
with one spade. It goes pass
— two spades — pass. What
would you do now?
Clearly, your side cannot
make game. It should be
equally obvious that you
have scant defense against
an opposing contract. Anticipating a balancing action on
your left, you should raise
pre-emptively to three
spades.
As we saw yesterday, if
you pass, West should balance with two no-trump,
showing a two-suiter, usually the minors.
Then the opponents might
Friends
902883
Friends
267222
Friends
286357
Wayne’s World 2 (PG-13, ’93) ›› (Mike Myers, Dana
Carvey) 5081135
The Waterboy (11:10)
(PG-13, ’98) ›› 5287796
Blood pressure and pulse
variations usually unrelated
ence shortness of breath
Dear Dr. Gott: Can you
because they are out of shape.
explain pulse rate as it relates
However, the fact that your
to blood pressure? My BP is
symptom began 40 years ago is
130/70, pulse 72. My wife’s BP
is 110/70, pulse 100. What caus- significant. Therefore, your case
is distinct because it could
es this variation?
reflect an underlying pulDear Reader: Ordinarily,
monary disorder, such
the blood pressure
as hypoventilation
and the pulse are
syndrome, asthma or
unrelated. The one
emphysema that
striking exception is
requires diagnosis
stress that causes
and may be treatable.
both to rise. Also,
I urge you to be
anemia and hyperexamined by your
thyroidism can
family physician who
increase the pulse
may, depending on his
rate, without affecteven reach a making five
findings, refer you to a
ing the blood presclubs. Three spades has a
pulmonologist for fursure.
Peter
chance to silence them,
ther clarification.
The only aberrancy Gott, M.D.
although either opponent
in your and your
Dear Dr. Gott: I
might risk a double.
have been diagnosed by specialAgainst three spades, West wife’s numbers is her
leads the club ace, East per- tachycardia (rapid pulse of 100 ists as having primary
or more). I attribute this to pos- hypoventilation syndrome.
haps signaling encourageWhat is this? Is it treatable?
ment with the six. Let’s sup- sible anxiety.
I may, however, be wrong in
Dear Reader: This condipose, though, that West
my brief analysis. Your wife
tion, which is not common, conguesses well and shifts to
should check her pulse once or
sists of evidence that the
the heart queen. Declarer
twice a day for a week. If the
patient is not breathing deeply
might duck this, but let’s
enough to expel carbon dioxide
assume he covers with dum- rate remains elevated, she
should see her primary care
and absorb oxygen. The afflicmy’s king.
physician for further examination is often a consequence of
East should win with his
tion and testing.
sleep apnea (poor gas exchange
ace, cash the heart jack, and
Although I am certain that
during sleep) and narcolepsy
return the heart five as a
your wife’s tachycardia is inci(reduced breathing at times
suit-preference signal for
dental, the prudent approach is
during the day). In my opinion,
clubs.
to monitor it.
West ruffs, cashes the diaLet me know if this situation you should be examined by specialists in a pulmonary laboramond ace, and plays a low
needs a follow-up.
tory. You may need supplemenclub to his partner’s queen.
Dear Dr. Gott: I am 66 and
tal oxygen, medication, respiraNow East leads his last
in good health. Nonetheless, I
tory therapy to resolve the
heart, but South ruffs high
have had shortness of breath,
and draws trumps. Two
for about 40 years, when I exer- issue, or a sleep study to condown, minus 100, is an
firm the diagnosis.
cise. Is my case unique?
excellent result, though.
Follow your specialist’s
Dear Reader: No, it isn’t.
©NEA
advice.
Most elderly adults experi-
Readers offer dirty
lowdown on bathing
each and every day
Dear Abby: I totally disagree with your answer to
“Separate Bedrooms in the
Future,” the man
who complained
that his wife doesn’t
bathe every day.
Who would want to
share a bed or have
sex with a woman
who doesn’t bathe or
shower every day? It
makes me wonder if
she washes her
Dear
hands before
preparing dinner.
Abby
Disgusting, to put it
mildly! I was sure you knew
better. — Leon W., Skokie,
Ill.
Dear Leon W.: “Separate
Bedrooms” has been married
to his wife for 35 years.
Until he retired from his job,
he never noticed that she
didn’t bathe every day. He
didn’t complain that she didn’t wash her hands before
preparing food — and he’s
watching her like a hawk —
so let’s give her the benefit
of the doubt. Read on:
Dear Abby: As an
internist, I treat people
every day for conditions
ranging from contact dermatitis to fungal rashes that
would not occur if people
gave up bathing daily. The
skin is covered in bacteria
that constitute “normal flora.” It is not to anyone’s
advantage to wash these
beneficial bacteria away, as
it leaves one open to rashes
and skin irritation from a
number of sources. Also, to
state the obvious, if he’s
been married to her for 35
good years, then a rose by
any other name could not
smell as sweet. — Michael
G., M.D., Johnson City,
Tenn.
Dear Abby: We Americans
are so obsessed with cleanliness that we may be endangering our health. Exposure
to bacteria helps us to develop antibodies to fight disease. Studies are under way
to see if the autoimmune diseases may be at least partly
due to so much cleanliness
that our immune systems
have nothing to do but
attack healthy tissue.
In Europe, whose culture
and lifestyle are otherwise
similar to ours, people bathe
less often than we do. It was
also fine with our ancestors,
who bathed only on Saturday nights!
“Separate” should be
thankful he’s living
with someone
hygienic enough
that he can’t tell
the difference. —
Daily bather but
hold the anti-bacterial soap
Dear Abby: I
lived in Italy for a
year. When my
Italian hosts realized I was showering every day, they
thought I was
crazy. The only thing you
really need to wash every
day are your private parts.
That’s why bidets are so
common in Europe. — Erin
in Hesperia, Calif.
Dear Abby: I’m a nurse,
but you don’t have to be a
nurse to know that a few
dead skin cells aren’t harmful. For someone with dry
skin, a daily bath can do
more harm than good. That
husband must have other
problems going on — like
retirement boredom, as you
suggested. I wonder if he
drove his former co-workers
nuts, too? Thanks for setting
him straight. — Kokomo,
Ind., R.N.
Dear Abby: Queen Isabella of Spain, one of history’s
most famous rulers and
sponsor of Christopher
Columbus’ voyages, bragged
that she took only two baths
in her entire life — when she
was born and when she got
married. Of course, hygiene
standards have improved in
500 years. — Robert C.,
Athens, Ga.
Dear Abby: If that jackass figured out a way to
make a lady “work up a
sweat,” maybe they could
shower together — Thomas
Mc D., Cincinnati
Dear Abby: “Separate
Bedrooms in the Future”
needs a hobby. He’s a perfect
example of why women hate
it when their husbands
retire! — Pat in Las Vegas
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA
90069.
Photos on key ring keeps
loved ones close at hand
Dear Heloise: In
car when transporting
response to your recent
messy items.
column regarding unique
• Cover your outdoor
photo-use ideas, I have the plants when the temperafollowing hint to share:
tures drop.
My husband, who was in
• Use as a dropcloth
the Air Force for 21 years,
when painting.
was deployed to
• Protect outdoor
Saudi Arabia durfurniture and
ing Operation
grills.
Desert Shield. I
• Cover the
took several phokitchen table
tos of him and
when you have
had them lamimessy crafting
nated, punched
projects planned.
holes in the cor• Make fun
ners and threaded
painting smocks
them onto a metal
for kids. Just cut
key ring for our 9- By Heloise
the shower curmonth-old daughtain into several
ter so she wouldn’t forget
large, rectangular pieces.
her daddy.
Attach to the shoulders
This hint would also be
of kids’ shirts with clothesuseful if grandparents live pins. When the painting is
a long distance from a
done, rinse the smocks off
grandchild. I hope this
with a hose and use them
hint helps our military
again!
families! — Leah Keith,
— Heloise
Union Grove, Ala.
Hat’s Off
Lovely gesture to keep
Dear Friends: I wanted
loved ones in our thoughts to say “thank you” to the
daily. This would be a
people at my pharmacy
great way for family mem- chain.
bers who have someone in
When they dispense a
the military to keep their
prescription medication,
loved one close. — Heloise the printed label on the
Fast Facts
bottle peels off easily. So,
Plastic shower curtains
the labels can be thrown
can’t last forever — at
away without worry about
least not in the shower.
them falling into the
But there are many other
wrong hands. — Heloise
great uses for them all
Write P.O. Box 795000,
over the house. Here are
San Antonio TX 78279some of my favorites:
5000 or fax (210)
HELOISE.
• Line the trunk of your
6-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Contact: Paul South, Editorial Page Editor, (228) 934-1423
E-mail address: editor@mspressonline.com
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
OPINION
Yo Rocky,
stop the
madness
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Wanda Heary Jacobs
Publisher
Steve Cox
Tommy Chelette
Editor
Advertising Director
Billy Wilder
Circulation Director
LETTERS POLICY
The Mississippi Press encourages letters to the editor. Writers are
encouraged to keep letters to 500 words or less.
Letters can be submitted via:
• Mail: The Mississippi Press, P.O. Box 849, Pascagoula, MS 39568.
• E-mail: editor@mspressonline.com
• In person: 1225 Jackson Ave., Pascagoula.
Letters will only be considered for publication if accompanied by the
name, address and daytime telephone number of the letter writer. All
submissions become the property of The Mississippi Press and will not
be returned; submissions may be edited and may be published or
otherwise reused in any medium.
Other Opinions
Planning for
the worst
Even though President Bush’s stagy announcement — a
special trip to Bethesda naval hospital, two Cabinet secretaries and the U.S. Surgeon General in attendance — had
all the trappings of PR spin, that should not diminish the
importance of his $7.1 billion initiative to head off a flu epidemic.
If he had wanted to skip the fanfare, the president could
have simply endorsed all or part of a similar $8 billion initiative passed by the Senate. But the White House is desperate to get the story off “Scooter” Libby and Harriet
Miers, and to demonstrate that it will never again be blindsided by a natural disaster.
The president was at pains to stress that, “There is no
pandemic flu in our country or in the world at this time.”
There is a highly speculative threat from an Asian bird-flu
virus, but it has only killed just over 60 people worldwide
and the virus has yet to — and may never — mutate to
where it can pass easily from person to person.
Still, it is a hard political fact of health issues that scary
sells and the Bush administration says that possibly, just
possibly, depending on its virulence, a pandemic could kill
anywhere from 209,000 to 1.9 million Americans, most of
them young. Pandemics have happened before and it makes
sense to prepare for another.
The heart of the Bush program is just over $3 billion for
early detection of flu threats here and abroad and to build
the capability to quickly and effectively develop vaccines
and medications to counter them. This is simply sound public health policy.
Billions more would go toward stockpiles of vaccines for
20 million emergency workers, as well as medications and
the means to distribute them to a potential 41 million victims.
There are some elements of the Bush plan that deserve
thorough and skeptical scrutiny by Congress, especially the
civil-liberties questions involved in his proposal to use the
Army to enforce quarantines and to give the government
the authority to enforce travel restrictions.
Alas, it is typical of the Bush administration that in
announcing a huge, new government initiative — the prescription-drug benefit comes to mind — a critical detail is
missing. How do we pay for all this? Not just the federal
government’s $7.1 billion, but an unfunded mandate it
imposes on the states of about $510 million.
Like an hourly worker deep in a financial hole, we as a
nation may one day not be able to afford getting sick, and
that’s not really a workable health strategy.
— Scripps Howard News Service
The U.N.’s
Syria resolution
The U.N. Security Council, usually noted for dissension
and timidity, acted with rare unanimity and toughness in
voting 15-0 to demand that Syria cooperate “fully and
unconditionally” with a U.N. inquiry into the assassination
of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, an
increasingly outspoken opponent of Syria’s occupation of his
country.
A preliminary report on the assassination, a bombing of
Hariri’s motorcade that also killed 22 others, by German
prosecutor Detlev Mehlis said it was almost certainly done
with the approval of senior Syrian officials, putting the
responsibility awkwardly close to President Bashar Assad.
Syria is run by a tight circle of Assad’s relatives and
friends.
Mehlis must be commended for his courage, given the
lethality of politics in the area. Just days before the report
was released, Interior minister Ghazi Khanaan, the former
de facto Syrian ruler of Lebanon and a possible suspect,
was found dead in his office. The Syrians said it was suicide.
The resolution directs the Syrians to let Mehlis interview
anyone — including Assad, who so far has refused to talk to
him — and to see any documents or go anywhere. It puts an
already shaky regime in an uncomfortable spot.
The resolution dropped the specific threat of economic
sanctions in the event of non-cooperation in favor of the
vague threat of “further action” to bring on board China,
Russia and Syria’s fellow Arab state, Algeria. If Mehlis is
deliberately stymied, the council will almost have to take
the next step of sanctions.
If the assassination was indeed ordered by Damascus, it
turned out to be an egregious blunder. Syria was forced to
pull out of Lebanon, ending a 29-year occupation. Now, the
Security Council — egged on by France, Britain and the
United States — is on its case. The United States, of course,
has a direct interest in Syria closing its border with Iraq to
terrorist infiltrators.
During the debate over the resolution, Syrian Foreign
Minister Farouk al-Sharaa said that accusing Syria of
knowing about the assassination in advance was the same
as saying that Britain and Spain had advance knowledge of
the train bombings and the United States of 9/11. Even for
countries with little love for the United States, this was too
much.
— Scripps Howard News Service
Shallow thought
about the court
Leftist pundits like to chuckle about
how thin the thinking of conservatives is
on the Supreme Court. But catch the act
of the leftists — of Senate minority leader
Harry Reid, minority pressure groups,
various liberal blog sites and large numbers of editorialists — and you will find
an ideological narrowness and shallowness of thought that would be laughable if
not so sad.
What is perhaps the
greatest fault they find
in Samuel Alito, President Bush’s most
recent nominee for justice on the Supreme
Court? Why, he isn’t a
woman. For that matter, he isn’t Hispanic,
either. Bush’s previous
nominee, of course,
Jay
met the criterion of
Ambrose
womanhood, but
turned out to know
very little about the Constitution and, as
her various writings conveyed, had a
mind of no particular depth or acuity.
Reid liked her. He pushed for her.
But Bush dropped that nominee, Harriet Miers, owing largely to conservative
criticism that, whatever you say about it,
was not thin. The chief arguments
against Miers was her lack of intellectual
heft and stature as an analysts of constitutional issues. The best evidence was
that her ideology was almost everything a
conservative could hope for. On the question that tugs so hard at both left and
right — the Roe v. Wade decision upholding the right of a woman to abortion —
she was on the record as being against it.
The politically correct case against Alito
that he is the wrong gender has nothing
to do with merit, with how capable he
might be. The downright stupidity of it
can be seen if you imagine a college coach
putting together a basketball team and
saying well, for diversity’s sake, we want
a short, blond, blue-eyed center, because,
after all, there are many short people in
America, and this team should look like
America. Yes, this person can’t block shots
and isn’t much offensively, either, but he
will go along well with a team that is half
female, does have some tall people on it,
represents a variety of religions, and, as
much as was possible, has someone from
all the largest racial and ethnic groups.
Winning games? Not so likely.
Supreme Court decisions are a great
deal more important than winning basketball games. A logical argument can be
made that Bush could have found a highly capable woman or minority for the
seat. But in a logical argument considerations of race or gender wouldn’t take
precedence over merit or judicial philosophy. I would personally have been delighted if Bush had nominated Janice Rogers
Brown, an African-American woman, but
the liberals would almost certainly have
fought that nomination with a filibuster.
Because of her libertarian beliefs, Democrats held up Brown’s ascension to the U.S.
Court of Appeals for two years.
It’s conceivable that Alito will face a filibuster even though he has more experience on the bench that any Supreme
Court nominee in 70 years, is highly
regarded for his restrained, polite manner, and his written decisions are reputedly respectful of the Constitution, as
well as incisive, intelligent and spare of
ideological rambling or self-proud diversions from the meat of the issue. The
trouble, from the point of view of the left,
is that he respects the Constitution too
much. He thinks, for instance, that the
interstate commerce clause means what it
says, that its purpose is to facilitate interstate commerce and not to empower the
federal government to do anything it
wants as long as it makes reference to the
clause.
Some liberals are already referring to
Alito as “machine gun Sammy” because
he understood that a machine gun sale
within a state had nothing to do with
sales between states and that the commerce clause did not entitle Congress to
outlaw the sale. That doesn’t mean he is
for machine guns. It means he is for the
Constitution. Let go of faithfulness to this
document, as the court so often has, and
you let go of a long list of protections for
the citizenry. Those on the left, by and
large, feels themselves entitled to the
sophistry that the Constitution can mean
what they think it should mean, even
when its meaning and language are perfectly clear and in opposition to their
interpretations.
Bush deserves credit for backing off his
mistake in nominating Miers and for
turning to someone who has none of her
deficiencies. If the left wants a fight on
this, he should give it to them. The Constitution is worth it.
Jay Ambrose, formerly Washington
director of editorial policy for Scripps
Howard newspapers and the editor of
dailies in El Paso, Texas, and Denver, is a
columnist living in Colorado. He can be
reached at SpeaktoJay@aol.com.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Reader frustrated
with insurance company
To the editor
Those full page ads from State Farm
that greet me in the paper every morning
make me sick to my stomach.
We are more than two months out from
Katrina and I still have no idea what my
insurance company, State Farm, is going
to settle with me for on the losses at my
house. The process has been awful. No
information, three different adjusters,
having to fill out the same forms several
times, waiting two weeks to get a call saying we can't find the information you gave
us a month ago. And I am one of those
lucky enough to have flood insurance.
If I didn't pay my premium for two
months, do you think I'd get a cancellation
notice?
The worst part is we are at their mercy.
We have no recourse, no input in to the
process and it has a huge impact on our
lives.
Why am I paying for six times the coverage on content on my homeowners’
insurance than what my agent sold me for
flood?
Jeff Story
Pascagoula
Yo Adrian! Somebody
tell Sly to stop the madness.
Sylvester Stallone
announced recently that
the world just didn’t have
enough “Rocky” and
“Rambo” movies in the
bargain bins at the local
mega shopping mart. So
he’s giving us “Rocky VI”
and “Rambo IV.”
The original “Rocky”
was about Rocky Balboa,
an underdog boxer who
fights the champion of the
world. “Rocky II” was
about Balboa fighting a
bad guy. “Rocky III”?
Another bad guy. Same
thing for the fourth and
fifth.
So now he’s going to
give us number six. MGM,
Columbia Pictures and
Revolution Studios
announced that Stallone
has written and will
direct
and
star in
the
upcoming film
“Rocky
Balboa”,
which
is
sched- Donna
uled to Harris
begin
shooting in Philadelphia
and Los Angeles in
December.
Spokespeople for the
movie have said this one
will offer moviegoers the
original, gritty tone of
“Rocky”, which won three
Academy Awards in 1976.
In the sixth installment, the boxer comes out
of retirement to fight several low-profile matches
but is eventually drawn
into a highly-publicized
comeback bout with the
reigning heavyweight
champ.
I’m sure he’ll end up
fighting a bad guy.
But at 59, do we want
to see it?
I mean, come on. A man
shouldn’t be jiggling
around a ring in boxer
shorts when he can order
the Grand Slam at Denny’s with his senior citizen discount.
So with Rocky Balboa
out of retirement and
almost on life support,
Stallone will then resurrect John Rambo, the
avenging Vietnam veteran
who did not draw first
blood.
Millennium Films and
Emmett/Furla Films have
announced that the
almost-60 Stallone has
signed on for “Rambo IV”,
which is scheduled to
begin filming in Mexico
and the United States
next spring.
It will take $50 million
this time around to recapture the raw energy of
“First Blood,” which
launched the action franchise in 1982. It and the
other two Rambo bloodbaths grossed a total of
$614 million worldwide.
The Hollywood Reporter
says the reclusive former
Vietnam veteran is lured
back into action when a
young girl is kidnapped.
I’m guessing by bad
guys.
I don’t fault Sly for
hanging on to the roles
that made him famous.
Maybe he’s hoping to cash
in on a generation that
was in diapers when he
was punching a side of
beef and going Rambo on
anyone who got in his
way.
Sly has enough dough.
It’s time to throw in the
towel.
Donna Harris is a
reporter for The Mississippi Press. Her column
appears on Thursday. She
can be reached at dharris@themississippipress.com.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
7-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
White House releases details of flu pandemic strategy
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
The Associated Press
WASHINGTON — A flu pandemic that hits the United
States would force cities to
ration scarce drugs and vaccine and house the sick in
hotels or schools when hospitals overflow, unprecedented
federal plans say.
The Bush administration’s
long-awaited report Wednesday on battling a worldwide
super-flu outbreak makes clear
that old-fashioned infectioncontrol will be key.
Signs that a super-flu is
spreading among people anywhere in the world could
prompt U.S. travel restrictions
or other steps to contain the
illness before it hits America’s
shores.
If that fails, the Pandemic
Influenza Plan offers specific
instructions to local health officials: The sick or the people
caring for them should wear
masks. People coughing must
stay three feet away from others in doctors’ waiting rooms.
People should cancel nonessential doctor appointments and
limit visits to the hospital.
In Mississippi, Two of the
state’s largest poultry producers say they are prepared if the
bird flu now in Southeast Asia
makes its way to the United
States.
Officials with Marshall
Durbin Poultry Co. and
Sanderson Farms say that
although the H5N1 bird flu
virus could mutate and spread
to humans, U.S. poultry flocks
will likely be the last affected.
Both poultry companies say
their policies include strictly
limiting visitor access to their
farms and processing plants.
Both producers’ policies
include banning employees
from visiting poultry operations requiring those who have vis- wait at least seven days before
outside the United States, ited other poultry farms or entering a plant, and disinscreening all visitors and traveled outside the U.S. to fecting or requiring special pro-
tective clothing for all employees and visitors who enter
barns or processing facilities.
A day after President Bush
outlined his $7.1 billion strategy to prepare for the next pandemic, the details released
Wednesday stress major steps
that state and local authorities
must begin taking now: Update
quarantine laws. Work with
utilities to keep the phones
working and grocers to keep
supplying food amid the certain panic. Determine when to
close schools and limit public
gatherings such as movies or
religious services.
“This is a critical part of the
plan,” because states will be at
the forefront of a battle that
could have “5,000 fronts,” said
Health and Human Services
Secretary Mike Leavitt, who
will work with governors in
coming weeks to push local
preparations. “Every community is different and requires
a different approach.”
Also Wednesday, the government for the first time told
Americans not to hoard the
anti-flu drug Tamiflu, because
doing so will hurt federal
efforts to stockpile enough to
treat the sick who really need
it. Tamiflu’s maker recently
suspended shipments of the
drug to U.S. pharmacies
because of concern about
hoarding.
A key question is how much
of the financial burden of
preparing must be shouldered
by cash-strapped states. Bush’s
plan provides $100 million to
update state pandemic plans,
but also requires states to
spend about $510 million of
their own money to buy enough
Tamiflu for 31 million people to
supplement the federal stockpile.
Some states might not be
able to buy the drug, said Rep.
Nita Lowey, D-N.Y.
Senate fracturing over Alito
AP
People gather around the remains of a destroyed vehicle believed to be a U.S.
humvee, in Ramadi, Iraq. In Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, insurgents used
guns, rockets and roadside bombs to attack U.S. patrols late Tuesday, said police
Capt. Nassir Al-Alousi.
Bomb kills 20, wounds 60 in Iraq
■ Six U.S. service members die
in Iraq, total now at 2,034
By ROBERT H. REID
The Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq — A suicide bomber detonated a minibus Wednesday in an outdoor market packed with shoppers ahead of a Muslim festival, killing about 20 people and wounding more
than 60 in a Shiite town south of Baghdad. Six
U.S. troops were killed, two in a helicopter crash
west of the capital.
Also Wednesday, the U.S. command confirmed
moves to step up training on how to combat roadside bombs — now the biggest killers of American
troops in Iraq. At least 2,034 U.S. military service members have died since the Iraq conflict
began in March 2003, according to an Associated
Press count.
The suicide bombing occurred about 5 p.m. in
the center of Musayyib, a Euphrates River town
40 miles from Baghdad. On July 16, nearly 100
people died in a suicide bombing in front of a
Shiite mosque in Musayyib.
Witnesses said the latest attack took place as
the market was crowded in advance of the threeday Eid al-Fitr holiday that marks the end of
the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Many
women and children were feared among the dead
and wounded.
“They want to kill people before the feast,” said
Nagat Hassoun, 50, who lived a few hundred
yards from the blast site. “They want people to
stay at home and live in a tragedy. The aim is to
cause sabotage. They’re targeting the Shiites.”
The town police chief, Lt. Col. Ahmed Mijwil,
said 22 people were killed and 61 wounded. But
officials warned the figures could change as rescuers frantically searched the area of meat and
vegetable stalls, shops and cafes.
“The insurgents wanted to cause as many casualties as possible,” said police Capt. Muthanna
Khalid.
Elsewhere, fighting flared between U.S. troops
and Sunni Arab insurgents in Ramadi, capital of
Anbar province 70 miles west of Baghdad. Late
Tuesday, a U.S. Marine and sailor were killed
when a roadside bomb exploded near their vehicle in Ramadi.
Sporadic clashes occurred throughout the night
and into Wednesday, residents said. Associated
Press Television News video from the city showed
a burning civilian vehicle and what appeared to
be a destroyed U.S. Humvee.
A crowd of Iraqis gathered at the site, and one
man, waving the remnants of a damaged U.S. M16 rifle in the air, claimed the attacks caused
U.S. casualties.
Later Wednesday, a Marine AH-1W Super
Cobra attack helicopter crashed just north of
Ramadi, killing its two Marine crew members, the
military said. A U.S. statement said the cause of
the crash was under investigation.
But APTN quoted an Iraqi resident as saying
the helicopter was shot down. Hours after the
crash, a Marine Corps F-18D fighter jet dropped
two 500-pound bombs on what the U.S. military
described as an “insurgent command center”
about 400 yards from where the helicopter went
down.
There was no report of casualties in the
airstrike.
In Balad, 50 miles north of Baghdad, a U.S. soldier was mortally wounded when his patrol came
under small arms fire Wednesday, the military
said. One insurgent was killed when the American patrol returned fire and another died when a
U.S. Air Force jet blasted the building where he
had taken refuge, the military added.
U.S. tightens security at base where
suspected al-Qaida operative escaped
By DANIEL COONEY
the Associated Press
KABUL, Afghanistan —
Prison doors and cells have been
fortified at the U.S. military jail
in Afghanistan, a U.S. official
said Wednesday as details
emerged of an unprecedented
breakout by a suspected al-Qaida leader and three others who
picked locks and evaded a mine
field.
The Pentagon’s belated confirmation of the identity of one of
the four who escaped in July,
Omar al-Farouq, sparked anger
in Southeast Asia where he was
one of Osama bin Laden’s top
lieutenants.
Some officials in Indonesia,
where he was captured in 2002
before being handed over to U.S.
authorities, accused Washington of failing to inform them of
the escape.
U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales described the apparent breakdown in communication as a serious problem and
told CNN in an interview that it
would be investigated.
Although the escape was
widely reported in July, U.S.
authorities at the time gave only
an alias to identify al-Farouq,
who was born in Kuwait to Iraqi
parents.
According to a top security
consultant in Indonesia, Ken
Conboy, al-Farouq joined al-Qaida in the early 1990s and
trained in Afghanistan for three
years before unsuccessfully trying to enroll at a flight school
in the Philippines so he could
commandeer an airplane on a
suicide mission.
He later plotted to stage car
and truck bombings at U.S.
embassies across Southeast Asia
on or near the first anniversary
of the Sept. 11 terror attacks on
the United States, but the plan
was thwarted and he was captured, Conboy said.
The four escapees boasted
about their breakout on a video
broadcast Oct. 18 on Dubaibased television station Al-Arabiya, according to two editors at
the station, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
they are not authorized to talk
to the media.
The editors said the four
Arabs claimed to have plotted
their escape on a Sunday when
many of the Americans on the
base were off duty. One of the
four, Muhammad Hassan, said
to be Libyan, said he picked the
lock of their cell.
WASHINGTON — The 14 centrists who
averted a Senate breakdown over judicial nominees last spring are showing signs of splintering on President Bush’s latest nominee for
the Supreme Court.
That is weakening the hand of Democrats
opposed to conservative judge Samuel Alito
and enhancing his prospects for confirmation.
The unity of the seven Democrats and the
seven Republicans in the “Gang of 14” was all
that halted a major filibuster fight between
GOP leader Bill Frist and Democratic leader
Harry Reid earlier this year over Bush’s nominees.
The early defection of two of the group’s
Republicans, Mike DeWine of Ohio and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, will give the
GOP the upper hand if Democrats decide to
attempt a filibuster of Alito, the New Jersey
jurist nominated Monday to replace Sandra
Day O’Connor.
If Democrats do filibuster, Frist wants to
change the Senate rules to eliminate the delaying tactic — something the centrist group
blocked in May.
“People like Lindsey Graham and I, who
were part of that group, I think you can bet
we’ll be willing to vote to change the rules of
the Senate so that we do not have a filibuster,”
DeWine said only hours after Alito was
announced.
The centrist Democrats plan to urge their
Republican colleagues at the group’s meeting
on Thursday to withhold judgment, since Alito’s nomination is not even officially at the
Senate yet. The defection of even two members
of the group — which decided earlier in the
year to support filibusters only in ’extraordinary circumstances’ — would virtually ensure
Frist would ultimately win a showdown.
“The truth of the matter is that it’s way too
early to talk about extraordinary circumstances,” said Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., a
founding member of the group. “I’m not hearing any of my colleagues talk about it, and I’d
rather not hear any of my colleagues on the
other side talk about it as well.”
The loss of Graham and DeWine makes the
“Gang of 14” less influential.
Republicans hold 55 seats in the Senate,
and while confirmation requires a simple
majority, it takes 60 votes to break a filibuster.
However, Frist needs only a simple majority
— 51 votes — to eliminate the stalling tactic.
That means he needs two members of the
centrist group to join the rest of the GOP to
make his goal. With a 50-vote tie in the Senate,
Vice President Dick Cheney would cast the
tie-breaking vote for the Republicans and Alito could be confirmed with majority support.
Bush announced Alito on Monday following
the failed nomination of White House counsel
Harriet Miers, who was undermined by conservatives.
8-A
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
Local hunters to appear Pakistan quake’s death
on national TV show toll surges by 16,000
By ROYCE ARMSTRONG
The Mississippi Press
LUCEDALE — A passion for hunting is
turning two George County hunters into TV
celebrities among an estimated 23 million or
more hunting enthusiasts who watch the Men’s
Channel, Comcast and Canadian television.
Dean Scott and Tom Holland last year began
videotaping their spring turkey hunts and fall
deer hunts for Mark Scroggins and his Cross
Timbers Productions company. The bowhunts
take place throughout the Southeast and in the
Midwest. Cross Timbers, headquartered in
Stillwater, Okla., has been one of the noted
producers of TV programs and outdoor videos
for more than 10 years.
“This is a dream come true,” said Dean Scott
about the upcoming program featuring hunting
trips that he and hunting companion Tom Holland have filmed. “I have wanted to do this for
a long time.”
Scott and Holland are both home-grown outdoorsmen and bowhunters. They met eight
years ago and discovered they had a common
dream — hunting trophy whitetail deer. Two
years ago they decided to go to the Midwest
and chase their dream.
“I grew up hunting along the Pascagoula
River,” Scott said, “with my father and grandfather. I have hunted here all of my life and
harvested a lot of deer, but the deer in South
Mississippi are simply not the size and quality as in other areas of the county. Part of the
reason we have smaller deer in George County is genetics and part of the reason is nutrition. Whitetail deer are much larger in northern states.”
The Mississippians found instant success
taking their hunting skills learned in the
cypress swamps and piney woods of George
County to the cornfields and hardwood woodlots of Illinois and Iowa. Both men have now
harvested record book quality whitetail bucks
with their archery gear in the Midwest.
It was on one of these hunts that fate took an
interesting twist. Scott and Holland happened
to share a hunting camp with Mark Scroggins
while they were hunting in Illinois. Scroggins
is the founder of CrossTimbers Productions
and produces “The Fever” and “Gobblin’ Fever”
television programs. “The Fever” is a big game
hunting program, now in its eighth season
and “Gobblin’ Fever” is a spring turkey hunting show soon to begin its 10th season. Until
recently these programs appeared on the Outdoor Channel. They have since moved to the
Men’s Channel, where it is expected the programs will receive larger audiences. The programs reach 25 million to 30 million viewers
currently. Viewership is expected to grow to 60
million, according to Scott.
“The Fever” covers the spectrum of big game
hunting including elk, deer, caribou and bear
as well as spanning the globe. Shows are taped
in such hunting hotspots in Argentina, Canada and Newfoundland as well as in the United
States, Scroggins said.
Scroggins, Scott and Holland hit it off right away,
Scott said. After swapping
hunting stories, Scroggins
invited the Mississippi
hunters to film their hunts
and submit the video to him.
Scott and Holland had reservations. First, there was a
substantial investment in
Scott
high-quality camera equipment. Second, they had no
experience with video, and
most importantly, filming
their hunts meant only one of
them would be able to hunt
while the other was operating
the camera, effectively cutting
their hunting in half.
After more persuasion from
Scroggins, the two hunters
Holland
decided to give it a try.
“I have always said that it is
much easier to take a great hunter and turn
him into a camera operator than it is to take a
camera operator and turn him into a hunter,”
Scroggins said. “Scott and Holland had already
proven themselves as outstanding hunters.
They picked up the techniques to filming very
quickly and right away, they had themselves a
television show.”
The first shows featuring Scott and Holland
aired in August.
“We received an immediate good response,”
Scroggins said. “These are two very down to
earth people. Their camera presence is really
good. They come across very genuine and they
are successfully hunting very big deer. They
have laid down some really cool footage. People can tell these guys are hunters and the
viewers can relate to them. People can tell
they love to hunt and the program comes
across that way.”
Scott and Holland are enthusiastic about
their TV work.
“These are energetic, fast-paced programs,
unlike any other hunting shows you have ever
seen,” Scott said of the program that airs on
the Dish Network (channel 218) at 5:30 p.m.
today and again at 8 a.m. Saturday.
“Things have been happening very fast for
us,” Scott continued. “After working with our
initial video efforts, Scroggins was happy
enough with our work to add us to his pro
staff. We are going to be featured regularly
on both ‘The Fever’ and ‘Gobblin’ Fever.’
“In this program,” Scott explained, “you will
see a bobcat and a deer both in the same
scrape and we harvest some very big Iowa
deer.
“If you are a die-hard whitetail hunter, this
program is right up your alley,” he said.
Reporter Royce Armstrong can be reached
at rarmstrong@themississippipress.com or at
(601) 947-9933.
History
From Page 1-A
Workers opened it to find wet, sopping papers
— the ruined history of a seaside town. Most of
the collection including town ledgers and old
newspapers is lost.
“Apparently, the vault did not hold back
water,” said Lou Rizzardi, an alderman and
historical society member in the town of 6,750.
“So it penetrated. Things got damaged because
of water.”
All up and down the Mississippi Gulf Coast
and into New Orleans, archivists and local historians are taking stock. They’re worried about
the future, but wondering also, what do they
have left of their past after Katrina’s 145 mph
winds and a massive storm surge on Aug. 29
splintered many communities and left others
waterlogged.
Many are considering whether it is wise to
keep such valuable
documents in disasterOn the Net:
prone areas. Elsewhere
Mississippi Departin Mississippi and New
ment of Archives and
Orleans, archivists
History:
www.mdah.state.ms.us
swooped in as soon as
New Orleans City
they could after KatriPark: www.neworleanna to rescue docuscitypark.org
ments, sending them
New Orleans Notarial
in refrigerated vans to
Archives: www.notarispecial labs for restoraalarchives.org
tion.
Just a few miles
west of Pass Christian, the Hancock County
Historical Society in Bay St. Louis fared much
better with very little water damage and a
vault that held, protecting thousands of documents, including family diaries and thousands
of local photographs.
Charles Harry Gray, the executive director,
was prepared in case disaster struck. Over the
years he had been making copies of all of the
group’s most treasured documents, including
30,000 pictures. Not one single photograph or
record was lost.
They are the pieces of Bay St. Louis’ 306year history that made the town of 8,230 what
it is today, he said. Many of the copies were on
computer disks and hard drives, others were
sent to the University of Southern Mississippi,
two hours north in Hattiesburg.
“It is imperative that you have copies in other locations because you never know what’s
going to happen, what the next catastrophe is
going to be, and there certainly will be one,”
Gray said.
There were no copies in Pass Christian. Rizzardi said the hope for the town’s past lies with
a local plumber, Billy Bourdin, who kept 3,400
vintage pictures on computer disks as a hobby.
The actual photographs and his eight piles of
newspaper clippings are gone, Bourdin said,
AP
Along the historic beach front of Pass
Christian what remains of the Pass
Christian Historical Society office is photographed Oct. 18. The building which
was formerly a bank and still maintained
a vault, was destroyed by the winds and
waters of Hurricane Katrina, Aug. 29.
but the disks survived.
“Stayed on the desk shelf during the storm.
So far they’ve meant very little. Maybe they’ll
mean a little more now,” said Bourdin, who
displayed many pictures at his Bourdin Brothers plumbing shop downtown, a two-story brick
building whose first floor was gutted by the
storm.
Rizzardi finds himself second-guessing his
trust in the vault.
Perhaps the state capital at Jackson, about
170 miles to the north, would be a good place to
store duplicates, he said. “Somebody off the
coast that has a vault, though we would like to
have them close at hand so we have access.”
Mingo Tingle, a preservationist with the Mississippi Department of Archives and History,
says taking local historical documents away
from towns for safekeeping is a touchy subject.
“This is their history,” Tingle said. “It belongs
to them. We don’t want to come and take it
from them. If the local historians would just
make copies, send the originals to places like
Jackson where we have the facilities to file
that.”
There are archivists working all along the
coast, he said, in such cities as Gulfport and
Biloxi to help local historians salvage what
they can.
“We’ve had people over there, talking to them,
how to save their records. How to dry them
out,” Tingle said. “Mold grows very quickly.”
Mold and water damage affected thousands
more documents that could be saved. Edmond
Boudreaux, chairman of the Mississippi Coast
Historical and Genealogical Society, climbed
into the Biloxi Public Library the day after
Katrina to assess the damage to the group’s
collection, which was housed there.
■ More than 73,000
confirmed dead along
the Kashmir border
By SADAQAT JAN
The Associated Press
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan —
Pakistan’s official earthquake
death toll jumped by 16,000,
and officials warned Wednesday that it is likely to rise further as relief supplies fail to
reach thousands of victims
stranded in remote parts of
the Himalayas.
The announcement, which
puts the official toll at 73,000,
brings the central government
figures closer to the number
reported by local officials, who
say the Oct. 8 quake killed at
least 79,000 people in Pakistan.
“Just imagine how many villages and towns became a
heap of rubble and how many
people got buried,” said Maj.
Gen. Farooq Ahmed Khan told
reporters.
Khan said 73,276 people
have been confirmed dead in
Pakistan and Pakistani-controlled Kashmir, up from the
official count of 57,597. In
India’s portion of Kashmir, an
additional 1,350 people died.
More than 69,000 people
had severe injuries, with the
total number of injured much
higher, the general said.
Khan attributed the spike
in deaths to bodies being
recovered from the debris, and
warned “there is likelihood of
further increase” in the death
toll. The government has been
cautious about the official
death count, while regional
officials from Pakistani Kashmir and the North West Frontier Province issued their
higher tolls more than a week
ago.
Top U.N. relief coordinator
Jan Egeland told PBS “there
are many thousands, potentially tens of thousands, up
there in the mountains that
are wounded we haven’t gotten to.” He said a “second
wave of death” could come
AP
Kashmiri earthquake survivors wait in the rain for supplies
provided by a Pakistani army relief center in Chakothi, Pakistan, Wednesday. With the brutal Himalayan winter
approaching, the relief effort is rushing to deliver tents,
food and medicine to victims of the quake before villages
are cut off by snow and helicopter-grounding fog.
from “people who could freeze
to death, starve to death, or
just be sick because of infected
water.”
U.N. officials say money for
distribution of relief supplies
was running dangerously low.
Donors have pledged $131
million of the $550 million
sought by the United Nations
for emergency quake aid.
Egeland said foreign aid for
the quake relief has so far
been far less than what it was
following last year’s Indian
Ocean earthquake and tsunami, which killed 178,000 people and left an additional
50,000 missing.
After the tsunami, “we had
about 1,000 helicopters active
from the countries concerned,
and from the whole international community. We have
about one-tenth of this in this
emergency, and we need helicopters just as badly,” Egeland
told PBS.
more months. You just have
two more months.”’
Before his deployment, the
Hancock High School and
University of South Alabama
graduate worked as a
mechanical engineer at
Northrop Grumman Ship Systems’ shipyard in Pascagoula.
“The employees of Northrop
Grumman are deeply saddened by the loss of Robert
Oneto-Sikorski,” Phil Teel,
president of the company’s
Ship Systems Sector, said in a
statement. “He lived his life
committed to our nation’s
safety and security, both as
soldier and shipbuilder.”
His mother said he loved
playing the guitar and writing his own music.
His father, Bob Sikorski of
Vancleave, said the two had
recently finished rebuilding a
Yamaha dirt bike that OnetoSikorski loved to ride. But
more than anything, he loved
his children.
“He loved his kids,” Bob
Sikorski said. “That little girl
couldn’t go to bed without a
hug from him.”
The back-to-back tragedy
has fueled anger for some in
Oneto-Sikorski’s family. His
aunt, Eloise Kindja, said the
family has had a difficult time
in securing hurricane relief
and the soldier’s mother is
still waiting for a temporary
trailer from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
“What more does she have
to give to the country?” Kindja asked. “She gave her only
son.”
But, Kindja said those
material things, while important, pale with the loss of her
nephew.
“I wish he had been my
son,” she said. “He was an
absolutely incredible young
man who loved everyone. The
world is going to be a worse
place without him.”
Funeral arrangements were
incomplete.
Soldier
From Page 1-A
storm.
“He was devoted to his children. He is so much more
than any of us could say,” Oneto said. “He was a wonderful
man who loved everyone and
his loss is going to devastate
this whole community.”
“I’m going to do my best to
make sure his kids never
want for anything, and they
remember him for the honorable and brave man that he
was,” she said.
The 155th, which is made
up of about 3,500 Mississippi
National Guard soldiers and
others from more than a dozen
states, is scheduled to begin
returning in waves from Iraq
by the end of the year, officials say.
“I talked to him Thursday
night and we were talking
about how he was going to
come home in December,”
Oneto said. “I told him, ’Please
be careful, you just have two
Police chief
From Page 1-A
Drakeford, the board voted to increase his
salary to match that of the former police
chief, which was about $50,000 annually.
At least one alderman felt the city moved
too fast naming a permanent chief.
“I think it was a hasty decision and that’s
why I voted against it,” Bodden said.
Bodden said he did not have enough information about Drakeford’s background to
make a decision.
“I like Chief Drakeford personally. He’s a
real nice guy. I have nothing against him,”
Bodden said.
However, Bodden added that he did not
know details about Drakeford’s work history
prior to coming to Moss Point or his education. “I think he came from Gulfport with
Chief Ricks,” he said.
The board voted two weeks ago to have
Drakeford serve as interim chief for six
months.
They made the decision Tuesday without
going into executive session for further discussion.
Bodden said the position should have been
advertised and that the board approved job
description had been followed. “We’re
nowhere even close to it,” he said. “I think we
owe it to the city to advertise and get the
very best person for the position.”
Bodden said he will vote to make resources
available to the new chief. “I will support
him. He’s our chief now. I hope he’s up to
the job,” he said.
Reporter Donna Harris can be reached at
dharris@themississippipress.com or (228)
934-1448.
Press
From Page 1-A
home delivery have been
displaced. More single copy
racks are available for customer convenience, she said.
Several of the people who
delivered the newspaper
have lost their homes and
their vehicles.
“We’re working diligently
to get all our home delivery
routes filled,” she said.
Jacobs said she is proud
of her staff who worked
through the storm to make
sure readers were kept
informed. She said it was a
team effort, with a single
goal in mind to give readers
of The Mississippi Press
their daily newspaper every
single day.
“I was so proud that we
printed every day,” she said.
Bureaus in Ocean Springs
and Lucedale received no
damage and were open soon
after the storm.
S PORTS
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
Contact: JR. Wittner, 934-1426
E-mail address: mssports@themississippipress.com
B
Thursday, november 3, 2005
Big Three
struggling
as season
winds down
As we head into November, our in-state colleges
are really struggling on
the gridiron.
Ole Miss, under heavily
anticipated first-year
coach, Ed Orgeron, is 3-5.
Mississippi State, in year
two of Sylvester Croom,
has gone 2-6. Southern
Miss, a model of inconsistency, is 4-3. Heck, Jackson State, long the kingpin of the SWAC, is 2-6
and just fired its coach.
What’s the deal here —
in football-proud Mississippi — that this has happened? It’s complicated,
with no simple answer,
and
hopefully
not a
trend
for the
future.
The
situation at
Ole
Miss is Richard
actually Lucas
pretty
simple. The Rebels have
an outstanding, nationally
ranked defense led by
Patrick Willis, who is
becoming one of the best
linebackers in the nation.
On offense, the Rebels are
basically, inept. Poor
offensive line play, less
than stellar quarterbacking and adjusting to a
new system are all culprits. Coach O clearly
needs to turn his attention to the “O” for the
future.
In Starkville, things
may have actually
regressed. At this time
last year, the Bulldogs
had two SEC wins, including one over Florida. Jerious Norwood is having a
superb year, but MSU still
comes up short. An overall
lack of talent continues to
make things difficult for
Coach Croom.
We’ve seen this from
USM before: play real
well one week, lose to Tulsa the next week and so
on. Senior QB Dustin
Almond seems to be either
quite good or very, very
bad. You kind of understand why Jeff Bower’s
hair keeps getting grayer.
(Wait a minute: is there a
trend here Henry Fox,
Buddy Lovorn, Harvey
Barton ... hmmm.)
Our teams need to get
this fixed because, as
much as we all love football, it’s a lot more fun
when you’re winning. It
was not that long ago that
we were all in high cotton,
the late 90s to be exact.
In 1997, Ole Miss, State
and USM all finished in
the year’s final Top 25.
That’s a remarkable
achievement, one we need
to repeat. It would be
great for the state, and
those Sunday morning
papers would be a lot easier to read.
Comment concerning
Richard Lucas’ column
can be sent to
mssports@themississippipress.com.
’Jackets too much for Hornets
■ D’Iberville tops
Vancleave for girls crown
By JR. WITTNER
The Mississippi Press
VANCLEAVE — Biloxi transfer
Robin Sikes is making an early
impression at St. Martin.
Sikes scored 13 first half points and
grabbed 20 rebounds in the game as
St. Martin claimed the Vancleave Tip
Off Tournament title with a 63-39win
over East Central Wednesday night.
The Hornets had reached the championship game after having an
impressive performance against Vancleave in the late game the night
before.
East Central had three players in
double figures in the win, but things
did not go as well against a bigger
St. Martin team.
The St. Martin inside duo of Sikes
and Casey Hill controlled the boards
in the early going as the Yellowjackets
got out to a 9-0 lead.
Hill scored on the inside for the
first two points of the game and then
connected on a pair of free throws.
Sikes then scored on a putback to
make it 6-0, before Michael Sherman
connected on a long 3-pointer forcing
a timeout.
East Central trimmed the lead to
five on pair of free throws to end the
first quarter, St. Martin rolled off six
straight points, starting with a base
line dunk by Sikes.
Billy Bouchillon connected on 3pointer from the right corner to make
it a 20-10 game and Sikes finished
off the run with a hook inside.
East Central closed the gap to seven at halftime as Billy Osterman
scored in the lane with seven seconds
left.
St. Martin picked things back up
in the second half as Dikes finished
the game with 16 and Hill finished
LOUISIANA LOTTERY
Pick 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-1-9
Pick 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-1-8-0
Cash Quest . . . . . .7-20-21-43
Lotto . . . . . . . .3-5-7-24-29-32
Powerball (38) . .6-11-14-27-41
Vancleave’s Kayla Inabinet dribbles down the floor against D’Iberville
Wednesday, in the Vancleave Tip Off Tournament. The Lady Bulldogs
fell to D’Iberville, but Shana Gunter and Megan Delancey were
named all-tournament.
East Central
teams looking for
improved seasons
By JOSH JOHNSON
The Mississippi Press
William Colgin/The Mississippi Press
Vancleave quarterback Hugh Humphrey drops back to pass against Stone County this season.
Humphrey and the Bulldogs have scored 117 points the last two games, but will be going up
against one of the stingiest defense on the Coast when they take on Gautier tonight.
Vancleave, St. Martin
fighting for playoff spot
■ A win over Gautier
tonight would help
Bulldogs’ cause
The Mississippi Press
Cash 3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1-7-4
Play 4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0-8-5-5
Fantasy 5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . .N/A
Lotto . . . . .39-16-50-49-43-46
See TOURNAMENT, Page 2-B
Carisa Anderson/The Mississippi Press
PREP HOOPS PREVIEWS
By JR. WITTNER
FLORIDA LOTTERY
with eight.
St. Martin (2-0) will be back in
action Nov. 8 when they travel to
Pascagoula, while East Central (1-1)
will take on Resurrection Nov. 10.
The boys all-tournament team consisted of Sikes and Renaza Heidleberg of St. Martin, Osterman and
Courtney Redix of East Central, Trey
Mohler of Vancleave and Andrew
Francois of D’Iberville.
D’Iberville girls 46, Vancleave 36
For the first half, D’Iberville and
Vancleave battle back-and-forth as
each team held the lead four times.
D’Iberville started with a flourish in
the second half and never looked back
to claim the Girls’ Vancleave Tip Off
Tournament championship.
D’Iberville got off quickly building a
10-3 with 3:31 left in the opening
quarter on a 3-pointer by tournament
most valuable player Tiffany Brosh.
Vancleave then went on a 10-2 run
sparked by the play of Kayla Inabinet.
Inabinet nailed a 3-pointer to start
the run and then connected on a pair
of free throws to end the quarter at
make it a 12-11 D’Iberville lead.
Inabinet then hit a bucket with 6:04
left in the half to give Vancleave its
first lead since a Megan Delancey 3pointer in the opening minute of the
game.
The Lady Warriors took the lead
right with a 5-0 run over their own,
started by a layup from Caitlin
Gilmore.
The deep ball gave Vancleave the
lead once again as Shana Gunter connected from long range with 1:09 left
in the half to give the Lady Bulldogs
a 19-17 lead.
Gilmore tied the game at 19 with 50
second left in the half, but buckets
by Inabinet and Chelsea Borries gave
the Lady Bulldogs a 23-19 lead heading into the locker room.
The Lady Warriors scored the first
The Vancleave Bulldogs have a
tall task in order tonight when they
travel to War Memorial Stadium to
take on Gautier.
The Gators are a perfect 5-0 in
Region 7-4A play and have already
claimed the No. 1 seed in the region,
but Vancleave needs a win to help
its playoff standing.
A win by the Bulldogs (3-5, 2-3)
and a loss by St. Martin would give
Vancleave the No. 4 seed in the
region and give them a third
4A-3A PREVIEW
straight playoff appearance. If the
Bulldogs lose and St. Martin tops
Forrest County AHS on Friday, St.
Martin would claim the No. 4 spot.
“We know what’s at stake,” Vancleave head coach Jim Bloomfield
said. “You want to be playing games
late in the season that mean something. We control our own destiny
and our goal is to win the game.”
The Bulldogs’ offense, which has
put up 117 points in its last two
wins over Pass Christian and East
Central, will be facing a defense
that has allowed just 7.5 point per
game this season.
A veteran cast up front led by
linebacker Jeremy Evans has given
the Gators an intimidating force on
defense.
“Gautier’s defense is just so fast
and they swarm to the ball,” Bloomfield said. “We just have to try and
maintain some drive and run the
clock and keep them their offense
off the field. They have a lot of speed
and are going to be tough to beat.”
The Bulldogs have never beaten
the Gators going 0-6 since 1999.
Gautier (6-1, 5-0) had a bye week
last Friday and head coach Don
Nelson used that time to make
some adjustments.
“We felt like we played our worst
game all season against Stone
County,” Nelson said. “We were able
See PREVIEW, Page 2-B
HURLEY — A new district could be
beneficial for Keith Tucker’s East Central
basketball team in the 2005-2006 basketball season, which started in a good
way by winning the Vancleave Tip Off
Tournament.
The new Division 7-4A will be without
St. Stanislaus, Bay High and Pass Christian, and will be more of a competitive
division, according to Tucker.
“I think the new division will be suitable for everyone,” Tucker said. “We had some
heavyweights last year.
I’m not saying the division won’t be any good,
it’ll just be more competitive.”
For the Hornets to be
successful this season,
Tucker feels his team
needs to be fundamen- Tucker
tally sound.
“We’re going to have to play some
scrappy defense and not turnover the
ball,” Tucker said. “We aren’t very big,
and don’t have much speed. There really
isn’t one strength that stands out for us
this year.”
Experience could become a strength
for Tucker’s team. The Hornets lost just
two starters from last year’s team.
“We have a good many of experienced
players coming back that have played a
lot of games,” Tucker said.
Three players Tucker said should have
a big season are seniors: Zenith Dock,
Trevan (Billy) Osterman and Nick
McDaniel.
“Zenith has lettered for the past two
years, so he’s probably the most experienced player we’ll have,” said Tucker.
“Trevan is the most experienced post
player, and Nick McDaniel has some
experience.”
Some underclassmen Tucker said
should contribute are: Josh Atkinson,
Brandon Pope and Courtney Reddix.
East Central girls
Seven players dressed out for Terri
Bailey’s East Central Lady Hornets basketball team during the 2004-2005 season
— a season later that number has almost
tripled.
Bailey will see 17 girls participate on her
See HORNETS, Page 2-B
2-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
BY THE NUMBERS
Top 25 Schedule
FOOTBALL
National Football League
Glance
All Times CST
AMERICAN CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
New England 4 3 0 .571
Miami
3 4 0 .429
Buffalo
3 5 0 .375
N.Y. Jets
2 5 0 .286
South
W L T Pct
Indianapolis
7 0 0 1.000
Jacksonville
4 3 0 .571
Tennessee
2 6 0 .250
Houston
1 6 0 .143
North
W L T Pct
Cincinnati
6 2 0 .750
Pittsburgh
5 2 0 .714
Baltimore
2 5 0 .286
Cleveland
2 5 0 .286
West
W L T Pct
Denver
6 2 0 .750
Kansas City
4 3 0 .571
San Diego
4 4 0 .500
Oakland
3 4 0 .429
NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T Pct
N.Y. Giants
5 2 0 .714
Dallas
5 3 0 .625
Washington
4 3 0 .571
Philadelphia
4 3 0 .571
South
W L T Pct
Atlanta
5 2 0 .714
Carolina
5 2 0 .714
Tampa Bay
5 2 0 .714
New Orleans 2 6 0 .250
North
W L T Pct
Chicago
4 3 0 .571
Detroit
3 4 0 .429
Minnesota
2 5 0 .286
Green Bay
1 6 0 .143
West
W L T Pct
Seattle
5 2 0 .714
St. Louis
4 4 0 .500
Arizona
2 5 0 .286
San Francisco 2 5 0 .286
PF
159
136
128
92
PA
180
134
159
139
PF
189
129
161
93
PA
77
125
211
195
PF
189
169
88
94
PA
125
114
120
122
PF
201
169
221
162
PA
152
160
166
158
PF
209
181
135
163
PA
137
137
139
167
PF
175
186
126
125
PA
133
149
87
222
PF
119
117
103
158
PA
81
125
193
139
PF
181
208
127
111
PA
127
231
178
222
————
Sunday’s Games
Chicago 19, Detroit 13, OT
Dallas 34, Arizona 13
Oakland 34, Tennessee 25
Houston 19, Cleveland 16
N.Y. Giants 36, Washington 0
St. Louis 24, Jacksonville 21
Cincinnati 21, Green Bay 14
Carolina 38, Minnesota 13
Miami 21, New Orleans 6
San Diego 28, Kansas City 20
Denver 49, Philadelphia 21
San Francisco 15, Tampa Bay 10
New England 21, Buffalo 16
Open: Indianapolis, N.Y. Jets, Seattle,
Atlanta
Monday’s Game
Pittsburgh 20, Baltimore 19
Sunday, Nov. 6
Atlanta at Miami, noon
San Diego at N.Y. Jets, noon
Oakland at Kansas City, noon
Houston at Jacksonville, noon
Cincinnati at Baltimore, noon
Detroit at Minnesota, noon
Tennessee at Cleveland, noon
Carolina at Tampa Bay, noon
Seattle at Arizona, 3:05 p.m.
Chicago vs. New Orleans at Baton Rouge,
La., 3:05 p.m.
N.Y. Giants at San Francisco, 3:05 p.m.
Pittsburgh at Green Bay, 3:15 p.m.
Philadelphia at Washington, 87:30 p.m.
Open: Buffalo, Denver, Dallas, St. Louis
Monday, Nov. 7
Indianapolis at New England, 8 p.m.
Top 25 Fared
No. 1 Southern Cal (8-0) did not play. Next:
vs. Stanford, Saturday.
No. 2 Texas (8-0) did not play. Next: at
Baylor, Saturday.
No. 3 Virginia Tech (8-0) did not play. Next:
vs. No. 5 Miami, saturday.
No. 4 Alabama (8-0) did not play. Next: at
Mississippi State, Saturday.
No. 5 Miami (6-1) did not play. Next: at
No. 3 Virginia Tech, Saturday.
No. 6 LSU (6-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Appalachian State, Saturday.
No. 7 UCLA (8-0) did not play. Next: at Arizona, Saturday.
No. 8 Notre Dame (5-2) did not play. Next:
vs. Tennessee, Saturday.
No. 9 Florida State (7-1) did not play. Next:
vs. North Carolina State, Saturday.
No. 10 Penn State (8-1) did not play. Next:
vs. No. 14 Wisconsin, Saturday.
No. 11 Georgia (7-1) did not play. Next:
vs. No. 17 Auburn, Nov. 12.
No. 12 Ohio State (6-2) did not play. Next:
vs. Illinois, Saturday.
No. 13 Florida (6-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Vanderbilt, Saturday.
No. 14 Wisconsin (8-1) did not play. Next:
at No. 10 Penn State, Saturday.
No. 15 Oregon (7-1) vs. No. 23 California,
Saturday.
No. 16 Texas Tech (7-1) did not play. Next:
vs. Texas A&M, Saturday.
No. 17 Auburn (6-2) at Kentucky, Saturday.
No. 18 West Virginia (7-1) beat Connecticut
45-13. Next: at Cincinnati, Nov 9.
No. 19 Boston College (6-2) did not play.
Next: at North Carolina, Saturday.
No. 20 TCU (8-1) did not play. Next: vs.
Colorado State, Saturday.
No. 21 Fresno State (6-1) did not play.
Next: vs. San Jose State, Saturday.
No. 22 Michigan (6-3) did not play. Next: vs.
Indiana, Nov. 12.
No. 23 California (6-2) did not play. Next: at
No. 15 Oregon, Saturday.
No. 24 Louisville (5-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Pittsburgh, Thursday.
No. 25 Colorado (6-2) did not play. Next: vs.
Missouri, Saturday.
Saturday
No. 1 Southern Cal vs. Stanford, 9 p.m.
No. 2 Texas at Baylor, 11:30 a.m.
No. 3 Virginia Tech vs. No. 5 Miami, 6:45
p.m.
No. 4 Alabama at Mississippi State, 2:30
p.m.
No. 6 LSU vs. Appalachian State, 7 p.m.
No. 7 UCLA at Arizona, 5 p.m.
No. 8 Notre Dame vs. Tennessee, 1:30
p.m.
No. 9 Florida State vs. North Carolina State,
2:30 p.m.
No. 10 Penn State vs. No. 14 Wisconsin,
2:30 p.m.
No. 12 Ohio State vs. Illinois, 2:30 p.m.
No. 13 Florida vs. Vanderbilt, 6:15 p.m.
No. 15 Oregon vs. No. 23 California, 2:30
p.m.
No. 16 Texas Tech vs. Texas A&M, 6 p.m.
No. 17 Auburn at Kentucky, Noon
No. 19 Boston College at North Carolina, 11
a.m.
No. 20 TCU vs. Colorado State, 6 p.m.
No. 21 Fresno State vs. San Jose State, 8
p.m.
No. 25 Colorado vs. Missouri, 2:30 p.m.
Division I-AA Poll
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — The top 25 teams
in the Sports Network Division I-AA football
poll, with first-place votes in parentheses,
records through Oct. 30 and previous ranking:
Record Pts
Pvs
1. Furman (61)
7-1
2,742
2
2. N. Hampshire (25)7-1
2,628
4
3. Hampton (23)
8-0
2,676
3
4. Montana (2)
6-2
2,491
5
5. Southern Ill. (1) 6-2
2,337
8
6. Western Ky.
6-2
2,131
1
7. Appalachian St. 6-2
2,088
12
8. Massachusetts 6-2
1,808
7
9. Coastal Carolina 7-1
1,765
13
10. Texas State
6-2
1,578
6
11. Eastern Wash. 5-3
1,566
14
12. Montana State 5-3
1,446
15
13. Lehigh
6-2
1,335
16
14. Georgia Southern6-3
1,146
19
15. Youngstown St. 7-2
1,082
11
16. William & Mary 5-3
1,067
9
17. Northern Iowa
5-3
1,043
21
18. Cal Poly
5-3
957
10
19. Grambling State 6-1
904
22
20. S.C. State
6-2
731
23
21. UC Davis
5-3
525
—
22. Brown
6-1
393
—
23. Richmond
5-3
339
—
24. North Dakota St. 5-3
300
—
25. Eastern Illinois 6-2
283
—
Others receiving votes: Northwestern State
240, McNeese State 191, Lafayette 134,
James Madison 131, Illinois State 130, Portland State 122, Nicholls State 80, Alabama
State 78, Hofstra 55, Weber State 52, Penn
50, Wofford 38, Alabama A&M 35, Jacksonville State 28, San Diego 25, BethuneCookman 18, Western Carolina 17, Princeton
15, Delaware 7, Southeastern Louisiana 5,
Missouri State 5.
Anaheim at Colorado, 8 p.m.
Columbus at Calgary, 8 p.m.
Friday’s Games
Atlanta at Washington, 6 p.m.
Montreal at Buffalo, 7 p.m.
Edmonton at St. Louis, 7 p.m.
Chicago at Dallas, 7:30 p.m.
Columbus at Vancouver, 9 p.m.
San Jose at Anaheim, 9:30 p.m.
NASCAR
Nextel Cup ScheduleWinners
(x-non-points race)
Feb. 12 — x-Budweiser Shootout (Jimmie
Johnson)
Feb. 20 — Daytona 500 (Jeff Gordon)
Feb. 27 — Auto Club 500 (Greg Biffle)
March 13 — UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400
(Jimmie Johnson)
March 20 — Golden Corral 500 (Carl
Edwards)
April 3 — Food City 500 (Kevin Harvick)
April 10 — Advance Auto Parts 500 (Jeff
Gordon)
April 17 — Samsung/RadioShack 500
(Greg Biffle)
April 23 — Subway Fresh 500 (Kurt Busch)
May 1 — Aaron’s 499 (Jeff Gordon)
May 7 — Dodge Charger 500 (Greg Biffle)
May 14 — Chevy American Revolution 400
(Kasey Kahne)
May 21 — x-All-Star Challenege (Mark
Martin)
May 29 — Coca-Cola 600 (Jimmie Johnson)
June 5 — MBNA America 400 (Greg Biffle)
June 12 — Pocono 500 (Carl Edwards)
June 19 — Michigan 400 (Greg Biffle)
June 26 — Dodge/Save Mart 350 (Tony
Stewart)
July 2 — Pepsi 400 (Tony Stewart)
July 10 — USG Sheetrock 400 (Dale Earnhardt, Jr.)
July 17 — New England 300 (Tony Stewart)
July 24 — Pennsylvania 500 (Kurt Busch)
Aug. 7 — Allstate 400 (Tony Stewart)
Aug. 14 — Sirius at The Glen (Tony Stewart)
Aug. 21 — GFS Marketplace 400 (Jeremy
Mayfield)
Aug. 27 — Sharpie 500 (Matt Kenseth)
Sept. 4 — SONY HD 500 (Kyle Busch)
Sept. 10 — Chevy Rock & Roll 400 (Kurt
Busch)
Sept. 18 — Sylvania 300 (Ryan Newman)
Sept. 25 — MBNA 400 (Jimmie Johnson)
Oct. 2 — UAW-Ford 500 (Dale Jarrett)
Oct. 9 — Banquet 400 (Mark Martin)
Oct. 15 — UAW-GM Quality 500 (Jimmie
Johnson)
Oct. 23 — Subway 500 (Jeff Gordon)
Oct. 30 — Bass Pro Shops MBNA 400
(Carl Edwards)
Nov. 6 — Dickies 500, Fort Worth, Texas
Nov. 13 — Checker Auto Parts 500, Avondale, Ariz.
Nov. 20 — Ford 400, Homestead, Fla.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
Glance
All Times CST
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
N.Y. Rangers 6 4 3 15
41 33
Philadelphia
6 3 1 13
44 37
New Jersey
6 5 1 13
39 44
N.Y. Islanders 6 6 0 12
38 44
Pittsburgh
2 5 5 9
40 56
Northeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Montreal
9 3 1 19
42 37
Ottawa
9 2 0 18
54 26
Buffalo
7 5 0 14
40 42
Toronto
6 4 2 14
42 43
Boston
5 5 4 14
47 51
Southeast Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Carolina
8 2 1 17
48 32
Tampa Bay
7 4 2 16
41 34
Florida
6 5 2 14
32 35
Washington
4 7 0 8
25 46
Atlanta
4 8 0 8
37 49
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Central Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Detroit
12 1 0 24
55 24
Nashville
8 2 1 17
34 31
Chicago
4 9 0 8
38 52
Columbus
4 9 0 8
24 43
St. Louis
2 7 3 7
37 51
Northwest Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Vancouver
8 2 2 18
43 38
Minnesota
6 5 2 14
37 29
Colorado
6 4 1 13
49 37
Edmonton
6 6 1 13
38 41
Calgary
5 7 2 12
32 40
Pacific Division
W L OT Pts GF GA
Los Angeles
9 4 0 18
49 35
Anaheim
7 5 1 15
41 37
Dallas
6 5 1 13
37 45
San Jose
6 5 1 13
38 44
Phoenix
5 8 1 11
36 42
Two points for a win, one point for overtime
loss or shootout loss.
Tuesday’s Games
Detroit 4, Chicago 1
N.Y. Islanders 4, Boston 3, OT
Montreal 5, Florida 4, OT
Atlanta 6, Tampa Bay 4
Pittsburgh 4, New Jersey 3, OT
Edmonton 5, Columbus 1
Calgary 3, Minnesota 0
Anaheim 4, Nashville 1
Wednesday’s Games
Ottawa 10, Buffalo 4
Chicago 6, St. Louis 5, OT
Los Angeles 6, Dallas 3
Minnesota at Vancouver, (n)
Nashville at San Jose, (n)
Today’s Games
Florida at Boston, 6 p.m.
Toronto at Carolina, 6 p.m.
Pittsburgh at N.Y. Islanders, 6 p.m.
Washington at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Edmonton at Detroit, 6:30 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Ottawa, 6:30 p.m.
N.Y. Rangers at New Jersey, 6:30 p.m.
Los Angeles at Phoenix, 8 p.m.
Nextel Cup
Points Leaders
Through Oct. 30
1. Tony Stewart, 6100
2. Jimmie Johnson, 6057
3. Greg Biffle, 6025
4. Carl Edwards, 5993
5. Ryan Newman, 5993
6. Mark Martin, 5957
7. Matt Kenseth, 5945
8. Rusty Wallace, 5843
9. Kurt Busch, 5840
10. Jeremy Mayfield, 5790
11. Jamie McMurray, 3782
12. Jeff Gordon, 3740
13. Elliott Sadler, 3722
14. Kevin Harvick, 3711
15. Joe Nemechek, 3693
16. Brian Vickers, 3617
17. Dale Jarrett, 3583
18. Jeff Burton, 3524
19. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., 3489
20. Kyle Busch, 3485
Nextel Cup
Money Leaders
Through Oct. 30
1. Tony Stewart, $6,530,292
2. Jeff Gordon, $6,426,961
3. Jimmie Johnson, $6,361,191
4. Kurt Busch, $6,353,318
5. Dale Earnhardt, Jr., $5,370,708
6. Mark Martin, $5,339,828
7. Matt Kenseth, $5,191,941
8. Ryan Newman, $5,177,291
9. Greg Biffle, $5,126,653
10. Elliott Sadler, $4,656,271
11. Kevin Harvick, $4,595,666
12. Kasey Kahne, $4,559,453
13. Rusty Wallace, $4,538,902
14. Dale Jarrett, $4,354,112
15. Jeremy Mayfield, $4,259,428
16. Bobby Labonte, $4,258,829
17. Carl Edwards, $4,180,143
18. Michael Waltrip, $4,080,561
19. Ricky Rudd, $3,989,270
20. Jeff Burton, $3,959,381
TV SPORTWATCH
TODAY’S LISTINGS
College Football
6:30 p.m. — Pittsburgh at Louisville (ESPN)
Golf
11 a.m. — PGA Tour: The Tour Championship (ESPN)
FRIDAY’S LISTINGS
College Football
7 p.m. — Toledo at Ohio (ESPN2)
Golf
11 a.m. — PGA Tour: The Tour Championship (ESPN)
National Basketball Association
7 p.m. — Cleveland at San Antonio (ESPN)
9:30 p.m. — Minnesota at Seattle (ESPN)
LOCAL SCHEDULE
Today’s Events
High School Football
Vancleave at Gautier
Friday’s Events
High School Football
Harrison Central at
Pascagoula
George County at
Moss Point
Prentiss at Greene
County
Forrest County at St.
Martin
East Central at Stone
County
College Basketball
1
Detroit
1
0 1.000
⁄2
1
Indiana
1
0 1.000
⁄2
Chicago
0
0
.000
1
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Southwest Division
W L Pct
GB
Dallas
1
0 1.000 —
Houston
1
0 1.000 —
San Antonio
1
0 1.000 —
1
New Orleans
1
1
.500
⁄2
Memphis
0
1
.000
1
Northwest Division
W L
Pct GB
Minnesota
1
0 1.000 —
1
Seattle
0
0
.000
⁄2
1
Utah
0
0
.000
⁄2
Denver
0
1
.000
1
Portland
0
1
.000
1
Pacific Division
W L
Pct GB
Golden State
0
0
.000 —
L.A. Clippers
0
0
.000 —
L.A. Lakers
0
0
.000 —
1
Phoenix
0
1
.000
⁄2
Sacramento
0
2
.000
1
———
Tuesday’s Games
Milwaukee 117, Philadelphia 108, OT
San Antonio 102, Denver 91
New Orleans 93, Sacramento 67
Dallas at Phoenix, (n)
Today’s Games
Indiana 90, Orlando 78
Washington 99, Toronto 96
Cleveland 109, New Orleans 87
Boston 114, New York 100, OT
Milwaukee 110, New Jersey 96
Miami 97, Memphis 78
Detroit 108, Philadelphia 88
Minnesota 90, Portland 86
Houston 98, Sacramento 89
Charlotte at Chicago, (n)
Dallas at Utah, (n)
L.A. Clippers at Seattle, (n)
L.A. Lakers at Denver, (n)
Atlanta at Golden State, (n)
Thursday’s Games
Indiana at Miami, 7 p.m.
Phoenix at L.A. Lakers, 9:30 p.m.
Friday’s Games
New Jersey at Toronto, 6 p.m.
Memphis at Orlando, 6 p.m.
Charlotte at Philadelphia, 6 p.m.
Detroit at Boston, 6:30 p.m.
Washington at New York, 6:30 p.m.
Cleveland at San Antonio, 7 p.m.
Portland at Denver, 8 p.m.
Utah at Golden State, 9:30 p.m.
Minnesota at Seattle, 9:30 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A. Clippers, 9:30 p.m.
Cavaliers 109, Hornets 87
BASKETBALL
National Basketball
Association Glance
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Atlantic Division
W L
Pct GB
Boston
1
0 1.000 —
New Jersey
0
1
.000
1
New York
0
1
.000
1
Toronto
0
1
.000
1
Philadelphia
0
2
.000 11⁄2
Southeast Division
W L
Pct GB
Miami
1
0 1.000 —
Washington
1
0 1.000 —
1
Atlanta
0
0
.000
⁄2
1
Charlotte
0
0
.000
⁄2
Orlando
0
1
.000
1
Central Division
W L
Pct GB
Milwaukee
2
0 1.000 —
1
Cleveland
1
0 1.000
⁄2
SPORTS DIGEST
NEW ORLEANS (87)
Nachbar 0-5 0-0 0, West 4-6 3-3 11,
P.Brown 2-7 0-0 4, Paul 5-11 2-2 13, Smith 511 2-2 15, Andersen 5-7 1-3 11, Claxton 4-8
8-9 16, Butler 2-8 0-0 4, Mason 2-9 2-4 6, Vroman 2-3 1-2 5, Bass 1-1 0-0 2, Macijauskas
0-2 0-0 0. Totals 32-78 19-25 87.
CLEVELAND (109)
James 9-16 7-8 31, Gooden 3-3 1-2 7,
Ilgauskas 5-10 2-4 12, Snow 0-0 0-0 0, Hughes 2-9 6-6 10, Jones 4-8 2-2 12, Marshall 69 3-6 18, Pavlovic 2-4 0-0 5, Wilks 0-2 0-0 0,
Henderson 3-5 1-2 7, Hamilton 1-1 0-0 2,
Jackson 2-2 0-0 5. Totals 37-69 22-30 109.
New Orleans
19 28 21 19 — 87
Cleveland
35 31 25 18 —109
3-Point Goals—New Orleans 4-12 (Smith
3-4, Paul 1-4, Butler 0-1, Macijauskas 0-1,
Nachbar 0-2), Cleveland 13-21 (James 6-7,
Marshall 3-6, Jones 2-4, Jackson 1-1,
Pavlovic 1-2, Wilks 0-1). Fouled Out—None.
Rebounds—New Orleans 38 (Andersen 8),
Cleveland 54 (Marshall 9). Assists—New
Orleans 17 (Nachbar 6), Cleveland 22 (Hughes 6). Total Fouls—New Orleans 24, Cleve-
Houston Jaguars at
Mississippi State women
(exhibition), 7 p.m.
Saturday’s Events
Prep Football
Ocean Springs at
Gulfport, 3 p.m.
Prep Basketball
Moss Point Classic
(Moss Point boys and
girls, Ocean Springs girls)
Bay High girls at
Vancleave, 5 p.m.
Prep Soccer
East Central boys at
St. Stanislaus, 12:30 p.m.
land 27. Technicals—New Orleans Defensive Three Second, Cleveland Defensive
Three Second. A—20,562. (20,562).
TRANSACTIONS
BASEBALL
Major League Baseball
MLB—Suspended New York Yankees OF
Matt Lawton for 10 days, effective at the start
of the 2006 season, for violation of the
league’s Joint Drug Prevention and Treatment Program.
American League
ANAHEIM ANGELS—Agreed to terms with
Bud Black, pitching coach, on a two-year
contract.
BOSTON RED SOX—Agreed to terms with
RHP Mike Timlin on a one-year contract.
CLEVELAND INDIANS—Promoted Chuck
Ricci to national scouting crosschecker, Scott
Meaney to east coast crosschecker and Matt
Ruebel to midwest crosschecker. Named
Steve Abney, Byron Ewing and Brent Urcheck
scouts.
DETROIT TIGERS—Exercised their 2006
contract option on LHP Jamie Walker.
NEW YORK YANKEES—Named Lee
Mazzilli bench coach.
SEATTLE MARINERS—Exercised their
2006 contract option on LHP Eddie Guardado.
TEXAS RANGERS—Named John Wetteland pitching coach for Frisco of the Texas
League, Carlos Subero manager and Pedro
Lopez coach for Bakersfield of the California
League, Andy Fox manager of Clinton of the
Midwest League, and Arnie Beyeler manager and Aris Tirado pitching coach for Spokane
of the Northwest League.
National League
PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Named Pat
Gillick general manager and signed him to a
three-year contract.
SAN DIEGO PADRES—Named Grady
Fuson vice president of scouting and player
development.
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
CHICAGO BULLS—Waived F Kasib Powell.
FOOTBALL
National Football League
ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed S Antuan
Edwards.
DALLAS COWBOYS—Signed T Marc
Colombo. Released G Shannon Snell from
the practice squad. Signed DE Vontrell Jamison to the practice squad.
MIAMI DOLPHINS—Placed LB Eddie
Moore on injured reserve. Re-signed DT Josh
Shaw.
PHILADELPHIA EAGLES—Placed P Dirk
Johnson on injured reserve. Signed P Reggie
Hodges.
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Signed RB
Brian Allen to the practice squad.
ST. LOUIS RAMS—Signed K Jeff Wilkins
to a four-year contract extension.
TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Signed LB
Wesly Mallard. Released FB Rick Razzano.
COLLEGE
AKRON—Signed Ken Lolla, men’s soccer
coach, to a five-year contract extension
through March 2011.
EASTERN MENNONITE—Announced the
resignation of Greg Steffen, women’s soccer coach.
INDIANA, PA.—Announced the retirement
of Frank Cignetti, football coach.
LEMOYNE—Named Joi Jefferson women’s
assistant basketball coach.
MASSACHUSETTS-DARTMOUTH—
Announced the retirement of Paul Fistori,
golf coach.
TENNESSEE—Signed Rod Delmonico,
baseball coach, to a five-year contract extension through 2010.
Tournament
From Page 1-B
seven points of the second half
as Gilmore nailed a 3-pointer,
Holly Lawrence scored on a fast
break and Vicky Donner scored
in the lane.
Vancleave trimmed the lead
to two several times in the
third quarter, before D’Iberville
went on 6-0 run sparked by the
play of Lawrence and Brosh to
give the Lady Warriors a 3529 lead.
Lebron has big
night in win
over Hornets
From Wire Reports
CLEVELAND — LeBron James hardly needed any assistance from the hired help.
Cleveland’s All-Star forward, playing his first
regular-season game with new teammates
brought in to help get him to the playoffs, made
six 3-pointers and scored 31 points as the Cavaliers beat New Orleans to help rookie coach
Mike Brown win his debut.
James made five straight 3-pointers — four in
a row during a 1:44 span over Hornets forward
Bostjan Nachbar — and scored 24 points in the
first half as the Cavs built a 21-point lead and
buzzed the Hornets, who won their opener on
Tuesday over Sacramento.
Speedy Claxton led the Hornets with 16
points, J.R. Smith added 15 and rookie Chris
Paul had 13.
Pacers 90, Magic 78
ORLANDO, Fla. — Ron Artest behaved perfectly in his return to the NBA on Wednesday
night. He played pretty well, too.
Artest had 16 points, three rebounds and five
assists, and the Indiana Pacers began life without Reggie Miller with a 90-78 victory over the
Orlando Magic.
Wizards 99, Raptors 96
TORONTO — Antawn Jamison had 29 points
and Washington held off the Raptors.
Gilbert Arenas added 21 points for the Wizards, who escaped with the victory.
Bucks 110, Nets 96
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — Michael Redd
scored 41 points and Maurice Williams added
23 off the bench to lead Milwaukee past New
Jersey.
Timberwolves 90, Trail Blazers 86
MINNEAPOLIS — Kevin Garnett had 18
points, seven rebounds and seven assists and
Richie Frahm hit his first five 3-pointers to lead
the Timberwolves over Portland and new coach
Nate McMillan, who either coached with or
played for new coach Dwayne Casey in Seattle
for the past 11 years.
Pistons 108, 76ers 88
AUBURN HILLS, Mich. — The only difference
was the coaches.
Richard Hamilton scored 37 points to lead the
Detroit Pistons past the Philadelphia 76ers in a
game that looked a lot like their first-round
series six months ago.
Heat 97, Grizzlies 78
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Antoine Walker scored
25 points and grabbed 16 rebounds, and
Dwyane Wade added 23 points as Miami
defeated the Grizzlies.
Celtics 114, Knicks 100, OT
BOSTON — Ricky Davis scored nine of his
27 points in overtime, when the Boston Celtics
went on a 9-0 run to beat New York and spoil
Larry Brown’s debut as Knicks coach.
BASEBALL
Maddux wins 15th Gold Glove,
one shy of record
NEW YORK — Chicago Cubs pitcher Greg
Maddux won his 15th Gold Glove on Wednesday, one shy of the record shared by pitcher
Jim Kaat and third baseman Brooks Robinson.
San Francisco shortstop Omar Vizquel won
his 10th Gold Glove, his first in the NL after the
nine straight he earned with the Cleveland Indians from 1993-2001.
Atlanta outfielder Andruw Jones won his
eighth straight Gold Glove and St. Louis outfielder Jim Edmonds won his eighth, including
the last six in a row.
Giants catcher Mike Matheny won his fourth
overall and third straight.
A pair of Florida infielders also were on the
Gold Glove team, with second baseman Luis
Castillo winning his third straight and third
baseman Mike Lowell winning for the first time.
Cubs first baseman Derrek Lee won for the
second time. Philadelphia outfielder Bobby
Abreu was a first-time winner.
Hornets
Vancleave would not go away
as three free throws by Borries
made it a three point game, but
D’Iberville would not let the
Lady Bulldogs get any closer.
Inabinet led the way for Vancleave with 12 points, while
Gunter chipped in with seven.
Gunter also grabbed 10
rebounds in the game.
Christina Atwood was also
solid on the boards with six.
Brosh led the Lady Warriors
with 14 points and was followed in double figures by Donner and Lawrence who each
had 11.
Vancleave boys 44,
D’Iberville 38
The host team moved its
record to 1-1 on the season with
a come-from-behind win over
D’Iberville.
The two teams traded buckets in the first half and into the
third quarter, before D’Iberville
took the lead.
Vancleave then cut a five
point lead to two in the fourth
quarter and took the lead with
under six minutes to go.
Trey Mohler led the way for
the Bulldogs with 14, and Colin McRae and Trey Bilbo each
had nine.
Andrew Francois finished
with 16 for D’iberville
Preview
From Page 1-B
to come from behind and win and Stone
County had a lot to do with that.”
Nelson said the bye week also gave his
team a chance to correct some mistakes.
“We had a chance to look film and try
and correct some things we were doing
wrong,” Nelson said. “It also gave us a
chance to get our feet back under us.
“Vancleave has really good football team
and are playing great down the stretch.
We know we are going to get their best
shot, so we have to be ready to play.”
Forrest County AHS
at St. Martin, 7:30 p.m.
The St. Martin Yellowjackets have one
last game to reach the playoffs.
St. Martin (1-6, 1-4) knocked off Vancleave two weeks ago, but couldn’t follow
that up with a win over Stone County
last week.
Now the Yellowjackets need a win and
some help for Gautier to get in the playoffs.
Forrest County has a stranglehold on
the No. 3 seed in Region 7-4A after losing
to D’Iberville last week.
St. Martin quarterback T.J. Hay and
wide receiver Michael Payton have been a
big part of the Yellowjackets success this
season.
East Central at Stone County, 7 p.m.
The Hornets (1-6, 1-4) need some help to
make the playoffs for the first time since
2002.
East Central opened the Region 7-4A
slate with a win over St. Martin, but have
dropped the five games.
Stone County picked up its first win of
the season last week with a 28-7 win over
St. Martin.
Running back Justin Houston and linebacker Jordan Monarch have helped lead
the Hornets this season.
Prentiss at Greene County, 7:30 p.m.
Greene County, the sixth-ranked team
in 3A, has wrapped up the Region 8-3A
title and will end the season against Prentiss.
The Greene County offense has been a
huge factor in the team’s success this season as Markeus Bivens, JaKole Williams
and Justin Matthews have each contributed big plays and touchdowns.
Greene County has topped No. 3 Magee
already this season and has defeated new
region rival Collins and are gearing up
for another postseason run.
JR. Wittner can be reached at (228) 9341426 or jrwittner@themississippipress.com.
From Page 1-B
varsity and junior varsity teams
this season creating some much
needed excitement in the program. Ten will play exclusively
on the varsity team, while six
will play on both teams.
“The interest is picking up.
The talent is picking up,” Bailey said. “I’m real excited about
this season.”
East Central’s girls program
is filled with mostly
sophomores, but there
will be two juniors
from Vancleave that’s
gotten Bailey excited.
Sisters Frankie and
Johnnie Borries have
transferred to East
Central for the 200506 season.
“They have a lot of Bailey
talent, and they’ve
done a real good job of getting
familiar with the rest of the
girls,” Bailey said. “I’m excited
to have them on our team.”
The Borries sisters will be
joined by returning players:
Mary Beth Heathchoe, Lisa
Webb, Erin Crane and Whitney Melton, all juniors. Four
girls have moved up from the
freshman team: Morgan Goff,
Jessie McNeese, Blair Salter
and Brittany Wolsker.
The lone senior on the team
will be Heather Pageant, while
sophomores
Jacqueline
Brochard, Shelissa Mitchell
and Kristy Ramkisson
will provide depth.
“We’ll have a lot
more to work with this
year,” Bailey said. “We
just need to work hard
to improve our talent.”
The Lady Hornets
opened the season in
the Vancleave tournament, losing to Vancleave and beating ??.
Josh Johnson can be reached
at (228) 934-1426 or jjohnson@themississippipress.com.
MOBILE GREYHOUND PARK
MATINEE POST TIME 1:00 MON., WED. & SAT.
EVENING POST TIME 7:30 MON. – SAT.
1-800-272-5000
Min. age 18
MARMADUKE
ZIGGY
3-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
DENNIS THE MENACE
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
CLOSE TO HOME
GARFIELD
PEANUTS CLASSICS
DILBERT
BORN LOSER
SNUFFY SMITH
KATHY
BLONDIE
BABY BLUES
B.C.
TODAY’S FUN
BEETLE BAILEY
PUZZLES
THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Mike Argirion
Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,
to form four ordinary words.
TALPI
©2005 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All Rights Reserved.
WECIT
FOXTROT
GEDDUR
www.jumble.com
BURNEM
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
Answer:
Yesterday’s
FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE
CURTIS
“
”
IT
(Answers tomorrow)
BLANK
CARBON
MUSTER
Jumbles: ANNOY
Answer: What the firemen ended up with when they
won the lottery — MONEY TO “BURN”
4-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THE
C
LASSIFIED
M
P www.gulflive.com
ISSISSIPPI RESS
SUPER DEAL ADS
762-CRAB
3 Lines / 7 Days
$
6
No animals, plants, produce or commercial ads.
EMPLOYMENT
■ Indicates Mississippi Ads
Help Wanted - Display . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Education/Instruction . . . . . . . . . . . 102
Work Wanted . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
Accounting/Bookkeeping . . . . . . . . 105
Casino . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Clerical Office . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107
Computer-Data Processing . . . . . . 109
Domestic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Drivers-Trucking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
Engineers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 115
Financial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
When you place your Classified Ad in
The Mississippi Press it automatically
appears on our affiliated website
www.gulflive.com
00*
“LIVE” 24 HOURS A DAY.
(Display ads may not automatically appear on Gulflive.com.)
$300
or
LESS
F
R
E
E
ADS!
$300 or Less /
Free Ads
LEGALS PUBLIC
NOTICES
MERCHANDISE
Hot Tubs/Spas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 395
Industrial Equipment . . . . . . . . . . . . 400
Jewelry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405
Lawn/Garden Equipment . . . . . . . . 410
Medical Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 415
Miscellaneous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 420
Musical Instruments . . . . . . . . . . . . 425
Office Furniture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 430
Produce . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435
Seafood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 440
Sporting Goods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .445
Tickets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 450
TV/VCR/Satellite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 455
Want to Buy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 460
Want to Rent/Lease . . . . . . . . . . . . . 465
Want to Swap . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 470
Antiques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 305
Appliances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
Arts & Crafts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .315
Auctions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
Baby Items . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
Bicycles/Exercise . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330
Building Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
Cameras . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340
Clothing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
Collectibles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
Comm Business Equip . . . . . . . . . . 355
Computers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360
Equipment Sales/Rentals . . . . . . . . 365
Farm Equipment/Supplies . . . . . . . 370
Firewood . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
Furniture/Household . . . . . . . . . . . . 380
Money to Loan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 210
Garage Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
Business Opportunities . . . . . . . . . 220 Guns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390 Pets for Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 480
FINANCIAL
PETS/ANIMALS/
LIVESTOCK
$300 or Less /
Free Ads
$300 or Less /
Free Ads
BOAT COVER, 19ft. $30
497-5768
NAVY, Braided Rug 8x11
$25 228-588-3862
BOAT- 14 ft. aluminum
fishing boat, $100,
875-9551
Sectional Sofa, beige
w/ blue & green
$75. 588-3331
BOOKCASES- 7 ft. tall,
$25 each, 875-9551
STEEL TOE SHOES
New, sz 10 1/2
$15. 872-3056
COMPUTER & Monitor,
$150 228-327-6430
DESK, Real wood, $120
327-6430
TOOLBOX, Aluminum,
for full size truck, $75
228-623-1354
DISPLAY, 2 panel Peg
board/w stand, 2 shelves,
$40 228-588-3862
TOW BAR, Blue Ox
Heavy Duty, $275
228-623-0060
Dr. Scholl’s Foot Massage
TRAMPOLINE “Free”,
never used $20
You Move. Large size.
228-475-6118 after 6pm
228-249-6896
FENDER ACOUSTIC
Guitar, was wet, was new,
$100, 228-369-0968
Announcements
FOLDING DOORS, 1 pair,
excellent condition, $50
Call 762-4392
GENERATOR, 1000 Watt,
New, $225 762-3246
Glass Top Tables (2),
oak finish. $25.
588-3331
Gun Shell Reloader, MEC
600 Jr. plus supplies, $75
475-6118 after 6pm.
IBANEZ ELECTRIC
Guitar SZ320, black, like
new, $295 228-326-6952
LAMPS, Burgundy (2)
$20. 588-3331
LAWNMOWER by
Craftsman, 19hp, $300
228-623-1354
LEATHER COAT,
ladies med sz, Denim
& Co $50. 872-3056
020
030
Business
Opportunities
Lost &
Found
LOST: English Bulldog
Brown & white. Vic. of
Escatawpa Post Office.
(251)599-7458
FOUND Bassett mixed,
AL State Line identify
(251)366-2917 lv mess.
Found-Small Golden
/white dog. Jackson Ave
Ocean Springs 217-3194
FOUND- White Cat, Long
hair, blue eyes, Govt &
Hanley. 875-5822
050
Special
Notices
PLEASE CHECK
YOUR AD
This newspaper makes
every effort to avoid errors
in advertisements. Each ad
nd
is carefully checked an
proofread, but when you
handle thousands of ads,
mistakes do slip through.
We ask therefore, that you
check your ad and if you
find an error, report it to
the Classified Department
y by calling
immediately
934-1445. We regret that we
will not be responsible for
more than
ONE INCORRECT
RTION and only for
INSER
that portion of the ad that
may have been rendered
valueless by such error.
Each insertion is proof of
publication, and it is the
responsibility of the
advertiser to check each
inssertion and call the
error to our attention.
DEADLINE FOR
CORRECTIONS:
M-F 8:30 am - 2:30 pm
(Fridays are deadlines
for Sun. & Mon.
Editions)
Employment
■ Indicates
Jackson
County
LEATHER COAT,
mens 38, GAP
$40. 872-3056
LOST Female Blonde
mixed Dog, recently
spayed, collar, 235-4478
Mens Suit 3pc Navy 38L
pants 34w32 inseam $20
228-475-6118 after 6pm
ED'S PAINTING & home
Lost Mini Schnauzer, scar
maintenance. General
on head & back answers
contractor licensed &
to Toby 228-475-7951
insured. 228-497-2266.
POKER TABLE. Sturdy,
Collapsible Legs.
$50 497-5768
040
1989 Buick Skylark for
parts, does not run, 4
inflated tires. $175. 7626369
RECORDS- 100 plus LP’s,
classicals and musicals,
$50 OBO, 875-9551
AUTO FOR PARTS, ‘01
Grand Am, body in new
condition $200 228-623-1354
SECTIONAL SOFA, 2 pc.
earthtone plaid, makes
queen bed $300 497-1612
Personals
HAMMER HEAD
Only God Knows
How Much I Love You!
Miss You All.
Doodle De Do
FREE Garage Sale Kit Included
FREE Rain Check Guarantee
DEADLINES
To Place, Cancel or Change Ads:
For NEXT DAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Daily
For SATURDAY Publication: 3:00 P.M. Friday
For SUNDAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Friday
For MONDAY Publication: 4:00 P.M. Friday
Online at www.gulflive.com
$3 each additional line
*Ad must include a price and be pre-paid
Adoptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 010
Business Opportunities . . . . . . . . . 020
Business Personals . . . . . . . . . . . . . 025
Lost & Found . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 030
Happy Ads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 035
Personals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 040
Special Notices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 050
Valentine Love Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . 060
4 Lines / 1 Day
Get a Free Ad to sell any item priced at $300 or less.
The price must be in the ad, and only one item per ad.
No abbreviations. Private individuals only. You may
place up to 3 Free ads per day. Ads must be faxed,
dropped off or mailed to us. No phone calls please.
Show your vehicle to more than
120,000 Gulf Coast households, in
The Mississippi Press and
The Mobile Register - for only
General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
Hair Stylists-Personal Services . . . .123
Restaurant-Hotel-Lounges . . . . . . . 125
Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128
Medical-Dental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
Modeling-Talent Agencies . . . . . . . . 133
Offshore-Marine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
Part-Time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
Professional-Technical . . . . . . . . . . 141
Retail-Store . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
Sales . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150
Telemarketing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154
Trades-Crafts-Skills . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
Resumes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
Employment Training . . . . . . . . . . . 163
Job Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 170
10
$3.00 each additional day, $1.00 each additional line
3 Lines / 7 Days
4 Lines / 30 Days
ANNOUNCEMENTS
$
FREE ADS
$1.00 each additional line
AUTO FOR SALE ADS
34
GARAGE SALE ADS
Phone: 762-2722 Monday thru Friday, 8:30 AM - 5 PM
Toll Free: 1-800-655-6597 Fax: 228-934-1492
If your merchandise doesn’t sell in 7 days, just call us
and we will run it for another 2 weeks - FREE. Ads must
include a price, one item per ad and the price of the item
must be under $2,000. Merchandise only, private
individuals, no abbreviations and ads must be pre-paid.
$
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
103
Work
Wanted
103
SUPER DEAL, AUTOMOTIVE & GARAGE SALE ADS - PRIVATE PARTY
ADVERTISERS ONLY, PLEASE, NO COMMERCIAL SALES
Because we want your ad to be easily understood, please no abbreviations.
Flat rate still applies.
PROCEDURE - Please check your ad the first day it appears to be certain it is
exactly what you want readers to see. If you want to make any changes or corrections, please call us the first day the ad appears. The Mississippi Press takes
responsibility for the first insertion only. For more information, see Procedure
under the NOTICES classification. All rate card conditions apply.
Pets: Free to Good Home . . . . . . . . 485 Waterfront Houses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 580 Unfurnished Houses . . . . . . . . . . . 650
Pet Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 490 Waterfront Lots/Land . . . . . . . . . . . . 585 Rent/Share Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . 655
Mobile Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .660
Poultry & Supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 495
Livestock/Feed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 500
REAL ESTATE
COMMERCIAL
REAL ESTATE
RESIDENTIAL
Jackson County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 505
Moss Point & Esca . . . . . . . . . . . . . 510
Pascagoula . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 515
Gautier/Vancleave . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 520
Ocean Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 525
George Co/Lucedale . . . . . . . . . . . . 530
Condos/Townhouses . . . . . . . . . . . . 535
Homes in General . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 540
Farms/Farmland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 545
Lots & Land-Jackson Co . . . . . . . . 550
Lots & Land-George Co . . . . . . . . . 555
Lots & Land-Other Areas . . . . . . . . 560
Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 565
Mobile Homes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 570
Mobile Home Lots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 575
Work
Wanted
MOVING FROM OHIO,
Looking
for Full Time Employment
in
Mobile Area. 26 Yrs
Experience
in Sheet Metal & Welding
Job
Shop, Also Management
Exp.
Call 419-303-0158 or E-mail:
hallidaycharters@yahoo.co
m
105
CHARGE IT! We accept
VISA, MASTERCARD,
DISCOVER and
AMERICAN EXPRESS
Accounting
Bookkeeping
Accounting Firm Needs
Experienced Staff
Accountant, 3 years experience requiired.
Responsibilities include
payroll, sales taxes and all
areas of monthly accounte to: 251ing. Fax resume
342-6166
ACCOUNTING POSITION
with local General
Contractor. Degree or nondegree acceptable. Salary
+ health insurance.
Commensurate with education and experience. Must
be proficient with
Quickbooks and Excel.
Reply to The Mobile
Register PO Box #2488-430,
Mobile, AL 36630
105
Building for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 590
Office Space for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . 595
Warehouse Space for Rent . . . . . . . 600
Business for Sale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 605
Comm. Property for Sale . . . . . . . . 610
Investment Property . . . . . . . . . . . . 615
REAL ESTATE
RENTALS
Camps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 620
Condos/Townhouses . . . . . . . . . . . . 625
Furnished Rooms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .630
Furnished Apartments . . . . . . . . . . . 635 Accounting/Tax . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 800
Furnished Houses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 640 Air Conditioning/Heating . . . . . . . . 805
Unfurnished Apartments . . . . . . . . . 645 Appliance Repair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 807
Accounting
Bookkeeping
Silver King Golf Course in
Irvington, AL is seeking an
ACCOUNTANT/BOOKKEEPER
Must have experience in
the following areas:
accounts payable, accounts
receivable, payroll, clerical. Must be computer literate. Send resume to:
Silver King Golf Course,
7960 Edgar Roberts Rd.,
Irvington, AL 36544
107
Clerical
Office
Manager
expd only apply. Fax
resume to: 251-544-4504.
Part/Full Time Clerical/
Admin. Experience in
Excel/Word & trans. Fax
$100K + DOE. Prefer MPA or resume/sal req: 251-340CPA
for
Metal
Bldg. 7346
CFO/Controller
Construction Bookkeeper
Looking for a professional
Exp Bookkeeper to manage job costs,
receivable/payables and
payroll. Exp with
Quickbooks, Excel and
Word a must. Fax resume
to 251-631-3961
E. Shore, Full Charge
Accounting/Bookkeeping &
Office Manager Duties.
Strong GL, AP, AR, PR,
P&L, HR, Tax exp req’d.
Busy office w/growth
potential. FT + Benefits.
Resumes to: PO Box 99,
Stapleton, AL 36578.
Read the Classifieds
SERVICES
107
Painting/Wallpapering . . . . . . . . . . . 883
Plumbing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 885
Pool Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 890
Roof/Gutter Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . 893
Septic Tank & Sewer . . . . . . . . . . . . 895
Tree Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 897
TV/VCR/Satellite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 898
Window Tinting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 899
TRANSPORTATION
■ Indicates Mississippi Ads
Antiques & Collectibles . . . . . . . . . . 910
Cars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 920
Cars Under $2000 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 930
Sport Cars . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 940
Sport Utility Vehicles . . . . . . . . . . . . 950
Trucks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 960
Vans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 970
Motorcycles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 980
Vehicle Rental . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 985
Vehicle Parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 990
Clerical
Office
SMALL SPANISH FORT
LAW OFFICE seeks
Receptionist/General Clerk
Full time, entry level position. Salary DOE. Some
receptionist experience
required. Fax
resume to: 251-626-3776
NOW HIRING:
SECRETARY (Must Type
50+
WPM) & CDL DRIVER.
Call
251-459-7402 for an appt
or Email Resume: admin@
allspecialtiespromotion.co
m
Office Assistant.
Accepting applications for
Professional office environOFFICE ASSISTANT.
ment. Must have excellent
Must have good computer
communication skills, writskills,
ten & verbal; computer
customer service exp., and
knowledge. Send resume to
good
P.O. Box 81427, Mobile, AL
telephone etiquette.
36689
Send to resume to The
Mobile Register PO Box
Assistant
#2488-422, Mobile, AL 36630
For well established car title
loan company in Mobile.
Salaried position with benefits. Begin at $28,000 annual.
Need a responsible, organized,
detail oriented, nonsmoker.
Must have excellent administrative and communication
skills. Duties include making
loans, taking payments, light
AP/RECEPTIONIST - MS bookkeeping, typing, and colExcel & Word a must. F/T, lections. Fax resume to 251476-5858. Include salary histoMon-Fri, hiring immed.,
ry and goals. EOE.
Component Mfg. in Gulfport,
MS. Fax resumes to Goldin
228-896-4653
RECREATION
Aircraft . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 705
Boats-Power . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 710
Boats-Sail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 720
Jet Skis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 730
Boating Equip/Serv/Supplies . . . . . 740
ATV/Off Road Vehicles . . . . . . . . . . 750
Campers/Travel Trailers . . . . . . . . . 760
RV Lots . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 770
Motorhomes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 780
Motorhomes for Rent . . . . . . . . . . . 790
Attorneys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 810
Backhoe/Dozier Work . . . . . . . . . . . 815
Bath Tubs & Tiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 820
Building/Contracting . . . . . . . . . . . . 825
Carpentry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 827
Carpet Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .830
Child Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 835
Computer Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 837
Concrete/Masonry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 840
Decorating . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 843
Dirt and Top Soil . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 845
Domestics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 847
Elderly Care . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 848
Electrical . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 850
Home Improvement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 853
House Cleaning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 855
Investigators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 860
Lawn Care/Landscaping . . . . . . . . . 865
Loans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 870
Medical Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 875
Miscellaneous Services . . . . . . . . . 880
RECEPTIONIST /
RUNNER for local
law firm, people skills,
dependable a must.
$8.00/hr. Send resume to
The Mississippi Press,
P. O. Box 849,
Pascagoula, MS 39568
Attn: Box 778-A ■
Part-time
RECEPTIONIST
Tuesday & Thursday 4:30-7
& every other Sat. $6.50 hr.
Need multi-line exp +
cashier exp helpful.
Fax resume to 471-3046
or call Stacey Jay 471-3326
Experienced
LEGAL ASSISTANT
RECEPTIONIST/FILE
& LEGAL RECEPTIONIST
CLERK
are needed for local law for tax business. Good
firm. Call 251-433-7379
phone skills. 251-367-5324;
345-1011 to schedule
Pascagoula Law Firm
appointment.
seeks F/T Receptionist.
Computer skills & exp. a OFFICE
plus. Send resume to
MANAGER/LEGAL SECOffice Mgr., P.O. Box
RETARY. Skills req’d:
1407, Pascagoula, MS
Typing, phone, greet
39568 ■
clients, computer. Auto
expense & salary DOE.
Administrative
Submit resume to P. O.
Assistant/Receptionist for
Box 366, Mobile, AL 36601.
well established general
contractor. Send resume to Admin Asst needed in
P. O. Box 9131, Mobile, AL Spanish Fort. Customer
service skills & some com36691 or fax: 251-476-5282
puter exp. Previous work
w/automotive a +. Great
benefits & perks. 251-6266061. Drug test required.
WANT ADS
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
CLASSIFIEDS
762-CRAB
Janis . . . . .934-1463
Karen . . . . .934-1477
Paulette . . .934-1476
Sasha . . . . .934-1441
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
“Business and Home”
TO ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS SERVICE
CALL: 934-1463 • 934-1476 • 934-1441 • 934-1477
WE SERVE ALL OF JACKSON,
GEORGE AND GREENE COUNTIES.
• ALL OF THESE CLASSIFICATIONS ARE TO BE PAID IN ADVANCE UNLESS A
CREDIT APPLICATION HAS BEEN SUBMITTED AND APPROVED FOR BILLING.
Business
Services
815
Backhoe /
Dozer Work
DOZER, Track-hoe work.
Dirt of all types.
Ponds & Custom work.
475-9254 or 218-4526
825
Building
Contracting
STORM
RESTORATION
Local Licensed
Contractor. We Do It
All!
Free est. within 2 days.
Materials prices are
rising, so hurry!
Call John Houston
228-497-1865
Main Street
Builders, LLC
Home
853
Improvement
Feeling Overwh
helmed?
We can help. From
Demo to Restoration.
Call Wally & Jennifier,
228-219-3221/ 228-588-9573
20 yrs exp / Ref Avail.
SHEETROCK, Painting,
Roofing, Remodeling.
Local contractor.
228-497-1811 Leave mess.
Gulf Coast Maintenance
& Remodeling. Locally
owned, licensed & bonded
Free Est. 228-218-7062
TOP GUARD
Remodeling & Roofing
We do it all!
228-522-0900
HOME RESOURCES
Plumbing, Carpentry, A/C,
Clean-up & Roofing
Call 228-627-8248 / 588-2992
Local
Custom
Builder
State Licensed
25 Years Exp.
“We Warranty What We Build”
Call
DUNCAN NOBLE, JR.
(228)341-1009 (228)497-5800
4400 Vancleave Rd., Gautier, MS
Quality Home
Improvements, additions,
repairs, tile, painting,
decks, elect., plumbing,
pressure washing. John
228-474-1321 / Cell 355-0421
FOUNDATION REPAIR
REMODELING SPECIALIST
1
Licensed & Insured
228-806-1979
THE W GROUP, INC.
General Contractor.
All types of commercial
& residential.
1-800-770-7710
Residential &
Commercial Remodeling,
Roofing, Sheetrock &
Flooring. Free estimates.
588-1159 or 217-2695
835
Child
Care
CHILD CARE Mon-Thurs
6am-2pm Christian Home
Drop-ins Welcomed no
weekends 228-497-8109
CHILD CARE IN MY HOME
Day & Night / Reasonable
References Available
228-475-6919
Little House of Wonders
Re-Opening Nov 8.
Now Taking Applications
We Offer Night &
Weekend Care.
228-762-7528/ 228-218-1675
840
PAINTING, Carpentry,
Electrical, Plumbing, Air
Conditioning & Pressure
Washing. 228-990-3010
CRCA, INC
remove, repair, rebuild,
Residential Construction
All Phases, 228-323-8327
A-to-Z FENCE & DECKS
Repair/Replace damaged
privacy, cyclone or
other fences. Free est.
Licensed & Insured.
228-238-7587
CARR’S PAINTING,
Plumbing, Sheet Rock,
Remodeling, Windows,
Roofs, Clean-up,
Flooring, Carpet & Tille.
217-0337
MULTI CRAFT
DEMO
Sheetrock Removal,
Sheetrock Installation,
Tree Removal,
228-217-0337
PAINTING, Carpentry,
Electrical, Plumbing, Air
Conditioning & Pressure
Washing. 228-990-3010
855
Elderly
Care
I SIT For the ELDERLY
in your home.
References available.
M-F 8-5, 228-990-9332
House
Cleaning
HOUSE CLEANING
Honest & Dependable.
Due to storm lost
customers. Ref’s avail.
475-6340 or 990-7509
RENT
-AMAID
* Licensed * Bonded
* Supplies Furnished
Lawn Care /
865
Landscaping
HURRICANE DEBRIS
Clean-up, tree removal,
lawn maintenance &
care. Grass Goblin Lawn
Care 228-806-4911
Creative Landscaping
Avail for Hurricane
receonstruction
developemnt on new &
exixsting properties.
resaonable rates. 228-4974199/ Call for Free Est.
Christine Ravens
thank you & GOd BLess
107
Clerical
Office
Lawn Care /
Painting /
865
883
Landscaping
Wallpapering
Husband & Wife
Lawn Mowing
& Leaf Mulching
Free est. 228-217-6200
880Miscellaneous
Services
FREE TOWOFF
of Junk Cars &
Trucks Anytime!
228-826-1709, 217-8171
Ced’s Environmental Contractor
Sheetrock Removal/ Remodel
Home/Industrial Cleaning
H/P water blast/
vac. truck
Chemical spray/ insured
228-235-4157
111
Domestic
WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER
desires weddings,
anniversaries, etc.
Reasonable, reliable,
money-back guarantee,
$200-$250 228-326-7361
MOLD TREATMENT,
SHEET REMOVAL &
Replacement. Locally
owned & operated.
Licensed & Insured.
Crediit cards accepted.
228-366-0443/ 228-424-3632
G
Appointment Setter
RESERVATIONS
Will Train-$12/hr
F&PT POSITIONS AVAILABLE
CALL 251-473-8844 Make
reservations and assist
customers. Good phone
voice. No Prior Exp
needed. Perm $175 #102.
NO TEMP JOBS EVER!
Class B Driver’s for Cotton
Module Trucks. 7 days a
week, 12 hours a day. $10
an hour + overtime. 251602-1828
Warehouse/Backup Driver
Join a great team and be
home nights and weekends.
SECRETARY Needed For Requires Class A CDL
Used Car Dealership, Exp. w/Hazmat endorsement
Necessary. Apply in
and clean MVR. Forklift
Person: 5706 Hwy 90 W
exp required. Full Time 40
Theodore. Call 251-653-7745 hour week, good benefits
or 251-391-7745 (After 5pm) and competitive wages. To
be considered, apply in
Administrative Clerk
needed. 2 yrs of computer person at
5445 Business Parkway,
skills preferred.
Theodore or fax resume to
Apply at Coastal Cargo
251-653-8535 EOE.
228-769-1061 or send
resume to P. O. Box 1365,
Pascagoula, MS 39567 or
ROOFERS MART
fax 228-762-1551■
hiring CLASS A & B
Need F/T Experienced
FLATBED DRIVERS
Front Office Employee for
Medical Practice job confor new Mobile Branch.
sists of pre-certification
Home nights, full benefits.
from insurance companies
ew equipment. Drug
Ne
& receptionist duties, exc.
screen
benefits. Fax resume to
required. Call Mitch
228-938-0705 mail to MS
at 800-367-9683
Press, P. O. Box 849, Attn.
Box 779A, Pascagoula, MS
FORD LUMBER CO
39568.
SARALAND, AL
■ Clerical Assistant needed. Multi-Line phone
exp req, 228-497-3434
109
ComputerData
Processing
Internet Call Center seeking motivated individuals
to fill FT & PT order processing positions. $400/wkly
+ comm. DOE/ bnfts. Email Cvr Letter, Resume &
Sal req’s to: 251-662-4971 or
jobs@qaparts.com Attn
Kurt
Programmer
Full time, VFP expertise plus
C++, SQL, Exchange, Java.
Offices in West Mobile,
AL. Email resume to
jobs@enveloc.com
ACTION ADS
Class A or B CDL Driver
Needed. M-F. Please apply
in person 251-675-5336
■ Dairy Fresh Of
Alabama, LLC is accepting
applications for the position of Route Delivery
Sales. Most be 21 years of
age, clean driving record,
Class B CDL preferred.
Applications will be
accepted at 4020 Jefferson
St, Pascagoula, Mon-Fri
12 Noon until 5:00pm
EOE
PAINTING, Interior &
Exterior, Small Repairs
& Pressure Washing.
12 yrs exp. Free Est.
0104/ 478-718-6143
228-522-0
Roof /
893Gutter
Service
ROOFING & LEAK
Repairs. Shingle,
Metal & Built-up.
228-475-3866 / 228-219-1290
Roofing, framing,
building, siding, & tree
removal- Call 607-329-5994
✰
✰
✰
MAGNOLIA ROOFING
ROOF IMMEDIATELY!
35 Years Experience
Home Roof & Small
Repair / Guaranteed!
✰
249-6368
✰
✰
GULF COAST ROOFING
& Disaster Relief, since
1983, 1-866-6-FIXROOF
1-866-634-97666
COAST-TO-COAST
Remodeling, painting,
roofing, sheetrock, tree
work, etc, etc, No job
too large or too small.
Please call.
228-497-9864 / 228-366-1771
ROOF REPAIRS &
Type- Locally Owned !
QUALITY
FIRST
ROOFING
CO.
228-369-9721
ALL YOUR ROOFING
NEEDS! / Licensed &
Insured / Insurance
Specialist / Free Estimate
Financing Available
In Business Since 1975
Where Quality Counts
Free Estimates
251-802-8202
Licensed &
Fully Insured
SOUTHERN PRIDE
CONTRACTING
ROOFING &
NG
REMODELIN
Lics’d, Bonded, Insured
Starting $145
per square
Free Est. (228)-623-1130
228-424-5042
BOBCAT, TRACTOR
& TREE SERVICES,
DEBRIS REMOVAL
Reasonable Prices
228-990-5042
HOUSE & PRESSURE
Washing. S & J Cleaning
Sam Wilkerson, 228588–6392/ 228-990-1921
For Insurance Purposes,
For Hurricane Damages,
& also Photo Resoration,
Memories Portraits
228-475-68831
MAID SERVICE
Affordable Rates
219-0532 or 623-0595
FOUR SEASONS
LAWN CARE
Debris & Tree Removal.
Tractor work & Complete
Lawn Care Service.
228-355-03373 Locally
owned & operated
HURRICANE DAMAGE
We remove sheetrock,
insulation, furniture,
carpet & yard clean-up.
228-475-3679 / 228-990-6253
BUY JUNK CARS
Free Tow Offs!
228-235-2122
113
DriverTrucking
113
P/T DUMP TRUNK DRIVER
tandem, at least one year
exp. Call 251-366-2389.
Dennis’ A-1 Painting
30 yrs exp. Residential,
int / ext. Free Est .
228-522-1640/ 228-327-7658
REPLACEMENT of Any
CNA/Caregiver, N/S, priFast Growing Furniture
vate home, W Mobile. Must Company in Foley looking
for
be avail. nights/weekends
a residential delivery driv251-607-9270
er.
Experience a must.
DriverExcellent
Trucking
pay with benefits.
P/T Receptionist: Evening
Call Andy 251-955-5151
DRIVERS NEEDED
hours for counseling
Drive
boxtruck,
same
day
department 16-18 Hrs/week.
route, loading is required.
Diesel Mechanic
Apply at 400 Government
Clean license necessary.
St 1PM-4PM M-F
Needed
Must pass drug screen. 251457-7511
Craft Turf Farms
Experienced REAL
ESTATE ASSISTANT needed for Eastern Shore Real
Estate firm. Email resume
with salary requirements
to
reprof@bellsouth.net
OR DRYWALL
MINO
Repair, Most Textures
Matched, 30 yrs local
exp. 228-497-1903
BROTHERS CONTRACTING
DALE’S CABINET,
Remodeling & Roofing
All work top quality
228-990-1723/588-9501
RAYBORN’S BOOM
TRUCK SERVICE
15 Ton Boom Truck
80’ reach. By the
hour, day or week.
4 hour minimum.
228-218-3310 / 228-497-3311
NEED PHOTOS?
497-4418
Concrete/
Masonry
BRICK WORK All
Types, block, stone,etc.
No job too Small. 20 yrs
exp. Gary, 228-474-7070
848
ROACH FENCE DECKS
& Remodeling
Reasonable rates
Quality work
475-0528 or 228-355-0541
5-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
Wingo Trucking
FOLEY, AL
EXPERIENCE A PLUS
NO TOOLS REQUIRED
COMPETITIVE PAY
EXCELLENT BENEFITS
CALL 251-955-2000
Driver Needed for Local
Seafood Distributor. Must
have good driving record,
all
no CDL needed. Please ca
251-626-1106 for more info.
CLASS A CDL DRIVER
Needed. Haz-Mat & Tanker
Exp. a Must. Home Most
Nights, Good Pay &
Benefits!
Apply at Mobile Solvent,
5750 Kushla-McLeod Rd.
★★★★★★★★★
CDL Licensed Truck
Driver Needed. Call 251331-2916
Delivery Drivers needed,
CDL and non-CDL. 401k,
health avail. Mon-Fri. 251970-3845
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
NEED A ROOF
NOW???
V&W Roofing Contractors
• Residential/Commercial
• All Types of Roofing
In Stock
• Shingles In Stock
• Bonded, Insured &
Licensed Contractor
• Family Owned Since
1974
• Call for Estimates
866-769-5140, 228-769-5140
or 936-788-4459
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
897
Tree
Service
A TO Z TREE Hurricane
Relief. Tree removal,
stump grinding, clean-up
& dirt work. Licensed &
Insured. Senior Citizen
Discount. 228-238-7587
DOUBLE R Tree Service
& Tree Removal.
Rodney A. Rouse
601-508-4936 / 601-766-9635
Read the Classifieds
113
DriverTrucking
LOCAL FLATBED DRIVERS
Needed Full / Part Time.
Home every evening.
Great pay & great equipment. 228-392-7122 ■
AAAAAAAAA
DUMP TRUCK DRIVERS
CDL, Clean record. 251-8656203
ROLL OFF DRIVERS
Class B License Needed,
Increase in Pay. Please
Apply Within 6225
Rangeline Rd.
Dump Drivers needed.
Trailer, Tri-Axle Trucks.
Class A CDL Req. Exp A
Must. 251-653-5410
■■■■
FLATBED DRIVER
NEEDED
FOR DEDICATED
SHORT-HAUL RUNS
Tarp pay, bonus pay, holiday,
sick and vac pay. If you meet
these requirements:
* at least 23 yrs of age
* minimum 24 mos tractortrailer exp.
* clean MVR
* Class A CDL
Call Baldwin Transfer Co at
251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128
■■■■
113
DriverTrucking
113
Exp Truck Driver Needed,
Must be able to operate a
24 - 26 ft light duty truck,
CDL lic not required. 401K
+ benefits. Apply in person, 600 Western Dr,,
Mobile.
DriverTrucking
113
A Class A CDL Driver
PITTS & SON TOWING is
w/ 2 years verifiable expe- now hiring HEAVY DUTY
WRECKER DRIVERS to
rience. Forklift exp. helpwork night shift. Must have
ful.
Class A CDL. Call Mon-Fri,
877-226-9088 call for an
8AM-5PM
appt.
251-675-8831
F & H TRUCKING
OTR Flatbed Drivers
Min 2 yrs exp,
A&M Portables
Top Pay, Tarp Pay
Call 228-696-0570 ■
Inc.
RINKER MATERIALS
Gypsum Supply.
DRIVER/STOCKER
Positions
available. Min Class B
DRIVER TRAINEES
CDL
License. Excellent benefits. NEEDED NOW! No
Exp. Req’d. Werner has
Zeroforlife Safety
immediate openings for
Program. Paid
entry-level semi drivers.
time off, Must be able to
lift,
Our average driver earns
carry 100+ lbs.
more than $36K first yr.
40+hrs/week.
60% Werner drivers get
EOE, Drug free workplace. home nightly or weekly.
Apply
15 day CDL training now
at 7770 Tara Dr. Semmes
offered in your area. For
36575. 251-645-8586
a new career call Today
Overdimensional Drivers
1-866-280-5309
Needed. Exp Necessary.
Regional Loads, Home
DAVISON OIL COMPAN
NY
Most
LOCAL DRIVERS NEEDNights, BC/BS Ins, Paid
ED
Holiday
& Vacation. Call 251-626- Local & Regional Route
1344
Drivers Needed, Must
Have Class A CDL w/ HAZHTI
MAT, Min. Age is 25 Years
w/ 1 Year Experience.
CDL A Drivers Needed, 2-4 Excellent Pay & Benefits.
Weeks Out, New Pay Rate, Apply in Person at 8450
Mileage + Drop Pay, 401K & Tanner Williams Rd.
n Mobile. 251-633-4444
Direct Deposit, Sign On
Bonus! Two Years Experience
Required. Contact Martin Gas and Diesel Truck
Baker: 251-653-0370 or 800-966- Driver Needed, Exp only.
7092
Good Benefits, BC/BS. 251-
Driver Needed for
Petroleum Company. Local
runs. Class A CDL
w/Hazmat & Tankers
endorsement required.
Hourly Pay with good benefits.
Call Lee at 251-654-0045
ATTN: OTR DRIVERS
VAN & FLATBED
$1000 SIGN ON BONUS
FOR THE FIRST SIX DRIVERS
* up to .33 cpm * great
benefits (BCBS/401K) * late
model tractors * bonus $
for safety & miles * 2yrs
OTR exp reqd
Wright Transportation
1-800-342-4598
DriverTrucking
CLASS A DRIVERS
Travel I-40 & South. Exc.
pay & benefits + 401K. 2
yrs. OTR exp. Call Palmer
Transport 800-559-0114
DRIVERS
NEEDED
FOR SHORT
HAUL
AND REGIONAL
RUNS
Local Manufacturing
Company seeks
INSTALLER
Must have valid drivers
license. Pay DOE. 251-4734400
120
General
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY!
Qualified Flooring
Installers
Call Liz 251-633-9996
CARMEN’S CHILD CARE,
INC
JANITORS & now accepting
employment
SUPERVISORS applications at both locations, 1361 Springhill Ave.
Full Time & Part Time
Must have clean background & 201 Cox St. Trained &
251-344-5105
experienced TEACHERS
Now Hiring Local Route
only need apply.
Driver, CDL Preferred.
■ Company needs F/T
Health
Now Hiring Custodial
Insurance & Benefits Avail. Alarm Installer. Good pay
Workers for Schools.
& benefits. Please Call
Health card required. We are
No
experience necessary
228-497-7316
a Drug Free Co. 251-679-0933
228-818-0021, lev message
OPERATORS & DRICUSTOMER
CABLE CONSTRUCTION
VERS Class A or B CDL.
SERVICE REP valid drivers license. No
Dump exp. needed.
experience
needed. Call
Multi-Line Phones for
Apply in person: 1711
352-342-4473
a West Mobile Consumer
Prospect Ave.,
Products & Distribution
Pascagoula, MS 228-762MAINTENANCE TECHNICompany. Fax resume to:
0754 ■
CIAN
251-445--0084
Needed for Apartment
Complex Apply in person,
CDL
Mon-Fri, 9AM-4PM, 3800
ROUTE DELIVERY
Michael Blvd. EOE
DRIVERS NEEDED
We offer paid vacations,
excellent benefits, incentive
programs and more! Good
Driving Record A Must! Drug
screen and physical are
required.
Come Join Our Family by
applying in person, MonThurs from 9AM-3:30PM at
Gulf Distributing Co, 3378
Moffett Rd, Mobile, AL 36607.
EOE.
NO TELEPHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
★
679-1700
DRIVERS NEEDED
Good Money - Yellow Cab
Co.
251-476-7711 After 7PM
General
120
LOCAL TANKER
DRIVER
NEEDED NOW!
Work close to home! Good
pay
and benefit package! Call
now
if you meet the following
requirements:
* Class A CDL
* Minimum 2 years tractor
trailer exp.
* Clean MVR
* At least 23 yrs of age
G
EXP. PET GROOMER
needed for established
clientele. Apply at: Pet
COOKS, PREP-COOKS, & Harbor Veterinary
Entry Level
Hospital, 3110 Old Mobile
Off-shore Hands Needed. Hwy, Pascagoula 762-1987
EOE / Gulfport Marine ■
Employment. 228-864-9797
Local Sign Co. need indiCollection Agency in
vidual to help run small
Daphne Now Hiring
sign shop. Exp. necessary.
Experienced Collectors.
251-583-6583
Call Betty at 251-447-0742
PARKING LOT ATTENDANT. Part time. Min.
Wage. Background check
req’d. 251-438-5919.
G
AVON - ALL AREAS
Buy or sell. Free gift! Ind. ■ Floral Designer P/T
Rep.
Experience Necessary
1-800-572-4469, 645-1839
call for Apt. 228-875-6109
CELLULOSE INSTALLATION &
VINYL SIDING
INSTALLERS
438-4814
Immediate Opening for
Full Time position of
Warehouse Personnel.
Primary duties are loading & unloading freight
trucks. Benefits available. Apply at Baber’s
Inc., 2500 Amonett St.,
Pascagoula, MS 39567 ■
COUNTER
HELP
Flex Hrs. 7-9 & 2-9 Shift
No phone calls.
Apply at JAGUAR CLEANERS
6405 Cottage Hill Rd. b/t 8-2
Jackson County Civic
Dedicated local non-hazmat
Action Committee is seekshuttle run.
ing to fill the following
positions. Applicants must
Call Baldwin Transfer at
be insurable by agency
433-3391, ext 111 or 128
vehicle
insurance.
Home almost every night.
COMPANY DRIVERS
★
Most positions require
Bonus pay, holiday pay, sick
Needed for Local Work
computer
literacy,
and vac pay. If you meet
BULLARD
6 days on - 2 days off
these requirements:
including word-processing,
CAR CARE
General
Hourly Training Pay
We have openings for expe- spreadsheets, e-mail, and
2 Years OTR- 25 yrss old
* at least 23 yrs of age
rienced Car Buffers, New excellent verbal and writTanker & HazMat
* minimum 24 mos tractorten communications skills.
Car Prep and Car
INVENTORY
CONTROL
Endorsements
trailer exp.
Inspection individuals.
p applications at
Pick up
MANAGER
Call Danny 800-274-1055
* clean MVR * Class A CDL
Nice
working
conditions.
Jackson County Civic
Of
Pickup
and
Truck
or 251-443-7055. EOE.
Call Marvin, 478-7667
Action, 5343 Jefferson
Call BALDWIN TRANSFER Accessories. Exp. Req’d.
M/F/D/V
CO
Top Pay and Benefits. Fax Located behind Joe Bullard Street, Moss Point, MS
at 251-433-3391 ext 111 or 128 Resume To Bob @ 666-8676
Cadillac/Hummer
39563 or mail re
esumes to
READY MIX
Beltline at Cottage Hill
Human Resources, P.O.
Or Email To
TRUCK DRIRoad
Box
8723,
Moss
Point, MS
bob@truckequipmentsales.c
DRIVERS WANTED
39562-8723.
om
Company Drivers & Owner
VERS
CAR
operators. Must be 23 Yrs
WASHER
Needed.
Teachers - must have
Old, 2.5 Years OTR
Good benefits package.
Auto dealer needs hardAA in Early Childhood
Experience. Regional Work
working individual who
Development
or related
&
Some
Local
Work.
Call
desires good, steady job.
SIGN ON
Randy at Safeway
degree with six ECD
Nice working conditions.
BONUS!
Transportation 8am-5pm
courses; prefer exp.
Must be 21 or older, must
251-694-7000
with 3-5 year olds.
pass drug screening and
Outdoor Recreation
Apply in person at:
shave clean driving record. Teacher Assistants
WEST
READY
MIX
Company looking for
2640 South McKenzie St,
No Phone Calls. See Jason High school diploma or
Exp’d Ready Mix
Teleservice
Foley, AL 36535.
or
Lee
GED,
6
months
exp.
workDRIVERS w/ Clean MVR Representatives exc work
or call 800-239-3879.
JOE BULLARD MITing with preschool chilApply at 6295 Hogg Rd., environment, flexible
SUBISHI
dren.
BALDWIN COUNTY
Eight Mile, AL 36613.
hrs., base + commission. 1017 S. Beltline HwyE/O/E
CONSTRUCTION INC.
Family Services Worker Call 251-679-1052
Call 228-497-3594 ext. 8050
Needs Class A or B CDL
AARON‘S SALES & LEAS- AA degree in Human
■
WAREHOUSE/DELIVERY
Dump Truck Drivers
Services
or AA degree
ING
CLASS A CDL Required.
251-947-7711
in related field with two
Securitas
Fax resume/qualifications
Customer
years related work exp.
to 251-476-1296
Security
Accounts Mgr Cooks - High school
Mechanic
Experience preferred but not diploma or GED,
Services
Night Mechanic
exp. in commercial food
★★★★
required. Must have good
Needed for Mobile area
driving record. Apply in per- services.
WE ARE ACCEPTING
AAA ASPHALT
trucking co. to perform minor
son:
940
N.
Schillinger
Rd.
Administrative Assistant APPLICATIONS FOR
& major repairs. Must have
251-607-7023
2 yr degree in office tech.,
SECURITY OFFICERS.
TANKER
own tools. Pay based on exp.
business,
computer sciAPPLY
AT
3737
GOVT.
Forklift
Drivers
&
Major medical, dental, 401k &
ence, or related;
DRIVERS NEEDED NOW! BLVD. STE 205 IN MOBILE, Laborers. Immediate
paid holidays. Call Joe @ 251AL. M-F 9AM - 3PM 251-666Min.
one
yr.
exp. in
Start at $11/hr plus
661-1232.
Openings! Call b/t 1-5pm,
1091
bonus pay
business or office work.
251-432-1054; 209-9243
Activity Specialist EOEM/F/D/V
BALDWIN CONCRETE
● Must have Class A CDL
AA degree in social work,
with
STAFF Needed for
education, business,
HIRING DRIVERS
Tanker and Hazmat
Fairhope dry cleaners.
or related plus one yr.
endorseClass Class B CDL
FORKLIFT POSITIONS coordination exp.
New ownership. Exp. not
ments,
plus
2
years
tractorDIESEL MECHANICS
WILL TRAIN - $12/HR
Train!
necessary,Will
Project Coordinator trailer experience.
Positions in the Baldwin
Call 251-473-8844 Train to
BS degree with major
● Must have clean MVR and Apply: 702 N. Section St.
Co. area. Pay depends on
operate a forklift and palFairhope
251-990-0602;
609course work in education,
be
experience.
let
7956
at least 23 yrs of age.
jack for local warehouse. communication, social
● Good pay and benefit pack
Exp’d
FT
FLORAL
● Competitive Wages
Perm $175 #384. Benefits work, or business adminage: vac pay, sick pay,
DESIGNER
● Medical Insurance
Medical, Pd Holidays vaca- istration; budgeting
holiday pay, bonus pay,
and supervisory exp.
for
Eastern
Shore.
Call
tion. START TODAY!
● Vacation Pay
BC/BS ins., etc.
preferred. ■
251-626-6323; ask for Dan
Call BALDWIN TRANSFER
Contact Kevin Jackson,
■ Company needs F/T
at
Gulf Shores 251-968-33888
Electrician. Good pay &
Spanish Fort 251-621-7982 433-3391, ext 114
benefits. Please Call
228-497-7316
120
120
■ LABORER Apply at
8400 Jim Ramsey Rd,
Vancleave, M-F, 7-5
★★★★★★
Attention!
24 People
Needed
Immediately
Mobile based company needs
people for all positions due to
new offices opening and
upcoming holiday promotion.
Applicants must need F/T and
like working with people
Call Thursday
only
$2000/mo
Start ASAP!
251-661-9435
EAGLE SECURITY &
PATROL
SERVICES, LLC
now hiring PT/FT Security
Officers. Call 251-649-5743
for appt. Mon-Fri 9am5pm.
ATTN: NOW HIRING
Carpet Cleaner & Water
Restoration. Must have
valid driver’s license &
good MVR. Must pass
Drug test. Will Train.
Benefits avail. Call for
Directions. Service Master
251-653-9333.
PAYCHECKS
AVAILABLE
Your voice needed. Pleasant
Atmosphere,
Guaranteed
Salary,
Group
Medical
Insurance. 251-662-1063
★★★★★★
15 F/T OPENINGS
HARD WORKERS ONLY
$400 WEEKLY
START IMMEDIATELY
CALL BILLY
251-635-1704
★★★★★★
■ ROUTE DRIVER
Needed for Local Vending
Co. Experience Preferred,
Benefits, 401k, Paid vacation. Apply in Person at
7900 Hwy 613 N. Moss
Point, 9-11am
or 1-3pm or Fax resume
to: 228-475-1665
We are now hiring F/T
Tree climbers. Must
have 2 yrs exp w/ drivers
license. $15 per hr.
228-860-2667
Securitas
Security
Services
G
★★★★
Evergreen
Transportation
OTR & LOCAL DRIVERS
Must be 23 yrs of age.
Clean MVR, hold a Class A
CDL.
BC/BS, paid vacation, 401k,
$600 sign-on bonus
For all drivers
Guaranteed $600 first
3 wks of employment
Rangeline Rd., Mobile
251-660-9570
Griffin Industries seeks an
honest & dependable DRIVER for local recycling
company to service area
customers, equipment,
delivery & light maintenance. Must have CDL &
clean record. Good pay,
benefits & safety bonuses.
Home each night. Call 1800-536-9804 8am-4pm.
CABLE TV INSTALLERS
&
BURY DROP CREWS
NEEDED Immediately!
Get paid to train & learn.
Paid holidays & vacation.
Must
have truck or van. Please
call
251-621-0505 for directions
to 25476 Friendship Rd,
Suite E, Daphne
General
We are accepting applications
for A RECRUITER/HUMAN
RESOURCE SPECIALIST.
Applicants must possess the
following:
● HS/GED
● Valid AL Driver’s License
● No Criminal Record
● Able to work days/evenings
● Willing to travel 2-3 hours
from Mobile, AL to recruit
● Advanced Computer Skills
Please apply at 3737 Govt.
Blvd., Ste. 205 in Mobile, AL,
Mon-Fri. 9am-3pm!
Ask for Jada Stanley
EOEM/F/D/V
PARTS PULLER NEEDED
Experience & tools a plus.
Apply in person: Joe
Pounds Auto Parts. 251-4734896
Canvas Products Company
has opening for INDUSTRIAL
SEAMSTRESS. 251-471-5308
VINYL SIDING APPLICATORS
Needed, Employee or SubContractor. Also GUTTER
INSTALLER Needed
e
Employee
Only. Call 251-634-9122
4'+06'4)4#6+10
%1705'.1450''&'&
61#55+56*744+%#0'
-#64+0#'8#%7''5
VQOQPVJ%QWPUGNQT2QUKVKQPU#XCKNCDNG
The Mississippi Press is seeking
applicants for the following position:
NEWS REPORTER
The Mississippi Press is seeking an aggressive, no-nonsense, stickler for truth,
fairness and accuracy to cover Ocean Springs and the surrounding areas.
The ideal candidate must be a relentless self-starter, who knows how to cultivate
good sources, get the story first and get it right in a highly competitive news market.
We need a reporter who understands that covering a beat is more than attending
meetings, but involves digging into issues and seeing trends. The position offers
excellent opportunities for growth and advancement at a newspaper committed to
excellence that is raising the bar in news coverage in South Mississippi.
The Mississippi Press offers an excellent pay and benefits package.
Interested candidates should send a resume, plus five to ten writing samples.
Send material to:
Steve Cox, Editor
The Mississippi Press
P.O. Box 849
Pascagoula, Miss. 39568
COPY EDITOR
The Mississippi Press copy desk is in need of an aggressive, no-nonsense stickler for
truth, fairness and accuracy. A strong pagination background is preferred, as well as
a solid working knowledge of grammar, punctuation and Associated Press style. The
ideal candidate is a relentless self-starter, who shares a strong commitment to raising
the bar in news coverage in a competitive media market, and who has a real passion
for the newspaper business. The Mississippi Press offers an excellent pay and
benefits package.
Send a resume and five to ten samples of your work to:
Steve Cox, Editor
The Mississippi Press
P.O. Box 849
+PVJGHQNNQYKPICTGCU
$KNQZK$TQQMJCXGP%CPVQP%NGXGNCPF%QNWODWU)WNH
RQTV*CVVKGUDWTI*GTPCPFQ,CEMUQP.CWTGN/E%QOD
/GTKFKCP0CVEJG\2CUECIQWNC2GCTNQT2KEC[WPG
#UUGUU&KURNCEGF+PFKXKFWCNŏU%KTEWOUVCPEGU
+FGPVKH[$CTTKGTU2TQXKFG%QWPUGNKPI
+FGPVKH['ORNQ[OGPV6TCKPKPI1RVKQPU
4GSWKTGOGPVU
/CUVGTQT$CEJGNQT&GITGGKP%QWPUGNKPI5QEKCN
9QTM)WKFCPEG%QWPUGNKPI%CTGGT)WKFCPEGQT
[GCTUGZRGTKGPEGKPVJGCDQXGCTGCU
5GPF4GUWOGD[0QXGODGT
4GKPVGITCVKQP%QWPUGNQT
/5&GRCTVOGPVQH'ORNQ[OGPV5GEWTKV[
#6601HſEGQH)TCPV/CPCIGOGPV
2QUV1HſEG$QZ
,CEMUQP/5
(CZ
'OCKNYKCAQIO"OFGUOUIQX
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
The Mississippi Press is an equal opportunity employer, (M/F).
Read the Classifieds
Now Early Morning Delivery!
/&'5KUCPGSWCNQRRQTVWPKV[GORNQ[GT2TQITCOVJCVJCUCWZKNKCT[CKFUCPFUGTXKEGUCXCKNCDNGWRQPTGSWGUV
VQKPFKXKFWCNUYKVJFKUCDKNKVKGU6&&66;(WPFGFD[75&GRCTVOGPVQH.CDQT/KUUKUUKRRK
&GRCTVOGPVQH'ORNQ[OGPV5GEWTKV[/KUUKUUKRRKKUCRTQWFOGODGTQH#OGTKECŏU9QTMHQTEG0GVYQTM
Deliver
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THIS IS AN OUTSTANDING
PART-TIME BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY!
We are looking for a dependable independent contractor to deliver The Mississippi Press for a few hours a day.
Must have dependable transportation and auto insurance is required.
Home Delivery Routes Are Available In The Following Areas:
• Vancleave • Ocean Springs • Moss Point • Wade
• Lucedale • Gautier • Benndale • Pascagoula • Hurley
If you are interested in a home delivery route, please call
228-875-8144 or 866-843-8911
6-B
120
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
General
EXP. MAINTENANCE
Person needed.
Experience in all phases
of maintenance, HVAC
certified. Apartment +
Salary. 228-497-4221 ■
Nursery & Mom’s Day Out
Workers needed immediately. Saraland 1st A/G. 907
Shelton Beach Rd. $6-$7/hr.
675-4216
ELECTRICAL HELPERS
Residential work.
Semmes area. $7/hr. Will
train. Leave info 251-6491120
Warehouse Delivery Driver
Full Time. Apply Within
932-A Butler Dr. Mobile,
AL
EXPERIENCED AUTOMOTIVE
PAINTER Needed For
Auto
Bake II, Schillinger Rd.
Contact Billy: 251-639-95445
DHL EXPRESS
Is seeking a service agent for
AM Shift. Duties include customer service, front counter,
phones, some warehouse
duties and other duties as
assigned. DHL is a global
company that offers many
opportunities for growth and
advancement. Please e-mail
your resume to
jeff.billingsley@dhl.com
or fax to 251-433-0502.
OFFICE ASSISTANT
needed for Real Estate
Co.. Must have computer
exp. Call 217-0887
Mon.-Sat., 9am-6 ■
WANTED: MERCHANDISERS
For Baldwin &
Mobile County Area.
We offer paid vacations,
excellent benefits & more.
GCD is a drug free work
place. Come join our family by applying in person
Monday-Wednesday from
8AM-4:30PM at:
Gulf Distributing, 3378
Moffett Rd, Mobile, AL
EOE.
NO TELEPHONE CALLS
PLEASE.
SALES CLERK needed
for Boutique. Some sales
exp. req’d. FT & PT.
217-0887 Mon-Sat 9am-6■
SECURITY
OFFICERS
Full and Part time positions
Also weekend Guard Shifts of
6-8 hrs each. No experience,
we will train you.
Call Capt. Ward 251-633-0994
FULL TIME JOBS
Paid training in power
plant operations, welding,
metal working or mechanics. Bonuses as high as
$20,000. No experience
required. We provide tools.
Full medical and dental.
HS grads and seniors ages
17-34. Paid relocation. For
more information call 1888-255-6289, M-F, 9-4.
Grounds Person &
Maintenance Person needed. Apply in person 6427
Airport Blvd. Monday5.
Friday, 9-5
OFFICE FURNITURE
SYSTEMS INSTALLER
Experience pref’d. $8.00/hr
to
start. Call 251-990-3058
MOBILE HOME PERSON
needed to block & tie
Mobile
homes. 251-583-4998
$7-$12/hour, PT/FT
Very busy prof. seeks
dependable person for
errands, laundry, shopping,
office help, more. Ideal
candidate can travel occasionally and is avail. more
than wkdys. E-mail: (No
attachments)
stalwartmgr@yahoo.com
DISTRIBUTION
LINEMAN
Experience a Must!
334-222-7022 Ext 25
For More Details.
NOW HIRING
GENERAL LABORERS for
the State Docks Needed. Avg.
Pay $10-$12/hour. Call
Partners 251-675-6840, 656-5675
NOW ACCEPTING
Applications for Bell Ringers.
Apply Mon-Fri., Must
have 2 valid ids. 9am-4.
3217 Nathan Hale Ave.,
Pascagoula ■
PRESSERS NEEDED
No phone calls.
Apply at Jaguar Cleaners
6405 Cottage Hill Rd.
Field Technicians for a
Water & Sewer Company
needed in the Kiln &
Ocean Springs area. Must
have valid driver’s license
& pass drug screening. 1800-866-3561
AVON - Free Sign-Up!
Earn extra $$ for Xmas!
ISR 251-610-9846
NOW HIRING: DELIVERY
DRIVERS. Apply Anytime
at
Steak-Out, 4680 Airport
Blvd.
BODY TECHNICIAN
Needs 10 yrs exp. I Car
certified. Benefits. 850-4341029
Accounting firm has
immediate opening for a
FILE CLERK/RUNNER
Monday-Friday 8-5 position
with mileage reimbursement. Experience in an
office setting helpful. Send
resume to:
PO Box 160748, Mobile, AL
36616 or fax to 251-342-0454
DETAIL PERSON
Must have body shop experience. 850-434-1029
MOBILE GREYHOUND
PARK
now hiring Lead-Outs
Apply within
JANITORS
2nd shift, part time,
workers needed. Private
school.
Ideal job for retirees.
251-470-9026 8am-3pm
120
General
125
RestauratHotel-Lounges
128
Management
■ F/T Bill collector. Exp.
Req, Salary + comm. &
benefits. 228-475-1401
★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★
DAYS INN & SUITES,
TILLMAN’S CORNER
Automotive Used
NOW HIRING
Car Sales
Front Desk &
AAA - Avon. Earn $$ for
Housekeeping
Manager
Christmas. $10 to start.
Expd Only. Must be able to
Call 767-2048
work
Hill-Kelly Dodge-Jeep, a high
Large company has imme- any shift. Apply in person: volume-award winning ‘‘E’’
8AM - 3PM.
diate openings for the folDodge dealership located in
lowing departments:
Pensacola, FL is now acceptHiring Dancers
ing
● Insulation
applications for a Used Car
For Bachelor & Bachelorette
● Garage Doors
Sales Manager. Candidate
Parties No Exp Req. Call
● Fireplace
should have prior sales
Steve
● Shelving & Gutters
251-604-4132; 649-8939 lv msg. management experience with
Great benefits include
impeccable references, be
401K, medical, dental, life Exp’d WAIT STAFF. Must highly motivated, well organ& disability insurance.
ized
be mature, pleasant,
Must have valid drivers
appealing. Split shift 11am- and have prior work experience
license and pass drug
2pm & 5pm-10pm. Apply:
in a CSI oriented environscreen. Apply in person
Captain’s Table, Battleship
ment.
2609 Old Shell Road, Mobile Parkway on the Causeway.
Top pay and benefits packSOUTHERN QUALITY
age.
BARTENDER NEEDED:
MOTORS NOW HIRING: Daily Double, 7311
For a confidential interview
call
Experienced Manager,
Theodore Dawes Rd. No
Mr. Tom Reed at 850-476-9078;
Sales Person & Secretary Phone Calls Please.
OR
FAX
resume
w/ history,
251-649-3100
references and salary
ARE YOU ANXIOUS FOR
GROUNDS PERSON
requirements
to
850-478-2235.
A GREAT OPPORTUNITY
needed. Apply in person
AND EXPERIENCE? All E.O.E. Drug-Free Workplace.
★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★
MS National Golf Club in Mississippi restaurants are
Gautier, 8am til 1pm
hiring for Crew & Shift
Mon.-Fri. 228-4
497-2372
Managers at premium pay.
MANAGER
Apply at any Mississppi
restaurant or fax
TRAINEES
REWARD
Delmonica Washington 251NEEDED
662-0285 or email: delYOURSELF
moni2@aol.com
Looking for a challenging
with Bonuses, Double
Holiday Pay,
Advancement opportunities, Flexible hours,
Paid Vacations and
Health
& Life Insurance.
Join our team at the
family owned
Burns Oil Company.
Friendly Clerks &
Store Manager
Needed.
Call Mike O’Quin at
228-475-1555
Burns Oil Company
Equal Opportunity
Employer
job? Looking for a great
place to work? Join the
Management Team at AMERICA’S THRIFT STORES and
put your leadership skills to
work. We are seeking selfHOLIDAY INN
motivated individuals who
BELLINGRATH
want to be successful and
is looking for the best in
help others at the same time.
the hospitality industry. If Our company is founded on
Christian principles and supyou
are a smiling, motivated, ports family-oriented
guest service oriented per- Christian ministries locally
and around the world.
son come join our team
Competitive wages and an
today!
excellent benefits package
based on education and expeNOW HIRING:
rience. On-site interview is
● Housekeepers
required. EOE
Valet Needed for night
shift at Sammy’s, Great
Pay!! Call Steve 251-6044132; 649-8939 lv msg
130
MedicalDental
138
Part
Time
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
150
Sales
OPHTHALMIC ASSIS★★★★★★
TANT
Hiring: Jack of All Trades.
Looking for a great place
Painting, Cleaning Rugs,
to
Janitorial, You Name It.
work? We are looking for a
Call 251-478-8449
motivated, experienced
ask for James btwn 10-3.
Ophthalmic Technician
Full-time.
Professional
Benefits incl. BC/BS.
Certification a plus
-Technical
157
TradeCraftsSkills
e retail
Full & part-time
sales position available.
rpenters & Nail
Wanted Car
Base plus commission.
Drivers. $11-$15/hr. Call
Retail and/or flooring sales 251-639-1983 554-9980
experience a plus but not
PLUMBERS NEEDED
required. Please call
IMMEDIATELY. Serving
(251)633-8835
South
Seeking Talented Designer
Baldwin County. Call for
with furniture experience
interview 251-967-5661
to
join SALES staff at largest SHEET ROCK FINISHER
ARCHITECTURAL
SURGERY SCHEDULER
w/Valid Drivers License.
furniture
store
on Gulf
DRAFTSMAN
Medical Office Exp.
CALL 251-661-3000
Coast.
5 yrs exp for commercial
Required.
Located
7
miles
from
AUTOMOTIVE TECHNIOphthalmology practice, architecture firm in
beaches.
CIAN
Computers skills a must. Mobile. Salary DOE; full
Fun and fast-paced work required for busy shop.
benefits. Fax resume to
Able to multi-task.
environment. Fax resume $600 weekly guarantee.
251-343-5505
Scheduling/Ins Precert
to:
Vacation & health insurexperience preferred.
Mississippi Security Police
Malouf Furniture &
ance. 251-454-7968.
now hiring Security offiDesign,
Apply Immediately to:
cers for our Chevron
Attention: Sales Manager Large company has immeVISION PARTNERS, Attn: Pascagoula Refinery
diate openings for a
251-955-5153
Office Manager
ract. Prior Law
Contr
GARAGE DOOR SERVICE
Fax 251-650-1010
Inside Sales, Machinery, E. TECHNICIAN. Experience
Enforcement or Armed
Email:
Shore, Nat’l Market.
Forces Exp preferred.
preferred. Great benefits
vpettway@vp2020.com
Communication, WP/DB,
Apply in person 3003
include 401K, medical, denComputer Skills req.
Pascagoula St.,
tal, life & disability insurSpanish speaking a ++.
agoula, MS. E.O.E
Pasca
ance. Must have valid drivLPNs or RNs
Base, Comm., Benefits. PO ers license and pass drug
Autocad Mechanical
Box 99, Stapleton, AL
screen. Apply in person
Detailer
● Full-Time 2PM-10AM
36578.
2609 Old Shell Road, Mobile
Needed. Entry level.
● RN: Full-time 10P-6A
Vacation, insurance. Send
AND
Electricians
resume to Engineering
SALES POSIPRN’s
Manager, PO Box 249,
Jobs in Bay St. Louis Area
TION
Saraland, AL 36571
$20/hr. 2 hrs travel time.
141
● All Shifts
Must have Alabama Nursing
License and possess a working knowledge in long term
care. New wage scale. Pay
Based on Experience.
Benefits available, 401k plan.
Apply in person at:
KINDRED HEALTH CARE
1758 Springhill Ave., Mobile,
AL.
EOE
ESTIMATORS
Now taking applications
for motivated individual
for Estimator/Project
Manager for the Gulf Coast
area. Minimum 6 years
experience. Competitive
wage and benefit package.
All applications are confidential. Fax resume to 251661-1181 or apply in person
J. C. Duke & Associates,
1716 Industrial Park
Drive, Mobile, AL 36693
Immediate sales position
open for highly motivated
individual.
5 day work week, paid training, salary + comm + benefits.
No exp necessary, will train.
Credit America, Apply in person at GFAC, 156 N. Beltline
Hwy, Mobile. 251-470-9780
I
145
130
154
135
123
157
150
125
138
128
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
CLASSIFIEDS
TradeCraftsSkills
Local Manufacturing
Company seeks
INSTALLER
Must have valid drivers
license. Pay DOE. 251-4734400
Forklift Drivers &
Laborers. Immediate
Openings! Call b/t 1-5pm,
251-432-1054; 209-9243
157
TradeCraftsSkills
BRICK MASONS
needed. Must have own
transportation. 251-232-8312.
PIPEFITTERS/WELDERS
OVERTIME/PER DIEM
800 890-9376
EOE
IMMEDIATE NEED
SHIPFITTERS
Exp’d Rolling Steel or
PIPEFITTERS-WELDERS
Hollow metal Door Tech.
PIPE WELDERS
Paid vacation, Benefits,
ELECTRICIANS-OUTSIDE
Christmas Club, Paid
MACHINISTSHolidays & Insurance. Call
PAINTER BLASTERS
Rachel 251-645-1016
INSULATORS
JOINERS
EXPERIENCED
CONSTRUCTION WORKTOP PAY- Per Diem
ERS
Included
all trades needed. 228-217251-473-1541; 877-473-1541
6444
CONCRETE FINISHERS
EXP METAL STUD
needed. Must be able to
Mechanic.
form & pour. Exp. only
Must have valid Drivers
251-689-0330
License. CALL 251-661-3000
MAINTENANCE
COMMERCIAL ELECTRIMILLWRIGHTS
CIANS
& EXP’D HELPERS
Basic
Understanding of the
needed. Contact 850-968Following:
6691
CARPENTERS for framing in
Fairhope & Mobile area.
$50/day for electricians
Local Mobile work at Ipsco Experience needed. 251-649Steel, $18.50/hr & $40/day for
6755
Journeyman Electricians
Written test given. Drug test BUCKET TRUCK OPERATORS
required. Bring hard hat,
safety glasses and steel
& GROUNDMEN/BOBCAT
toed shoes.
OPERATORS for tree servApply in person at
ice.
G.A. West
Pay based on exp. Drivers
12526 Celeste Road
license a must, CDL a
Saraland, Alabama
Chevrolet Dealership (new
Crane Operator &
facility) located in
Mechanic.Now Hiring, Top
Citronelle, AL now taking
★★★★
pay. Apply at 12057 DIP.
applications for:
7am-4:30pm. 251-973-0034
CNA
(2) EXPERIENCED
Service Manager
EOE
TEACHERS & (1) VAN
Service Technicians
CLASS
DRIVER Needed. Apply at
Detail Personnel
A 1st Class Welder, 1st
2732 Mill St. b/t 9am-12pm
Sales
Class Pipefitter &
SAAD’S
Noon Mon-Fri only.
● Houseman
Endless opportunity!
Structural Welder. Apply
CNA TRAINING CLASS
SALARY: $23,400.00 to
● Bellmen
Great
Benefits!
8517
Bellingrath Rd,
Has Openings
The Town of Pine Hill has
$34,400.00 per year based on
(251) 866-5100 for appoint● Bartenders
Theodore between 7-3:30
For Our Next Class
an Opening for CERTIeducation
&
experience.
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
ment
● Cocktail Servers
FIED POLICE OFFICER.
$275
HVAC Installers Needed.
GROUNDSKEEPER /
Salary negotiable. EOE.
Local Wholesale Lumber
PLUS $40 BOOK FEE
LOCATIONS: Gulfport, Ocean
Competitive wages and
Caretaker needed. Apply
WE OFFER:
For info call Chief John
Starts November 7, 2005
Springs, Mobile & Baton
Co. seeks inside sales per- benefits available. 21530
in person at: Serene
● Competitive Pay
Brown at 334-963-4351
Call 251-343-9600
Rouge.
son, 3-5 years of lumber
Professional Dr.
Memorial Gardens, 12800 ● Paid Time Off
ales Robertsdale. 251-947-5972
DENTAL ASST. w/chair- ■ Pascagoula Law Firm and building material sa
Hwy 613 N., Moss Point,
WORK EXPERIENCE: 1-2
● Holiday Pay, Vacation
preferred.
Send
resume
to
Seeks F/ T Workers
side exp. PT/FT. West
DUCT MECHANIC &
MS 39562 228-475-1246 ■
years minimum
● Major Medical
attn: Manager, P.O. Box
Mobile.
Comp Paralegal. Exp.
HELPERS WANTED
● Dental
5237, Mobile 36605
Fax resume: 251-661-9523 preferred. Send resume
DRIVER/DELIVERY
EDUCATION: HS, GED or
2
years exp req’d. Good
● Positive Work Environ
above
Person Needed for Furn
to: Office Manager
SALESPERSON needed.
driving
File
Clerk
needed
at
Store, Growth Potential.
Self motivated & experiPO Box 1407,
record.
Call 251-510-5755
NO PHONE CALLS
Doctor’s Office, P/T, 12:30APPLY IN PERSON:
Call 251-605-1137
enced. Kitchen Tune-Up.
Pascagoula, MS 39568
PLEASE
5:00, Mon-Fri. Fax
AMERICA’S THRIFT
AC Service Tech &
Call 251-554-0639
STORES
APPLY IN PERSON.
Civil Estimator and
resume to 228-875-1335 ■
Warehouse Worker needed.
LUBE TECH
★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★
312 Schillinger Road
5465 Highway 90 West
Project Manager.
Estes Heating & Air. 251Needed.
Mobile
LPN needed Mon-Fri for
Mobile, AL 36619
Experience with Site Work Start a Career in 443-7837.
busy Internal Medicine
and Utilities. Fax resume
Good Benefits package
OR E-MAIL TO
FRONT DESK CLERK
Automotive Sales Carpenter’s, Carpenter’s
Office. Fax resume to
to 251-631-3961
ethrift@americasthrift.com
Helpers and Framers
7AM-3PM. Apply Best
Please Apply in person at:
228-875-1335. ■
Needed in Gulf Shores and
Certified Water Operator
Western
2640 South McKenzie St,
NO
PHONE
CALLS
Orange
Beach area. Long
& Waste Water Operator
Inn, Battleship Parkway,
Local auto dealership needs
Foley, AL 36535.
CNA/Caregiver, N/S, prion the Causeway.
honest, sharp-dressed, cus- term,drug free environor call 800-239-3879.
vate home, W Mobile. Must needed. Must have valid
ment, immediate work
tomer
driver’s license & pass
be avail. nights/weekends
MANAGEMENT POSIMoorer YMCA needs
friendly salespeople. No
avalible. Call 251-269-1141
drug screening.
TION for local tax office. 251-607-9270
LIFEGUARDS & SWIM
ASHBURY HOTEL &
experience required. We will or 251-968-7958
1-800-866-3561
Must have knowledge &
INSTRUCTORS. Great job
SUITES
train promising candidates.
PRN Occupational
experience in income tax
for
We
Now Hiring for the
ENERGETIC CERTIFIED
Therapist
offer a great pay plan. Demo
college students, flexible
preparation. Salary DOE.
Following Positions:
TEACHERS needed at
Needed for Orthopedic
plan
and
401K
available.
hours
Bonuses are available.
Practice, Hand Experience Sylvan. Send resume to:
Become a part of our award& great pay. 251-438-1163 ● Front Desk
Mail resumes to: Baber’s
Preferred. Send Resumes 820 S.
winning
sales
team.
Apply
IT OPERATOR
or 251-421-2959
University Blvd. Suite 2-C,
● Banquet Server & Set Up Inc., 2500 Amonett St.,
to:
in person to Tim Poppell at
Pascagoula, MS 39567
● Room Attendants
P.O. Box 86144 Mobile, AL Mobile, AL 36609 or fax
WAREHOUSE &
Hill-Kelly Dodge Eastern
The Mobile Register has an
resume: 251-460-0651
or fax to 228-312-0387 ■
36689 E.O.E.
Shore
DELIVERY Help needed.
immediate opening for an
Excellent Starting Pay
1812 Hwy. 98, Daphne. E.O.E. IT OPERATOR
Apply in person:
STORE MANAGER w/
BC/BS,
Holiday
Pay,
Vac.
Drug-Free
Workplace.
RetailTaylor Furniture, 11000
The hours for this position
Retail Furn. Sales Exp.
No phone calls please.
Apply in person at
are
Hwy 63, Escatawpa.
Stores
★★ ★★ ★★ ★★ ★★
$40K + Benefits. Call 251600 S. Beltline Hwy.
based on a two week
No phone calls please. ■
605-1137
NO PHONE CALLS
alternating
schedule.
★★★★★
Industrial Distributor seeks
PLEASE
Week one:
The Paralyzed Veterans
CUSTOMER SATISFACINSIDE SALES PERSON
Sat
&
Sun,
12Noon-12am
of America, Bayou GulfMedicalTION
for conveyor belting/rubber
CRACKER BARREL in the
Exp. Dental Assistant
Week two:
State Chapter Located at
COORDINATOR
Dental
products. Experience preEastern Shore Center is
Mon-Thurs, 10pm-3am
wanted for busy estab3004 Bienville Blvd., Suite
College educated preferred ferred. Fax resume to 251Now Hiring for all posiAdditional
hours
MEDICAL ASSISTANT to lished office. Please fax
to assist sellers of window 431-0299. Email
2, Ocean Springs, MS
may be added as needed.
tions
resume to 228-712-2370
work with Orthopedic
treatments/upholstery in lkeuler@turnersupply.com
39564 is hiring for the posi- ● Full & Part Time
Surgeon in patient care.
store setting. 251-479-0667 or mail JOBS, P. O. Box
tion of Clerk/Bookkeeper. ● Great benefits
Requirements include a high
★★★★★★
Solo practice in West
school diploma. Ideal for a
Applicant must be comIn our efforts to re-open 1428, Mobile, AL 36633.
● Flexible schedules
Mobile.
Hours
8-5
or
negocollege student pursuing a
puter literate and must
our
MOBILE,
Dauphin
● Top pay
computer degree. Desire gentiable. EOE. 251-479-1441
SALES
RN’s
have exp in the
Square
● $200 sign-on bonus
s.
eral knowledge of main
preferably between 8-5,
following programs:
TIRED OF A JOB location
we
are
holding
a:
No phone calls please.
frame computer systems and
week
days.
LOOKING
FOR
A
CAREER?
RN’s needed for Hurricane
Word/Microsoft Publisher
Apply in person CRACKER
*JOB FAIR*
5 SALESPERSONS NEEDED desktop pc’s. Must have good
Stricken areas:
2003/Excel/Power Point.
communication skills & the
BARREL
■ CNA NEEDED
5
day
work
week.
Above
averMonday,
Nov.
7th
New
Orleans,
Mississippi
Gulf
We are an equal opportu- 30227 Eastern Shore Center
For More Information,
age earning potential. Full ability to work under little
between
Coast, Texas & Florida.
nity employer. Salary
Spanish Fort, AL
benefits package. Paid train- supervision. Must be respect10AM - 5:00 PM
High compensation including
Call 228-474-3201
dependent upon exp. Send
ing. Salary + commission. ful of authority and use conWe are seeking:
high expense allowances, at
THE PILLARS
resumes & salary infor$35K-$55K first year. Contact cerns. Must be very accurate
STORE MGMT.
least 3 week stays. For more
Is Hiring
mation to the address listDanny Kinard 251-626-5558 for & have good attention to
KEY HOLDERS &
information contact:
PHYSICAL
detail. Interested applicants
interview
SALES ASSOCIATES
ed above.
Saad’s Healthcare Personnel,
should apply in person on
MANAGER & PANTRY
JOB
FAIR
LOCATION:
1515 University Blvd or call
THERAPIST
Wednesday from 1-4pm at the
A ROUTE HELPER
Dauphin Square
CHEF / LINE CHEF
251-343-9600. EOE
Mobile Register, downtown
NEEDED
3226
Dauphin
St.
Best pay in Mobile.
Full & Part-Time & PRN
★
★
★
★
★
★
Resumes may be
$9/hr. Apply in Person at
Mobile, AL 36606
Telemarketing Mobile.
Benefits
Alabama License Required
emailed to mprhr@mobileregTrovinger Vending, 3710
avail. Apply within Monister.com or faxed to 251-219PHONE
PROS
Halls Mill Rd. b/w 12-1pm.
MEAT CUTTER
Fri
5099.
OffshoreSPEECH &
Here’s your chance. Now
2-4pm 1757 Government St.
EOE
Marine
hiring am and pm shifts.
Excellent benefits. Great
LANGUAGE
Hair Stylistwork place. 89 yr. old compa- Top pay + bonuses. Auto
FRONT DESK CLERKS
OIL
FIELD
POSITIONS
Personal
AUTO BODY PERSON
PATHOLOGIST Fitter/Welder combo &
ny. Fantastic future. Very
dialers. 251-661-5098
and HOUSEKEEPING
Experience w/ References
y. 2 yrs.
competitive salary
Service
PERSONS needed for
shore exp
Riggers. Offs
exp. in handling beef & pork
$60,000+ Per Year.
PAYCHECKS
PRN or Part-Time. Must
Airport Inn. Please call
preferred. Some overtime
req’d. Send Resume to:
Hair salon looking for
Rettig’s 251-343-2300
have Masters Degree &
251-344-3410 and ask for
AVAILABLE
and weekends required.
Greer’s Food Tiger
Shampoo and Customer
Alabama Licensed. CCC.
Alex
Personnel Dept.
Your voice needed. Pleasant ELECTRICIAN needed.
251-957-6529
Serviice Assistant. 4358-C
28500 West Main Street,
Atmosphere,
Guaranteed Heavy control background.
Apply in person at:
DIAMONDS
Old Shell Rd. 251-343-8106
Experienced Deckhands
Prichard, AL 36612
Salary,
Group
Medical Benefits and truck. Phone
KINDRED HEALTH CARE
Is Accepting Applications
Experienced
100
Ton
Near
*****Great*****
Insurance.
251-662-1063
251-694-0909, fax 251-6941758 Springhill Ave., Mobile,
for
Coastal Captains.
An Equal Opportunity
**Stylist Opportunity**
0977.
AL.
Dancers & Doormen.
Employer
Competitive Pay Scale.
If you love cutting hair in
EOE
TradePlease
APARTMENT/BUILDING
Good Benefits. 800-245-9825 OFFICE DEPOT - Daphne
a
Apply in Person after 7pm CLINICAL DIRECTOR for
Maintenance Person
Craftsor Apply Online at
fast-paced salon, we have a
now hiring Computer,
at 4664 Airport Blvd. See new state-of-the-art ASC in
Steady
year around work
lytalenterprises.com
Rare Opportunity for you!
Skills
Technology Sales
Lamar. No Phone Calls. Fairhope, AL. Candidate
in
town.
Exp. & Refs.
(no
Associates
F/T
&
Cashiers
Apply: Summertree Office,
NOW HIRING!
will have responsibilities
ALL AMERICAN P/T Competitive Rates,
clientele needed), as we
NOW HIRING
608
Azalea
Rd
Experienced
SIGN
for
policy
&
procedures
provide
Benefits, Flexible
MARINE
All Positions
INSTALLER. Must be jourplus supervisory role for
awesome floor traffic,
Fiberglass Laminators
Schedules.
Call
251-626-4040
SERVERS,
BARTENDERS,
neyman
w/CDL.
Top
pay,
all Clinical employees. ASC ***Boat Jobs***
salary,
Fabricators & Machine
to schedule an interview.
benefits. 251-653-0555
commissions, and benefits! DISHWASHERS & BUSSERS. exp. & AL nursing license
Operators needed.
NOW HIRING! TOP PAY!
Apply in
req’d. Please fax resume
CALL 251-455-6548 TODAY
GREAT
BENEFITS!
Experienced
& Trainees.
AC
SERVICE
TECHS
person ONLY Mikato
251-990-9990 or email
Sales
Immediate openings for AB’s,
Top pay, health-disability- Pay dependent on exp.
Japanese
HAIRDRESSER NEEDED
ap311@bellsouth.net
OS’s,
Captains,
Eng,
Unl
Eng
Apply
in
person:
8201
dental-life
insurance,
401K,
Steak House, 364 Azalea Rd.
Only Team Players Need
w/emd exp., Q-Med’s,
Between 1-2 Mon-Fri.
paid vacations and holi- Zeigler Blvd. No phone
To
■ MEDICAL ASS’T - F/T, Tankermen. Exp. Offshore &
EXPERIENCED ROOFcalls.
days,
Apply! Call 251-990-9934
Inland Deckhands. Entry
Our hearts go out to all the Medical office experience
ING
spiffs and bonuses. Drug
level deckhands needed up to
required. Excel
victims of Hurricane
SALESMAN NEEDED.
PLUMBERS
free work place. Apply @
$95
per
day.
www.americanbenefits.
Fax
resume
RestauratKatrina. In the wake of
Top Commission Paid, Lotts
Climate Control, 7291
crewing.com
&
HELPERS
to
228-938-0705
or
mail
to
this
tragedy,
McDonald’s
of
Leads.
Mississippi
&
Hotel-Lounges
Cottage Hill Rd. 251-633or call 251-443-7771
MS Press, P. O. Box 849
Wanted. Company paid
would like to help. We are
Alabama Area. 251-633-2016
3356
Medical & Dental & Life
HOUSEKEEPERS NEED- now accepting interviews
Attn. 779A. Pascagula, MS Local Company now hiring
A Prominent National
10 Paid Holidays,
ED
39568
for Crew, Maintenance &
INLAND DECK HANDS
PIPE FITTERS Insurance,
Industrial Distributor of
Retirement Plan -Company
Good benefits. No experi- Exp’d Managers for FT,
Pay based on experience.
pipe,
Match, Overtime. Call Amore
Dental Office Admin Clerk Must have valid driver’s
&
ence
PT or Temp. positions. If
Plumbing Company
valves and fittings has an
Multi dentist clinic needs
necessary. Call Microtel we can help you, please
license,
PIPEWELDER
251-626-9535
opening for an
Inn Suites, Daphne. 251-621- give us a call. 251-478-0701 self motivated indiv with
reliable transportation,
r
ienced
Exper
For Panama City, FL
’‘whatever
it
takes‘‘
attiSIVALLS, INC.,
7807
proof
Shutdown.
Inside Sales
HOMEWOOD SUITES
tude for busy front desk,
HAS OPENING FOR
of insurance, ability to
Will be welding and fitting
Now Hiring for SERVERS,
Representative.
by HILTON
must have exp processing pass criminal background
Schedule 120 Carbon Steel
BUSSERS & LINE COOKS
Is Now Hiring For:
dental insurance claims,
A.S.M.E.
check and drug screen. 251Pipe. Only experienced need
Please apply in person
We offer competitive
GUEST SERVICE MAN- patient scheduling, etc.
433-2079 ext 3
CODE WELDERSapply. $20.00/hour. $100.00/
LONE STAR STEAKcompensation, incentive
AGER
Send resume and ref’s to
day per diem.
3G
AND 6G
HOUSE
SUITE ATTENDANTS
Facility Manager, 2727
Apply in person at:
100 Ton Captains package andfitsfringe bene$13.00 - $15.00/HR.
3704 Airport Blvd, Mobile
GUEST SERVICE
Pleasant Valley Rd.
G.A. WEST
Lic/Unlic Engineers, D/H’s
Must
pass
drug test
including profit sharing
AGENTS
Mobile, AL, 36606 or fax
12526 Celeste Road
■ EXP. HOUSEKEEPER
NOW HIRING! TOP PAY!
& physical
and
Great Benefits &
Saraland, Alabama.
251-479-4709
& Night Desk Clerk. No
Great
benefits
Sign On BONUS! 401-K savings plan. For
Call 251-679-1965
Opportunity
phone calls please. Apply
Minimum 2 years
Ask for Sonny
NO AGENCY! NO FEES!
confidential consideration
for Growth. Apply within DENTAL HYGENIEST PT
at Deluxe Inn & Suites.
faberciation expercience
West Mobile. Fax resume: INTERNATIONsend resume and salary
at:
DR. REMODELING now
7105 Hwy 63. Moss Point.
required
251-661-9523
history
to:
530 Providence Park Dr E.
hiring for all positions.
AL
Must pass 3G Test on
Needed SERVERS,
Email: homewood.mobile@
Sales, Production
LPN
for
Neurology
pracPlate & 6G Test on 2”
CORPORAKITCHEN STAFF, HOST,
nobleinvestment.com
BOAT RENTALS MCJUNKIN
Management,
tice. Send resume: 6701
TION
DINING ROOM MGR.
Office Management and
GRAND OPENING! Mobile
Exp’d SERVERS & HOST- Airport Blvd., B-215,
Contact Us By Phone At
P.O. BOX 1723
Beach House Grill on
Sub
Contractors.
Office
MOBILE, AL 36633
432-337-3571
n ESS needed at Spot of Tea Mobile, AL 36608
Causeway. Apply in person
6215 RANGELINE Bldg. 205
Fax resume to 251-653-0485
Restaurant, 310 Dauphin
An Equal Opportunity
or call 251-653-0484
RESTAURANT MANDENTAL
251-443-1110
St.
AN AAP/EOE/M/F//DV/V
V/A
Employer
AGERS
Apply in person btwn 7am
Journeyman and
EMPLOYER
HYGIENIST
& GMS NEEDED
and
A SMOKE FREE WORK- Apprentice Plumbers needPart
10 am. No phone calls.
General
ed. Call Jimco @ 251-633PLACE
Full-Time
position
in
Time
Great Way to Jump8003.
Pediatric Dental Practice.
NEEDED SALES PEOLaborers
Start Your Career.
Management Successful applicant must Earn $700 - $900 mo. as an PLE for Roofing &
Local Work
Project Manager
demonstrate good communi- independent distributor for
Construction Co. Income
Multi-Unit Restaurant Co.
cation skills and be able to Newspapers. M-F, 3 hours
for construction site in
Worldwide
averages
$50K-$120K
per
now seeking exp’d manwork cooperatively in an a morning. No weekends.
Mobile. Min 5 yrs exp in
SALESPERSON
agers. $75k potential. Exc.
Labor Support
active team environment. Routes available in Mobile. year. Must have sales
large commercial building.
Apply in person, Red Tag
background. 251-473-7700.
compensation pkg, ins.,
Please send resume to The
Fax resume to 256-442-6680 or
228-762-3418
Great
for
retirees.
Call
251Furniture,
5363
Hwy
90
W,
Leads & raining will be
bonus. Resume to:
Mobile Register PO Box #2488email
800-748-1395
209-9006
provided.
428, Mobile, AL 36630
gbryant@dawsonbuilding.com
PO Box 1985, Mobile 36633 Mobile.
G
157
plus.
251-401-8733
● Flat, vertical and overhead welding
● Shop Equipment
● Pipe Fitting
● Power Transmission
Componets
● Pneumatic Componets
Must be able to perform
preventive maintenance
jobs and Basic structural
and sheet metal layouts.
Evening Shift (4:30PM 3:00AM). Exp Only. $12.00
Start
EXPERIENCED
PLUMBERS New constr.,
LUMBER GRADER
Repair & Remodel. Must
have references and valid
drivers license. 251-666-1002 High Production SYP Mill
has full time position open
for experience Lumber
Immediate
Grader or Grader Trainee.
Opening!
Exp in lumber business
preferred but not required.
CARPENTERS & CARPENTER
HELPERS to work on FEMA
trailers in Mississippi.
Top pay, Per diem
8235 Padgett Switch Rd
Irvington, AL. 251-957-1095
EOE. Drug free workplace
Qualification: Physically
fit, excellent vision, good
eye-hand coordination.
Must be able to read and
write, follow oral and written instructions, good
mathematic skills and be
able to read tape measure
(fractions).
CARPENTERS &
ROOFERS needed. Must
have 2 yrs exp & transportation. T&J Investments
Excellent benefits.
251-508-1841; 251-458-1975.
Resumes to: PO Box 1663,
Mobile, AL 36633
TRUCK EQUIPMENT
SALES-Mobile AL,
Sign On Bonus
Needs Mechanics w/
$250.00
Hydraulic/Welding or Fab.
1st Class Only
Exp., Pay up to $14.50 per
Structural Welders
hour F/T
(FC w/ ceramic tape
& Stick with backing strap)
Benefits available
Mig Welders
800-633-6946 / 251-666-8606
(Multi-pass w/ heavy wire
Exp. needed)
Shipfitters
Pipefitters
welders
Pipew
Outside Machinists
Electricians
Maintenance
Crane Operators
Tech
Out of town work
Heavy Overtime
Worldwide Labor Support
FT. Must have exp. in woodwlrk, plumbing, & electrical.
(228) 762-3418
Must be HVAC Cert. Apply in
(800) 748-1395
F
person to: 2880 Dauphin St
Mobile, AL 36606. EOE
CONVEYOR BELT
SPLICING TECHNICIAN
Belt splicing or millwright
experience desired. Full
time work. Benefits. Local
established company. Fax
resume to: 251-431-0299 or
E-mail resume:
lkeuler@turnersupply.com,
Mail to: Belt Job, PO Box
1428,
Mobile, AL 36633
Certified Pipe Welders,
Pipefitters, & Millwrights
needed. Drug screen req.
917
Apply in person: UOG, 69
Stennis Blvd, Pascagoula,
MS
9:00am M-F (228) 475-3360
ELECTRICAL HELPERS
Residential work. Semmes
area. $7/hr. Will train.
Leave info 251-649-1120
MAINTENANCE TECHNICIAN
Needed for Apartment
Complex
Exp’d TIRE CHANGER
Apply Chatom Tire, 432 So Apply in person, Mon-Fri,
9AM-4PM, 3800 Michael
Craft Hwy, Chickasaw
Blvd. EOE
LUBE MECHANIC
SUPERINTENDENT
Needed. Exp. w/servicing
For Commercial
heavy construc. equip. 251Construction
653-5410
Projects. 5+ Years experiIRON WORKERS needed.
ence
Vacation, holiday pay,
required. Drug Screen
health insurance. Apply
Required.
8155 Morris Hill Road,
Fax Resume to 251-661-1181
Semmes, AL
or
Apply in person @ J.C.
Q.C.I. MARINE OFFDuke
Assoc.,
1716
SHORE, LLC Now hiring
Industrial Park
for all crafts: 1st Class. We
Drive, Mobile, AL.
offer top pay. Please call
228-762-8126 228-934-2453 or
Carpenters
fax resume 228-762-3687
CABLE TV INSTALLERS
&
BURY DROP CREWS
NEEDED Immediately!
Get paid to train & learn.
Paid holidays & vacation.
Must
have truck or van. Please
call
251-621-0505 for directions
to 25476 Friendship Rd,
Suite E, Daphne
GULF COAST CUSTOM
WHEELS needs experienced C&C MACHINE
OPERATOR
with aluminum welding
exp. Contactt Rick 251-4735588.
Cabinet Makers &
Finishers
Experienced Only.
Top pay, Start
Immediately.
Call 251-401-1308
GLOBAL EMPLOYMENT
Has Jobs on Mississippi
Gulf
Coast Shipyards for all
Shipyard Crafts & Out of
State
Work for Mig and Flux
Core
Welders. Good Pay &
Hours.
Call 1-877-762-9899
FRAMING & TRIM CARPENTERS-Top pay.
Baldwin County work. 251379-3542 626-0800
PAINTERS
Needed with at least 3 yrs.
exp. New residential. 251989-9888
NEEDED. 251-401-8457
GLAZER
with experience in
Residential & Commercial
251-605-0931; 473-5363
STUCCO
PLASTERERS NEEDED
Must Have Own
Transportation
Call 251-895-0383
CABINET MAKERS &
Finishers Wanted. Exp
Only! Quality Cabinets Inc.
251-661-9079
PIPE-LAYERS & LABORERS
for water, sewer and
drainage
projects. Experienced only
need
apply, Must be drug free.
Mon thru Fri. 8 am - 5pm
251-457-7500
■■■■■
DIESEL
MECHANIC
Needed for local trucking
company shop. Must be able
to work immediately without
ve own
supervision. Must hav
tools. ★ NEW STARTING
PAY SCALE. Hourly rate
based on experience. ★
Please call Mike
at 251-433-3391 ext 105
■■■■■
Construction Help needed. SHEETROCK FINISHERS
HANGERS NEEDED
Sheetrock finishing and/or
Must Be Experienced
carpentry exp. a plus. Only
Dependable. 251-591-8194
reliable applicants need
apply. Ron Cherry
COUNTER PERSON for
Construction 251-973-0111 Busy Auto Salvage Yard.
METAL ROOFERS NEED- Willing to Train. Call 251456-1432
ED
No Experience Required
PLUMBERS
251-751-5820
Master & Journeyman
Journeyman plumber. Pay
Needed
based on exp & ability.
for Comm Work, Top Pay
Start today! Call Jessie
Benefits, OT Avail. 251251-609-2925
583-7218 or Fax 251-666-1143
762-CRAB
Janis . . . .934-1463
Karen . . .934-1477
Paulette . .934-1476
Sasha . . .934-1441
157
TradeCraftsSkills
157
TradeCraftsSkills
ELECTRICIANS
Skilled
Residential/Remodeling
Carpenters and
Foreman,
$18/hr & $4/hr per diem.
Carpenters Helpers needed
Work 6 days a week. Call
immediately
for full time
228-381-1115; 228-381-8327
employment. Send resume
Immediate Opening for
or apply in person @ J. C.
SIGN FABRICATORS.
Duke & Associates, 1716
Welding, electrical & sheet
Industrial Park Dr.,
metal exp helpful. Apply at
Mobile, AL 36693
Quality Sign Co., 3650
Experienced workers needHamilton Blvd.
ed in Carpentry & metal
Carpenter
roofing. Call 251-679-7564
Foreman/Supervisor
Accepting applications for
Needed for Commercial
HVAC TECHNICIAN.
Construction Project. Must
Competitive pay and benebe willing to work with
tools. Send resume to: 200 fits. Fax resume to 251-6533466 or call
Government St., Ste 101,
251-653-3477 for appointMobile, AL 36602 or Fax
ment.
to: 251-432-8046
MAINTENANCE
AUTO MECHANIC NEEDneeded. Must have own
ED, Irvington area for
tools & truck. Must know
major and minor repairs,
must have own tools. Pay Section 8. Background
check req’d. Call Mon-Fri,
based on experience.
Medical & dental insurance 9-3, 251-473-9445.
avail. Paid holidays, vaca- STRUCTURAL FITTERS
tions and uniforms fees.
& HELPERS needed for
Call Lamar 251-957-3031
local fab shop. BC/BS,
401K, vacation. Apply at
EXPERIENCED
9490 I-65 Service Road,
ROOFERS!
LOTS OF JOB, TOP PAY Exit 22, Creola, AL
CALL 251-421-0754
Elevator Constructors
Recruiting Apprentices
LABORERS needed for
in the Mobile/Pensacola/Ft
local
work. Miracle Landscaping . Walton/ areas for its 4
year program. Must be 18
251-479-1048 or 479-1049
years or older, have H.S.
EXP. CARPENTERS,
Diploma or GED, pass an
Drywall, Roofers &
aptitude test and be able to
Laborers. Reliable trans. perform work of the trade.
a must. Call 497-5136 ■
A $25 testing fee is
ADVANCED TRANSMIS- required at the time of
test. Send request for appl
SION
& more info post marked
in Spanish Fort seeking
no later than 11/15/05
R&R Person. Must have
experience and own tools. NEIEP-124 PO BOX 55397.
Great benefits. Drug test- St Petersburg, FL 33732.
EOE & Drug free.
ing required. Call 251-6266061 for interview.
Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices Legal Notices
places of residence, post
office address and street
address are unknown to
Plaintiff after diligent
search and inquiry to
ascertain the same.
3. ANY AND ALL PERSONS
OR
PARTIES,
REAL OR CORPORATE,
HAVING OR . CLAIMING
ANY RIGHT, TITLE OR
INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED
LAND SOLD FOR TAXES
ON AUGUST 30, 1999, VIZ:
LOT 8, FORBES S/D OF
LOTS 7 & 8 W H MYERS
TR S/D DB 45-201 DB 77-61
(M769.25), PARCEL NUMBER 21330009.000.
You have been made a
Defendant in the suit filed
in this Court by Plaintiff,
SOUTH
ALABAMA
TRUST COMPANY as
Custodian for Chauncey W.
Hall, seeking to confirm its
title to the property
described above, acquired
from a tax sale on August
30, 1999 for taxes for the
year 1998, while assessed
to Laura Collard.
You are required to
mail or hand deliver a
written response to the
Complaint filed against
you in this action to
JAMES B. WRIGHT, JR.,
Attorney for the Plaintiff
whose address is P.O. Box
249,
Ocean
Springs,
Mississippi, 39566.
YOUR
RESPONSE
MUST BE MAILED OR
DELIVERED
NOT
LATER THAN THIRTY
(30) DAYS AFTER THE
27TH DAY OF OCTOBER,
2005, WHICH IS THE
DATE OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS
SUMMONS. IF YOUR
RESPONSE IS NOT SO
MAILED
OR
DELIVERED, A JUDGMENT BY
DEFAULT
WILL
BE
ENTERED
AGAINST
YOU FOR THE MONEY
OR
OTHER
RELIEF
DEMANDED IN THE
COMPLAINT.
You must also file the
original of your response
with the Clerk of this Court
within a reasonable time
afterward.
Issued under my hand
and the Seal of said Court,
this the 18th day of
October, 2005.
TERRY
MILLER,
CHANCERY CLERK OF
JACKSON
COUNTY,
PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI
BY: Theresa P. Liddell,
D.C.
No. 3t 10/27-11/3-10
SERVICE TECHNICIAN
Drag Line Operator & Sand Seeking ambitious people
w/ mechanical bkgrd to
Dredge Operator Needed in
Pensacola, FL. Must Have replace hydraulic hoses on
various types of heavy
Experience. 850-477-35554
machinery & equip. Exp. a
IMMEDIATE OPENINGS:
+. Must be dependable,
Underground utility
have own tools & clean
(pipeline) contractor now
driving record. Service
hiring heavy equipment
vehicle provided. Sales &
operators, pipelayers,
product training given.
laborers and drivers
Apply: Reliable Hose
including dump,
Service 1436 W I-65 Service
service/mechanic, CDL
Rd South
Class A or B, hazmat a
$$$ AUTO TECHNICIAN
plus. Clean MVR, must
$$$
pass drug screen, competitive pay and benefits.
Very
busy
repair
shop on
Please apply in person to
the Eastern Shore now hir1301 North Wilson Ave.
ing
Prichard, AL.
experienced & qualified
PAINTERS F/T, Reliable Auto Techs, Tire Changers
workers w/ reliable trans- and
portation. Will train
General Service Techs.
Excellent pay. 5 day work
Long term employment.
week, uniforms,
228-826-5160/ 228-327-3596
medical/dental, incentive
Hiring Immediatley
plan, salary + commisSkilled Carpenters &
sion, modern equipment,
Laborer’s. Call 251-605-3315.
good working conditions.
EEOC
Start immediately! Call
FLEET
Greg 251-626-0002, 604-5066
IN THE CHANCERY
MAINTENANCE/DIESEL
COURT OF JACKSON
★★★★★★★★★
MECHANIC. Working on
COUNTY,
MISSISSIPPI
MAINTENANCE PERSON
trucks and trailers. Must
CONNIE SAJWAJ and
CALL 251-456-1432
have own tools. Clean
STACEY GODWIN
MVR. Able to pass DOT,
HELP WANTED FOR
PLAINTIFFS
physical & drug screen.
HOME
VS.
Call 251-679-1052
IMPROVEMENT COMPA- CIVIL ACTION NO. 2005NY
Foster’s Painting NEED STRONG WORK 1752-PW
JACKSON COUNTY, MIShiring. Work in Mobile area.
ETHIC.
SISSIPPI; JIM HOOD IN
251-645-9911, 605-9100
251-607-9112
HIS
CAPACITY
AS
JOE KELLY DRYWALL
ATTORNEY GENERAL
Exp. PLUMBERS
needs exp’d residential
FOR THE STATE OF MISfor New Construction.
DRYWALL HANGERS.
Benefits Avail. 251-379-6576 SISSIPPI; ANTHONY LA
Top money. 251-423-6342.
WRENCE IN HIS CAPACITY
AS
DISTRICT
Resumes
ATTORNEY FOR JACKBender
SON COUNTY, MISSISShipbuilding
SIPPI;
MICHAEL
MOBILE’S FINEST
LAMAR
DEANGELO;
RESUME
Is Now Hiring For
FAGAN;
800 Downtowner Blvd Suite RANDOLPH
The Following Crafts:
JOEDNA FAGAN; AND
A
ANY
AND
ALL
PERSONS
251-344-4253
- Crane Operators
HAVING OR CLAIMING
ANY LEGAL OR EQUIJob
APPLY IN PERSON
INTEREST IN
MUST PASS DRUG SCREEN
Information TABLE
THE
FOLLOWING
PROPERTY
CHECK FIRST DESCRIBED
SOLD FOR TAXES ON
THE MOBILE REGISTER
SUGGESTS THAT BEFORE AUGUST 28, 2000, THE S
MAKING AN INVESTMENT 3/4 OF LOT 7 DELWOOD
IN RESPONSE TO AN AD, SURVEY AS RECORDED
TE IN DB 1133-334 SEC 35-6-6
THAT YOU INVESTIGAT
THE OFFER WITH AGEN- (M669.67), PARCEL NUMCIES SUCH AS THE BETTER BER 01735690.220
BUSINESS BUREAU AT 433- DEFENDANTS
5494 OR THE CONSUMER
SUMMONS BY PUBLICALocal Surveying Company PROTECTION AG
GENCY IN
TION
seeking Party Chief &
MONTGOMERY, AL AT 1-800THE
STATE OF MISSIS392-5658.
Instrument person. Exp
SIPPI
req’d, Drug Free
TO:
Workplace. Call 251-9681.
Defendant,
2124 or fax resume to 251MICHAEL
LAMAR
968-1840
DEANGELO, who is, if livTRIM CARPENTER
ing, an adult non-resident
w/valid Drivers License.
IN THE CHANCERY
of the State of Mississippi,
CALL 251-661-3000
COURT OF JACKSON
or who was not found withCOUNTY,
MISSISSIPPI
■ Maintenance Tech needin the State of Mississippi
SOUTH
ALABAMA
by Plaintiff after diligent
ed for 114 unit property.
TRUST COMPANY as
search and inquiry personPsacgoula area, HVAC
Custodian for Chauncey W.
ally made by Plaintiff and
cert. Apply in
Hall
whose present place of resperson: 3015 Eden St,
PLAINTIFF
idence, post office address
Pascagoula, or on line:
VS.
and street address are
www. lanecompany.com
CIVIL ACTION NO. 2005unknown to the Plaintiff
NO PHONE CALLS
1754-JB
after diligent search and
Auto Painter’s Assistant JACKSON COUNTY, MISChapman’s Paint & Body SISSIPPI; ET AL PAR- inquiry to ascertain the
same, and if dead, his
Shop. Apply in person,
CEL
NUMBER
unknown
heirs-at-Iaw,
5824 Hwy 90, Theodore
21330009.000
legatees, devisees, execuBoat Manufacturer seeking DEFENDANTS
tors, administrators, and
SUMMONS BY PUBLICAExperienced Laminators
legal representatives, each
TION
and Mold Builders.
of whom is an adult nonTHE ST ATE OF MISSISStarting pay DOE. Foley
resident of the State of
SIPPI
area. 251-209-8019
Mississippi or not to be
TO:
found therein, none of
Immediate
1. Defendant, LAURA
whom are. known to
COLLARD, who is, if livOpenings
Plaintiff and each of whom
ing, an adult non-resident
was not found within the
of the State of Mississippi,
INSIDE MACHINISTS
State of Mississippi by
or who was not found withWELDERS & FITTERS.
Plaintiff after diligent
in the State of Mississippi
Apply in Person at
search and inquiry personby Plaintiff after diligent
SPI/Mobile Pulley Works
ally made by Plaintiff and
905 South Ann St, Mobile
search and inquiry personwhose names, present
251-653-0606
ally made by Plaintiff and
places of residence, post
AUTO DETAILER TECH whose present place of res- office address and street
Will train the right person idence, post office address address are unknown to
Paid training w/exc growth and street address are Plaintiff after diligent
unknown to the Plaintiff
potential. $400-$550/wk.
search and inquiry to
Valid drivers license req’d. after diligent search and ascertain the same.
Drug free. Apply in person inquiry to ascertain the
2. ANY AND ALL PERat 2675 Government Blvd., same, and if dead, her SONS
OR
PARTIES,
Mobile.
unknown
heirs-at-law,
REAL OR CORPORATE,
legatees, devisees, execuExp’d Sectional Door
HAVING OR CLAIMING
tors, administrators, and
ANY RIGHT, TITLE OR
Installer needed in
legal representatives, each
INTEREST IN THE FOLMobile. Top pay.
of whom is an adult nonLOWING
DESCRIBED
Holidays, Benefits,
resident of the State of
LAND SOLD FOR TAXES
Insurance, paid
Mississippi or not to be
ON AUGUST 28,2000; VIZ:
vacation & Christmas
found therein, none of
S 3/4 OF LOT 7 DEL
Club. Contact Rachel
whom are known to
WOOD
SURVEY
AS
251-645-1016
Plaintiff and each of whom
SHOP & SERVICE MAN- was not found within the RECORDED IN DB 1133334
SEC
35-6-6
(M669.67)
AGER
State of Mississippi by
PARCEL
NUMBER
For Truck Equipment
Plaintiff after diligent
Installations. Top Pay And search and inquiry person- 01735690.220.
You have been made a
Benefits.
ally made by Plaintiff and
Fax Resume To Bob @ 666- whose names, present Defendant in the suit filed
in this Court by Plaintiffs,
8676 Or Email To
places of residence, post
bob@truckequipmentsales.c office address and street Connie Sajwaj and Stacey
Godwin, seeking to conom
address are unknown to
firm its title to the properPlaintiff after diligent
PARTS PULLER needed
ty
described
above,
search and inquiry to
for busy salvage yard.
acquired from a tax sale
Must Have Own Tools. 251- ascertain the same.
on August 28, 2000 for
456-1432
2.
Defendant,
taxes for the year 1999,
Printing Company needs McKINLEY COLLARD, while assessed to Michael
who
is,
if
living,
an adult
small press
Lamar Deangelo. You are
non-resident of the State of
operator/bindery
required to mail or hand
Mississippi, or who was
operator. Good driving
deliver a written response
not found within the State
record
to the Complaint filed
required. Call 251-583-6583 of Mississippi by Plaintiff against you in this action
after diligent search and
to JAMES B. WRIGHT,
TIRE
inquiry personally made
JR., Attorney for the
by Plaintiff and whose
SERVICE
Plaintiff whose address is
present place of residence,
P.O. Box 249, Ocean
Change and repair tires for post office address and Springs, Mississippi, 39566.
address
are
truck fleet. Check fleet for air street
YOUR
RESPONSE
unknown to the Plaintiff
pressure, tires needing
MUST BE MAILED OR
repair. Must have exp. Help after diligent search and
DELIVERED
NOT
in shop with minor repairs. inquiry to ascertain the
LATER THAN THIRTY
S&M Transportation
same, and if dead, his
(30) DAYS AFTER THE
245 Jacintoport Blvd
unknown
heirs-at-law,
27TH DAY OF OCTOBER,
Saraland, AL
legatees, devisees, execu2005, WHICH IS THE
Evergreen Transportation, tors, administrators, and DATE OF THE FIRST
Inc.
legal representatives, each
PUBLICATION OF THIS
Mobile terminal now hiring of whom is an adult nonSUMMONS. IF YOUR
resident of the State of
1st Shift
RESPONSE IS NOT SO
Mississippi or not to be
MECHANIC & found therein, none of MAILED OR DELIVERED, A JUDGMENT BY
2nd Shift FUEL whom are known to DEFAULT WILL BE
Plaintiff and each of whom
AGAINST
ISLE ATTEN- was not found within the ENTERED
YOU FOR THE MONEY
State of Mississippi by
DANT
OR
OTHER
RELIEF
Plaintiff after diligent
Both must have
DEMANDED IN THE
search and inquiry personvalid drivers license
COMPLAINT.
ally made by Plaintiff and
Call Melvin
You must also file the
whose names, present
251-660-9570
160
G
170
Legal Notices
7-B
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
original of your response
with the Clerk of this Court
within a reasonable time
afterward.
Issued under my hand
and the Seal of said Court,
this the 18th day of
October, 2005.
TERRY
MILLER,
CHANCERY CLERK OF
JACKSON
COUNTY,
PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI
BY: Theresa P. Liddell,
D.C.
No. 95339 3t 10/27-11/3-10
IN THE CHANCERY
COURT OF JACKSON
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
L.A. OFFSHORE, INC.
PLAINTIFF
VS.
CIVIL ACTION NO. 20051751-JB
JACKSON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI; JIM HOOD IN
HIS
CAPACITY
AS
ATTORNEY GENERAL
FOR THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI;
ANTHONY
LAWRENCE
IN
HIS
CAPACITY AS DISTRICT
ATTORNEY FOR JACKSON COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI;
CARIBBEAN
MARINE
SERVICES,
INC.; AND ANY AND
ALL PERSONS HAVING
OR
CLAIMING
ANY
LEGAL OR EQUITABLE
INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED
PROPERTY SOLD FOR
TAXES ON AUGUST 30,
1999, VIZ: LOT 37, BLK 66,
GULF PARK EST S/D DB
665-335 (M883.2). PARCEL
NUMBER 05403978.000
DEFENDANTS
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
TO:
1.
Defendant,
CARIBBEAN
MARINE
SERVICES, INC., its successors and/or assigns, a
corporation not authorized
to do business in the State
of Mississippi, who may
have an interest in said
property, who was not
found within the State of
Mississippi by Plaintiff
after diligent search and
inquiry personally made
by Plaintiff and whose
present post office address
and street address are
unknown to the Plaintiff
after diligent search and
inquiry to ascertain the
same.
2. ANY AND ALL PERSONS
OR
PARTIES,
REAL OR CORPORATE,
HAVING OR CLAIMING
ANY RIGHT, TITLE OR
INTEREST IN THE FOLLOWING
DESCRIBED
LAND SOLD FOR TAXES
ON AUGUST 30, 1999, VIZ:
LOT 37, BLK 66, GULF
PARK EST S/D DB 665-335
(M883.2) PARCEL NUMBER 05403978.000.
You have been made a
Defendant in the suit filed
in this Court by Plaintiff,
L.A OFFSHORE, INC.,
seeking to confirm its title
to the property described
above, acquired from a tax
sale on August 30, 1999 for
taxes for the year 1998,
while
assessed
to
Caribbean
Marine
Services.
You are required to
mail or hand deliver a
written response to the
Complaint filed against
you in this action to
JAMES B. WRIGHT, JR.,
Attorney for the Plaintiff
whose address is P.O. Box
249,
Ocean
Springs,
Mississippi, 39566.
YOUR
RESPONSE
MUST BE MAILED OR
DELIVERED
NOT
LATER THAN THIRTY
(30) DAYS AFTER THE
27TH DAY OF OCTOBER,
2005, WHICH IS THE
DATE OF THE FIRST
PUBLICATION OF THIS
SUMMONS. IF YOUR
RESPONSE IS NOT SO
MAILED
OR
DELIVERED, A JUDGMENT BY
DEFAULT
WILL
BE
ENTERED
AGAINST
YOU FOR THE MONEY
OR
OTHER
RELIEF
DEMANDED IN THE
COMPLAINT.
You must also file the
original of your response
with the Clerk of this Court
within a reasonable time
afterward.
Issued under my hand
and the Seal of said Court,
this the 18th day of
October, 2005.
TERRY
MILLER,
CHANCERY CLERK OF
JACKSON
COUNTY,
PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI
BY: Theresa P. Liddell,
D.C.
No. 95337 3t 10/27-11/3-10
THE CHANCERY COURT
OF JACKSON COUNTY.
MISSISSIPPI
KAREN
S.
GILLY,
MICHAEL GENE GILLY
AND DEREK ANDREW
MEDJESKY
PLAINTIFFS
CAUSE NO. 2005-2128 PW
VERSUS
JOSEPH
ANTHONY
MEDJESKY
DEFENDANT
SUMMONS TO A DATE
CERTAIN
THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF JACKSON
TO:
Joseph
Anthony
Medjesky, who is believed
to be a non-resident of the
State of Mississippi, or not
to be found therein after
diligent
search
and
inquiry, and whose name,
place of residence, post
office, street and house
addresses are unknown
after diligent search and
inquiry to ascertain same.
You have been made a
Defendant in the suit filed
in this Court by Karen S.
Gilly, Michael Gene Gilly
and
Derek
Andrew
Medjesky, Plaintiffs, seeking
to
establish
a
Guardianship for Derek
Andrew Medjesky, and
seeking other relief.
You are summoned to
appear and defend against
the Complaint filed against
you in this action at 9:30
o’clock A.M. on the 3rd
day of January, 2006, in the
Chancery Courtroom of
the Temp. Jackson County
Courthouse in Pascagoula,
Mississippi and in case of
your failure to appear and
defend, a Judgment will be
entered against you for the
things demanded in the
Complaint.
You are not required to
file an answer or other
pleading but you may do
so if you desire.
Issued under My Hand
and the Seal of Said Court,
this the 20th day of
October, 2005.
Terry Miller, Chancery
Clerk
Jackson County Chancery
Court
Theresa P. Liddell, D.C.
(SEAL)
No. 95358 3t 10/27-11/3-10
Jackson
County
Civic
Action Committee, Inc. is
accepting proposals for the
following items:
Metal roof
Sheetrock replacement
Commercial freezer
Commercial refrigerator
Commercial dishwasher
Commercial preparation
table
Commercial range
Classroom cubbies, chairs,
tables, storage units, rugs
and sleeping cots
Leased car
Please call 228 769 3292, ext
103 for specifications or
pick them up at 5343
Jefferson St. Moss Point,
MS 39563 between the
hours of 8:00 a.m. – 4:30
p.m. The deadline for
accepting proposals is
November 11, 2005 at 4:30
p.m. You may mail your
proposal to P.O. Box 8723;
Moss Point, MS 39562-8723
or deliver to the above
street address.
JCCAC
reserves the right to reject
any or all proposals.
No. 95354 2t 10/27-11/3
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
IN THE CHANCERY
COURT OF JACKSON
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ESTATE OF HELEN
ANN
JUILLERAT,
DECEASED
CAUSE No. 2005-1514 RP
CHRISTINE ELISE GARDENER
PETITIONER
SUMMONS
THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
TO: THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS
AT
LAW
of
HELEN ANN JUILLERAT, Deceased, whose identities and addresses are
unknown after diligent
search and inquiry made
to ascertain the same, who
are adults, if they be living
and are non-residents of
the State of Mississippi, or
not to be found therein
after diligent search and
inquiry, and who whose
places of residence, post
offices, street and house
addresses are unknown
after diligent search and
inquiry to ascertain same,
and if dead, their unknown
heirs-at-Iaw,
devisees,
executors, administrators,
or legal representatives,
all non-residents of the
State of Mississippi, or not
to be found after diligent
search and inquiry, and
whose place of residence,
post
offices,
street
addresses are unknown
after diligent search and
inquiry to ascertain the
same.
You have been made
Defendants in the lawsuit
filed in this Court
The
Petition
filed
against you is a civil
action seeking to determine the heir-at-Iaw lagatees of HELEN ANN
JUILLERAT, Deceased, as
fully set out in the Petition
on file in this cause.
YOU ARE SUMMONED
TO
APPEAR
AND
DEFEND AGAINST THE
PETITION
FILED
AGAINST YOU IN THIS
ACTION AT 9:30 O'CLOCK
A.M. ON THE 3RD DAY
OF JANUARY, 2006, IN
THE COURTROOM OF
THE JACKSON COUNTY,
TEMPORARY FACILITY
CIVIC
CENTER,
AT
PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI; AND, IN CASE OF
YOUR
FAILURE
TO
APPEAR AND DEFEND,
A JUDGMENT WILL BE
RENDERED
AGAINST
YOU FOR THE RELIEF
DEMANDED IN THE
PETITION.
You are not required to
file an answer or other
pleading but you may do
so if you desire.
Issued under my hand
and seal of said Court, this
21st day of Oct., 2005.
TERRY MILLER
Chancery Clerk
Jackson
County,
Mississippi
P. O. Box 998
Pascagoula, MS 39568-0998
BY: Martha J. O’Connor,
D.C.
No. 95364 3t 10/27-11/3-10
LEGAL NOTICE OF
AVAILABILITY
OF
FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT
On September 26, 2005
after
review
of
the
E n v i r o n m e n t a l
Assessment on Project SPSTP-0066-01(0088)
in
Jackson
County,
the
Federal
Highway
Administration issued a
“Finding of No Significant
Impact” (FONSI).
The
proposed project is for
improvements to State
Route 57 from Interstate 10
to Vancleave.
The
Draft
E n v i r o n m e n t a l
Assessment document will
be available for public
inspection
at
the
Mississippi Department of
T r a n s p o r t a t i o n
Administrative
Office
B u i l d i n g ,
Environmental/Location
Division, 401 Northwest
Street, Jackson, MS; the
MDOT
Sixth
District
Office, Hattiesburg, MS;
the MDOT Sixth District
Project
Office,
Ocean
Springs, MS; the Jackson
County
Board
of
Supervisors, Pascagoula,
MS; the Jackson County
Chancery Clerk’s Office,
Pascagoula,
MS;
the
Vancleave Public Library,
Vancleave, MS; and the
Federal
Highway
Administration, 666 North
Street, Suite 105, Jackson,
MS.
E. Claiborne Barnwell
Environmental Engineer
Miss.
Department
of
Transportation
No. 95375 1t 11/3
USE
THE
CLASSIFIEDS
TO SELL, BUY,
TRADE, FIND
OR LEARN!
JUST
PICK UP
THE PHONE
AND CALL
762-1112 OR
875-8144
TO PLACE
YOUR AD NOW!
★★★★★★★★
LEGAL
NOTICES
DEADLINES
PUBLISH
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Sunday
DEADLINE
Wednesday
5pm
Thursday
5pm
Friday
5pm
Monday
5pm
Tuesday
5pm
Wednesday
5pm
For Information Regarding
Legal Notices Call
Telina Birch (228) 934-1420
★★★★★★★★
SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION
IN THE CHANCERY
COURT OF JACKSON
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
IN THE MATTER OF
THE ESTATE OF WYATT
WALDEN, DECEASED
NO. 2005-2077 PW
JUANITA
WALDEN
MOORE, PETITIONER
SUMMONS TO A DATE
CERTAIN
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI
COUNTY OF JACKSON
TO: THE UNKNOWN
HEIRS-AT-LAW
OF
WYATT
WALDEN,
DECEASED, who are
adults, if they are living
and are non-residents of
the State of Mississippi, or
not to be found therein
after diligent search and
inquiry, and whose places
of residence, post office,
street and house address
are unknown after diligent
search and inquiry to
ascertain the same, and if
dead, their unknown Heirsat-law, devisees, executors, administrators, or
legal representatives, all
non-residents of the State
of Mississippi or not to be
found after diligent search
and inquiry to ascertain
the same.
You have been made a
Respondent in the lawsuit
filed in this Court by
JUANITA
WALDEN
MOORE,
seeking
to
declare the sole and only
Heirs-at-law of WYATT
WALDEN, the following:
JUANITA
WALDEN
MOORE, BOBBIE JEAN
RODRIGUEZ, SHIRLEY
LYONS,
LESTER
WALDEN,
BEVERLY
WILDER and MAXINE
RAMSAY and seeking
other relief.
YOU ARE SUMMONED
TO
APPEAR
AND
DEFEND AGAINST THE
PETITION
FILED
AGAINST YOU IN THIS
ACTION AT 9:30 A.M. ON
THE 13TH DAY OF JAN.,
2006 IN THE CHANCERY
COURT OF JACKSON
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI,
IN PASCAGOULA, MISSISSIPPI; AND IN CASE
OF YOUR FAILURE TO
APPEAR AND DEFEND,
A JUDGMENT WILL BE
ENTERED
AGAINST
YOU FOR THE RELIEF
DEMANDED IN THE
PETITION.
You are not required to
file an answer or other
pleadings, but you may do
so if you wish prior to the
hearing of this matter.
ISSUED UNDER MY
HAND and seal of said
Court, this the 27th day of
Oct., A.D., 2005.
TERRY
MILLER,
CHANCERY CLERK
BY: Martha J. O’Connor,
D.C.
No. 95399 3t 11/3-10-17
420
Miscellaneous
Wholesale Salvage
Going Out of Business
Sale! Take an extra 25%
off our already low
prices! All inventory
& equipment must go!
Public notice is hereby
Open Thur-Fri-Sat 9-3
given that the Planning
Commission for the City of GUN SAFE, LIBERTY
Gautier will hold a public
Lincoln LX25, Glossy
hearing in the courtroom
Burgundy 790#,
of the Municipal Building,
5’x30”x27”. $1200/obo
3330 Highway 90, Gautier,
You Haul. 228-762-7597
MS at 6:00 P.M. on
Thursday, November 17, DOUBLE CAR Garage
2005 to hear a request from Door. Excel Cond.
FLOYD SEAL for a CON- $500. 238-0708
DITIONAL USE PERMIT
that would allow tempo- AC/HEAT UNIT 3.5 Ton
rary housing for hurricane Electric. 7 yrs old. Good
relief workers for a period cond. $950 474-2841
PUBLIC NOTICE
GPC # 05-061
FLOYD SEAL
CONDITIONAL USE
of 6 months at the follow- QUALITY STORAGE
ing location:
BUILDINGS
Built on site!12X12, $1595
7900 MARTIN BLUFF
12X16, $1895;16X24, $2695
ROAD
251-625-1626, pg. 423-9283
THREE OAKS VILLAS
SOD, CENTIPEDE, St. AUG
GAUTIER, MS 39553
Bermuda. Delivery/Install 228At the aforementioned 396-0282 1-866-374-7277
time and place, all parties
in interest shall have an TRAILERS: 16ft utility,
6X8, 5X10, 18ft, goose
opportunity to be heard.
neck, car hauler &
WITNESS my hand this
dump (601)766-3700
1st day of November, 2005.
Ralph E. Hode, Director
Community Services
No. 95405 1t 11/3
Pets/Animals/
Livestock
Merchandise
480
305
Antiques
J & B ANTIQUES
✭ New Shipment
✭ Quality Furniture
✭ Certified Appraisal
Services
Quality Furniture Repair
& Refinish. 769-0542
310
Appliances
DRYER, ELECTRIC.
Looks & runs good.
$85. 522-0072
WASHER & DRYER Set,
Electric. Good cond.
$225. 228-522-0072
320
Auctions
AUCTION
FRIDAY, NOV. 4th
■ 11:00 AM ■
Hwy 72, Spanish Fort, AL
2000+ SF HOME
ON 3 1/2+ ACRES.
Bonds Realty & Auction
Howard Bonds #0533
251-626-0197
www.hbondsauctions.com
335
Building
Materials
STEEL ROOFING & SIDING
Galvalume & Colors from $9.95/sq
Goldin Metals, Inc. 800-777-6216
NEED
A ROOF?
STEEL ROOFING
& SIDING
Majestic Metals, Inc.
1-800-647-8540
Pets
for Sale
MIN-PINS. Ready for
Christmas, Dep Holds
228-769-8819 / 228-990-8431
Chihuahua, Male, black &
white. 9 wks old, shots.
228-369-8568 / 228-369-8323
Real Estate
Residential
Jackson
County
3br 2ba 2100 sq ft Living
area, 2 utility rms, 20x20
shed, 990-5478 for details
NEED to Move FAST?
I can buy your house in a
flash! In 8 days or less!
(281)467-7284
G
510
370
375
515
Louis Phillip
Willis
Furniture
520
762-0028
385
525
G
530
ACTION ADS
540
Homes
in General
57 AC. S of Leakesville on
Hwy 63, 17 ac open, rest
wooded, 3 ponds, barn,
3br/2ba remodeled, also
small mini storage facility
completely rented,
only minutes from new
Hwy 63, $225,000.Cumbest
Realty, Hal Rounsaville,
601-394-5051/ 601-549-5981
2 STORY BRICK Home,
3 acre land, 4br/2.5ba,
pool, very nice, 4 mi N.
of Leakesville on Hwy 57,
only 1 mi from new Hwy
63, $169,000. Cumbest
Realty, Hal Rounsaville,
601-549-5981/601-394-5051
Any condition, any area,
any situation sell your
house quickly. 872-4628
550
Lots & LandJackson Co.
OCEAN SPRINGS
Gulf Hill Estates, West
El-Bonito. $35K 769-9291
VANCLEAVE 2-10 ACRE
tracts, ok for mobiles
homes. Owner financing.
Joe West Realty,
228-497-3797
22 Acres, 1000’ Frontage
on Hwy 614 Between
Wade & Hurley / $60,000
588-9203 / 355-0317
VANCLEAVE Ramsay
Oaks. Wooded lots for
homes only, Covenants,
Min. 1600 sq. ft.
Moss Point
& Esca.
645
Unfurnished
Apartments
REMODELED 1BR
$100/Dep, + $280/Rent,
** 990-7951***475-6813**
650
Unfurnished
Houses
DUPLEX SPECIAL
1br $295, 2br $395, 3br
$450, 4br $495, dep $300,
4901 Tanner St., Moss
Point, MS (510)517-6789
GAUTIER 2BR DUPLEX
Brick, a/c, drapes, city
water/ sewer, clean, quiet area,
$650mo. 875-7812 / 872-6203
G
GAUTIER, 3br, 1ba, newley remodeled, $700 mo
$300 dep, 228-219-8359
660Mobilehomes
Rentals
Forts Lake 2br/1ba, 14x50
No pets,total elect $350mo
$250Dep. 251-633-8825
Recreation
■ Indicates
Jackson
County
710
BoatsPower
1999 21.3 Contender
Yamaha 225, Saltwater
Series. T-Top, Top Gun
Outriggers, Saltwater
Washdown, Many Extras,
Alum. Tandem tlr. exc.
cond.. asking $29,000 D
228-875-3794 N 228-327-2234
ST MARTIN Jordan
Farms Partiallly cleared
home sites w/water,
sewer for
doublewides
MERCURY OPTIMAX
225hp
’99, Lo hrs, w/gauges controls $5500. Runs
Perfect! 251-865-3969
GAUTIER Hickory Hills
Wooded lots for housesCity water/sewer
Owner Financing
available
1996 17’ KEY WEST
BAY BOAT w/’98 115HP
Evinrude, Excellent
Condition
$6500. 985-778-9486
228-875-3200
1989 STRATOS FISH
& SKI 19.5 ft
200 hp Mercury
$4900. 251-747-1856
w.msgulfcoastproperty.com
555
560
EC School Dist., 2-1/2 Ac
w/ 98’ 28x52 3bd 2ba fp, lg
shed $72,000 228-588-2681
355
410
1 BR CONDO: 25% Down
6% APR on 10 yr balance.
AS IS, Buyer does all
repairs. 228-219-1359
Lots & Land-
EAST CENTRAL Sch.
George Co.
Dist. 4 br, 2 ba, 15 acres
5.75 ACRES
(all or part), 40 x 70 metal
w/14 x 60 Mobilehome
bldg, totally furnished.
(601)766-9708
Can move in tomorrow.
$175,000 588-9291 /
30 acres Hunting Land,
588-6956 aft. 6pm
Howell Comm. $2,000
per ac, (601)947-2451
WOOD PANELING 3’x7’
Smooth Finish New $3.00 No Flooding Here!
Sheet/ 601-947-9600 508-5613 Helena, Lyons Lake
Area, 5.5 acres, 3/2/2 +
carport, & office. Big 2550
Comm.
sq ft la, formal DR, Large
Business
eat in kitchen screen
Equipment porch, frpl. Great cond.
large storage shed. fully
NEW DUMP TRAILER
landscaped & fenced,
used 1 wk, 6.5X12ft, raised retiring to FLA.
sides, ready to work,
$191,000/ 474-0222
$6,700. 251-599-3647
Moss Point, Richard St,
Farm
2br/1ba, on 1 acre No
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
Flood Damage! $68,000.
Equip./
NO. 2005-2077 PW
228-475-9433/ 228-623-6267
Supplies
Notice is hereby given
that Letters Testamentary 20hp Farm Pro Tractors; FIX UP SPECIAL 3br
on the Estate of WYATT 25hp tractor w/ loader; 1ba, Needs Roof & Clean
WALDEN, deceased, were Disk, box blades, rotary Up, 6201 Dora Ave.
$25,000 875-7770
granted to the undersigned
cutter, pan plow, landby the Chancery Court of sca
ape rake. (601)766-3700 LARGE HOME
Jackson
County,
$55,000 obo as is
Mississippi, on the 27th
228-623-2375
day of Oct., 2005, and all
Firewood
persons
having
claim
4BR, 2BA, SIDING
against said estate are
FIREWOOD
Fair Market Value!
hereby notified to present
475-7146 / 826-2531
$60,000 228-475-4376 aft 5
their claims to the Clerk of
said Court and to have
Furniture /
Pascagoula
them
probated
and
Household
allowed within ninety (90)
days from the date of the
3BR/2BA, Brick, 2215
first publication of this
Jonathan St, carport,
notice, failure to do so will All wood cherry bed- sheet -rock needed 4 ft
bar the claim.
down, needs kitchen cab,
THIS the 27th day of room suite: dresser, being sold as is, $64,000
mirror, chest, queen
Oct., 2005.
bed with rails, night /offer. 228-588-3380/ 228-218Juanita Walden Moore
9593
EXECUTRIX
stand
No. 95400 3t 11/3-10-17
Retail Value $2,040 Over 2100 sqft, brick,
extra large kitchen , new
Special Price $999
appl, skylights, whirlpool
IN THE CHANCERY
bath, 24X24, shop/garage,
COURT OF JACKSON
deck, needs few repairs,
COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI
great buy, $70,000 cash,
IN RE: HEIRSHIP OF
Jim McNair Realty,
DARRELL
GENE
228-762-0954
SANDERS and THELMA
“Where Quality is
G. SANDERS
Still Affordable”
NO. 2005-2173 JB
Gautier
3202 Chico St.
SUMMONS BY PUBLICAVancleave
Pascagoula
TION
VANCLEAVE 5 BR, 3 BA,
TO: THE UNKNOWN OR
2 1/2 acres. $169,000 826KNOWN HEIRS-AT-LAW
4442 or 990-0293
AND ANY AND ALL
OTHER
PERSONS BEDROOM ENSEMBLE
3/4BR/3.5BA, Fireplace,
CLAIMING ANY RIGHT, Sleigh or Poster Bed,
3 Car Garage,
TITLE OR INTEREST AS Dresser, Mirror,
228-497-5208,
HEIRS OF DARRELL Armoire, Night Stand.
GENE SANDERS and Exquisite hand-carved
LAKE OF PINES SUBD.
THELMA G. SANDERS, w/mahogany finish. New
3 br, 2 ba, brick, shop,
in box. Heirloom quality.
DECEASED.
pond, 3+ acres. No
You have been made Retail $7900 Sale for
storm damage. $149,500
Respondents in the lawsuit $2900 (334)406-4591
228-826-3244 / 497-5884
filed in this Court by Keith Can E-mail Pictures
238-1015 Leave message
C. Sanders, Petitioner.
Sacrifice, Nice Sectional
The
Petition
filed w/ 2 incliners, jeweltones, For Sale, 3br/1ba Brick
against you is a civil & cocktail table, like new, home. No water damage.
action seeking to have $675. 228-474-7257
228-872-4628
Keith C. Sanders, be estabHOME FOR SALE,
lished by further order
Garage
By Owner, 1704 Martin
through this court adjudiBluff,
Gautier, 3br/1.5ba,
Sales
cated as the sole and only
Den, 1400sf, Brick $79,995
heirs at law of the
MOVING SALE!!! 228-497-9811/ 228-327-4684
deceased, Darrell Gene
Sanders and Thelma G. All Furniture, 4 wheelers, VANCLEAVE 3 br, 2 ba,
Sanders, all as fully set out go carts, 36” tv, clothes, F/P. For Sale by Owner.
in the Petition on file in the dishes, etc. - 228-588-3658 As is. $76,000 818-0623
Chancery Clerk of Jackson
FRIDAY 8am-5pm
County, Mississippi.
SATURDAY 8am-12pm
Ocean Springs
YOU
ARE
SUM- 1624 Amberjack, 2 Blocks
MONED TO APPEAR
East of Dolphin, Off
AND DEFEND AGAINST Graveline / Misc. Linens,
3 BR, 2 BA, Approx.
THE PETITION FILED
Drapes, Home Items,
1400 sf. 505 Heatherstone
AGAINST YOU IN THIS
Clothes, Shoes, Etc.
$125K. 818-5283
ACTION AT 9:30 O’CLOCK
Enuf
Stuff
4
Two
A.M. ON THE 17TH DAY
3BR/2BA
Dble Garage,
OF JANUARY, 2006, IN Weekends! Multi-Family, split flr plan, 3 yrs old,
THE CHANCERY COURT Fri & Sat. 8am-12n, 9744 1,650sq ft, No Storm
AT
2902
SHORTCUT Wilkerson Circle, Moss Damage, $179,500.
Point
ROAD (JACKSON COUN228-769-1327/ 228-990-4639
TY
FAIRGROUNDS)
P A S C A G O U L A ,
MISSISSIPPI; AND IN
Lawn/Garden
CASE OF YOUR FAILSupplies
URE TO APPEAR AND
DEFEND, A JUDGMENT
EX-MARK-MOWERS
WILL
BE
ENTERED
LZ23KC24AS or
MUST SELL by owner,
AGAINST YOU FOR THE
LHP5220KC, SALE
3br/2ba, frpl, in ground
RELIEF DEMANDED IN
$6,499. (601)766-3700
pool, $139,900 228-872-1223
THE PETITION.
You are not required to
file an answer or other
George Co.
pleading but you may do
Lucedale
so if you desire in care of
James B. Wright, Jr.,
FOR SALE BY OWNER
Attorney at Law, P.O. Box
in South George County
249, Ocean Springs, MS
off Hwy 63. Ready for
39566.
occupancy 3/2, 2400sf,
ISSUED
under
my
little roof damage from
hand and the seal of said
Hurricane Katrina.
Court, this 26th day of
High & Dry. 1.90 acres.
October, 2005.
Call for more details
TERRY
MILLER,
762-7770 or 832-5354. The
CHANCERY CLERK
Property Shop Realty.
BY: Connie Jones, D.C.
2900 sq ft home on Park
No. 95401 3t 11/3-10-17
St. Lucedale, MS, 3/3, LR,
DR., great room, & bonus
ot.
room on 2 acre corner lo
$115,000. 251-591-7566.
380
Condos /
Townhouses
1/2 Acre East Cent. Sch.
power, water, septic tank
ready for hook-up.
$16,000 228-475-3320
G
505
535
Lots & LandOther Areas
Building Lots 1200 sq ft
min, Grand Bay, AL.
No flooding, $15,000 ea.
6 avail. (251)661-3193
570Mobilehomes
Sales
Double Wide 28X80,
3br/2ba, frpl, new tile
thru-out, $38,000 /offer 228366-0280/ 228-588-2614
21’ Fiberglass Pontoon
Boat,
150 HP Johnson, 40+ mph,
dual axle galv trlr, 5 new
tires.
Turnkey, many extras!
$15,000. 251-610-1238
135HP MERCURY O/B
motor, boat & trailer
attached. $3000 Firm.
228-762-5911 between
9am-4pm Mon.-Fri. ■
Seafox ’00, 215 Bay Fisher,
21’, 150 Ocean Pro, CC,
Electronics, Bimini top,
low hours, alum trlr.
Extras! $13,500. 251-6496566; 583-8448
35’ DIESEL
SPORT FISHERMAN
loaded, $25,000
251-583-4976
’96 19.50ft Stratus 175 Evin,
t-top, L-post, dbl axle alum
trlr, full elecs. 2-SS props,
very low hrs, Lots extras!
$22K Book, SELL $16K
FIRM 251-422-1079
WATERFRONT Hickory
16’ Dura Craft ’05 w/Trailer
Hills, 2 single wides on
Adjacent lots, high & dry, 68’’ Wide, Yamaha 25
4Stroke Trolling Motor,
$78,000. 228-209-0447
Gun Box & Dog Stand.
$6800. 251-634-0014
G
98’ DW 28X52 Chandler,
3bd, 2ba, fireplace $34,000,
228-588-2681
575
Mobilehome
Lots
1998 20’ Century Center
Console, 150 Yamaha,
Trailer, Extras, Very Low
Hours, Exc. cond. $12,900.
251-422-4151 day; 639-1499
evening
21FT AQUASPORT 1994
T-Top, AM/FM/CD, Garmin
GPS & Depth Finder.
Great Shape! $11,000. Call
251-769-4536
RV & Camper Lot, 40’ SHRIMP BOAT 453
Rent in AL, 10 mins from Detroit, solid fiberglass,
Pascagoula, all util. furn. 3 drum winch & electronics. $18,500 228-990-0557■
$275/ Mo. 251-865-3480
LOT for Rent in East
Central School District,
Big Point, 209-2914
Real Estate
Commercial
595
Office Space
for Rent
HWY 57(Near I-10)
1200SF Retailer Office,
***$600/Mo*** 228-832-4475
610
Commercial
Property
Commercial Building for
Sale, Call Allen Deal/
Keller Williams Realty
228-861-4165
Real Estate
Rentals
620
Camps
By Owner, Desperate to
Sale, 2br w/ frpl, 1200 sq
ft, near fishing camp,
no flood damage. $79,000.
228-588-0188/ 601-947-6606
635
Furnished
Apartments
Publisher’s Notice
All real estate
advertising in this
newspaper is subject
to the Federal Fair
Housing Amendments
Act, which make it
illegal to advertise any
preference, limitations
or discrimination based
on race, color, religion,
sex, national origin,
handicap, familiar
status, or an intention
to make any such
preference, limitation or
discrimination.
familial status includes
children under the
age of 18 living with
parents or legal
custodians, pregnant
women and people
securing custody of children under 18.
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which is in
violation of the law. To
report discrimination,
call the Office of Fair
Housing and Equal
Opportunity of the
U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban
Development (HUD)
at 1-800-669-9777. The
HUD TTY telephone
number for the
hearing impaired is
212-708-1455.
Read the Classifieds
CHECK FIRST
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
SUGGEST THAT
BEFORE
MAKING AN
INVESTMENT IN
RESPONSE TO AN AD,
THAT
YOU INVESTIGATE THE
OFFER WITH AGENCIES
SUCH AS THE BETTER
BUSINESS
BUREAU AT 1-800-987-8280
OR THE CONSUMER
PROTECTION
AGENCY IN JACKSON,
MS AT 1-800-281-4418
’05 Kenner 23FT 225
Yamaha 4-stroke, w/trailer,
Garman 188C stereo/CD,
VHF, T-top, wash down,
dual batt., trim tabs, down
rigger, low hrs, warranty
started 7/9/05. $34,500. 251653-2270 or 656-4782
21’ Cape Horn, CC, twin 200
Merc O/Bs, livewell, washdown, all elect., galv 2 axle
trlr w/new tires $18K
Danny 251-344-1979
23FT HydraSport Walk
Around, less than 100 hrs
on boat & motor,
Firberglass T-top w/curtians, 250 Evinrude on outdrive, FF, GPS, VHS,
AM/FM/CD, $30,000 FIRM.
251-510-3267
20‘ Wellcraft Cuddy, 120hp
Force, Galv Trlr. VHF,
Fish Finder. Exc. Cond.
New price $4500 Orange
Bch 251-981-1324
20’ Chaparral ’01 Bow
Rider,
Mercruiser 220hp, only 130
hrs, exc cond - MUST SEE
$17,750. 251-990-07749
’99 Contender 21’, Yamaha
200HP, Saltwater II, T-Top,
Spreader Lights, Jensen
CD/AM/FM/Weather Radio
w/4 Marine Speakers,
Furuno GPS & Depth
Finder, VHF Radio, Alum
Trlr w/Disc Brakes.
$29,000. 205-625-5730 or 205288-9081
2002 Proline Sport 23’, twin
150 Merc, dual elects,
radar, GPS, bottom mach,
600W stereo, 3 yrs on warr.
dual axle trlr, $32,900obo
251-583-5780
8-B
710
THE MISSISSIPPI PRESS
BoatsPower
’05 Blazer Bay 2170, 150
Yamaha, TM, CD, GPS,
Leaning Post & More, 5 mo
old, $23,500. 601-264-8111 or
601-550-0284
26’ Redneck Yacht, 1976,
Heavy Duty, Pontoon Boat,
90HP Yam, Tiki Torches
inc, $3000. 251-973-1632/2093777
A 2000 Bullet Bass Boat
20XF w/225 Mercury
Promax ’00, tandem axle
trailer. $18,500 obo. 251-3778097
97 Robalo 2320 CC, 225
Mariner OS, full trans.,
alum trlr, new Furuno
elecs, t-top/curtains, F/W/
S/W wash down, tuna door,
live well, Exc cond,
$27,900. 251-379-9078
18’ 2000 Polar V-Hull
T-Top, 90HP Honda,
Low Hours $10,000.
251-621-9189
1990 19’ PROLINE, Center
Console, 130HP Yamaha,
2000 Trailer, Runs Great,
Rides Well. $7250. 601-9476519
22 ft. Glacier Bay
Catamaran
twin 2001 Suzuki 90HP
4 stroke, electronics,
$21,500 251-423-4200
760
Campers/
Travel
Trailers
920
Cars
‘05 32’ Travel Trailer
Sleeps 8. Good condition.
$11,900 850-221-1398
or 386-295-4119
CHEVY CORVETTE ’01, 1Owner, Silver/Black
Leather, 8 Cylinder, T--top,
loaded, Beautiful. $24,900
251-490-7403
STARCRAFT ‘96, 28ft
w/ superslide, 5th wheel,
sleeps 6, kept covered.
$15,500. (601)947-1065
Chrysler Concord LXI ’01
79k miles, Loaded!
garage kept, Very nice!
$8600. 251-675-6059
2001 Prowler 5th wheel,
dble slide, 30.5 ft, ceiling
fans, all extras, 228497-6922/ 228-990-0327
CHRYSLER SEBRING
1999 CONVERTIBLE.
Fully loaded w/leather,
power, etc. 91k miles,
$7,500 251-232-1291
2004 Americamp Travel
Trailer 31’ Bumper Pull,
with 1 slide-out.
Like new cond. $16,500
Call Gray @228-623-0355■
Chrysler Sebring Convt. ’04
silver w/blk cloth top, AC,
AT, CD, LOADED! 19k,
$22,000. Will trade. 251-7520212
2005 JAYCO Jayflight
Travel Trailer. 27’
Bumper Pull. New condition, Never Used. $15,200
Call Gray @228-623-0355■
Chrysler Sebring Limited
2000, Excellent condition!
Leather, champagne,
brown top, $9850. 251-9903011
780
Motorhomes
‘02, Class C, 28 ft RV
Ford E450 V-10 Triton
Total Price $40,000
228-324-8175 / 228-238-7592
26ft Southwind Flair,
Class A, runs great,
clean int, slight body
damage. $8,500 reduced.
228-875-2944
CHRYSLER SEBRING LX
2003
4DR, V6, PL, PW, AM/FM,
CD, cruise, Silver, Exc
cond! 66K, Reduced! $7900
251-625-4318
Dodge Neon SXT ’03 auto,
PW, PL, keyless entry, 6
disc CD, exc cond, 48k
miles, Must Sell $5,995 obo.
251-610-9561
DODGE SRT-4 Turbo ‘04,
black, 20k mi,
under fact warr., kicker
COACHMAN 22ft, ‘95 fully sound system, Too many
extras to list, $18,500.
equipped, good cond.
(601)528-3812
$15,000 @ 17
Magnolia St East ,
Ford Crown Victoria ’01,
Lucedale, 228-990-2881
Excel Cond! Keyless entry,
Boat Sacrifice Sale for Pay
WINNEBAGO Elandon PS, CD, New tires, 156K
Off. $25,000. ’03 Stardeck
miles,
$6000. 251-463-62255
Class A ‘88-33ft 454 Chevy
w/4 stroke 140hp Suzuki
Engine, Gas-2 acs, sleeps
FORD FOCUS 2000
Mtr & Magic Tilt trlr. 2516, 44k mi, 17” flat screen 70K, 5 Speed, Avg. 30
680-7240
tv,, new refrigerator,
MPG, $4995 obo or Trade
2001 SeaDoo 21’ Challenger microwave/stove, asking for Truck. Florida Car.
2000. Mercury 240HP, less
$11,000 obo - Contact Ray Call 813-245-0737
than 60 hrs. on motor.
Campbell 228-474-1791
FORD MUSTANG 2001
$17,500 251-343-7004 209-7572
209-8239
37’ ELANDEN Winnebago PW/PS/PL, 64K mi. Good
cond. $6990. Must sell. 251‘90
fully
loaded,
’04 23.4’ SEAPRO CC,
675-6104; 675-6090 after 6
26K mi. In Moss Point .
200HP Yamaha HPDI
pm
$16,500 813-478-5270 ■
w/4yr warr. Alum Trlr,
Electronics, New $30,000,
FORD Mustangs ‘67 (2),
27ft COBRA Class C,
Sell $25,900. 251-422-5270
runs great, generator, roof $2,500 /offer, for both, 228475-1383/ 228-219-1813
Boston Whaler, 17’
air, CLEAN!
Montauk, ’86 hull, ’96 88HP $10,500. 228-875-2944
FORD T-BIRD ’97
Johnson,
Auto, new tires, alloy
bimini top, cover, $7900 251- 1997 Holiday Rambler
wheels,
32 ft, like new, 20k mi,
990-5799 463-3375
loaded, power windows.
$36,000 (251)865-2121
$4800obo.
251-767-2657
1978 Mako CC w/ 2001
250HP Mercury,
Ford Taurus 1994, SHO
$11,700. 228-826-0330
Silver, 1 owner,
lev mesg.
130K miles, $3500.
251-751-6453
’00 WELLCRAFT 22’ CC,
’01 Yamaha, 200HP 0X66
FORD TAURUS SEL 2001
Fuel Injected, alum trlr,
Loaded w/options,
Ttop, exc cond, elec.
Extra Nice! $8200.
$19,250. 251-689-4788
Call 251-209-8651
26’ CC Trophy Twin 150HP
★★★★★★
Merc, Elecs, Head, Large
Oldsmobile LSS ’97
Fish Boxes & New Trailer.
lthr, loaded, exc cond,
Prefect Cond! $22,500. 251$4,200 obo. 251-583-3415
Antique &
269-7588
Collectibles
★★★★★
’04 Kenner 23FT, 225
Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’97,
Optimax, T-top, GPS, depth
1956 Chevrolet 2dr
135k miles, black, $3,900.
finder, dual batteries, low
265 V8, 3 spd, matching
251-545-9790 lv msg
hours. $35,000. 251-402-7199 numbers, exc cond, $12,900
HONDA ACCORD ’01
obo. 251-575-4418
17’ BOSTON WHALER
Spoiler, Auto, 4dr,
MONTAUK 1993: boat,
1963 Ford Fairlane 500,
CD/Tape/AM/FM, Looks &
motor & trailer. Many
2DR, V8, auto. Looks and
Drives Like New! New
options$11,600. 251-747-3529. runs good, nice interior,
Tires! $10,500. 251-391-7490
drive it everyday for $3500.
1998 19FT Sunbird
Honda Civic 2000, 126k, 1
Bowrider w/130hp Evinrude Call 251-510-7141
O/B, SS prop, seats 8, bimi1967 Ford Custom F-100, owner, Auto, AC, PS, PB,
PW,
PM, new tires,
ni top, $6850 obo. 251-580Large V8, AC, AT,
8216 after 5pm
Very Solid Truck. $4900. 32MPG. $7100 251-343-2380
or 401-4649
251-675-7325; 377-3468
22’ Bay Palmetto ’04
Honda Civic DX 2000
’69 Firebird 350, air, PS,
225HP 4 Stroke Yamaha,
PB, 72K original miles, 1 Blue, 5 speed, Good condionly 24 hours, Color
tion,
new tires, CD player,
owner, Exc cond!
Furuno, GPS, Alum Trlr,
$7000. 251-402-2007
Matching number car.
Like New Cond. $35,000.
1-575-4418
$9750. 251
251-962-7952
Honda Civic EX ’94, 140K
miles, 2DR coupe, sunroof,
’69 Pontiac Tempist
’04 Sea Strike, 18 ft., 90
Black, AT, $3900 251-379Convertible Custom S,
Yam, 4-stroke, hydraulic
0186
Good Condition! $12,900.
steering, trailer, cover,
Call 251-391-9036
GPS, stereo, misc. $18,500
HONDA PRELUDE ’99
251-454-7635
4 cyl, auto, white/black
’73 FORD MUSTANG
cloth, 98k, all pwr, sunroof,
351 V-8, Drives & Rides
’99 Bayliner, 1950 Capri
very clean, $10,850. 251-344Like
Bowrider, 135 Mercruiser,
I/O, Low hours, cover. Like New. Too much new to list. 8414.
$8000 OBO. 251-625-1486
New! $7400. 251-634-0811 or
Honda’s From $500!
401-5641
POLICE IMPOUNDS
FORD BRONCO 1976. 3For listings call
A 1999 CHAPARRAL 19.30 spd, 302 V8, gray, new
SS Ltd. Edit. open bow, 6 brakes, seats, steering col- 800-366-9813, Extension 4500
umn,
too
much
to
list.
cyl Mercruiser, non skid
Infiniti G35 ’03, 2DR,
liner, 2 tops, 1 owner, 150 $12,,900 OBO. 251-605-2112.
Black/Tan, lthr, XM radio,
hrs. total use, $16,500 251spoiler, all options, $25,900
510-9446
Cars
obo. 251-510-3449 625-1484
2002 YAMHA LX 2000
Infiniti G35 Coupe ’04
JET BOAT
22k, Sport Pkg, Consider
ACT NOW! Cars From
$13,500.
SUV
$500!
Call 251-379-4043
Trades, Like New
Police Impounds for sale.
18ft Deckliner VIP
Condition.
For listings call 800-366bought new 04-05,
$31,500. 251-689-2274
9813,
115 Yamaha, $15,500.
Extension 9797
Infiniti J30
Must sell! 251-296-1462
ACURA 3.2 CL ’01: Blk/blk
’95, 121k mi, runs great.
41’ Hatteras Convertible lthr, loaded, all pwr, 6-CD,
$6,000. 251-709-1204
Auto Pilot, radar, color
Sunroof, Bose stereo, 64K
graph plotters, outriggers, mi. Below NADA at
INFINITI Q-45 2000 Anniv
rebuilt engines. Asking
Ed., loaded, immac., new
$14,500. 251-989-3030
$65,000, make offer. 251-476tires, brakes & battery;
Acura 3.2TL ’03, white/tan 70K, fact. maint. $17,950.
5434 or 423-4633
lthr, AT, loaded, Bose 6-CD, 251-990-3560.
Mitzi 17, fully rigged,
1 owner, non-smoker, 38,500
Motorguide trolling motor miles, $20,750. 251-490-1610
Infiniti Q45 ’97,
SW, 70HP Yamaha SW,
Kelly Green, 133K,
AUDI ’01 A6 2.7T AWD
Lowrance DF #LMS-337,
Local car, Top of the line
trim tabs, bass seats, bimi- Dk. grn w/tan lthr, 41,500
$7500. 251-209-4611
mi,
ni top, alum trlr & more.
Great Cond! Htd. seats, Lexus LS 430 ’01, Fully
7mo. old $l6,990 256-268-5811
Loaded, navigation sys,
sunroof,
Bayliner Trophy ’97, 20’,
Bose stereo/CD, Premium white on white, Spotless!
Walk around cabin, 120
90k mi. $29,900. Call 251pkg.
Force, Galv trlr, Lots of
$20,000. 251-610-2024 lv msg. 942-3855
Extras! $10,000.
LEXUS SC 300 1997
BMW 528 2000 Black, 52K
Exc Cond! 251-679-9935
Green, 1 owner
miles, 1 owner, Excellent
1999 467 Ranger Bass boat condition! garage kept.
$8900
200HP Evinrude. Fully
251-752-8274
Non smoker, $23,500. 251loaded, $14,000 OBO or will 422-3204
LINCOLN ’97
trade. 251-213-1387
BMW 740iL 1997
120 Stretch Limo by Royal,
22ft TRITON Seaflight
Excellent condition!
Exc Condition! 92K Miles.
w/ 200hp Honda, GPS,
139K miles, $8900.
$18,000. Call 251-402-1437
Depth Finder, VHF Radio,
Call 251-510-1102
Lincoln LS 02 Fully
& alum trlr. Low hrs
BMW ‘97, good shape,
Loaded,
$27,000.. 228-355-0999
96k mi, ap, ac, leather
Lthr, Sunroof, V8, 43K mi,
PRO LINE WALK 2000 27’, seats, No storm damage
Exc. Cond., $18,500
twin 225 Mercurys, all elec- $11,500. 228-249-9062
251-473-7995; 753-8474
tronics & trailer. Exc.
BMW Z-3 Conv. 2000
LINCOLN LS 2000
cond. $62,500. 251-649--3586
Auto, 33,500 Miles, 1 Owner
V8 black w/lthr, roof,
Bertrum 56FT FB, MY,
$22,900
53K mi. loaded exc. cond
Great live aboard, twin cat
Call 251-928-7926
$13,500 251-605-1943
diesels, Very nice boat!
LINCOLN LS 2002
Selling due to illness. Call Buick Century ‘95, Very
good cond, rebuilt trans,
V8, 50K miles
for photos. $150,000
new
ac
compressor,
Pay off balance, approx
Negotiable. 606-473-7864
$2,000. 228-475-7751
$19,500. 251-460-4664
★★★★★★
Cadillac DeElegance 1999 Lincoln Towncar 2000
38FT PACEMAKER 1965
Excellent condition, Pearl Signature Series, loaded,
twin diesel, $10,000.
White, Leather $9500.
low miles, exc. cond. $9500,
251-661-5564
251-990-3011
($5000 below blue book.)
24’ Pontoon Boat, ’96 90hp
251-504-0300
Cadillac
Deville
’03,
Force, good cond, runs
47K miles, white,
MAZDA MIATA 1991
great, cover & extras,
factory warr. A-1 cond!
Red, 81K miles, 5-spd, air,
$8,875 obo. 251-341-1460
$17,995. 251-554-0188
radio/cass. Good cond.
2000 LOGIC 210CC 21ft CC,
$4000. 251-660-9335
Cadillac Deville 1998
200 Evnr Ocean Pro, Brand
Pearl, tan leather, looks Mazda Miata ’99 Conv., red
New Alum Trlr. Runs
&
drives
excellent!
117K,
Great, Looks Good! $13,900
w/tan top, 5spd, 111k mi,
$7500 obo. 251-391-7088
251-367-0683
cruise, runs & drives very
3-9732
CADILLAC DEVILLE ’96 good. $6500. 251-443
’04 Century 2200 119K Mi, Excellent Cond! Mazda Protege LX 1994
w/200 Yamaha 4-Stroke,
Extra Clean! Asking $8500.
auto, air, new timing
low hours, all electronics,
251-649-0251 or 401-4121
belt/wtr pump, $2550 obo.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ ✭
’04 SEA PRO 24’ Colored
Hull, F/F, GPS, CD player, 225 4-Stroke Yamaha.
Full warranty. Moving
must sell. $37,800/obo
Call Larry 228-217-7627
Vehicles
■ Indicates
Jackson
County
910
920
loaded, $39,500. 251-610-6989
Kenner 18 Center Console,
Brand New 2005, Less than
15 hrs, Loaded electronics,
Perfect Cond! $16,500. 251689-0605
720
Boats Sail
PEARSON 35
30hp Yanmar diesel, sloop
centerboard, 11’ beam, 3.95.5 draft, very good cond.no storm damage. $30,000.
251-929-2853.
ATV/Off
750Road
Vehicles
‘97 YAMAHA 350
WOLVERINE w/ Winch
$2800 228-219-3438 217-3208
760
Campers/
Travel
Trailers
26’ TAG-A-LONG Sleeps 7,
new tires, water heater &
refrig., etc. $2850
601-508-3870 / 601-508-1905
920
Cars
BMW 325i ’94
4DR, PW, AC, AT, s’roof,
White, Nice $5,495. Call 251661-2342
Mitsubishi Galant S ’96
gray, AT, cold AC, PW,
PL, nice & clean.
$2,990. 251-680-2160
NISSAN ALTIMA 02
3.5 SE, white, sunroof,
power seats, spoiler, mint
cond. $19,500 OBO 251-7670156
Nissan Altima 2.5S ’05, 26k
Miles, Alum Rims, Electric
Seats, Cruise, Auto,
$21,000. 251-633-6523 or 4630978
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
DODGE Durango ‘00,
V8, 3rd row seat,
tow pkg, 127k mi,
$8,200. 228-826-3378
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
JEEP WRANGLER 2005
6 cyl., AT, hardtop, running
boards, tow package, 19,500
miles, exc. cond. $23,000
obo. 251-709-4510
Dodge Durango 2000. Exc.
cond. Very clean. 5.9L V8, JEEP Wrangler X, ‘02,
3rd row seat, $9900 251-645- soft top, leather seats,
4.0L, blue, asking payoff
1457 709-9287
DODGE DURANGO 2003 $13,000. 601-947-1727/
47k Miles, Black, 3rd Row (601)508-5209
Seats, CD, Rear AC, Well
Maintained. $14,900. 251947-2136
DODGE DURANGO ‘98
4WD, 3rd row seat, rear
ac, tow pkg, 82k mi,
$8,700. 228-218-1526
LEXUS RX300 ’01
sunroof, leather, CD, Gold,
113K, Excellent condition.
$17,500. 251-648-9482 or 251666-3174
LEXUS RX300 2X4 ’99
Loaded, pwr sunroof, heatFord Bronco XLT ’92, 147K ed seats, Pearl white/tan
leather, new tires. $13,950
NISSAN ALTIMA 2002
mi, Leather, Loaded! New
251-661-0908
Auto, PW, PL, CD, extra BF Goodrich All terrain
nice, $13,200. Call
tires, great cond! $5300.
Lincoln Navigator ’00,
251-209-8651
251-414-5740
loaded incl GPS navig sys,
67k,
exc cond, new tiers.
NISSAN ALTIMA GXE ’99 FORD EXCURSION 2000
100K, Silver, 4DR, CD/Cass White & tan, Limited, 90K $19,000 obo. 251-635-1274,
402-1990
AT, 4 Cyl, Extra clean!
Nice. $11,500 OBO
$5900. 251-379-0186
251-583-1535
LINCOLN NAVIGATOR
‘04, 8000K Miles, Loaded
NISSAN MAXIMA ‘05
FORD EXCURSION 2001
No
Water Damage $34,900
SE Very nice, clean car.
XLT, 4WD, V10, 63K miles.
228-475-9652
21K mi. $28,500/obo
Hunter Green w/Tan
228-475-7609/ 228-217-7609■
Interior.
MERCEDES M350, 28k
$15,000 obo. 251-747-2089
miles, immaculate cond.,
Nissan Maxima ’97, 140k
FORD EXPEDITION ’01
No. Jackson Co., $29,500,
miles, runs great, needs
228-588-9960 / 228-217-1804
paint, everything works, Silver, 6 CD Changer, 62k
Miles, Exc Cond, 3rd Seat,
$2,500. 251-401-2275
Mercury Mountaineer ’02
Leather, $15,500. 251-653NISSAN MAXIMA SE 2003 8686
Exc cond, 65k, V8, blue,
Sunroof, all power, tinted
loaded, leather, 3rd row,
windows, 75K miles. Nice Ford Expedition ’01,
tow pkg. NOW $12,900. Call
AWD/4WD, 1 Owner, 55K
car
251-929-0592
miles,
new
tires,
new
$18,500. 251-865-9457
brakes, excel cond. $12,500. Mitsubishi Montero Sport
Oldsmobile Aurora 96’ 82K 251-928-8947
XLS 2001, Loaded, 68k
mi, 1 owner, cd, sunroof,
miles, $11,000. 251-947-4822
lthr interior (no rips)$6k- FORD EXPEDITION ‘03 or 747-4559
Eddie Bauer. $22,000
offer 228-235-5218
NISSAN PATHFINDER ‘01
For more info call
All Power, Cruise, CD
POLICE IMPOUNDS
601-947-2742/ 601-508-0225■
Player, Black/Gray
Chevy’s From $500!
For listings call
FORD EXPEDITION 2000 Interior. 92K. $10,200. Call
251-533--5531
800-366-9813, Extension 2241 Sport. Great shape. 198K
PONTIAC GRAND AM ’94 miles, black, 3rd seat, rear Nissan Pathfinder XE ’99
air.
$7500.
251-209-2548.
.
V4, runs great! New tires,
V6, auto, 70k, gold/tan
no A/C. Super on gas! $1600 FORD EXPEDITION
cloth, PW, PL, PM, very
OBO. 251-604-1249
clean, $9750 251-344-8414.
EDDIE BAUER 01.
Leather, sunroof, loaded,
Pontiac Grand Am
Nissan Xterra SE ’04
maroon,
74k
miles
$14,500
GT ’01, 60K miles,
Loaded, Auto, AC, PW/PL
251-639-8294
$7000.
14k Miles, $18,500
251-765-2676
251-633-3909, 391-7224
FORD EXPEDITION
Eddie
PONTIAC AZTEC SUV
Bauer 1999 2WD 126k
2003
White/Gray Leather
52,400 mi, new tires, 1
Rebuilt Title. Great
owner, 26mpg, exc cond.
Cond. $7900. 251-747-8216
$10,900 obo. 251-377-6781;
990-3781
Ford Expedition Eddie
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Bauer
PONTIAC MONTANA 01’
GT 00’ 4dr, 87k pw/dr/mr,
2001, 40k Miles,
Seats 8, 83,400 miles, new
$7,850 228-219-1067
Excellent Condition.
brakes, No Damage,
Loaded,
Pontiac Grand Prix GT ’04
Excellent condition. 228$16,500. 251-634-5186
63k miles, Burgundy,
497-3143 $8,000 firm
Exc Condition. $11,500 obo
Ford Expedition XLT ’98
251-937-5945 or 604-3103
3rd row seat, mom driven,
Subaru Forester 2004, 20k,
great cond, 142k mi,
REPO SALE
black, XT Turbo, auto,
$7,150. 251-786-5619
Auto Credit, Inc.
loaded, warranty. Exc.
Dealers Only 228-769-9888 FORD EXPLORER ‘00
cond. $21,900 251-343-2380 or
401-4649
TOYOTA AVALON XLS ’00 XLT lthr, am/fm cd,
61K
miles.
$10,500
Leather, Auto, CD,
Totota 4-Runner ’00, 4WD,
228-990-6300
Sunroof, Loaded!
Limited look alike, silver,
Showroom Condition!
FORD EXPLORER 1996 lthr, roof, loaded, carfax,
$11,900. Call 251-391-7490
2WD, V8 Auto., AC, All
low miles. Sacrifice
Power, 130K miles, CD
$14,900. 251-554-4583
Toyota Camry 99
Changer, Loaded. $4750.
Black & gold,
TOYOTA SEQUOIA ‘03
Call
251-689-4984
all power, $7900
33k mi, excel cond,
251-610-1287
FORD EXPLORER ’97
loaded, asking
Eddie Bauer XLT, All
$25,000. 228-217-5626
TOYOTA Celica ‘91, only
Options,
80k mi on motor, 5 spd,
TOYOTA 4RUNNER ‘97,
99+K
Miles,
Excellent
runs great, as is, $1,500.
Condition! $6900. 251-947- 255k mi, needs paint, runs
/offer. 228-217-2672
good, black,
62111
Toyota Celica GTS ’91,
$4,300. 228-475-9661
Ford Explorer
5spd, all pwr, AC, CD, new
TOYOTA 4Runner ‘98, ap,
Eddie Bauer 1994
tires & paint, all mainte$3500. Priced to sell!
ac, runs good, 175k mi,
nance records, exc cond,
251-583-3228
very
dependable,
$4,500. 251-753-7551
No Storm Damage.
FORD EXPLORER
Toyota Celica GTS, ’00, 6$5,900. 228-249-9062
SPORT 01. Like new, 1
speed manual, loaded,
Toyota 4Runner Ltd ’00
Excellent Condition. Sharp. owner-female, all power,
leather,
78k
hwy,
wholesale
Millennium Silver, Leather
$9,900. OBO. 251-379-0186
price $8350 251-604-8705.
Loaded! Exc Cond! 66K
TOYOTA COROLLA ’01
Mi.
Ford Explorer Sport ’94,
Bought new! 5 spd, 73K,
$16,999. Call 251-422-4328
new Michelin tires, 41mpg, 2dr, PW, PL, sunroof, exc
CD player, V6, 5spd manu- Toyota 4Runner Sport 2002,
4dr, PW, PL, Exc cond!
PW, power DRs, CD, tow
$7900 obo. 251-689-9175; 653- al, 63k mi, $4,200 Firm.
251-666-9404
pkg., 50k miles, asking
9316
Ford Explorer Sport Trac $19,800 OBO 251-490-1626
Toyota Corolla CE ’01
XLT ’04, 9K, all power,
Toyota Sequoia ’02
4dr, extra clean, auto,
leather bucket, heated
SR5, leather, DVD, fully
cold AC, new tires, gas
loaded,
saver, $7,100. 251-645-9530 seats, hard tonneau cover
$22,750. 251-968-4547
49k mi, MUST SELL!
TOYOTA SOLARA ’00
Extra
clean,
FORD EXPLORER
Auto, CD/Tape/AM/FM,
$19,500 obo. 251-583-1318
SPORT TRACK ’01.
2DR, 1 Owner, Cold AC,
Loaded, 118K miles, sunToyota Sequoia SR5 ’05,
Showroom Cond! $9700.
roof, exc. cond., $8500. Call
2WD, V8, fully loaded!
251-342-8347
251-366-9778
cloth intr, dual AC, TV’s,
VW Beetle 99
Exc cond! Ext warr, non
Ford
Explorer
XLT
2002,
PWL, 94k miles.
smoker, $32,900 obo . 251leather, all power, CD, 36K
Looks brand new. $8900
575-4418
mi, tow pkg, $15,000. 251251-610-1287
432-2363 or 251-455-0180
TOYOTA SEQUOIA SR5
VW JETTA GLS 02
2002, Silver, Leather, V8,
GMC Envoy XL ’04,
AT, 4 cyl, CD, great MPG,
Rear
V-8, loaded, 3rd seat
perfect, $10,950
Spoiler,
4dr., CD/Cass., 55K
warranty,
$28,700.
251-510-3449 625-1484
Miles. $19,500. 251-957-6724
251-604-6639
G
950
Sport Utility
Vehicles
BMW X5 2005
16K miles,
Great Deal! Sacrifice.
$42,000. 251-402-7748
Cadillac Escalade 2000
4WD, leather, 115k mi.
$12,500
Call 251-423-1111
GMC Jimmy ’00
either take up notes of
$239.40 or buy for $7,000.
251-654-0801 or 533-4223
GMC Suburban 1500 1994
142k Miles, New Tires &
Brakes Rebuilt
Transmission & Engine.
Needs Short Block $1895.
Call Gideon at 251-479-9591
960
Trucks
Chevy 3/4 Ton ’03,
HD, 4x4, Reg Cab, V8,
Auto Tran, AC, Tilt,
Cruise, $12,800. 251-454-2211
CHEVY 3500 ’94, 8x12 box
truck, 204K, runs good,
Great work truck! $7400
obo. 251-675-7605; 251-6808611
GMC YUKON ’00
Cadillac Escalade ESV ’05,
Power everything, new
fully loaded, black, 8k,
tires, 16mpg, 117K mi.
$52,995.
Must sell. $10,000 OBO. 251CHEVY S-10 2002
251-634-9634 or 716-3864
370-8526
R/C, V6, 5spd, cold AC, tilt,
CADILLAC SRX 2004
GMC Yukon ’03, White, 3rd cruise, bedliner, alum
8K Miles, Extra,
seat, 34K miles, manufac- whls, 50K. Super nice.
$7500 251-661-0908
Extra Clean! $28,500
turers warranty. $20,500.
obo. Call 251-649-0470
251-401-4131 or 478-07778
Chevy S-10 LS ’00
CHEVY BLAZER ‘01 4.3
auto, AC, CD, alloys, 51k,
GMC Yukon GT 4x4 1995,
liter V6, 2-Dr., 4WD, pw,
1 owner, gar kept, like
2DR, Low miles, 5.7, new
new,
pl, ps, alarm, moonroof,
tires, fully loaded, exc.
$6,500. 251-633-8925
cond. $7900. 251-504-0300
am/fm radio, cd player,
cassette player, brush
GMC YUKON SLT ’99 4x4
Chevy S-10 LS 1999
guard, rear tire carrier,
145K mi, white w/grey
17’’ wheels, stereo,
tow pkg, 69K mi. $9000
leather, fully loaded, per$5500 OBO
228-475-0884/ 228-990-5818■
fect! $9600. 251-443-7445;
251-458-4827
533-7344
Chevy Blazer LT 1995, 4x4,
Chevy Silverado ’00, R/C,
145k Miles, New Michelin
GMC YUKON XL ’01,
V6, 5 Spd, Short Bed, 56K
Tires, New AC, $3500. 601SLT Pkg, lthr, sunroof,
miles, $7200. 251-970-2790 or
334-0557 or 251-343-2749
4x4, 99K miles, $13,500.
251-978-7751
after 5PM
251-554-7977
Chevy Silverado ’04, sportCHEVY SUBURBAN ’99
Honda CRV 2000
side, Ext cab, LS, 5.3 V8,
4x4, LOADED! Exc cond!
4WD, 4 cyl, 4DR, auto,
carfax, low mi, custom
Super clean! $8950 obo.
Extra Clean! $9900.
extras, retail $24K. Only
251-344-3443
251-379-0186
$18,900 obo. 251-554-4583
Chevy Suburban ’99,
HONDA ELEMENT EX ’04 CHEVY SILVERADO 1500
Like New, Loaded, CD,
Auto, Champagne, 20K
’01. 3 toolboxes ladder
3rd seat, 114K miles.
Miles, Like New!
rack, new tires, 75,000 mi.
$8250. 251-533-3381
$18,300. 251-648-0067
$13,000. Jessie 251-609-2925.
CHEVY SUBURBAN LT Isuzu Axiom XS ’02, 4WD,
CHEVY SILVERADO 2004
’00
one owner, carfax, like
R/C 4x4, 14K, V6, AT, AC,
Leather, Nice Family Car! new, htd lthr, roof, loaded, $15,000 obo. Call 251-986110K Miles. $9900 obo.
retail $12,740. Only $9900
6673, 251-550-6673
Call 251-421-2211
obo. 251-554-4583
CHEVY SILVERADO
Chevy Suburban LT ’04
JEEP CHEROKEE
CREW CAB LT ’03 DURA3rd seat, leather, loaded!
SPORT 1998. V6, 4DR,
MAX 3500 Dually, Allison
33K miles, $28,000
4WD, CD Player, 150k mi., trans, leather, 4dr, 6 disc
251-675-0212
great cond. $4600 251-228- Bose, 70k. OnStar. $26,850
1252
334-313-2654
CHEVY SUBURBAN LT
’99
Jeep Grand Cherokee ’00, Chevy Silverado LS 2004
3rd seat, leather, 86K,
all power, Auto, CD/tape, 4x4 2500 Ext’d Cab, White,
CD, Burgundy/grey intr.
AC, Mint Condition! Must 6.0L V8, tool box, bedliner,
$12,000. 251-666-5372
77
Sell! $8900. 251-554-797
PD, PW, CD, keyless entry,
Exc cond! 48K, $24,000. 251CHEVY TAHOE 01,
JEEP GRAND CHERO604-7908
Cadillac Seville STS ’98, 251-463-5572, 463-9323 or 431- leather, loaded, 80k mi, KEE 2001, Silver/Gray, 4x4,
3rd
row
seat,
excel
cond.
V-6,
CD,
PW/PL,
76k,
Loaded, Bose stereo, $9000.
1831
$17,900. (601)201-2659
Beautiful, $11,800. 251-490Day 251-626-5951
MERCEDES 300SE ’89
Night 251-978-1993
CHEVY TAHOE ‘99 LS 7403; 554-8921
White, Lthr, Sunroof,
4X4. Looks & Runs Good
JEEP GRAND CHEROCadillac STS ’02, Loaded,
Loaded!
$8,500 /offer.
KEE LAREDO ’00 74K mi.,
Pearl white w/tan interior,
104k mi, $8900
251-455-5750
V6, CD, PWL, Taupe,
sunroof, 47K actual miles,
228-475-3480
$10,000 OBO. Call 251-679new tires, 1 owner, Excel
CHEVY Tahoe LS ‘02,
Mercedes
Benz
SL500
4529
Cond! $22,500. 251-575-5308
loaded, leather, rear air,
Roadster ’97, 63k, 2nd
lv msg
JEEP GRAND CHEROowner, like new, $26,000. new Firestone tires,
KEE LAREDO 2002.
asking $18,700. 228Chevy Camaro ’02, 35th
850-382-0957
Loaded, all the extras, sunAnniversary Ed, AT, 29K
588-2748/ 228-990-8525
roof, extra sharp. Was
miles, adult owned only , MERCEDES SL500 ’96,
CHEVY TAHOE LT 04
$15,500; askiing $13,900. 251excel cond. $13,000. 251-689- new tires, carfax, both
Black/gray leather,
tops, beautiful car, low
689-7375.
3302
TV/DVD,
3rd seat, XM/Sat,
miles, new $90K, sacrifice
39k, $23,900 251-510-3449 625- Jeep Grand Cherokee
CHEVY Camaro ‘86
$18,900 obo. 251-554-4583
Laredo ’97, leather, all
1484
IROC new motor, tree fell
power, 2WD, Looks & runs
across back hatch. $1,500. MERCURY COUGAR ‘99
CHEVY TAHOE Z-71 1999 great! Must sell!
$6000 obo.
No water or hurricane
/offer. 228-826-1198
4-dr, 93K mi, Sharp look850-516-4869
damage. Ext. & Int.
ing!
Chevy Camaro SS Conv. ’02 looks great. Runs great.
JEEP
LIBERTY
’03
$11,500
Auto, LS1 350, 24MPG,
$8000/obo 228-475-6203 ■
$12,000
251-895-7507; 344-1608
Loaded, Garaged, Adult
251-751-4663
Owned. $17,800. 251-639Mercury Grand Marquis
CHEVY TRAILBLAZER
by private owner
4582; 753-5269
’91
LS 05
Box
style,
V8,
120k
mi,
AC,
JEEP
WRANGLER 1997
Tow Pkg. OnStar, 25k
Chevy Camaro Z28 ’99, 88k,
all power, super clean,
4cyl, 5 spd, sound bar, bikimiles.
5.7 V8, 6spd, Hugger
Must Sell! Payoff $16,500 ni top, new tires, 107k mi.
orange, white stripes, lthr, drives perfect, $2100. 251Good shape. $5300 251-949251-945-6238 747-1751
t-tops, very clean, $11,500. 604-1249
7390
251-344-8414
MERCURY GRAND MAR- Chevy Trailblazer LS ’05,
QUIS LS ’86. 1 owner,
V6, AT, Silver, PW, PDL,
JEEP WRANGLER 2000,
garage kept, 20K actual CD, OnStar, 5K, Tow Pkg. softtop, 69K, AM-FM CD,
miles. Mint cond. $7950.
Must Sell $24,000 obo 251A/C, new tires, fantastic
980
251-645-49
366-1534 LM
shape. $13,800. 251-753-8375.
WANT ADS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 2005
960
Trucks
960
Trucks
960
Chevy Z71 ’05
CHEVY Z-71 2002
Ext Cab, SLT, ONE
OWNER, Loaded! Only
91K Mi. Exc Cond! Carfax.
$15,900. 251-533-8385
Quad Cab. Orange County
Chopper Special.
One of a Kind! 6500 mi.
$33,900 251-716-6389
Chevy Z71 Extra Cab99
4WD, auto, PW, PL, tilt,
cruise, $11,500. Call
251-209-8651
FORD RANGER XLT ‘99,
4dr, ext cab,
4X4, $6,500.
(601)947-6176
Trucks
TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5
2000 4dr Ext Cab, 4WD,
Lthr, V8, AT, CD, PW/PL,
95K, exc. $32k New Sell
$14,995 251-769-5592
TOYOTA TUNDRA SR5
2000
V8, 4WD, 40K mi, exc.
cond, all options except
leather, tow pkg, brand
DODGE 1500 4x4 ’03
GMC DENALI ’02
new tires. No wrecks, damGray, Hemi, CD player.
4dr, 4WD, Quadra Steering,
age or smoke. Asking
$13,700
Lthr, Fully Loaded! Exc
$17,500. 251-621-7326
Call 251-402-0650
Cond! $15,900 obo. 251-5338385
Dodge 2500 Series 2005.
Toyota Tundra, 2004,
Fully loaded. Hemi, asking GMC Extra Cab 1500 ’96,
Double Cab, LTD, 4x4 V8,
$20,000 but will take trade. Turbo diesel, 230K mi, fully Sunroof, Lthr, Towing, 1
251-213-1387
owner, 37K, $31,000. Ph 251loaded, hard shell cover,
compass mirror, overhead 342-9311
Dodge 3500 Ext Cab 1997,
console, tow pkg, drive
4x4 Dually, Cummins
TRUCK OUTLET
anywhere, 19mpg Exc
Turbo Diesel, gooseneck
We Have Diesels,
Shape $6800 251-653-6313
hitch, New 5 Speed
Ford, Dodge, Chevy
Transmission & Cluth, Cold
3/4 Ton, 1 Ton, Crewcab
GMC Sierra 2000 SLE
AC, Runs Excellent. $9600.
4X4’s 866-869-1987
2WD, 1/2 Ton Ext Cab, 4
Call Chris @ 601-394-4447
home or 601-394-9338 cell.
Dr., 108K, PS, PW, PDL,
Vans
CD, $12,000. Call 251-490Dodge Dakota ’02, Quad
0044
Cab, 4x4, V8, auto, 54K,
Loaded! hard tonneau
GMC Sierra ’98 1500 SLT,
Chevy Astro Van 2000, 7
cover, step rail, nerf bars, Z71, Ext’d cab, Black,
pass., auto, dual AC, 91k,
new tires, Silver/grey intr, 120k, leather, PL/PW, PS,
loaded, new tires, $7100
Exc cond! $16,900. 251-675- HD tow pkg, toolbox
251-343-2380 or 401-4649
1872; 251-689-0670
bedliner, $9500. 251-610-9391
CHEVY Venture Extended
Dodge RAM 1500 ’03
GMC Sierra Stepside ‘01,
Van, ‘97, many extras,
Quad cab, exc cond, w/
4dr, w/ camper shell, 41mo
145k
mi, Must See.
extended warr, 37k mi,
ext warr. 69k mi, No flood
$5,000 (601)947-1065
$16,200. 251-786-5619
damage, excel cond,
CHEVY VENTURE VAN
DODGE RAM 1500 SLT ’01 $16,000. 228-769-6401
2002
Quad Cab, 5.9L V8, auto,
GMC YUKON XL 2002
LOADED! auto, air, PL,
EXTRAS! Tow pkg, 71K,
Black with Tan Leather,
PW,
Extra
DVD,
CD, 79.7K, Well mainClean! $12,500. 251-649-5997
CD, Rear Bucket Seats,
tained.
Sunroof,
Dodge Ram 2500 ’04
$10,500. 251-605-6382
$22,800. 251-767-0338
great shape, extras,
w/5th wheel hitch,
Chrysler Town & Country
★★★★★
$25,500. 251-649-9590
’03, 43K, Exc Cond! $15,000
Chevy Wedge Type Car
obo 251-928-9068 after 5pm
Hauler ’78, w/454, new
Dodge Ram Charger ’85,
& wknds or 947-1981 days,
clutch,
4x4 w/winch. Great engine
Tom
$2,750. 251-456-7806
& drive train. Needs TLC.
$2000 251-660-2694; 653-8958
★★★★★★
CHRYSLER VOYAGER ’02
Ford F-150 ext cab ’02
New brakes & battery, 12K
Dodge Ram Pick Up 1500
’01 LWB, V6, Auto, AC, 65K XLT, 4dr, V6, auto, air, exc mi left on Fcty wrnty,
cond, $8,950. 251-633-3986 ext’d wrnty avail. $9700.
Miles, Excellent Condition
251-660-1659.
$7350. Call 251-510-54338
★★★★★★★
Dodge Dakota RT ’00
Ford F-150 2000 Ext’d Cab,
DODGE GRAND
electric blue, 107k, exc
4DR, V6, 5 speed, cassette,
Caravan ‘99. $4500
cond, $9,000. 985-788-2953 Call Stacey 228-818-2865
cruise, AC, bedliner, 140K
hwy mi, $6800. 251-533-9252
after 6pm weeknights.
★★★★★★★★★★★★
FORD F-150 2001
CHEVY COLORADO Z71
Dodge Grand Caravan ’05
reg cab, V6, auto, AC,
’04
13K Mi, Stow & Go Seats,
excellent condition. $8,350.
Crew cab, PW, PL, low
V6, Asking Payoff of
Call 251-633-0396
miles.
$23,000. Call 251-296-0108 or
$20,200. Call 251-341-1742 370-0560
FORD F-150 2004 SUPER
CAB. 20,300 Mi. 4.6, AT,
Jeep Wrangler 2000
Dodge Grand Caravan
loaded, New tires, Red/Tan 4x4 Soft Top, 5spd, 46k
w/tan cloth. $18,500. 251-454- Miles, Great Cond. $10,200.
‘90, $475 228-806-1812
3989
601-947-6519 Leave Message
970
FORD F-150 ’97
57K, V6, AUTOMATIC, A/C
GOOD COND. $6850
★★251-634-8119★★
Nissan Frontier ’03,
4DR, LWB, Crew Cab,
27K miles, $15,000.
251-765-2676
Dodge Grand Caravan
‘96, drives, needs trans.
work $475 228-806-18125
970
Vans
PONTIAC Transport ‘98
White. Good condition,
dependable. $4000/obo
228-497-5560 / 228-806-0630
Pontiac Transport SE ’97
65k miles on new engine,
runs like new,
$3,800. 251-786-5619
TOYOTA SIENNA LE 2004
Silver, Exc cond! keyless
entry, auto sliding dr, JBL
sound sys, 15K $25,200. 251455-5036
980
Motorcycles
’00 Yamaha Venture, MM
Edition, Touring Bike,
ivory
& tan, 39k, looks new, 2
headsets & helmets,
PG,
40MP
$8,995. 251-476-7888
‘05 Harley Davidson
Sportster 1200 Custom
3200 mi., w/windshield &
sissy bar. 1 yr factory
warr. $9500 228-623-4790
aft. 4pm. ■
2002 Electric Glide
Standard, Custom Paint,
Lots of Extras, 14K miles,
Must See! $14,500 obo. cell
251-455-3152
‘97 TO ‘00 JEEP Wrangler
Hard Top & Soft Top
$1500 228-219-3438, 217-3208
’99 Buell S3T Sport
Touring,
4600 miles, $4800 obo.
Will consider trades.
251-232-1463
A Brand New 250CC Vision
R3, remote keyless start,
alarm, 70mpg, 6-mo warr,c
$2500. Call 251-232-1760
★★★★★
’03 Pro Street Custom,
many
extras. Must sell! $14,000.
251-680-2719 or 649-2642
★★★★★★★
’03 Intruder Volusia 800
Suzuki, accessories included,
7k mi, $5,000. 251-680-7509
Harley Davidson Road
King Classic 2002, 17K
miles, some extras, garage
kept. Under warranty.
$17,900. 251-675-8617
HARLEY DAVIDSON Wide
Glide 2005 Pearl White.
2000 mi. Lots of chrome, 7
yr warr. $16,500. 251-6611253
FORD WINDSTAR SEL ’01 HONDA GL 1500 TRIKE
2000
Dual Pwr Doors, Quad
Capt Chairs & More! 105K. 50TH ANNIV. EDIT. Pearl
Great Cond! $6900. 251-533- white, 33k, Too many
extras to list. $21,500 firm
83885
251-990-4908
GMC SAFARI 97
7 pass., rear air, PW, PL, HONDA GOLDWING 2002
GL 1800, 6 cyl, ABS, 14K
tilt,
mi,
cruise, low miles, $5800.
Black, Elec reverse,
251-209-8651
$12,000. 251-442-0885
★★★★★★
HONDA MAGNA 750 ’98
NISSAN Frontier X-Cab
Chevy Venture ’02
Black/Blue, 4,800 Miles,
98, 4 cyl, 5 spd, 83k excel87k, exc cond,
Very
Good Condition! $5200
lent $6000 601-508-6998
$8,000. 251-379-9095
obo. Call 251-960-1655
NISSAN TITAN LE CREW
★★★★★★★★★
CAB ’05. White, loaded out, Dodge 1990 15 Passenger HONDA SHADOW SPIRIT
2003. Only 4K miles, candy
leather, 17k miles. $27,500.
Van 51K mi, Good Cond. red w/flames, like new.
Call 251-747-0581
$5800 251-471-1912
$4950. 251-443-6312.
TOYOTA TACOMA 1998
★★★★★★★★★
Honda XR 400R ’03 dirt
Ext Cab, V6, 4WD, 78k, std
Dodge 1997 15 Passenger bike, new tires, low hours,
shift, SR5, bedliner, dk
Van,
98K mi, Good Cond. excel cond! $2850 obo. Call
green/tan, $12,350. Aft 5p
$4800 Call 251-471-1912
251-666-3013
251-344-8414.
Honda Odyssey LX Van
KAWASAKI VULCAN ’05
Toyota Tacoma Pre
1996
1600 Classic, 5K Miles,
Runner ‘03 Ltd Edition, V6,
112k mi., CD, new tires
Excellent Condition, Many
AT, PW, PL, bedliner, towing pkg., CD player, $18,700 All maint. records, depend- Extras! $8500. 251-455-1972
able $4,500 - Call 380-0933
obo. Call 251-679-4529
Suzuki Boulevard C50T ’05
Toyota Tundra Limited
Oldsmobile Silhouette ’98 Bags, Windshield, Back
Rest, Adult Owned, 6 Mo
TRD 2001, 4WD, 84,500
ext. van, lthr, all pwr,
Old, 3500 Mi. $6700 obo. 251auto, 113k, $4,890.
Miles, $16,200. 334-222-3680
970-5900
251-476-5434 or 423-4633
or 334-222-6477
NISSAN FRONTIER ‘04
Ford F-150 ’99
4x4, Extended Cab, 172K, 4 XE-V6, Crew Cab, 10K, at,
4x4/cd/pwr locks/windows
month motor warranty.
$7500
$21,500obo 251-656-4105
obo. 251-661-0908; 609-5376
FORD F-150 LARIAT 2005.
7k miles, super crew cab,
bed cover, chrome wheels,
many extras. $28,500 251753-5282
FORD F-150 SUPER CAB
’01
V8, 143K Miles, AT, Cold
AC, Stereo, Alloys, Drives
Excellent! $6995 obo. Call
251-478-4445
Ford F-150 Super Crew ’01,
V8 4.6, CD, Bedliner,
Running boards, P.W., P.L.,
1 Owner, 81K mi, $12,000
OBO 205-936-4535cell 251344-6263hm.
Ford F-150 XLT 2004. Ext.
cab. Fully loaded. Take
over notes. Approx. $25,000
251-661-6222; 610-5650
Ford F-250 ’03
XLT, tow pkg, loaded, 5.4
LTR, ext cab, 18k miles,
$19,500. 251-401-2275
Ford F-250 ’03, 6.0 Super
Duty 4x4 Lariat, Power
Stroke Diesel, Auto, 74k
Miles.
Sell for Pay-off, $28,300.
Call 334-357-0654 Anytime.
Ford F-250 ’04
super duty XLT, gas, 3,400
mi,
$27,000. 251-957-2459
FORD F-250 2002 SUPER
DUTY. 4x4, XLT ext. cab.
Powerstroke diesel, auto,
152k. Sell for loan $18,500
251-661-0908
G
AL BODDEN
USED
SUPERCENTER
&
Ford F-250 ’97, SLT, diesel,
ext cab, LWB, immac,
comp equip’d. Must Sell,
By Owner! $7,500 obo. 251661-8979
Ford F-250 ’99, long bed,
reg cab, V8, AT, PS, PB,
AC,
33k actual miles,
$8,500 obo. SOLD
Ford F-250 XLT 2004
24k miles,
Excellent Cond, $33,600.
251-580-3495 or 232-7749
FORD F-350 ’03
Super Duty Dually Diesel,
Ext Cab. Exc. Cond. Call
for details. $25,000. 251-4221345.
FORD F-350 ’03.
Dually, 4x4, crew, Lariat.
Excellent condition. $32,900
251-660-0709; 421-1933
Ford F-350 ’99, short bed,
crew cab, V10, AT, AC, PS,
PB, 66k actual miles,
$14,995 obo. 251-344-6739 or
510-0760
FORD F-350 CREW CAB
’95
Good condition. 160k miles.
Great work truck.
$8,000 251-232-5139
Ford F-350 Crew Cab
Lariat ’00 Powerstroke
Diesel Dually, Auto., Tow
Pkg.5th Wheel Hitch, New
Tires, Many Extras. 96K,
$20,000. 251-580-4401 680-1954
FORD F-350 XL 2000
6-spd, flatbed, 235K miles
$11,000 OBO
251-661-4768, 533-1231
Ford F-350, ’97, Crew Cab,
Diesel, Long Bed, Duallys,
Xtra Fuel Tank 50gal,
camp pkg, Exc Cond
$14.5K 251-961-2031
FORD F-450 XL Super
Duty Powerstroke 2004,
39,984 mi., 4x4, V8 turbo
diesel. Asking payoff $37k,
251-846-2366
FORD F600 ‘69, septic
Tank Truck , 360 eng, gas,
1100 gal tank, new tires,
gas/mud pump, less than
500 mi on eng. 4spd,
$6,500. Tim (601)947-3199
WE’RE OPEN &
HERE FOR YOU!
SPECIAL NOTICE!
Buying From Auction
Weekly. TELL US What
You Want And We
Will Buy It For You!
EVERYTHING
250
OVER OUR COST
$
00
Our Prayers Are
With The Gulf Coast
As We Begin To Build
Main Street • Moss Point
475-9611
1-800-452-4341