Enterprise-Journal from McComb, Mississippi (2024)

12 McCOMB ENTERPRISE-JOURNAL Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2000 Workers Wanted! Lotteries father outlook Obituaries Index Weather i Classifieds 8-9A Sports 6-7A This afternoon: A 30 percent chance of thunder-Obituaries 10A Opinion 2A storms. High near 90. Tonight: A 30 percent ComicsCrossword Stocks 7A chance of rain. Low in the lower 70s.

Thursday: Family 1 -2B Rain chance 80 percent. High in the mid-80s. Farm 3B Other Forecasts, Page 5A Coming Up CHILD CAREGIVER staff development course on food safety wilt be 6 p.m. Thursday at the Pike County Extension office. For information, call 783-5321.

State officials and businessmen are hoping a new school poster campaign, urging kids to know job skills expected of them, will work. Page 4 A The AccuWeather forecast for noon, Wednesday, Sept. 20. BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -Here are the winning numbers selected Monday in the Louisiana Lottery: Lines separate high temperature zones (or the day.

60S 40S 40s i Pick 3: 0-8-1. Pick 4: 7-4-9-2. Enterprise-Journal The one newspaper in the world most interested in this community IBMLEXMARKSWINTEC fYPEWRITERS PRINlt'RS Wednesday, Sept. 20, 2000 50 Cents 1 1 1th Year No. 134 McComb, Mississippi FRONTS, ST COLD WARM STATIONARY 2000 AccuWeather.

Frances A.Tumey Frances A. Tumey, 79, of Liberty, died of heart failure Sept. 17, 2000, at Field Memorial Community Hospital in Centreville. Services were 2 this afternoon at Brown Funeral Home in Liberty with Dr. Martin Hayden officiating.

Burial was in Liberty Cemetery. Mrs. Tumey was born Aug. 24, 1921, in Choctaw County. She was the daughter of Sam L.

Weeks and Ada Lee Mabry Weeks. She was a retired schoolteacher and a member of Liberty Baptist Church. Mrs. Tumey was preceded in death by her parents; her husband, Ben R. Tumey; and one brother, R.L.

Weeks. Survivors include one son and daughter-in-law, Samuel and Gayle Tumey of Liberty. Pallbearers were Donald Tumey, Troy Lee McKey, B.W Stevens, Benny Stevens, Bernell McGehee and Bill Halford. Hoyte Hart Hoyte Hart, 76, of Brookhaven, died there Sept. 18, 2000, at King's Daughters Medical Center after a lengthy illness.

Visitation is 5-10 tonight at Brookhaven Funeral Home. Visitation continues at 1 p.m. Wednesday at First Baptist Church in Brookhaven until services there at 2 p.m. Burial will be in Riverwood Memorial Park Cemetery in Brookhaven. Mr.

Hart was born Oct. 14, 1923, in Bogue Chitto. He was the son of Eddie Harrison Hart and Clara Matilda Wallace Hart. He was retired from the Mississippi Employment Security Commission, where he worked for 46 years. He was a member of First Baptist Church of Brookhaven, where he was a deacon, Sunday school teacher and a member of the choir.

He was an active member of Noon Kiwanis Club, where he was secretary. He was a World War II veteran of the U.S. Army who served from 1943 to 1945. He was stationed in Normandy, northern France and central Europe. Mr.

Hart was preceded in death by his parents and four brothers, Harley, Herman, Wallace and Hugh Hart. Survivors include his wife, Lois Albritton Hart of Brookhaven; two sons and daughters-in-law, Deron and Mary Elizabeth Hart of Albuquerque, N.M., and David Albritton and Sherry Hart of Houston, Texas; two daughters and one son-in-law, Diane Davis of Mandeville, and Connie and Larry Boyd of Brookhaven; five sisters, Rosa Lee Wallace and Elsie Nettles, both of Brookhaven, Lottie Smith of Bogue Chitto, Jennie Ford of McComb and Peggy Gardner of Oklahoma City, eight grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to Hospice Ministries, 224 S. First Brookhaven, MS 39601. Dorothy T.

Laird Dorothy Thigpen Laird, 81, of Roxie, died of heart failure Sept. 18, 2000, at Franklin County Hospital in Meadville. Visitation is 5-9 tonight at Franklin Funeral Home in Meadville. Services are 10 a.m. Wednesday at the funeral home chapel, with the Rev.

Calvin Wac-tor officiating. Burial will be at Mount Carmel Cemetery in Franklin County. Mrs. Laird was born Feb. 23, 1919, in Newbern, Ala.

She was the daughter of James Callie Thigpen and Inez Foley Thigpen. She was a homemaker and a member of the Baptist faith. Mrs. Laird was preceded in death by her parents; husband, John Laird; and two daughters. Survivors include three sons, James Laird of McCall Creek, John Laird of Bude and Phillip Richards of Memphis, two daughters, Mary Laird of Bogue Ridge, and Antoinette Richards Slay of Phoenix, and 13 grandchildren.

Pallbearers will be James Laird, John Laird, Calvin Wactor, Carl Wactor, Gary Lehmann and Lee Cobb. In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Baptist Children Village in Natchez. Whopper beans LH LH E3 E3 HIGH LOW SHUWERS fMIN T-STORMS HURRIES SNOW ICE SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY Whitewater evidence vs. Clintons Insufficient' Sheriff to end sex offender's trusty status NUTTY PROFESSOR 2 nq TUES.

THURS 7:00 ONLY KINGS OF COMEDY (Ri HFjiVH 9:15 ONLY MM HIGHLANDER ENDGAME I i-M ruts -THURS. 7:20 9:20 HhT BRING IT ON pud BUB wBk BLESS THE CHILD lul 9:10 ONLY Kl COYOTE UGLY mm I 1 7:00 ONLY The AccuWeather forecast for Wednesday shows showers are possible over eastern New England coastal areas; otherwise, the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic will be warm and dry. Thunderstorms are on tap along the Gulf Coast from Louisiana to Texas. Rain and thunderstorms are likely in the western Midwest and the northern and central Plains. Southwest Mississippi forecast Today: Partly cloudy.

High in the upper 80s. Wind becoming southeast at 5 to 10 mph. Tonight: Increasing cloudiness and warmer. Low in the mid 60s. Light south wind.

Wednesday: Mostly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers and thunderstorms. High in the mid 80s. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Mississippi area forecasts MEMPHIS Tonight: Mostly clear. Low 65 to 70.

South wind 10 mph. Wednesday: Partly cloudy. A slight chance of thunderstorms late in the day. High near 90. Southwest wind 15 mph.

Chance of rain 20 percent. JACKSON Tonight: Low clouds developing overnight. Not as cool with lows in the mid 60s. South wind 5 to 10 mph. Wednesday: Mostly cloudy with a 30 percent chance of mainly afternoon showers and thunderstorms.

Highs 85 to 90. South wind 10 to 15 mph. Wreck victim in rehab center You get sued for any-thing nowadays. You don't have to try to rape nobody in the jail. You get sued for doing the job you're supposed to be doing.

Sheriff Fred Johnson Extended forecast River stages Catchings Funeral Home "Working Through Your Grief" We have a Video that may help. Yours free for asking (684-2211). PHONE 684-2211 McCOMB, MISS. WASHINGTON (AP) Independent Counsel Robert Ray today wrapped up the six-year Whitewater investigation without charging President and Mrs. Clinton with any wrongdoing, handing the White House a bittersweet victory seven weeks before Election Day.

With little fanfare, Ray issued a six-page statement saying there was "insufficient" or "inconclusive" evidence to warrant charges for any of the allegations that prompted the most expensive independent counsel inquiry in history. He said the Clintons were investigated for allegations ranging from obstruction of justice to false testimony concerning their Arkansas business dealings, including the Whitewater real estate venture. "This office determined that the evidence was insufficient to prove to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt that either President Clinton or Mrs. Clinton knowingly participated in any criminal conduct," Ray said. The White House, which frequently battled with Ray's predecessor, Kenneth Starr, during the $52 million probe, politely cheered the Presidential aides who feared Ray's statement might include information that could hurt Mrs.

Clinton's Senate bid in New York breathed a sigh of relief. "Robert Ray is now the latest investigator to complete an examination of the transactions related to Whitewater Development (See Whitewater, back page) By Ernest Herndon Staff Writer Responding to repeated criticism from a former sheriff, Pike County Sheriff Fred Johnson said today he will revoke the trusty status of convicted sex offender Gary Nash. "I'll put him back in the jail," Johnson said. "When they get room for him up there we'll send him up there to Parchman." He was responding to former sheriff Dick Wilson, who claimed Johnson "did not tell the truth" regarding Nash, who was sentenced in 1992 to 20 years in prison after being convicted of sexual battery and burglary of an inhabited dwelling. "Sheriff Johnson did not tell the truth when he said that Gary Nash was not allowed to have contact with females as a trusty," said Wilson.

Earlier this month Wilson complained to the Enterprise-Journal that Sheriff Johnson uses Nash as chief trusty, which allows him to do chores around the law enforcement complex. Johnson responded then that Nash had no contact with females. In his latest complaint, Wilson disputed that. "Nash was allowed to be in the vicinity of females every day, both female prisoners and employees of the sheriff's department and justice court," he wrote in a letter to the Enterprise-Journal. "The man had the run of the grounds and building.

He picked other trusties. He even has a female trusty who works around him on the premises." MS 39216. The phone number to her room is (601) 984-8319 or to the nurse's station at (601) 981-2611. She can receive visitors during regular visitor hours. Mrs.

Morgan, who was driving a white Buick, was trying to cross Highway 51 at the time of the accident, according to police records. Also involved in the crash was Wayne McDaniel, 35, of McComb, who was northbound on Highway 51 when Morgan's vehicle apparently moved into his path. He was not treated for any injuries, and nobody was ticketed in the accident. McDaniel's wife had undergone surgery for the birth of their child that day. A third car was involved when Mrs.

Morgan's car spun around and struck a gold Chevrolet headed south on 51 driven by Angeli-ka Taylor. Her passenger, Michelle Levanti, who turned 19 that day, went to King's Daughters Medical Center in Brookhaven, where she was treated for a head injury and was By Karen Freeman News Editor McComb resident Doris Morgan, who broke her neck in a Sept. 8 multiple-vehicle wreck on Highway 51, is now in the Methodist Rehabilitation Center in Jackson. Mrs. Morgan's husband J.J., 79, said Monday afternoon that his wife was transferred from a Jackson hospital to Methodist Rehab, where she has been outfitted with a neck brace halo.

Mr. Morgan, who himself is ill he only has 27 percent lung capacity from asbestos damage said doctors don't expect Mrs. Morgan to suffer any paralysis from the wreck. However, doctors told the Morgans that the specific spot where Doris' neck was broken "could be the best break or one of the worst." Mr. Morgan said his wife's recovery depends on the bone's ability to knit back together and how her neck stays in line.

"It's a heck of a contraption, and it's heavy," Morgan said of the neck halo. "She'll have to wear it for three months." He expects his wife will be returning home after about three more weeks of rehabilitation. But in the meantime, he said Doris looks forward to hearing from her friends in Pike County, either by phone, letter, card or personal visits. The Morgans are longtime members of McComb First Baptist Church, and Mrs. Morgan was a choir member for many decades.

She also is a former employee of Commercial Developers in McComb. J.J. worked as an engineer for the old Illinois Central Railroad in McComb for more than 40 years. They have two sons, John, of Baton Rouge, and Vic, of St. Louis.

Friends who want to get in touch with Mrs. Morgan may do so by writing Methodist Rehabilitation Center, care of Doris Morgan, Room 319A, 1350 East Woodrow Wilson Drive, Jackson, Contacted by the Enterprise-Journal, Wilson said he learned about Nash from county employees. "How do I know? Talking to people that work there, people injustice court," he said. "I've talked to people in justice court who didn't even know what he was sentenced for." "What does he mean by contact?" Johnson responded today. "Does he mean passing them in the hall? We've got cameras all through the jail, and we've got jailers back there that are female.

"When (Nash) goes to clean up over at justice court, they don't seem to be running out screaming," Johnson said. "They ask him to, and they have asked me to let him clean up over there. Now if they didn't want him over there and they were MISSISSIPPI Flood Stage 24-hr Wednesday night: Mostly Stage Today change cloudy with a chance of showers MISSISSIPPI and thunderstorms. Lows mainly Cairo 40 12.1 in the 60s. Memphis 34 0.1 Thursday: Dry north.

A chance Helena 44 1.7 of showers and thunderstorms Arkansas City 37 0.2 central and south. Highs in the Greenville 48 11.0 0.3 mid 70s to mid 80s. Vicksburg 43 2.7 0.8 Friday: A chance of afternoon Natchez 48 8.5 0.8 showers and thunderstorms Red River lndg 48 13.5 0.1 southeast. Otherwise dry. Lows Baton Rouge 35 4.6 from the lower 50s to the lower Donaldsonville 27 3.5 60s.

Highs in the 80s. Reserve 22 2.8 Saturday: A chance of showers PEARL and thunderstorms. Lows from Rockport 25 4.7 0.0 the mid 50s to the upper 60s. Monticello 19 4.1 Highs in the 80s. Columbia 17 0.6 BIG BLACK LOUISIANA West 12 1.5 Wednesday night: Partly Bentonia 22 4.5 cloudy north.

Cloudy south with Bovina 28 6.5 scattered showers and thunder- hom*oCHITTO storms. Lows mid 60s north to the Rosetta 19 5.5 0.0 lower 70s south. YAZOO Thursday: Partly cloudy north. Greenwood 35 13.2 Mostly cloudy south. A chance of Belzoni 34 11.4 showers or thunderstorms.

Yazoo City 29 9.2 HARTMAN Funeral Home of McComb. Inc. LOCALLY OWNED OPERATED Photo by Ernest Herndon Kenneth Holland of the Compromise community west of Liberty shows some giant beans he arid his wife Norma grew in cow manure around an old dog yard behind their house. Holland got the beans, which he says are a hybrid butterbean, from a friend in Brookhaven. A typical pod measures a foot long, two inches wide and TA inch thick.

Though impressive to see, they're not that great to eat, Holland said. However, two pods produced 18 seeds, which he planted to get a crop. By Planning Ahead You Leave Solutions Not Problems Call 684-38 ll i 1 1 1 ll i air. nd ot mm, wny woum mey asK (See Sheriff, back page) Walthall woman charged with arson Quin-Kelleher, Owners 1801 Delaware McComb Funeral Home Phone 684-3811 Highlights aiu Btol Special City board hears plans to improve downtown depot railroad museum From 5-7 p.m. Wednesday Only, one child per family eats free from the children's menu! Barron's home, and we found the computer at Holmes, residence," Rushing said.

"That happened about three weeks to a month ago." Holmes is being held in Walthall County jail with no bond. In another case, the Walthall County Sheriffs Department is searching for a McComb man who escaped from jail Saturday. Leandrew Williams, 37, 525 McComb scaled the back fence of the jail, officials said. Originally in Pike County jail for burglary, Williams, a black male, was turned over to Walthall County to face six counts of burglary there. The Walthall County Sheriffs Department arrested and charged a local woman for arson Saturday.

Tina Holmes, 31, 163 Copper Ford Road, allegedly set Clay Barron's trailer at 54 Ira Magee Road on fire while he and some friends were out, officials said. Barron, who is blind, came home around 5:30 a.m. Saturday and called the fire department. Dectective Tony Rushing said lawmen picked Holmes up for questioning and she allegedly confessed to the crime. Rushing said Holmes was out on bond for allegedly burglarizing Barron's home a few weeks prior to the fire.

"A computer was taken from Officials said they had no leads about Williams' whereabouts this morning. ELSEWHERE Town police departments and sheriffs departments in Amite, Lincoln, Franklin, Lawrence and Pike counties, as well as Tangipahoa Parish, reported no news this morning. Got a tip that will help Pike County lawmen solve a crime? Call Crimestoppers at 684-0033. Tipsters will get an ID number. They remain anonymous at all times and can collect rewards of up to $1,000 if their information results in an indictment.

on the cv 684-DALE (3253) 505 S. Railroad McComb Gift Certificates Available Recall then Harvard. "I remember thinking how brilliant all the other kids were," said Bush, who has battled questions of his intellectual gravitas in this campaign. "Eventually, I realized smarts are not only whether or not you can write well or whether or not you can do calculus, but smarts also is instinct and judgment and competence." He continued: "I've got a lot of experience, I'm well-educated. But I'm certainly not the kind of person who talks down to people because of my education.

You can't inspire and unite by thinking that you're smarter than everyone else." Asked about why he stopped drinking at age 40, he acknowledged his wife encouraged the move but said it was never a "you or Jack Daniels" moment. "I think she got disappointed in some evenings. There were some times when she said You need to think about what you are Bush said. Bush and Gore are crisscrossing paths these days and courting the same middle-class voters. This week, with his wife at his side, Bush is focused on deflating Gore's recent surge among women voters.

(Continued from Page 1) read, stands for women." As "Oprah" came on the restaurant TVs, they tapped their wristwatches and chanted, "It's time for us to win." They booed when Winfrey mentioned her interview last week with Gore. Gore had greeted a disappointed Winfrey with a handshake. The vice president, the first politician Winfrey ever invited onto a show that's run 15 seasons, won flattery and a thumbs-up from the wealthy entertainment mogul, who has given $12,000 to Democrats since 1992. Audrey Pass, a spokeswoman for Winfrey's production company, said it is anyone's guess whether Winfrey will make an endorsem*nt in the presidential race. For now, Pass said, "Oprah's not giving any indication of her preference." On Tuesday, Bush made a point of bussing her cheek.

"Thanks for the kiss," Winfrey cooed. "My pleasure," he grinned. Winfrey, probing for the personal over policy, asked him to identify a time when he was overwhelmed with self-doubt. Bush said it was when he went East to prep school, which led to Yale and A Gulf States Theatre School story clarified A story in the Sept. 14 Enterprise-Journal incorrectly implied that the McComb school board's proposal to borrow $1 .5 million would raise property taxes by 3 mills.

The proposal would replace an existing 10-year, $675,000, loan, made in 1991, that will be paid off this year. Because the new loan is for a larger amount of money, school officials estimate that the tax rate needed to pay it off, coupled with the deletion of the 1991 loan, would increase taxes by 0.94 mills. The money would be used for building improvements and other needs. A mill is $1 for every $1 ,000 of assessed property value. Officers cleared in case GREENVILLE, Miss.

(AP) A state investigation has cleared three police officers involved in the shooting death of a Greenville man at a mall. Two of three the officers will return to work after being on leave. Police Chief Lee Adams said the third officer, Fred Ray, resigned. District Attorney Frank Carlton said an investigation showed the officers were justified in the Aug. 30 shooting of Eric McDavis.

McDavis was shot by police in the back parking lot at Greenville Mall after he fired a gun in the direction of the officers. That was more than twice as many as the previous year. "The increase simply shows that those Explorers were equipped with bad tires," said Ernie Grushz, Ford's manager of safety data analysis. Showtimes for Sept. 18 21 (Continued from Page 1) the Explorer and some other Ford vehicles.

The recall came after NHTSA opened an investigation into complaints that the tread would peel off, sometimes while the vehicle was traveling at highway speeds. Most of the problems reported on the Continental tires involved only partial tread separations, the source said. NHTSA said on Aug. 31 that it had received reports of at least 88 U.S. deaths and more than 250 injuries involving Firestone tires, with most of the accidents involving rollovers of the Explorer.

The agency planned to update the numbers Tuesday. Firestone has acknowledged problems with its tires, but also says the Explorer's design may have contributed to the accidents. Ford has insisted it is solely a tire problem. Meantime, The New York Times reported Tuesday that an analysis of federal traffic accident data for 1999 showed 52 people died in 40 fatal crashes of Explorers in which tire problems were listed as a contributing factor. jf0" hees8burer BAIT (R) now, but we have to set it up like a library." Howell said the volunteers will have assistance from a number of agencies, including the Mississippi Department of Archives, which can dispatch a field representative to assist the effort.

As part of a McComb history lesson, Howell showed selectmen an enlarged photograph of a train schedule from 1866, complete with its departing time from New Orleans and arrival time in Canton, Miss. The train would travel through Kenner, Hammonds (spelled with an 'S' back then) and Kentwood, Osyka, Chatawa, Magnolia, Summit and Bogue Chitto. "McComb's not on there," Howell noted, "because it wasn't around then." In other matters: Selectmen discussed one vacant and one soon-to-be-vacant slot on the Pike County Economic Development District's board. McComb businessman Victor Morrish's term expired Feb. 28, 1999.

Jewel Rushing's is set to expire Sept. 30. Selectman David Myers requested the two slots remain open as selectmen discuss future appointments at next Tuesday's regular board meeting. Board members agreed to set a date next Tuesday for a public hearing concerning the solid waste grant the city received from the Department of Environmental Quality Aug. 17.

At the public hearing, the city will discuss cleaning up several nuisance properties and unauthorized dumps around town. The city received the $25,000 grant from the DEQ to clean up nuisance properties. But selectmen are stumped as to whether or not they can go onto private property to clean it up and if they ave the right to charge the cost back to the land owner. "You have to go through a process," city administrator Sam Mims said. "The funding is not the question.

It's how the city acquires the right to clean private property." Selectmen received a tiix abatementex- (See City, back page) By Dave Parker Staff Writer Visitors to the area need to know the history behind the founding of the city of McComb. That's the belief of a group of local volunteers who have taken the initiative to update a cultural museum inside the McComb Downtown Depot. Summit resident Winnie Len Howell, spearheading the effort, and retired railroad foreman Edwin Etheridge, addressed the McComb city board Tuesday during its regular work session explaining the process needed to make the museum first class. Howell said several criteria are needed: A governing board. A written collections policy.

Each item donated must be relevant to the railroad. It must be catalogued and registered. Cabinets made of wood and a type of glass Lexan, plexiglass or tempered -must be built. Howell said many of the items that will be showcased belong to Etheridge who said he has no problem donating his collection of railroad items to the museum. "I'm in favor of getting everything organized and catalogued," he said.

"I'm going to deed my collection to the city. It means more to the city than it does to me." Howell said McComb, with its origins connected to the railroad, needs a first-class museum. "I remember approaching (then mayor) Johnny Thompson about this 25 years ago for a place to put it (the museum)," Howell said. "But he said we didn't have a place for it." A railroad and McComb historical museum existed for a while in a caboose near the main lodge at Percy Quin State Park. Unfortunately, Howell said, it was vandalized.

"Now the museum's at the depot where it's heated and cooled; locked," she said. "It's protected. We have a museum with artifacts NURSE BETTY (R) 9:50 THE WATCHER (R) 2 CheeBekirg for $2.00 THE WAY OF THE GUN (R) QK Auditor: Corruption still exists TURN IT UP i 9:30 THEARTOFWARw 7:20 IfF 6 1 9 W. Presley (right next to the big American Flag) Jdfi American Flat BRING IT 0N(PG13) SPACE COWBOYS (pm 4:40 Check us out on the Internet THE ORIGINAL KINGS OF COMEDY (R NUTTY PROFESSOR 2: THE KLUIfS (pg-13) for $3 Corps. Bryant said he envisions a time when "somebody in government will say, 'We used to get away with taking a little here and little there, but no On Monday, Union County was repaid $100,000 that former Chancery Clerk Larry Koon had embezzled, Bryant said.

The Republican's 180-employ-ee agency is in charge of making sure government officials are financially accountable. JACKSON, Miss. (AP) State Auditor Phil Bryant hopes Mississippi officeholders tempted by corruption will learn from others' mistakes. In the past four years, 55 officeholders or government employees in the state have been indicted, Bryant said. "There's a lot of folks out there stealing taxpayer money," Bryant said Monday at a luncheon sponsored by the Stennis Institute of Government and Capitol Press Greens (Collards, Mustard, Turnips) bundle Jumbo Peanuts 32 id.

Medium Jumbo Peanuts 99 lb. Fresh Roasted Peanuts (Roasted Daily!) $1 49 ib. Sand Mountain Tomatoes (Vine Ripe!) 89 lb. Associated Press photo A clean sweep Payton Lockey, an employee of Farrow Amusem*nts, works his way down the 'Giant Slide' on the Mississippi State Fairgrounds in Jackson with a power washer Monday afternoon. The popular slide attraction is receiving a fresh coat of paint, new safety railings and a canopy.

The refinishing work was part of the bustling preparations for the beginning of the Mississippi State Fair, which kicks off Wednesday, Oct. 4. 1707 Delaware Ave. McComb THE REPLACEMENTS (PG-13) WHAT LIES BENEATH (rt-13) 684 9406 hnSer. To subscribe: 684-2713 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

weekdays To contact the news, advertising or printing departments: 684-2421 We Treat You Right" Dairy Queen stores are proud sponsors ol the Children's Miracle Network, which benefils local hospitals lor children..

Enterprise-Journal from McComb, Mississippi (2024)
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