(AP) — Republicans' goal of winning a supermajority in the Mississippi House could be decided by the luck of the draw after certified results showed Thursday that one election in the south central part of the state ended in a tie. Democratic Rep. Bo Eaton and Republican challenger Mark Tullos each received 4,589 votes in District 79 in Smith and Jasper counties, said Clara Brown, a Smith County deputy circuit clerk. State law says if a multicounty race is tied, the winner is determined "by lot" drawn in public and overseen by the secretary of state and governor. A Tullos victory would give Republicans 74 of the 122 House seats for the four-year term that starts in January, and that would be a three-fifths supermajority — enough to pass tax or bond bills without Democrats. Eaton, a farmer from Taylorsville, has been in the House 20 years and said he wants Republican Gov.