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05-MayCN T h e P o w e r O f P r a y e r American Cancer Society Relay For Life Kicks Off With Inspirational Speech __________ Page C1__________________ D A V I E C O U N T Y enterpri/B ecord USPS 149-160 Number 18 Thursday, May 5, 2005 36PAGES; D a v ie N a tiv e A c c u s e d O f M u rd e rin g C h ild re n By M ike G unning Davie County Enterprise Record A former Davic resident iias been cliarged witli two counts of first de­ gree m urder after lier husband ar­ rived liome to find his 9-year-old son lying in a pool of blood on the kitchen floor and his 3-year-old daughter stabbed to death in an up­ stairs bedroom. Tonya Bolin Vasilev, 34, who withdrew from Davie High as a jun­ ior in 1988, was found lying on the floor mumbling incoherently next to her daughter’s body. She was cov­ ered in blood and holding a knife believed to have been used in the m urder of her two children, accord- R o b e rt C o o k M o c k s v ille P o lic e Chiief By M ike B arn h ard t Davie County Enterprise Rccord M ocksville has a new police chief. Davle County has a new animal control officer. And the Davie Sheriff’s Depart­ ment is without a deputy. Last Friday, Robert Cook was nam ed M ocksville’s new police chief. He started on Mpnday. A lso on M onday, S h e riff’s Deputy M ark Crater was named ani­ m al control officer, a job formerly held by Cook. Cook was chosen as police chief from more than 30 applicimts. Town M anager Christine Sanders said he was picked because of his broad range of law enforcem ent experi­ ence. Cook is a fonner police officer in Thom asville, form er assistant police chief in Kem ersville and a form er Davie Sheriff’s Deputy. He was a magistrate for 20 years. Although no longer a sworn of­ ficer, Cook said he hopes to get the certification needed to be an officer. "It just seemed like, at this time in the police department, this was the right thing to do,” Sanders said. Cook will make $46,500 per year. The anim al control office under Cook’s control had com e under fire in recent weeks because of a puppy Please See Cook - Page 4 P ra ye r D ay, M em orial Thu rsda y Tw o events are planned for Thursday, M ay 5. The National Day of Prayer will be celebrated on the steps of M ocks­ ville Town Hall at noon. At 5 p.m. in front of the memo­ rial garden at Davie High School, a service will be held remembering M egan Howell and Lindsay Gales. ing to reports from Illinois, Her husband, Nikolai Vasilev, a Bulgarian immigrant who started a church that served a E uropean Christian com m unity in Chicago, told police his wife admhted to stab­ bing her son, C hristian, and her daughter, Grace, over 200 tim es each in her Hoffman Estates home. Hoffman Estates is a northeast sub­ urb of Chicago. Vasilev said when he arrived home, he found his son lying on thé floor of his kitchen in a pool of blood. He immediately searched the house for his daughter and wife. He found tliem on the floor of an up­ stairs bedroom. T ran scrip ts indicate V asilev made a frantic call to 911 just m o­ ments after m aking the grisly dis­ covery. Dispatcher: 91J Vasilev; (breathless, hysterical) 911! ]] 65 John Drivel Dispatcher; What town are you in? Vasilev; My wife stabbed hoth my kids! In Hoffman Estates! Dispatcher: OK. You're wife stabbed your children? OK, the po­ lice and paramedics are on their way. Where is your wife? Is she there? Vasilev: She's here. Dispatcher: OK, listen to me, help is on the way. Does she still have the knife? Vasilev: Yes, she still has the knife. The Daily Herald in Chicago re­ ported that Tonya was found with several cuts on her hands and wrists. None indicated a suicide attempt. W hen N ikolai returned to the kitchen to check his son, he believed he saw C hristian struggling to breath. He tojd police he attempted CPR, but was unsuccessful. Hoff- man Estates Police Lt; Rich Russo said officers also struggled to bring the child back. Investigators believe Gracie was attacked first, then taken to the sec­ ond floor, w here C hristian w as w atching television around 8:30 W ednesday night, April 27. Evi- Davie Sheriff’s Detective Briag Diggs and Deputies Jeff Harpe and Steve Moxley take Christopher Keith Miller Into custody after chase. D ep u ty In ju red A fte r C h ase E nd s W ith W reck, S h o o tin g By M ike G unning Davie County Enterprise Record Two Forsyth County m en are being,confined in the Davie County Jail after trying to elude police in a 105 m ph, chase that ended with a wrecked vehicle and deputy sher­ iff discharging his .weapon. Deputy Robert Jackson was also assaulted while attempting to place one of the suspects under arrest. Frederick Lee M cKoy, 34, of W inston-Salem , and C hristopher Keith Miller, 35, of Walkertown, are charged with one count of resisting a public officer. M iller was also charged with assault on a govem ­ m ent official. M cK oy faces two counts of fleeing to elude arrest and assault with a deadly weapon. Other charges, including reckless driving with wanton disregard and larceny are pending. Sgt. Lee W hitesides of the Davie Coimty Sheriff’s Department started the chase after spotting the Taurus minutes aft?r receiving a description of the vehicle over.the scanner. The two men were suspected of larceny of packages of various pain killers, including Tylenol and Alleve, from the Food Lion in M ocksville. W hen W hitesides attem pted to stop the vehicle, the suspects took off at high speed and turned onto I- 40 eastbound. N .C, H ighw ay Patrol trooper Jimmy Staley picked up the chase; and placed Stop Sticks on the high­ way near the Farmington Road exit, but McKoy, who was at the wheel, avoided the attem pt by driving onto the median. M cKoy was exceeding 100 mph when he lost control of the Please See Two - Page 4 Davle EMT Eddie Spry checks Deputy Robert Jackson. - Photos by Robin Fergusson dence shows the boy defended him ­ self, and was able to flee to the first floor. He tried to hide in a closet, but was found by Tonya, and repeat­ edly stabbed. Reports state that Tonya Vasilev said she killed her children to pro­ tect them from sexual abuses she believed they were going to t(e ex­ posed to in her husband’s church. She was indicted and rem anded without bail last Friday. School records show that Tonya Bolin attended Davie High School until her junior year. According to Julie TUcker James, who said she was Bolin’s best friend Please Sec W om an - Page 8 DHS Teacher Faces Sexual Activity With Student Charge A warrant has been issued for the arrest of a D avie H igh School teacher and coach for having sex w ith a f e ­ m ale stu ­ dent. W illiam Tilden C arter, 27, o f 1903 M i l l i n g j R oad, w ill be charged w ith sexual activity with' I a student by a teach er, adm inistrator or coach. The felony ciuries a m inim um 8-10 m onth sen­ tence, a m axim um 13-16 m onth sentence for som eone like Carter, who has no crim inal history, said D avie S h eriff’s D etective John Stephens. Law officials were looking for Carter Tuesday night, and had not found him Just before m idnight. The victim apparently confided in som eone on Tuesday, Stephens said. That person told a school of­ ficial. D avie High School principal Larry Bridgewater, school superin­ tendent W .G . “D ub" P otts and school attorney Dan W onible inter­ view ed the victim and the suspect, Stephens said. Stephens said school officials suspended Carter, then called the sheriff’s departm ent. That was just after 5 p.m. Tuesday. Sheriff’s of­ ficials hadn’t interview ed the sus­ pect as of Tuesday night. Carter, who coaches JV football and girl’s softball, is 1996 gradu­ ate of D avie High. He taught bu.si- ness. Stephens said the sexual activ­ ity started in' the sum m er of 2004. He w ouldn’t elaborate on w hether it was a one-tim e or ongoing affair. Tlie student, now 17, w as 16 in the sum m er of 2004. . Carter w asn’t at hom e Tuesday night, and Stephens said a descrip­ tion of his vehicle w as given to third shift officers. C arier 2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 2005 Exjitprial Райе Poor Farm Boy Willie Brock Made It Big When it comes to famous Davie County natives, don't forget William Emerson Brock. Wc try to own up to our mistakes, nnd I made one during the gubernatorial campaign last year of Dan Barrett of Advance. I wrote that nobody from Davie County had ever held a state office. I was wrong about thnt. Fnrmington native William Emerson Brock served in thé U.S. Senate for the State of Tennessee. He served in the Senate for the years 1929-1931, resigning to return to his cnndy m anufacturing business in Chattanooga. He died in 1950. His Farmington cousins — State Sen. A ndrew Brock among tliem — still proudly claim him , but they often neglect to m ention that he w as a Democrat. He war bom in 1872 in humble surroundings — in a log cabin. His father, Richard Epperson Brock, had served as a lieutenant in the Confederate Army. He attended the Farmington Institute briefly, and another school known as the Grass Hopper. His father died in 1888 after a lengthy illness, and Brock, just 10, was left with his destitute mother and four siblings. The family farm, nearly 100 acres, was poor, and the family had no money. He dreamed of better times as a salesman — far from the dirt farm. According to the M ocksville Enterprise in 1929:—“His mother begged him hot to go. She feared for him the evils and temptations of the town and city.” In 1884, he had performed a song at Farmington Academy entitled, “Selling the Farm." Willie Brock went to Winston-Salem, first getting a job for $30 a month from merchant Frank C. Brown. A fellow named R J. Reynolds had determined his growing company needed a salesm an, and sister-in-law M rs, W .N ., Reynolds mentioned the nice young man at the general store. Thus, Brock became the first RJR salesman, making $30 a month and expenses. According lo the 1929 newspaper clipping,”“ At the end of the first year of traveling through the Carolinas and Georgia he received besides his regular salary a bonus check for $500 so well did he succeed. When he quit the tobacco sales work for the Reynolds company in 1909, he was head of a force of 50 men and was drawing the same amount per day that he made for a month work when he started, $30. The first salesman ever employed by R J. Reynolds had made good ... “Having an offer from Triggs-Dobbs Company to sell candy for them, he decided instead to buy the factory and run it himself. The plant which employed 25 or 30 people when he bought it, now employs over 500.” He was a trustee of the University of Chattanooga, Emory and Henry College and the Martha Washington College for Giris. He was appointed to fill a vacancy in the Senate caused by the death of Sen. Lawrence D. TVson. He was not a candidate for election for a new term. A grandson, William Einerson Brock III, also served as a congressman for three terms and senator from Tennessee. He left the Senate in 1977, serving as chairman of the Republican National Committee 1977-81, as the U.S.Trade Representative 1981-85 and as Secretary of Lab or 1985-87. He ran unsuccessfully as a candidate for the U.S. Senate from Maryland in 1994. He once attended a Brock family reunion in Farmington. As for the candy company. Brock was acquired by the Brach’s Confections in 1994. - Dwight Sparks D A V I E C O U N T Y USPS 149-160) 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksvllie, NC 27026 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Ihe Davie Publishing Co, Dwight Sparks.....................................Edltor/Publlshor Robin Fergusson................................General Manager Mike Barnhardt....................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow.......................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts..............................................Sports Editor Starr Snow.............................................CirculationyClasslfled Mocksvlll« EnterpriM Davla Record CooiM niM Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rntes Single Copy, 50 Cents ,$20 Per Year In N.C., $25 Outside N.C. POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to: Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028_____________________________j__________________________________ I тН'г SociftLStCUPm flcK/ Л In T h e M a i l ... History Photo Morally Offensive To thé editor: I grew up in Mocksville, went to local schools, graduated, went to college, and now, fortunately, live elsewhere. However, being that my family still resides in this community, I visit often and still insist on reading the local newspaper when I come home. Being a proud liberal, I quite frequently take objection, if not offense, to the content published in the Record. While I know I'm drastically out­ numbered by the opposition in this mral town, I still find it beyond political boundaries thot this newspaper can print some of the most morally offensive, reprehensible, and bigoted rubbish I've ever seen. Case in point, historical photographs are frequently shown in the paper, rekindling the nostalgia that shaped this town into its current state’. Two or three weeks ago, a photo showing an old local prison wo^^ lijie jyas publishe(^^\n.the p.apie^^ The photograph is rife, with obvious raciai overtones conveniently in keeping with the time-period, al! prisoners were African-American, and all "over­ seers" were of course, white. In a community growing with diverse cultures and ethnicities, this is entirely unacceptable. Not being African-American, I can­ not possibly imagine the hurt, rage, or disillusionment that a photo like that could evoke. Must 1 remind this town that the "heritage" it so eagerly aims to celebrate, was (and often still seems to be) part of the axis of segregationist evil with which the rest of the world so easily equates to the Southern US? Why would the Record publish such a photograph, when it seethes with so many unethical impli­ cations? While it may not currently be African-Americans that are being overtly targeted by this community and its dubious history, it's the gay and lesbian community, Latinos, Democrats, or whoever else Jerry Falwell has on his blacklist that gets the brunt of persecutive attacks. When can we all just stop pointing the finger and live and let live? To the Record, I ask that it be much more mindful of its content. To everyone else, I ask for tolerance, kindness, and compassion towards one another. We should never forget the past', but we shoiild niok 'defmitely move'hjnvard froiii Ü. can start by asking Bert Bahnson to take down his flag, as there is no sense in perpetuating the glorification of a slave-driven Confederacy, Better yet. The Record could take his column out of the paper, altogether. He never has anything nice to say. May God, Allah, or Brahma bless the entire worid. Christopher Strong, Hendersonville Republicans Reaching Heights Of Hypocrisy To the editor:. The heights of hypocrisy, not heaven, are being reached by the Republican Party and the "religious" right as they try to make the appointment of judges and ambassadors a tenet of faith. Using God to push for power - not justice - to consolidate a political agenda, to, gain votes is an ultimate form of taking God's name in vain and such persons show no fear or reverence for God. The fact that so many American Christians have stayed quiet as their faith is bastardised is even more disconcerting as they are be­ ing judged to be unfaithful to God if they oppose this administration's agenda . Where in Scripture does God support the heavily weighted tax breaks for the rich and for corporations, the diminishment of social institutions that help maintain a semblance of dignity to the poor, the unemployed, the disabled and Ihe elderly, the degradation and exploitation of His creation for corporate gain, the inflicting of pre­ emptive war on an innocent populace with the use of blatant lies, the support of torture and suppression of persons He created, the anointment of America as His people or even the principle of de- C a n c e r F i g h t e r s M a k e A D i f f e r e n c e To the editor: I would like to thank each team member of the Cooieemee Can­ cer Fighters, as well as everyone in the commuiiity and elsewhere that has contributed in any way to help make our 2005 Relay for Life fight against cancer a success. Because of you, lives are changed - lives are saved. Ann Spry, Team Captain, Cooieemee Cancer Fighters mocracy ? Jesus' teachings call for love - even of one's enemies, for char­ ity, for forgiveness, for truth and for justice; even the early church lived out the principle of equity as they shared all they had among each other. In our faith, as Christians, Jesus is the judge of the worid - not any of us - and even He did not condemn the woman who was about to be stoned although she had allegedly broken His Father's law; but He did heavily condemn the Pharisees for their use of the law as a tool for self-enhancement and self-righteousness. He chargedjus to "feed His sheep" for Him - not for votes. Syndi Holmes, Mocksville Letters Welcomed The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read- ers. The letters may be on topics of local, state, national o r ' intem ationali^sues. An effort will be m ade to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. All letters shotjid include the name and address of the writer, including a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is also requested. Please have letters in the newspaper office no later than 4 p jn . M onday of the week to be published. Davie C ounft'; ^ te rp rise Record P.O. Box, 99, M ocksville, or email to :) emews@ davie-enterprise.com. . i Add your vote to our weel<ly online poll tiiat asks questions affecting you and Davie County Log on at www.enterprlse-record.com and click on reader’s poll to cast your vote. Results will be listed here weekly G o t A n O p in io n ? Should county commissioners give V p o 71 Davie County Schools a 16% in- / 1 /0 crease in local funding for next year? 2 9 % Log on now to cast your vote on the newest question: www.enterprlse-record.com I n T h e M a i l ... DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - 3 Case Smacks Of Cover Up Passers-By Help Save Home To the editor: Doesn’t it seem strange that with all the attention Ihe media has given lately to the consequences of parents serving alcohol to mi­ nors that all Tammy Young received was a suspended sentence and commiinity service? What kind of punishment is lhat? Does our court not realize how dangerous this type of behavior is? Do chil­ dren have to die in car accidents before our court takes this seri­ ously? I agree wilh Mrs. Gough. I think there was some sort of çover up, too. I had heard about the parly and the kids who were arrested and found it odd that there was nothing in the paper, I applaud Mrs. Gough for speaking out, everything she said is Une. Sue Smith Advance South 8th Graders Great To the editor: We are very lucky to have a great group of kids and staff at South Davie. We are so proud of you. I just survived going on the 8th grade North Carolina Coast field trip. From what I have heard this is the 1 Ith year of this trip. I was also told that through the years each year holds a new experience. So you might say I thought I knew what to expect. I know that the next time the weatherman tells us that things are going to cool down, I w ill believe him. We were told to pack light and I listened too well. It didn’t take long to figure olit that I under packed for the wet, cold weather that we experienced. We were told that on the boat trip over to Cape Lookout that we would get wet. We did. But I wasn’t prepared for the wind chill of 30, and being wet. We thought the wind would blow us away. We looked like the weather guy on the news trying to show us the hurricane winds right before it hits shore. The kids just jumped right up in the front of the boat. The kids thought it was a cool adventure. Cool is not the word for it. They never acted like it bothered them at all. The captain and our tour directors commented that it was the worst weather they had ever experienced with a group over on the island. They bragged on how well our group behaved, especially with the conditions and the cold, rainy weather. I was so impressed with the behavior of the students. The kids were respectful to their adult chaperones and Iheir teachers. The staff had to work very hard to organize a trip of this size. On Thursday morning, the weather was bad enough with the cold temperatures and choppy seas that the ferry closed. We were told that in the II years Ihey have come on this trip this was only the second time the ferry closed because of bad weather conditions. Mrs. Leonard and her staff members had to make some tough decisions about how to fill all that time. They did an outstanding job. We got to take a tour of Bath, the first town established in North Carolina. The kids had a time looking for shark teeth out in the driveway of the information center. They never complained or made a fuss about the changes. They just asked the questions all kids ask, “Where are we going next and when are we going to get there?” We took the long, scenic route but we made it to the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse. The staff had our meals planned out so that we didn’t have to wait in long restaurant lines. We had lots of snacks and seemed to eat every time we stopped. kids love to eat. I thoroughly enjbÿèd’and appreciiite'thé'privilege of speh'di'ng time with this group 6 f 8th graders.T will go on a trip with'tliem anywhere, anytime. You kids did a great job and the other chaper­ ones agree with me that you are great and we appreciate your re­ spect and your good behavior on the trip. I also want to complement our bus drivers, they were very helpful and courteous to the students and bragged and thanked the kids for such a great job. Shiriey West, Mocksville Other Parents who went on the trip were: Ellen Grubb, Karin Ren, Leanne Beck, Davia Durham, Brenda Hollifield, Tina Felts To Ihe editor: M y family and I would like to extend a grateful thank you to everyone who responded to a fire at our home. Had it not been for some quick action, it would have cost us everything. On Monday, April 25, we were in Winston-Salem. Our home is located on Hwy, 801 North, and while we were gone, our home caught fire, A complete stranger was U'aveling on 801 and saw smoke coming out the window. She stopped, jumped out of her car, in­ structed her daughter to call 911 from her cell, and as her daughter was making this call, she ran to the back of our home, grabbed a water hose, and started spraying the fire. Thank you, Debbie Seats, and your daughter, M aria Leonard. Your actions will always be re­ membered, because if it had not been for you controlling the fire, we may have lost our past, present and future. Your call to 9 11 got two fire departments dispatched quickly, and fortunately, that call saved our home. Thank you, 911, Davie Sheriff’s Office, first re­ sponders, Farmington and Smith Grove fire departments, Davie EM S and anyone else who worked hard and feverishly to save our home and everything in it. Yes, there was damage, and yes, we lost some of our things, but we’re lucky, because due to the actions, hospitality ond quick thinking of the people of Davie County, our home is still standing. To all involved, you are in our prayers and thoughts every day. W e’re very happy to say we live in Davie County, because oltl- fashioned hospitality does still exist here. W e've lived here all our lives and it gives us a feeling of security to know that people still care. God bless you all, and we pray that He w ill richly bless yoiir lives as he has ours. Thank you, again. Bill and Joyce Myers Advance Cartoon Offensive To the editor: Your cartoon on the editorial page of Ihe April 28 edition was in poor taste, to put it mildly. It was a crude insult to all Catholics in Davie County and beyond. And for what purpose? I Joanne and Tom O'Donnell Bermuda Run Johnson Family Thankful To the editor: We would like to t ank the Davie Counly EM S, Rescue Squad, Sheriff's Dept,, Higliway Patrol, Fork VFD and anyone else who assisted with the accident M ike Johnson was in on Hwy, 64, Thurs­ day morning, April 21, We would also like to thank the community for all the prayers, well-wishes, cards, flowers, phone calls and vis­ its, The outpouring of love and support has been overwhelming. We would like lo say a very special thanks lo Scott Stout, who witnessed the accident, slopped and stayed wilh M ike, talking to him and praying with him until help arrived. We are mòre grateful and indebted than words can express to Danny Barnette of Energy United in Statesville, who Hajipeney li'pon the nc{:i'deHi'nM sii?,pp,eci' | and risked his own life to save Mike^s', He truly is a iiero. We are so grateful that God placed Barnette in that place, at that time. We know it's a miracle from God lhal we still have M ike with us and we’re so very grateful to all who had a part in that miracle. We covet your continued prayers for M ike and our family. M ike, Nanette and their employees thank you for your continued support of their business and they need il now more lhan ever. Thank you. Melissa Johnson, sister, and the family of Mike Johnson Mocksville Report From Raleigh Deadline To File Bills Passes; Crossover Here By Rep. Julia C, Howard N.C. House of Representatives “Crossover" here at the General Assembly is M ay 19, so committees this week have been active. Crossover is a date established by the House and Senate under which a bill, in order to survive after M ay 19, must “crossover” from one chamber lo Ihe other. To expand, a bill, if introduced in the House, must be passed by the House and sent to Ihe Senate before the crossover deadline'. The same holds true for a bill introduced in the Senate: il must pass in the Senate and be sent to the House prior lo the deadline. Otherwise, the bill is "dead,” and is not eligible for further consideration by cither body. This is a long-standing procedure here at the General Assembly and is undertaken in an attempt lo moinlain some degree of control over the more than 2,700 bills that have been filed this session. Certain bills, such as finance and appropria­ tions bills are not subject to the crossover deadline. The deadline for inUoducllon of public bills in the House was last Wednesday, and as a result, a large number of bills were introduced. Below are some of the bills filed in the House I thought interesting: H B 1345 - Lim it Certain S^lf-Service Drug Purchases. This bill requires that products w ith tablets containing 30 milligrams or more o f pseudo- epheclrine must have each tablet in a blister package and may nol be made available for self- service retail .sale. Purchases in any single over-the-counter sale of more than nine grams of any product containing pseudoe- phedrine as the sole active ingredient would be prohibited. This bill establishes the N .C .- Melhamphelamine Abuse Task Force and provides that stealing a product containing more than nine grams of pseudophedrine is felony larceny H B 1347 Volunteer Retired Nurse Licensure. This b ill authorizes the N .C . Board of Nursing to issue a volunteer license to an active or retired nurse who wishes to donate nursing services through a charitable organization. A volunteer license w ould be available lo a nurse who has completed al least 25 hours of training w ith Ihe charitable organization and has been active for al least 10 years or has been on Ihe official inactive status list for no more than 10 years. H B 1358 Health Care For A ll. This bill amends the Slate Constitution to recognize health care as a right lo all North Caro­ linians, This bill proposes voter ratification at the November 2006 general eleclion of a new section in the C onstitution « requiring the General Assembly to enact a plan ensuring every resident o f N orth Carolina access to appropriate health care on a regular basis by July I, 2011. H B 1367 Wave Marrioge License Fee/Pre-Marital Coun­ seling Funds. This bill waives the fee for a marriage license for individuals who receive pre­ marital counseling. It appropri­ ates $150,000 for 2005-06 and $150,000 for 2006-07 from the General Fund to reim burse counties’, the Children’s Trust Fund, and the Domestic V io­ lence Center Fund for the loss in revenue that results from the fee waiver. Any losses in excess of the appropriated funds would be paid from the contingency and emergency fund. H B 1390 Am end A B C IVansportation Lim it. This bill increases the am ount o f unfortified wine that may be transporte^ without a permit from 20 to 50 liters. H B 1401 Concealed Carry By Low Enforcement Officers. This bill allows a sworn law enforcement officer with a state, county, or municipal law en­ forcement agency to carry a concealed weapon at all times. Law enforcement officers would have to abide by their agencies ' adopted regulations that prohibit impairment by alcoholic bever­ ages or controlled substances w hile corrylng a concealed weapon. H B 1414 - Help Teacher Assistants Become Teachers, This b ill perm its teacher assistants ,enrolled in teacher education programs to continue lo work while they complete teaching. The bill requires the Slate Board o f Education to establish an education program for assistant teachers beginning with the 2005-06 academic year, H B 1426 - Grandparent V isitation By Special Proceeding, This bill establishes a proceeding whereby the grandparent of a minor child may obtain visitation rights or custody. Grandparents would be able lo initiate a special pro­ ceeding seeking visitation rights if either or bolh parents are deceased or if extraordinary cir­ cumstances exist including an extended disruption of custody. H B 1435 - Criminal Record Considered In D W I Sentencing. This bill allows the sentencing court to consider more .of a defendant's criminal record in determining aggravating factors to be weighed when sentencing an offender for D W I. H B ' 1440 - Eleclion Improvement Act O f 2005. This bill increases the size of the State Board of Elections from five lo six nnd continues the provision that no mote than three may be members of the same political Please See Report ■ Page 5 L o u ise S tro u d Boarding House A t Gaither & Main I can’t believe this month marks the fourth year I have written a monthly column for the Davie County Enter­ prise Record. W hat started as a one-time article just sort of went on. I had seen an article in a magazine published in another state, asking readers to write an article on “Way Back W hen.” I wrote one and then I couldn’t see why somebody in another slate would be interested in what little M ocksville was like in the early 1900s. Then it occurred to me that m aybe Davie County people m ight be interested so I took the article to M ike Barnhardt to see what he thought. He thought it would be of interest and asked me about writing once a month. I hadn’t thought of such a thing but I told him maybe I could write a few colum ns. I can’t believe that was four years ago. I was am azed at the response I received and I want to thank all of those people who told me they enjoyed the colum ns. I’ve been especially impressed by the response from the young people. I have also learned a lot of interesting facts. Sometime ago, I wrote about the way M ocksville’s downtown square looked between 1914 and 1926.1 remember how the buildings looked but I had one memory that was so vague I didn’t mention it because I w asn’t sure about it. One of my first recollections was of a boarding house on the com er where the W oodworks Gallery is now located. It seemed to me it was a yellow , frame house run by Mr. and M rs. Pritchard Cain. H e was always known as "Pritch” Cain. Anyway, I had never mentioned this to anybody because I didn't know anyone that I thought would know. However, Bill Seaford and I were talking about old M ocksville and he mentioned that boarding house on that com er and then I knew it had really been a reality. Bill knows all about things that happened way before his day. Sometimes, he will tell me little incidents that I didn't know anyone else knew but me. I think he said the Cains left here and went north. Then Kurfees and W ard (Jesse Lee Kurfees and Grady W ard) owned a place of business there. M r. Kurfees sold paint for along time and Grady Ward occupied the other half of the building. Then a service station was run by Albert Boger and Sam Howard. Later, Mr. Boger’s son, Denton, “Al” ran the station for a long time. I remember when they closed their gas tanks because I always bought my gas there. One day 1 drove up for gas and Al came out and said, “Fill it up?” which was what he always said and I said, “Yes.” Then he said, “Oh, I forgot. We closed down our gas tanks about a m onth ago.” I hadn't known they were no longer selling gas and I was sorry. ' ^'' fiot long ago, a group was discussing ¡in antique car show. I said I had an antique car I could take. O f course, I drive it every day. In fact, it’s the only car I have. It’s getting on in years. O f course, it’s not as old as I am but it’s had ill health for some time now. It has been to a vehicle engineering technician a num ber of times but I’m thankful it doesn’t just give up. I do my best to keep it in good health. It doesn’t look very good any more, but who am I to condemn what the ravages of age will do. I'ln not sure I could handle a new car. I m ight push the button that I thought would unlock the door and it might blow the horn or roll up the garage door. M y car has a steering wheel, seat belt, brakes, ignition, lights, tires and a windshield wiper - oh, yes, and a gas pedal so I guess it has the absolute necessities. O f course, it might be nice to have that little gadget that tells you in what direction you're traveling. If there’s a wrong road. I’m pretty good at finding it. I was so glad when I found out I w asn’t the only one with a poor sense of direction. Anyway, I’m just hoping my old car will last as long as I do. It has its own little ways but I guess I’m used to them and m aybe I do, too. I'm sure many of you remember Oren H effner’s Land of Food, which was where the First United M ethodist Church community life building is now located, on North Main Street. Later, the store was moved to the Willow Oaks Shopping Center on the Yadkinvilie Highway where the Post Office is now located. I’ll always rem em ber the good home cooked food at the back of the store. M rs., Tommy Hendrix of Fork was an excellent cook. She was in charge and I remem ber she was sometimes assisted by a couple of other ladies. I went out almost every Friday to buy my lunch. I thought Mrs. Hendrix made the best homemade soup. One Friday in late spring I told her I was alm ost sorry summ er was com ing because I enjoyed her homemade soup so much. To my surprise and delight she said that since I liked it so much she would continue to make it all sum m er on Fridays, and she did. I thought that, was really nice. The first of M ay brings something to mind from way, way back. It was the day that many mothers let their little folks shed their union suits. And now you ask, "W hat was a union suit?" You have probably never heard of one and you just don’t know what you’ve m issed. It was a gar­ ment children wore next to their skin in winter to keep them warm. M aybe older people w ore them , too. I don’t know. Some mothers allowed them to be removed on M ay 1, whatever the weather. These garm ents went all the way down to your ankles and little girls wore thick black stockings in the winter. I tried hard to smooth them down (under my stockings) and lap them over at the ankles, so my legs would not look lumpy. It w asn't easy. This was in the “good old days.” W e've com e a long way. 's t r o u s e h o u s e a u c t io n s ' 1424 Industrial Dr. Statesville, NC 28625 Plione: 704-872-8444 336-940-6306 AUCTIONEER MIKE STROUSE NC UC #7465 COME VISIT OUR NEW LOCATION - LARGE AUCTION GALLERY! FISHING. TOOL & GENERAL MERCHANDISE G ARY H IL B O R N - H E ’S BACKl!!! May 7th SAT. 6PM C O M E EARLY- CHECK OUT THE SALE - W E’R E GONNA GRILL SOME RIBEYESUmU D O N T M IS S TH IS SALE-HE’S HERE O N C E A YEAR!!! 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 BIBSAve. Í 40 to 177 South to Exit 49A G.Bagnal IX. 3^4 Mile Past Shell Station - Next Left on Industrial Dr. Stiouse House Auction Is on the Left Across ^The RR Ttacks.. Just a short drive and easy to find. l i M l i E i l ALERT T h e n e w B A N K R U P T C Y B I L L b e c o m e s l a w f o r a l l c a s e s f i l e d o n o r a f t e r O c t o b e r , 20 0 5. Written by the Credit Card Banks the new law will make it impossible for many consumers to file for Chapter 7 relief and at the same time will require such high repayments as to make Chapter 13 difficult, If not impossible for many. If you are con sidering bankruptcy, there is still time. < lli |i M .1 l!\\ luv ol'li-MlioU I T H E LA W O F F IC E O F T h o m a s L. N e sb it Mocksville, NC 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 1 2 5 www.nesbltlaw.com C o u n ty C o n s id e rs C hange A t S h e lte r Sheriff Allen Whitaker and Deputy Steve Moxley take Frederick Lee McKoy into custody. 2 C h a r g e d A f t e r C h a s e Gifts Fo r л; Mothers! U i n ^ s ♦ I ’ i i i s ♦ N c c k h i e e s I V i u la i il s ♦ I t r a c c l e l . s tim i d \ i c c S e lc c d tn t o f S lt r liii^ J c w t lr y I <■/(/. /'I Iiihltii H\ \ir.r.:( \l lili /III id I 3Ji'iiu'lrrs ♦ ,S| in IN«, \I(H KS\ II I I \ |)\\ II ( (И S| \ I OK ()\ I M 50 ^ K\U.S ♦ 171 N orlh M ;iiii SI.. McK-ksN illi'. N C Cunlinucd Krum Page 1 vehicle and wrccked the Taurus on the gunrdrnil. According lo Chief Deputy Murk Howell, the officers thought the vchicle was pinned on the guardrail, and proceeded to move in from behind. Jack.son eyited his vehicle and approached from behind as McKoy got the car started again. He threw the car in reverse and headed straight for the deputy, Jackson drew his service re­ volver and fired ns the car bore down on him. Howell said the in- cldent was caught on Jackson’s dashboard mounted video cam^a, and was reviewed by himself and Sheriff Allen Whitaker, Howell said the weapon discharge was clearly justified. "Officer Jackson left his ve­ hicle and the car came towards him," Howell said. “He thought he was going to be pinned, and aimed al the right rear lire. He took two The Alternative to Ordinary I I О п 1 ч 1 к2 1 I l \ f М О М к Я ^4 I S I A I I S l< i)l)in A M\«. rs 3 .Ì6 .2 iS.O lO O Applying Corporate Management Experience, & B.S. Marketing Skills to Real Esiale National Relocation Advertising Access. Ranltcd 100% Client Satisfaction CEfiTUBY 21: SwiCTgood, Walls McDaniel 24l9Uwisville-ClcmmnnsRd.,Cli;mriioiis or 8.‘i| Valley Rd„ Mocksviilc shots," McKoy then threw the car in gear and took off down 1-40 again. Jackson, Whitesides and Staley all gave chose, but the damage to the vehicle proved to be too much. McKoy pulled off the road, and both suspects left the vehicle and tried to evade their pursuers on foot. Jackson gave chase and came up behind M iller with his gun drawn. As he closed the gap. Miller quickly turned and swung, causing Jackson’s gun to slam into , his mouth. Jackson injuries were consid­ ered minor. Although he suffered a chipped a tooth and received eight stitches as a result of the in­ jury, Jackson was back at work by Monday. Police recovered approxi- niately $700 worth of Tylenol and Alleve from M iller and McKoy, much of which had been stuffed down their pants legs in an attempt to sneak it out of the store. McKoy, who is held on a $60,000 secured bond, has a court date scheduled for May 11. Miller, held under a $12,000 bond, will appear in district criminal court May 20. G E N E ’S AUTO PARTS W e M ake H ydraulic H oses & M ix Auto P aint 7 6 6 - 9 1 4 8 3 6 1 2 C lem m ons R oad C lem m ons sw>v, T o w n & C o u n tr y HOME SHOWCASE By MBS for • C A B I N E T S • F L O O R I N G • C E R A M I C T I L E / i • W I N D O W S & D O O R S • B R I C K & V I N Y L S I D I N G lyUBMh PMlHcCwrnKk kmvDMfm ICMfmOmfW KMtmOnfw 5275 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 27006 (TanglewDod Crossing Shopping Center) (336) 996-7800 OptnMfBanhSpfnStSaaadoflbifApptonl/ Mocksville Builders Supply^ Town & Country By MBS H o m e S h o w c a s e C e n te r Is your local one stop shop with an attractive, showroom atmosphere. Our professional design team will give you the personal attention you just can't get in those big city scores. By Jackie Seabolt Davie County Enterprise Record The discovery last month of a live puppy inside a garbage bag at the local landfill - the lone survivor of a botched euthana­ sia attempt by a county shelter employee - has raised interest among animal welfare groups. It has them asking the ques­ tion, “Is Davie’s animal shelter in compliance with the state law?” On Tuesday, April 26, mem­ bers of Davie County’s Humane Society met with County Man­ ager Terry Bralley to discuss the issue. Local veterinarian and Hu­ mane Society President Robin Brock said the purpose was to find a way to resolve the prob­ lem and make sure it doesn’t happen again. Brock said she was contacted by a representative from an ani­ mal protection group outside of North Carolina who expressed interest in attending the meeting. No one from the group was in attendance. Brock reviewed a state law which says a dog or cat not wear­ ing required rabies vaccination tags and not reclaimed by its owner during an impoundment period can be put to death by a procedure approved by the American Veterinary Medical Association, the Humane Soci­ ety of the United States, or of the American Humane Association. She passed out handouts from the American Veterinarian Medical Association on euthana­ sia. A VM A ’s panel on euthana­ sia recommcnds inhalants, Uke the carbon monoxide used at the shelter, not be used on animals less than 16 weeks of age except to induce unconsciousness, fol­ lowed by the use of some other method to kill the animal. Brock said younger animals do not inhale oxygen at the same rate an adult would and it’s pos­ sible they could jnlwle the car- . bon monoxide quickly and be knocked unconscious without actually killing them. She said that was probably what happened to the puppy found al the landfill. “That’s the A VM A’s recom­ mendation, and we’re not fol­ lowing it,” Brock said. Davie Animal Control Of­ ficer Robert Cook spoke next and brought those in attendance up to date on whal has taken place at the shelter since the in­ cident. Cook said he plans to bring in a veterinarian from Pittsboro, Dr. Ralph Houser of Carolina Veterinary Consulting, who has helped other shelters in the slale employ proper euthanasia meth­ ods. "He has agreed to come here within the next week or so and help us through this trauma and assist us in making whatever change is necessary.” Cook said interpreting the law can be confusing, "One says recommends is the law, and one says recommends is ndl the law. We don’t want to do this, period. But my position is we want to do what’s right,” Houser assisted Davidson County in the design of their eu­ thanasia chamber. It is a clear plexiglass design that allows easy viewing of the animals dur­ ing induction. Cook estimated the cost of a new chamber and training ot personnel by Houser would cost the county less than $6,000. “1 would like for us to allow him the time to observe our situ­ ation and make the necessary recommendations,” Cook said. "He can bring us together on what’s right.” Brock referenced a handout that listed one of the minimum standards for carbon monoxide use. It staled the chamber must be equipped wilh view ports and be well lit lo permit viewing. Davie’s euthanasia chamber does not meet this standard and uses a “timing method” to deter­ mine when the process is com­ plete, “If you would have had port holes on the side of your cham­ ber would it have made a differ­ ence?” asked Humane Society Board M em ber Dave McGonigle. “No, sir,” Cook answered. “So the issue is really how to handle the smaller animals that don’t inhale carbon monoxide on a basis rapid enough to euthanize. Maybe have a process in place for them that w ill keep them longer at the shelter to make sure they don’t recover,” McGonigle said. “When this guy (Houser) comes he probably won’t have a better idea, just better equipment and belter training, unless we go lo another process.” That olher process would be death by injection with sodium pentobarbital. Though the A V M A recom­ mends carbon monoxide and so­ dium pentobarbital as acceptable animal shelter euthanasia meth­ ods, of. the ,two methods, injec­ tion of sodium pentobarbital is preferred. And the American Humane Association recently adopted injection as the only ac­ ceptable method for animal shel­ ter euthanasia. Davie’s shelter has five part- time employees. Doing injectable euthanasia on every animal put down can be stressful for employees and the animats, increase the risk of injury, and compound the grief and guilt that already comes with the job. Cook said. "I don’t know how you would find the personnel to do that.” Bralley asked Humane Soci­ ety board members if they thought the county was moving forward in a responsible way to deal with the situation. A ll those at the meeting said they thought the county was dealing with the issue in a posi­ tive way. The Humane Society w ill meet again to review Houser’s recommendations after his visit to the shelter sometime this month. Cook Police Chief; Crater Animai Officer Continued From Page 1 that didn’t die in a euthanasia at­ tempt. That didn’t play a great deal into his decision. Cook said. " I’ve given it (animal con­ trol) 20 years of my best. 1 may not have been perfect, but I ’ve given il my all," Cook said he looks forward to serving the people, "W e’ve got one of the best police departments in the slale,” Cook said, “I don’t have any axe to grind. I ’m here lo help.” Cook said there are no plans to revamp the police department. With the town growing towards 1-40, he realizes and looks for­ ward to meeting the challenge. Crater will take over Cook's ' contract with Ihe county to pro­ vide animal control services. That conlract is forJlOl.OOO per year. He had been animal cru­ elty investigator w ith the sheriff's department. D i s t r i c t C o u r t The follow ing cases were heard in Davie District Court on April 28. Presiding: Judge H, Thomas Church, Prosecuting; Kevin Beale and Wendy Terry, Assistant DAs. - Karen Autrey, seven counts of felony probation violation, sentenced to 244 days, 179 days credit. . - Donnie Beaver, possession of drug paraphernalia, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, cost. - A lbert Bracken, driving while impaired, sentenced lo 60 days, suspended 2 years, unsu­ pervised probation, surrender li­ cense, $100, cosl; failure lo bum headlights, dismissed; motor­ cycle helm et violation, dis­ missed. - Warren Brown, D W l, sen­ tenced to 60 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, surrender license, 24 hours com­ munity service, $100, cost. - James Cole, 2 counts mis­ demeanor probation violation, sentenced to 225 days; assault on a govemment official, sentenced to 75 days; second degree tres­ pass, dismissed; intoxicated and disruptive, dismissed. - Karissa Cole, driving while impaired, sentenced 16 I year, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, surrender license, $400, .cost, 17 days credit. - Ronald Coleman, D W I, sen­ tenced to 1 year, suspended 2 years, supervised probation, sur­ render license, 7 days active, $400, cost; no license, open con­ tainer, dismissed. - Tabatha Fairley, assault on a school employee, dismissed; resisiting public officer, dis­ missed. - Connie Farrell, simple as­ sault, dismissed. - Guy Dack, speeding 91 in a 70, rcduced to 79 in a 70, cost. - Peter Hadley, driving while revoked, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 2 years, supervised probation, $200, cosl. - Darice Hall, speeding 83 in a 70, reduccd to improper equip­ ment, cost. - Nathan Hayes, larceny of a tpolor fuel, dismissed. - Jonathan Hutchins, speed­ ing 80 in a 55, reduce dto 64 in a 55, cost. - Stephen Jefferson, noise or­ dinance violation, dismissed. - Kevin Jones, speeding 87 in a 70, reduced to improper equip- m cnt, cost; follow ing too closely, dismissed; failure to notify D M V o f an address change, sentenced to 45 days, suspended I year, unsupervised probation, $100, cost, - Marvin Lockhart, failure to secure passenger, dismissed, - Rita Lockhart, failure to wear seatbelt, prayer for judge­ ment, cost. - Felton Lee Mayfield, prac­ tice pharmacy without a license, dismissed. - Lebrón M ayfield, misde­ meanor larceny, dismissed. - Eddy Miller, simple assault, dismissed; injury lo personal property, prayer for judgement, cosl. - Cleofas Miramontes, driv- Report From Raleigh Continued From Page 3 party. This bill provides that the governor designates the chair and secretary from the board’s membership. H B 1445 Sex O ffender Amendments. This bill provides that a victim o f a sexually violent offense or the’Vicfiln’s fam ily may obtain a civil tio- contact order against a registered offender who resides or works at a place o f employment within a quarter m ile o f the victim . This bill prohibits a registered offen-der from residing within a quarter mile of an elementary school or a childcare facility, H B 1450 - Spend 65% O f School Funds In Classroom. The bill ensures that at least 65 percent of school funding is used for classroom instruction. H B 1453 - Line-Item Veto. This b ill amends the N .C . Constitution to grant the gover­ nor a line-item veto of appro­ priated items. H B 1474 - Public Assistance Benefits/Residents Only, I am a primary sponsor of this bill that requires an applicant for public assistance to provide affirmative proof o f citizenship or lawful presence in the U.S. wilh docu­ mentation recognized by the Department of M otor Vehicles or a verifiable Social Security number. Requirements do not apply to persons applying for Medicaid if they resided in long­ term facilities or received in- home and com m uiiity-based services on June 31, 1997, and "w eiiJ'eligib le fo r M bdldaid benefits.' Requirements also do not apply to persons under the age o f 19. This b ill would require state agencies admini­ stering public assistance pro­ grams to cooperate with local governments and the Depart­ ment of Homeland Security lo develop a system to facilitate verification of an individual’s lawful presence in the U. S. H B 1484 - D W I A fter Conviction O f D W I W ith Death. This provides for the felony offense o f D W I after having been previously convicted of a driving while impaired offense that was the proximate cause of a traffic-related dealh. H B 1492 - Drivers License Revocotion For A BC Violation. This provides for the revocation of the drivers license of any per­ son convicted of giving alcohol­ ic beverages to, or aiding and abetting the purchase or possess-ion o f alcoholic l l i P n R г о ш т ш А м н е Щ B ra n d o n K o o n tz B e n e fit G o lf T o u m a m e n t Saturday, M ay 21“‘, 2005 Pudding Ridge Golf Course 1:0 0 P M Shotgun Start (R egistration Begins a t 12:00 N oon) (Lunch Provided) 4 Person .Sli ai^lil ( :ii)l;iiirs ( IioIit , \,' Mnlli Mt II |)l.i\ hoiii lUiii l> > Nvui'tl s 1 1 I» «ИИ ItiU 1« « ' St'iiuM N I ‘ Л \V '‘Ш II II MUI Kid I» «S «•(.si: $i)0 |)iT |)ri s(iii ' S |it4 'ia l P i'i/ .fs liii liiilc ; liK I "S k ill Г о Г ' Str;iii;lil>'sl 1)11'>’ l.im iirst l)i'Í4 I lllSCst Id lllf I'lM , I//¡inn cCíN WillIll liciujil U m iuloii KiiDiilz lo Uccisili \ li'iim nr I'or Sponsor lllinnilillínil l'K'íisr ( olii.U I: I'll Uohn Koii ;11 ( VWii -l‘>2 7(HU »r Kin liillrnm .W ».Иы 4'>2 7754 DAVIE CO U N TY E N T E R PR ISE R E C O R D , T hursday, M ay 5,2005 - 5 n f f lE F ’T S r ing while revoked, sentenced lo 45 days, suspended 2 years, un­ supervised probation, $100, cost. - Glen Newsome, 5 counts worthless checks, dismissed. - Edward Paulsen, assault on a female, dismissed, - W illiam Reynold, driving while revoked, prayer for judge­ ment, cost. - Kevin Robertson, misde­ meanor larceny, dismissed: speeding 52 in a 35, reduced to imprper equipment, cost. - Brandon Runyon, injury to personal property, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 18 months, supervised probation, $100, cost. - Timothy Seamon, second degree trespass, dismissed. - Michele Swanger, speeding 89 in a 70, reduced lo improper equipment, cost. - Jennifer Thompson, speed­ ing 84 in a 70, reduced lo im­ proper equipment, cost. - Michael Wafford, 2 counts driving w hile revoked, sen­ tenced to 60 days, 1 day credit; unauthorized use of a motor ve­ hicle, dismissed. - Jonathon Ward, no motor­ cycle endorsement, dismissed. - Alan Westmoreland, protec­ tive order violation, prayer for judgement, cost. - Lisa Whitley, assault wilh intent to inflict serious injury, prayer for judgement, cost. - David Winebarger, injury to reol property, sentneced to 45 days, suspended 2 years, unsu­ pervised probation, $100, cost. beverages by an underage person. H B 1526 - No Comprehensive Deductible On W indshields. This b ill elim inates the autom obile insurance com -prehensive deductible on motor vehicle w indshield glass (repair or replacement). H B 1543 - Autopsy Photos Not Public Record. This pro­ vides that photographs and video or audio recordings made pursuant lo an autopsy are not public records. This bill allows lim ited access to recorded images of an autopsy by the public. Text o f an autopsy report, including findings and inlerpre-tations would be public record. Pictures, video images, and audio recordings would be available lo a personal represen­ tative o f the deceased or a person authorized by court order. Medi-cal examinerij and others could use these items for teaching purposes after rem oving the identifying information about the deceased. If you would like further inform ation on any of these bills, feel free to contact my office. Legislative Office: 919-733- 5904; Mocksville Office: 751- 8567; E-mail:juliali@iicleg.nei Cooperative employees provide good value and reliable service for the people who own their company - YOU. Only a local elccttic cooperative like EncrgyUnlted makes every customer an owner of the business. Unlike other electric utilities, we exist to make sure your needs nre met - nnd exceeded - not just to mnke n profit. And since EncrgyUnlted Is locnlly owned nnd opernted, we're always there with you, relnvcstlnB In our community. EncrgyUnlted - we’re a cooperative, and our customers hnve the power. nited^ E n e r g y J J Л TînKhïtonc Energy* Gx>pcrullve cnergyunitcd.com (800) 522-3793 Mower Broken? Taking Vacation? 1 T l m O f 2 Timesf Ali tiie Time? We^re Here When You Need Us D am e Lam n c a r e Prices so low... You’ll never mow! Free estimates Commercial & Residential Insured Weekly & Bi-Weekly Services We also pressure wasti! (336)345-0061 • (336)909-2554 Nextel ID# 150*25*26008 Dauie 1ашп care 25% OFF 1st Weekly Service (336)345-0061 6. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Mny 5,200S Public Records DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 2005 - 7 Land IVansfers The following land transfers were filed with Ihe Dnvie Reg­ ister of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, township, and deed sinmps purchased, with $2 representing $1,000. - Brock & Scott, substitute trustee, to Federal National Mortgage Association, 1 lot, Mocksville. - Allen Wayne Builders to M ike and Ashley Smith, 1 lot, Farmington, $842. - W. Wayne Frye Organiza­ tion to Williiun J. Holdgrafer and M arjorie C. Chapman, 1 lot, Farmington, $149. - Ricky L. Steele and Annette W . Steele to Richard L, Edwards and Marsha L. Edwards, 4 lots, Mocksville, $157. - M arjorie Comer to Lynn Com er Shinault, 1.1 acres, Farmington.' - William' V. Foster Jr. and JoAnna C. Foster to Donald M . Link Jr. and Kathy M . Link, 1 lot, $68. - Pamela W. Carter and Rob­ ert Dale Carter lo Pamela W. Carter and Jeffrey Scott Wall, .7 acre, Jerusalem. - Donald Ray Sm ith and Rebecca Smith to Donald Ray Smith,.8.41 acres. - Cipriano Mendez Chiquito and Apolinar Mendez to Oliver J. Washington and Sabrina A. Washington, 1 lot, Mocksvillc, $192. - Hepler Brothers Dairy by surviving shareholders, Jesssc 0 . Hepler and Shirley C. Hepler, Samuel R. Hepler and Belty Hepler, James David Hepleer and Ruth Hepler, and Frances E. Hepleer, widow of Edward L. Hepler Sr. to Keith B. Hiatt and Patricia H. Hiatt, I lot. Shady Grove, $50. - Zachary H . W right and Melody B. Wright to W illiam G. Johnson Jr. and June H. Johnson, I lot, Clarksville, $210. - Flossie C. Walker to Ahmed Moussa, 100 acres, Clarksville,, $1,000. - Brandon C. Hi'iton and Heather S. Hilton to C.F. Allen Enterprises, 8.03 acres, Clarksville. $120. ■ -Campbell’sQuality Proper­ ties to John Weston W illiams and Leanne P. Williams, 1 lot, $320. - Jade Associates II to Fowler-Jones Construction, I Hot, Mocksville, $90. - M ax Hess Construction to Christian Perron, 1 lot, Mocks­ ville, $289. - The Ryland Group tto Gwendene Posey and Tyrone Posey, 1 lot, Farmington, $412. - R.P. Associates to H iLo Entcфriscs, 1.67 acres, Farm­ ington, $90. - J.K . Canter B uilder to Charies Mays and Sheila Mays,; I lot, Fanninglon, $999. - Richard Edwin Gathers and Anna Marlene Gathers to Patrick E. Kronner and M ary A . Kronner, 1 lot, Clarksville, $258. - Andrew J. Filipowski and Veronica L. Filipow ski to Zachary H. Wright, 40.38 acres, $160. - Stacy L. Hauser and Michael Wilson Hauser to Chris­ topher K. Johnson and Melissa R. Johnson, 6 acres, Shady Grove, $190. R EAL ESTATE W EEK LY By Debbie Prachel Owner/Brok«r Premier Carolina Properties ...... SCENTS T H A T M A K E SENSE! Prospcclivc buyers may read strongly to the way a home smells. Smoke, strong disinfcctanls, insecticides, kilty litter, and frcnch fries have all been known lo dampen the enthusiasm of buyers who might olhenvise respond positively lo a house that seems like il would meet their needs. Bt sure that yoar home in Davie Counly passes the sniff test when il is on Ihc nuttket. Smoke and pels are the biggesl offenders. Consider a temporary smoking bon inside your home while your home is on the markel. If you have a cat litter box, be meticulous about cleaning it, ¿md pul il in the garage or on the back porch while prospective buyers are touring your home. If your new puppy niins an area nig, remove or replace it while the house is on Ihe markel. There are cleaning services thal specialize in odor removal, They may suggest carpel steaming and other techniques lo remove Ihe offensive odor. Even if buyers smoke themselves or have pels, they will read differently to the same odors lingering in a home Ihey are considering, Debbie is an award-winning full-time professional real estate broker in Davie County. For professional advicc on all aspects of buying and selling real estate, you can reach Debbie al Premier Carolina Properties, 336-998-7777 or 336-909-1284, or visit her website at www,pcpnc,com. - Dora Dean Fleming Jones lo Craig Brannon and Sherry C. Brannon, 2.02 acres, Fullon. - H. Terry Hutchens, substi­ tute trustee to FlagstarBank, .78 acre, Calahain, $146. - Marcus R, Dix and Teresa B. Dix to Stephen G. Crater Jr. and Daria J. Morton, 1 lot,Farm- inglon, $411. - Richard E. Bryant and Patricia M . Bryant to Robert G. Hughes and Mary E. Hughes, 1 lot, Farmington, $580. - Lucy King Chapman ( l/3rd interest) and Dennis Clark King (l/3 rd interest) and Jeanette King lo Jerry Williams King, 1 lot, Jerusalem, $35. Mocksville Police The following incidents were reported to the Mocksville Po­ lice Department. - The larceny of a television from a residence on Yadkinville Road was reported April 25, - The larceny o f a while, metal utility pole from Gaither Street was reported April 25. - The larceny o f $30.02 worth of fuel from The Soda Shoppe, East Lexington Road, was reported April 25. - The larceny of cash from O ’R eilly’s Aulo Ports was re­ ported April 26, - The larceny of $46,56 in fuel was reported April 26 from Fast Track, Yadkinville Road. - The larceny of money from a wallel at the Davie Y M C A was reported April 26. - The basement window lo a salon on Old Yadkinville Road was pryed open; it was reported April 27, - The larceny of money from a room off 337 Hospital St.-was reported May 1. Arrests - Fredy Aguilar Olivarez, 2 1, of Dobson, was charged April 27 wilh shoplifting. Trial date: June 23. - Christopher Keith M iller, 35, of Walkertown, was charged April 27 whhshopljfiing. Trial,., date: M ay 26. He is accused o f' taking lyienol, Advil and Aleve from Food Lion, Yadkinville Rond, - Jose Luis Rogue Luna, 25, of 126 Sunset Drive Apt. 68, was chargeed April 28 with failure lo carry driver’s license. Trial date: M ay 20. - Beatrice Lavem Parson, 46, of 108 Holmnn St., was charged May 1 wilh assault wilh a deadly weapon, damage lo property and communicating threats. Trial date: May 26, Ti-afflc Accidents ^ D a ^ S c h o o l o f D a n c e % S U M M E R S C H E D U L E June 1 - August 1 2 •Adults *Tots* Ballet »Mcxlem« Pointe • Jazz • •Hip Hop »Tap* • Belly Dancing • Line • • Social / Ballroom • D A N C E C A M P S f o r A L L A G E S 9:00 a .m . - 12:00 p .m . D a n c e R e c it a l M ^15 B lock Pteiferming Arts Center ^ Ì ^ BorMorelnßjrnmttmiCatt (336)751-2898 ^ jj V 1 - No'charges were filed after a wreck on Salisbury Street al South Main at 3:15 p.m, April 28, EUseeo M anrriquei M ayo, 45, of Salisbury Road, failed to stop the 1991 Subaru he was driving before il struck the rear o f a 1998 Dodge pickup driven by Stephen Ross Bameycastle, 44, o f Boone Farm Road, M ocksville, icpoited O fficer E.M . Parker. - The steering tie rod broke to a 1992 Ford truck, causing a wrcck on Railroad Street at 3:06 p.m, April 27, Officer Danny Chandler re­ ported that Derrick Fitzgerald Parks,4 0 ,o fN C 801 North, was driving the truck that went off the road to Ihc right, hit a ditch and a pole. - Both drivers were cited af­ ter a wreck on Salisbury Street at 8:15 p.m. M ay 1, Ralph Kenneth Kimrey, 48, of Dove Lane, drove a 1994 Dodge inlo the palh of a 1994 Honda motorcycle driven by Clifford Matthew Justice, 19, of Caravan Lane, reported Officer R,A, Donathan. Kimrey was cited for making an unsafe traffic movement, Jus­ tice for riding without a motor­ cycle endorsement. - No charges were filed after a wreck on Poplar Street at 8:30 p.m. April 28. Krystlc Monique Kelly, 16, o f Blue Bonnett C ourt, wa sdriving a 1992 Ford that Slid into the oncoming lane .in a curve, sltiking a 1989 Toyota driven by Stephanie Laverne Dillard, 18, of Leisure Lane, re­ ported R.A. Donathan. Fires Davie County fire deparl- menlsy responded to the follow­ ing calls: A p ril 2St. Farmington, 4:50 p,m„ N.C, 801 North, house fire; Smith Grove assisted; Advance assisted; Cooleemee, 8:23 p.m., Nolley Road, woods fire, A pril 26: Comatzer-Dulin, 10:35 a.m., Baltimore Road, au­ tomobile accident; Smith Grove assisted; Advance assisted; Cen­ ter, 5:01 p.m., Sheffield Road, fire alarm; Sheffield-Calahaln assisted; Mocksville, 6:30 p.m., U.S. 64 East, automobile acci­ dent. A pril 11". Smith Grove, V.17 p.m., 1-40 East, vehicle fire; Farmington assisted; Mocks­ ville, 2:18 p.m.. Railroad Street, utility line down, A pril 30: Farmington, 5:12 a,m„ 1-40 East, vehicle fire; Cen­ ter assisted; County Line, 11:23 a.m.. Oak Leaf Court, brush pile on fire; Jerusalem,. 3:36 p.m.. Liberty Road, fire alarm; Cool­ eemee assisted. M ay 1: Advance, 5:43 p.m., Granada Drive, structure fire; Comalzer-Dulin assisted; Smith Grove assisted. Arrests The Davie County Sheriffs Department made the following arrests: - Alejandro Barbera Adame, 33, of 130 Cabana Lane, Mocks­ ville was arrested April 22 for domestic criminal trespassing. Trial date: M ay 5. - Nathan Lee Crowe, 19, of 53$ S. Salisbury Street, Mocks­ ville was arresied April 22 for assault on a female. Trial dale: May. 19. - Caroline M . Alhey, 47, of 249 Main Street, Cooleemee was arresied April 22 for intoxica­ tion and disruption. Trial dale: M ay 5. - Paul Draton Toney Jr., 41, of3721 N .C. 801 North,Mocks- ville was »nested April 23 for assault on a female, misde­ meanor possession of schedule V I, and possession of drug para­ phernalia, Trial date: M ay 5. - Linda Nettles Gregory, 41, of 363 Juhey Beauchomp Road, Advance was arresied April 27 for failure to appeor. Trial dale: M ay 27 in Rowan County. - M ark Dwain Williams, 37, o f 121 Neely Street, Cooleemee was arrested April 27 for non­ support, Trial dale: May 17. - Amber June Fürst, 55, of 409 Swicegood Street, Mocks­ ville was »nested April 27 for obtaining property by false pre­ tense. Trial date: M ay 12, - Michael Eari Boone, 39, of 1986 U.S. 601 North, Mocks­ ville was arrested April 29 for failure tocomply.Trial date; May 16. Sheriff’s Department The following incidents were reported lo the Davie County Sheriff’s Department. - On April 21 an assault was reported by a student at S. Davie Middle School, Mocksville, •- Royal Howell reported an assault and a trespasser at a lo­ cation on Cornatzer Road, Mocksville on April 23. - On April 23 a runaway was reported at a home on Savannah Court, Advance. - David Leonard reported tires and rims were taken from a home on Cana Road, Mocksville ' on April 23, - On April 23 Juan Cohen re­ ported gas was taken without pay at a business on U.S. 601 North, Mocksville. ' Marie Fesperman reported fraud at a home on Marchferry Road, Advance on April 23. - On April 23 Vernon Wright reported a dog was taken from a home on Cabana Lane, Mocks­ ville. - James Pruitt reported an animal attack at a home on Bal­ timore Road, Advance on April 24. - O n April 24 a dog bite was reported by Deputy Vicki Fields al a location on Hobson Drive, Mocksville. - Michael Tilley reported an assault by motor vehicle al a business on Cornatzer Road, Advance on April 24. - On A p ril 24 Levina McDonald reported a motor ve­ hicle was taken from a home on U.S. 601,Souih, Mocksville. - bsborah Inmart ieportcd a break-in at a home on Sonora Drive, Advancc on April 25. - On April 25 a domestic dis­ pute was reported at a home on Sheffield Road, Mocksville, - Jacquelyn Koesis reported a break-in al a home on Griffith Road, Advance on April 25, - On A pril 25 Linda Foster reported a trespasser at a home on Pamela Lane, Mocksville. - M aria M artinez reported property was damaged at a home bn U.S, 601 South, Mocksville on April 25. - On April 26 Wayne Bunker reported a scooter was taken from a home in the county. - Kimberiy Harrison reported forged checks at a business on U.S. 64 West, M ocksville on April 26, - On A p ril 26 Patricia Lenovese reported two plastic pipes were taken from a resi­ dence on P ineville Road, Mocksville. - An assault on a female was reported at a home on Hobson ' Drive, Mocksville on April 28. - On April 28 Paul Gregory reported a break-in al a business on Commerce Drive, Advance. - Joel Clam pilt reported a prowler at a home on Bridle Lane, Advance on April 28, Highway Patrol The following traffic wrecks in Davie County were listed by the N.C. Highway Patrol. Vehicle Wrecks, Overturns No charges were filed after an accident on April 27, K im berly Paige Wagoner- Meniu of 177 Chariesion Ridge Drive, Mocksville was driving her 2002 Honda vehicle west on U.S. 64. Meniu drove the vehicle left of center, off the roadway lo the left, collided wilh a ditch, and overturned twice. Trooper 1\^.C. H ow ell re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 6;29 p.m . and Meniu was taken to Davie Hos­ pital for trealment, W reck O n Interstate No charges were filed after an accident on April 29. Wendy Kath Macasieb of Terrell was driving her 1997 B M W vehicle west on 1-40. Macasieb’s vehicle hydroplanes on the west roadway, ran off the road lo the left, and collided wilh trees in a wooded area. Trooper M.T, Dalton reported Ihe accident occuned at approxi­ mately 6:45 p.m. and Mocasieb and two passengers were taken to Davis Hospital in Statesville for treatment. W reck Near High School A Davie woman was charged with safe movement violation after the vehicle she was driv­ ing hit another April 29. Junko Gilbert of 149 White­ head Drive, Advance was driv­ ing her 1997 Ford vehicle south in the parking lot of Davie High School, Neely M yall Alexander o f 201 Southwood D rive, Mocksville was driving a 1991 C hevrolet vehicle west on Southwood Acres. Gilbert at­ tempted to enter Southwood Acres to travel west and failed to see Alexander's vehicle. Gilbert's vehicle collided wilh Alexander's al the entrance lo the high school. Trooper L.J. Staley Jr. re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 4:46 p.m. Collision On N.C. 801 A Davie woman was charged with failure to reduce speed af­ ter the vehicle she was driving hit another April 29, Erin Rene Coburn o f 120 Fork Bixby Road, Advance was driving her 2005 Chrysler ve­ hicle south on N.C, 801. Ruth Potts Lalham of 3055 Cornatzer Road, Advance had stopped her 2004 Toyota vehicle for a stop sign on N.C, 801 at U.S. 64. Coburn was distracted and thought Latham had proceeded onto N.C. 801. Cobum's vehicle collided w ith the rear of Latham's. Trooper L.J. Staley Jr. re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 6:29 p.m. D river Charged W ith D W I A Davie man was charged with D W I, reckless driving, no seat belt, and littering after he wrecked the vehicle he was driv­ ing April 29. Keith Braxton McDaniel of 133 Addles Lane, Mocksville was driving a 1992 Cadillac ve­ hicle south on N .C . 801. M cD aniel drove his vehicle across the centeriine, ran off the road lo the left, continued out of control, collided with an em­ bankment and a catch basin, McDaniel's vehicle came to rest upside down on the shoulder near the area of impact. Trooper M.T. Dalton reported the accident occurred al approxi­ mately 3:40 p.m. Collision O n U.S. 601 Both drivers were charged after an accident on April 30. Pamela Kay Tucker of 117 Leanne Lane, Mocksvillc was driving a 2001 Chevrolet vehicle south on U.S, 601. Stephen An­ thony Carpenter of 412 Rainbow Road, Advance was driving his 2003 Chevrolet pick-up south on U.S. 601 and had decreased speed for traffic ahead. Tucker failed to reduce the speed of her vehicic in time and it collided wilh Carpenter's truck, T\icker was charged wilh failure lo re­ duce speed. Carpenter was charged wilh insurance viola­ tion. TYooper M.T. Dalton reported the accident occurred at approxi­ mately 4:45 p.m. and there were no injuries. Vchici« Collides With Trees A Davie man was charged with exceeding safe speed after he wrecked the vehicle he was driving April 30. M atthew Neal W ilson of 1169 Baltimore Road, Advance was driving his 1996 Ford ve­ hicle east on Cornatzer Road, Wilson drove the vehicle off.ihe road to ihe right and collided wilh two trees in a yard. Trooper M ,C. Howell reported the acci­ dent occurred al approximately 5:25 a.m. EMTs and firefighters rush a wreck victim to the ambulance after a wreck on Baltimore Road on April 26. Cornatzer firefighters Doug Potts and Terry Davis help - Photos by Robin Fergusson an accident victim. Details of the wreck on Baltimore Road were unavailable at presstime, but N.C. High­ way Patrol Trooper Alex Justice said the driver of the van went to pass the backhoe, and upon noticing an oncoming tractor-trailer, swerved back to the right. The van , , . „ . bounced off the backhoe into the path 6f the truck, which caught fire. Firefighters put out the fire to the tractor-trailer. ECU Graduating Senior, 17, Earns Award N ichols The East Carolina Alum ni Association has selected five graduating seniors - including K yle Bradley N ichols of Mocksville - lo receive the 2005 Robert H. Wright Alumni Leadership Award. The award is the most prestigious presented to under-grhduale students during' spring ’ commencement. It recognizes academic achievement, leader­ ship and service lo Ihc university and the community. “These students have distin­ guished themselves wilh their exceptional academ ic and leadership performance," said Paul Clifford, vice chancellor of ECU alumni relations, “We are proud to welcome them inlo the Alumni Association.” Nichols will graduate wilh a bachelor’s degree in chemistry w ith an overall grade point average of 3.955. Nichols has received numerous scholarships, awards and distinctions in­ cluding the Grover W, and Neil Everett Scholarship, Gravely Foundation Scholarship, North Carolina Communily College System Academic Excellence Award, Forsylh Tech Bookstore Endowment Scholarship, as well as awards for community service and membership in the Ameri­ can Chem ical Society and lifetime member of Phi Thela Kappa, Alpha M u Rho chapter. Nichols has worked as a laboratory research assistant ill East Carolina University and Forsyth Technical Conimunity C ollege, He has made oral presentations on his research and hos published a manuscript in the Journal o f Physical Chemistry. Nichols’ home-school educa­ tion, interest in learning and desire to attend med-school allow ed him to enter East Carolina University at an eariy age and complete his bachelor's by age 17. N ichols plans lo enter medical school in ihe fall at East C arolina U niversity, W ake Forest U niversity or U N C - Chapel Hill. P la n n e rs T o M e e t M o n d a y The M ocksville Planning Board will consider a rezoning request and two text amend­ ments when it meets at 7 p.m, on Monday, M ay 9. M ackle M cDaniel has ap­ plied to rezone .92 acre from open space residential lo high­ way commercial. The property is on the north side of Ridgeview Drive, approximately 300 feel west of Valley Road, and is Par­ cels A -3 and A -4 o f D avie Counly Tax Map 1-4-14, The board will review a text amendment to Section 8-3.5, landscaping. The amendment modifies the number of shrubs and trees and the required plant­ ing areas, A full copy of the text amendment is on file at the town hall and Davie Developmental Services, The board w ill also review a text amendment lo Section 8- 3.7.14 that would reduce Ihe transitional setback for major and minor thoroughfares. 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Richard Epes, M.D. • Dr. Epes has performed over 75,000 cataract surgeries • “No-Needle, No-Stitch, No-Patch” surgery For local convenience & unmatched experience, call Southeastern Center®CnilrelCTOlliuSutjltilE)'« AuocUla, rA/MidlcJreAiiljrwiml Acnpud \J TRUST YOUR EYES TO EXPERIENCE. For your convenience you may see one of the Southeastern Eye Center doctors in our offices at; VISION CENTER Dr. Steven G. Laymon, Optometrist 198-B Hospital St., MocksvUle • 751-5734 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 200S Woman Charged With l\/lurders Vasilev Continued From Page 1 in liigli scliool, Bolin finished school in a private school in New Mexico before moving lo the now defunct East Coast Christian Col­ lege in Charlotte. Reports indicate Bolin and Nikolai Vasilev met in Charlotte, and were wed in 1994. In 1995, the two moved to Cleveland, Tenn. to advance their theological stud­ ies, then moved on to Chicago where N ikolai Vasilev started a church lo meet the spililual needs of the Bulgarian community there. While her husband preached, Tonya led the Sunday School classes, Vasilev has no criminal record, sources claim she has been receiv­ ing treatment for mental illness for several years. Some mental health experts say the case is quite simi­ lar lo other highly publicized cases of fillicide, where a parent kills a child. "The only explonation in my brain for why a mother stabs her kids Is she's psychotic," Suzanne Andriukailis, executive director of the National Alliance for the Men­ tally III of Greater Chicago, said. "It's Andrea Yates all over again." Yates was a'Psxas woman who confessed to police that she drowned her five young children one at a time in the family’s bath­ tub in 2001. Psychiatrists testified that Yates suffered from schizo­ phrenia and postpartum depres­ sion. What puzzles police in this cose is the brutality of the mur­ ders. In most cases of maternal fillicide, violence is rarely used. Most murders are carried out by less violent means, like poison, drug overdoses, suffocation, or drowning. While any method of killing a child is horrendous, this case has drawn attention because of the sheer violence Tonya Vasilev per­ petrated on her children. The brutality is reminiscent of Dena Schlosser, a fundamtnlalisl Christian Texas woman who chopped off her daughter's arms while playing Bill Gaither's gos­ pel song, "He Touched Me," in the background. Robert Butterworth, a clinical psychologist in Los Angeles who has studied maternal murderers, said research shows more than a third of the hundreds of mothers who kill their children cach year are depressed. He added that kill­ ing a child can be similar to an extended form of suicide. Butterworth said Vasilev may have been suffering from a psy­ chotic episode that may have been festering for years, brought on by the upcoming anniversary of an­ other child's death in June of 2000. That child's death in a fire in the couple's Elk Grove, III. home could have contributed lo mental illness or depression, Butterworth said. Vasilev's friends hove soid she struggled emolionolly after that death. No cause was ever determined on that fire, but foul play was ruled out. Investigators have said they are going to re-examine the case. People who knew Tonya in high school soid they hod o hord time accepting the news from Chicago. Brian Williams, an attorney practicing in Mocksville, remem­ bered his schoolmate as a sweet person. “I’m shocked,” he said. "1 re­ member her as a nice, quiet girl.” Former classmate Brad Ander­ son agreed. "She was one of the most level headed people I knew,” Anderson, a probation officer wilh Davie County, said. "She was just super sweet. This just blows me away.” James was devastated when she heard the news. “Oh my God,” James sobbed. “I just can't believe this. Not Tonya.” James said the fun-loving freind she knew in high school was not capable of hurting any­ one, especially her children. “It's just not possible,” James said. "I just can’t comprehend this. Something must have happendcd to her.” James said she had last seen Vasilev al her brother’s wedding 0 few months after the death of her first child. "1 know she was so devastated by her daughter’s death,” James said. “She told me there was no way she was going to let Satan enter her home and destroy her family again.” James knew something was different about her friend after that meeting. “I tried to get her lo talk to me, about why we couldn’t still be close,” James soid, “It's like she just closed up, I hove no idea why. To anyone else she might seem fine, but not lo me. We just weren't as close when she left." James said she had tried to keep in touch wilh Vasilev over Ihe years, but had letters sent un­ answered. She spoke with Vasilev's mother often. “Tanila (Keaton, Vasilev's mother) told me how well things were going for her, and they were so excited about Ihe baby (Grace),” James said. "1 thought things were going OK for her.” James said that Tonya Bolin wos a normol high school kid who got into the same typical trouble that others got into. When she turned 17, her grandfather died. James soid that was a turning point for her friend. “She had a lot of family therej and they spoke to her about get­ ting saved,” James said. “She told me she hod accepted Christ, and soon after we started to drift apart. It was like she chose to shut out C hristian and G race Vasilev all of her non-saved friends.” James said she and Tonya en­ joyed an honest truthful relation­ ship with few secrets, except where Bolin's history wilh her fa­ ther was concemed. “I never really believed she, was telling me Ihe truth about her relationship with her father," James said. "It was just a subject she always tried to avoid wilh me. I know they didn't talk to each other much.” Her father is Lonnie G. Bolin. Chicago newspapers reported that Tonya Vasilev left the area in 1995 and lost contact with her family. However, Tonyo’s aunt. Tino Prevette, sold that's not true. “They've cortie to visit over the holidays,” Prevette said. “They come every year.” Her uncle, Joe Phillips, soid that Tonya did not have much to do with her father's side of the family after her parent's divorce, but remained close to her mother and step-father. 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Indoor Lazy Pool • On-site Convenience Store • Statc-of-lhe-Art Fitness Center • pamc Room •Ralcj iubjcci lo change •Diwounu iuhjcci to avuilabiiiiy r Soorte DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 ■ Bl W ar Eagles S hock FIrst-P lace South R ow an, 12-2 By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Rccord Contrary to what you might have heard in the last several weeks, Davie’s varsity baseball team is not done yet, The shadows that have covered Davie so heavily for so long were lifted Fri­ day at South Rowan, and hope shined going into the final week of the regular seasoii. Just when all seemed lost for the Central Piedmont Conference cellar dwellers, the War Eagles got off the mat and shocked first-place South 12-2 in six mercy-rule innings. How did that happen? How did a team that was abysmal in an 11-4 home loss to West Forsyth three days earlier . come back and snap the league leader like^a twig? Coach M ike Herndon sigh'ed deeply, delighted that Davie (8- 11, 2-7 CPC) refuses to throw in the towel. “Our kids know we’re better than our record and they feel like they’ve got something to prove. And I think they believe,” he said. " If we play good the last week, I believe we all feel like we’ve got a chance in the conference touma­ ment. It’s not a miracle chance, it’s a pretty doggone good chance if we play like we’re capable.” ■ After getting embarrassed by West, the War Eagles were a vastly different team. W hit Merrifield and Lance Emert got three hits each. Zach Howard, Brad Corriher and Timmy Allen all had two hits and two RBIs. Allen was 2 for 2 before leaving with a pulled hamstring. And Tim m y Erb twirled a complete- game four-hitter to drop South into a first-place tie with West Forsyth. With bitter images clogging Davie’s mindset, it scored six runs in the top of the first and never looked back. It was an amazing breakout for a team that has seldom pul good pitching and hitting to­ gether. It was also a measure of revenge for an April 19 doubleheader loss to South, which won 3-1 because Davie stranded II runners and 10-9 because two bloops fell between exasperated Davie gloves in the ninth inning. “After we left that night every one of our kids said; ‘Hey, we could be in the same shoes they’re in,’ “ Herndon said. “It showed we have some talent and we just have to put it together here at the end.” Bryan King is the Davie JV baseball team’s top pitcher with a 5-1 record and three saves.- Photo by James Barringer JV Baseball Quickly Regains Flair By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record i You know you ’re having a great sea­ son when a loss qualifies as news. Davie's JV baseball team lost 11-5 to West Forsyth in the first of three home games last week. But the War Eagles looked like themselves again in a 5-0 nbnconference win over West Stokes, and then they denied South Rowan for the fourth time, 7-6. The War Eagles don’t let a loss lin­ ger. After losing 5-4 to West Forsyth, they rattled off seven straight wilts; A f­ ter losing 8-7 to North Davidsoti, they reeled off three wins. And after suffer­ ing just their third setback against West Forsyth, they did another remarkable job of bouncing back. The satisfaction of standing 18-3 overall and 7-3 in the CPC with two games remaining overwhelms Coach Tim McKnight. "We may stub our toe, but through­ out the year we’ve not lost two games in the same week,” he said. "They have not let a loss carry over. These guys come out with some energy, and it makes it easy on (assistant Bill Marrs and I). This bunch doesn’t need any motivational speeches. Come game time they’re ready to play. "If we win out, we tie West Forsyth for first. If we win out and West Forsyth loses, we win it outright.” W. Forsyth 11, Davie 5 The Titans cooled off Davie with seven runs in the first three innings. They roughed up Bryan King and Chris Brogdon, and two West pitchers com­ bined on a five-hitter. Before giving up seven runs in 2 1/3 innings, King was 5-0. "They just came out swinging the bats,” McKnight said. “Tliey hit the ball. They just beat us. They have the tiebreaker on us and we tip our hats to them. There’s nothing else you can say.” After stranding two runners in the second and third. Josh Eder got Davie ^:ack Jtj;lhe fgfjrth with a three-run fe^ .Ufibn reacKmg third, the ball ' Skipped away from the cutoff man and McKnight waved Eder home. ' Although that pulled Davie within 7- 5, it surrendered meekly (one hit in the final three innings). Besides Eder, Davie’s hits came from Heath Boyd, Brent Beam, Andrew Boswell and Matt Pennington. Dnvic 5, W. Stokes 0 One big inning - a five-run third - was easily enough for pitchers Colby Seaford and Beam. They combined for a one-hitter, and neither one issued a walk, "We Were keeping Seaford around the 50-pitch count because with him being our shortstop we didn’t want him to have a sore arm in a big conference game, and that was the reason we pulled him (in the fifth),” McKnight said. Beam sparked the five-run third with a single. Three West errors were mixed Please See JV - Page B5 V ersatile S tar: M iller Hasn’t Had Many Like Turner By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record South Davie girls track and field coach Becky M iller can’t even choose the most amazing thing about Tbnesha Turner. Is it her 100 dash? “She just continued to knock her 100 time down all year long,” M iller said. Is it her 800? "She ran such a smart race every time in that. She would hang back and then that second lap she would just go and would use that sprinter’s speed.” Is it her versatility? "I believe this is the first year I ’ve ever had an athlete that I could have put in just about any event and she prob­ ably would have come really close to winning it, even going up to the 1600. She’s that much of a competitor.” Or is it her intangibles? "S he’s a great team leader, too. So I can’t say enough about her,” M iller has been coaching track at South for about 15 years, and she hasn’t had many perform ers like T\imcr, who carried the Tigers to third in last w eek’s nine- team M id-South Conference meet. The eighth grader won the 100 and 800. She also helped the 400 relay team to second, which was Т\1т е г actually a disappointment. Turner, Maleia Stevenson, Ashley Smoot and Jordan Lane dominated the 400 all sea­ son, but a missed handoff attributed to their first loss. This was merely the final spectacu­ lar three-event performance in a season full of them for Turner, and would you believe she achieved all her glory with bad knees? It’s true. If Turner’s knees behaved better, she could be a force in jumping events, too. "Most of the time she was a triple winner,” M iller said. "What a versatile athlete to be able to do the 100 and 800, She has trouble with her knees; otherwise I would have had her jump­ ing, too.” Hard work has made the difference between 'Himer and the rest of the pack. She has a relentlessness that no one can teach. “In the last three meets nobody touched her in the 100 and 800,” Miller said. “I hope she continues (at Davic High). She’s an exceptional athlete, she takes it serious and she works real hard. (Early on) we tried her in different, events because she was so strong at •practice in just about everything. She’s a smart kid, she knows how to run in whatever race and she’s got that drive that any coach would love to see.” By holding off West Rowan 105-100, North Davie's girls captured their sec­ ond straight MSC title. South was third at 59, while China Grove had 54, Erwin 39, Knox 36, Southeast 29, North Rowan 26 and Corriher-Lipe 16. Please Sec 'Hirncr ■ Page B8 Chase Deal relieved in the 10-9 game and held Davie to two hits in 4 1/3 in­ nings. Davie was sure ready for Deal this time, knocking him out in the first inning. M errifield started it with a triple. After Brandon Stewart walked, Emert and Howard popped singles. Foo Smith walked. Brad Corriher was hit by a pitch and Allen drove in two with a single before Merrifield plated the sixth run with his second hit of the inning. Six South errors helped Davie pad the margin in the third, fourth and sixth. Please See Davie - Page B4 C ham ps, A gain N. Davie Track Celebrates Repeat Title The North Davie girls track team’s hottest day could not have come at a better tim e. A lex Folk and. C arly Comatzer set school records ir^the 600 run and 200 hurdles, respectively. No fewer than 11 girls delivered personal- best times. Aiid two relays came up with season-best performances. The Wildcats were so electric in last week’s Mid-South Conference champi­ onships that Coach DonTabat was look­ ing for an extension cord. After losing two of three meets to West Rowan in the regular season, Tabot watched 15 of his girls place in the top four as the W ild­ cats pulled out a breathtaking, down-to- the-wire duel with West Rowan and cap­ tured their second straight M SC title. North edged West 105-100. South Davie was third at 59, followed by China Grove at 54, Erwin at 39, Knox at 36, Southeast at 29, North Rowan ^ 26 and Corriher-Lipe al 16. “(Assistant coach Beth H all) and myself felt that West was the team to beat,” Thbat said. “They have a lot of speed and great athletes. However, our girls were up to the task. The key was Please See Lester - Page B8 W o rth N o tin g ... . W hit M errifield and L ance E m ert had three hits and Timmy E rb pitched a four-hitler as Davie varsity baseball shocked first-place S. Rowan JI2-2:"Em ert is hitting ;S91 in thé last six games. H annah Stroupe of N. Davie soccer scored two goals in a 2-2 tie with Summit and again in a 6-0 win oyer S. Dayie. RebM ca Qerdon had three assists against pâ'vie. Andrew Darcy of iOaVie golf fin­ ished sixth in the CPC’s individual race. ' ^ ' Coûter A rnold of Davie track won the triple jump and high jump In a meet with Reynolds and W. Forsyth. Chelsea lYuH’s goal gave Davie j y soccer a 1-0 win over Southwest Randolph. Sam antha Hobson of Davie IV softball went 6 for 8 in wins over W. Forsyth nnd S. Rowan. E rin W hitaker of Davie varsity softball went 3 for 4 in a 5-1 loss to S. Rowan. Colby Seaford arid B rent Beam of Davie JV baseball combined for a 1-hitter in a 5-0 win over W .’ Stokes, lit a 7-6 win over S, R,owan, Beam went 3 for 4 and Justin T h­ ompson blasted his fiftli homer. . 'Toneaha 'T urner of S. Davie track won the 100 and 800 in the nine-team conference cham pion­ ships, ' • N, Davie's girls track team won its second straight conference title behind first-plftce perform ances from C rystal L ester (long jump), Autum n Jones (1600) and the 1600 relay team bf Carly Pratapas, S^« rah Evans, Jessica Strickland and G race Loeffler. i| 1 !l В2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 2005 p w i Й). V^-Й-' •‘;v The Landslide includes, from left: kneeling - Caitiyn Jones, Jackiyn Smith, Jamie Keegan, Margaret Anderson, Lauren Parker; row 2 - Lindsay Garrett, Rachel Goin, Jessica Gerken, Taylor Cave, Katie Van Neman, Amy Grubb, Emma Gordon. Coaches are John Van Neman, Mark Goin and David Mickey. La n d slid e Q ualifies F o r To u rn a m e n ts The girls fast-pilch team Landslide qualiricd fbrslnlc and world bids by finishing second at the Wallburg USSSATouma- ment April 23-24. Tlie girls’ home field is the Fork Recrcation Cenler, US 64 East. This was the team ’s third tournament. The team came from behind Sunday with four back-to-back games for tlie sec­ ond-place finish. The Landslide had consistent hitting from KiUlyn Jones, Jamie Keegan, Taylor Cave and a thrce-run shot over thé center field fence by Rachel Goin. Key hits were also turned in by Lind­ say Garrett, Margaret Anderson and Katie Van Neman. Defen­ sive work by Jackiyn Siüith and WANTED Amy Grubbs and Emma Gordon gave relief to pitchers, Jessica Gerken and Lauren Parker. The state playoffs w ill be held in Charlotte, the world tour­ nament in Florida. Coaches arc M ark Goin, David M ic k e y ,, John Van Neman, Chris Cave and Charles Keegan. The Davie Storm Davie Storm won all four games to win the "Strike Out ALS" tournament in Thomasville. Pictured, from left: front - bat boy Curtis Dillon, Kirklin Bowles, Patrick Whaley, Will Cope, Jacob Walker and bat boy Craig Colbourne; row 2 - Jeremy Walker, Corey Randall, Tommy Dillon, Darren Colbourne, Cody Bell and Trevor Thurlo. Coaches are Stacy Dillon, Chester Bowles, Joel Walker and Larry Colbourne. D a vie B a sk e tb a ll C a m p s S c h e d u le d 0 BUY OLD COINS 998-8692 Bud Hauser •The Davie High girls basket­ ball camp - for all grades - will be June 6-9. On June 9 all camp­ ers will attend from 9 a.m.-noon for contests, games and awards. The June 6-8 morning session from 9 a.m.-noon is for grades 1-8, and the evening session from ,1-4 p.m. is for grades 9-12. Tlw cost is $50. • Tlie Davic boys basketball program will hold a mini-team camp for rising ninth and 10th graders on June 3 ,4 and 6 from 1-4 p.m. The cost is $70, which includes instruction, insurance and T-shirt. • Davie will have boys bas­ ketball camps on June 3-4, June 13-15 and June 21-25. June 3-4 is a parcnt/child camp. The cost is $50 for parent and child and $15 for each addi­ tional child. The camp will in­ clude instruction on how to work with your child; games, contests and prizes; a pizza dinner on Fri­ day night; and continental break­ fast on Saturday. June 13-15 is a shooting and player development camp. The cost is $50. TTie camp will in­ clude skills development ses- ,sions with Coach Mike Absher, an appearance by Lenoir Rhyne College coach John Lentz, shoot­ ing technique and emphasis on individual player development. June 21 -25 is a day camp that costs $90. The camp will include daily lectures w itli the Wat Eagles staff, learning basic offen­ sive and defensive fundamentals, learning rules and terminology, games and prizes, and a champi­ onship game on Saturday. Patients who need radiation oncology treatments want a comfortable, convenient location where they can go for care. Now Rowan Regional Medical Center provides even better facilities with an all-new location at 229 Mocksville Avenue, just a few blocks from the medical center. Our Cancer Care Center features the most advanced digital technology to ensure pinpoint accuracy for l<illing cancer cells with radiation. F o r t h e v e r y l a t e s t in cancer care c o m e o n o v e r to o u r p la c e . Our physicians and staff, all of whom are specialists in treating cancer patients. bring the highest level of technical skill and patient-focused care. Which means ф 1 //^ ROWAN REGIONAL patients who come t6 our Cancer Care Center benefit from the latest advances in MEDICAL CENTER technology in a location that provides understanding, compassion, and comfort. And that's a good place to be. CBeHer £ea[{/i. !7Se//er care. (7 0 4 ) 210-6S70 wmiv,rowan, or^ 229 JK o c^so iiie O ^uenae, Saii.'i£urj/, OCG 2<S144 Bradley Davis B o y E a rn s B la c k B e lt Bradley Austin Davis, the son of Dr. and Mrs. Brad Davis of Kernersville, has earned his first degree black belt in Tae Kwon Do. He earned the honor April 9 in Richmond, Va., during a four- hour test in front of hundreds at Dong’s Studio, under Grand­ master Dong, a 9th degree black belt. Bradley, 9, has been training for 3 and 1/2 years. His mother is the former M ichelle Bracken of M ocks­ ville. He is the grandson of Tommy and June Bracken of Mocksville and the great-grand­ son of the Rev. and Mrs. J.A. Bracken of Mocksville. A celebration party was thrown for him at Zoe’s restau­ rant in Kernersville on April 14. Attending were his brother, Ryan, 4, and sister, Casey Leigh, 2, his parents, his grandparents, his aunt, M elissa Bracken W oodward, and his cousin, Hunter Woodward, his grcat- aunt, Diane Butgess, and his good friend, Hanna Newsom. West Forsyth Ends Davie’s Golf Season DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - B3 Going into last week’s Cen- U'al Piedmont Conference Tour­ nament at Bermuda Run Coun­ try Club, Davie’s golf team had a clear shot at finishing as high as second in the standings for Ihe first time since 2000. After shooting a clutch 17- over-par 161 over nine holes at OldTown Countty Club, the War Eagles (railed runaway leader Reynolds by 29 shots but were tied with West Forsyth for sec­ ond. The CPC gets two berths to the Midwest 4-A Regional, so everything came down to an 18- hole showdown at Bermuda Run. West Forsyth, though, had everyone clicking at once, and Davie didn’t have a chance. West fired a 21-over 309 to claim the second spot, while Reynolds and Davie tied at 325. North David­ son finished at 347 and South Rowan at 352. As a result, Davie’s streak of finishing third or lower in the CPC moved to five. Here’s how the final standings wound up; Reynolds 934, W. Forsyth 947, D avie 963, N . Davidson 1,005 and S. Rowan 1,043. Andrew D arcy and Jake Pierce came through with a pair of 79s at Bermuda Run, but they couldn’t keep Coach Doug Illing’s team from falling to third. Its third and fourth scores be­ longed to iSean Wagner (84) and Jared Nelms (91). There was a consolatipn as two Davic players kept their sea­ sons alive. The top four players not on one of the top two teams qualify for regionals, and Darcy and Wagner pushed their way into the field by finishing sixth and 10th, respectively, in the CPC. The All-CPC team also in­ cluded Darcy and Wagner. In D avie’s 17-over perfor­ mance at Old Town, Nelm s, Darcy and Pierce all shot 40 as the War Eagles took second be­ hind Reynolds’ 9-over 153. N. Davidson was third at 163, W. Forsyth 168 and S. Rowan 175. Th u rs d a y ’s S o cce r G a m e T o D ecide Playoff Berth Davie’s varsity soccer team went down familiar roads in last week’s Central Piedmont Con­ ference games. The War Eagles lost 5-0 to West Forsyth. T h a t’s nothing new. They’re 1-28-1 all-time against the Titans. The W ar Eagles blistered South Rowan 10-0. That was nothing out of the ordinary. They’re 20-0 against the Raiders since 1996, and the margin of victory in that span is 98-0. Although first-place West (10-2-2,6-0 CPC) shut Davie out both times, the games were very differetit. The War Eagles (8-6- 1, 2-3-1) trailed 1-0 at halftime in the first meeting and gave maximum effort in a 3-0 defeat. Tliis time visiting Davie trailed. '4-0 at halftime, and Coach Pete Gustafson wasn’t satisfied witii any aspect of its game. “West just tore us up, and we didn’t really give the best effort,” he said after getting outshot 17- 3, "I thought there were several times we had lack of effort.” ■Davie, conversely, dominated every aspect against visiting South (4-10-1 overall). Sloan Smith and Alyson Walker scored two goals apiece as the W ar Eagles fired 20 of the game’s 23 shots. Jackie Button, Whitney Bo­ keno, Bekah Brock, Justine Gamble, Kourtney Hanrahan and Stephanie Jarvis added goals as Davie scored at will. It was 7-0 at halftime. Through the first 18 minutes, Davie was on pace to win 22-0. Sharon Woodward had two assists and Kelsey Steller one. In the first game of the week, Walker led a 4-0 nonconference win over visiting Southwest Ran­ dolph with two goals. Button and Saturday Night Qales open tor practice al 6 p.m. flR9TBACE»T8P.M. Smith LADIES’ NIGHT! P w e n te d b y WBRF-FM 98.1 • B lue R idge C ountry D EM O LITIO N DERBY! Fans’ prizes: $500 In gift cards from Hanes Mall m u d .omcM «от — — Admleilon: IZandokior-SIO^Aga»8-11 -$l CWklren under 6 FREE wilh adult oscon Pt-ENTY OF FREE PARKINQ information «Пои» »twllum tMlngi (ЗЗв) 7S3-iete Matt Hauser has a 9-6 record in the top half of the lineup. - Photos by James Barringer Smith also scored us D avie mounted overwhelming advan­ tages in shots (25-4) and comer kicks (7-0). The assists came from Button, W alker, Sm ith and Bokeno. The W ar Eagles close tlie tegular season at home M ay 5 at ap­ proxim ately 7 p.m. against North Davidson. This is a game that w ill define the season. Davie and North are tied for third. They tied 0-0 in Welcome and Thursday’s winner will seize the third and final state-playoff berth. JV Splits Chelsea Trull scored in the first half against Southwest Ran­ dolph, and the goal stood up in a 1-0 win. The War Eagles’ mo­ mentum carried over at West Forsyth, but the Titans wore Davie out in the second half and won 5-0. Trull got her team-high fourth goal off an assist from Karla Woodward, and keeper Amanda Cook and defenders Hannah Ja­ kob and Grace Didenko made sure il was enough in the 1-0 win. Cook was filling in foran injured . Vanessa Didenko. “We played a really good passing game, the best one I ’ve seen from us all yeor,” Coach Kerstin Plagemann said. “Jakob and Grace Didenko played strong defense. They fill gaps between offense and defense and kept the ball moving forward.” Davie (3-5-1,0-3 CPC) gave West fits in the first half. It was 1-0 after 35 minutes, but West proved its superiority in time to beat the War Eagles going away. "We played really well in the first h alf,” Plagemann said. “West just stepped il up and played a great game.” Matt Van fHoy has shared time as a freshman. Tennis Team Earns Second-Piace Tie Senior David Mcllwain reaches for the ball. D avie’s tennis team tore through visiting North Davidson 7-2 last week to force a three- way tie for second in the Central Piedtnont Conference. The War Eagles were coming off a 6-0 loss to first-place Rey­ nolds. But the North match was the one that mattered. Alex Ap­ pelt, Matt Hauser, Collin Ferebee ■ and Phillip Hursey, the Nos. 1-4 players, delivered lopsided wins in singles, and Appelt-Fcrebce, Hauser-Hursey and Seth Spry- M att Van Hoy swept through doubles to put the War Eagles in a tie with South Rowan and West Forsyth. A ll three finished the CPC at 4-4, while Reynolds ran and hid at 8-0. A drawing will determine the .second and final state playoff bid. Regardless of how Coach Steven Lingard’s War Eagles (6-9 over­ all) fare in that 33.3 percent- chance scenario, this qualifies as their highest moment in a long, long time. In the last nine years, they’ve finished third twice and fourth or lower seven times. N. Davidson finished last with records of I -12 and 0-8. The CPC Tournament began M ay 2 and ends May 6. G irls Track Loses Freshm an Star Tamiku Reynolds has been the talk of Davie girls track all season. The freshman phenom dominated the attention again in last week’s meet with Reynolds and West Forsyth, but this time it was for all the wrong reasons. Coach Daric Belter’s best per­ former got injured in the 400 re­ lay. The injury couldn’t have come at a worst time. The Cen­ tral Piedmont Conference cham­ pionships are M ay 4 at Wake Forest, and Reynolds’ availabil­ ity for that was doubtful at the end of last week. “W e’re trying to figure out what it is,” Beiter said, “We’re not sure what her status is going to be. We thought at first it was maybe a muscle, a crump or something like that. But now we’re thinking h might be worse, possibly a stress fracture.” Reynolds’ girls cruised in front with 79.5 points. W. For­ syth had 54 and Davie 49.5. The order was identical in the boys’ meet - Reynolds 78, W. Forsyth 54 and Davie 51. Even though she’s only a freshman, Reynolds is an indis­ pensable cog. She has regulariy won the long and triple jumps. she’s contributed points in the 100 dash and she’s also the star on a 400 relay team that figured to battle W. Forsyth and Rey­ nolds for the title. She’s not only Davie’s top scorer, she’s the top scorer by a lot (iOO-plus points to the No. 2 girl’s 60). Before the injury, she was a serious threat to contend for gold medals in no fewer than three events. So you can imagine how Rey­ nolds, who lived up to her ad­ vanced billing after leading North Davie Middle to a confer­ ence title last spring, feels after suffering an injury that could end her season right before the real fun begins. “So that’s going to be a big bicjw to us if we don’t have her for the conference meet,” Beiter said. Reynolds’ loss was the cap­ per to a disheartening day. Brit­ tany Rowe (triple jump), Tekaira G aither (discus), Shanicka Brown (shot put), Jamie Stane- liff (1600), Bekah Peeler (3200) and the 800 relay (Tanisha Rey­ nolds, Keti Robertson, Justinu Scott and Tyara Wagner) pro­ duced first places, but Davie ac­ complished little else. “It was a rough meet,” Beiter said. “Two other giris had muscle pulls during races. It was a cold day and I don’t think our giris prepared for it. We had a couple freshm en,that just w eren’t warmed up and had minor pulls. Hopefully it’s a learning experi­ ence.” One other bright spot was Marie Robertson, who qualified for regionals with an 8-foot score in the pole vault. Davie’s boys are also dealing with a key injuiy. Senior Greg Simpson sustained a grade-two hamstring pull the previous week, and he’ll definitely miss Ihe CPC championships. Simp­ son devoted serious time in the offseason to become one of Davie’s top scorers, and Coach Devore Holman feels his pain. "1 hate it for Greg because he worked real hard in the offsea­ son,” Holman said. “He invested tt lot of time and he got his 300 hurdles time down lo 40.1, which is real respectable.” Simpson’s shot at CPC gold has been ruined. But he's quali­ fied for regionals, which means he still got something to shoot for. The War Eagles had finished first or second in four meets in ■ which three teams competed. They split their first two encoun­ ters with Reynolds, winning 80- 72 two weeks ago for a 10-1 record, but they took a tumble in the final tuneup. “Reynolds ran well and hats off to them,” Holman said, “We had a couple injuries and didn't have everybody there. The good thing about it is the conference meet is (M ay 4) and hopefully we’ll have Kenny Rivers back. He’s been out three weeks with a pulled muscle.” Cooler Arnold was Davie’s highlight with wins in the triple jump and high jump. Jaspen Gray won the long jump. No one else cracked the top. "Our throwers didn’t throw the way they should have, and our 4x1 relay had an exchange problem,” Holman said. “But 1 was real proud of our sprinters in the 100 and 200.” Gray did the 100 dash in 11.0 seconds. Raeshon M cNeil had an 11.1 and Dustin Morgan 11.3. “Thai’s good stuff. That was ex­ citing to watch,” Holman said. e x p l o r e a w h o l e o t h e r w o r l d % \ t h a t 's 'c l o s e t o h o m Day • Spo^ • Specialty • Teen • Overnight Visit wvvw.yi^idscamp.org or call (877) 888-YMCA for your local Y. В4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 2005 D avie B ounces B acit From Loss, Stioclcs S o u tli Continued From Page U l “(The 6-0 lead) look a lot of things away that they lilcc to do," Hcmdo^ said. “They couldn’t be as aggressive as they like to be.” W hile Davie was collecting i 3 hits, Erb was stymieing South. The senior righthander set the tone with a 1-2-3 first. He whiffed two batters in the sccond and got 6-4-3 double plays from Emert and M errifield in the fourth and fifth. Remarkably, one South ball M errie ie ld E m ert A llen E rb left the infield. “I don’t know if we got smart or what, but we decided to call the pitches," Hemdon said. “We called every pitch and just moved it around. Tlie best thing Erb did, when we were ahead in the count -1 -2 or 0-2, he didn’t throw any- The Premier STAINMASTER* Carpet Collection - only at Abbey Carpet. The number-one-ielling carpet brand In America, STAINMASTER* carpet comhlnei luxiitloui ttyle wilh unbeatable performance. 5TAINMASTEK* carpets are designed with the latest te^nologles to keep them looking great year after year. And now, exclusively at Abbey stores, you'll find an Incredible selection of America's best-loved carpet In Tho Premier STAINMASTER* Carpet Collection. 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But he did a great job just to get to the grounder in the hole, and Eib picked Emert up with back-to- back Ks. "The play he made in the fifdt, boy that was something,” Hem­ don said. . "He played lights out,” assis­ tant Todd Bumgarner added. The War Eagles' teain batting average is up to .304, which seems incredible given the fact they were hitting .268 through nine games. A ll of a sudden, Hemdon is getting hits from ev­ erywhere in the order - Davie’s average is .337 in the last 10 games, and seven everyday start­ ers are peaking at the same titne. Allen is 9 for his last 21 after hitting .176 through eight games. Corriher is 9 for his last 20 after hitting .190 through 13 games. Emert is 13 for his last 22 after C P C S ta n d in g s CPC Overall South Rowan 7-4 14-7 West Forsyth 7-4 13-7 North Davidson 5-5 10-9 Reynolds 4-5 12-9 Davie 2-7 8-11 hitting .286 through 13 games. Smith is 10 for his last 21 after hitting .129 through 12 games. Stewort is 7 for his last 17 after hitting .250 through 12 games. Zach Vogler is 18 for 50 after hit­ ting .250 through Five games, and he had hit safely in 12 of 14 be­ fore going 0 for 4 ogainst South. And Merrifield (.433) has hit in 16 of 19. The sophomore leadoff ■ man leads the club in runs, hits and stolen bases. Here’s an eye-popping stat. O f Davie’s 13 hits against South, nine of them came with two strikes. “We’ve been swinging it well for a while. It’s not like all of a sudden we’re hitting it,” Hemdon said. “Emert should have had four (hits against South).” “The center fielder made a heckuva play,” Bumgarner said of Emert’s only out in four U-ips. "I was ready lo send him to sec­ ond.” Notes: Dusty Snow, a three- year member o f the Mocksville Legion, scattered seven hits in a complete game as W, Forsyth pulled away from Davie, 114, after it was 3-2 through four in­ nings. Things got ugly in the fifth as West pounded John McDaniel for seven runs on 10 hits. The four runs that Tom Kuell gave up in two innings were unearned.... The War Eagles arc locked into last place. They must win the CPC Tournament as the five seed to make the state playoffs. “We don’t have any pressure,” Hem­ don said. “And we’re feeling it.” ... Davie wraps up its regular sea­ son M ay 6 against visiting North Davidson at 7. The CPC Touma­ ment is M ay 9-13 at N. David­ son. W . Forsyth 11, Davie 4 Dovic MenMcld2b Slewnn rf Cmerl ss Vogler ct Hownrd 3b Smllh If Corrilier lb Aliene PraU с Bcngc dh Totals W. Forsyth Davle ab r 3 1 1 I 0 0 2 1 1 0 29 4 1 0 7 2 030 044 0-11 010 too 2 -4 2B - Smith (3). SB - Slownrt (3), Joldcr- sma (2). Davle IP H R ER BB SO McD.L 5 10 7 6 0 7 Kuell 2 3 4 0 2 1 Davie 12, S. Rowan 2 Davle Merrineld 2b Slewnrt rf Bmcrt ss Vogler cf Howard 3b Smllh ir Corriherlb Allen с I Pratt с Eibp Totals Davle S. Rowan ab r 5 1 h Ы 3 1 1 0 0 3 3 0 1 0 0 2 2 2 2 0 I 0 2 2 2 2 2 О О О 3 4 4 3 2 3 2 1 3 0 1 2 30 12 13 10 601 203-12 001 001-2 3B - Merrifield. SB - Joldersma (2), Slewnrt (4). ' Davle IP H R ER BB SO Erb.W 6 4 2 2 3 4 Davie Baseball Statistics R ecord: 8-11,2-7 C PC A V G . AH R H RB I 2B 3B H R .316 38 10 12 9 0 0 1 .174 23 1 4 2 0 0 1 .274 62 5 17 15 1 I 1 ' .111 18 0 2 1 0 0 0 .429 7 3 3 3 0 0 1 .391 64 17 25 5 3 0 0 .158 19 1 3.0 0 0 0 .291 55 10 16 14 • 3 0 0 .000 3.0 0 0 0 0 0 .286 7 . -2 2 0 0 0 o ' . .000 -;2,0 ,« 0 ,.-0 . .i 0 0 Ö .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .000 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 .433 67 23 29 8 3 1 1 .222 .9 3 2 0 1 0 0 .269 52 9 14 11 ,3 0 2 .311 45 15 14 7 3 0 2 .333 66 16 22 17 5 2 2 .304 • 542 116 165 92 22 4 11 W -L IP H R E R BB SO E R A 2-2 20 2/3 28 18 13 4 '17 4.40 2-3 34 38 28 20 12 . 37 4.12 1-1 8 11 11 8 8 3 7.00 1-1 12 2/3 16 ,14 7 7 12 3.87 2-4 55 59 35 24 7 45 3.05 8-11 130 1/3 152 106 72.38 114 3.87 Timmy Allen Garrett Benge Brad Corriher Josh Eder Tim m y Erb Lance Emert T.J. Hines Zach Howard Jonathan Hutchens Logan Joldersmit Tom Kuell Dilion Maurer John McDaniel W hit Merrifield Saxon Pratt Foo Smith Brandon Stewart Zach Vogler TOTALS Brad Corriher Timmy Erb Jonathan Hutchens Tom Kuell John McDaniel TOTALS SAVES: Corriher STO LE N BASES: Merrifield 8, Emert 5, Corriher 4, Stewart 4, Howard 3, Joldersma 3, Vogler 3, Smith 2, Eder W A LK S /H P B : Stewart 17, Howard 12, Merrifield 11, Smith 11, Emert 9, Vogler 9, Allen 7, Corriher 5, Eder 2, McDaniel 2, Pratt 2, Hines S p e c ia l o f th e W e e k Alcohol Q*Tips Peroxide Cotton Balls m w Limit a Total H of 8 Items ■ While ■ Supplies Last It ’s H e re ! | Bring Your Film and Save P ro ce ssin g • D i g i t a l P r i n t s • E n l a r g e m e n t s ■ I'o i-Д|Ч':|| iiilo rn iiilio n (III 1 1 d r ills 1Ч: lin illli p n ilili Mis, Id 1 1 \NNN\N.l'l)Stl-r(lniJi(.(l.l(lin 1 Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-4 • Sun 1:30-5 F o s te r D ru g C o . 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • (336) 751-2141 www.fosterdriigco.com DAVIE COUNTY EilVTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - B5 Bryan King connects for the JV War Eagles, who have not lost two in a row all year. Chris Brogtdon has a 5-1 record on the mound, equaling Bryan King's record. Cheerful teammates greet Josh Eder and Andrew Boswell (7;Matt Pennington (21) has brought pop with the bat all season. JV B aseball C losing O n A m azing 20-W in Plateau Davle squares to bunt. - Photos by James Barringer Continued From Page B l with hits from Garrett Benge, Pennington and Seaford. Beam relieved and recorded eight outs without allowing a hit. West’s lone base runner against Beam was a hit batter. The win dropped 2-A West to 11-6. "We got real good pitching from two guys that haveii’t pitched a great deal,” M cKnight! said. “Seaford is our Ihird or fourth option and Beam is our fifth option, and they one-hit a pretty good hitting ciub.” Benge was 2 for 2 with two walks. Beam was 2 for 3 and Pennington was 2 for 4. The occasion was a reunion of sorts for M cK night, who coached at Chestnut Grove M iddle for four years before leading W. Stokes’ JV for four years. Davic 7, S. Rowan 6 If the War Eagles arc playing with house money, then they added another chip to the pile. Davie has the Raiders’ number, beating them four times by a to­ tal of seven runs. Justin Thompson opened the scoring with a solo homer in the third, Boyd ignited a five-run fifth with a shot over the left- field fence and pitcher Benge went into the seventh with a 7-2 l^ id . The long ' ball was Thompson’s team-high fifth, while Beam went 3 for 4. The hit that loomed big in the end was Matt Osweil’s two-run single for a 6-2 lead. D avie got an unexpected scare in the seventh, but was able to hold on when King fanned South’s No. 5 batter on three pitches with the'tying run at flrst. King relieved Benge and in­ herited two runners. McKnight’s heart skipped a beat when a Raider doubled in three runs. But King endured the mess, getting the final out by throwing a fast­ ball, changeup and fastball for consecutive strikes, “Benge just ran out of gas,” he said. “It was probably the flrst time he’s thrown in three weeks, and that’s one of the reasons we brought him down (from var­ sity). “King made a good pitch on the outside part of the plate (on South’s three-run double), and the guy went with the pitch.” N otes: Thom pson had a single to go with his homer. ... Seaford’s record is 2-0, Benge is 3-1 and King has three saves.... D avie’s season ends w ilh Friday’s home game against North Davidson at 4:30. “Wo’d iove to reach Ihe 20-win pla­ teau,” McKnight said. ( il ’e a l (.o v e ra g e S la rls w ilh B lu e • Blue Advantage* Plans • No Referral HMO, PPG and POS Group Plans • Small Group (iivEragc Johnson Insurance Services, Inc. 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In the first of back-lo-back games wilh South Rowan, the War Eagles kept giving South new life with six errors, but they got away with it in a 10-6 home win. Their defense was sloppy Catcher Samantha Hobson applies the tag. again in the rematch at South, and this time South took advan­ tage, turning four Davie errors into a 5-3 win. W hen Katie M cD ougall’s R B I double and Shay Holder’s sacrifice fly provided a 2-0 lead in the second inning at South, the War Eagles seemed primed for a nin at a share of the Cen­ tral Piedmont Conference title on M ay 6 at North Davidson. They had won five in a row and eight of nine for records of 12- 4 and 4-1 in the CPC. But Davie’s good vibes were doused in the fifth, when three errors turned a 2-2 tie inlo a 5-2 deficit. In the first o f three CPC games last week, Davie rolled over West Forsylh 9-2. "We played real bad,” Coach Tilden Carter said. “We didn’t deserve to win.” Lauren Parker pitched a four- hitter, but she got scant help. Davie scored one run in the last five innings and only managed five hits. The hits came from Lea Tarlton, Katelyn Jones, Joni Garrett, McDougall and Brit­ tany H ill. “Lauren pitched well and we wasted her effort defensively,” Carter said. “There were three straight ground balls (in the Lea Tarleton takes a swing.- Photos by James Barringer Softball Team Matches Worst Skid in 9 Years Of Fast-Pltch M IER IN D O W Of Mocksville / к ANV «ZC WMTS DOUBU HUNO WIMXIW [S. Ш * 1 8 5 {*•* т»»Ыт» lof dUi CHECK OUT OUR SEAMUESS GUTTERS FHaExltUntOtXtM» t^li Uw Water In WhlK Km pIi« le«ws Out FREE Exímate Ulatlm* Hkirutly Lo***l Price Aiound E»y Fln*ncln( •Cuttctn Mtde Ontlte • Entrn Hemy Duty Henge» Sundard ■Ovettlie Dovmapouti •Several Color* lo ChooM Rrom < Comvl*<**y ENTRY DOORS PATIO DOORS •’•V: fifth), we booted or made a throwing error on all three, and those three ended up scoring. “We hit the ball hard, but right at people. We only had four ground-ball outs. Part of it was hitting it hard and part of it was we were trying to hit home runs.” A t West Forsyth, Sarah A l­ exander pitched a shutout into the fifth and Samantha Hobson and Jones got three hits as Davie breezed by the Titans 9-2. Holder and Tarlton added two hits. The W ar Eagles didn’t come up with many line-drive hits, but Ihey made up for it with sparkling defense. The ring­ leader was shortstop Holder. “W e didn't hit the ball as hard as we had been, but we played real good defense,” Carter said. “Holder made two diving stops that kept the ball in the infield and kept them from a double. She made an­ other great play.” In the 10-6 win over South Rowan, Holder, Hobson, Tarl­ ton, Jones, Garrett and Megan W illiams staked Davie to a 5-0 lead in the first inning. Parker made sure the early outburst held up. This was the exact opposite from W . Forsyth. D avie struggled in the field (six er­ rors), but offset that by knock­ ing the ball all over the park. Hobson had three hits, while Holder, Tirllon, Goin and W ill­ iams had tw o. Hobson and Tarlton had two doubles each. “We didn’t play good de­ fense, but we hit the ball a lot harder,” Carter said. “I was im­ pressed with Parker because we made a bunch of errors and she kept her composure and fought Ihrough it. Only two o f their runs were eamed.” The big blow in the five-run first was W illiam s’ two-run triple in the right-center gap. “ She probably could have scored (an inside-the-park hom er), but when she came around second she stumbled a little bit,” Carter said. Notes: Davie entered the fi­ nal week at 12-5 and 4-2 in the CPC. It plays at home to West Rowan on M ay 5 at 4:30 and at North Davidson on M ay 6 at 5. With two Central Piedmont Conference games lo go, it’s time lo write the Davie varsity softball team’s obituary. The reeling War Eagles lost three CPC games lasl week (4-0 to West Forsylh and 3-2 and 5-1 lo South Rowan). They’re 7-10 overall and 1-5 in the league. They’ve dropped four straight, matching the longest skid in their nine-year hislory of fast-pitch. And they’ve scored a meager five runs in the 0-4 free fall. W . Forsyth 4, Davie 0 Titans four-year workhorse Mendy McKenzie is virtually unhitlable, and she proved it yet again with a two-hitler that fea­ tured 14 strikeouts and no walks. Davie only got three base run­ ners against a team thal moved to 20-0 ond 6-0 in the CPC - singles by Ashley Whitlock and Whitney Williams and a hit by pitch from Hannah Tiemey. McKenzie had eight strikeouts through three in­ nings, The game was basically over in the first inning, when Koitlyn Wemsing led off with a homer. A walk and two singles followed as West raced in front 3-0, That was the only bad inning for Amy Alexander, who held West to two hits after the first. S. Rowon 3, Davie 2 In a season of heartbreaking losses, the War Eagles were dealt Suggs was not as dominant - Dovie had seven hits to South’s four - but she was able to come up with clutch outs when the game wos scoreless. Dovie pro­ duced two base runners in first, second and third innings. It had two on- with no outs in the sec­ ond, but the next batter popped up a bum to the catcher. A ll three of the threats ended without any runs os South (10-7,4-3) clinched the No. 3 seed, , Davie’s fourth-inning down­ fall started with a pair of bunt hits. After a walk loaded the bases, South'bunted back to the mound. . Alexander threw home, but the mnner barely beat a bang-bang' play. Then, with two outs and South up 1-0, Meredith Corriher belted a three-run double to the left-field fence. A lexander’s run-scoring double in the seventh broke Suggs’ shutout. Notes: In the 5-1 loss, Erin Whitaker went 3 for 4 and W ill­ iams helped Alexander with a se­ ries of dazzling plays at shortstop, ... South starts seven seniors. ... Dovie ploys 01 home to West Rowan on May 5 al 4:30 and at North Davidson on May 6 at ap- proximolely 7. Dovie will host the CPC Tournoment, M ay 10-12. Davie will be the fourth seed in the five-team toumament. W . Forsyth 4, Davie 0 perhaps the most difficult one at Davie ab Г h1 bi home. They put themselves in H. Tiemey ct 2 0 0 0 position for a dramatic comeback win with two runs in the sixth and Williams S9 Alexander p Whitaker c 3 3 3 000 10 G 000 two base mnners in the seventh.Whillock 2b 3 0 I 0 Kaitlin Hall singled with one Mail lb 3 0 0 0 out and Carrie Sain got on and Snin rf 3 0 0 0 stole second, putting the tying run Mann if Cope If 21 00 00 00 at third and the go-ahead run at E. Tiemey 3b 2 0 0 0 second with one out. But the War Totals 25 0 2 0 Eagles’ rally fell short when they Dnvle W. Forsylh 0-0 K-4mode a base-running mistake on Jenny M ann’s bouncer to the ООО ООО < 301 ООО : mound. Mann reached first ond W F IP H R ER BB1 so the bases should hove been loaded McK,W 7 2 0 0 0 14 with one out for Emily Tiemey.Davie IP H R ER BB1 SO Tiemey flew out deep, and thot Alex, L 6 5 4 3 6 5 would hove tied the game with­S. Rowan 3. Davie 2 out the mistake on the bases.Dnvle nb г h bi That summed up the War H. Tiemey ct 1 0 0 0 Eagles’ futility in close games.Williams ss 2 0 0 0 They’re 0-6 in games decided by Alexander 3b Whilnkerc 3 , 3 00 10 2'' 0one or two mns. , . , -Whillock'2b ' • 3 0 0.0With 0 constant lack of run Hnll Ib 3 0 1 0 support, Davie’s pitchers hove Sainp 2 0 0 0 little room for error. Sain pitched Fullwood If Mann If E. Tiemey rf Totals 2 13 1 011 4 0 well, holding South to one run 012 002through five. But a two-run homer 23 by Kayla Kelly in the sixth ulti­ mately spelled the difference.S. Rowan 0011 002 10 -3 South pitcher Heather Suggs Dnvle ООО 002 0-2 no-hit Dovie for 5 1/3 innings. In the boitom of Ihe sixth, E. Tier­ ney followed a Sain wolk with ' Davie’s first hit, and Amy Alex­ onder pulled Davie to 3-2 with a two-run single. South center fielder Ashley Weast deflated D avie’s early chances with three brilliant catches. She dove for two and mode one with her back lo the plate. Weost hurl Davie al the plote, too, getting two hits and an RBI. S. Rowan 5, Davie 1 Alexander gave up five runs on three hits in tlie fourth. Other­ wise she was untouchable. She didn’t allow 0 single base runner in the other five innings. SD-SaIn (3), Ч tr t M [ir'cli;r St ! üri-rii и • i I Kl S K3J*)8I3-IS77 Davie !P H R ER BB SO Snin, L 7 7 3 3 0 1 S. R ow an 5, D avie 1 Davie ab r h Ы H, Tiemey cf 4 1 1 0Willinms ss 4 0 1 0 Alexander p 4 0,1 1 Whitaker c 4 0 3 0 Whitlock 2b 4 0 1 0Hall Ib 2 0 0 0 Sain rf 3 0 0 G Copelf 2 0 b 0 Mann If 1 0 0 0 E. Tiemey 3b 3 0 0 0 Totals 31 1 7 1 Davlc ООО ООО 1 -1 S. Rowan ООО suo х -5 2B - Alexander (3). SB ■Williams (6). Davlc IP H R ER BB soAlex. L 6 4 .S 5 1 5 Davie Softball Statistics Record: 7 -1 0,1-5 C P C Amy Alexander Brennon Carter Jennifer Cope Tori Fullwood Koitlin Holl Jenny Mann Carrie Sain Emily Tieraey Honnah Tiemey Erin Whitoker Ashley Whitlock Whitney Williams Dona Woodard TOTALS Amy Alexander Carrie Soin TOTALS ЛВ R H R D I A VG .2B 3B H R53 10 17 11 .321 3 1 0 5 1 2 0 .400 0 0 0 .13 0 1 0 ,077 0 0 0 11 4 3 1 .273 0 0 046596.196 0 0 022241.182 0 0 0504125.240 1 0 040842.100 0 0 05415203.370 0 2 0505138.260 ■2 1 0484104.208 0 0 056121815.321 2 3 1 19 l 2 1 .105 0 0 04677111557.246 8 '7 1 W -L IP H R ER BB SO E R A3-6 64 36 26 12 18 86 1.314-4 51 38 19 13 13 44 1.787-10 115 74 45 25 31 130 1.52 S TO LE N BASES: H, Tiemey 9, W illiams 6, Alexander 3, Soin 3, E, Tiemey 2, Fullwood Hall Mann, Whitaker ’ W A LK S /H PB ; Hall 10, Alexander 7, H, Tiemey 7, W illiams 5, Whitaker 4, W hillock 4. 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FORD MERCURY Shop us online at a d fo rd .c o m Just off l-40 Exit 170, Hwy. 601 • Mocksville, NC • (336) 751-2161 ■ lir « S ™ tfdeiirior ----------—-------------------------------------------- S “"* ^ HO AO* 1 AMOtlCAN'^rote л mtcwv MocktvIM Keith DavenportSaiesMmagef Dale RaUedgeАзнЫаиВв/азШаоег 1лпп|е BurgeesSatos Cliuck Walker В8 - DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 The Wildcats' gold medalists, from left; front - Crystal Lester and Jessica Strickland; back - Grace Loeffler, Sarah Evans and Carly Pratapas. Not pictured; Autumn Jones. A look at North’s gold med­ alists: • Lester posted a 6-1 rccord in the long jump, flnishing scc­ ond one lime. The eighth grader saved her best jump (15 feet) for the biggest day and led the Wild­ cats with 23 points. Comatzer was next with 20. “She was a solid performer all year," Tabat said. • Jones went undefeated in the 1600 despite being a seventh grader. Over the course of the season, she improved her time by 17 seconds. She won first wilh a season-best 6; 11.04. “She is a hard worker and smart mnncr," he said. “1 would not be surprised to see her mn under six minutes next year.” • The 1600 relay was a wire- to-wire winner. Evans, Pratapas and Loeffler were constants, while Strickland, Kristen Kams and Taylor Hiatt shared time In the second spot. “They won by an averoge of eight seconds,” he said. “I can’t recall them ever being chal­ lenged. They were just that good and refused to lose. They dropped their lime from 5:06 at our first meet to their best lime at the conference meet - 4:49.60.” The scary thing about the Wildcats is they may have been a year away. Next spring they'll have a good chance to thtee-peat. “We have a great number of seventh graders coming back and we’re also very excited about our upcoming sixth-grade class," PREPARED FOR JUDGMENT? ARE YOU SUCCESSFUL AT EVERYTHING EXCEPT THAT тЮ Н MATTERS MOST-PREPARATION FOR ETERNITY? Jesus said, “Seek flrst the kingdom of God and His righteousness...” Secure your soul’s salvation today by obeying Ihe gospel! Believe in Christ (.мк. i6:i5 i«; пеь. п.б) Repent of your Sins and Turn to God (U.I3!3; Acts 17:30) Confess tlie Name of Jesus (Mall. 10:32; Am N;37) Be Burled In Baptism for the Forgiveness of Your Sins (Леи 2:3», *;31l, 22:16; Rom. 6:3-5; 1 Cor. 12:13; (iai. 3:27) Be FaHhful to Jesus unto Deatlt u jn. m, к». 2:ю) VISfT THE JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Non-Denomlnallonal Dedicated lo Restoring New Testament Christianity Biblical in Name, Oreanlialloii. Worship, iml 1Ыг1ле. Located at the comer оГ Junction and Jericho Roadj.________________Dr, Tom Torpy, Minister (336) 492-5291 Old School Davie Sports From May, 1969 • Junior Gary Markland of High Point College captured sec­ ond in two events in the state track meet al Duke University. In the javelin, he broke his own school record wilh a throw of 199-1.5. • Randall W ard o f Wake Forest’s football team was seri- ou.sly injured in practice and hos­ pitalized, and the offensive half­ back wasn’t able to play in Wake’s black nnd gold game. Ik -A -A A A N IM A L H O SPIT A L ii. ()» г DAVlh May Specials Dr. Emily Roberson • M -F 7:30-6-Snt 9-12 5162 U.S. Ilwy 158 • Advance 940-3442 Full Service Vclerlnary ilo.«pilultAn'j • Cats • Kalélu • Ftmu • l‘ockel I'tls www.nniiiiallimpllalnfcastdavic.coni неш Lovier Prices! E C K E R D * P H A R M A C Y LOOK For Our Sales c irc u la r In Today’s Papon Turner Wins 100,800 In Conference Meet The N. Davie girls track and field team won the conference title with a 105-100 margin over runnerup W. Rowan. Lester, Cornatzer Lead ‘Cats To Repeat Title Continued From Page B l Ihe fact we had 11 personal-best performances. Even though West had more rirst-plnce Hnishcs thim us, we scored in more events and often had Iwo people place in an event. .Carly Comatzer and Ctys- tal Lester participated in three events and each posted personal- best performances in all three. This was a true team win, and Coach Hall and myself are so proud of the girls.” Lester and Autumn Jones brought home individual gold medals, Lester went 15 feet in the long jump, and Jones turned in a 6:11,04 in the 1600. North al.so grabbed First in the 1600 relay as Carly Pratapas, Sarah Evans, Jes­ sica Strickland and Grace Loef- fler ran a 4:49.60. The Wildcats caught lighUiing in a bottle after going through an ordinary regular season. “Continuity in coaching is im portant,” said Tabat, who picked up a struggling program in 1997 and has built it into a power. "Gelling your athletes into the program is also impor­ tant. We’ve done a better job get­ ting our best athletes into track. We have the kids talk up the pro­ gram and Ihe other coaches help us by pointing out possible track people. I also think wc make track a lot of fun for the kids. Over the past four years we’ve gotten about 98 percent of the seventh graders lo come back for their eighth-grade year, and they bring out their friends.” T^bat said. “We will compete for tho championship next year also.” Folk finished second in the 600 with a school-record 2:08. Hiatt was third in the 600. Lester was first in the long jump, sec­ ond in the 200 and tied for third in Ihe 100. Comatzer tied for third in the triple jump and was second in both the 100 hurdles and 200 hurdles, with a school- record 34.52 in the 200 hurdles. Katelin Wensley was sccond in the high jump, Jones was first in Ihe 1600 and Pratapas was sec­ ond in the 400 and third in the 800. Evans was third in4he 400 and 800, Kellie Brown was third in the 200 and 800 and Taylor Stokes was third in the 800. Continued From Page B l South’s 400 relay was favored to win, but a botched handoff kept it two seconds under its best time. “We should have won it,” M iller said of Stevenson, Smoot, Lane and 'Himer Tinishing sec­ ond. South got third places from the 1600 relay of Hannah Hur- sey, Brittany Greer, Smoot and Stevenson and from Asia Steed A pair of defensive errors wiped away a pair of leads for North Davie’s soccer leam, lead­ ing to a 2-2 tie with visiting Sum­ mit last week.’ The Wildcats edged Summit 3-2 in the first meeting, and they probably would have completed a sweep if Coach John Marshall wasn’t a nice guy. Summit only brought 10 players, leaving it one girl short. But instead making Summit pay by trotting out 11 North players, Marshall only used 10 at a lime himself. "I was stuck in an ethical situ­ ation,” he said. “Do 1 play 10 or do I play II? We played 10 the whole game. We could have played 11-on-10, but I like to kind of keep things on an even playing field.” Hannah Stroupe scored a go- ahead goal in each half, but her spark wasn’t enough to offset de­ fensive mistakes that helped Summit create ties at 1-1 and 2- 2. Stroupe got assists from Katie Gerdon and Susanna MacFar- lane. "We had some opportunities, we just didn’t finish,” Marshall said. Later in the week, the W ild­ cats routed South Davie for the second time, 6-0. North, which in the 600. M ille r was very pleased with South’s overall showing. “The good thing is a lol of our strength came from seventh graders, and that’s going to make us strong next year,” she said. “We’ve got Stevenson, Smoot and (Morgan) Wyatt back. Jes­ sica Burner, Cherina Overton and Taylor Smoot are some of the best hurdlers I ’ve ever had as seventh graders.” blanked South 5-0 in the season opener, played exactly like Mar­ shall expected. "Right now geographically, most of the kids in our district are playing club soccer, and most of the girls on the other side of town are not - just because of location,” he said after North improved to 5-1-1. "(South’s coaches) are doing a good job with that program, and in a few years I really feel like it’s going to even up a little bit.” It was another dominating day for Stroupe and MacFarlane, who teamed up for three goals in the first half and finished with two each. On the season Stroupe has 12 goals and MacFarlane eight. Rebecca Gerdon had a big day as well with three assists. North ■ got one goal from K. Gerdon and Clare Moser and one assist from K. Gerdon, Cassie Barnes and Leanna Peedin, The Wildcats are just too tal­ ented and too deep for South. They have been for some time. In Marshall’s six years as head coach, he hasn’t lost to South. "We like the rivalry,” he said. “We kind of step up our game for that game.” R. Gerdon is the team leader in assists. She has six. • D avie’s boys track team outlasted North Rowan 115-114 to win the lO-team North Pied­ mont Conference. Coach Burt Barger got double wins from Hubert West and Jingles Ijames. West had a 21-3 in the broad jum p and a 42-6 in the triple jump, while Ijames did the 120 high hurdles in 15.5 seconds. Dovie also got wins from Allan Barger (50-4 in shot put) and Andy Andrews (4:51.8 in mile). B riefs, D ates Golf Tournament The Davie Civitan Club w ill hold its 3rd Annual G olf Touma­ ment at Pudding Ridge on M ay 7 at 2, with a hotdog lunch start­ ing al 1. Entry fee is .$200 for each four-person captain's choice team or $50 per person. Proceeds frorii the toumament w ill ben­ efit such organizations as Victory Junction Gang, A Storehouse for Jesus, Special Olympics and many more. If you’re interested in participating or sponsoring a hole, contact Ken Stroud at 998- 1485 or via email at KW STR O U D @ aol.com . Golf Cliallehge Tlie Concord United Methodist M en’s third annual golf chal­ lenge is M ay 14 at Pudding Ridge. There w ill be cash and prizes for holes-in-one and the first, second and third finishers. The cost is $50 per player and $200 per four-person team. For more infor­ m ation, call 9 9 8 -2 3 4 4 or check the web at www.concordumchurch.com. Golf League The Twin Cedars Ladies G olf League w ill be played on Thurs­ day evenings at 5 p.m. Call 751-5824 for more information. Benefit Golf A benefit golf toumament for Brandon Koontz is scheduled for M ay 21 at Pudding Ridge. Registration begins at noon (lunch provided) wilh a shotgun start al I. The fomiat is four-person captain’s choice. The cost is $60 per person and $240 per team. Contact Ed Robertson at 492-7003 or Ray Tutterow at 492-7754 to register. This Mother's Day Give Morn Something ^Really Spedal! i3 a ia n 5 a ^ p a wilh Merle Norman Balanstt Spa is a m Service European Spa OffMngEveri^iing: M a s s a g e ' Fd o ials'M .io ro clerm atrasio n B ocly W ra p s • M a lc e -U p • C om plete H c iire^in g N a il S e iv ic e s • and ,so muol\ moreill ß a i a n i a ^ p a 5273 US Hwy 158, Advance • 998-2057 Open: Mon-Frl: 10-8, Sat: 10-5 ______Gjß CerHflcaies Available DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - B9 Spotlight on Business D irty D igs C elebrates 1st A n n ive rsa ry Dirty Digs Is celebrating Its first anniversary and Tom Jones, owner and operator w ants to say "thank you." Thanks to all the folks who have contributed to their suc­ cess. Thanks to the people who held the original Idea of Dirty Digs and believed In the dreatn. Thanks to everyone who responded to their adver­ tising by making their phone ring with requests for them to do many different types of In­ teresting jobs, and thanks to the people w ho have ex ­ ecuted these jobs In a profes­ sional manner. From erosion control to stump removal Dirty Digs, a licensed and bonded company, originally represented the finest In ero­ sion control. T hey also handled drainage system s for yards and downspouts, grad­ ing and excavations, demoli­ tion of old or unwanted struc­ tures, brush clean-up of hard to control areas, footings and stum p removal. But Dirty Digs didn’t stop there. Now offering addi­ tional services Dirty Digs has evolved and is now offering m any addi­ tional services to better serve their clients who often had to turn to several contractors to complete projects they had in mind. To make It much sim­ pler, Dirty Digs b ecam e a 'general purpose' service. They did this by forming two alliances - one with a pro­ fessional landscape designer/ Installer and one with a certi­ fied arborlst. Dirty Digs’ landscape and hardscape services include soil preparation and seeding along with design and Instal­ lation of mulch beds, trees and shrubs, Installation of re­ taining walls and back filling/ final grading. Hydro seeding and hydro mulching will also be available soon. Their tree services, which are performed by a certified arborlst. Include treatm ents, repair, revitalization, trimming, removal of trees, land clear­ ing and stum p removal. Free estimates available So as you can see, Dirty Digs provides many things to many people. W hether your project requires only one or two of their sen/ices or Is a more complex Job and would be better sen/ed by an inte­ grated approach to an array Davie Academy of Martial Arts 753.8482 »782.0038 Wc Teach Respect Everyday Dirty Digs has a complete line of tree and yard m aintenance equipment. of services, give Dirty Digs a call now for a free estimate. Get your spring projects scheduled now With the season change rapidly approaching, schedule your projects with the Dirty Digs professionals now so SAVINGS up you can be am ong the first to get finished this spring. They use small equipment for jobs in tight spaces and larger equipment appropriate for projects requiring heavier lifting. Rem em ber that spring is EVERYDAY •<> I Senior Citizen» DíhcouiiIn • Office Storage Boxes • Grass & Weed КЯег • Men’s Swimwear Clemmons Discount Sales 1533 Lewlsvlllo-Clemmons Rd. 766-4449 • Clemmons • 766-4938 ■l BAKERY THRIFT STORE Mrs. Campbell’s Chow-Chow 2660 UwlsvUk>0>mmons Rd.* Cleoimons Mon.-Fri. Q-7', Sol Sun. 12^ 76e«)80 ^ S ^ H e l p i n g I^ a n ^ s fliTtift Scnkes, Inc. OFFKRtNr.! • A(lu]( Daycarc • Rcsldcm'ml Carc • Overnight Client Respite (Nuiritious Meals, Medication Supervision Si Daily Activilies) A Nun- Profit Unidal \Uiy Axcitcy provlillnii Eidl Service ot FoinHy FrieiuHy Hales . 633 West Main Street« Yuflklnvlllc (336) 679.7052 «w fH H 'Serving Davie CounliServing Davie County For 10 Years Commilmont Ol Brolher To Bfo'hor & Faitliln God Customized Gift Baskets for Corporations or I n ^ d u a l s A ll budgets and occasions I -866-NCGift-l p ^ R E N T T O O W N N O W A V A IL A B L E Woodworks A ffo rd a b le P ortable B u ild in g s Alvin Mast Jr. _ « 336-468-1194 S t o r a g e B i i i l d i n g s 5328 St Paul Church Rd. Hamptonville, NC 27020 Call for Directions • No Sunday Calls Please *l>onie D i r t C h e a p *________ Grnding/Excavating/Foottngs Lnncl CIcnring/Dcm olition Ero.slon C ontrol/D rainage Systems Landscapv/Hardscnpe Installation Tree C are by C ertincd A rborlst UccDScd And Imiim! Clemmons NC Tom Jones 336-749-0465 -JS^ISU A L- HAIR . , NAILS UP-DO’S PEDICURES 2565 Old Glory RtL, Suite E, Clcnintons • Off LcHisvaksOaiunons Rd. (Behind A Clatncr Wcrld) 7 7 8 -0 6 0 4 Kristina Eddlr)ger, Jadio Wllson-Solomort, Jorynlfor Hutchins. Jonnlfer Wagasky, Diana Rhymer B e n r i u d a M i n i l S e l f T S t d r a ^ i s 4 D ) 9 9 ^ 9 6 6 1 /C lim ate Control / 24 hr Computerized Gate / Fenced with 24 hr lighting /S iz e s 5x5 up to 10x20 / Video Camera Security / Next to Bermuda Quay I 146 Comnnerce Dr., Advance C H R I S T I A N H A N D Y M A N A L L P H A S E S O F H O M E R E P A IR S • Kitchen Bathroom • Roof • Windows M R . D a s h e r 416-3197 778-0528 an excellent time of the year to tack le th o se outdoor projects that you have been thinking about all winter. Give Tom at Dirty Digs a call today at (336) 749-0465. 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Lew isville Corners Shopping Center (H wy 421 Lewisville-Clem m ons Exit) 336 -766-4403 Г e u td *pctdfUe. 5723-F Counlry Club Rd. 9<tS-7864 T ^ R C F u P a n 'd M W R Y ” "/F YOUR AREA RUGS ARE SOILED" We Wash and Extract All IVpes Old Rugs • Antique • Specialty Upholstery • Leather • Pillows Call for Estim ates - 945-7864 NEEDSPmNG F IX U P 7C A U U SI New Vinyl Top Decking Vinyl Docks & Railing Vinyl Replacement Windows Screen Rooms Sun Rooms EnciosutBs Caiporte Vinyl Siding 764-0885 SIDING & WINDOWS F r e e E s H m a te s ! IVIobile Phone 9 7 8 - 2 2 9 9 I BIO. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 Barnette Wins Men’s Open Basketball Regular Season Barnette Heating & A ir won the regular-season championship in thé men's open basketball league at the Brock Gym. Barnette went 10-2 to edge Heiner’s by one game. Tw o games separated the top four teams as H otzoff and Osborne’s Towing tied for third at 8-4. Barnette Heating & A ir didn’t ride one or two oveг^^'helming weapons to the title. Instead, it comes at opponents in waves, with seven players averaging between seven and 17 points through the first round o f the toumament. It has perhaps the most versa­ tile big man in the league in Andy Snow, who averages 17.1 points, hitting 16 o f 18 free throws (89 percent). Scott Tonidondel is second at 12.1 points. The balanced attack includes Barry Chunn at 10.8, M ark Foley at 9.2, Clint Junker at 8.4, Alex Justice at 8.1 and Brad Hudson at 7.3. Hudson’s aver­ age skyrocketed with a 29-point night, which included seven 3s, in the first round. W ith five guys hitting at least 15 3-pointers, it keeps defenses guessing. Tonidandel has made 22 from beyond the arc, Foley 21 and Justice 20. Deal 41 - Gilbert 6, Chris Mecham 2, Andy Ward 10, Neil Comatzer 6, Scott Comatzer 9, Jason T\itterow 8. Barnette Heating & A ir 85 - M ark Foley 11, Scott Tonidandel 22, Brad Hudson 11, Clint Junker 11, Dee Robinson 2, Andy Snow 22, Brian W illiams 2, Greg Bamette 4. H a tzo ff 79 - Rod Tenor 2, Shawn W estbrook 14, Paul Cuthbertson 14, W illie Cozart 6, Speedy Redmond 19, Damien Lewis 11, M am ie Lewis 7, Vincent Cockerham 6. C ockerham Construction 70 - Brian Avery 6, Alphonso Keaton 9, Jason Hogue 15, Matthew Burchette 2, M itchell M ay­ field 10, Marcus Lassiter 26, P.J. Cockerham 2. Rivers 68 - Russ Bryden 9, Harry Brown 6, Brian Hunter 15, Albert Foster 2, Tim m y Redmond 4, Josh Aiken 30. Davie Enterprise 64 - Bubba Coleman 3, Andy Everhart 24, Tony M allard 13, Brent W all 9, Chariie Crenshaw 2, Brian Pitts 13. ■ 1st Round Tournam ent #1 B arnette H eating & A ir 94 • Greg Bamette 5, Andy Snow 21, Clint Junker 2, Brian W illiam s 2, Alex Justice 6, Marie Foley 9, Barry Chunn 11, Brad Hudson 29, Scott Tonidandel 9. #8 Deal 43 - Randy Peak 2, Jason Tutterow 4, Scott Comatzer 7, N eil Comatzer 2, Andy Ward 9, Chris Mecham 8, Rick Schott 11. #2 H einer 64 - Chad Heiner 4, Tracey Arnold 14, Germain M ayfield 14, John M ayfield 8, Clifford Dulin 12, Brandon Chra- pek 10. #7 Cockerham Construction 60 ■ Marcus Lassiter 14, M ario Hawkins 20, M atthew Burchette 2, Jason Hogue 4, M itchell M ayfield 4, Jason W illiams 6, John Orsillo 4. #6 D avie Enterprise 67 - Brian Pitts 2, Chariie Crenshaw 7, Brent W all 4, Tony Mallard 28, Andy Everhart 10, Bubba Cole­ man 16. #3 H a tzo ff 65 - Vincent Cockerham 9, M arnic Lew is 8, Damien Lewis 11, Speedy Redmond 12, Paul Cuthbertson 19, M ott James 2, Rod Tenor 2, Shawn Westbrook 2. #4 Osborne’s Towing 87 ■ Brian Lane 24, M ike M artinez 27, Staley Fletcher 6, Brent Cowles 22, Dustin Morgan 4. #5 Rivers 77 - Josh Aiken 27, Russ Bryden 21, Johnny Foster 2, Albert Foster 2, Brian Paylor 13, Michael Mashore 3, Brian Hunter 9. HAPPY Sunday, May 8, 2005 D a y S p a 1 Eti^ppemi Facial witli Ncd^ 4na ' , ' K ShotüdcÉ* Mai^ííágéj Deluxe Pedicijíyé»\i^ih ’ " . ' F v I h m d S o ñ m i r n T r e a t m c n i V ^ I ( / U I B e lla ,. i l HiJIsdalc Profcssttíiiáí 'fi/M j 3 C L E M M O N S C O U N T R Y .S T O R E & G A R D E N S H O I 2690 Lewisville-Clemmons Road • 7 6 6 ^ 8'Mo^eri Dttf Gifts ^!ar,9l|■lg B as kets* H um m ingbird Feedoi's i lom em ado C hicken Pies • M « e d Flow er Pots C oncrete B enches & Birdbetlhs AftH icial Com otory Flow ors St'dditig Plants • Herb« • Vogittablc Plants Local Honoy - Produce ■ V\/atorm6lpn «ind Plinomo Clirjut,c • Stiy.-ir-Frce Piosc fvcs a Pumpiiln Biiltei > W.tt. vyhilm CDiuiir,' ^...^Friod'AfjpIo blfiJ ^ Hand Dipped Ice Cream 1 [FREE SINGLE SCOOP CONE I ______w jthw u^n and purchase J V 5‘‘Cowtf £A/H?rtc«t'c ífomcíowi .Cmfoitm Service Full Line Office Supply Store Oolt't Forwet Mom... Mother's Day Cards & Large Selection of Jewelry & Handbags! i/ ''¡ ‘i , h i /■■.'i.'» {• w iS.'/fc; ,, ' ■ 766-8382 Fax: 766-9061 2668 Lewisville-Clemmons Rd, Clommoiis ¡ncKis Irom Villyie C.viii:,: .'I Oilisj ^afupes €clcm Tcf Mem From OLD Tirney Snowball Bush to the New Palonteti Tinkerbell Lilac & Endless Summer Hydrangea All North Carolina Grown! Jim ’s F ru it and StuSS 3311 Hwy 601 N, Mocksville • 492-2625 (3 ^u c Jt ®4bo%a P u r v e y o r s o f F in e Y a r m a N m ’ M um üia: ui ynm L ttriif Nclnction oj'yanis, <tciK‘Kin>rwi:, toolu, hnoliN nndp iitlcrn u (And otliar I'unhy iteniit) (ire a f elnsses- P iiiish in ii KcriiiccN- “Chickn w ith Sticks” Sooial K n ittin g Group \¥Amt, FR IB N D iY A m mOWLEDGEABLIi STAFF “G iß C a rd s A v a ila h lc ” Lsm avttJus c o a m ita s iio p p in o CKNTtm C om tr ofR I M l anil £<uihiit((«.C(«nim«nt Rd Shop is (irrn.iH from luifilnti'n A R N O L D B RIFT |TOREHtOH QUALITY FOOD & GIFT ITEMt Thrift Store Prices G re a t S e le ctio n o f M e a l & Gift Ite m s fo r M o th e r's D a y In c lu d in g ... •Mr.s. C am pball'a C how C how •E nletim nnn'f. B akod G oods •AiTiish Jam s •S lash Tea •G ourrnot C offee •P eppol idge Farm s C ookies S S nacks *Cherrie.s S alad D rossintj •G olding i-arm Honey, S alad D rossings S S auces DIscounL-i To Churchas & Othor Groupa Across the Street from VUlage Candle & Gift 2668*1 Letviiiville'Clemmnns Rd. Clenimoiu, NC 01»EN: Mon..Frl. 9-7; Sat. 9-6; Sun. ItS Presents a Martha Pullen JEIeirlo^n School 'iiudUneajul ocaiureibtev» --------------EduoUonwUlprotntthliErntudc prognua Bodi Connie Rdnur nnd IVggy DUbone ilzak }T)U with thdr launvlcdge and poioiulitiei!! WHEN: A i^ t 17-20,2005 WHERE: VILLAGEINN, CLEMMONS, NC COST: $375 ($300 IF PAID BY MAY 15) incUi(lc% l.nnilic.t All Mi\cliine.i Pn>vidc<l LIMITED SEATING SIGN UP TODAY 9-4:00 W-Ftiday • Sat 9-4:30 Lewisville Comers 4 2 i & Lcwisville-Clem im m s R d Leivisviile (336) 766-8271 wwui.sewinglyyouri,eom Garden Shop 133SW.InnnSI.,Sallibury,NC Phone 704-636-4742 llOWWiMon-S«tfl.B, Sun 1-4 J U S T m T 8 M E m n w i o t h e m ’s d a y Laitdsm pe Desig-Ji & ConsuUiti§^ lOCAl CROWN JUST RECEIVED Davie People DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - Cl Cancer survivor Claire Wallace, 5, daughter of Jeff and Regina Chandler talks about the importance of faith in Cancer survivor Randy Dean McDaniel walks the open- Kelly .Waliace of Yadkinville and granddaughter of grand- battling cancer at the annual Davie County Relay for Ing lap at the annual Relay for Life. parents Joe and Linda Brown of Mocksville. Life for the American Cancer Society. - Photos by Robin Fergusson F a i t h & P r a y e r Local Cancer P a tie n t M skes tt W ith The t-fe ip O f Farhiiyt O thers “M y failh in God, the care and sup­ port of my fam ily and friends, and prayer is how I made it through this last year.” Regina Chandler was speaicing from the heart. Talking to area residents at the an­ nual Relay for Life iast Friday, the Cooleemee resident recounted her or­ deal - which started with diagnosis of breast cancer in April, 2004. It wasn’t detected until it had spread and a lymph node became sore. She had surgery last May, and finished chemo- • therapy in June and radiation in Decem­ ber. Doctors said the cancer was gone in February. > “Even though I Icnew God was with me through every step of the way, there were a couple of times when 1 literally trembled uncontrollably because fear, for a moment, had ovevtaicen me. “But you know, looking back, I re­ alize that was before my husband and 1 told anyone what we suspected,” Then the word began to spread, and “God’s people began to pray,” she said. “I never experienced another fear­ ful time like that. It was an overwhelm­ ing sense of peace that I could not ex­ plain. I leamed that people around the worid were praying for m6.” That pow er o f prayer got her through the treatments, along with fam­ ily and friends and church families at First Baptist of Cooleemee and Blaise Baptist in Mocksville, “God brought friends who had al­ ready tieen down this road before me, to comfort and encourge me and offer some sound advice. And all you survi­ vors out there were definitely an en­ couragement, “Even though we don’t have it a ll, together all the time, 1 cannot imagine going through this last year without faith and hope in Jesus Christ. We may think our faith is strong until it’s really put to the test, then we realize there’a a • lot more room for growth.” Corinthians 12:9: "His grace is suf­ ficient for us and His sireiigtll or power is perfected in our weaknesses." “1 have definitely found this to be twe, especially this last year, Chandler survivors get the night of walking around the track started at the opening ceremony. Members of the VF Jeanswear team have fun al the annual event on Friday night. Relay Chair Anne Holland recognizes her helpers at the opening ceremony, Sadie Essie, 2, daughter of David and Tammy Essie of Mocksville, at the relay. 51( . I ! 1 I C2 - D A V IE C O U N TY E N T E R P R ISE R EC O R D , Thursday, M ay 5,2005 W o m a n ’s C lu b M e m b e r s D r e s s F o r ‘F e d d y D a y ’ Marks-Hanes Engagement Announced Jim and Lindn Brannun of Raleigh announce the engagement of Ihcir daughter, Rebecca Lin Marks to Joshua Carter Hanes. The bride-elect is a graduate of Leesville High School. She is a leaching fellow at N.C. State University and will graduate this month. The groom-to-be is the son of Ken and Brenda Hanes of Ad­ vance. He is a graduate of Davie High School and N.C. State Uni­ versity. He is employed at N.C. State Employees Credit Union in Raleigh. The couple will be married May 21 at Emmanuel Baptist Church in Raleigh. They will live in Roleigh after marriage. The GFWC-NC Mocksville Woman's club met April 13 at Bermuda Run Country Club. President Linda Sechrist wel­ comed members and guests to the Federation Day celebration. Donna Williams, on behalf of the education department, intro­ duced the club scholarship win­ ners: Jessica Barnette, Brook Harris and Karen Deadmon from Davie High School. Phyllis Potter, from the con­ servation department, presented a $500 check to Davie High As­ sistant Principal Carol Cozart for Ihe school’s memorial garden. Club hostesses were Elette Owen and Vickie Smitherman. They hosted the "First Annual Feddy Day Awards.” Tables were decorated with movie themes, complete with boxes of fresh popcom. Marlene Shamel, the “8th Wonder of the World,” opened the show wilh a monologue of jokes. All of the women had been asked to dress as if they were attending the Academy Awards. Lots of gold, silver, pearls, hats and boas were the highlight. Each woman was presented with a “Star Wand” award for their contribution to the club during the year. Approximately 45 attended, and following the blessing, all were served a sit-down dinner reminiscent of a luncheon at the Brown Derby in California. Elette Owen and Vickie Smitherman are dressed forthe "Feddy Awards." S h e u s e d t o w e a r p e a n u t b u t t e r & je lly . . . N o w s h e w e a rs m a k e -u p H A P P Y «™ BIRTHDAY K -K C H A < H A W«Lov«you! M om , Dad & Caroline SPRING FLING Elbaville United M ethodist Church 2595 Hwy 801 Soulh. Advancc Comer o f 801 & Peoples Creek Rd 998.6111 SATURDAY, MAY 7 8am*1pm H o t D o g s Rent a table at $10 You Keep Sale Proceeds Woman's Club members Marlene Shamel (left) and Donna Williams (right) with schol­ arship winners essica Barnette, Brook Harris and Karen Deadmon Three Bloodmobiles Planned In May Three American Red Cross Bloodmobile blood drives will be held in Davic County in May: • Friday, May 20 at Davie County Hospital, Mocksville, from 12:30-5 p.m.; • Tuesday, May 24 at the Davic Chapter of NWNC, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville, from 2-6:30 p.m.; and • Thursday, May 26, Ingcrsoll-Rand, Sanford Av­ enue, Mocksvillc, from 6:30-11 a.m. Each unit of blood donated can help to save up to three lives. The requirements to give blood are: age 17 or older; weigh at least 1 to pounds and be in gen­ eral good health. Call 724-0511 lo schedule an appointment at one of these dries or at the Win- ston-Salem Blood Center. A d v a n c e B e n e f it C a r S h o w M a y 1 4 MOCKSVILLE 854 Valley Rd (Ac'O tH «li«‘t*1 Irorii C ( 336-751-2222 O n l u o í , Swicegood Wnll & McDaniel Ass.nvl W'mnuig Iri.ul I (»i.iiio \\¿U \\ (. J I svvni.totn CLEMMONS 2419 Lewisville-Clemmons Rd (A( rtiss slioot Ifo itt VVoiuiy S) 336-778-2221 The Fifth Annual Advance Benefit Car Show will be held Saturday, Moy 14 al Shady Grove Elementary School, Comatzer Road, Advance. All money will go to “Whal Christmas Is All About” to ben­ efit Diane Keaton and Grady Smith. Trophies will be awarded for,, first, second and third'place in' each class, in addition to spe­ cialty trophies. There will be door prizes and a 50-50 draw­ ing. Don't leave the tractors at home. There will be specialty classes for tractors with a best of show, and first and second runners-up. For more information, call T^iryJ^rapct) at 998-6136 or contact him via FAX at 998- 9630. I$35,000 '$69,900 ^ 2 B R/2 BA : :»2BR/1 ;>iia,auu . :»2BR/1BA g ' ‘JI ‘ - I $78,500 3BR/1.5 BA savTTtrii t n $105,900 J 3 BR/1 BA p i . $109,900 m ' " ' 4 BR/Z BA ill ; $119,500 3 BR / 2 BA ’iTllrtñll'— 3 BR/Z BA* »J ' I $129,900I c.u,uuu «CV* ^ * uufuuu 3 BR / 2 BA 3 BR / 2 BA $139,900 lúioizníiiim yLyi- $149,900 SI 53,900 3 BR/ 2 BA 3 BR 1 2.5 BA ' T l i i n i T T n~l' $159,900 3 BR / 3 BA Tt-I:rnna'i'nw $189,900 4 BR/ 2.5 BA I I $205,000 , 3 BR / 2 BA P P l f S 'i U I ! $208,000 $135,000 & Up ■ M H H $ 2 1 9 , 0 0 0 Ì 3 BR/ 2 BA ^ Townhome 4 BR / 3 BA $224,900 |7 r " * lB H $ 2 3 1 ,9 0 0 . , 3 BR / 2.5 BA I «f* <• » 4 BR 1 2.5 BA j-^ h i mRT.i:<r7Traniii $240,000 3 BR / 2 BA $249,000 y w . - 2 BR / 2 BA mmk $274,900 $345,000 5 B R /2 .5 BA , 4BR/3BA C /a ss O f 1 9 5 0 To R e u n ite Members of the Mocksville North at 1-40, Mocksville. , High School Class of 1950 will Anyone interested is invited, hold a get-together on June 4 at To leam more about the event, 6 p.m. at Prime Sirioin, US 601 call 998-3211. Payne Yard Sale May 14 A benefit yard sale to benefit p.m. at Davie High School. Darlene Payne in her fight There will also be face paint- against cancer will be held Sat- ing, a 50/50 drawing, hotdog urday. May 14, from 8 a.m.-4 sale, bake sale and more. Auxiliary Market May 21 The Davie County Hospital Auxiliary will host its second open air market from 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, May 21 at the Masonic Picnic Grounds, Mocksville. To leam more, call 751-8362. M other's D oy, M o ij 8 tK l Thwlwajeweiry ofiens u|> countless ofifiottunities. SnKohce yow existing bracelet m necUoce wilk ow new bead dlcsiqnsl P A N D ’‘tkooia■ Slorting i 7 ^ /e SKclusive Pavie County Now Available at 67 Coui-t Sqyore. Hiblono Downtown Mockaviite, NC • 336-75 l-fSSG Mon.-Fri. 10;00am-5;30pm Sat. 10;00am-5;00pm*2 muii.-rii. lu.uudin-^ijupni aai. I u:uuam-:i;uupm ^ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - C3 Area residents smile as they make the survivor's lap at the American Cancer Society Relay for Life. This little racers brought smiles to everyone as they sped around the high school track. ONE STOP FOR Aa VOUR WATER CARDEN NEEDS MARSHA'S KOI SWATEKfiACDENS Open: W - T f i- F - 5 llam-ópm C lo s e d S u n d a y Appt Mow-Tues 336-4^2-7423 64W OF MOCKSVILLE TO CALAHALN RO. (NEAR LAKE MYERS CAMPGROUND) THEN l.qMI TO BEAVER BRANCH TRAIL NEWLY REMODELED WITH LARfiER WATER CARDEN CENTER S N o w M l i n g f o r S U M M E R C A M P a n d A F T E R S C K O O L C A R E C o m a tz e r U M C C h r is t K id s S c h o o l A g e C a re Enroll before M a y I f and pay wo re g istra tio n feel Rates are reasonable and include fees for trips. **Piscounts for families w i more than one child** Summer Camp Rates are §85 per week and After School Care is ¿145 per month. For more Informaffon or to sign up^ please call Comatzer United Methodist Church. 998 -0687. R a c e M a k e s E x c itin g F in a ie The last hour of the 2005 Relay for Life proved to be an exciting finale. Children age 3-6 raced bat­ tery-operated vehicles around the track in the “Christy Truck­ ing 200." Awarded cash prizes were; 3- 4 year olds - first, Dennis Proffitt; second, Patrick Home; third. Faith Horne; fourth, Peyton Sherrill; and fifth. Hunter Hopkins. Winners in the 5-6 year old division were: first, DeJuan Peebles; second, Luke Home. H a r m o n y S c h o o l R e u n io n M a y 7 The Harmony School Alumni will hold their annual reunion at the Harmony School cafeteria on May 7 at 6 p.m. Plates are $10 per person. No reservations are needed, and all former students ore encouraged to attend. Registration begins at 5:15. To learn more, call Dorothy Conant at 704-546-7547. Poker Run Saturday The first Palmer Church Poker Run will be held Saturday, May 7 starting and ending at the Masonic Picnic Grounds off North Main Street, Mocksville. Proceeds will go to promote cancer awareness through the Forsyth Cancer Center and Hos­ pice. Admission is $5 adults, $2.50 for children under 13. Check-in begins at 8 a.m., for the ride that begins at 11, return­ ing at 2 p.m. There will be a car and motorcycle show and live music after the run. G a r d e n C lu b To M e e t Diane Bell of Wild Birds Unlimited, Winston-Salem, will present a program to the Mocks­ ville Garden Club on "Attract­ ing Birds to Your Garden” on Thursday, May 5, at Jericho Church of Christ. Refreshments will be served at 7 p.m., and the program will begin at 7:30. Visitors are wel­ come. Dix ie u n d Farm Summer Camp ipotj »re still availablel Call to (Ind out morel www.dixlelandfarm.com Conacc Marim Phono: 1784 Godbey Road - Motkiville. NC170:a JEWELRY CLEARANCE & SALE N O W 1 / 2 C A R A T D I A M p N D N E C K L A C E > 4 9 9 ° ^ ! *199! Was *320 ‘159! M ens 3 D iam ond R¡ng W hite G oid Claddagh Was *6200 «310 0 ! 3 DIAIVION 1/4 ct. WAS *1500 2 CARAT DIAIVIOND BRACELET 3DAYS ONLY! W K 'l.l. (ilV K HKR TH K W K D O lN t; »A N D F R E E W H I N YOU lUJY m .K S O m 'A IU K I ROM I S! *" Kid’s Slirimp Rings _______ii_____ Loose 1 Carat Marquise Diamond ^3200 ALL GEIVISTONES 25-70% SAVINGS (Mystic Fire Topaz Earrings W a s *299Trade-In & Estate Clusters o .$ 2 9 ¡ Diamond Anniversary Rings l o t h e r ’s I R i n g s ! ORDER ¡ TODAY! ^ Made In Our Store ^ ^ a m i D I A M O N E ^ G O L D G A L L E R Y Mociisville 751-3747 «28S! W ATCH BA T T ER Y R E P L A C E D Davie Jewelers ^ Mocksville J C4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May S, 2005 Farmington Ruritan Club members are ready to pick litter from community roads. F a rm in g to n N e w s By Laura Mathis Farmington Correspontlcnl On Saturday morning the Farmington Ruritan Club par­ ticipated in a roadside cleanup in the Farmington area. They had a hardy breakfast j . before hand and had a good time \ ; of fellowship and getting to know one anolher. Members that were on hand for the event; Garry Steele, Larry Holbrook, William Brock, Chip Essie, Neal Essie, Tim Ballard, Jackie Lane, Fred Throckmorton, Eddie Spach and Mike Deal. The road­ side looked much better after the clean-up and I know that I can speak for others in (he commu­ nity when 1 say that it was greatly appreciated. The Farm­ ington Ruritans have been active in the community over the past years; raising funds and contrib­ uting to the replacement of the old roof at the Community Cen­ ter; fund raising for community projects, roadside clean-up,and the TED golf tournament that has provided scholarships for area students. The Ruritans next meeting will be May 12 at 7:30 at the Farmington Methodist Church. The Farmington Community Center has recently became a United Way Agency. Several years ago, as some of you may remember,the United Way sup­ ported Ihe Community Center. Over the years, policies have changed al the United Way. They are currently leaning loward supporting "programs" rather than facilities. Although, the Community Center has contin­ ued to receive "designated" funds, they have been quite small. Now that the Community Center is working with Senior Services to begin a program this Summer, they have once again regained support from the United Way. For those of you in 'IC, N o w ’s T h e T im e T o D r e a m G e t P e r f o r m a n c e P lu s C h e c k in g S 5 Q 1 П Х . T im e l 3 . I Your personal forecast calls for sunny days ahead, and ensuring that bright futuro means getting the most for your money now. Start ivitli Performance Plus, Southern Community's top-of-the-line checking account. U has all the bells and whistles you could »rant, plus a very attractive special interest rata Use the money you'll save to brighten up your lifestyle. Bring your big.dreams to tlie bank that's small enough to care. Л тЫмыт it/vll af IIM •jMifI irMr «МММ. Ktfp m ^ ft МЛ1 ftftcotiU tubuttamlHt* on ‘ tk s m v m n t ■ luw » dWl* ^ S o u t h e r n ( .o m m u n i t y B A N K A N D T R U S T Smil Enottgh To Caw nr/ormiMf« fÍMi , g of€twt ü¡w biea i, \20U toil) ГАГЯ Ihe/oMrif ' ’ mitt of Intertill NifiifMiim baione* o/ií.009 lo $15,000, ,50% Л плиа! Ptuen tage Y U Ì4 f $15.000 влЛ ü b c ft, X l O h Лпнна! Ptn € M a$ e Y itU . SwrroundIno Comm unitibs,h)^^3, |tó fe V ^ ‘>''Vv^.*ra*líe*»04gUtocaTe.com / (33в^7в8<в5.00* A d v a n c e N e w s By Edith Zimmerman Advance Correspondent Dave Ward was pleasantly surprised when his family hon­ ored him with a birthday dinner/ party at the Methodist church fellowship hall Saturday night, April 30, wilh 65 guests attend­ ing. Dave turned 70 Monday, May 2. His children and grand­ children spent the weekend with he and wife Frances and all at­ tended worship service at the Methodist church Sunday. They were Beth and Eric Bielder of Raleigh, Kim and Bob Homer and sons Harrison and Christian Homer of Wilton, Conn. Dave said il was Ihe first time his fam­ ily had been together in quite some lime, and he was delighted they were present for his birth­ day. We were happy lo have our pastor Ihe Rev. Harry Sammons back in Ihe pulpit Sunday after spending severaJ days in Forsyth Medical Center for heart related problems. We were glad lo see Gene Vogler at church Sunday. He had undergone surgery for clogged arteries al Forsyth Medical Cenler last week. The Rev. Ron Wachs, a pro­ fessional, pastoral councclor with CareNel of Davie Counly and Ihe Baptist Hospital, gave a presentation (questions and an­ swers) concerning mcntol health issues and the church at Mocks United Methodist church Sun­ day afternoon, May 1. Those from our congregation attending the session were Edith Zimmer­ man and Ronnie Smilh. Edith knew Ron Wachs when he worked with the youth at our church as a Duke student in 1963, and was in her home on many occasions. Elbaville United Methodist church will have a Spring Fling Saturday, May 7. There will be food (chicken pies), baked goods, yard sale, fun and games. The Methodist church Hand Bell Chior, under the directon of Bobby Clutts, gave an impres­ sive performance Sunday. They did Ihe call lo worship, Ihe offeretory and the postlude. The choir will retire for the summer, resuming in August. Maggie Carter of Hickory spent the weekend with her sis­ ter, Belt Barnhardt. B e rm u d a У Ш а й е N e w s By Lisa O’Donnell Bermuda Village Correspondent Residents spent last Thurs­ day aftemoon in Lexington at North Carolina’s newest winery, Childress Vineyards. Located on almost 65 acres, this state-of- the-art winery with ils stgne and stucco exterior and omate terra colia roof captures Ihe Old World feel reminiscent of an Italian Tuscan villa. Bermuda Village residents were impressed from the moment they entered the Grand Entry Hall wilh the heavy architectural beams, textured walls, and multi-tiered fountain, which impart a feel of elegance. Lunch was outdoors on Ihe terrace of the Bistro Cafe. The view included plantings of nine varieties of premium European vines that have been growing since April 2003. Although the vineyard is not producing grapes, it is producing wine from grapes purchased from other North Carolina vineyards under the care of wine master Mark Friszolowski. Residents discovered Ihe worid of wine, making wilh a guided tour of 35,000 square foot winery followed by a tasting, which include house and varietal wines. All enjoyed the day and many residents plan to return wilh family and friends. Gary Steele and Jackie Lane do their part to keep the roadsides clean. the Farmington Community who give to the United Way or arc thinking about supporting the United Way, this is a great op­ portunity to put your donation back into the community. When you donate, simply designate your funds to go to the Farming­ ton Community Cenler. This will help the center lo be able to pro­ vide more programs for the com­ munity in the future. The Farmington Masonic Lodge will be meeting May 9. Birthday girls celebrate, from left: Ashlen Drye, Alexis Jordan and Candice Foster. S h e ffie ld - Q ile ih a b N e w s By Janice .Iordan Sheffield/Calahaln Correspondent This was a busy week of birthday celebrations, beginning with a party for Ashlen Kellie Drye, who turned 1 year old on April 29. Her parents are Noah and Ellie Drye, and her big brother is Caleb Drye. Great- grandparents are Cecil and Lena Mae Allen, Lawrence and Virginia Drye, and Nancy Koontz. Several family mem­ bers and friends gathered at the home of Ashlen's grandparents, Harvey and Delaine Cranfill, on Saturday for a cookout and birthday cake. Also present were her grandparents, Lanny and Linda Drye. Alexis Jordan, daughter of Clinton and Holly McDaniel, was born four years ago on May 2. She is the granddaughter of David and Dawn Allen and Bonnie Allen. Alexis is the great-granddaughter of Cecil and Lena Mae Allen. Family and friends enjoyed Sunday aftemoon with Alexis at Rich Park. May 2 is Ihe birth date of Candice Grace Foster, and she P in o N e w s welcpmed her thifd, birthday with lots of outdoor fun at the home of her grandparents, Chris and Janice Jordan on Sunday afternoon. Her parents, Dell Foster and Karen Jordan-Foster, served a Mickey and Minnie Mouse birthday coke with ice creom to family and friends who dropped by to visit. On SaUirday, grandparents. Max and Jane Foster, came from Pfafftown to take Candice, her older sister Krystal, and the children’s parents to Miller’s Restaurant for lunch. Candice is the great- granddaughter of Ariie Foster and the late Grace Foster of Davie County, Kimberly York and Timmy Gobble were married Thursday, April 28 in Mocksville. They were honored by family and friends with a reception al Ihe Fork Civic Center following the ceremony. Kimberly is the daughter of Calvin and Lisa York. She is the granddaughter of Hubert Reeves, who resides in the Sheffield community. On Friday, Chris and Janice Jordan attended the grand opening of Ihelr son and daugh- lerrinTlaw’s law praclice in Jefferson, Jonathan Jordan and wife Tracie are partners in Jordan & Jordan Law Offices, PLLC and specialize in all aspects of estate planning, including wills and health care directives. Jonathan serves as the counly attorney for Stokes County, For more informalion, you can go to their web sile jordanjordanlaw.com . The Women’s Fellowship of New Union United Methodist Church hopes everyone will attend their bake sale Saturday, May 7 beginning at 8 a,m. al Ihe Mocksville Wal-Mart. Church members and volunteers from the Sheffield/Calahaln Volunteer Fire Department will be there selling Marshmallow Blow- pops to raise money for the fire department’s annual Children’s Christmas Party. The History Committee of New Union United Methodist Church will be pre-selling a special tapestry throw in honor of the church’s upcoming 225lh anniversary. Cost of the throw is $50. Call Brenda Bailey al 751-7567 for more information. By Nora Latham Pino Correspondent James and Lelia Essie had dinner with their son, Neal and his wife, Brenda, Iasi week. Also attending were iheir son, Chip and his wife, Ruth and Ben, and Ruth Neal of Oxford. On Sun- Candilla of Winslon-Salem had lunch to honor her mother, Lelia, James also attended, Mike and Pal Trepka of Michigan Center, Mich,, have been visiting their uncle and aunt, Paul and Joan Barsdale for Ihe last week. day, Johna and Mary Ellen Chris Dobbins, Pat Sawyer, F o u r C o rn e rs N e w s Jean Kune and Kathy Ellis hosted a baby shower for Ted and Mindy Williams on Sunday. Approximately 40 guests at­ tended. Betty West, Dewilla Smilh and Nora Latham enjoyed lunch at Battle Branch Restaurant in Courtney Friday. By Marie White Four Comers Correspondent Denise S, Sapp and Kelly Mabe were married Saturday, April 30 at Courtney Baplist Church. The Rev. Kenny Smith, uncle of the bride, perfonned the ceremony. Denise is the daugh- ler of Mr. and Mrs. L.S. Shellon Jr. A reception followed in Ihe church fellowship hall. They are making Iheir home in Walnut Cove. The Rev, Ricky Atkins has been called as the new pastor of Courtney Baplist Church. Ev­ eryone is invited lo any service. Sunday School is9;30, worship service at 10;30 and Sunday evening al 6. Mrs. Ollive Burgess is our shui-in of the week and needs our continued prayers. Batry Smith is slowly im­ proving and was able to attend church Sunday. ............................. ^.........V DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - C5 Lydia Stroud, Nannie Stroud, and Lydia and Nannie with Lydia’s son and Nannie’s husband, Rhoid. C o u n ty L in e N e w s By Shirley Thorne Counly Line Correspondent This week our nation and state will honor our mothers and Ihe power of prayer. In 1952, President Harry Truman signed o resolution es­ tablishing a national day of prayer. On May 5, 1988, Presi­ dent Ronald Reagan amended Ihe law to set aside the first Thursday of May as the date. This Sunday is Mother’s Day and all six local churches will pay tribute to mothers. Some will recognize Ihe oldest, young­ est, and the one with Ihe most children. Regular Sunday evening services at Society Bap­ tist and Pleasant View Baptist have been canceled to give fami­ lies more lime together. This year wc are grateful to County Line mothers of past and present. One of our senior mothers today is Clara Godbey York of Clarksbury, who will celebrate her 90th birthday in September. While living wilh her parents on NC 901 near Stroud Mill Road, Clara met her lifetime sweet­ heart, Buford York, of Fox Hunter Road. Clara and Buford reared their family of four daughters and three sons on Fox Hunter, and the York family has provided auction services to the area since Ihe 1930s. Martha Nicholson of Davic met the love of her life, Stokes T\iraer of Iredell, married him, and settled on Society Road where they reared Iheir fomily of two daughters and five sons. Some of Iheir children and grandchildren settled nearby. Martha was a faithful member of Piney Grove AME Zion Church until her death in 1967. Elizabeth “Lizzie” Nichols of Wilkes was captivated enough by County Liner Milton Gaither to marry him and move to County Line. They reared a fam­ ily of nine children, seven of whom settled and reared fami­ lies whhin a few miles of the Gaither home on NC 901 near Rimrock Road. Sue and Milton last operated a grocery store (now operated by grandson Parks Jones) adjacent to Iheir home. She went lo be v/ith Ihe Lord in 1975. Cordie ‘Walker of Davie Academy said “I do” lo class- male Grady Cartner, who lived nearby. They wed in 1919 and settled on Ihe Walker family farm in Ihe lalC' 1920s. They reared three sons, two of whom (Lawrence and Kermit) settled nearby, Cordie celebrated 50 years of marriage before Grady’s death in 1971 and died al age 96 in 1994. Lydia Yates Stroud lived wilh her husband, John Austin Stroud, adjacent to Society Bap­ tist Church until his death in 1939, She and John reared a family of three sons and a daughter. Oldest son Rhoid mar- . ried'Nannio'Stroud, who'lived on Ridge Road. Rhoid and Nannie made Iheir home with Lydia and John and reared their son, James Harvey, there. After Rhoid’s early death lo cancer, Nannie and Lydia continued lo live together and were Society’s “Naomi and Ruth” in the late 1940s and 1950s. Wherever you saw Lydia, you saw Nannie. Grandma Thome, my sister and I often walked up lo spend Ihe afternoon with ihem in the 1950s. Nannie went to be with the Lord in 1956 and Lydia fol­ lowed in 1957. Our mothers in County Line are special and we like to treat them lhal way. My mother is a special lady and, as she nears 90, I treasure the limes with her more and more. I look forward to having her sil beside me in church on Sunday. Here’s wish­ ing all mothers in County Line a great day of honor on Sunday. The Baptist Men of Calvary will have a prayer breakfast at 8 a.m. Sunday, May 8, in the church fellowship hall. Others in the community are invhed. The United Methodist men of Clarksbury will have a men’s prayer breakfast at 8:15 a.m. Sunday, May 8, in the church fellowship hall. Other men in the community are invited. Pleasant View Baptist Church will have a mission re­ vival from May 9-11. Featured speaker will be Dr. Bobby Sizemore of Catawba. Services begin each night at 7 and will '\^ictuna !E(airte (BrUais F u l l S e rv ic e B r id a l S a lo n : MolhlrtilW W ; s re c i№ W e a r e a o n e s lo p s h o p f o r a l l y o u r s p e c ia l d a y n e e d s : B r id a l G o w n s , M o th e r o f ih e B r id e , B rid e s m a id s , F lo w e r G ir l, E v e n in ff, P ro m , S h o e s <6 G IF T C E R T IF IC A T E S A V A IL A B L E 129 E. D epot St., M ocksville, N C *(3 3 6 ) 753-8488 Locally Grown, Hydroponic T o m a t o e s We also now have G r a p e T o m a to e s , C u c c u m b e r s , a n d L e t t u c e ! Tomato & Bedding Plants, Dew Drop F«ntn 302 Foster Road, Mocksville (i'micr Rd. It Jtui ofT Kidgo Ril. in Western Duvie Counly) Call For Directions (3 3 6 )4 9 2 -5 2 6 3 Open Thurs. & Fri. Noon-5pm and Sat. 8 am-noon M a y B A R G A I N S o f t h e M O N T H p(0V4iae wtondoiJ teoano xllJkMVCtrratJor IU IM M iMiuoHM Help Is Just Around Tt\e Comer. Caudell L u m b e A B uilding Supplies 162 Sheek Street • 751-2167 Open Dally Weekdays 7:30 - 5:00 Sat. 7:30 -12 noon specializing in business, personal and family issues. Available for travel security, information acquisition, information dissemination, advocacy, negotiation, client/employee relations and consultation. 100% Coniidentiality guaranteed. No long term obligation. Your objective is our mission. 336.751.9582 feature singing each. Everyone is welcome, Salem United Methodist Church will have revival ser­ vices May 8-11, Services begin each night al 7:30 and will fea­ ture the Rev, Terry Duckwon'h, evangelist from Asheville, There will be special singing each night, including Ihc choirs from Center, Friendship, and New Union United Methodist churches. Everyone is invited. The May monthly meeting of Salem UM Women has been postponed lo Wednesday, May 18, due lo the revival. The Rev. Michael Benfield of Statesville will be the guest speaker for the morning worship service Sunday, May 8. The ser­ vice will be at 11 a.m. and the church invites everyone. The V-PoinI Ruritan Club will have a board meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday, May 5 at the V- Poinl building on Old Mocks­ ville Road. Club members who need to make up meetings are urged to attend. Pauline Stroud remains at Iredell Memorial Hospital, and Marshall Godbey and Mao Walker continue in therapy. We give praise to the Lord that the doctors did not have to reset the broken leg of young Justin Wallace as they had expected, Join us as we pray for continued healing in the lives of Pauline, Marshall, Mae and Justin and other residents who are having outpatient treatments. Clara York, Lizzie Gaitiif r, IVIartha Nicholson Turner and Cordie Cartner are County Line mottiers of note, present and past. С / > - * / »______________ íy'K /y jSs; C reation s M o th e r’s D ay S p ecia ls Nosegays, Basket Keepsakes Organza wrapped floral bouquets Hytirangea/rose drop-ins, and more 10% off all Mother’s Gifts, 15% with Ad 7 0 7 C o u n t r y L a n e , M o c k s v ille COMMl-RCIAl INSURANCI W e C a n Protect the M o s t i Im p o rta n t B u sin ess in the W o rld ; j Y o u r B usiness! | W e specialize In Insuring sm all businesses, In clu din g contractors, i offices, commercial residential, retail, an d service businesses. Get a FREE second opinion. Call me... Stop.by... Log on - It's your choicel Kellh Hiller 1111 Yadklnvlllo Hwy., MocksvllieW»MOat3Shop.C№.336-751-6131MlorK10nB6orwUe.com Karen Bennett Associale Agent 1111 Yadkinvilie Hwy., Mocksvlllo W lkm O akiSli4i.Ciili. 338-751-6131 hflofktOnat]onwido.ooffl Nationwide* Insurance & Financial Services N a tio n w id e Is O n Y our S id e * Nalloriwlde M utual iniuranee Company and Aflltialed Com panlej. Home Olfice: Colum bui, OH 43215-2220 C2-2 5/02 " ......,S€«KO TdJapanese Restaurant I A u tlie n tio Japanese C u isin e Dine-in or Take>out 678 Wilkesboro St„ Mocksville 336-753-6867 Fax; 336-753-6847 In Former Potmans Location Business H ours Sunday - Thursday 11:00am - 9:00pm Friday - Saturday 11:00am - 10:00pm Pickup Window Available BBQ Chicken F o r k F ir e D e p a rtm e n t S a tu rd a y • M ay 7 , 2 0 0 5 1 2 N oon t i l S o ld O ut MENU; 1/2 BBQ Chicken. Baked Potato, Slaw, Roll, Dessert E a t in o r T a k e O u t ^7.00 p e r P la te ___i__ C6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,200S At Brookridge, life IS great Enjoy the freedom to do whatever you want - to explore, entertain, leam, and participate! The active retirement lifestyle at Brookridge offers just that along with a host of amenities and an entire community at your disposal. Live life. L if e is ffre a t... L I V E I T I ВюоЫддел Btptìit Retirement Homu Communi^ 1199 Hayes Forest Drive • Winston-Salem, N C 17106 336.759.1044 * www.brh.org Ш Ё Ш Ш Obituaries Billy Richard Satterfield Mr. Billy Richard Satterfield, 76, of Bermuda Run, died Sun­ day, April 17, 2005, al Forsyth Medical Center surrounded by loved ones. He was bom June 16, 1928, in Forsyth County to Edward Eugene and Esther Lashmit Satterfleld. Mr. Satterfield was a member of^Clemmons Firsl Baptist Church. Mr. Satterfield was a local builder and land de­ veloper. His passion for golf be­ gan when he was a caddy in his carly youth leading him to de­ velop golf and country clubs. In his 20s, he began construction of single-family homes, which later led to commercial development, and one of Winston-Salem's first bowling alleys. In 1970, he be­ gan his ultimate dream of devel­ oping a golf and country club. In addition to developing Ber­ muda Run Country Club, he was instrumental in Ihe development of Country Club of South Caro­ lina and Olde Beau Golf Club. He was preceded in death by 4 brothers, Norman E., Frank W., Ray D. and Max L. Satterfleld. Survivors; 3 daughters, Pamela J. Satterfield and Sharon S. Whitfield and husband Keith, all of Sarasota, Fla., and Billie Sue Satterfleld of Black Moun­ tain; 2granddaughters; 2 great- grandsons; a brother, Edward E. Satterfield and wife Kathleen; 2 sisters, Gladys Scott and Betty Spaugh and husband "Bub," all of Winston-Salem; and an abun­ dance of nieces and nephews. A funeral service was con­ ducted at 11 a.m. Friday, April 22, al Clemmons First Baptist Church with Dr. Steve Foster of­ ficiating. Memorials: West Forsyth Family YMCA, Partner with Youth Campaign, 1150 S. Peacehaven Road, Clemmons, 27012. This is the tìigh-speed New lower price. Guaranteed for one year. $29.99 a month (ori year. T&X0S and surcharges appfy. One-Ysar U tm a^tavm ent Aft«f one Year, pay S34.99 a month. $50 online tebato coven S49.99 activation tee. Spiiat. Now you can enjoy High-spesd Intornat at a price that was worth the wait. Sprint high-spoBd IntBrnal wilh EarihLink’ moans always-on access at a low monthly price that won't jump up aflor throe or six months. Use It to shop, email, get news and more at speeds much faster than dial-up. All with the security of 24/7 technical support and a suite of free blocking and protection tools. Sprint local customers get It all for just $29.99 a monlh when you combine It with other qualifying Sprint services. Cell 1-800-Sprint-3. Click 8print.com/high-speed. Sjuyico not Bvaitabte^i all atoai. ^ h l y rate offer Ij oood ¡or new Wgh-spood Internet fesidenlial cuslomofs only and applies to up to 15 Mbps spood service. Nol valid wilh any addillorul Й I " cancel wllBut n o t«. Monthly Ы : fiomottonal monthly rate of Я9.99 applies for 12 monlhs while customer sutjscribos lo a quallMnoSpnni Ш и ш т“ bundle and other ^ n t services.'After 12 monlhs. standard monthly rale of S34.99 will apply. Customer Is rmultod to sutiscrlbe to Sprint Solutions“ Standard Dian Sonntn Mltn atnnn uitlh ПШ nihnf Qnrinl вйПим «iIaIi n* Cnrint DPC* Mr m cu nn (__..-II____L .T l_____________. James Clyde Cleary Mr. James Clyde Cleary, 56, of Cleveland, NC died Thursday, April 28, 2005, at his home. He was bom Oct. 25, 1938, in Davie County to Flora T\itlerow Cleary of Mocksville and the late Clyde Cleary. Mr. Cleary enjoyed yard work, fish­ ing, camping and motocross. He was preceded in death by his wife, Mary Marlow Cleary in 1999; a son, Lester Clyde Cleary; and 3 brothers, David Cleary, Odell Cleary and an in­ fant brother. Survivors: his mother; 2 daughters, Retha (Bobby) Keller of Mocksville and Kim (David) Waugh of Troutman; a son, Jamie (Danielle) Cleary of Slony Point; companion, Dianna Swing of Lexington and her two sons, Ricky Heath Swing and Johnalhon Paul Swing; 2 sisters, Elizabeth (Leroy) Baity and Marie (Donald) Hawks; 4 broth­ ers, Dorman (Dorcas) Cleary, Tommy Cleary, Kirk (Frances) Cleary and Wayne (Kaye) Cleary; 6 grandchildren, A funeral service was held al 2 p.m., Sunday, May 1, at Baton Funeral Chapel. Burial was in Liberty Baptist Church Cem­ etery. Memorials: Iredell Hospice / Palliative Care, 2347 Simonton Road, Statesville, 28625. (л m i p a ie O l i i C D R i i i r s Bank-issued, FDIC- insured to $100,000 №T 3 ^ 4.25% Minkmim APY* deposH $5,000 &yHr44S% MUmm •Aniujal Perconlago Yield (APVHnlofOsI carvK)t remain on deposit; periodic payout of interest is requited. withdrawEd is not permitted. Effective 5/2/05. Subject to availability and prfee chanoe. The amounl received from a sale of a cD at currant market value may be less than the amount in tti^ invested. Call or stop by today. MattVoreh 66 Court Square Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-4400www.rdwanljoncM.com Edwardjones Serving Individual loveatoni Since 1871 Florence I. Downey 1917 - 2005 MOCKSVILLE Wiliam A. Everidge 1924 - 2005 MOCKSVILLE * Hubert L Parr Jr. 1921-2005 MOCKSVILLB DoroOtyB.'Nesbit 1930 - 2005 SALISBIJRY Hubert A, Carter 1931-2005 MOCKSVILLE Misty D. Hall . 1979 - 2005 HARMONY I .iliiii I 11111M.1I Si'n ut 325 N. Main Street МоскауШе, NC (336) 751-2148 David Carlton Blackburn Mr. David Carlton Black­ bum, 65, of North Main Street, Mocksville, died on Sunday, May I, 2005 al Davie County Hospital. Bom in Watauga County on Aug. 7,1939, he was the son of the late Earl S. and Susan Swift Blackbum. He was employed by Southeastern Freight us a truck driver and was a member of Blaise Baptist Church. He was preceded in death by a sister, Peggy Craven, in 2004. Survivors: 3 brothers, Eu­ gene (Sharon) Blackbum of Port Charlotte, Fla., Bill (Peggy) Blackbum of Raleigh and Roy (Margaret) Blackbum of Boone; 3 sisters, Lois Blackburn of Boone, Betty (Richard) Hutchens of Mount Airy; and Mary (John) Pendill of Manteo. A celebration of life service will be held later. Memorials; Blaise Baptist Sunday School Class, c/o Gene Whitaker, 134 Blaise Church Road, Mocksville Mary Catherine Pope Mrs. Mary Catherine Weber Pope, 83, of Angell Road, Mocksville, died Friday, April 29,2005 at Wake Forest Univer­ sity Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem. She was bom June 24,1921 in Altoona, Pa. to the late George and Katherine Strayer Weber. Mrs. Pope was a member of SI. Francis Catholic Church. She was a homemaker and had been a caterer. She was preceded in death by her husband, Eugene Roadman Pope, in November, 2003. Survivors: 3 sons, Eugene (Patricia) Pope and Charles (Cindy) Pope, both of Mocks­ ville, and Richard Pope of Mooresville; a daughter, Mary Jane Pope of Mocksville; 3 brothers, Eddie (Dee) Weber and George (Eloise) Weber, both of Florida and Bill Weber of West Virginia; 3 sister-in-laws, Nelda Brown and Jo Shaw of Mocks-, ville and Ruth Johansen of Min­ nesota; 5 grandchildren; and 4 great-grandchildren. A funeral mas was held at 11 a.m., Tuesday, May 3, at St, Francis Catholic Church with the Rev. Andrew Draper and Dr. David Gilbreath officiating. Burial was in Ealons Baptist Baptist Church Cemetery. Memorials: St. Francis Cath­ olic Church, 862 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville. Lessie Mae Moody Mrs. Lessie Mae Combs Moody, 84, of US 601 North, Mocksville, died Wednesday, April 27, 2005, at the home of her daughter, She was born March 20, 1921, in Oxford to Ihe late Ed and Hattie Holbrook Combs. Mrs. Moody was a member of Calvary Baptist Church. She enjoyed flower gardening and sewing. Mrs. Moody was preceded in death by her husband, Grady Moody in 1980; 2 daughters, Diane Moody and Betty Sue Moody; a son, Ronald Moody; 2 sisters, Tessie Moody and Effie Holbrook; and a brother, Ray Combs. Survivors: 3 daughters, Lucille (Harold) Bledsoe of Mocksville, Verna Owens of Mocksville and Lois (Steven) Tysinger of Linwood; 2 sons, Bobby (Becky) Moody of Boonville and Donald Moody of the home; 2 sisters, Dessie TVsinger and Emma Tysinger, both of Lexington; 2 brothers, Fonzo Combs of Cary and Willard Combs of Berkley Springs, W.Va.; 15 grandchil­ dren; 11 great-grandchildren; and a special friend, Jazmyne Carachure. A funeral service was held al 2 p.m., Saturday, April 30, at Calvary Baptist Church with the Revs. Jim Gryder and Chris Wil­ liams officiating. Burial was in Rose Cemetery, Memorials: Calvary Baptist, 1663 US 601 S., Mocksville; or Hospice of Davie, P.O. Box 848, Mockville. /Cay W. Norman To Speak At St. John AME Zion Kay W.Norman, executive director of The Learning Curves Edu­ cation and Enrichment Center in Rowan Counly, will speak during Ihe 11 a.m. service at St. John AME Zion Church, Mocksville, on Sunday, May B, in observance of Mother’s Day, sponsored by the Missionary Department. The non-profit center is designed to provide academic support and activities that engage school-age children in after-school and summer camp programs. "The future of our society is to be deter­ mined by the priority we give to educating all children in our com­ munities,” Norman said. “When they fail, society suffers, Educat­ ing children is the least expensive gift we can give them. We have a moral and ethical obligation lo protect the future of this counttry by investing in children every day They deserve il and we must do it.” A member of the Rowan Board of Education, Norman earned a bachelor’s degree in music and education, and has studied public policy science and personnel administration. Join Hands Day Planned Join hands - and generations - to help others. Join Hands Day is a national volunteer day that brings youth and adults together to improve communities, building lasting relationships and have fun. The group will serve a meal to the 5th Street Ministries in Statesville. Food items, baby supplies, hygiene supplies and other items will be divided between charities in Davie and Iredell coun­ ties. Take donations on May 14 to any Lutheran church or to Bethlehem United Methodist Church of Statesville, For more in­ formation, call 704-878-9041. B id s O pen F or L iberty i-iou se Liberty Wesleyan Church in Sheffield is accepting bids on Ihe recently-vacated old parsonage. The two-slory wooden dwelling may be moved intact or taken down piece by piece. Bids close May 7. For more information or viewing, call Pastor Scott Nelson at 492-7239 or Louis Marroquin at 492-6016. EibaviHe Spring Fiing Saturday Spring Fling will be Saturday, May 7 from 8 a.m.-l p.m. al Elbaville United Methodist Church, 2595 NC 801 S., Advance. Bake sale items including chicken pics, and hotdogs along with a yard sale will be offered. Tables can be rented for $10 each. S a ie m R e v iv a i S ta rts i\4 a y 8 The Rev. Terry Duckworth will be Ihe guest speaker al Salem United Methodist Church for revival services beginning at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 8 and continuing cach evening through Wednesday, May II. Duckworth was appointed a full-time evangelist of the Westem North Carolina United Methodist Church in 2000. He will be shar­ ing a testimony designed lo inspire and enlighten. Choirs from Ihe area will provide music each evening. Salem UMC is localed at 169SalemChurchRoad,justoffDavie Academy Road, approximately eight miles west of Mocksville. E m m a n u e l C h o ir T o B e A t R e d ia n d The 40-voice Emrh'artUbl CbllegfciChoir from Franklin Springs,'' Ga. will perform at Redland Pentecostal Holiness Church on Mon­ day, May 9 at 7 p.m. For more information, call 998-4226. Family First Steam Carpet Cleaning 19*95 A Room 2 Room Minimum 25% OFF Tile £p Grout Cleaning 14*95 Chair or Recliner 35«95 6ft Sofa Up to 6ft 336-774-0000 877-771-8010 Expire» s/as/os Fabric Center a QUILTER’S HAVEN 119 .Salisbury S lrccl, M o cksvillc (336) 7S1-S417 Select BVIBROIDERY & АП D m a a I SEWING MACHINES.......UL ГПСе! ..$1 Each! .$2/Рк&1 oFA^iNDs_____50i Each! A ll SIMPLICITY & BliTTERICK PATTERNS. SHOULDER PADS.......................... CROSS-SmCH & 4 /Л p - I OTHER CRAFT BOOKS....I/Z ГПСе! ___ I AUfAB« I AI/aI FABRIC ON LOWER LEVEL IS REDUCED!!! DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, l^ay 5,2005 ■ C7 T h e A n g e l s a i d u n t o M a r y . . . ^^And, behold, diou shalt conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a son, and shalt call his name JESUS. ^^He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest: and the Lord God shall give unto him the throne of his father David: ^^And he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever; and of his kingdom there shall be no end. L u k e 1 : 3 1 - 3 3 — K i n g J a m e s V e rsio n H appy M o t h e r s D a y This message brought to you by these local businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. CAUDELL LUMBER COIHPANY 162 Sheek Street Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2167 AUTO PART* MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE 884 S. Main St. • Mocksville 336-751-2944 jSFABLEST 8 r A F f t N O в Ì R vice В¡.1ц1ч hu/infrUil • Cli-rli iil 959 Yadktnvltle Road IVtocksvllle, NC 27028 336-751-4414 Fax: 336-751-1117 'Щ S un T r u st Moct(evllle- TS1-59J6 Mocksville« 751-6162 Cooleemee • 284-2542 Advance • 940-2410 W.6. WHITE & C 0 . 850 N .Trade St. W in ston Salem, N C 27102 336-723-1669 BUPalktOne A PALEX COM PANY 1()5'Гпгк<'у Fool U(ia(l ¡\Io«k.svilh- NC, 27028 336-492-5565 JERRY’S MEATPR0GESSIN6 We Custom Meat Process Beef - Pork - Deer 30 years experience 002 Ralph R itliid g e Rd ■ M ocksvllla 336-492-5496 J. P. GREEN M ILLING CO., INC. Makers of DAISY FLOUR UV C«.«om Depot St., Mocksville, NC 336-751-2126 EATON F U N E R A L H O M E S IN C E I9 5 I 325 North M ain Street M ock sville, N C 27028 336-751-2148 C A R O LIN A D R IL L IN G INC. 3 2 6 Railroad St. M ocksville, NC 2 7 0 2 8 336-751-2961 Fax:336-751-0774 FULLER ARCHITECTURAL PROUDLY DESIGNING DAVIE CHURCHES 336 751 0400 GENTLE MACHINE & TOOL INC. 3 3 1 9 u s H w y. 158 M ocksville, N C 27 0 2 8 336-998-3350 л е щ VILLAGE HARDWARE 5431 Hwy. 15B • Advance, NC 336-998-1987 LARRY’S WOOD FLOORING SERVICE 28 Yetirs E.K/)f‘ri(‘nce Sanding • Roflnlshing Installation • Old & Now work Larry McClentuy • MocksviUe 336-751-1721 M OCKSVILLE SHOE SHOPStioe, Boot, and Tack Repairs Full Lino o f W estern B oots & W o rk Boots (L o ro o S election)M.m .T«t, llmi., »>1. g J; Wid. & Sil. 9-1 336-753-0942 Chsd GouQti, O w n e r/O p e ra to r (In Town Square) SEAFORD LUMBER COMPANY 127 Buck Seaford Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-5148 V C X ^ L E R Л -S O N S Funeral Home 2849 Middle Brook Dr. Clemmons, NC 27012 336-788-4714 DAVIE LUMBER & LOGGING 872 Main Church Rd. Mockeville, NC 27028 336-751-9144 CRAIQ CARTER BUILDER, IMG. 119 Hwy. 801 S, Suite 200 Advance, N C 2 7006 336-940-2341 Huikkrii{Q\alii)' Cuim /Aw»« /IrptfrM }cjn Craig A. Cinri. ProiJtiil ‘ Mulin C. Cancr. Vice Piti. FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 495 Valley Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2141 ¡'rest ripiiiiii Cull in: 336-753-DRUG F U L L E R K tir te ir Precision Laser Cutting 8i Metal Fabrication 855 Salisbury Road Mocksville, N C 27028 336-751-3712 D a vIe A c a d e m y o f M a rtia l A rts 7 5 3 .8 ^ ^ ^ ^ .0 0 3 8 W e T e a c h R e s p e c t E v e ry d a y P u t T h is Space To W ork For You Call 336-751.2129 K l C8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 Davie Dateline Fundraisers Saturday, May 7 Yard Sale, sponsored by Boy Scout Troop 525, at Holy Cross Lutheran Church, 8 a.m. until noon. Spring Fling, 8 a.m. until 1 p.m., at Elbavilie UMC, 2595 N.C. 801 S., Advance. Bake sale items, chickcn pies, hot dogs. Yard sale tables: $10 rental each. Yard Sole, by Davic Multiple Scle­ rosis Support Oroup, at Smith Grove UMC, 3706 U.S. 158,8 a.m. until 4 p.m. All procecd to Central Chapter of National MS Society. Palmer Church Poker Run, help raise money for cancer awareness, chcck-in 8 a.m., riders leave 11 a.m. & return 2 p.m: Al Masonic Picnic Grounds behind Brock Gym. Car, motorcycle show & live music to follow. Proceeds to Forsylh Cancer Center & Hospice. Admission: $5 adults, $2.50 children under 13. Band Aid, by the Davie Bond Boost­ ers, 10:30 a.m. til 2 p.m. at Davie High School. Crafl & bake sale. Davie High Jazz Ensemble to per­ form around noon. Proceeds lo Davie Band Boosters. Bake Sale, by Women’s Fellow­ ship of New Union Methodist Church al Walmart, begins 8 a.m. Saturday, May 14 3rd Annual Golf Challenge, Pud­ ding Ridge Oolf Club, Fannington. Registration 12 p.m., lunch I p.m., shotgun start 1:30 p.m. Presented by Concord UMC Men, proceeds to CampTekoaondothermission/com- muniiy projects. C ountry Ham & Tenderloin Breakfast, 6:30-10 a.m., al Mocks UMC, 523 Beauchamp Rd., Ad­ vance, eat-in or toke-oul, $5. Menu: country ham, tenderloin, eggs, grits, sausage gravy, biscuits, beverages. Sponsored by United Methodist Men, proceeds to ministries & projects. Ongoing Cooleemee Civitans BBQ Chicken, each 3rd Sat. of month at Cooleemee Hardware Store. Serving 1/2 chicken, baked beans, BBQ slaw, roll, and dessen. Time: 11 a.m. until sold out. Come early, only prepare 120 halves each month. Reunions Sunday, May 15 Annual Tom Kelly & Julia Smllh Howard Family Reunion, al picnic shelter of Bethlehem UMC, 321 Redland Rd., Advance. 1 p.m. Bring food, drink, memorabelia, and pic­ tures. Religion Thursday, May 5 Davle YMCA Community Prayer Breakfast, at at Davie Family YMCA, biscuits, pastries, muffins, fruit, juice & coffee. To reserve a table: 751-9622. Sunday, May 8 Revival, at Salem UMC, 7:30 p.m. Services continue each evening through Wed., May II. M other’s Day Speaker, at St. John AME Zion Church, special speaker Mrs. Kay W. Norman, 11 a.m. Spon­ sored by missionary department. Ongoing CareNet Counseling Centers, nt First Baptist Church, 390 N. Main St., Mocksville. Offers inter-de­ nominational counseling. Academi­ cally trained, cerlified counselors & mental health professionals. Info. & appt. 751-2041. A Woman’s Call To Prayer, Indie’s Bible study for all ages, Jericho Church of Christ, Mocksville, 7:30- 8:30 p.m. every Wed. thru Dec. 1st. Call 492-6006 for more info. Preschool/Parents Morning Owl, Bethlehem United Meth. Time: 9 a.m.-noon. Ages 1 & 2 - M,W orT, Th. Age 3 - M,T, Th. Age 4 & Pre- K - three or four days per week. Call 998-6820. Preschool, at Cenler United Meth. Church, Mon., Wed., & Thurs (4 yr. old class) 8:30-11:30 a.m. -Mon.& Wed. (3 yr. old class) 8:30-11:30 a.m. - Tues. &Thurs. (2 & 3 yr. olds) 8:30-11:30 a.m. Before School Program for Shady Grove Students, available Mon.- Fri. beginning 6 a.m. al Advance UMC Community Bidg. School bus arrives 8 a.m. lo take children to Shady Grove Elementary. Call 998- 0199 for fees and info.' Grief Support Group, "Nobody’s Child But God’s”, 2nd Thurs. of each month, 6:30 p.m., Cooleemee Church of God, 7704 N.C. 801 S., Cooleemee. Info: 75305716 or 284- 2180. Awana & Bible Study, Wednes­ days at 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Taber­ nacle. Special Events Thursday, May 5 Memorial Service, in the Davie High Memorial Garden, 5 p.m. for anyone that wishes to join us in remembrance of Megan Howell & Lindsay Gales. Fri., May 6 & T ues„ May 10 Concerts, presented by Davie County Music Dept., al Brock Pcrfomiing Arts Center, on May 6th at 7 p.m. Qioml Dept, presents Choral Fesl. Admission: $5. On May 10 nt 7 p.m. tlie bands of Davie High to perform. Admission: free, but donations wel­ comc. Saturday, May 7 Spring Fling, 8 a.m lil 1 p.m., at Elbavilie UMC, 2595 N.C. 801 S., Advance. Sale items include chicken pics, hot dogs, and yard sale items. Yard sale tables: $10 rent each. Saturday, May 14 Third Annual Old Time Fiddler’s/ Bluegrass Convention, 12noon-un- til, at Clement Grove Picnic Grounds. Cash prizes & ribbons awarded. Event sponsored by Cooleemee Civitan Club with proceeds to local charities. Info: 284-4167. Monday, May 16 Cruise-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, June 6 Cruise-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, June 20 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Juiy 4 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, July 18 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Aug. 1 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville. 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Plcdmonl CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Aug.15 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Sept. 5 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksvllle, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Sept. 19 PITTSBUR G H ' PAINTS S A V E - 1 6 0 ON SELECTED PRO DUCTS GET THE VERY BEST FOR LESS AT: Caudell Lumber 162 S h e e k S tre e t M o c k s v ille *7 5 1 -2 1 6 7 Open Mon-Frl 7:30am-5pm & ЯЮ5С Sat. 7:30am-12noon M ay 8-June 4 • • • • $6 per gallon (3.78 litre) Manor Hair Interior and Exterior paints* $4 per gallon (3.78 litre) Pure PerformanceT Seal Grip Prinners* and Sun Proof* products 'Excludes Manor Hall Timeless Mall-ln «ebiK.UmilWGlllcmtlza Lilres) i ИГ ri ,\C I I о I IM I VtïUK Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksviilc, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, Oct. 3 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Picdmbrn CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 2M-2Vn9.LaslCnii5e-lnfortheyear. Ongoing Jam Sessions, eveiy Fri. night, at Sheffield Music Hall, call 492-7417 for info. Dates to Remember Wednesday, May 4 Davie Business Women's Associa­ tion Annual Membership Drive, 12 noon. Rotary Hut, Mocksviilc. Ca­ tered lunch - $6. Please RSVP by noon. May 2 lo 998-FOOD. Info: 998-1153. Friday, May 20 Blood Drive, 12:30-5 p.m., nt Davie Co. Hospital, Hospital St., Mocks­ ville. Tuesday, May 24 Blood Drive, 2-6:30 p.m., nl Davie Co. Chapter of NWNC, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville. Thursday, May 26 Blood Drive,6:30-11 n.m.,at Ingersoll Rand, 501 Sanford Avenue, Mocks­ ville. Ongoing visit Cooleemee’s Mill Village Mu­ seum, 14 Church St., Tues. &Tliurs., 9 o.m.-noon. Sats., II a.m.-2 p.m. Touts also available by appt. Call 294-6040. Storytlmes, al D.w|e Co. L ibr^. Mondays 7 p.m. Family Stotytime &/ or special prognmi. Tues. 11 a.m^ ToddlenTime (stories, songs & fun for ages 1-3). Tliurs. 10 a.m. Story hourfor3-5’s. Fridays 11 n.m. Friday free-for-all, everyone welcome. Pro­ grams free & open to everyone. Richard Burr Holds OiTice Hours in Davle, 2nd Thurs. of every month, 9 n.m. lil 4 p.m., Mocksville Town Hnll Building. Special Olympics of Davle County, play activities & fun nile, Wednes­ days nt Brock Blilg. Play activities 6- 7 p.m. Fun Nite 7-8:30 p.m. Open lo all persons wilh disabilities & their families. Thursday, May 12 Davie Sub-District UMC Mission. Board, 7:30 p.m., nl Mocksville First, UMC, executive board will meet 6:45 p.m. Ongoing Humane Society of Davle Co., monthly meetings 2nd Tues. of each month, at office Yadkinville Rd. be­ hind car wash. 751-5214. Davie Partnership for Children board meeting, 4th Tues. of every oilier month (begnn in Jnn.) at Davie Library, 8:30 a.m. Questions: 751- 2113. Alzheimera Support Group, 2nd Tuesday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at Autumn Care, Mocksville. Davic Civitan Club meets 4lh Thurs. of each month, Feb.-Ocl., 7 p.m., at Hillsdale Bapt. Church, Hwy. 158. All visitors wclcome. Center ECA Club meets 3rd Tues­ day of each month, nl Cenler Comm. Bidg., 7:30 p.m. Please join us. Di.sabled American Veteraas Post 75 meets on third Monday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at 1958 Hwy. 601 S. Contact J. Renfro al 284-4664 for more info. Town Of Cooleemee Planning Board, meets 3rd Thurs. of each month at Cooleemee Town Hall, 7 p.m. AutlsmSuppartGroup3rdMonday of each month, 6:30 p.m., al Shady Grove, Mocksville. Davle Bus. Women’s Association 1st Wed. of every month, 12 noon, at Mocksville Rotary on Salisbuiy Street. Speaker of interest and catered lunch, cosl $6. Year membership $25. Con­ tact 998-1153 for more info. Davie County Diabetes Support Group, last Thurs. of every month, 7- 8:30 p.m., al Davie Co. Public Library Small Conference Room. Info; 751- 8700. Davle Youth Council, meets 2nd & 4th Tue.sduys each month, 6:30 p.m., al Mocksville/Davie Parks & Rec. meeting room. Info; Wendy While 287-1292. Davie Co, Hospital Auxllary, every second Tues., in board room, 7 p.m. Davle Business Women’s Associa­ tion, first Wed. of each month, 12 noon, at CCB in Mocksville (880 Yadkinville Rd.), luncheon meeting, catered meal available. For Info: 998- 1153 or 940-3600. Davle Republican Mens Club, meets 4lh Salurday of each month, 7:30 a.m.. Prime Sirloin. Celebrate Recovery, weekly support group for those sUiiggling wilh or in recovery for bad habits - such as stress, depression, addiction, abuse, etc. Meets Thurs. 7 p.m. al Farmington Comm. Cenler, Farmington Rd. Call 408-8750 or813-992l formore info. DavleCountyHorscEmergency Rcs­ cue Team, 7:30 p.m., downstairs nl the Agricultural Building, Mocksville. Ev­ ery 3rd Tuesdny each month. For info: 940-2111. Davie Co. Band Boosters, meets 2nd Tuesdoy of montli, 7:30 p.m., Dnvie High Bnnd Room. Family Services " What Every Par­ ent Should Know", parenting classes to interested parents of teens in local areas, every Mon. 6-7:15 p.m., al Mocksville office Sanford Ave. Cost $15. Formore info: 751-4510. Christian Buslne.<!smcn's Commit­ tee of Mocksvllle, Tliursdnys, 7 a.m. Mocksville Roliuy Hut. Gold Wing Touring Association, Red Pig Barbccue, Greasy Comer,' N.C. 801 at U.S. 601, 6 p.m. 284- 4799. Davle County Stamp Clubj 2nd Thurs., Davie Senior Center, 7 p.m. 751-0611. CooleemeeRccreatlon Association, Zachary House, 1st Tuesday, 7 p.m. Homeschool 4-H Club, 2nd & 4th Thursday. Cal| 998-8925 for more info. The Artist Group, Davie County Li­ brary, 7 p.m. lasf Tues. Call Bonnie nl 998-5274. Center Community Development, 3rd Mon., 7 p.m. Community Bidg. Cooleemee Town Board, 3rd Tues­ day, Town Hall, 7 p.m. unless olher- • wise noted. Cooleemee AA, behind Good Shep­ herd Episcopal, Tues. & Fri., 8 p.m. North Cooleemee and Clark Road Council, 2nd Wednesday, 7 p.m. Friendship'Baptisi Fellowship Hall. Mocksvllle AA, closed non-smok­ ing meeting, al St. Francis of Assisi Church fellowship hnll, 862 Yadkinville Rd., Mocksviilc. Snl- urdays 6 p.m. Info: Pat 751 -6228 or Jan 753-6863. Davle Domestic Violence Services nnd Rape Crisis Center. Offers weekly support group for domestic violence & sexual nssnult viclims. The group meets every Tues. evening from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Please call office for location, 751-3450. Concerned Bikers Association, Foothills Chapter, 2nd Wednesday, WeslemSleer,U.S.601 atl-40.7p.m. Public welcome. Advance Garden Club, 1st Tues., 9 a.m.. Mocks UMC, 998-2111. Mocksvllle Garden Club, 1st Tliurs., Jericho Church of Christ fellowship hall, 7 p.m. Visitors welcome. Sons of Confederate Veterans, 1st Monday, Cooleemee Historical Build­ ing, 7 p.m. 4-H Bits & Bridle Club, every Ihird Tues., 6-7:30p.m. al Dixieland Farms. Call 492-6403 for morc info. Mocksville Rotary Club, Tuesdays, 12:10 p.m., Rotary Hut. Farmington Masonic Lodge No. 265, 2nd Monday, 7:30 p.m. al the lodge. Mocksville Lions Club, 1st, 3rd Thursdays, 7 p.m., fellowship hall of SI. Francis of Assisi, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville. Davle Co. United Way Board of Directors, 4th Monday, 5:30 p.m.. Brock Center Annex, Conf. Room 208. Mocksville-Dnvie Homebuilders, 4UiThursday,7p.m.,Caplain Steven’s. Dnvie High Athletic lioosters, 3rd Monday, 7 p.m., school cafeteria. Farmington Rurltan Club, 2nd Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Farmington Methodist church, HELPS Ministries, Christian recov­ ery program for women sexually abused as children. Mondays, 7:30 p.m., 41 court Square, Room 210. Parents Resource Organization (PRO) support group for families of children with disabilities, 2nd Tues­ day, 7 p.m. Call Rosemary Kropfelder at 998-3311 for location. Jerlcho-Hardlson Rurltan Club, 2nd Tuesiday, 7 p.m., club building. Health Dept., clinic hours; Mon.-Fri„ 8:30-11:30 a.m., 1-4:30 p.m Davie Co, MS Support Group, 2nd Mon. of each month, 6 p.m., Davie Co. Hospital. VFW Auxiliary Post 4024,1 p.m., 4lhThurs. each month in lowerlevel of Brock Bldg.,N. Main Street. Eli­ gible members welcome. Davle Klwanls Club, 1st and 3rd Thursday. 12:30 p.m. (lunch) at Venezia Italian Restaurant Recreation Formore information on these evenu, ciUI 751-2325. Line Dancing BrockBuilding. Every Tuesday 1:30- 2:30 p.m.. Co.«: $2. For moro info, call 751-5983. GoodTimersSquareDance Dance Lessons $5 per month. Volun­ teers for different social events. Con­ tact Ethel al 998-3837. Senior WalKing Program Seniors, 50 and up, M-F, 6:30-9 o.m. No charge. Incentive breakfasl held quaiteriy. Register now nt Rec. Dept, or Sr. Services. The Dance Company Mon., Tues., Wed., & Sal. Call Emily Robertson, 998-5163. Competition Clieerieading $25 registration and $45 mo. for 2 times per week. Call Wendy Shoe­ maker 284-6300. Tennis Leagues available formen, women, co-ed, jun­ iors. Call Sandra for info. Comm. Clean-Up Day At the RivcrPark at Cooleemee Fails, 4th Sal. of cach month, 8 a.m. until. Coll Bill Gibson 284-4774 or Rec. Dept., for morc info. Shelter Rentals Available at Rich Pnrk and RiverPark at Cool­ eemee Falls. Call 751-2325 lo make reservations. Davie Youth Council Ages 13 to graduation, meet at Rec. Dept. 2nd and 4Ut Tues. nights each monlhs. Coll Einily 751-2325 forinfo. Special Olympics Fun Nite Wednesdays alRee, Dept. 7-8:30 p.m. Open lo athletes, their fiuniiies, and volunteers. Special Friends Dance Van Monthly Fri. night dance in Lewisville. Open lo adults with developmental delays. Reservations required for Inmsporlalion, call Kathie 751-2325 by Thursdays. Van leaves Rec. Depl. 6:30 p.m. and intersection of N.C. 801 &U.S. 158 al 6:45 p.m. Churcli League Basketball Call Joe for more info. Wrestling Call Emily 751 -2325 for more info. YMCA Formore information, call 751-9622 or visit Davie Family YMCA. Water Exercise Class For beginners and Ihe experienced. All ages. Call forclass types & times. Swim Lessons Choose from 4 wk., Sal. mommg or private lessons. Reg. begins 2 wks. prior lo class. Call for class limes. Karate-Carucado Style Tue.sdays, 7-8:45 p.m. Ages 7 & up. Tae Kwon Do Ages 6 & up. Meet Tues. & Thurs., 6:00 & 6:45 p.m. Parent’s Night Out 2nd Friday of each month, 6-10:30 p.m. Take the night off nnd allow YMCA to care for your child. Activi­ ties include swimming, arts & crafts, games, and a movie. Dinner served around 6:30 p.m. Cost $7 members/ $10 non-members. DMA(fomfierlySunshineClub) For all older adults. Club is full of fun, fellowship, good food, new nnd old friends and lots of laughter, Monthly pot luck lunchcon with speaker. Cost: $10 members/$20 non-members. Seniors All Senior Activities take place al Davie County Senior Services located in the Brock Building on North Main Street, Mocksville unless otherwise noted. Call 751-0611. Ongoing Sr, Lunchbox, M,T,W, 11:30 n.m., Th. & Fri., 11 n.m., lunch served daily. Silver Health Exercises, East Room of Senior Services, M, W,F, 8:30 a.m. Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m. al Mock Place, (open to any senior). Quilting Club, every Monday, 10 a.m.. East Room. Scrabble, every Monday, 1 p.m., Crafl Room. Bridge, every Friday, 2 p.m., please call Sr. Services. SKIPBO, Wednesdays, 1 p.m.. East Room. Scrapbooking, 2nd Tuesday, 2 p.m. Dr. Dunn, Podiatrist, at Sr. Services every three weeks, please call fordates. Free Blood Pressure Checks, once a month, at 10:30 a.m. in the Nutrition Site. Tal Chi Classes, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.. Beach "N" Tans (fonnerly Nature's Gifts). Next class dales (Sept. 6 thro Nov. 8). Discount for Srs. 60+. Call Sr. Services to pre-register at 751- 0611. VogaForSenlors,Tues,2p.m.(May 3 to July 12). You must call Sr. Ser­ vices lo register. Price $10 for 10 weeks. Pointing Class, eveiy Wed., 8:30 a.m. PACE Exercise Clns.s, eveiy other Wed., 10:30 n.m. SingingSeniorsChorus, Thursdays, 10 a.m. Canasta, every Tlmrs., 1 p.m. Report Davle Dateline Items By Noon Monday Items for Davie Dateline should bo reported by noon Monday ofthe pub­ lication week. Call 751-2120 or drop 11 by Ihe office, at S, Main St. across from Ihe courthouse. ( Davie Sdiools DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, IVIay 5,2005 ■ DI D H S M u s ic D e p a r t m e n t T o P r e s e n t C o n c e r t s The Davie High School Music Department will present two concerts this week at the Brock Performing Arts Center, North Main Street, Mocksville. On Friday, May 6 at 7 p.m., the choral department will present “Choral Fest.” Admis­ sion is $5, The bands of Davie High will perform on Tuesday, May 10 at 7 p.m. The concert is free, but donations are welcome. Choral Fest will feature three ensembles in a night of singing. Highlights from the Chorus I program will include the bal­ lad “All I Ask Of You” from Phantom of the Opera, and a medley of songs from the hey­ day of of Motown. The Ladies Ensemble will perform arrangements of the folk song' “Shenandoah," Phantom’s "Music of the Night” and a medley of Aretha Franklin’s greatest hits. The 'Vocal Ensemble has prepared selections from the Broadway Musical “ Foot­ loose'! and Queen's “Bohe­ mian Rhapsody.” They will perform their program from this year's North Carolina Dis­ trict Festival, for which they earned a sup.erior rating. The band concert will fea­ ture three groups, beginning with Concert Band IL They will play the James Bond theme and a new composition by Robert W. Smith titled “Kronos," one of a series of Smith's works highlighting themes from Greek mythology. John Parker, a freshman saxaphonist, will guest conduct the Samuel Hazo work “Keltic Variations.” The program for Concert Band I will include a medley of songs form the Andrew Lloyd Webber musical “The Phantom of the Opera” and “As Summer Was Just Begin- ning,” an original work for band dedicated to the memory of actor James Dean. Sopho­ more tuba player Richie Gassett will conduct Leroy Anderson’s “The Syncopated Clock.” Anderson is best known for his compositions “Sleigh Ride” and “Bugler’s Holiday.” The Symphonic Band will begin with selections from George Bizet’s opera “Cannen.” Jessica Bowling, a senior flute player who was a drum major for the inarching band, will conduct Michael Sweeney’s “Pantheon.” The group will play “ Alvamar Overture” by James Barnes and William H. H ill’s “A Norman Rockwell Suite,” which will feature a slide pre­ sentation of Rockwell paint­ ings that were the inspiration for the piece. Seniors in tlie music depart­ ment will be recognized at each of tlie concerts. On May 6, Ladies ensemble members Kristian Lankford and Kelly Martin will be hon­ ored, alongside Vocal En­ semble seniors Naja Bares, Ben Boger, Haley Dunn, Sammi Frank, Molly Harris, Reuben Ijames, Kenneth Mitchell, Kami Simpson, Lauren Wanucha and Terrell Wilson. Senior members of the Davie Higli Band are Jessica Bowling, Tom Troyer, Becky Howard, Amanda Phillips, Kyle Warise, Sarah Jarvis, Tommy Pullen, Tanner Manship, Kara Bruce, Alexis Levin, Matthew Rich, Ryan Creekmur, Miranda Koontz and Kimberly Carter. Band Aid B o o s t e r s A n n u a l F u n d r a i s e r S a t u r d a y A t D a v i e H i g l i Band Aid - the Davie County Band Boosters annual fundraiser - will be held from 10:30 a.m.'-2 p.m, Saturday on the school campus. There will be a silent auction, including items from local merchants and racing memorabilia. There will be a craft and bake sale featuring items and baked goods produced by mem­ bers of the Davie County baiids and their parents. The Davie Higli'3azz’'£nsembie wili p^ at about noon, with other entertainment tliroughout the day. And don’t miss the chance to get a band director wet. Ev­ ery year, the band directors from Davie High, North and South Davie middle schools sit on a dunking booth to give students and others a chance to get them wet. Proceeds from Band Aid benefit the boosters, an organiza­ tion which provides music, instruments and other help for the band programs and Davie High, and North and South Davie middle schools. It is the biggest fundraiser for the bands. The uavie High School Ladles Ensemble will be in concert Friday night. The Davie High Vocal Ensemble members dance to a medley from "Footloose.' Students rehearse for the upcoming shows.The Davie High School Symphonic Band is ready for Tuesday's concert. Trombone players from the Concert Band II rehearse for the concert.Richie Gassett Is guest conductor for the Davle High Concert Band I. Vf? D2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 D a v i e S c h o o l s Cooleemee Eleinenlary Sccond grudc sludcnls arc learning about chicks. Tliey had eggs in the incubator since April 12. They turn the eggs three times each day. They record the temperature and make sure tiie humidity is correct. Some of the students are counting the days until they have baby chicks. The classes are visiting the Cool­ eemee Library. They will apply for a library card and leam what services arc available. Each class will spend n half an hour there. Fifth grade students prepar­ ing for the EOGs. Tlie students enjoyed county-wide field day last week. Students met fifth graders from other schools in the county. Tliey enjoyed tlie activi­ ties and the fellowship during lunch. Kindergarten .students have been busy making words using various word families. Their theme study for the past week has been about living and non­ living things. On Wednesday, Mrs. Robinson's kindergarteners welcomed some rising kinder- gartners into their class fora Sci­ ence experim ent about seeds. The class is faithfully waiting and watching for seeds to sprout in their room. R epresentatives from the Cooleemee Police Department discussed bike and pedestrian safety with first« graders. Tliey demonstrated the correct way to wear a helmet and shared other safety tips. First grade classes and Mrs. Kistner’s class are plan­ ning to go to the Zachary House to experience life long ago in the Cooleemee mill village. Stu­ dents will take part in typical chores such as milking a cow, slopping hogs, washing clothes, and gathering eggs. According to the Cooleemee Historical As- .sociation, tlie children will leam everyone had to do their part to keep the family strong. The fourth grade has been busy getting ready for EOGs. Mrs. Jones' class is wrapping up a unit on electricity and magne­ tism . Students have experi­ mented and constructed series and parallel circuits. Ms. Ward's class Tmished reading the novel Charlie and the Chocolate Fac­ tory by Ronald Dahl. After read­ ing the book the fourth grade w atched the film and had a "Willy Wonka Celebration". Students in grades 1-5 re­ cently participated in the Presi­ dential Physical Fitness Test. Students achieving the Presi­ dential level; Jada Burroughs, Lily Ingram, Garrett Beck, Jo­ seph Spry, Theodore Fisher and Logan West, first grade; Erykah Fowler, sccond grade; Nicholas Endlcott, Caleb M artin, Cody Martin and Corbin West, third grade; Tionna Cleveland, Blair Carson, Brlanna Farris, Jennifer West and Tyier Grubb, fourth grade; Whlttney Correll, Jansen M cDaniel and Kaytlyn Shoe­ maker, fifth grade. Students achieving the Na­ tional level; Jared Hem bree, Kelly Martinez, Brooke Moore, Sydney R usher, C ole A llen, Kayla Allen, Ally Wyrick, Chace Lagle, Nolan Osbome, Amanda M acmenamin, Dustin Bulatko, Eva Hicks and Kasey PoUs, first grade; Jacob Crews, Humberto M arcial, T ravis M cD aniel, D avid M ichalskl, H eather Moore, Aspen Phillips, Taylor Sheets, Ny'Asla Stockton, Mor­ gan Fuller, Destiny Calloway, C ody O 'N eill, M iguel R od­ riguez, Selena D ollar, B rian Johnson and Quameak Lewis, second grade; Chelsea Bulatko, M onika Daye, M lkal Gadson, Jessica Guerrero, Pake Millsaps, Josh Peters, Dustin Potts, Carlos Rodriguez, Emma West, Emeral Gadson, K atie M iller, Wesley Bow les, H ouston Thom pson, A llison Barney, Caleb Carter iuulTreacy Redmon, third grade; Russell Anthony, Amelia Boger, Jessica L ancaster, M ichelle Mlckalowski, Patience Peglow, Selena R odriguez, K altlyn Smith, Shelby Stephens, Klyoml Taylor, Venecia Acevedo, J.R. Arcos, Rebecca M ickalowski, Austin Bartlett, Desirae Downs, Quameshla James, and Candace M ayfield, fourth grade; Tony Deese, Nicole Ebrlght, Sierra Ferrell, Jamie Houston, Nathan Jones, F rankie T hom pson, LaStella Gray, Jessica Wooten, and D eondre Johnson, fifth grade. Third grader Treacy Redmon broke her own school record for grades 1-3 for the sit and reach w ith 48 cm. In grades 4-5, Montero Carter and Donnie Wil­ son tied the sit and reach record for boys with 42 cm. Shai-Tekka Dalton broke her own school record for the sit and reach with 46 cm for girls In grades 4-5. Also, for grades 4 - 5 W hittney Correll broke her own school record by doing 58 curl-ups in 1 minute. V olunteers A shley B utner and Amold Broadway assisted In administering the fitness test. C ornatzer E lem entary M arch was a fun month full of leprechauns, rainbow s and other weather-related activities In the Pre-K class of Mrs. Ancuta and Mrs. Peeler. “Our alphabet- related activ ities Included making a whale book, decora­ ting jean s, m aking ju n g le anim als out o f shapes and painting butterflies. A big thank C ontinued On Page D3 Triad Mortgage Investment Group Purchases Cashout Deb Consolidation 2nd Homes Lowest Rates Residential & Commercial Martin Lane Sr. Loan Officer/ Account Executive License #1120513 751-5992 Cell: 610-216-0028 mpl60@earthllnk.net W E B U Y H O U S E S & M O B IL E H O M E S Any Condition —Any Location Fast Cash — Quick Closing (336) 961-2777 Wishon & Carter Builders, Inc. Y adkinvllle336-679-2031 Yadkinvllle, NC Outstanding Agents, Outstanding Results www,wishoncafter.coffl W lnston-S olem 336-724-0372 Custom Home Building Additions Custom Kitchens & Baths Guaranteed Pricing 33 Years Experience Unlimited License In-House Design Free Estimates Locally Owned...Nationally K now n 139 БиНЕ COURT PUSOINfl Ш ЕOWl iblt ЗЬВ* b'Si'1 »/ Sii on Cfc Vi: 1г;| Wir,4^r.!.ft ri ji c<r. i сс>’:Л1 iJi-p ;г>оМ ГЛ ’.r.DMi fiVT WU-.'íUj'f Iv'br.í'c^ Силr.i>iW4S8r.VI)^ifa/)tm.l)Q0 911 JUWr ItACVHAIIF DAVtE ЗОЯ 2ЬВА 4 ?1АС Ш.ЧЛ'Л kTCt'daass (tO'jJíO А open füitiS4 U'fV *Ло1 & rj;l ЫШ Frofil Á scíftfti pc<ci« Qreji fn tcfiüi bft h M:»e‘ ViCii Ftrrng 90ЙИ6/(Уа1Ш mt.soo 244 CHESTNUT TRAU ОДтЗВЯ35ВЛH ai« Wficiïne on Ши Ь41 acre tunr fenceí w'-lj'e Ь fi w*i Ui-n яЛкЗ/ v ív í-í í i [УД fooni La cuíii.'í síiií fKirfAcoíii'.'cri *,írii3^ tn ö.fi rfl f, füc'i liíftiace in veal fooni Л ч1 He; veï 90a- 15}|W33ari4|$3H.OOO im ВШШСМЕ U OAVK ЗШГЖ1 Vir'jQe iw )j fifm Sr/ie houM femodefed ifí/n ire gicund i,í) ftócdi nöH:ng w iis in pfflií Ojte locaiion on 4*/• actrt HJAS iiDOfs WuQfOül Pleniv oi 908-1158 (\И51012) 27S К Ш Ш и DMVl OU VALUY OAVtf 36Я 2 SBA Imnuciia!« w/ic<s ol eilias. 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Ь|ив| HntMlns Opfitniuiiil)'. 1-aLli .illlic ik Imlcitemlcnlly Owned uiul ОрсгаЫ, m 1Ш6000 ю’оАуа'звп 2ba алMïance beauty »eil rmirlained frila Iww on 6Û ol an а:ге Еп|0/ thiS орел licor plan wiih« n»i MW.MU~ ^ an Kffi ГП|0/ tftij орел Hoor plan *iih separaie IH Irom a la lamiiy loom OuUida touies a ierced taiyaifl i cai uipon.' COLDUUeULBANKjBREI TRIA D , REALTORS' Davie Schools C ontinued From Page D2 you to all the parents who helped make our Spring Fling Day so special by making bunny bags, coloring eggs, preparing Easter cards, filling plastic eggs and making baskets,” the teachers said. M rs. A ncuta and M rs. Peeler are proud of their class, which came in a close second in the school for the M ebane Challenge “Change for Change". The children gave a “standing oration” performance of “Day- O” during the PTO Program. “They sang their hearts out," th ey said. Students are participating in the Pizza Hut "B ook-It B eginner" Program and to date, the children have read 415 books at home. Each student received a pencil from Mrs. Owens for the job each one did reading “My Zz Book”. The children participated in a school bus safety program . They learned the rules for riding on a bus and experienced a bus ride. Thank you to Mrs. M arrs and M s. R eavis for putting this together. The students would like to thank fifth grade buddies who have helped throughout the year - Tiffany Davis, Emily Everidge , Josie P iper and Shaitekka D alton. D uring A pril, the children finished up alphabet and number units. May will be füll o f insects and dinosaurs. Graduation date is set for May 20 at noon in the gym with a picnic lunch to follow . The children are learning songs and practicing how to march in to Pomp and Circumstance. In Mrs. Brooks’ first grade class, students have been working on a unit about plants. They planted lima bean seeds in plastic bags and are waiting to see if they will grow. Students are conducting an experiment to see how well their beans grow in different parts of the class­ room. The class is continuing to read for the reading program and M rs. Brooks is proud that her class is in second place. Students are being encouraged to exceed their goal of seven books a week. The class will continue to leam . about plants and seeiJs, and the next assignment will be to plant' bean seeds and cucumber-seedsEi: W hen they sprout, students will take them home to be replanted outside in the hope they will grow into cucumbers and beans. The class had something extra special to celebrate last week. M rs. B rooks gave birth to a daughter, R eagan, on Friday A pril 22. H er students are looking forward to meeting the latest addition to Mrs. Brooks family. Her place will be taken by Brooke Reavis until the end of the school year. Second graders in M rs. M cD aniel’s class have been studying the desert, including people and anim als that live there. They fmished the unit by eating some Desert Cactus Treats (green butterscotch chow mein noodles). M rs. M cD aniel is proud of the improvements she has seen this year in the students ’ reading skills. “T hey have worked so hard,” she said. In math, students continue studying m ultiplication facts and have begun to leam division. They have talked about area, arrays, and three-digit subtrac-tion. The fourth grade has been studying North Carolina all year. Last Thursday, they visited the state’s capital, Raleigh. It was an exciting day for students; they got to visit the L egislative building, and sat in the House of Representatives and impressed the tour guide with knowledge. T hey visited the C apitol Building and admired the ornate architecture of the state’s former seat o f governm ent. A t the History Museum students got to look at many artifacts and see how much everyday life has changed from the eariy days of their country’s life. Students agreed they could have spent the day exploring the N atural Science Museum. Fourth grade teachers would like to thank the chaperones for invaluable help in making the trip a success. Spanish classes are going well, reports Señora Woodruff. "The Pre-K students finished th e ir, color books and are beginning a unit on the shapes. The kindergarten and first grade classes fini.shed their farm unit, and are working on the family. They are learning w ords to express feelings as a part of this chapter.” To earn the Spanish challenge and 25 bonus points for the reading program , the third-fifth grade classes have been working on a trivia contest. T hrough the research in the library and on the Internet, they are learning a lot about the history, geography, and culture of Spanish-speaking places. The classes have displayed a lot of team w ork in getting the questions answered on time. A reminder to parents: May 3,4 and 5, End of Grade Tests; Friday May 6, third grade Bike Rodeo and 2nd grade M other’s Tea; May 10. 11, 12, 13, Book Fair; T hursday M ay 12 AR Parties; Friday, May 13, Field Day for all students; Thursday, May 19, Class picnics for 2nd and 3rd grade; Friday, May 20, Class picnics for 4th and Sth grade; Friday May 20, noon-Pre- K graduation; Monday, May 23, A wards Day and last day of school for students. School ends at 1.45 p.m. Shady G rove Elem entary The PTO spring project is to raise funds to enhance the playground and establish a new playground area behind the new classroom wing to accommodate the sch o o l’s m ore than 635 students. The PTO hopes to raise at least $10,000. R eturn donations by May 13. The annual golf tournament for technology will take place M ay 14 at Hickory H ill with proceeds going tow ard the technology program . The shotgun start will be at 1 p.m. Fun Day will be on Monday, May 16. The school wide talent show will be Wednesday, May 18t at 1:30. Awards Day will be held on Friday, May 20. Kindergarten Mrs. Foster’s class began a unit on plants. The children have been learning what makes plants grow. The students did a great job'in computer lab working on ■vtheirsUdesshows, M rssFoster said. Mrs. M artin’s class will focus on fairy tales and working on circle maps. M rs. Sanders’ class theme this week was plants and flowers. Students made green-houses, sequenced plant growth pictures, learned about parts of plants and made some tissue paper flowers. The class has discussed ways to take care of the environment in honor o f Earth Day. T hey’re “Going Buggy” with ladybugs, bees and butterflies. F irst Grade M rs. M inor’s students, in m ath, have been review ing geometric shapes, telling time, problem-solving, number facts and place value. The summative math test will be soon. In writing, students have been talking about the main idea and writing more complete sen-tences. In science, the children experimented with solids, liquids and gases. They have been watching a lima bean sprout. Next they will focus on animals and then a unit on rocks will follow. Second Grade Elizabeth Hill’s students read F ernando’s G ift. The class discussed helping verbs. Stu­ dents are continuing to work with 3 digit subtraction.They enjoyed a trip to Eaton Farm on Wednesday. The students saw goats, horses, and a sheep dog performance. Janet H ill’s students read the stories “W hales: The G entle G iants" and “Fossils Tell of Long Ago.” In math, the class is learning about telling time and using a calendar for problem solving. Students are learning abput finding perimeter, area, and volume. Third Grade Mrs. h'arvey’s students have tested on solid and plane figures, perim eter, area, and volume, They will work on fractions until final reviews for the EOGs, In reading students have continued with the story "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." They are DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - D3 working in the Coach book for reading where they looked at plot, point of view and com paring and contrasting stories and charac-ters. Students continue to w ork on their planetary webquests. M rs. H en d rix ’s students learned about probability by doing experiments. The fraction study concluded with a test. All students showed improvement w ith tim ed m ath facts. They review ed m ath skills like counting money, telling time, and adding and subtracting with regrouping. Students in third grade took a field trip to M ocksville to see counly government in action. S tudents o f the W eek: Sabrina Grimes, Colby Tucker, Tannor Atwood, Hersh Bhatt, A lex Y arbrough, L indsey Stroupe, K atie Jira, K ara O sborne, D akota Lem m , Sam antha M aurice, C indy B lance, T ristan Com er, A lexander Plitt, Jill Duffner, L auren T hurinond, M egan O ’C onnell, M aggie H urdle, Mark Graham, Katie Sutherland. W illiam R. Davie Elem entary The classroom Box Top win­ ner for M arch/A pril is Tracy Dyson's class. Her class col­ lected 412 box tops. The class­ room winner from December- April is Diane Ireland's class. The class collected 797. Citizens of the week for April 15; Zachary Schore, Jonathon M iller, M atthew Binky, Aryn Sinyard, Blue M iller, A m ber Stroud, Katie Alexander, Nick H ilton, K yle Stevens, Brian Moreno, Sonia Ramirez, Desirae Vandiver, Johnny Hernandez, Courtney Jone, Oliver Candido, Anna Tutterow, Ashley Ander­ son, and Megan Walker. Citizens of the week for April 22: Samantha Hoglcn, Megan Gardiner, Wendy Baltazar, Noah M ullis, Heather Davidson, Isela B eiza, Jake K itchene, M ary Cloyce Collins, Conner Carpen­ ter, Austin Hunter, Cory Turner, Dustin Reavis, Samantha Taylor, A ndrea F errebee, Cole Bankenship, Shelton Lanning, Derek Danner, and M ariah Dob­ bins. " Citizens of the week for April 29: Kaitlin Bledsoe, D'Aljawon Woodard, M agdalena Serrano, R eilly M eagher, K aitlyn Greenlee, Daniel Ramsey, Tan­ ner Smith, Forrest Barber, Jacob Nem eth, Logan Quinn, Jacob Stewart, Brittany Cranfill, Kolin Andrews, Ross Hoffner, Natalie Ireland, Logan Hendricks, Lind­ say Sanders, and Julie Baltazar. Bus/Car Riders of the week for A pril 2: Jorge T utiven, Yoanna Alvarado, Ross Hoffner, Traci Ferrebee, Jachawn Mar­ tinez, Summ er Bivens, Bobby Joe Thompkins, Julie Baltazar, Conner Mayo, and Sarah Ander- M ocksville Elem entary Student of the Week, April 25- 29: Michelle Newsome, Melody Dimmig, T.J. M artin, Mati.son Keegan, Tamiya Tabor, Nicholas Starnes, R eilly G reene, H um berto C assares, G regory Jones, Ivonne Rom an-Garcia, Eavan Jennings, Amber Hunter, Harmony Dimmig, Shelby Potts, Christopher Miller. The children in Ms. Gamer and Mrs. Russell’s kindergarten class are glad spring has arrived. The students have been bu.sy learning all about spring and many insects and other animals seen during spring. The students learned and acted out the life cycle of a butterfly. They also learned about bees, ladybugs and frogs. In addition, they have been learning about plants, sprouting beans and growing hair (grass). In math, the students have been busy adding and subtracting. The children are looking forward to the kindergarten field trip to Heri­ tage Theater. Mrs. Flynn and M rs.Cook’s first graders are counting the days. We have studied monkeys this week and are going bananas over them. Some of our favorite monkey books are M ore Spa­ ghetti I Say and Don’t Wake Up Mamal We are looking forward to our study of the oceans and our upcoming Ocean Day. U K I 'U K . S K N T A I I V KJulia Howard /VC ' H o iis f 7 9 th D is lric l Please contact me in: MOCKSVILLE; (336) 751-8567 RALEIGH: (919) 733-5904 16 W. Jones Street, Rm1106 Raleigh, NC 27601-1096 Email: lullah@ncleg.net Paid for uvJuua Howm s W IN G S & T H IN G S “Just Wing I t r Tanglew ood C om m ons 4146 C lem m ons Rd. C lem m ons, NC 27102 Phono (330) 77Э-2077 M on.-T hur8llQ m *9pm FrI.'S at. lle m H O p m 12 Flavors of Wings • Burgers • Sandwiches • Hot Dogs • Salads • Desserts • Kids Meals • Fish Sandvwches • ABC perm it Ш Come In and #o Register to # a ^ W inaDAll ® EARNHARDT, |R. collectible mirror (both stores) 2 Ur Coke Quantities May Be Limited Horn’s Express # i H orn’s Express #2 266 S. S a lis b u ry S t. 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DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 Ija m e s, B e rm u d a V illa g e S c h o o ls ’ T o p V o lu n te e rs Davie County Schools hosted 85 individuals and busi­ nesses at the first Annual Ap­ preciation Luncheon on April 21 at Bermuda Run Country Club. The event honored indi­ viduals and businesses who had been named the Volunteer of the Year or Exemplary Ser­ vice Award recipient for each individual school. The luncheon included an awards presentation. At the be­ ginning of the awards presen­ tation, Superintendent W.G. Potts greeted guests and thanked them for their conunit- ment to students in Davie County. Following the invocation by Potts, Wendy Home, public in­ formation officer and organizer of the luncheon, recognized several individuals in the au­ dience and then explained how the year's winners were se­ lected. Home was joined by Potts to present the awards. After the presentation of the school level award winners, the county Volunteer of the Year and Exemplary Service Award winners were announced. . William Ijames, volunteer for Mocksville Elementary, was designated the County Volunteer of the Year Award winner. "We feel so lucky to have Mr. Ijames at Mocksville, the fact that he returned after re­ tiring from the school system, just means that much more,” said Gladys Scott, principal. “You can tell by his actions that the children are very dear to his heart and they think highlyofhim, as well. Hear­ ing him say 'Good morning my friend’ brings joy to all of us at Mocksville. We are truly blessed to have Mr. Ijames.” The residents from Ber­ muda Village were awarded the County Exemplary Ser­ vice Award. "Shady Grove is extremely proud of the Bermuda Village Retirement Center for receiv­ ing the Exemplary Service Award this year. The volun­ teers have made a commit­ ment to working with our children every week,” said Larry Lanier, principal. "It warms the heart to see the la­ dies sitting on a.sofa in the media center with their arm around a student listening to them read. Our students love the attention they receive from ‘grandma.’ We truly ap­ preciate these dedicated vol­ unteers.” 2005 Volunteer/Exemplary Service Winners • Cooleemee Elementary Anike Fuller Cooleemee Town Board • Comatzer Elementary Buddy Meadows CCB • Mocksville Elementary William Ijames First Baptist Church Adopt- A-School Ministry Program • Pinebrook Elementary Sam Krause Bi-Lo, Inc. • Shady Grove Elementary Amy Duffner Bermuda Village • William R. Davie Elementary Teresa Apperson Blaise Baptist Church Good Life Group • North Davie Middle Mary Cunningham Vulcan Materials • South Davie Middle Lynn Lee Jeoff Williams Buck's Pizza • Davie High Bonnie Miller Debbie Nelms Mocksville Woman's Club ììki Mocksville Elementary Principal, Gladys Scott, and Assistant PrincipalJennifer Custer congratulate William Ijames on being named the Davie County Volunteer of the Year. He was the Volunteer of the Year for Mocksville Elementary. The residents of Bermuda Village were awarded the Exemplary Service Award for Davie County. Superintendent W.G. Potts takes a moment to congratulate these individuals who also received the award from Shady Grove Elementary. C l e m m o n s P a w n & J e w e l r Danny W Ingo- Owner 25 Y n Experience I leOO Lew livffle-Clenunoni Rd. Clemmona (Naxt to Ranni'* Wln(t) H O UM M -F g-e S at. 9 -3 7 6 6 -9 3 1 2www.mjrclemmoot.ooœ Personal Assistant for Hire Having trouble getting the little things done? Do your questions go unanswered? Being treated unfairly? Need confidentiality? Need to talk? Perhaps we can help. 336.751.9582 Sales Graduates Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Willie L. Clem­ ent and and Mr. Laymon W. Sales Jr. announce the gradua­ tion of Jacqueline Clement Sales from Winston-Salem State Uni- versity with a bachelor’s degree in nursing on Saturday, May 7, at the Lowrence Joel Veterans Coliseum at 9:45. TVvo Teachers Pailicipate In NCCAT Seminars '.»• ,-V > '■/■■rv'v. / № A gent O n D uty 2Ф -7 Call (336) 751-3538 or visit www.howardrealty.com HOWARD R E A E r Y , , v . . f e ' v OS 330 s. Salisbiuy St. Mocksville H o u rs : M o n d a y -F rid a y 8 -^ S a h trd a y ^ 1 2 , S im d a y B y A p p t. OFFICE SPACE D o w n to w n O ffic e S p a c e fo r R e n t. 7 0 0 s q . ft. o n D e p o t S t. $ 4 5 0 P /M C a ll C o n n ie n Selm oni Road..^... Tittle Trail...........TTtom^n Lane, 901 YadkFiivliïe Rdi.'. 629 Madison Rd (Commercial)............... Off Balhal Chureh R d ..™ ,— Qwyn StraaL............... .......11 aerea ¿71,877 ^ Bulldlnfl Lot $34.500 Ш .......»W -acrat S600.000 .................................$425,000 ...eW-acres ieO.OOO ...............Lot $25,000 100+/-acres farm. 3BR.2BA, out* Spacioue 4ВП. 3.5BA, FP. fenced bIdgs., crook. $4 9 9,000. beck yard. $239,000 SEE OUR AVAILABLE RENTALS IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION.42+/-Ю, 3BR, 2BA. tarn, pore), YmMmllle; Renovalsdl Bettor Km newl m is ONE m s IT АШ $ 4 5 0,000. ЗВЯ.2ВА on $ 2 3 9 ,0 0 0 115 Avalon Stîjeei ГТИП 106 Meaüüwview Rd. Г Т Ж П ^ ^ Э Wooduumn PiACt Нвшопу-зва гел. I о,/- acres (3 Klnd«ton,3Ba2.5BA,tenc»dbkyid. 3BR, 2BA. biloM & oliy with Ы1 №R, 2 B \ 1.5 Яму, creen«) poreh, 1400./- sq. It., lull basement, FP, iw » i), 2 tu ita m . $179 ,9 0 0 'M o jity sysl i MORE!! $ 1 5 9 ,9 0 0 appllancesi $159 ,9 0 0 haKt«»ds,8lofagebld9s. $ 1 5 8 ,9 0 0 lonced back yard. $154 ,9 0 0 з в а 2 a \w r t built, unfm. basement, 3W-»ecludedBc.!Bai.5BA,l,392«Asl, Woll kept ЗВП, 2BA, with lenced Remodeled Werior. Fu« basemenL Home Warranty, ЗВа 2BA, stone FP, poss. Home warranty. $ 1 4 4,900 ol(«(i()larvas,et9«bkl. $ 1 3 9,900. bock yard. $129,500, ЗВ агВ А rancher. $ 9 9 ,9 0 0 , $2,500 carpet alow. $98,500, зва 2flA, new carpet. 4)M bedroom 3BR, 2BA, 1,98 actes lenced, plan, largo master. $82 ,9 0 0 . i»cluded i private. $81,000.$79,000 Almost new зва 2ВЛ FP, a« 38a 2BA, Stalesvlle |ust «cross D»l. ms, appUanceson.96 ac. $ 7 1 ,5 0 0 remodel icr.pordioffrear. $69,900 ! c a ! $59,900 i i Spactoua3BR, lBA,Cooleem oe. 2BR, IBA, Cooleemee mill house. Selling 'As Is", Lots ol potential Za»<lli»nC«»,ll)ùHOM,mi;»t/i*vil updated elocl. $58,000. $52,900. Oood square lootago. 4 9 ,9 0 0 H m tnd lum |nonluitlwi| $40,000. O l К / \ ( ; i M s Л К 1 1 l l K l Го S l u \ ' i Y o l ' ! lU lIA C O N N IB JAN E M ARY bW A H D KO W ALSKE W ltn iO C K H O W AR D 751.8567 75I-D545 751.«5i6 CULLOWHEE - Two area educators recently participated in seminars at the North Caro­ lina Center for the Advancement ofTeaching. Allison L, Strickland of Moclcsville, third-grade teacher at Mocksville Elementary School, attended a support semi­ nar for teachers pursuing certi- flcotion from the National Board for Professional Teaching Stan­ dards, held Feb. 28-March 4. . Shannon Dalton of Mocks­ ville, kindergarten teacher at Cornatzer Elementary School, ottended a seminar, In the Com- pany of Animals, March 14-18. NCCAT provides residential seminars in the art, science's, hu­ manities and technology for pre- kindergarten through 12th-grade public school teachers. The seminars are offered on a year- round basis at no cost to partici­ pating teachers. They are de­ signed to renew teachers vital­ ity for teaching and to equip them with new knowledge. More infprinatioi) about NCCAT seminars is available by calling 828-293-5202, toll free at 800-922-0482 or online at www.iiecat.org. Speech Disorders Take On Many Forms Since 1927, the American fully regain their capacity to speak and understand, but a speech-languoge pathologist can help them live more indepen­ dently." Speech-Ianguage patholo­ gists are the professionals who treat all types of speech, lan- ■ guage, and related disorders. They hold at least a master's de­ gree and are certified by the American Speech-Language- Hearing Association. Speech- Ianguage pathologists work in schools, private practice, hospi­ tals, clinics, and other health and education settings. The American Speech-Lan­ guage-Hearing Association (ASHA) is the national profes­ sional, scientific, and ereden- tialing association for more than 114,000 audiologists, speech- language pathologists and speech, language, and hearing specialists. Speech-Language-Hearing As­ sociation has celebrated Better Hearing and Speech Month each May to raise public awareness of speech and language disorders that affect 14 milljon Americans. . Speech and language disor­ ders can take many forms and can limit academic achievement, social adjustment, and career ad­ vancement, An individual may be bom with a speech or lan­ guage disorder, or it may be caused by accidental injury or • illness. "Fortunately, most people with speech and language prob­ lems can be helped," said Bonnie Schwengel, speech-language pathologist for Davie County Schools. "Even if the problem cannot be eliminated, we can teach people with speech and language problems strategics to help them cope. People may not F H E R C H O I C E Recorded Testimonies Of Abortion Decisions “ L e a m T h e T r u e F a c t s ” 24 Hour-Anonymous www.herchoicenc.com 336-748-8777 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPMSE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - D5 Join the IN CROWD W i t h a s u b s c r i p t i o n t o t h e D a v i e C o u n t y E n t e r p r i s e R e c o r d Y O U c a n b e " i n t h e k n o w " o n i s s u e s o f i m p o r t a n c e t o a l l o f D a v i e C o u n t y . K e e p u p t o d a t e o n e v e n t s t h a t a r e h a p p e n i n g i n y o u r c o m m u n i t y . D o n ' t m i s s a s i n g l e i s s u e . S u b s c r i b e t o d a y . D A V IE C O U N TY TENTERPRI/E^ECORD Simply send In this form with your paym ent... I IWANTTOJOINTHE IN CROWD! I Please send me a I Subscription to the j Davie County Enterprise Record! ■ NAME___________________________^----------- I I I I I CHECK ONE; □ 12 Month INSTATE Subscription = $20.00 □ 12 Month OUT-OF-STATE Subscription = $25.00 ADDRESS. Your phone# ______________________ Mail this form along with the amount checked above to: Davie County Enterprise Record, PO Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 - I I I I I I I “ I ~ I ~ I I I i . J DAVIE C O U N T Y ENTE ECORD Davie County's choice for local News, Sports, Advertising & Morel ' Г-; ' t ’ i f D6 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 ■ D7 PUBLIC NOTICES NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF A DEED OF TRUST EXECUTED BY VANESSA D. GREER AND MICHAEL A. SOUTHARD DATED SEPTEM­ BER 30, 2003 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 516 AT PAGE 367 IN THE DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC REGISTRY, NORTH CAROLINA NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant to an order 0) the Clerk c( Superior Court and under and by virtue ot the power and authority contained In the at)ove-referenced deed of trust and because o( de­ fault In the payment of the Indebt­ edness thereby secured and fail­ ure to carry out and perform the stipulation and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the In­ debtedness secured by said deed of trust, Ihe undersigned substitute trustee will expose for sale at pub­ lic auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place ol sale at the county courthouse of said county at 10:00 AM on May 12, 2005 the following described real estate and any,other Improve­ ments which may be situated thereon, situated In Davie County, North Carolina, and being more particularly described as follows: TRACT ONE; BEGINNING al a stone, the Southeast corner of the within described tract, In C.A. Seaford's corner near ditch and runs thence North 86 deg. East 1.93 chains to a stone, near ditch; thence East 10.0 feet to a stake, Charlie Lakey’s corner or line; thence with said Lakey's line North 4 deg. East 3.2 chains to an Iron stake. In the edge of Mocksvllle- Hardlson Road, Charlie Lakey's corner; th.ence with said Road South 80 deg. West 10 feet lo a stone; thence continuing South 80 deg. West 2.9 chains wllh said Road to a stone, C.A. Seaford cor­ ner; thence with said Seaford line South 2.56 chains to the BEGIN­ NING, containing 1/2 acre, more or less. For a more particular descrip­ tion of the tract from which the above described Is taken, and of the said above described tract from which the above Is taken, and of the said above described, refer­ ence Is hereby made to a deed from C.A. Seaford and wife, to F.H. Brown, recorded In Deed Book 34, page 49, Register of Deeds of Davie County, and lo a deed from F.H. Brown and wife to Wade Mainer and wife- It being the grantor's Intention, by this instru­ ment to convey all that property described in said latter deed plus all Ihe land now or formerly owned by F. H. Brown lying on the east side of the land last mentioned and between said land and Charlie Lakey, being a strip ten feet wide running the entire length ot said east side. This description taken Irom the description from the de­ scription contained In the deed re­ corded In Deed Book 58 at page 345 of the Davie County Registry. TRACTTWO: BEGINNING at a stone In the Hardlson-Chapel Road, Wade Mainer's corner, thence South 3 deg. East 2.57 chains to a stone; thence South 89 deg. West 1.94 chains lo a stake; thence North 3 deg. East 2.18 chains to a stake In the Hardlson- Chapel Road; thence with said road North 77 deg. East 1.84 chains to the BEGINNING, containing fourth tenths (4/10) of an acre, more or less. This description was prepared from the description In the deed re­ corded In Deed Book 46 at page 602 of the Davie County Registry. For back title, see the document recorded In Deed Book 125, at page 590 and Deed Book 382, page 828 In the Davie County Reg­ ister of Deeds. Tax Parcel #K400000026.- And Being'more commonly known as: 1627 Jericho Church Road, Mocksvllle, NC 27028 The record owner(s) of the prop­ erty, as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds, is/are Vanessa D. Greer and Michael A. Southard. Tho property to be offered pur­ suant to this notice of sale Is being offered for sale, transfer and con­ veyance “AS IS, WHERE IS" Nei­ ther the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the deed of trust/security agreement, or both, being foreclosed, nor the officers, directors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either Trustee or the hoider of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing In, on, at or relating to the property being offered tor sale, and any and all responsibilities or liabilities arising out of or In any way relating to any such condition expressly are dis­ claimed. This sale Is made sub­ ject to all prior Hens and encum­ brances, and unpaid taxes and as­ sessments Including but not limited to any transfer tax associated with the foreclosure, for paying. If any. A depo.'ilt of five percent (5%) of the amount of the bid or seven hun­ dred fifty dollars ($750,00), which­ ever is greater, is required and must be tendered In the form of certified funds at the time of the sale. This sale will be held open ten days for upset bids as required by law. Following the expiration of the statutory upset period, ail re­ maining amounts are Immediately due and owing. The date ol this Notice Is April 21,2005. David W. Neill, Elizabeth B. Ells, John Valenti or Cecelia Stemple Substitute Trustee 8520 Cliff Cameron Drive Suite 300 Charlotle, NC 28269 (704) 333-8107 05-69002 4-28-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREOrrORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of MADGE B. DAY late of Davie County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the Estate to exhibit them to the undersigned at the office of Ingersoil & Associates, PLLC, P.O. Box 25167, Winston-Salem, NC 27114, on or before August 15, 2005, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment. This the 26th day of April, 2005. Charlotte F. Henry, Executor Marc W. ingersoil, Attorney; Ingersoil & Associates, PLLC 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of BOYD GILBERT PACK, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of July, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 19th day of April, 2005. Janell Young Pack 3464 NC Highway 801 South Advance, NC 27006 Martin & Van Hoy, LLP Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square Mooksvllle, NC 27028 4-28-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE ' Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a certain deed of trust executed by Major Wayne Register and wife, Wllma Marie Register, dated the 9th day of Au­ gust, 1999, and recorded In Book 310, page 864, In the office ol the Regisler ol Deeds ol Davie County, North Carolina, default having been made in the payment ol the indebt­ edness thereby secured, and the said deed of trust being by Ihe terms thereof subject to foreclo­ sure, and the holder of the Indebt­ edness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said In­ debtedness, and the undersigned Trustee having petitioned the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County lor an Order Allowing Foreclosure to proceed and such Order having been entered, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the Courthouse door of the Davie County Courthouse, Mocksville, North Carolina, at 12:00 noon on the 12th day of May, 2005, all of property conveyed In said deed ol tmst, Including all buildings and permanent Improvements af­ fixed thereto, which property as of ten (10) days prior to the posting of this notice was owned by Major Wayne Register and wile, Wllma Marie Regl<!ter, the same lying and being In Jerusalem Township, Davie County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as fol­ lows: BEGINNING at an existing Iron pin, the Southeastern corner of the within described tract In the North­ ern right of way margin of SR 1821, the Southwestern corner of Ronnie H. Riddle (Deed Book 137, page 683); thence from the beginning North 78 deg. 31 min. 33 seo. West 250 feet lo a new Iron pin, the South­ western corner ol the wllhin de­ scribed tract, new corner of William H. Broadway et ux (Deed Book 136, page 163); thence North 8 deg. 39 min. 18 sec. East 245.80 feat to a new Iron pin; thence South 80 deg. 46 min. 18 sec.. East 124.77 feet to a new Iron pin; thence North 08 deg. ■I 13 min. 55 sec. East 174.22 feet to a new iron pin, being the Northwest­ ern corner of the within described tract, new corner of William H. Broadway; thence South 80 deg. 22 min. 47 sec. East 122.95 feet to a new Iron pin, the Northeastern cor­ ner of the within-described tract in the line of Ronnie H. Riddle, said Iron being located South 08 deg. 13 min. 00 sec. West 1015.28 feet from an existing Iron pin, being the cor­ ner of William H. Broadway and Ronnie H. Riddle; thence with the Riddle line South 08 deg. 13 min. 00 sec. West 429.00 feet TO THE POINT AND PLACE OF BEGIN­ NING, containing 1.922 acres as surveyed by Hall's Land Sun/eying Company on September 16,1988, and being a portion of that property described In Deed Book 136, al page 163. For back title see Deed Book 145, page 417; Deed Book 136, page 163; Deed Book 104, page 519; Deed Book 103, page 156 In the Davie County Registry. The property Is located at 305 Singleton Road, Mocksville, North Carolina, and Is being sold as Is SUBJECT to any city-counly ad va­ lorem taxes and any special assess­ ments that are a Hen against the pre­ mises, as well as all prior deeds of trust, liens. Judgments, encum­ brances, restrictions, easements and rights-of-way of record. If any, and THERE IS NO WARRANTY RELATING TO TITLE, POSSES­ SION, QUIET ENJOYMENT OR THE LIKE IN THIS DISPOSITION. SALE AS IS WHERE IS. The highest bidder at said sate shall be required to make a cash deposit of five percent (5%) of the amount of his bid or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever Is greater, at the time of sale, with the balance to be paid within thirty (30) days after the sale. This sale Is SUB­ JECT to an upset bid which may be made by any person with the Clerk of Superior Court wllhin ten (10) days following report ol this sale. This the 14th day of April, 2005. Trustee Services, Inc., Trustee 05-SP-55 4-2B-2tnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY 04 SP 173 AMENDED NOTICE OF FORE- Under and by virtue ol a Power of Sale contained In that certain Deed df Trust executed by AAGUILA, and Angel A. GuHerrez to SH AP/RO S KREISM AN , Truslee(s), which was dated SE P ­ TEMBER 16. S002 and recorded on SEPTEM BER 17, SOOS in Book 438at Page 77, ZJawbCounty Reg­ istry, North Carolina. Default having been made In the payment ol the note thereby se­ cured by the said Deed of Trust and the undersigned. Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substituted as Trustee In said Deed of Trust by an Instrufnent duly recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of ¿7,91719 County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said Indebtedness having directed that the Deed of Trust be fore­ closed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the caurlhPuafl-dQor ol.lhe county courthouse where the property Is located, or the usual and custom­ ary location at the county court­ house for conducting the sale on May 20,2005 at 11:00AM, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property situated In Davie County, North Carolina, to wit: BEQINNINQatanewpIn In the line of Ned and Rudy Boger (Deed Book 117, page 100 and Deed Book 49, page548) and the South­ western corner of the herein de­ scribed tract; thence North i 4 deg. 11 min. 18 sec. East 133.59feet to rebar In the tine of Brenda B. Mecham (Dead Book 152, page 504): thence North 13deg. 11 min. IS sec. East S10.46 feet to a rebar In the line of Boger; thence North 13deg. 13min.51 SBC, East 169.58 feet to an axie; thence North 13 deg. 13 min. 51 sec. East 19.89 feet to a placed iron pin the Northwest comer of the herein described tract; thence South SO deg. 4S min. 20 sec. East 119.92 feet to a railroad spike in S R 1416 and the North­ east comer of the herein described tmct; thence South 04deg. 33min. 30 sec. West 40.00 feet to a new iron pin (online) In the line ofRonakJ Swaim and Mary Ann Myers (Deed Book 95, page 450); thence South 04 deg, 33 min. 30 sec. West 301.25feet to an axie in the Une ot Louis S, Myers (Deed Book 83, page 548); thence South 04 deg, 33 min, 30 sec. West 210,00 feet to a new iron f^n in the Myers tine and the Southeast corner of the herein described tract; thence North 75 deg, 48 min, 42 sec. West 204,86 feet to the POINT O F BE- GiNNiNQ containing 2,00 acres. more or less, all as set forth by Drawing Num ber 24598-3 by Grady L, Tutterow, R,LS„ dated iO/28/98. Save and except any releases or deeds of release of record. Said property Is commonly known as 457Richie Road (Incor­ rectly referenced on DOT as 547 Richie Road), Mocksville, N C 27028. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs of Forty-Five Cents (45e) pSr One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursu­ ant to NCGS 7A-308(a)(1). Acash deposit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) ol the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Filly Dollars ($750.00), whichever Is greater, will be required at the time of the sale. Following the expiration ol the statutory upset bid period, all the remaining amounts are Immedi­ ately due and owing. Said property to be offered pur­ suant to this Notice ol Sale Is be­ ing offered for sale, transfer and conveyance "AS IS WHERE IS," There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing In, on, at, or relating to the property being of­ fered for sale. This sale Is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, ease­ ments, rights of way, deeds of re­ lease, and any olher encum­ brances or exceptions of record. To the best of the knowledge and be­ lief of the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property Is/are Fi­ de! A. Aguiia and Angela A. Guiterrez. Brock & Scott, PLLC, Substitute Trustee 5919 Oleander Drive Suite 115 Wilmington, NC 28403 Phone (910) 392-4988 Fax (910) 392-8051 File No.: 04-07-20-M-3422 5-5-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS FOR THE FOLLOWING ZONING AMENDMENTS: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursant to the requirements of Article 20-B of Chapter 153-A of the General Statutes of North Carolina and Seo- tton 155.251 of the Davie County Code of Ordinances, that the DavIe County Boand of Commissioners will hdkl a ers Room of Ihe Davie County Ad­ ministration Building, Mocksville on Monday, May 16,2005 at 7:00 p.m. to hear the following requests; A) Tommy. PliW has applied to rezone approximately 156 acres of land from Residential Agricultural (R-A) lo Residential Suburban Spe­ cial Use (R-1 2-S) to permit up to 200 dwelling units within the development. This property, also known as Twin Cedars Golf Course, Is located at the end of TVvIn Cedars Golf Road and Walt Wilson Road and Is further de­ scribes as a portion of Parcel L500000007, and Parcels L5020B0023, -24, -25, -26, -27, and - 28. rezone approximately 3 acres of land from Residential Agriculture (R-A) to Industrial Special Use (1-2-S) for a machine tool shop. This property Is located at 2726 U.S. Hwy. 601 North, approximately 600 feet south of Danner Road (S.R. 1412) and is fur­ ther described as a portion of Parcel F300000082, C) PatriclaLJonea has applied to rezone 3.36 acres of land from Resi­ dential (R-20) to Community Shop­ ping (OS). This property Is located al 228 N.C. 801 South, at the northwest comer oi N.C. 801 and Carter Road (S.R. 1627) and Is further described as Parcel D8090A0001. D) The Board of Commissioners will conskfer a series of amendments to the Zoning Ordinance. The amend­ ments add a deHnillon for a Junk/aban­ doned manufactured home, clarify the requirements for temporary manufac­ tured homes, provide for staff to Issue a temporal permit for a m^ufactured home while a pennanent home Is un­ der constmction, revise the permit re­ quirements tor zoning compliance permits, and update the standards for nonconforming manufactured homes. The Planning Board recommended the amendments on April 26,2004. A complete copy of the proposed text Is available at the Davie County Devel­ opment Servtees Department. A sign will be posted on the above listed properties to advertise the pub- ik! hearing. The public Is invited to at­ tend the hearing at whteh lime there will be an opportunity to be heard In favor of, or in opposition lo, the above items. Addittonal Information Is avail­ able at the Devetopment Servtees De­ partment on weeMays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. br by telephone at (336)751-3340. John Galllmore Planning Director NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY 05 SP 52 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained In that certain Deed of Trust executed by THO­ MAS F. KRISSAK and RUTH KRISSAK loTHETITLE COMPANY OF NORTH CAROLINA, Trustee(s), which was dated August 9,1993 and recorded on August 13, 1993 in Book 199 at Page 96, DavIe County Registry, North Carolina. Default having been made in the payment of the note thereby se­ cured by the said Deed of Trust and the undersigned. Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substituted as Trustee in said Deed of Trust by an InstrtJment duly recorded In the Of­ fice of the Register of Deeds of DavIe County, North Carolina, and the holder ol the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed that the Deed of Trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the courthouse door of the county courthouse where the property Is located, or the usual and customary location at the county courthouse for conducting the sale on May 9,2005 at 12:00PM, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property situated In Davie County, North Carolina, to wit; BEING known and designated as Lol 229, as shown on the Map of ' Bermuda Run Golf and Country Club, Section 15, as recorded In Plat Book 4, Page 95, In the OHice of the Register of Deeds of Davie County, North Carolina, to which map refer­ ence is hereby made for a more par­ ticular description. Sava and except any releases or deeds of release of record. Said property is commonly known as 168 Bent Street, Advance, NC 27006. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs of Forty-Five Cents' (45e) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursuant to NCGS 7A-308(a)(1).' Acash de­ posit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time of the sate. Following the expiration of Ihe statu­ tory upset bid period, all the remain­ ing amounts are immediately due andpvylng. , .i r.,Said property to be offered pur­ suant to this Notice of Sale Is being offered for sale, transfer and con­ veyance “AS IS WHERE IS." There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety con­ ditions existing In, on, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale. This sale Is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, easements, rights of way, deeds of release, and any other encumbrances or exceptions of record. To the best ol the knowledge and belief of the undersigned, the ' current owner(s) of the property Is/ are Thomas F. Krissak and wife, Ruthann Krissak. If the truste'e Is unable to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser Is Ihe return of the deposit. Reasons ol such Inability to convey Include, but are not limited to, the lliing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the con­ firmation of the sale and reinstate­ ment of the loan without the knowl­ edge of the trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the trustee. In their sole discretion. If they believe the challenge to have merit, may declare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser wilt have no further rem­ edy. Substitute Tnjstee Brock & Scott, PLLC By:_______________________ (SEAL) James P. Bonner, NCSB No. 15788 5919 Oleander Drive Suite 115 Arboretum Center Bidg 2 Wilmington, NC 28403 PHONE: (910) 392-4988 FAX: (910) 392-8587 File No.: 05-01081 4-28-2tnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREOrrORS Having quaiiHed as Executor of the Estateof MELBA WATSON OWENS, this Is lo notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 28th day of July, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the first day of publi­ cation or this notk» will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. All persons In­ debted to saw estate wiil please make Immediate payment to the under­ signed. This the 28th day of April, 2005. Larry Don Owens - EXEC 123 Old Course Drive Advance, NC 27006 4-28-410 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of OLIVIA STROUD FOSTER, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them lo the under­ signed on or belore the 5lh day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. Ail persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. Dennis G. Foster, Co-Executor 983 Turkeyfoot Rd. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 Sandra Fosler Vestal, Co- Executor 1324 Hwy. 64 West Mocksville, NC 27028 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualllled as Administra­ tor of the Estate of MARGIE LANIER DAVIDSON., this Is to no­ tify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of pub­ lication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment lo the undersigned. This the 14lh day of April, 2005. Kerry D. Leazer, ADMN 126 Vineyard Lane Mocksvllle, NC 27028 4-14-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix oi the Estate of VIDA DUNN WHITMAN AKA VIDA C. WHITMAN, this 13 to notify ail per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them to the under­ signed on or before the 21 st day ol July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication oi this notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. Ail persons Indebted to said estate will please make im­ mediate payment to the under­ signed. This Ihe 21st day of April, 2005. Marjorie L. Watson, EXEC .............. P.O. Box 5002 Lexington, NC 27293 4-21-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having quaiilled as Executor of the Estate of LINDA DIANE SMILEY, this Is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21 si day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imrhe- diate payment to the undersigned. This the 21 st day of April, 2005. David Eugene Smiley - EXEC 131 WesivlewAve. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 4-21-4tp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Co-Execu­ tors of the Estate of EDNA S. FOS­ TER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21st day ol July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice wiil be pleaded in bar of thelt recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 21 st day of April, 2005. Mildred F. Pennington - EXEC 2451 US Hwy 601 S Mocksvllle, NC 27028 T. G. Fosler, Jr. r EXEC 304 McCullough Road Mocksvllle, NC 27028 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ol MADISON FREE­ MAN, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to Ihe undersignedon or before the 5th day of August 2005, being three (3) months Ironi the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned, This the 5th day of May, 2005 Phyllis F. Sells, Co-Executor 202 Sowers Ferry Rd Salisbury, NC 28144 Francis Craig Freeman, Co- Exeoulor 842 Sain Rd. Mooksvllle, NC 27028 5-5-4tn PUBLIC NOTICES NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDrrORS Having qualified as Executor ol the Estate of MARY LAPISH BOGER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. Ail persons Indebted lo said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of April, 2005. Hubert Samuel Boger 900 Farmington Road Mocksville, NC 27028 Martin & Van Hoy, LLP Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square Mocksvllle, NC 27028 4-14-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of KURT WILLIAM SCHNEIDER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the un­ dersigned on or before the 5th day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Ail persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. Charlene Schneider, Executor •134 Parkway Court Mocksville, NC 27028 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of CYNTHIA MARIE SMITH, this is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21st day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice wilt be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 21 st day of April, 2005. ' Shirley Sharber 116 Hogan Drive Gamer, NC 27529 4-21-4tn NORTH CAROLINA' DAVIE COUNTY M PIIgE As required by federal and state laws, this notice Is to Inform ail workers and building occupants and/or their legal guardians about asbestos In school buildings. Any­ one who wishes to see the asbes­ tos files may contact the school or call Tom Evans, Davie County Schools Maintenance Department, 336-751-1991. This the 28th day ot April, 2005. 5-5-2tn 2 0 Y E A R W A R R A N T Y Longest Lasting 3’ Coverage / Many Colors Pole Buildings Metal Roofs & Siding ^ 1-888-278-6050 MID-STATE METALS 336.940.25001 D ue to continued Krowth, Manicured Lawn & Lantlscaplng Inc. has an immediate opening for a full-time FIELD TECHNlCIAt^. W hile no experience is necessary, w e do require a desire to leam. Candidates must be self-motivated, detail-oriented, and have a cu sto m e r-frie n d ly a ttitu d e. Applicants must be drug-free, possess a valid driver's license, and nave no criminal history. 1 Responsibilities will Include operating various types o f lawtj maintenance equipm ent and performing ¡issorled bndscaping tasks. If you enjoy working outdoors and : would like to work (or a growing Christian-owned business, w e want lo hear from you.PLEASE CALL (336) 940-2500 ДШИЯМШЕ FB0ETEABLE A b o rtio n A lterna tive ____E m p lo y m e n t DAVIE PREG N A N CY CARE Center offers confkfential & free pregnancy tests, support ser­ vices, and referrals. Make a healthy choice for your llfel Call 753-HOPE for appolntmenl. A n im a ls M INIATURE HORSE PHIILY, 75? 324^''^^’ 909-2838 or A p a rtm e n ts LARGE 1 BR apartment, down­ town, no kids, no pets. 704-278- 1717 Mo c k s v il l e s u n s e t t e r - RACE: All brick energy efficient apartment. 1 & 2 bedroom, pooi, basketball court & swings. Kitchen appliances furnished In­ cluding dishwasher. 1.5 balhs, washer/dryer connections. High energy efficient heat риглр pro­ vides central heat and air. Prewired for cable TV & phones. Insulated windows & doors. No wax kitchen & bath floors. Lo­ cated In Mocksvllle behind the old Hendricks Furniture building (now Carolina Precision Machin­ery) on Sunset Dr. off of Hwy. 158. Office hours 1-6 M-F & Sat. 10- 12. Phone 751-0168. READY TO IV10VE In 2br fur- nished upstairs apartment, all utilities included, $500/mo. 751- 121В or 704-872-3367_________ B o a ts fo r S a le '94 PROCRAFT BASS boat. 20' super pro 200, 150 HP Mariner, trolling motor, GPS depth finder, '97 model tandem trailer with hy­ draulic tongue brakes and alumi­ num wheels. Nice boat $8200 OBO. 336-463-5260___________ C h ild C a re BABYSITTING AVAILABLE IN private home. Pinebrook, North Davie school area near Farmington Rd. exit, excellent references. 940-6664__________ Com m ercial Property C O M M ERC IA L SPACE FOR lease. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. Ga­ rage wilti potential office. Easy access to 1-40 on Hwy. 601.751 - 0429 or 816-2779 VARIOUS COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES Warehouse & Office space Janice McDaniel ,,,, , ■ Pennington & Company Realty ___________998-8900___________ E m p lo y m e n t 21 YRS. OR older with vaikl drivers meals lncludeS^49^79i7 ACCEPTING APPLICATIONSFOR Security Olflcers. Click on the employment link at www.security- torces.com lo apply. EOE ADECCO immediate openings available for the following positions at Ingerson-Rand. Assembly Workers Forkllft/Cherry Picker Operators. Apply In person at 504 Sanford Ave. Mocksvllle 336-936-0003 or online at www.adecco.com EOE M IL L E R E Q U IP M E N T R E N T A L SPRING IS HEBE! Bobcat, aeratoi core plugger a more torrent todayl t^ o c k s v iite 13361 751-2304 FO R S A LE :Cars • Trucl<s Utility Buildings Carports; All Sizes, All Galvanized AN Size Dog Lots 3 3 6 - 7 5 1 - 3 4 4 2 M ocksvllle, NC APPAREL CO. NEEDS experi­ enced spreader for cutting room. ■ ply In person at: Inderà Mills 50W.tvCo. 350 W. Maple St. Yadkinville, 8-4:30. EOE AUTUMN CARE OF Mocksville has the following positions available. Enthusiastic/caring week-end RN Supervisor, 7arti til 7pm. Week-end bayior LPN or RN, 7am til 7pm and 7pm III 7am and option of one 8 hr shift per week. Autumn Care offers excellent benefits. Including free health insurance to nurses averi Ing 31 hrs per week. Call 336-751- 3535 or apply In person at 1007 Howard St., fvlocksviiie, NC 27028 BEHAVIORAL MODIFICATIONS TECHNICIAN needed; to word part- time, weekends and as needed, 2nd or 3rd shift weekdays. Is guaranteed at least 28 hrs. per week. Responsi­ bilities are to guide youth throuah a planned dally schedule, see that cli­ ents gel to tneir appointments. Re­ sponsible for monitoring youths be­havior and assigning points and us­ ing appropriate behavioral interven­ tion for reinforcing and redirecting behaviors. Must have at least a high school diploma and oneoldipl rience. Fax resume to yearexi 336) 9Й 0039 or caii (336)936-0029 to apply BER M U D A RUN C O UNTRY Club Is accepting applications for summer time employment for pool snack shop, short order cooking experience a plus, 2 shifts available 10am-3pm and 2:30-7pm. Must be able to work weekends. Apply In person, for directions cair998-8155 BURTON’S PRESSURE WASH- ING looking for 2 experienced paint­ ers. Drivers License required. 336- 813-2272, ask for Michael CHURCH SECRETARY/BOOK- KEEPER PART-tlme, wori<lng to­ ward full-time position. Hebron Bap­ tist Church, 175 Hebron Rd. Statesville, NC 28625. Please sub­mit resume Attn. Mr. Clair Repple CNA'S NEEDED CALL 336-372- 5125 or 336-386-8900 DRIVERS NEEDED. CLASS A- CDL. Local runs. Paid Holidays, benefits. Call 998-8700 for an appointment. EXP. MAINTENANCE TECHNI- CIAN r^eeded, must be bl-llngual, for small property, 2yrs. exp. must be HVAC certified, great pay, great benefits. Apply at 800 NorthRldge Court, Mooksvllle EXPERIENCED SHO RT OR- DER cook needed, 5 days a week. B J’s Counlry Food. Call 998-7290 FARM HELP NEEDED. Must be able lo ride young horses. 751 -2771 FINISH CARPENTER NEEDED. If you're not making $50,000 plus a year and own your own tools and truck call 336-813-1577 H a r r is P o o l & S u p p lie s (Ьй«>МсаЬ>киШоо ()pem«t(bing*Vin}l liner ReiiUment Tommy Hiinis/OwntT-Ovcr 20 Yrs, lixp. 277 Plciisimt Acre Dr., M ocksville Horn (336) 284-4817 ^ и 1п м И З З ^^ M a i n t e n a n c e T e c h n i c i a n Qualllled applicants must have 4 yrs. exp. In equipment maintenance with a contractor, manutacturer, or Industrial company. Two year degree and 2 years working exp, will be considered. Experienced In: electronics, nydreullca, FebrlcBtlon, Electrical Mechanical system s, Industrial equipment troubleshooting. Salary DDE Em ail R esum e ATTN: Sh e rry SLon g@ tem p orary resources.com Temporary Resources 751-5179 STEVE IJAMES CARPET CLEANING DISCOVER THE BEAUTY OF YOUR CARPET! • Residential & Commercial ■ Carpet & Upholstery Steam Cleaning ‘ Deodorizing & Soil Guard ■ Water Extraction Service d Q 2 .2 ( % d S fREEESniyiATESW * T ^ Parker R d „ Mocksville Veteran in tlie Business and 45 Year Resident of Davie (3 3 6 ) E m p lo y m e n t FULL TIME COOK needed. Ex­ perience required. Must be very motivated, fast paced, depend­ able and drug free. Will work morning and evening shift. Must work on weekends. Off on Sun­ day. Please apply In person only. No phone calls. Tarheel-Q. NEW HORIZONS ENTER- PRISES 124 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville 27028 EMPLOYMENT SPECIALIST PART-TIME Oblectlve/Skllls Primarily responsible for assisting people with disabilities to obtain and maintain competi­ tive employment In the commu­ nity. Training and task analysis, communicate needs ana progress to VR counselors. Liaison between employers and participants. Requirements Graduation from a 4-year degree In a human sen/ice field; or a 4-year degree and one year experience working with people with disabilities; or graduation from a 2-year associate program designed to prepare support personnel for work in human service agen­ cies and two years experience working with people wilh disabilities. \^lid NCDL. HOURS Part-Time: Mon-Frl. Hours vary. Occasional weekends and holidays as needed. Apply online @ www.arcofstanlync.org An Equal Opportunity Employer NUTRITION PROGRAM COOR- DINATOR part-time position - 9:00am-1:00pm, Mon.-Fri. Man­ age, coordinate and supervise all components of the senior lunch program. Duties Include: Interact wllh caterer to order food, resolve problems, etc; plan and conduct dally activities; prep site, serve meals and clean up from lunch; train ahd schedule volunteers; deliver homebound meals when needed. Training will be provided. Prior exp. In food service helpful, but not required. Must be able to stand on feet for periods of time and lift minimum of 10 pounds. Must have own transportation for use during work time. Must be able to use computers, do basic mathematical calculations and Interact well with seniors and the general public. $9,00/hr. Apply at Davie Co. Senior Service, 622 N. Main St., Mocksvllle. Applications will be received until position Is filled. Davie County Is an equal Opportunity Employer. PART-TIME POSmON for front- desk Sat. and Sun., 3pm-11pm. comfort Inn. Apply in person. /51- 7310 PR O FES S IO N A L DRIVER S W ANTED for flatbed carrier based out of Woodleaf, NC. Must have 2 years verifiable OTR ex- erlence. Class A CDL with good ilVR a must. Starting pay of .35 cpm minimum with tarp, stop, and overnight pay and yearly bonus. Medical insurance also available. Fax resume to 704-278-4709, or contact Curtis E. Kyles Trucking al 2105 Needmore lid. Woodleaf, NC. Phone; 704-278-3532 M' [Driver J U S T D R IV E IT T H A T 'S A L L ! ExpBrience Ihe best driving Job ever. N o touch freight, tarping or dealing w/traliers. O ne oi the nations largest DriveAway C o. is leasing Ind, contractors w/Ciass A & B CDL's to pick up & deliver vehicles to & from all points in the U.S. Must be 23yrs of age. Driving schoot G rads & R etirees W elcom e. Bennett Motor Express local 704-342-1532 B00-3B7-2249 E m p lo y m e n t SEEKING EXPERIENCED MA­ SON, Must be able to lead crew. Also looking for mason helpers. Cali 751-9486 SOCIAL WORKER III, ChlW Place- ment Wori<er -Foster Care. Davie County Dept, of Social Services. The wori<er will be responsible for man­ aging a caseload of foster care chil­ dren - wori<lng toward family reunifi­ cation. Will assume other duties as required. Some on call required. Graduation fn3m a four-year college or university Is required and prefer wori< experience In social wori< or related human services fields. Must have a vehicle available for wori< and have a valid North Carolina drivers license. Submit a completed PD-107 Mllege transcript of th County Dept, of Social Sen/ices, PO Box 517, Mocksville, NC 27028. SUM M ER NANNY NEEDED. Dependable, fun, prefer college student, non-smoker, serfd letter of reference to: Child Care, P.O. Box 2281, Advance, NC 27006 THE IREDELL COUNTY Health Dept, has the following positions available. NC State Application Form PD 107 must be completed for each position of Interest and will be ac­ cepted unlllpositlons are filled. Con­ tact ICHD Personnel /distant at 704-878-5304 for addittonal Inlorma­ tlon. Iredell County does not discrimi­ nate on the basis of race, color, na­ tional origin, sex, religion, age or dis­ ability In employment or the provi­ sion of sen/ices. EOE M/F/H. Public Health Nurse II Multi- Disciplinary Team Position will provide and manage comprehensive health and developmental screening sen/lces In chiiclcare and community sellings; develop policies and procedures; coordinate social worker, PHN1, MOAand contrac­ tual heallh professional; perfonn reporting activities and consuilalon. Must be licensed to practice as an RN In North Carolina. Refer to ICHD position 600417 on application. Medical Office Asslstam Multi Disciplinary Team Position will provide assistance in coordinating site arrangements/ set-up andlollow-up. Will also provide direct health screening sen/lces in childcare centers and at community sites; clerical assistance; home visit lor follow E m p lo y m e n t WILLING TO EDUCATE highly motivated individual for a reward­ ing career in Financial Service. Call 926-4862 for Interview F a rm M a c h in e ry CORRAL PANELS— 100s In stock, 4 color choices plus gal­ vanized; Gates; Hay and Bunk feeders; Priefert Squeeze Chutes; Stall fronts; Stock tanks; Dog kennels; Bale spears; Busnogs: Box blades; Post hole diggers; Aerator; Spreaders and more. NG's largest distributor of livestock equipment. Delivery available. Wright farm Gates, 336-998-8637__________________ F u rn itu re KING PILLOWTOP MATTRESS set, new w/warrantu, can deliver $225.00. 336-442-3506 M ATTRESS & BOX, queen plllowtop mattress set, name brand, new In plastic $150.00 336-992-3930__________________ H o m e s F o r R e n t 10 PLUS A CRES, 3br, 1ba, basement, shop, barn, outbuild­ ings, $775/m o. Owner/broker 751-5628 2BR COOLEEMEE AREA, nice yard, HUD accepted. 336-909- 3452 2br, 1ba - McCullough Rd. Oil heat. $475/mo Call Century 21 Swicegood Wall & .McDaniel 336-751 -2222 ask for Ext. 213 Mon-Frl 8am-5pm or 336-751-5555 Ext. 213 nights & weekends. 2BR, 1BA HOME just oH 601 N. 704-278-1717 3BR, 2BA, REAL nice house for rent, Mocksvllle, fenced yard. $800/mo. plus deposit. Available In June. 940-3643, leave mes­ sage 601N W M. R. Davie area, 2br, 1 ba with central heat and air, on private lot. Includes washer. Z ir, ref., stove, dishwasher, owave. Has outside slorMo bidg with power access. $475/ up. Ability to relate to children and service disciplines are required. High school diploma or GED Hon of a one-year formal training course In medical olflce assisting; or combination of one year of clerical and health related experience; or an equivalent combination of training and experience. Job Order # N(58420112. Refer to ICHD position 600333 on appilcalion. Patient Accounts Lead Worker IV Position will supen/lse the collection of patient account, establish payment plans, verify insurance, and assist In follow-up ol outstanding claims. RMulres high school diploma or GED plus one year of clerical experience. A data entry test will tie given. Job order #N08419819. pfeferto ICHD posltton 600301 on application. [D river I J U S T D R IV E IT T H A T ’S A L L ! Experience Ihe best driving Job ever. N o touch Iraight, tarping or dealing w/trallers. O ne ol the nations largest D riveAw ay Co. is leasing Ind. contractors w/Class A & B CDL's to pick up & deliver vehicles to & from all points In the U.S. Must b e 23yrs of age. Driving schoot G rads S Retirees W elcorrie, Bennett Motor Express local 704-342-1532 BOO-367-2249 mo., 1st and last month rent plus deposit. 492-7634 CLEAN 2BR, house. Call 704- 450-8616 or 704-657-3297 FOR RENT: LIKE new 3BR, 2-1/ 2BA (1 /2 bath In full finished day­ light basement), appliances, heat pump, frash paint, new carpet, large deck, +i- 1 acre lot, in town, no pets, $900/mo., $900 sec. dep. 1yr lease. Call Mary Hendricks 336-940-7077, Pre­ mier Carolina Properties C A S H PAID FO R A N TIQ U ES, PAR TIAL O R W H O LE E S T A T E a C O LLE C TAB LE S, O LD M ETAL T O Y S , AN TIQ U E FU R N ITU RE toll totliur BMMcfc 33»-49t-599t RANDY MILLER &SONS 29S Miller Road •Mocksviiic (336) 284-2826 • Not» pumping Septic Tanks • Skid steer Work Ttencher Work Hauling Sepllc Systemi Footings Loader Work A lle n lio n D riv e rs - J O B S ! J O B S ! J O B S ! N o w H ir i n g f o r t h e s e p o s it io n s • M a t e r i a l H a n d le r s • A s s e m b ly W o r k e r s • M a n u f a c t u r i n g W o r k e r s I s t / 2 n d S h if t s A v a il. Q ualified can didates need: M in. I y r m fg. exp \ o r I yr. ve rifia b le w orl< h is to ry , relial>ie tra n s p o rta tio n , high school d ip lo m a o r e q u iva le n t, able to read ta p e m easure. ’'^ A p p ly D a ily : M o n -T h u rs . 8 :3 0 a m -1 1 :0 0 a m o r 1 :0 0 p m -3 :0 0 p m ' Two Forms of Indcntification needed to apply O w n e r O p e ra to t s. No N Y C or Canada $1,500 Sign on Bonus Home Every Weekend • 86 C PM L/E T e m p o r a r y R e s o u r c e s 751-5179 • 300 Main Street • Paid B ase Plates & Perm its Paid Liability insurance Paid Fuel Taxes Paid Fuel Surcharges M edical & Disability Benefits Available thru True C hoice C o m p a n y D ritH 'rs Solo up to 400/mlle* Л -ii-ùc-Cf-if ☆ Team up to 460/mlle* 1 year O T R exp. rei & G ood M VR L e a s e P u r c h a s e • Lale M odel Equipment ' Z ero Out Program E P E S riìA N S P O U r S Y S 'I'E M (Greensboro, NC) 1-800-948-6766 epestransport.com * '.r:--V..;77 , ' j i D8 ■ D A V IE C O U N T Y E N T E R P R ISE R EC O R D , Thursday, M ay 5,2005 CLASSIFIEDS IMEXPEINSIVE FROFTEABLE H o m e s F o r R e n t H o m e s F o r S a le M o b ile H o m e s /S a le HOWARD REALTY Gena Cline 751-8562 2br, 1ba, Mocksville Hwy 158 $550/mo. 1br, Iba, Mocksville $400/mo. 2br, Iba $450/mo. Mobile Home Lots: Gun Club Rd. $225.00 Daniel Rd. $125.00 MOCKSVILLE-2br, Iba, basement, carport, covered palie )/mo palle $700/1 MOCKSVILLE-ЗЬг, Iba, fenced backyard, сафог! and storage. Available In May $650/mo M0CKSVtLLE-3br. 2ba, deck, 2'Car garage In Charleston Ridge. Available In June $900/mo. MOCKSVILLE-2/ЗЬг, 1ba on 1 ac, basement and 2 car garage $650/mo. MOCKSVILLE- 3br, 2ba, 2 car garage, deck. In Twin Brook. Available In May $900/mo. Pennington & Company 751-9400 O W NER FIN A N C E, $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695 SECTION 8/H U D " W r, brick ranch, basement, remodeled. In country, near 1-40, $695/mo. 704- 630-0695______________________ H o m e s F o r S a le 3 LARGE BEDROOMS, 1-1/2 ba, kltchen/dlnlng room, new heat/alr, plumbing and electrical, some financing available, $59,900. 751-5925 3BRT2BA, RANCH, attached garage, paved drive, deck, dog run, PP, new paint, landscaping, many updates. $128,900. Call Debbie al 336-909-1284 Premier Carolina Properties. A GREAT HOME, 3 large BR, 2BA, living room, dining room, large eat-ln kitchen, den w/ tlre- tlace, ofticB, on over 1 acre, 91,900. 336-712-0163 or 336- 575-2695 BRICK RANCH, APPROX 2013 sf, 4br, 2.5ba, formal living and dining room, w/full basement, 2FP's, 2 car attached garage, 1 car bsmt. garage, central vac. system and much more, acreage, sm. stream, barn, and outbuild­ ing near Hillsdale, Davle Co. Low $170's, 336-940-3551 MOCKSVILLE, 3BR, BRICK; central heat/AC, all wood floors, gas fireplace, front porch, fence backyard, 1/2 acre lot, beautifully landscaped, asking $99,000 OBO. 336-284-2363 O W NER FIN A N C E : $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695__________________ L a n d F o r S ale 4.6 ACRE TRACT In beautiful Deacons Ridge subdivision. Gor­ geous wooded lot. No mobile homes or modular allowed. $51,500. Call Kathi Wall at 909- 1726. Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel APPROXIMATELY 125 ACRES farmland, Wvo Rd., Farmington area, totally fenced, 5 ponds and creek access. Contact 765-0913 or 766-5481 YADKIN CO., NICE large lots, singlewides and doublewides, owner financing. Brown Osborne, 336-838-4590__________________ M is c e lla n e o u s EXTENDED STAY RATES avail­ able. Call the Comfort Inn, Mocksvilie. 336-751-7310 FOR SALE; UTILITY trailers, 1- 5x8 ft. - $400. 1-5x10 ft.- $450. Call Kennelh 998-3224 FREE: USED GALVANIZE roof- Ing. For Sale; 2 row cultivator $100.00 OBO. 998-8936 HONDA EB 11000 generator with wheel Kit, 2 yrs. old, like new condition, 68 hrs. $3200. Call 336-886-3235 LINDA’S SUN AND Shade Pe- rennials, 898 Junction Rd. 336- 492-5855 NEW CHANDELIER, VALUE $450, sell for $275.284-6402 Mobile Homes/Rent 1 BR COTTAGE IN country, large yard, storage building, no pets, sln|^es or couples only. 336-284- 3BR MOBILE home , Shady Acres Mobile Home Park, John Crotts Rd. Hwy 64E. 998-8276 or 998-8222 ADVANCE- 3BR, 2BA singiewlde plus extra room, 1.5 ao fenced for 1 horse, outbldgs $700/mo. Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Realty 998-8900 LARGE MOBILE HOME and small mobile home, private lots, nonets. Deposit required,,998-> , LARGE SINGLEWIDE FOR rent, 2br, 2ba located Davie/Yadkin line, 20 mln. from Winston-Sa- lem, 15 mln. from Mocksville. No small children because ol pond 7 s f sloo^' for Steve. FLEETWOOD HOMES OF Wln- slon-Salem Is a factory autho­ rized dealer. W e can beat anybody's prices. 336-767-3900 MUST SELL 3BR, 2ba ranch true modular, set on your land; $84,900, value at $110,000. Call 1-800-672-9223 OWNER WILL FINANCE 2br ,2ba mobile home, country set- ting, $550/mo. 961-2777 M o to rc y c le s KAWASAKI VULCAN 7501994, 3,000 miles, like new, adult driven. 704-546-7322 after 6pm __________P e ts _________ BALL PYTHON ENCLOSURE and everything included, 4 yrs. old. Best offer. Call Jeff 492-7947 R V /M o to r H o m e FIREFIGHTER. NO EXPERI 1994 DUTCHMAN 32FT. pull be­ hind camper. Sleeps 6. $6000 OBO. 336-751-0575 1999 C O A CHM AN POP-up.Sleeps six, AC, awning, porta- potti, front storage, ex. condition. $3400. 336-492-2918 B ER M U D A RUN CO UNTRY club i.s accepting applications for gart-tlme valets, Thursday and aturday 5 until 10pm, clean driv­ ing history required. Apply within, call 998-8155 for directions S e rv ic e B & D DESIGN & CONSTRUC­ TIONYOUR COMPLETE HOME IMPROVEMENT COMPANY WE WORK TO MEET YOUR BUDGET Specializing in additions, renova­ tions, baths, kitchens, custom cabinetry, windows, siding, decks, masonry, stone & tlie work, light painting and small re­ pairs. Call Brian Darcy 336-751-4212 for prompt, reliable, workman­ ship. References available. Free slirrEstimates. B. M YERS LANDSCAPING , specializing In "Rubber Mulch" mowing, will take care ol ail your landscaping needs. Free estl- or 336-406-1981, ask m s c o R v e k MINI-STORAGE For all your storace needs, choose us! Come by io inquire about free rental. 2975 Hwy. 64 E in Fork C o U to d o iji (336) 998-8810 READY TO MOVE in 2br, 1ba, private lot, $450/mo. 751-1218or 704-872-3367__________________ M o b ile H o m e s /S a ie 2BR, 2BA, S W , excellent condi­ tion, $1500 down, $260.mo. Available now, call 336-995-4599 .SuinnuT l.ifi'KUiinl Nmled Small Neighborhood Pool seeks Certified Ufoguard. Musi be mature, dependable, trustworthy and able to work under minimal supervision. 3-5 years Llleguarding experlerioe necessary. References and Drug testing required. Send resume, foleronces and salary history/ requirements to: Pool Manager P.O. Box 864 Clemmons, NC 27012 or email toi (nahausOmsn.com mates, (336) 492-6385-home or (336) 399-4364-cell E.J. LAW N C ARE, mowing, weedeatlng, trimming hedges. Free estimates. 336-284-6120 GARAGE DOOfTREPAIRS & ■ALL ELEOTHIC. OPENEfaS.nr CALL MR. ED 336-998-2336 HOME MEDIC home repairs founcfatlon to roof. Vinyl siding, rock, masonry, foundation repairs, gutter discharges, fences, metal roofs, hauling, Free Estimates. Richard Cline 336-682-4237 LAWN MOWER SERVICE and Repair. Pick-up and Delivery. Will buy lawnmowers In need of re­ pair. 751-5474 LAW N M O W IN G , WEEDEATING, clean-up. 492- 7671 V e iiic le s 1995 CHRYSLAR NEW Yorker, excellent condition, $3500. Call !'!5lT5aoi I 1997 MERCURY GRAND Mar- quis GS, keyless entry, cassette, all power, aulo, cruise. Good con­ dllion $5995.336-751-2000 2000 W H ITE W INDSTAR mlnlvan, exc. condition, 89K miles, ac/power window/door locks, am/lm/cd, cruise, tilt, new tires. $6800. Call 492-7549 or 751-6534 2002 TO YO TA C ELIC A Gt. loaded 5-speed, blue, 54,000 miles, $15,500 negotiable. Call 336-692-7834 WILL PAY CASH for junk cars. 336-407-8283 A U C T I O NSATURDAY, May 7, 2005 • 10:00 AM AISTIQUES - COLLECTIBLES - FURNrfURE Personal Property ol Tod Weont III (Massive LKetlme Colloction ol Theodore F. Weant Jr. DOS (deceased) 1707 N. Main Slroel, Salisbury, NC 28144 OlrictlORs: From Mocksvllli, NC; Jtkt Hwy U l kntb; Oo ont Coliwbo Collifli: Tuni lilt oa MiHItt «Olii Oo Uin 2 Irilllo llikw T«™ Ilikl oa CI>Ì HooM Mi<i Tmi lott on ll. Main llnol; oil. 0« ilgm 011707 ». Molo ttraol («ddllloul pirtl.| o> iMo oliMb) 1 1930s Deniisi Ctuirs: Slnoer Portable Qullleis Oell(jM Swiino MacWw, Bieik-Fionls; MMUI Tiii-iop Collce Tsblo; Hijb Ctuir; Vinlage Tut» Raiios: Floor lamps: Cbalkwat»' Erumetato; Coca-Cola Sion; Vinlage Kitchen Utensils g tW W M It/rtin iIB i Koinei Lauqhlin: llail; McCoy: Lelton: llapcowais: Haewr: Viking Glass’g tW « M m n im iH o in e i Lauqhlin: llail: McCoy: Lelti auwnce: fioseviliriluil, Cape Cod: Blue Wiiiow: Knowles: I laRelne (Ganuny) Ctiina, Rosenlliale (Germany) China: Royal Ci il: Old Creamer/Sugar, Curlier S Ives China: Japan: FireKlng. ....................... ■ ....... ‘ s:Sli ression: M élíoií’ Co w S ii BÖ*i; ibard (Germany) China; Sloneware _ Desks: Ctoiis: Wictei Love Seat: \Neto Chairs: ...... raîs K u rb le Base: Table lamps^WopdmOcei Table Umps:_boubie Pedesül DiniSg including Tàülqv.<iciat(s. 4-Posie< Kii Ingcf Sewino Machine; Floor Lamps --------amps. Wooden Oc« Table Lamps: Double PedesUI Dining SiM Waleitied.^Oak Fool Board: BunV Beds w/ladder: Double Beds: lion Beds: Roliipp Desk, Slools: Baby Chair; Óid''Tabìes;'CÓÌlM Т а Ы в ,'Ш 1 й У Ж ш Dressers: ChesI ol Dia«crs; Rodiing Clulis: Bookcase; CMna Cablnels' Much moie Vinlam Furnllurg Р О и Ш Н Ш : Pepsl'Cola Pocket Knile: Case Pocket Knives: Barlow Pocket Knives: Ш Cameras: Eoileclion ol Brasswaie, Silver and Sivlei-pMed Items: 60s t if f and WOK Magailnes, Vinlage Melai Trucks, Vintage Dolls, Vinlage Metal Dotlhouse: Old Ideal Doll: Madame ler -Cissy' Doll, Melai lunch Вода: Vintage Pull Toys; Romeo Showtxat Puppet; Woodei\ Toys; IV Pal Uke; TInv German Dolls: Doll Cabinet Dominos: Radio Fiver Wagon; OW Glr'^MBffiSU Did Guilais: PMlabie Phonograph: Tripoa Music Stands: Esiey ElectIds: EsIey Electilc Oigan: Yamaha cuonic Keyboard, Big Band/Swing (fecoid Albums; Large Assi Reco'ids'i Alburns;’ 45 rpm Records: Music Books: vintage Sheet Music m Besetei Developei: Figurines: Cast Iron; Ward Cast Iron Skillet: DII lamp; »‘Kks; Tools: Trampoline; W ndM A/C Units, Gas IW tr: Weight Bench; Metal lawn Furnituie: Braided Rug: Sharp Microwave; Misc. Pots and Pans: Pressure Canner; Ctirlslmas; AoGUeooon Noto; Im i ii i grui oppoflunifir to pick № wma e,c*llfnl ilemi lor colteclwi dI a »kIq variety ol vinjin tU fil {TLVS 111,1 tmnce M iAJ Ki,oui PJiftg yourlj„n tluirind pijn lo spend irw lljy nUM Of tMf'. Cas?*oi IpJro^S heck. Ho b m i? *p fflu n y ^ lj^ w is sold as Is, where Is, Auctioneer is nol responsible lor any discrepancies or Inacctiracies in advertising. Hot responsible lot loss ot accident M a e iiK tm n to « • u ls day la k t (irtc iiilM c i o n i say prtvloin u a o m c M iiiits « prlB lnl m tlw la l. AU CT IO N EER: Roy F. Wrleht N E A L 2120 150 Gateway Lane* Advance, NC 27000 ___________________336-99B-8637 for listing & color pictures, please visit ^ v t L \ y ,v o r k a u c tio n .c o iii ^ • NO lUYER'S PREMIUM • A u c t io nSaturday, May 7 M ic h a e l E llis 10am (Mr. EIK.S Is .sclliiift hl.s home and has bought a hlRh>rlse loft In AHzonu) he h a j lived in C hicago & N ew Orleans and uavcled in Europe obialm ng a lo i o f Uiesc fine jtc n u before lie m oved hack lo his hom e tow n in C ool S pring, N.C . 2164 Hawks Road****Statesville, N.C. (F n m Siairn ille. N .C. . lale N O East la Hw y. 64 (exit tl6 2 A Cool Spring fAii). then Hw y. 64 lowani Cool Spring. S .C . fo r miles, then Right on C w l Spring M 02163 fo r + / - /1/2 miles to H a w h Rtl. Auction on the Leji.} 8 pi. vcmni S ifilinj ITii«* jreby Kiik A Son 70 ro , • g pi. K iiin| WnJi»ooJ Hlue Siam China v*/«ivins nci • Msjolica U fiiiR fji»i »(nherMijolH.*iicmi • || in. Cifni»«l Vue“ I'unellidT^ccinink" ifccn • pf. SumrnUhire IX)«» (Kcnii • 8 pl. «lU n|Cr)»ul t-klKil Sui Sicmy.»« • jw. WjtttfonlCawJleuicki • Hnmw l'«io Statue • It) ” Hummel • ♦/. 12 Huirunclt • Siiadiiofilihire a iU ’i Dmicr WOt • lleiuy Etched Uatkei • ft pc. W China Chmimit Dellt • K «)il rXwIum 07« Old OiIUmw SeUer) • R.»y»l DuulMm 12 D jj. of ChriumaiCioblm • Silver Readed Purw* 17 Jewel Ook) h*:kei Wauh ♦.I’lirctUin PlateK Bimh. A fni. • SuffonJUiire Mile* * Olauware ‘ 5 Yellow Illiittoin Mull Elowl • l4T|c Enamel Cnifec P » i * McCoy llinien • Sicveni 20 ja. Shoigun Mahi>j. Secrttary ntnikea^e • Eatlc tiourhon Cabinet • .10»77 OU« Curio Sh«*cavc • nice Coffe« Table A Kniraiwe Table • H«*etiy» 0»er-.Siuffcd Mifa & O uif • Uaihcf Chair • 3 pc. Cheny m(»Jcm UcUniom Suite • 4 pe. Pine tall hnier OeUfixim Suite • 2 ke C r e a m A Chair» • W»l. Caned Ro»« Uack VkL I^Wina Rotler • 4 Chnime Dinette Chain • Enteminmeni Center Oiienta) -I’»*', 4'»7*, & When)' 2 nice iinmlmMher’t Mower OanienQuilit 'Country(Julltt • U c t Tablecloth (M “i|00") • Tapettriei • IJneni * An Wutk (oiU. • & engra*fd print». 22 new Mimm) Many Other Items *** Lunch Available ♦♦♦ RestroomYork Auction & Realty 356 Fox Hunter Road Harmony, N.C. 28634 704-546-2696 or 704-929-9311 cell «••• ncatm •••• notice of upcoming auction for IL'iling & color plclurcs, please visit^vpv.vorkauction.coniA • NQ lUVIH'S PREMIUM •A u c t io n Saturday, May 14 @ 10am for Sam & Virginia B. Daywalt-estate (d«ca«d) 1732 Davie Academy Rd.***Mocksville, NC A R iding Law n M ow ers • • ’85 Pord Konger Pickup. 4x4 • • g txx l Horse D raw n C ole C om Planler • • good N.M . m od. 200 M anure Spreader • • J.D . side d elivery !la y Rukc • • S htip A Yard Tools • • C herry D ining R oom S uilc (H em hardt) • • J pc. M (hI, Bedroom S uiic • • 3 pc. Pine Poster m od. Bedroi>m Suite • • other clcftti I louw hoU l ru m itm c • • o h l T oys • • Antiques * * C o lle c tih le i * * Household & K itchen Item s sec ncM w eek’» paper for UsUng • • • • caU fo r M o r v itil yarns’.vorkauction.com York Auction & Realty 356 Fox Hunltr Road Uoiraony, N.C. 286M 704-546-2696 or 704-929-9311 cell •••• ncalt74 •••• S e rv ic e MAROARET'S HOME CLEAN- INQ Service, there's no Job too small or too large. Free esti­ mates, references If needed. 940- 2633 POWER WASHING HOUSES, driveways, sidewalks, decks, and RV's. For free estimates call Pro Clean Power Washing at 462- 7240 tO M BERLIN’S LAWN CARE & Handyman Services. All types of lawncare and handyman ser­ vices, mowing and weedeatlng, bushhogging & trimming trees and busnes, plugging, seeding, fertilizing, leaf removal, mulching, pine needles. Call Brent for free estimate (residential and com­ mercial services) Home phone 492-5424 H/loblle 391-2266. S ta te w id e W a n te d Y a rd S a le s LIFE COMMUNITY CHURCH Is ENCE necessary. Paid training with excellent benefits. High school diploma, good physical condition, ages 17-34. Call 1- 800-662-7231. Local Interview available. IRS AUCTION: PUBLIC wel- come. May 11, 2005, Greens­ boro, NC. Business Liquidation Including machine tools, furniture, fork lift, 07 Ford F-150,200+ lots. www.uslreas.gov/auctlons/lrs or Mike Harper 843-414-1405 LEARN TO DRIVE. Jobs avall- able In your area. 16 day CDL training. Earn $740-$840 weekly, highest job placement. 100% tl- nanclng. Lodging Included. 1- 800-398-9908 STEEL BUILDINGS. NOW sell- Ing limited number of discounted buildings to be used as displays. Call now for free details and friendly sen/lcel 1-800-405-7501 YOUR CLASSIFIED COULD be reaching over 1.6 Million homes across North Carollnal Place an ad with our paper for publication on the NC Statewide Classified Ad Network- 117 NC Newspa­ pers for a low cost of $300 for 25- word ad to appear in each paperl Additional words are $10 each. The whole state at your fingertlpsl It’s a smart advertising buyl (Jail us for more information or visit the N.C. Press Association’s website at www.ncpre5s.com ministry i the Kingdom of God. Please con­ tact 753-5433 with any Informa­tion you may have lo assist us. PRIVATE COLLECTOR BUYS coins and collections. Call for ap­ pointment. 753-0986 fin/IBER WANTED, pine or hani- wood. We select cut or clear cut. 8 acres or more. Shaver Wood Prod­ ucts, Inc. 704-278-9291. Night 704- 278-4433 or 828-430-8860 Y a rd S a ie s 3 FAMILY YARD sale, Friday & Sat­ urday, B:00-2;00,2 miles past 1-40, 601 North, Left, watch for signs, free coffee, doughnuts. New knives, light­ ers, dolphin clocks and lights, dolls, chest what nots, fountains, Jesus i, used clothes, of new and used for humidifier and Saturday shoes, ail kli junk. Drawing bride doll, 2;00 3 FAMILY YARD sale. Sat. May 7, 6am-12noon, Rocky Dale Ln. (off Farmington Rd.) Furniture, antiques, clothing 3 FAMILY YARD sale. Baby Items, clothes and equipment, household Items, etc. 837 Turkeyfoot Rd. Mocksville, Sal. May 7th 8am. 492-5622 514 S. M AIN St., Mocksville, 8am-untll. Saturday, May 7th. Lawnmower, grill, dryer, BR suite. clothing, housel misc. items.Items, and ASHLEY'S ANTIQUS & GIFTS Countywide antique and yard CORNER OF 801 and 601 Soulh of Mocksville. Spaces for rent- Flea Market/Yard Sale. Starting May 21, 2005. Large lot, plenty of parking. Call to reserve your space. Contact Jan at 284-4425 FRI. AND SAT. Hickory Hill, 230 Pine Valley Rd. 2 seater bike, baby clothes, and toys and fam­ ily items FRI. AND SAT. May 6 & 7 ,8am- 5pm, rain or shine. Large 2 fam­ ily, lots of misc. some antiques, some household furniture, older 12ga. shotguns. 132 Klunie Rd. FRI. MAY 6 7am and Saturday May 7, 7am-untll, Home of Nell Cope, 3400 US Hwy 601 S. Home decor, custom made window treatments, computer, lamps, etc. FRI. MAY 6TH 4-8pm, Sal. 7th 8-12. 3928 Wyo Rd. at Taber­nacle behind church. Lots of mer­ chandise, cheap prices GARAGE SALE FRI. 8-5, Sat. 8- 2.916 Hardison St. 91h house on right past South Davie Middle School. Clothes, Infant through adult, furniture, lamps, bed­ spread, curtains and lots more. GARAGE/YARD SALE, SAT. May 7,8-12pm. Baby crlb/chang- Ing table, baby equipment, dryer, tons of girls clothing (0-3t, 6x-10) namebrand ladles/men clothing, new Pampered Chef and Prin­ cess House, bed linens, video, CD's, lots off cels. 1420 i house on rlglit past Armory, watch for signsll HUGE MULTI-FAMILY . Fuml- if great stuff I Raincan- Hwy 64E, 3rd brick sale. Rowan County Fa'ir- y,NCN jm-4pm. 704-633-9238, over 400 booths grounds, Salisbury, N6 May 14, 200'-" — " • ■005 8am-4pm. Spaces fpr rent Creek R Í) ture, area rugs, housewares, dog pen. Sat. May 7th, 8am-until. 157 Tulip Magnolia Dr. (off Peoples last November BIG SIX FAMILY yard sale, Sat. May 7th, Sunset Dr., 8:00-untll. Books, clothes, household, toys and much more. Rain or shine. BIG YARD SALE 2522 Hwy 64W just before Lake Myers. BIG YARD SALEI Fri. 8-6 and Sat. 8-12. Entertainment Center, night stands, headboard, straiier, playpen, car seat, activity saucer, jump-a-roo, video center, toys, lots of infant clothes, childrens to adult clothes, househoW Items and tots morel Hwy 601N to Liberty Church Rd. then 1 mile on left. CAROLYN’S COLLECTIBLESirwij™2076 Hwy 601 South ........... ^ ’ Mocksvilie, NC 27028 ' (336-751-6252) Barbies, Beanies, Furniture and Gifts HUGE YARD SALE. Saturday Only May 14th. Prime Sirloin parking lot. Something for every- onell Baby items, kid’s toys, clothes, small appliances, house­ hold furniture, plants and more! All proceeds benefit youth schol­ arships to Hidden Meadows Christian Youth Ranch. Dona­ tions are appreciated and tax deductible. Gall 336-492-2308 MAY 7TH 8AM, kids clothes, lur- niture, lawn mower. WIndemere Farms off of Beauchamp Rd. MOTHERS DAY SALE DEE’S ANTIQUES 733 Greenhill Rd.& Dee's Tooli Antiques ;! : 296 Blaise Church Rd. “ Discounts throughout shop. Gift certificates available. Happy Mother’s Dayll Ken Snow turns the Big “30” D o w n h i l l F r o m H e r e O n - Y o u t h I s G o n e G o t c h a B a c k ! Love, Peggy K E IT H J. P IE R C E , G RI A U C T I O N G U N S, T R A IN S, AN TIQ U ES, ANTIQUE C LO CK S 1 0 : A M S A T . M A Y 1 4 Owner moving lo Virginia to assisted living home. All items are of the finest quality. No Junk. See our web site al т т ЫягсввигМпп гп^ Location: 190 Roquemore Rd. 'Clemmons West’. Clemmons NC. G UN S + S A F E Moesberg ShMoun. 25 caiibof Beratta. 22 caliber HairingtavRlchardson 0ММ Beretta Model 92FS, Ruger, Maik tl. Pistol, Mossbon, 12 цаао Shoigun, N-|tro Huntor 12 Qago. Winchester Model 67-22 Rifle, fvor Johnson 30 CaBbor rite. PistoJ pormte required. AN TIQ U ES Like вУегуЛд else, In exoollenl condition. Golden oak Larkin'e desk. GokJen oak sideboard (bulfot>. Oak Washstand, Oak coblnel Singer sewtna machlr»Beautiful UpriQhl leoo's Piano, Round oak table 7 0 AN TIQ U E CLOCKS # IFasWoalteSonal Clock Double dial All docks In exceHent oonditkm, TR A IN S AlanlastiotralnlayoUdisptay. FUR N ITUR E CWno cabinet Drop.|eaf labk., Redinef, Computof. Desk. T.V. Fraezef. ReWgeralor Uwvt«iw«&Ailaciwenla,P1uartiore&mofe Temwi Cash, Good check. Visa, MasterCard, 10% buyer preralum AUCTIONEER: K E I T H J . P I E R C E , G R I <33в) 7 3 X -Z 0 0 3 . NCAL # 1 5 4 w w w . p i e r c e a u c t i o n . e : n i n DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,2005 - D9 6 LAÌ5 SSIFIEDS INEXREMSrWB p r o f it a b le MULTi¥aRfil^Pte9novinn Y a rd S a ie s jasement sale. Furniture, tools, appliances, etc. Rain or shine. Sat. May 7, 7am-1pm. From Mocksville, 1-40 West exit 162, turn left, 1st road to left, 2nd house on left. 269 Campground Rd. MULTI-FAMILY YARD sale, FrE and Sat. May 6 & 7,6924 Harper Valley Ln. off Harper Rd. 7am- 1pm. Rain or Shine. First time sale. Antiques, crystal stemware, silver plate, prints, lewe’ kets, golf clubs, baby ewelry, bas- baby items, Christmas. Slop here Firstl NO W HEN : SATURDAY MAY 7, 2005, Time: 7:00am til 12noon. W here; 260 Sunburst Ln., Cooleemee, NC Selections include: Boys clothing (newborn to size 6 regular), girls clothing (size 6 lo size 12), boys and girls junior clothing, men's clothing (casual wear), women’s clothing(casual wear, business attire, and dresses), household items (accessories), yard Items (accessories), toys (Infant, pre- school, and ages 6 to 7 Infant and preschool JUNK. booksbikes SAT. MAY 7 ,7am-12. Rain can­ cels. Girls clothes sz. 7/8,9/10, 12, name brand, household, kitchen items, toys, dolls, 601N Danner Rd. 271 Pepperslone. SAT. MAY 7TH, 134 Old Course Dr., Oak Valley off Seay. Toys, baby Items, many more Items. 998-7678 SAT. MAY 7TH, 7am-1pm. 752 Duke Whitaker Rd. Lg. teapot collection and many otiier items. SAT. MAY 7TH, 8-12, Redland W ay, A dvance. Household Items, toys, toddler bed, girls clothes, adult and Infant size 14, something for everyone. Ralndate May 14 SATURDAY MAY 7TH, 7:30 un- tll 1:00. Clothes, outdoor stuff, household Items and much, much more. Off 801 and Fork Church Rd. on 109 Hunter Trail. Look for signs. SATURDAY, MAY 7,2005 from 8am-1pm at Elbaville United Methodist Church, 2595 Hwy 801S, Advance. Also bake sale and food. TUPPERWARE/WAREHOUSE S A LE , 20-75% off. All new products, discontinued Items. 264 Oak Grove Church Rd. Mocksville, May 7, 9-2pm, 751- 7415 P'boys and girls). Many, many more Items. Children's clothing Include name brands Nike, Cart­ ers, Osh Kosh B'Gosh, and many more. Don't miss this deaiil Di­ rections: turn off Junction Rd. across from Jockey Textiles. The yard sale will be at the fourth house on the right. YARD SALE - multi-family and estate. Numerous Items. Garden and lawn tools, furniture, pictures, clothes, toys, etc. 2061 Junction Rd. In Cooleemee, Sat. May 7, 7am-1pm YARD SALE WEEKEND. 492 Main Church Rd. Little of every­ thing, men’s hunting clothes. 751- 2967 , YARD SALE: MAY 4,5, and 6. Rain or shine. 162 Dogwood Ln. off 1-58. Clothes, curtains, elec­ tric stove, lols of stuff, etc. GARAGE SALE SAT 7am, 123 M eta Breeze Ln. Furniture, PartyUte, candles/holders, lawn equipment, computers, clothes, animal crates__________________ GENE TREXLER ROOFING N aw & Old R oofs Sm all Repair Jobs F ree Estim ates 336-284-4571 F IS H F O R P O N D S T O C K IN G Monday, May 9 Delivery will be: Clemmotiis • Clem m ons Milling Com pany 10-11 a.m., 336-766-6871 To Place An Order Call The Store Above or Call 1-H00-247-; wuiw.fiij-jeysfi.shfiirin.com " = ■ FARLEY & FARLEY FISH FARM Ca.sli,Arkiin.sii.s 72421 ^ s s f e Л/ûw location a» o f A ia y ЗОЫ wißß Oe: 119 D epot Si. M.ociisvU¡ec. NC 27028 (Û û siâ a J ñ e P ñoH O РС асвУ V is it ант cu rrent: a d d r e s s : N C H w y 8 0 1 S . 9 4 0 -5 5 0 1 ^ . Т йа^п св ir'jiorlsj;} S ilT lp .^ Wiiiston-.Sal Ih s W f M a y C l a s s e s & E v e n t s Community Programs DbiMtes Screening— $15 fee An individual consultation with a certified diaisetes educator. Participants get a fin­ gerstick blood glucose test and arc assessed on their risl<s for developing dia- jjetes. This screening is by appointment only. Screenings are held at; Education (k Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 Grove St., Salisbury, Cali (704) 638-1437 for an appointment Of for nnore InfOTmation,________________ Sill Annual Women’s BasebaH Camp Support the Susan G, Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and receive on-field instruction in hitting, fielding and pitching from the manager and players of the ICannapolis Intimidators during Rowan Regional's fifth annual Women’s Baseball Camp. The camp costs $40, or pledges totaling $100 or more and Is limited to women 16 years of age or older. All pro­ ceeds benefit the Komen Foundation. The camp will be held Saturday, June 25 at 9 a.m, at Fleldcrest-Cannon Stadium in Kannapolis. For more infomnation or a regislralion foim, visit www.tcwan.orq or call f704) Educational Programs ComiirehensivB Diabetes Classes Small group classes and individual instruc­ tion are offered on a weekly basis to help master the skills and concepts for the con­ trol of diabetes. These classes have a fee, which is covered by most insurance plans. All classes are held at the Salisbury City Park Recreation Center, 316 Lake Drive in Salisbury. Diabetes classcs will be offered on the following dates, and you miist attend all three sessions: May 10, 17 and 24 • 9 - 11 a.m. May 18,25 and June 1*1-3 p.m. Call 1704) 638-1437 for mens information, Oonna^ Artaiy Usaase EducaUon Class Leam about the risk factors for heart disease and what cardiac rehabilitation options are available. The free class meets the first and third Tiiursday of each month from 9-11 a.m, in the Cardiac Rehabilitation & Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center Call f704) 21(^5412 for more information. GesMkmainabeles Classes A certified diabetes educator provides a special program for expectant mothers with gestational diabetes. The program includes basic facts, meal planning and home blood glucose monitoring. These classes have a fee, which is covercd by most insurance plans. Gestational diabetes classes will be offered on (he following dales; attend the date of your choice. May 12, 19, 26 • 9-11 a.m., Rowan Regional Education & Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 Grove St,, Salisbury, Call (704) for more Information, Look Good, Feel Belter An American Cancer Society program that teaches cancer patients techniques to address the cosmetic side effects of treatment. Call (704) 8574)614 for an appointment afortnoreinfornnation. Support Groups ADHD Support Group Provides support and education for parents of children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder May 23 • 6i30 p,m,, Salisbuiy Pediatric Associates, 129 Woodson St,, Salisbury. Call 1704) 636-5576 for more infomiation. AWAKE (Alert, Well And Keeping Energetic) Provides a social and educational forum for anyone with a sleeping disorder. Call the Sleep Medicine Center of Salisbury at (TM) 637-1533 fOT meeting intoimalion. Better BreatMig Chib Offers members and guests the opportu­ nity to leam about breathing disorders. May 11 • 1 p.m,, Rufty-Holmes Senior Center, 1120 S. Boundary St., Salisbury. Call (704) 2IO-5343 for rrore information. Women’s Health All classes meet in the Women's Health Center, 3rd floor, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 210-5544 to register or for more information. BlgBnMnr/BlgSlsler Siblings, too, have to adjust to a new role when the baby arrives. This class helps prepare them for the arrival of a new brother or sister. It includes a tour of the maternity center and a visit to our newborn nursery. May 9 * 4-5 p.m._________________ ^h'; Getting Ready tbr Baby Pi№Admisslon Class This class prepares new parents for what to expect prior to delivery. Learn'the signs of pre-term labor; know when to come to the hospital/ and review important policy and registration infoimation. Classes are offered every Tuesday at 3 p.m. New mothers need to sign up for the one-time class between the 22nd and 28th week of their pregnancy. There is no charge for the class, but space is limited. Every 3rd Wednesday of the month, this class will be offered in Spanish._____ E x te n d e d H o u r s The Imaging Center al Rowan Regional Medical Park offers extended hours for all radiology services. Monday - Thursday: 7:30 a,m, - 7 p.m. Friday - 7:30 a.m, - 5 p.m. New MRI extended hours: Monday - niursday - 8 a.m. - 7 p.m. Friday - 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. The Medical Park is located on Julian Road, Exit 74, off 1-85. Canliac Support Gnwp Provides support and education for cardiac latients, people who are at high risk for leart disease and their families. This group meets the third Tuesday of the month during Febmary, June and September • 6 p.m., CardiacRehabilitation & Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 210Æ412 for more information. Colon iCaioer Support Group Offers support and education for people with colon cancer and colon cancer survivors. May 17 • 7 p.m,, Library at St, John's Lutheran Church, 200 W. Innes St., Salisbury. Call (704) 637-1093 for more information. Coping wWi Grief Support Group Provides support for those dealing with the loss of a loved one. Sponsored by Rowan Regional Home Health & Hospice, Day and evening support groups are available. Call (704) 637-7645 for more information. Epiepsy Support Group Provides support and education for people with epilepsy and their families. May 12*7 p,m,. First Ministry Center (fonnerYMCA Building), 220 N, Failton St., Salisbuty. Call (704) 638-8664 for more information. Prostate Cancer Support Group Offers support and education for people with prostate cancer and prostate cancer survivors. May 19 • 6 p,m,, Cardiac Rehabilitation 8t Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Cail(704)63»<l942or (704) 210Æ104 for more information. RSDS Support Group (Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome) Offers support and education for people with Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome, a chronic neurological disease marked by constant pain. May 9*7 p.m,. Cafeteria Conference Room, Rowan Regional Medical Center Call (704) 637-1021 fa mae Infonralion, Weight Loss Support (knup Provides support and education for people who have had or are contemplating hav­ ing gastric bypass surgery as a way to lose weight. May 12*7 p,m.. Women's Health Center, 3rd floor, Rowan Regional Medical Center Call (704) 637-8618 fa rnae inforrriatiqn. Rowan Regional Medical Center offers a variety of health and wellness education ' classes. For more information or lo register for any classes or support groups, ^ ^ call (704) 210-5000. ROWAN K lC IO N A l, 6 1 2 M o c k s v ille A v e n u e , S a lis b u ry , N o rtti C a ro lin a 2 8 1 4 4 '' w w w .ro w a n .o rg Blood Pressure Clinic Every Wednesday from 9 a.m. - noon, a free blood pressure clinic is held in the main lobby of Rowan Regional Medical Center. Volunteer nurses cpnduct the'clinic. Free parking is provided in the medical centei^s parking garage on Hendei^on Street. N u r s e - O n - D u ty For routine, non-emergency medical problems or for answers to your medical questions, call Nurse-On-Duty 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It’sfr^e. 1-800-33& 4921 h . fi y D10 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 5,200S A d u lt s C la s s e s U p c o m i n g A t D a v ie C a m p u s The Davie Campus of Davidson Counly Community College will offer the following classes beginning May 17. For more information, call 751- 2885. Arc Welding This course is on introduction to the principles of arc welding. Students will operate equipment. Studies will be made of heat ranges, polarities, and flux- coaled electrodes. Welding will be performed on mild steel in flat, horizontali and vertical positions. Safety will be empha­ sized throughout the course in use oftools and equipment. $60, M ay 3 1 -Sept. 29 T. П ., 6-9 p.m., 102 hours, In s lru c lo r: Jim M arcellalnsurance: $1.25. Conversational Spanish To enhance productivity, safety and Ihe quality of the workplace environment, En- glish-speaking personnel need to be able to communicate wilh Hispanic associates. Instruction is tailored to individual work­ place situations. Cultural differ­ ences are explained. Partici­ pants, bring a list of industry specific phrases, questions or commands. Bank o f the Caro- linas-A dvance, $55, June 7- July 19, Т., 6-9 p.m., 21 hours, In s tru c to r: M ere dith Perez, TRCs;2.1. Fundamentals of Investing Course covers common roadblocks to financial success as well as keys to success. Risk and cash management, retire­ ment and college planning, stock market terminology are covered. Guideline on how lo find stocks right for you. M ay 19, Th., 6-8 p.т., 2 hours, Instructor: Brenda Battle; also June 7, T, 11:30a.m- 1 p.m., 1.5 hours. Instructor: Brenda Battle, M a te ria ls Fee: $10. Retirement Plans That Work for Your Business Do you want to enhance ben­ efits to your employees? Have you considered retirement plans too costly? Leam about many options an employer con offer. M a yl7 ,T ,ll:3 0 a .m .-lp .m .,1 .5 hours. In s tru c to r: B renda B attle , M a ls ria ls Fee: $10. Lunch w ill be provided. Also: June 9, Th, 6-8 p.m., 2 hours, Instructor: Brenda Battle. Building Level II Standard Inspection Course This course fulfills the Code Officials Qualification Board’s prescribed training course to gain admission to the qualifying examination for a Standard Cer­ tificate at Level II (inspecting up lo 60,000 sq. ft. at one stbry, or four stories at 20,000 sq. ft.) or Level ¡.Participants should become familiar with the applicable code sections. $60, June 10-19,F, Sat, Sun, 8 a.m.-S p.m., 40 hours. In s tru c to r: W illiam W haley Computer Skills For the Beginner For the new computer user, this course will introduce com­ puters, computer terminology, differences between hardware and software, basic mouse applications, and some functions using Windows and file management. 555, June 8-Jidy 20, W, 6 -9 p.m ., 21 hours. In s tru c to r: P a u l W ylie, Technology Fee: $5TRCs: 2.1. Microsoft Windows Students leant to load soft­ ware, manipulóte the mouse and desktop, monoge files, work in multiple windows, and switch from program to program. Copy, move, delete, and other functions will be explained. This course may bc taught using Windows NT computers. Students will need a 3.5” high- density disk. Pre-requisite: Basic Computer Skills or equivalent experience. $55, June 6-July 25, M , 6-9 p.m., 21 hours. Instructor: P aul Wylie, Textbook: A p p ro x $37, Technology Fee; h ,T R C s: 2.1 Intermediate Excel Leam more of the capabil­ ities of Excel, using advonced formulas, conditional formatting and data tools. Work with graphic objects, changing num­ ber formatting, freezing .titles, moving between worksheets, and more,' Pre-requisite: a beginning Excel course oi- comparable experience. $55, M ay 21-Jim e 18, Sat, 8-1, 25 hours. In s tru c to r: A very Barber, Textbook: Approx. $45, Technology Fee: $5, TRCs: 2.5. MS Word This word processing course teaches document creation, formatting and editing functions. Style anangements will also be covered. This course is nol for beginners and requires key­ boarding and mouse experience and proficiency in Windows. This is a self-supporting class; all students will pay the registration fee. A 3.5” high- density disk will bc needed. $55, M ay 18-June 22, W, 9 a.m.-noon, 18 hours. In stru ctor: Valerie Slogick TRCs: 1.8. MS Word: Introduction Tliis word processing course teaches document creation (letters, memos, tables, charts, reports), and formatting ond editing functions (centering, underlining, fonts, pagination, spell/grommar check, morgins, spacing). Participants should have keyboarding experience and familiarity wilh Windows. Students need lo bring a 3.5" high-density disk. $60,M ay 19- July 28, Th, 6-9 p.m., 33 hours. In s tru c to r: S taff, Textbook: Approx. $20Technology Fee: $ 5 ,TRCs: 3.3. Cooking for Father’s Day Cook for Dad and Grandpa after learning about great sand­ wiches easy to eat before the golf game. Get ready for advanced cooking with wild gome, duck ond salmon. This class is recom­ mended for those already comfortable in the kitchen. Bring 0 cutting board, knife, and opron. This is 0 self-supporting course, and fees will be charged to all students. $20 J u n e 7, T, 6 -9 p.m., 3 h o u rs J n s tru c to r: M elissa D a rr M a te ria ls Fee: $15Insurance: $1.25. Learn to Shag - Part I Leorn steps, styles and techniques of the donee. Wear comfortoble flot, smooth bottom shoes or tennis shoes.This is a self-supporting course, and fees will be charged to oil students. $40,M ay31-Jim e28, T. 7-8 p.m., 5 hours, Instructors: Wa­ nda and Johnny Bass, Insurance: $1.25. Guitar for the Beginner This course is designed for individuals wonting lo leom the basics of how to ploy on acoustic guitor. Students will leam hand condition, cords, and basic scales. Students must bring their own guitar. This is a self- supporting course and fees will be chorged to oil students. $55, June 7-July 12, T, 6-8 p.m., 12 hours, In s tru c to r: S taff, Insurance: $1.25. Self-Awareness for Women In Public Places Self-defense is obout survi­ ving 0 situotion where there is о real risk of physical harm. Because a woman can be ottocked any time in any place, attempting lo avoid all danger­ ous situations is unrealistic. Leam to be aware of surround­ ings and how to slay safe. The course is self-supporting, and fees will be charged to oil students. $11, June 20, M , 7-9 p.m., 2 hours, Instnicior; A. J. Farmer. Women Defending Ourselves All Women live wilh a cerloin level of risk of violent crime. Leam the basic rules of self- defense and how not to bccome a victim. Give yourself the best chance possible to defend yourself. This course is suitable for adult women of all ages and sizes.lt is self-supporting, and fees will be charged to oil students. $18,June8-15, W, 7-9 p.m., 4 hours. Instructor: A J . Farm er Insurance: $1.25. ’ 7 Í .....If'” ' 4.. -, ^ n f Ш Ш Щ Ё v : r ■■ < ' Ц Щ г ncè I . . / ' ' i■ » « « « "№ Ь ^ .'Л - ivV. r, $ ) ж : WtH'ihe technology lAdpereoimel available atRowan Regional Medical Cenl^^^^ , a ifrqkq i^ ’t what it liaed to be. We have the fi«t Certified Stroke Center in the reg^p^ | 1 ' , j^d if yoti can recognib» the symptoiiM of stroke quiddy.Md get here v^lhiritkeehou^ , ro w a n RiEGIONAL 1 yoii cb^d {^atiy diminish the effects of a stroke. team of clinical experts Is right here MEDICAL CENTEJll' i' i 24/7, ready to give yoa the finest treatment available. Anywhere. 8ПЮ1Ш SYMPTOMS ^udden difficulty walking, dva^iteis, ( Sudden blurred vhion in one i Sudden weakness of the face, arm or le§, ' iNTLime ' ’ ftpteiaUyonone side ofthe body. , t: \. Suddm difficulty speaking or confusion, г Sudâaisevereheadàchew ithnoknoim cam ^'ÿié^^yj.^' ^ V, li* VOU EXmiENCK one on MORU ОГ'тККК symptoms, CAI,L 9lt AND Gtrr IMMEDlíVi’íiLVÍ • л*.» í<rfb&íiA4 /V \ Healthy and Inexpensive Meals Leam to prepare healthy & inexpensive meals by cross utilization of ingredients. Menu planning, meal preparations, and healthy cooking methods will be covered. Bring on apron, knife and 0 cutting board, This is о self-supporting course, and fees will be charged to all students. $20,M ay 17, T, 6-9 p .m ., 3 hours. Instructor: M elissa Darr, M aterials Fee: $15Jnsurance: $1.25. Mosaic Stepping Stone Course ' In this 8-hour creative, hands-on course you will create 0 mosoic stepping stone using cut pieces of decorative glass. Receive instruction as you create your own unique colorful project. Supplies are included. Students will need lo bring sofcly glasses, scissors, and a pencil. This is о self-supporting course, and fees will be charged lo all participants. $50, M ay 21-22, Sat, Sun, Instructor: Jan Liikei\s, Insu ra n ce ; $1.25, 9 a.m .-l p.m.. Sat, 1-5 p.m.. Sun, 8 hours. Yoga Instruction This six-hour course will introduce you lo the ancient practice of yoga - о woy to relieve stress, increase strength, increose flexibility and relax the body and mind. This is a low impact activity lhat everyone can participate in, regardless of age or physical conditions. Yoga participants of all skill levels ore welcome. Wear loose clothing. This is a self-supporting course, and fees will be charged to all participants. $50, M ay 23-June 27, M , 1:30-2:30p.m., 6 hours, In s tru c to r: V alerie K iser, Insurance: $1.25. Gales Scholarship Open To Cooleemee Residents COOLEEMEE - The Will­ iam R. Gales Scholarship was established by the town in 2004, in memory of William R, Gales, the town’s flrst mayor. Tlie Cooleemee Town Board strongly feels that Ihe future availability of a skilled work­ force depends on affordable education opportunities for all 0 young people, said Dolly Urdanick, town clerk. Scholar­ ships supply funds to help pay for the cost of postsecondary schooling and many students are able to pursue their educa­ tion due to the motivation and scholarship support offered by govemment entities, she said. "Scholarships challenge, en­ courage and give hope to stu­ dents of all socioeconomic backgrounds lo obtain the ben­ efits of a postsecon-dary educa­ tion,” Urdanick said. This $1,000 scholarship is available lo a graduating high school senior or high school graduate who is a resident of Cooleemee and who has been accepted and plans to attend an accredited college, university or technical/community college. The scholarship is awarded, not solely based on merit, but on family financial need, as deter­ mined by the Scholarship Com­ mittee. Application forms and guidelines ore available at Cool­ eemee Town Hall, 7766 NC 801 S. Applications must be tumed in to Ihe town by Friday, May 27 ih order to be considered. The recipient of the scholarship will be chosen by the Town of Cooleemee Scholarship Com­ mittee and will be announced during the regular monthly meeting of the Cooleemee Town Board on 'Hiesday, June 21. The town administers the scholtuship. 40 Soy Power M o c k s v ille E l e m e n t a r y S t u d e n t s L ik e T h e T a s t e O f S o y ‘C h i c k e n ’ N u g g e t s D A V I E C O U N T Y e n t e r p r i /í S e c o r d M r U S P S 149-160 Number 18 Thursday. M ay 12. 2005 40 P A G E S T ild e n C a r te r R e s ig n s A s H ig h S c h o o l T e a c h e r He Is Accused Of Having Sex With A Student By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record William Tilden Carter, 27, re­ signed his position on Monday fol­ lowing charges of sexual activity with a student by a teacher, coach or administrator, said Dan Womble, school board attorney. The charge, considered a felony, carries a maximum 13-16 month sentence. According to Detective John Stephens of the Davie Sheriff’s Department, Carter became in­ volved in a sexual relationship with a student at the high school last summer. The student, whose name has been withheld, was 16 years of age at the time. Although 16' is the legal age of consent. North Carolina does not permit any type of sexual relation­ ship between a student and a teacher in primary or secondary schools. In these cases, consent to have a sexual relationship by both partners is not a defense. Carter, a business teacher, graduated from Davie in 1996. He was an assistant football coach and was head coach of the junior var­ sity softball team. According to schools informa­ tion director Wendy Horne, school administrators are investigating the affair. Horne would not comment on whether some teachers at the high school may have known of the affair, and did not report it as re­ quired by a rule of the state board of education. If any teacher knew of the af­ fair, and failed to report it, that per­ son could face suspension or pos­ sibly termination, and could lose their license to teach. Staff at Davie High said they were given orders not to speak on A D a y O f P r a y e r Mocksville Town Manager Christine Sanders welcomes the small crowd that gathered for the National Day of Prayer obser­ vance last Thursday. The observance featured music, a speech and prayer for governments, the media and families. > Photo by Robin Fergusson F o r C h ild r e n s ’ S a k e C o m n riu n ity L e a d e rs L o o k F o r W a y s T o P r e v e n t A b u s e By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record Twenty three community leaders, teachers, clergymen, police officers and health care workers joined with Davie County Social Services (DCSS) to hold a community part­ ners forum on child abuse at the Davie County Library recently. DCSS director Karen Smith thanked the gathered crowd for tak­ ing the time out of their schedules for the children of the community. “We want to bring the commu­ nity education on signs of child abuse," Smith said. “Children are gifts we send to a time we do not see.” Cindy Justice, supervisor of child services for DCSS hosted the forum, but other specialists in dealing with abuse, including detective Jolin Stephens of the Davie County Sheriff’s Department and Cynthia Stewart, a social worker witli Bap­ tist Medical Center in Winston Sa­ lem led discussions on recognizing signs of abuse and how to properly report them. DCSS Attomey Sally Smith spoke about the legal, proce­ dures of protecting childreii once they’re in the court system. ' Stewart gave examples of ques­ tions that need to be asked when a child is presented to the emergency room with injuries. “Does the child have a history of frequent injuries? Was tliere a delay in seeking care for the injury?” Stewart asked. “These are important facts when making an assessment." Please See Agencies - Page 4 the matter tc the press. Horne said the school system will be taking a proactive approach to try to avoid another incident like this one from happening again. “All the principals discussed it at a staff meeting last week," Home said. “It was agreed the staff, all of them, teachers, aides, staff, need to be reminded about the law. It will be a part of their orientation when they come back to school from the summer.” T e a c h e r F re e d O f A s s a u lt C h a rg e Charges were dismissed in dis­ trict court April against a Soulh Davie Middle School teacher who faced one count of simple assault. Connie Farrell, who is in her first year at the school, was charged with the assault after the mother of a child she disciplined decided to press charges. “There was never any dispute of the facts in the case," attomey Grady McClamrock said. “She had an un­ ruly student and she look him by the shoulder and tumed him around to go down the hallway. What the court had to decide is what a teacher is allowed to do to control an unruly student.” McClamrock said he was im­ pressed with his client. “She’s a very nice lady, real pro­ fessional,” McClamrock said. “She doesn’t hold a grudge over this with the student. Most people would find that difficult not to.” Farrell said she was glad to put the incident behind her, but was dis­ appointed she didn’t receive the sup­ port of her boss. South Davie Middle School principal Robert Landry chose not to offer her a re­ newal for next year. “He gave me no reason,” Farrell Please See Charges - Page 4 W a rm C h ili, W a rm e r H e a rt D a v i e M a n G o i n g T o N a t i o n a l C h i li C h a n n p i o n s h i p Mike "Bubba" Williams enjoys chili competitions, especially the char­ ity. Here, he is shown with Josh Bowman, who has epilepsy, and his mother, Jessica Bowman. By Mike Gunning Davie County Enlerprise Record Officer Michael Williams of the Davie County Sheriff’s depart­ ment is .studying maps and his bank account to find the most economical way to get to westem Texas. That’s where he’ll be compet­ ing in the Teriingua, Texas Chili Cook-off in November on his quest to be named the Worid Champion. Williams qualified by placing third in the North Carolina State championships last weekend. Williams, 40, said he often competes in two categories, but chose to concentrate his efforts on Texas Style Chili for tliis competi­ tion. The strategy paid off. Williams, affectionately called “Bubba" by his friends, said he enjoys the competition, but the charities that benefit really warm his heart.The stale championships, held at the Piedmont Triad Farm­ ers Marktet in Greensboro, raised money for the Epilepsy Founda­ tion of NC. Williams said that charity is especially dear to him. "A couple of years ago, I met this woman named Jessica who was volunteering at a chili cook­ off in Greensboro,” Williams said. “She was real upbeat, real friendly, A lillle while later, she came back to my booth and introduced me to her son, Josh Bowman. He has epilepsy and I thought this was such an amazing woman to deal so well with this.” Williams, now in his seventh Please Sec Davie Man ■ Page 4 r %. s 2. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursdoy, May 12,2005 Editorial Рг^е G o d C o u ld H a v e U s e d J o h n Kerry, T o o No matter what, things just go wrong some days. Machines break. Tlie electricity goes off. And people do the dumbest things. It happened at a mountain church last week. It happened at Davie High School, too. So many times, the damage is self-inflicted. When bad things arc certain lo happen in life without our prompting, it makes no sense to awaken and unleash life’s demons through our own mindless actions. Just ask the people at East Waynesville Baptist Church. Tliat’s the little mountain church where nine people were excommunicated for voting for John Kerry for president. Tlie preacher is a Bush supporter. Now Ihe church's tax-exempt status might be challenged. Forty people joined the excommunicated members Sunday to protest the church’s actions. News of the actions have been spread around the world, and the church and preacher look like idiots. The preacher now has an attorney answering reporters’ questions. He says the people weren’t tossed out for their political leanings. However, there is a tape of Ihe pastor in Ocldt»: saying if people vole for Kerry ihey ought lo repent and resign.' Jerry Meek, chairman of Ihe N.C. Democratic Party said, "One of the Bible's mosl repeated commands is to 'Love your neighbor.' If these reports are true, this minister is nol only acting extremely inappropriately by injecting partisan politics into a hou.se of worship, bul he is also potentially breaking the law and threatening the church's 501 (c) (3) non-profit status." There is a bigger question; Is God really a Republican? My translation of the Bible doesn’t answer lhal question. It does say lhal God is active in our lives. He has worked through history using both righteous and unrighteous leaders. And God’s hand, most believe, is strong enough to have used John Kerry or George Bush for His purposes. If heaven survived eight years of Bill Clinton in the White Hou.se, certainly John Kerry would not — in four — have lime lo abolish all of the Ten Commandments. Some people think God needs our help. Like the biblical Jacob, they develop their own agenda lo achievc that. Tlie East Waynesville Baptist pastor and his flock might have spent their lime better worshipping and praising God — and leave the heavy lifting to Him. As for Davie High, the school was embarrassed by Ihe arrest last week of a teacher charged with being involved sexually with a student. Regardless of Ihe validity of the accusation, the school will have to suffer Ihe loss of focus on education. Instead of concen­ trating on algebra and geometry and English literature, teachers and the administration were talking last week about a gag rule and the salacious gossip surrounding the arrest. Instead of comparing SAT scores and graduation announcements, students are whispering about who knew whal and when. Similar arrests have happened in a number of surrounding counties this year, often involving coaches. The laws and school policy on this behavior could not be more clear. Teachers can even be dismissed for failing lo report that someone else has transgressed. On a better note, President Bush’s visit lo Russia this week was another reminder that the Cold War and the bitter struggle between our countries has been replaced by statesmanship. The visit commemorated the end of World War II in Europe 60 years ago. We often focus on our part of that war and Ihe considerable losses we suffered, forgelling the devastation of Russia and its loss of an estimated 27 million people. Our two armies eventually cnished Nazi Germany from the west and from the east — finally meeting at Berlin. With the Germans defeated, our armies faced and threatened each other for decades after that. Both nations competed for dominance. Tliere is .still friction. Still mistrust. Still an occasional battle of words. But the two leaders call cach other friends. Russian President Vladimir Pulin let President Bush drive his vintage car, a fitting demonstration that the mood is no longer hostile. Something did go right last week. — Dwight Sparks DAVIE C O U N T Y E N T E R P R I / i ^ E C O R D USPS 149-160) 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by the Davie Publishing Co. Dwight Sparks.....................................Editor/Publisher Robin Fergusson................................General Manager Mike Barnhardt...................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow.......................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts..............................................Sports Editor Starr Snow............................................Circulation/Classified Mocksvllie Enterprise 1916-1958 Davie Record 1899-1958 Cooieemee Journal 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 50 Cents $20 Per Year In N.C,, $25 Outside N.C. POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to; Davie County Enterprise Rccord P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 In T h e M a i l .. E v e n U n p l e a s a n t H i s t o r y C a n ’t B e I g n o r e d To the editor; May I offer this response to the recently published letter of Mr. Christopher Strong (History Photo Morally Offensive), I concur with your assessment, Mr. Strong, that it is indeed "for­ tunate" lhal you no longer reside in our local community as it would mosl certainly cause your liberal ideals lo suffer loo greatly. The photo lo which you seem so concemed aboul is a glimpse of our community's past and is a factual event. I question your means of taking offense to a historically accurate photograph. Yes indeed, all of the prisoners in the photo were black and tiie guards while. So what? Thai was the event as recorded in the photograph and nothing more.,. that is unless you read something more into il lhan the facts allow. ^ . Do I or any other resident celebrate the fad that these prisoners are black? Nol hardly. But you appear to relish the opportunity lo do so. It is a free country and county, so indulge yourself. I question your use of the word unethical in describing the pub­ lishing of this photograph. The Record has a responsibility to pub­ lish facts and the photo is a factual event. Don't you mean lhal us poor ignorant white folks should be ashamed lo admit publicly lhal such a factual evenl took place? Ah, but then I am nol ashamed of a factual photograph. I am instead concemed that your delicate sen­ sitivities must be subjected lo the harsh light of reality and facts. The event occurred, il was photographed, and published, gel over it. But your concern goes further for the good people of this back­ woods community, so recently forced out of the plantations that line the streets of Davie County, as we are also spreading our evil toward "gays and lesbian community. Latinos, Democrats, or who­ ever else Jerry Fallwell has on his blacklist". First of all, I could care less who Jerry Fallwell has on his blacklist. Secondly, I know many terrific people of this community who are Democrats and just as tliey can vole anyway they choose to, so can I. Third, I doubt most people will have a problem with Latinos who are present in our nation, state, and county that are here legally and as such work hard to contribute to the community. But perhaps you are more concemed with insuring that the illegal Latinos are accepted into the community so we can pay for their schooling, health care, turn the blind eye to their use of fraudulent driver's licenses, drive without insurance, or Ihe simple ability to understand the road signs which justifies the cause of Ihe auto accident Ihey will be in some­ day? Lastly you dare lo call a factuol photo "morally offensive" and "unethical" then bring,up "gay and lesbian community"? I will do you the favor of not citing Judeo-Christian scriptures lo rebuke your position on lhal subject and will instead lum to the . facts of recorded history. No society (lhat would be a civilization) has ever prospered and survived lhal openly condoned homosexu­ ality for the most basic building block of a healthy society is that of the husband/wife home. You claimed lo have attended school here in backwoods Davic County and yet you don't seem to have lis­ tened in class. Do the research, Mr. Strong. Find me the society that ever openly condoned homosexuality that still exists. They don't. But before you call me an ignorant fool, let me remind you sir that what a person does in the privacy of their home is just that... pri­ vate. Your right to privacy in the home is what protects the homo­ sexual. Keep il that way and il will not become a problem for any­ one. Shove it in Ihe face of others and il becomes a public matter which is subject to open contempt or approval. You ask "when can we all just slop pointing Ihe finger and live and lei live?" May I ask when you intend to start doing so? Il would appeor that your are stuck in a rut. You stale lhat "we should never forget Ihe past, but we should mosl definitely move forward from it." I agree because Ihose who fail lo leam from Ihe past are doomed to repeal it. So Ihe photo you ,take such exception:to, is a reminder of a different time and society than I now live in. Reminders are good things. The men in the photo were criminals on a chain gang, not slaves of thé Confed­ eracy. But the flag that you find so offensive on Mr. Bahnson's private property is another historical fact. Flown by Americans for whal they believed in. I compare it to every other historical flag that boldly said "this I will defend". Hé has as much right to fly il as you do lo hate il. You see il as a symbol of racism and hatred, 1 see it as a reminder that Americans will stand up to fight for whal they as individuals believe strongly in - regardless of what others may think. Neither you, nor 1, have a right to ask Mr. Bahnson lo lake down any flag on his private property, or would you desire to live in a society where the right lo "free speech" and "the pursuit of happiness" ,fall by Ihe wayside in the name of "political correct­ ness"? Sir, there was no glory in "a slave-driven Confederacy" and there is absolutely no hope for a modem society that refuses lo accept ils past. Mr. Strong, you need to move on. You need lo stay in Hendersonville so that the evil you speak of in our community does Please See We Are - Page 3 Letters Welcomed ' ; The.Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read- i ers, The letters may be on topics of local, state, national or international issues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided tliey are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves. the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. ., ; All letters should include the name and address of the 'writer, including a signature. A telephone number, not to ■ ^ published, is also requested. . / Please have letters in the newspaper office no later than ’ 4 p.m. Monday of the week to be published, Davie County ‘ , Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99, Mocksville, or email to? emews(3)davie-enterprise.com. Add your vote to our weekly online poll that asks questions affecting you and Davie County. Log on at www.enterprise-record.com and ciick on reader's poli to cast your vote. Results will be listed iiere weekly.Got An Opinion? Should county commissioners give n f \ ^ r \ Davie County Schools a 16% in- 1 \j /C crease in local funding for next year? No, 24% Log on now to cast your vote on the newest question: www.enterprlse-record.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - 3 In T h e М а й ... D e m o c ra ts H is to ric a lly In d iffe re n t T o H u m a n Life To the editor; This is a response to a letter lo the editor last week titled "Republicans Reaching Heights of Hypocrisy.” The letter was correct in calling Republicans hypocrites. Most people are, including myself. But, for the author to assume Republicans arc the only hypocrites in Washington is within itself hypocritical. The letter criticized Republicans of using Christianity to build support for the confirmation of judges. Republicans did not bring faith into the judicial debate, it was Democrat Senators like Charies Shumer (NY-D) and Dianne Feinslein (CA-D) that made religiously bigoted statements regarding judicial nominees’ “deeply held” beliefs, disqualifying them as federal judges. One thing that needs to be made clear, this issue is not aboul a nominee’s religion. Religion is only being used as a convenient avenue lo criticize the nominees’ personal opinion on abortion. This shows how enslaved many Democrats are by iheir affiliation with pro-abortion special interest and is one more example of the Democrats historical indifference to human life. One hundred and fifty years ago the majority of Congressional Democrats believed that a black person was nol a life, il was property; and lhat property was disposable at the wish of its owner, the slave master. Proved by the fact, when the 13th Amendment was passed in 1865, abolishing slavery, 83% of the Senate votes against the Amendcmenl, were cast by Democrats. For the past 30 years, the majority of Congressional Democrats believed an unbom infant was not a life, it was property; and that property was disposable at the wish of its owner, the mother. Proved by the fact, when the Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 (S.3) was passed, 91% of the Senate yotes against this bon were cast by Democrats. Even recently, the majority of Congressional Democrats believed lhat Ms. Schiavo was nol a life, she was property; and lhat property was disposable at the wish of her owner, Mr. Schiavo. Proved by the fad, when Ihe bill, granting the parents of Terri Schiavo an appeal, was passed, (S.686) 91% of the House votes against this bill, were cast by Democrats. Since the author of last week's letter may not have an accurate definition of hypocrisy, I would like lo give jusl a few more examples of what hypocrisy truly is. The Democratic Party claims to be the protectors of the environment. Why did it take a Republican president lo create the Environmental Protection Agency (ERA), the single most effective domestic organization protecting the environment? The Democratic Party says they are for the common worker. Why did il take a Republican president to create OSHA, the single mosl effective enforcer of safe and healthy work environments? Republicans formed these two organizations that are probably the largest nuisance big business has, yet the Democratic Parly claims Republicans are only for big business. Democrats say they want every vote counted, yet their Congressional voting record says different. When the Fifteenth Amendment was passed in 1870, allowing blacks to vote, 100% of the Democrats in Congress voted against this Amendment. In 1920 when the 19th Amendment was passed, allowing women the right to vote, 69% of Ihe Senators lhat voted against it were Democrats. When Ihe Twenty-fourth Amendment abolished the Poll Tax in 1964, 94% of the Senators that voted against it were Democrats. When Ihe Senate passed Ihe Voting Rights Act of 1965, Dehiocrats cast 94% of the votes against the law. Democrats claim they are the champion of minority rights and how Republicans have let minorities down, and again their Congressional voting record tells a different story. This country’s first major civil righls legislation was the Fourteenth Amendment, 100% of the Democrats in Congress voted against this Amendment. When Ihe Civil Righls Act of 1957 passed, Democrats cast 100% of the no votes. When the Civil Righls Ad of I960 passed, Democrats cast 100% of the no votes. When the Civil Rights Act of 1964 passed, Democrats cast 78% of the no votes. There have only been two black Supreme Court Justices,. Thurgood Marshall and Clarence Thomas. During the nomination of Thrugood Marshall, Democrats cast 91% of the votes against him. During the nomination of Clarence Thomas, Democrats cast 96% of the votes against him. It should be no surprise lhal the Senate Democrats are trying to block the nomination of another black judge, Janice Brown. Many Democrats, like the author of last week’s letter, stale il is hypocrilical for Republicans to inject religion into politics. Yet, no outrage was heard when Sen. John Kerry gave speeches during Sunday services, wilh political and religious references, al Ihe Greater Bethlehem Temple Church March 7,2004 and the Friendship Missionary Baptist Church on Oct. 10,2004, knowingly jeopardizing the churches’ tax-exempt status. In last week’s story the author made an idiotic claim that lax breaks are nol Biblical and implied that wanting lax breaks was hypocritical. My income is not given to me, I have to work for il, and il frustrates me to see a large portion of the money I earned being confiscated before my cheek is even in the bank. Since the top 50% of wage earners pay 96% of income taxes, of course any lax break is going lo favor the people actually paying the taxes. If some people do not like lower taxes by all means, pul your money where your mouth is and cul a big fat check to the 1RS, I am sure they will take h. Think about this, if our taxes were not so high we could afford to give more abundantly to charitable organizations - organizations lhal are more competent and efficient at utilizing funds thon the federal govemmenl. You can crilicize Republicans all you want, you can criticize Clirislians all you want, and you can even take Biblical quotes out of context to support flimsy opinions; but ask yourself a question. What kind of sick distorted extremist religion supports, defends and protects the right to kill an unborn child, the epitome of innocents, defenselessness and pureness? II is Ihe religion of liberalism, primarily supported by the Democrat Party. Please call me a “hypocrite”. Please tell me my religion is being “bastardized”. Pleose keep reminding me how important it is for me to spend the lime lo repute Ihe moral degradation and true hypocrisy that is exhibited in Ihe incoherent rhetoric that is vomited on the pages of this forum by the author of last week's letter; and jusl remember, this judicial debate we are having is about the murdering of the unbom, not the appointment of judges. Kurt Musselman Mocksville H a ts O ff T o S o u th D a v ie T e a c h e rs W h o D e fe n d L e a rn in g E n v ir o n m e n t To the editor; The slory hit the front page - Teacher accused of simple assault - pushing a student. Three months later, readers could find my name on page five - District Attomey dismisses case - whol on exonera­ tion. I believe there is opportunity around the comer of adversity, so I. R.C. Gregory Had Amazing Courage To the editor: We lost one of our stors last week. R.C. Gregory passed away in Goldsboro. R.C. was a Cooieemee native that heard the call of duty, quit school and joined Ihe army in March 1941. He went to Ihe Phil­ ippines in November'df that' ytia^' and WMs'tíifplured on'Batton'ih April 1942. He v;as one of the few surviving members and the young­ est soldier to lake part in the infamous Bailan “death march.” He spent the entire rest of the war being bmtalized as a prisoner of war. After being releosed at Ihe end of the war, he accepted what foie hod dealt him with the quiet dignity lhal made him what he was. He was a son, he was a father, he was o husband, and he was a warrior against man’s inhumanity lo man. As we moum Ihe loss of one of our own, we need lo remember that because of his life this worid is a better place for us, and because of his death the next world will be a belter place for us. Where does one find such courage? David Carter Cooieemee T h a n k s , J o e B o y e t t e To the editor; We would like to lake this opportunity lo thank Joe Boyette for his wonderful years of service to the children and people of Davie County. It is truly Davic County’s loss. Joe has done a tremendous job in developing Davie County’s program into what it is today. We ore so fortunate as a raral counly lo hove all the different sport ac­ livilies and olher venues available for our children, Joe has always been the vóice for the children. He wants whal is best for each child, no matter what he is particpating in. He wants coaches who care about the child - someone that can leach them the game bul at the same time to have fun and lo have good sportsman­ ship. He has given many teen-agers their first job, calling sidelines for soccer, taking up money al bollgames, keeping the statistics for basketball; etc. Who knows, he may hove instilled o desire for pub­ lic service in some of these older kids. For oil of this and much more, a heartfelt thank you. Good luck in your new position as director of Yadkin County’s program. The Prevetle Family Tim, Carla, Ashlee, Zach and Courtney K u d o s T o B a s e b a l l S u b s t i t u t e s To the editor; For the boys on the varsity baseball team who sil on the bench; kudos lo you, for your patience ond perseverance. It lakes great determination to put in the time and effort for little to no glory. Yes, you made the leam and that is an accomplishment in itself, but we all know that every young mon on the team has the desire lo play, and every parent has the desire to see their child play. Il does hurt as a parent lo see your child left out of anything lhat they truly desire lo be a part of, but al the same time, I am also proud of the “never give up” attitude. High school sports are still supposed to be a forum for teaching and learning and even though il may nol always be visible, these young men are learning lessons aboul life, You may hove lo accept that you aren't the top dog, but it doesn’t mean you should give up your dreams. Hard work has never hurt anyone. Maybe Ihose lo whom life comes so easily can leam from this. Congrotulotions to the coaches and all Ihe members of the varsity and JV teams for their success throughout the season. I can truly say lhat my son has enjoyed being a port of il all, and I hope that in lum Ihey have enjoyed having him there. Terri Maurer Mocksville want to take this opportunity to moke a much needed, simple plea to the parents and administration, especially to those of South Davie Middle School. Please get respect back in the classroom. Parents, administration, please support the classroom teacher. There must be respect, at leost lo the position of teacher. Teaching is on honorable and noble pro­ fession, bul it is quickly luming into a hard job lhat some try to make harder. Moms, dads, you don’t hove to be perfect to expect your child’s respect. II is Ihe position that requires it. There must be Ihe decency of respect for all in Ihe classroom if students and teachers are ex­ pected to grow. ‘ ' W e A r e B u s y M o v i n g O h ’ Continued From Page 2 not cause your sensitivity further harm. You need to slop reading Ihe Record if il hurts your sensilivity. You need lo avoid reading Mr. Bahnson's column as it clearly causes you a problem. You need to let Davie County live and let live, in ils own woy. I promise lhal we will let Hendersonville live and let live in its own way. May the blessings lhat our nation's founding men and women survive the likes of a person so eager to take away the rights thot they fought for... a free press, free speech, the pursuit of happiness, and the divine right lo make mistakes so long os we leam from them. To live and leam. So thank you Mr. Strong for this opportunity to ease your pain. We appreciate your sharing it with us. Now if you don't mind we are busy moving on ... Barry J. Cartner Mocksville R e p o r t F r o m R a le ig h Parents, Ihe respect that the learning environment demands be­ gins at home, Self-discipline is a practice. Administrotors, that re­ spect must be expected and enforced. The EOG test has done little more lhan murder the learning envi­ ronment slowly but surely. Ils only expectation is o 20 percent pass score, EOG has become the determinant lhat paints a false reality of educational growth while the report cord encourages harassment. Don’t miss the point of a good education. I began the year leach­ ing this concept to my AIC students; Money is nol the reason for on educotion. The reoson for a good eduction is to become the best person one can be. Thot is why leaming is a life-long endeavor. Re­ spect is 0 foundational part of this leaming concept. Money/position is only the icing on the cake of good character. A lazy genius is nol rii'uiih good to anyone. n» ^ J i' i My hat is off lo all Ihe teachers al South Davie and Iheir efforts lo defend Ihe leaming environment. Conijie Farrell, Mocksville Business Owners Thank Community To the editor; Glenn and I wish lo express our sincere gratitude to the many friends that we have made over the Iasi eight years at Woodworks Gallery. We were told that we would never make it a year doing business in down­ town Mocksville, bul our loyal customers proved that wrong. The people of Davie Counly nol only supported us bul also encouraged us. Our decision to close Woodworks was difficult, but we are so looking for­ ward to having some much needed free time. The hardest part of clos­ ing is not gelling to see the wonderful people lhat we have grown ac­ customed’to seeing. Hopefully, wc will catch up wilh everyone at the One Way show at our house, Sept. lO-l 1, Thanks again for making our stay such a pleasant experience. Glenn and Linda Mace, Woodworks Gallery, Mocksville S e n a te S e n d s Its B u d g e t V e rs io n T o T h e H o u s e By Julia C. Howard N.C. House of Representatives The Senate passed its version of a $17 billion state budget lhat wos sent lo the House for consideration. Controversial provisions in the Senate budget include a cigarette tax increase of 35 cents a pack, a state lottery, and Ihe extension of the half-penny soles lax. Under the Senate version, Ihe cigarette tax would increase from the 5 cents lo 40 cents per pack. This increase is expected to raise on odditionoi $201 million in Ihe next budget yeor. At 40 cents per pack. North Carolina would move from Ihe lowest cigarette tax to 41 st in the nation. The stale lottery provision is similar lo the version passed in the House. However, the Senate provision contains a ban on video poker and removes lottery advertising restrictions in the House bill. Passage of the Senate budget would not enact a lottery, according to Senate leaders. Language in Ihe Senate’s budget bill makes creation of a lottery contingent on passage of the bill Ihe House possed lost month. The Senate version of Ihe budget mokes the temporary holf-penny soles tax passed in 2001 (and scheduled lo sunset on June 30) permanent, which is expected to generate $400 million in revenues. Other lax increases include extending the soles lax lo candy and increasing Ihe tox for satellite television services and liquor, os well os, fee increases for driver’s licenses and new car titles. Tax decreases under the plan include a decrease in the corporote tax rote and the income lax for residents in the state’s highest income brocket. The Senate budget decreases the corporote tax by a half-percent effective July 1, ond Ihe income tax for joint filers with income over $120,000 would be decreased from 8.25 lo 7.75 percent over the next two years. Spending culs include reduced payments lo doctors for Medicaid patients and the shift of 57,000 Medicaid potients lo Medicare. Under on omendmenl adopted in Senate deliberotions, funding was restored for NC Health Choice, о program providing health insurance lo the state’s poorest children. The Senate removed a pro­ vision during debate that would hove cul stale administrative money by $12 milljon for counties that hove more thon one school system - o move that would have affected state money for city school systems in Lexington, Thomosville, and Mooresville, among others. Stale employees, under the Senate budget, would receive a pay raise of 2 percent or $500 - whichever is greater; and re­ tirees of the stole would receive a 2 percent cost-of-living in­ crease. The Senote placed $125 million in the Rainy Day Fund. The State Health Plan will receive some chonges under the Senate’s proposal. In the original budget bill, premiums for dependents and spouses of stole employees covered under the Stole Health Plan were slated to increose 15,2 percent. However, the Senate did adopt on amend­ ment during floor debate reducing thot increase lo 14,3%, This' amendment removed o provision increasing Ihe co-pay from $15 to $25 for office vishs to physicians olher than general practitioners. However, under the Senate proposal, co-pays on prescrip­ tion drugs will increose os well os co-insurance maximums. The Senate budget does not require ony employee premium contri­ bution and maintains the annual deductible at $350. The Senate’s budget will be sent to Ihe House and will be under close scrutiny as House members begin lo review the package. I will keep you updated os this budget bill moves through the House. Below is a single bill filed in the House this week I thought you might find interesting. HB 1565 Funds To Locate Sex Offenders. This bill appropriates $1 million for 2005-06 lo the Department of Justice to assist the Division of Criminal Statistics in locating individuols required to register os sex offenders. If you would like further information on this bill or Ihe budget, feel free lo conlact my office. I was pleased lo visit with Garry Frank this post week. Mr. Frank serves as District Attomey for the 22nd Judicial District, which includes Davie and Iredell counties, as well as Davidson and Alexander counties, Frank was in Raleigh on behalf of the N,C. District Attorney’s Coa­ lition and we enjoyed o visit. Legislative O ffice; 919-733- 5904; M ocksville O ffice; 751- . 8567; E -m ail;Juliah@ ncleg.net. 4 . DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Participants in a clilld abuse prevention forum listen to panel members.- Photos by Robin Fergusson Agencies Join Efforts To Help Children Continued From Page 1 Stewart said the Baptist Hospi­ tal social workers are specially trained to identify emergency room visits consistent witli abuse. "We look at a number of fac­ tors, like if the parents or caregiver passed another medi­ cal center to get care, and things like if the child arrive in the middle of the night," Stewart said. "These arc all red flags.” Justice said the forum was a positive response to an unflatter­ ing report by the state on her department’s handling of calls of concern. "We’re trying to promote a more proactive approach to ad­ dressing the problems of abuse and neglect by trying to create a working relationship in the com­ munity and help each other,” Justice said. "It takes all of us working together to make a dif­ ference." "We want to close the cracks, make them not so wide," Stewart said. "Narrow them up so chil­ dren can’t fall through." Stewart said that an involved and educated community was one of the biggest deterrents to child abuse. She said she under­ stood that adults have concerns about reporting, but knowing when and if to report suspected signs was critical. She added that it was important that adults over­ come those concerns. "We don’t want a knee jerk reaction, but err on the side of the child,” Stewart said. "Don’t second guess yourself.” Stephens said he agreed that the quickest way to start help­ ing the victims of abuse is for others 10 recognize the patterns of abuse and report them. “My best advice is don’t be afraid to report it,” Stephens said. "I’ve never known of a per­ son getting sued because of nothing coming out of it.” Stephens, a 25-year veteran who investigates child abuse and sexual crimes cases, said the amount of child abuse crimes he has seen has affected him. 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Charges Dismissed Against Teacher Continued From Page 1 replied when asked if the inci­ dent had to do with her dis­ missal. “He said it was up to the boys uptown.” Farrell said that she spoke to superintendent W.G. "Dub” Potts and found that the decision not to bring her back was Landry’s. "Mr. Potts showed me where Dr. Landry signed off on the pa­ per not to bring me back,” Farrell said. “I’m bitter that Dr. Landry couldn’t be truthful about it, he couldn’t even tell me it was him that wouldn’t recom­ mend my renewal.” Farrell said she believed the decision not to renew her came down to politics. “He has political ambitions,” Farrell said of Landry. "I had a great evaluation from (Assistant Principal) Maureen Oildein. He was catering to parents who called him.” Landry said political ambi­ tions had nothing to do with Farrell not returning to South Davie. “It was my decision not to bring her back, and it was based on her performance,” Landry said. "I did sign a paper, and it had nothing to do with this inci­ dent at all. It was ail on job per­ formance.” D a v ie M a n G o in g T o N a tio n a l C liili C o o l(-O ff Continued From Page 1 year as Davie’s Division of Criminal Information super­ visor, said that was the moment when cooking chili took on a.ncw perspective. “When I first got into this five years ago, I did it because I thought it would be fun,” Williams said. "And it has been. But then I storted to meet these people, and found out just how much good can be done for the charities. That was when it all started to have real meaning to me.” Williams joined tho Piedmont Pepper Pod, a competitive Chili Cook-off club, and quickly rose in status, culminating in his nomination to Pepper Popper, or Vice-President, of the club. "My job is to try to make sure all the information to get an event sanctioned gets to CASI,” Williams said. “Once thot’s done, the fun stuff begins.” He said he cooks four stales of chili in cqrnpetition. “there’s mild, bad attitude, and 911," Williams said. "And then there’s ‘Bubba’s sit in the creek for a week.’ Enough said about that.” I t W a s n ’t H i m The Kevin Robertson listed in District Court on May 5 is not the Kevin Robertson who works for BB&T. Williams’ road to Terlingua was a bumpy one. After earning qualifying points in the first three events he entered, Williams failed to place in the next three, leaving hini short of the pace. The State Championships was a make it or break it point. He said he was glad he rose to the occasion. "I’ve never been to Texas,” Williams said. "I’ve never been farther than South Carolina. But I’m ready.” The Piedmont Pepper Pods hosted the champion­ ship, but that didn’t help Williams to a third place finish. According to CASI rules, competition chili is blind judged on a basis of the following criteria: aroma, consistency, red color, taste, and aftertaste. Judges don’t know who cooked which batch until after the results are an­ nounced. Williams said he always uses the same secret recipe, with small tweaks every now and then depend­ ing on the event. If he wins in Texas, he may face pressure to make his secret public. Until then, his lips are sealed. r -' ( V, S I Cedar Rock Assiseed Living ofMoclcsvllle Here at Cedar Rock on May 6, 2005, we had Western Day. AU our residents were dressed up in their cowboy and cowgirl best. We also had a .ipecial group, Footloose Friends, to help us have a Yee Haw goodtime. The showed all of us how to line dance, and some of us got up and danced with them. Thanks for coming, "Ya'Il come back now, ya hear.” C e d a r R o c k 191 Crestview Drive Mocksville (336)751-1515 ^ S h e l i a S a m m o n s flMrge Enough to Serve - Small Eiiough to Ca^e'^ District Court DAVIE COUNTY ENtbRPRlSE RECORD, Tliursday, May 12,2005 ■ S National Golf Cars The following cases were heard in Davie District Court on May 5. Presiding; Judge L. Dale Graham. Prosecuting; Kevin Beale and Wendy Terry, Assis­ tant DAs. - Alejandro Adame, domes­ tic criminal trespass, dismissed - Christopher Alexander, speeding 73 in a 55, dismi.sscd; driving while revoked, prayer for judgement, cost; resisting public officer, dismissed. I - Ramon Apolinar, misde­ meanor probation violation, sen­ tenced to 60 days. I - Sherman Arnold, speeding 50 in a 35, prayer for judgement, /cost. I . - Caroline Athey, intoxicated and disruptive, sentenced to 5 I days, suspended 6 months, un­ supervised probation, cijst. - Bridget Billips, no operators license, sentenced to 20 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, $50, cost; no opera­ tors license, dismissed; posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia, dis­ missed. - Alan Cain, possession of schedule II controlled substance, dismissed; possession of drug paraphernalia, prayer for judge­ ment, cost. - Robert Chatman, driving while revoked, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 6 months, un- supervised probation, $25, cost - Dalton Crotts, possession of a fictitious license, dismissed; possession of beer/wine under age 21 i prayer for judgement, cost. ■ \ - Tracy Culler, speeding 76 in a 55, reduced to improper equip­ ment, $100, cost; expired opera­ tors license, dismissed. - Jessie' Dalton, misdemeanor possession schedule VI con­ trolled substance, sentenced to 15 days, suspended 6 months, unsupervised probation, $100, cost. - Lashonda Dalton, felony child abbse, reduced to misde­ meanor child abuse, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 12 months, supervised probation, cost. - Efrain Delgado, trespass on posted property, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, un- supervised probation, $25, cost. - Betty Sue Frogge, simple assault, dismissed; communicat­ ing threats, dismissed. - Franklin Gomez, no opera­ tors license, dismissed; unsafe tires, dismissed; driving while revoked, prayer for judgement, cost; failure to bum headlights, dismissed; factitious informa­ tion to officer, dismissed. - Jamie Griffie, failure to re­ turn rental property, prayer for judgment, cost. - Kaitlyn Hall, unsafe move­ ment, dismissed; exceeding safe speed, dismissed. - Cary Harris, speeding 80 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $10, cost; expired inspection, dis­ missed. - Larry Harrison, speeding 84 in a 70, reduced to improper equipment, $10, cost. - Stuart Hatcher, driving while revoked, rcduced to im­ proper equipment, $10, cost; driving left of center, dismissed. - Jennifer Hellard, 2 counts driving while revoked, sen­ tenced to 45 days, suspended 12 months, supervised probation, $100,cost: fictitious license, dis­ missed; expired registration card, dismissed; 4 counts driv­ ing while revoked, dismissed; 4 counts fictitious license, dis­ missed: 4 counts no insurance, dismissed. - Homer Hendrix, speeding 65 in a45,prayer for judgement, cost. - Mary Ann Houston, aban­ donment of an animal, cost. - Micki Hundley, driving while revoked, dismissed. - Naser Issa, speeding 74 in a 70, $10, cost. - Ernest Johnston, failure to notify DMV of an address change, cost; failure to display registration, dismissed; seatbelt violation, dismissed. - JMarvin Jones, exceeding a safe speed, reduced to improper equipment, $10, cost. - Raymond McBride, misde­ meanor probation violation, ex­ tended probation 18 months. - Jaime Mena, trespass on posted property, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, $25, cost. - Jo Ann Mitchell, violation of a protective order, dismissed. - John Morrison, false report to a police station, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, unsupervised probation, $25, cost. - Christopher Pardue, misde­ meanor larceny, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 18 months, su­ pervised probation, cost; forgery of endorsement, dismissed: ut­ tering a forged document, dis­ missed. - Justin Powell, reckless driv­ ing to endanger, reduced to im­ proper equipment, $50, cost. - Garrett Renegar, failure to wear a seatbelt, dismissed; driv­ ing while impaired, dismissed; civil revocation,dismissed; fail­ ure to reduce speed; dismissed. T e e n s C ite d F o r U n d e ra g e D rin k in g At least 11 teens were cited for underage drinking after Davie sheriff’s.deputies inves­ tigated complaints of a loud party and driving on private property early Sunday morning. According tb a report filed by Sheriff’s Deputy D.B. Pfaff, he and fellow officers arrived at the rural site off Birdsong Road in western Davie to a party. Sev­ eral people ran into the woods upon the officers’ arrival, Pfaff reported. They found two half kegs of beer, one empty and one that contained beer. Empty beer cans were scattered across the prop­ erty. People were asleep in their vehicles, Pfaff reported. The property belonged to one of the young people’s grandfa­ ther, who didn’t know about the event, the report said. Deputies administered Alco-Sensor tests that measure the blood alcohol level to those left, and 11 were cited. The young people were detained until their parents could pick them up or arrange for a sober driver to take them home. They also put out a bonfire and C o m p a r e ( ) п г ( Л ) R a le s Bank-issued, FDIC- insured to $100,000 ) ц ш З Ш ММши , №Г dWortSS^lOO 3-year 4.25% Minimum ЛРГ depos« $5,000 ^ 4Л5%'МЫмя1 я г d4iMl$S,000 •Annual Peicontago Vlold (APVV-Worest eainol ramnin on (toposil; periodic payout o( Intotost isiequliM. Eaily withdiawnl is nol psravllod^ffKlivo M/05. Sub|ocl lo avaJabliilv and piico chango, tho amouni rocoivod from a sala ol a CD al curronl maikal value may bo loss Itian 11» amount Initially invoslsd. Call or stop by today. MattVoreh 66 Court S(|iiure Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-4400 www.tnlwartljoncH.rom picked up litter from the prop­ erty, Pfaff reported. Cited for underage consump­ tion of an alcoholic beveroge were: Jordan McDonald Grimes, 17, of Advance; Russell Dale Clark, 17; of Advance; Zachary Scott O’Brien, 18, of Advance; William Logan Buchanan, 17, of Mocksville; Nicholas Peyton Tucker, 16, of Advance; Jonathan Kane Loos, 17, of Ad­ vance; Jonathan Franklin Dwiggins, 18, of Mocksville; Dusrin Joseph Harris, 17, of Mocksville; Daniel Mathew Walser, 19, of Advance; Joseph Adam Crotts, 19, of Mocksville; and Joshua Chad Miller, 16, of Advance. L o c a lly G r o w n , H y d r o p o n ic J o m a t o e s W e a lso n o w h a ve Grape Tomatoes, Cuccumbers, and Lettuce! Tomato & Bedding Plants, Dew D rop Farm 302 Fo.ster Road, Mocksville (Rosier R(L is jusl ofT RiJge RJ. in Western Duvie Count)') Gall For Directions (336) 492-5263 O p e n T h u r s. & F r i. N o o n - 5 p m a n d S a t . 8 a m -n o o n Edwardjones Serving la d iv lJ u a l liiv u lu ra Since 1 8 7 1 D on't Get Burned! You can be fined up to $10,000 for illegal open burning in N.C. S m o k e f r o m o p e n b u r n in g c a n c a u s e je r lo u s h e a llh p r o b le m s a n d p o llu t e ih e a i r . T h a i's w h y ih e s la le r e g u la te s o p e n b u r n in g . O n ly le a v e s , b r a n c h e s o t o lh e r p la n t g r o w t h c a n b t b u r n e d . eles and heavy oils old chemicals and IT'S ILLEGAL TO BURN: •Garbage, paper and cardboard •Tires and other rubber products •Building materials, including lumber •Wire, plastics and synthetic materials • Asphalt shlngtei •Paints, houseliol agricultural products Homeowners can bum yard tclmmlngs - excluding logs and stumps - If It's allowed under locu ordinances, no public pickup Is available and il doesn't cause a public nuisance. Other allowable burning includes campfires, outdoor barbecues and bonfires for festive occasions. Landowners also can open bum vegetation to clear land or rights-of- way, provided that: • Prevailing winds are away from built up areas and roads ' • Fires arc at least 1,000 feel away from occupied buildings • Burning Is done between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. Ktmimbtr.bumpimlt$l»iutJ liy IhtN.C.DIvUloH 0/ Fanil Reiourcu, Ils agmlt or any local govmmtal do not excuu a pmonfromfollouilng > Ihttt Hate alniuallty n itt. For mart In/omallon, eantacl: Wlnston-Salam Rsglonal OHIce Division ol Air Qualllv N.C. Dspartmont ol Environment and Natural Rasourceg Phone; (336) 7 7 H 8 0 0 (This ad paid lor hy a violator ot Itis open burning law.) - Jorge Reyes, driving while revoked, reduced to no operators license, cost; no inspection, dis­ missed; expired registration, dis­ missed; operating a vehicle with no insurance, dismissed; im­ proper brakes, dismissed; unsafe tires, dismissed. - Timmy Robbins, speeding 59 in a 35, prayer for judgement, cost. - Edith Romero, exceeding a safe speed, dismissed. - Lester Scott, no registration card, dismissed; driving while revoked, dismissed; driving while revoked, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, $200, cost. - Candice Seamon, driving while revoked, reduced to im­ proper equipment, cost. , - Ronald Sharpe, failure to wear a seatbelt, $25, cost. - Carolyn Starnes, 7 counts of worthless check, dismissed; 2 counts worthless check, sen­ tenced to 30 days, suspended 3 years, supervised probation, re­ mit cost; worthless check, prayer for judgement, cost. - Antwain Stover, speeding 55 in a 35, dismissed; driving while revoked, sentenced to 91 days, suspended 12 months, su­ pervised probation, $100, cost. - Everado Toires, speeding 85 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $10, cost. - Ann Treadway, speeding 68 in a 45, prayer for judgement, cost. - Luis Vasquez, speeding 60 in a 45, dismissed; driving while revoked, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, unsuper­ vised probation, cost. - Mamie Williams, cruelty to animols, prayer for judgement, cost. - Ronald Wishon, speeding 86 in a70,prayerfor judgement, cost. i l l Huge Selection We offer Custom Built Cars Complete Service & Parts Come See the "57 Chevy" Golf Car! 1320 Litton Drive Salisbury, NC ( J m iic b e h in d th e H ig h w a y P a t r o l H e a d q u a r te rs } 704-855-3200 M o c k s v i l l e L i o n s C l u b W h i t e C a n e A u c t i o n Open to the Public Saturday. 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(336)345-0061 • (336)909-2554 Nextel ID# 150*25*26008 Dauie 1ашп care 25% OFF 1st Weekly Service ( 3 3 6 ) 3 4 5 - 0 0 6 1 I î' f : 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Public Records Fires Davie County fire depart­ ments responded to the follow­ ing'calls; May 3: Mocksville, 9:26 p.m„ Main Church Road, fire alarm; Smith Orove assisted. May 5: Center, 9:51 p.m., U.S. 64 West, structure fire; Mocksville assisted. May 6i Center, 2:54 p.m., I- 40 East, vehicle fire; County Line assisted. May 7! County Line, 11:56 a.m., Oavie Academy Road, field fire; Center assisted; County Line assisted. May 8: Advance, 2:53 p.m., N.C. 801 South, automobile ac­ cident. SherifTs Department The following incidents were reported to the Davie County Sheriff’s Department. - On April 18 Tom Lehman reported forgery at a food store on N.C. 801 North, Advance. - Gina Brannock reported gas was taken without pay at a con­ venience store on N.C. 801 North, Advance on April 29. - On April 30 Amanda Home reported a vehicle was taken without pennission from a resi­ dence on Swicegood Street, Mocksville. - Justin Frasier reported an assault at a home off Daniel Road, Mocksville on April 30. - On April 30 Carolyn Rachels reported a break-in at a business on U.S. 158 East, Ad­ vance. - Sandra Smith reported ha­ rassing phone calls at a home on Bridgewater Drive, Advance on May I. - On May 1 Sharon Albert reported a dog bit a person at a home on Fallingcreek Drive, Advance. - Cruelty to animals was re­ ported May 2 after a dog was shot and killed at an unknown location in the county. - On May 2 Teresa Driver re- j ported a dirt bike was taken from, a home on Pineville Road, Mocksville. - A domestic dispute was re­ ported May 2 at a home on West Side Drive, Mocksville. - On May 2 Clarence Brogdon reported plants were taken from a house on N.C. 801 South, Mocksville. - Carey Roope reported pre­ scription medications were taken from a home on Golfview Drive, Advance on May 2. - On May 3 Jane Foster re­ ported money was taken from a home on Williams Road, Mocksville. - Ted Johnson reported a credit card was found at a gas station on U.S. 158, Advance on May3. - On May 4 TYinidad Olmedo reported a cell phone was taken from a residence on Shore Drive, Mocksville. - Sidney Davis reported a break-in at a home on N.C. 801 South, Mocksville on May 4. - On May 4 Annice Binkley reported fraud at a home on Juney Beauchamp Road, Ad­ vance. Arrests The Davie County Sheriffs Department made the following arrests; - Bryant Wilson, 22, of 149 Creason Road, Mocksville was arrested April 30 for assault on a female, damage to personal prop­ erty, and damage to real prop­ erty. Trial date; May 12. - Ronald Christopher Bur­ gess. 27, of 2031 Burgess Trail, Mocksville was arrested April 30 for non-support. Trial date: May 16 in Yadkin County. - Maikel Stanley Markiet, 44, of 185 Lakewood Village Road, Mocksville was arrested April 30 for assault on a female. Trial date: May 19. - James Michael Condrey, 22, of 353 Hobson S^eet, Mocks­ ville was anested May 1 for car­ rying a concealed weapon. Trial date: May 19. - Crystal Gayle Glenn, 27, of 110 Roy Davis Road, Mocks­ ville was arrested May 2 for tliieats against a court officer and conununicating tlireats .Trial date: May 12. - Justin Kyle Leonard, 17, of 363 Cana Road, Mocksville was arrested May 2 for going armed lo the terror of the people and damage to personal property. Trial date: May 19, - Gerald Henry Roeder Jr., 35, of 237 Ijames Church Road, Mocksville was arrested May 3 for damage to property, trespass­ ing, and going armed to the ter- rorofthe people.Trioldate; May 19. - Benjamin Keith Hardin, 17,' of 363 Cana Road, Mocksville was arrested May 3 for going armed to the terror of the people, damage to property, and second degree trespassing. Trial date: May 19. - Amulfo Leal Martinez, 38, of Winston-Salem was arrested May 4 for assault on a female. Trial date: June 14 in Yadkin County. - Reggie Leon Geter, 31, of 260 Stagecoach Road, Mocks­ ville was arrested May 5 for child support. Trial date: May 17 in Rowan County. - Harry Hampton Gulledge, 47, of 155 Center Street, Cool­ eemee was arrested May 5 for assault on a female. Trial date: June 9. - Sherrie Montsinger Benson, 40, of 126 Middleton Lane, Ad­ vance was arrested May 5 for simple assault. Trial date: June 9. - Anthony Selwyn Howell, 43, of 154 Dallas Lone, Moclcs­ ville was arrested May 5 for do­ mestic violence protective order violation. Trial date; May 19. -Richard Eugene Whitley, 22, of 132 Jerusalem Avenue, Cool­ eemee was arrested May 5 for assault on a female and commu­ nicating threats. Highway Patrol The following traffic wrecks in Davie County were listed by the N.C. Highway Patrol. Wreck On Interstate A Forsyth man was charged with failure to maintain proper travel lane after he wrecked the vehicle he was driving May 1. Lonnie Lincoln Price UI of Winston-Salem was driving his 1996 Nissan west on 1-40 when he drove the vehicle off the left side of liie road. Price's vehicle collided with a concrete barrier, went back across the road, and collided with a guardrail. Trooper F.C. Ferguson re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 12:02 p.m. and there were no accidents. Drunk Driver Wrecks Vehicle A Forsyth man was charged with DWI and exceeding a safe speed after he wrecked the ve­ hicle he was driving May 1. Willie Lewis Clark of Win- ston-Salem was driving a 1999 Toyota vehicle east on 1-40 when he lost control of the vehicle due to excessive speed in the rain. Clark's vehicle was driven into the median and collided with a median barrier. Trooper L.J. Staley Jr. re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 12:58 a.m, and there were no injuries. Ahhelnier's Patient Involved In Wreck No charges were filed after a wreck in Davie on May 1. Frank Milton Markland of 3110 Comatzer Road, Advance was driving his 1992 Chevrolet vehicle west on 1-40 in the east- t>ound lane. Geraldine N. Barron of Kentucky was driving her 2004 Chrysler vehicle east on I- 40 in the eastbound lane. Barron swerved her vehicle to avoid colliding with Markland's. After­ wards Barron ran her vehicle off the road and collided with a me­ dian cable. Markland is reported to suffer from Alzheimer's dis­ ease. Trooper F.C. Ferguson re­ ported the accidpnt occurrad at approximately 11:27 a.m. nnd there no Davie Man Wreb^ Vehicle is r No charges were filed after an accident on May 1. Jose Aguilar Sanchez of 932 Hardison Street, Mocksville was driving his 1997 Pontiac vehicle west on 1-40. Sanchez lost con­ trol of his vehicle due to exces­ sive speed in'theirain. SancheS;' drove his vehicle off the left side of the road and collided with a guard rail.T^per LJ. Staley Jr. reported the accident occurred at approximately 2:47 a.m. Driver Wrecks, Misses Dog No charges were filed after an accident on May 2. Matthew Wayne Dillon Jr. of 6554 N.C, 801 South, Mocks­ ville was driving his 1995 Nissan vehicle north on Cana Road, A dog ran into the road and Dillon swerved his vehicle to avoid hit­ ting the animal. Dillon drove his vehicle off the right side of the road and collided with a ditch. Trooper M.C. Howell reported the accident occurred at approxi­ mately 3:42 p.m. Rear Tire Blows, Vehkle Wrecks A Davie woman was charged with unsafe tires after she wrecked the vehicle she was driving May 3. Sujei Lopez-Vega of 116 Cranberry Lane, Mocksville was driving her 1988 Honda vehicle east on 1-40. The left rear tire of the vehicle blew out and caused Vega's vehicle to run off the roadway to the left and collide with a median cable barrier. Trooper M.C. Howell re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 2:31 p.m. Land IVansfers The following land transfers were filed with the Davie Reg­ ister of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, township, and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $1,000, - Grady L. McClamrock Jr. and Catherine E. McClamrock to George Timothy Smith, 1 tract, Mocksville, $100. - George Timothy Smith tb Grady L. McClamrock Jr. and Catherine E. McClamrock, 1 tract, Mocksville, - Grady L, McClamrock Jr, and Cotherine E, McClamrock to George Timothy Smith, .27 acre, Mocksville. - James A. Gaudreau and Daneen K. Gaudreau to LandAmerico OneStop, 1 lot, Farmington, $706, - LandAmerica OneStop to Steven L. Koch and Kathy B. Koch, 1 lot, Farmington, $706. - Raymond J. Markland and Ruth S. Markland, Clyde Hendricks and Helen Hendricks to Larry McDaniel Builders, 1 lot, Mocksville, $44. - Cindy Johnson and Curtis Victor Johnson to Randall Grubb and Ellen Grubb, I lot. - Venable Builders to Donny R. Riddle ond Christine V. Riddle, 1 lot, Farmington, $478. - Larry W. Pearman, substi­ tute trustee to American General Financial, 1.49,acre, $44, - Claude R, Horn Jr, and Dor­ othy M, Horn to Richard I, Shores Jr, and Judy W, Shores, 10,86 acres, Mocksville, $160. - Steven L. Eaton and Teresa W. Eaton to Doyle D. Donathon nnd Laurie Donathan, I lot. Shady Grove, $2-94. - David L. Black and Melody A. Black and Lucious Joseph Peavy to James R. Bruch, 1 lot, Farmington, $80. - Craig Carter, Builder to Susan R. Hicks, I lot, Farming­ ton, $450. - Mulvaney Homes to David M. Foster and Amber N. Spann, 1 lot, Farmington, $385. - Mulvaney Homes to James D, Symmes and Colleen H, Symmes, 1 lot, Farmington, $336. - Kate H. Holmes to Samnaz Inc., 5.01 acres, Farmington, $195. - H&V Construction tb Will­ iam Gary Engstrom and Loraine Grace Engsu-om, 1 lot, Farming­ ton, $178. - Diane Ferebee Baity and Barbara Ferebee Gregory to Phillip David Shore and •Jimmie L. Shore, 3 tracts, Calahaln, $490. -Campbell’s Quality Proper­ ties to Kenneth D. Durham and Cynthia D. Durham, I lot, $46. - Marie L. Hill and Stephen W. Hill to William Fife nnd Elizabeth Fife, 1.21 acres,$250. - Eddie H. Foster and Hilda B. Foster to Michael Chamber- lain, 5.59 acres. Shady Orove, $95. - H. Terry Hutchens, substi­ tute trustee to Secretary of Hous­ ing and Urban Development,9.3 acres, Farmington. - John W. Stamey Jr, to Nancy C, Norton, I condo­ minium, Farmington, $272, - Dedric H, Robinson and Pamela D, Robinson to Lawrence Edward Flanagan and Ann Marie Flanagan, I lot,$436, - Eddie H. Foster and Hilda B. Foster to Cory Robertson, 3.89 acres. Shady Grove, $53. - Frances L. DePoortere, trustee under the Jacques H. Reyntjens Trust to Bermuda Vil­ lage Retirement Cenler, I con­ dominium, Farmington, $465. - Bermuda Village Retire­ ment Center to Mary A. Phelan, 1 condominium, Farmington, $465. - William A. Burnette to Bumfam, 5.38 acres, Fulton. - Bumfam to Freedom Bap­ tist Church of Davie County, 5,38 acres, Fulton. - Charles Conley and Kelley Conley to Warren Scott Angell nnd Luann L. Angell, 10.26 acres, Mocksville, $408. - Ruth Johnson to Dorothy R. Graham, 6,56 acres, Calahaln, - Dorothy R, Graham and Nelson Graham to Neil D. Larsson and Frances W. Larsson, 6.56 acres, Calahaln, $320. - Janice E. Williams to The Piedmont Group, 1 lot, Farming­ ton, $194. - Arnold Palmer Enterprises to Jeffrey Keith Ferguson, 1 lot, Farmington, $260. - Jerry D. McCullough and ;jJoyce J. McCulloughJo MtoijiL; D. Hayes and Nanby M.'Haye’s, - 16.66 acres, $194. - Zachary Matthew Hartman to Nicholas N, Gonzalez, 2,12 acfres,$124, - McDaniel Investment Prop­ erties to Doris H. Ruby, 1 lot, Mocksville, $284.' - James Larry Sheek to James Edward Ijames Jr., .12 acre, $2. -Mary S. Walker to W. Den­ nis Grubb and Judy Grubb, 3- plus lots, Mocksville, $45. - Dick Anderson Construc­ tion to John Dawson Clark Jr. and Donna M. Clark, 1 lot. Shady Grove, $650. - C, Leo Harrell and Marie C, Howell to Lany James Staley Jr. and Shayne R. Staley, 4 tracts, Farmington, $295. - H&V Construction to Johann E,B, Louchez and Erin D, Louchez, 1 lot, Mocksville, $250. - Shannon G. Smith and Sherrie A. Smith to Christine M. Purkey, 1 tract, Mocksville, $250. Ì S S S - B 3 È M I E R — Ì N D O W Of Mocksville Ì O p e n in g \ \ o „ N . ^ v i ) ( и > r O M Ictn ANY MX twan OOMU HUM WINDOW *185 - Mae Ella Fuller Lowrance to Cortland J. Meader and Eliza­ beth Ham Meader, .3 acre, Fultton, $3. - Alan B. Boger and Christy B. Boger to Lea K. Ireland, I acre, Clarksville, $224. - Russell Carey Smiley and Hazel B. Adams Smiley (half interest) and David Eugene Smiley, executor of estate of Linda Diane Smiley (half inter­ est) to Bruce Edward Lau and Gayla Lau, 2 acres, Fulton, $195. - Heather M. Welch to Kyle Michael Shuping and Janet R. Shuping, .69 acre, Calahaln, $220. - Mulvaney Homes to Soloman A. Quick, 1 lot, Farm­ ington, $306. - Marolyn A. Schauss (half interest) to James Fulton, I lot, Farmington, $400. -Fanchon F. Funk (half inter­ est) toJames Fulton, 1 lot,Farm­ ington, $400. Mocksville Police The following incidents were reported to the Mocksville Po­ lice Department. - The larceny of a license tag from a vehicle off Hospital Street was reported May 3. - The larceny of money from a restaurant on Yadkinville Road was reported May 3. - The breaking, entering and larceny of money from a resi­ dence at Northridge Court was reported May 4. - The larceny of money from a purse at the Davie Campus was reported May 5. - The larceny of $17 worth of fuel from Fast Track, Yadkinville Road, was,reported May 6. - The breaking and entering of a residence on Summit Street was reported May 7. - The larceny of $30 worth of fuel from Fast Track, Yadkinville Road, was reported May 5. -THe^feaking, entering and larceny of stereo equipment from a vehicle on Windward Circle was reported May 6. - The larceny of 1,000 gal­ lons of water from a fire hydrant on Country Lane was reported May 6. - An employee stole money from The Soda Shoppe, it was reported May 9. Arrests - Ronald Phillips Andaiy, 19, of 178 Essie Road, was charged May 7 with DWI, provisional DWI and possession of mari­ juana. Trial date: June3. - Tabitha Melissa Shipp, 17, of Winston-Salem, was charged May 7 with underage possession of beer. Trial date; June 3. - Tommy Edward Holliday, 26, of Statesville, was charged May 4 with breaking, entering and larceny. Trial date: May 12. - Felix Cortes Contreras, 25, of Hamptonville, was charged May 4 with failure to appear in courl. Trial date; May 19. - Craig Thomas Brown, 16, of4222 US 601N., was charged May 6 with aiding nnd abetting larceny. Trial dale: June 2. - Christopher Matthew Ange, 16, of 158 River Road, Advance, was charged May 6 with shop­ lifting, Trial date: June 2, Traffic Accident - No charges were filed after a wreck at 8:30 a,m. May 6. - Robert Webster Fields Jr., 61, of Milling Road, wos driv­ ing a truck from Lexington Road onto South Main Street when it struck another truck driven by Urry Dale Bolen, 53, of Lexing- ton, reported Officer E.M. Parker. (MCI CHECK OUT OUR SEAMLESS QUTTERS ÍF)U bM nfQ im «« LM OwM twlnVM llli KMptngUMiOirt FREEEMInwt*( y i* t 'UMnwIMmny Ï •lUMMtMMArand• ' L* • •Еацг Пмпскк •СмиатМжкОмМ» ■Earn Нмяу Duly««-------------------------- »а ш тга •OmtiM DiMinipout« •S«MnlC«fento С(юом|Цц EMTRY DOORS PATIO DOORS L I N D В E R G зтй к о OPTICS Ifatle Slfcel NMnslon-SalfigRra27l()l • >()()(, W e ll. Г 'Щ Ш Ц Ш и (> il). S,|| I I I ill Ih c KKi'UK.sKM v m i; J u l i a H o w a r d ■ \ ( ' H o u s f 7 ' J t h n i \ l r i c l Pleme contact me in: MOCKSVILLE; (336) 751-8567 RALEIGH; (919) 733-5904 Legislative BulWing 16 W Jones Street, Rmlfoe Raleigh, N027601-1096 Email; Jullah@ncleg.net Р Л 1 И т « П Л Ш H O W A R O DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 P i c n i c S p e a k e r People are living longer, and the desire for more information on aging-related diseases such as Alzheimer’s is becoming sought after more and more, Davie County’s Masons re­ alize this, and have invited Dr, Robert J.F, Eisner to be the guest speaker at die Masonic Picnic on June 9. Eisner will answer questions from the audience at the 10:30 a.m. program at the picnic grounds off North Main Street, Mocksville. Dam e C ou n ty R epublican P a rty ¡ S i i , D i n n e r M e e t i n g ^ T u e s d a y , M a y 1 7 t h V e n e z i a ’s R e s t a u r a n t in ftont of Food Lion, Hillsdale Dinner at 6:30 p.m. M eeting at 7:15 p.m. . Ad paid for BY THE Davie County Republican Party . Cooleemee Postmaster Craig Mock is ready to help residents with their mail. Reception May 19 To Welcome New Cooleemee Postm aster COOLEEMEE - Craig Mock has been named new postmas­ ter of Cooleemee, 27014. A reception to allow the pub­ lic to meet him has been sched­ uled for Thursday, May 19 from 10 a.m.-noon. Long a fixture at the Mocks­ ville Post Office, Mock is a Davie native. He and his wife, Rhonda, live in Mocksville and have two children, Lauren and Michael. He started his postal career as a window clerk in Mocksville and had served until recently as supervisor of the office. He has also served as postmaster/office in charge at the post offices in Boonville, Union Orove, Mocksville and Scotts. He hod served as interim post master ot Cooleemee since the retirement of Judy Phillips in January. Phillips and Libby Owens re­ tired earlier this year. Beth Sauffer, formerly wilh the' Woodleaf Post Office, will re­ place Owens as postmaster re­ lief in Cooleemee. “I think it will be both help­ ful and interesting for custom­ ers to leam just how we man­ age to process and deliver the millions of pieces of mail we re­ ceive each day across the na­ tion,” he said. “I look forward to talking about our business and getting to know our customers. I encour­ age everyone who can to stop by the Post Office, have some refreshments and chat for awhile.” He becomes the 17th person to serve as post master in Cool­ eemee since the post office opened in 1900. The first was John S. Lyon, followed by George C. Patterson, William H. Candell, Thomas L. Swicegood, Jesse G. Foster, Noah J. Grimes, Lillington Hendrix, William C. White, 'I\illie M. Alexander, William C. White, F. Katherine Craddock, Harold L. Reid, Margie B. Pope, Joan W. Steele, Elizabeth B. Owens and Judith F. Phillips. S a l e ! S a l e ! S a l e ! S a l & ! S a l e ! P e tu n ia s & Im p a tie n s Now open Beside Diane’s Diner, Hwy. 64 West of IVIocl(sviile Call (336) 409-0113 for directions & info. Hours: Fri. 9-6, Sat. 9-7, Sun. 2-5 Other times by appointment only Personal Assistant for Hire Having trouble getting the little things done? Do your questions go unanswered? Being treated unfairly? Need confidentiality? Need to talk? Perhaps we can help. 336.751.9582 COMING T O M O C K SV ILLE SATURDAY & SUNDAY March 14 & 15 B e n F r a n k l i n Saturday, 10am to 5pm Sunday, 1pm to 5pm C o l o r P o r t r a i t P a c k a g e S p e c i a l 3 - SxlO’s 3 - 5x7’s 12-Wallets 1 3 95 $2 ss D e p o s it Customer pays $11,00 when portraits delivered al store approximately oneweeklatar, • DON’T MISS IT • NO AGE LIMIT •FAMILY GROUPS ALSO «ADULTS TOO! All work Guaranteed by; T R IV E T T E S T U D IO Ben Fra n k lin Willow Oak Center • Mocksvllle, NC ^ Annual C o o le e m e e C iv it a n C l i i F F id d le r s ’ C o n v e n t io n Saturday» May 14 * 12 Noon until C le m e n t G r o v e P ic n ic G r o u n d s 201 Poplar Street, O ff N. Main • Mocksville, N C Cash Prizes/Ribbons Awarded in 16 categories totalling over $2,600 • Best Bluegrass Band • Best Old Time Band • Best Bluegrass Fiddler • Best Old Time Fiddler • Best Bluegrass Banjo • Best Old Time Banjo • Best Guitar • Best Mandolin • Best Bass • Best Dobro • Most Promising Talent (12 & und«) • Most Promising Talent (13 -la) • Best Vocals • Best Vocal Group • Best Buck Dancers • Miscellaneous BAND AND INDIVIDUAL RiCISTRAVON STARTS AT 12 NOON W e will have performances and jam sessions throughout the afternoon starling at 12 Noon. There will be craft vendors on hand to sell their wares and crafts as well. During the festival we will present checks to local organizations supported by the Civitan Club including: Davie Co. Special Olyinplcs Camp Manna Ministries Davie County Hospice A Storehouse For Jesus Davie High School At Risk Kids Davie High School Scholarship Cooleemee Fire Department Door Prizes! Food and Beverages Available No Coolers Allowed! Lawn Chairs Recommended HELD RAIN OR SHINE! Admission^ Adults $8.00 Children 6-12 $2.00 Children under 6 FREE *Procceds benefit Civitan Club charities Sponsored by: C O O L E E M E E C IV IT A N C L U B For more information, call; (336) 284-4167 Email: cooleemeeciv@yadtel.net www.cooleemeecivitans.org 1st Place Band Sponsors Bank of the Carolinas - ord tiiik Band Concrete Supply Co. - Biutgra» Band Piatinym. Sponsors Davie Chamber of Commerce Carolina Finishing, Inc.The Red Pig Barbecue SunTrust Bank - Cooleemee Cooleemee Hardware Cheerwine Botlling, Salisbury Counter Point Music Dave's Music Handi Cupboard - 1 & II Lagle Construction Davie Arts Council WBRF 9B.1 FM Gold Sponsors Woodleaf Farm Equipment Daniel Furniture & Electric Co, Inc. Davie Discount Drug Roxanne's Beauty & Tanning Salon • WoodleafAllstate Insurance Co. - Mocksville Spillman's Land & Homes Davie Funeral Service Eaton Funeral Service Mlyson H, Sawtelle, CPA, PA - Advance Wal-Mart W AME550AM WFMX 105,7 FM Days inn of Mocksville gilver Sponsors Rep. Julia Howard Ken Sales Mocksvllle Builders Supply Campbell Pump and Well Service - Salisbury Deano's Barbecue Robert Page Septic Tank Cleaning Service Buffalo Rusty's Restaurant River Bend Farm Shoaf's Wagon Wheel South Yadkin PowerState Farm InsuranceThe American Café Dottie's Market The Corner Store Lawn Preparation & Maintenance Lonnie Campbell Welding Carolina Computer SuppFy Global Graphics fliSES American Legion of Cooleemee Osborne's Service Station Edgewood Oil Co. 44 Magnum Motorsports Farm Bureau - )C Stevenson Dorothy Cranford - Cooleemee Courtslde Sports 8 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Honor Students The following sludcnls were named to the third quarter acadcmic honor roll in Davie County Schools. Cooleemee Elementary Third Grade Allison Barney, Darryl Bohannon, Jose' Carrillo, Caleb Carter, Michele Diehl, Morgan Dragon, Nicholas Endicott, Charlie Ferrell, Kenny Goodin, Courtney Jones, Pake Millsaps, Zachary Osbome, Joshua Peters, Dustin Potts, Katie Soard, David Taylor, Jose’ Tejada, Corbin West, Emma West. Fourth Grade Jessica Blunkall, Amelia Boger, Katie Bonilla, Melanie Brannock, Ashley Burgess, Chris Campbell, Montero Carter, Will Cartner, Austin Caudle, Aaron Dodd, Desirae Downs, Justin Eckart, Briannn Farris, Tyler Grubb, Colleen Hembree, Quameshla James, Jessica Lancaster, Rebecca Mickalowski, Chasity Miller, Krista Miller, Andrew Montgomery, Brandon Rulh, Jason Sellers, Michaela Shaver, Shelby Stephens, Kiyomi Taylor, Stephanie Velotta, Jonathan West, Jennifer West, Brie White. Fifth Grade TVIer Allen, Austin Allison, Cameron Beck, Tyler Bush, Whittney Correll, Nicole Ebright, Sierra Ferrell, Nathan Jones, Drew Lewallen, Matt Love, Eli MacLean, Jansen McDaniel, Ashley Moore, Carlos Moreno, Brian Plott, Lauren Robbins, Kaytlyn Shoemaker, Josh Smyers, Anne- Marie Tow, Ben Watlington, Becca West, Austin White, Jake Whitley. Cornatzer Elementary Third Grade Jeremy Allen, Bibiana Ar­ royo, Sydnee Autry, Ryan Ball, TVavis Davis, Michaela Draughn, Lauren Eastep, Caleb Foote, Emilie Fetherbay, Cameron Gor­ don,Morgan Hendrix, Ryan Hepler, Trent Hill, Abby Hubbard, Whitney Illing, Jeremy Jones, Tanner Junker, Valerie Karriker, Samantha Kimrey, Jor­ dan Lagle, Damian Lewis, Dylan Maciaszek, Rasaun Martin, Katie North, Aaron Palmer, Madison ParJcer, Zachary Robertson, Kalelyn Sizemore, Zach Spry, Savanna Thomas, Kristen Trivette, Emily Turner, Nathaniel Tutterow, Miranda Wheeler, Austin Whitaker, Casey Wyatt. Fourth Grade Alex Abbott, Kurtis Banner, Roger Barona, Matthew ‘ Beauchamp, Nicholas Benitez, McKayla Boswell, Kyle Bullins, Kristi Burton, Amber Coates, Tyicr Correll, Yesenia Cristobal, Bobby DeLucia, Robby Dotson, Jacob Duncan, Cassidy Edwards, Juan Exiga-Beltran, I Corey Gordy, Brian Guerrero, Gisselle Hernandez, Viri Hernandez, Austin Hill, Brent Hill, Jacob Horton, Elizabeth Howard, Jacob Karriker, B.J. Lanier, Thylor Lankford, Amber Link, Tyler Marshall, Anna McBride, Justin McClannon, Caroline Miller, Dalton Nieft, Zack Norman, Maura Pereira, Brent Pontillo, Karina Ramirez, Abigail Romero, Katie SanFilippo, Amanda Smith, Amy Stellar, Lauren Taylor, Francisco Uriostegui, Austin Williams, Johnathan Wiseman, Andrew Workman. Savannah Yost. Fifth Grade Cody Bales, Karen Boger, Johnathon Boles, Chelsie Brown, Anthony Calhoun, Aus­ tin Carter, Kaitlyn Cheek, Caroline Cozart, Cole Crisco, Jodie Davis,Tiffany Davis, Jose Diaz-Olea, Andrea Easter, Emily Everidge, Leslie Fulton, Meredith Hanes, Brandon Hatcher, Brittany Hoose, Brady Link, TVler Neely, Ben Peterkin, Josie Piper, Corey Randall, Brit­ tany Reynolds, Gabriel Ruano- Cruz, Luke Taylor, Gerald Whitaker, Logan Wilkinson. Mocksville Elementary Third Grade Kevin Arreola, Jason Atkinson, Amber Bdsham, Aubrey Bearden, Kayla Beck, Olivia ' Bowman, Amanda Burgan, Chelsea Byerly, Ada Caballero, Alexis Callison, Cameron Cassady, Abigail Daniels, Tyler Galyean, Ariel Harvat, Elizabeth Holland, Quin Holland, Amber Hunter, David Jones, Quientin Joyner, Alex Lawrence, Heather McClamrock, Diana Moure- Garcia, Tanner Nelson, Taylor Nelson, Colton Orrell, Devin Owens, Abbey Pharr, Eric Powell, Cynthia Reyes, Harrison Sales, Summer Scardino, Will Seamon, Aaron Sheets, Summer Smart, David Uriostegui, Cole Whitaker, Mallory Williams, Sara Wishon. Fourth Grade Andrew Austin, Danny Bailey, Bradley Beck, Ashlyn Blass, Aidan Blumquist, Jessica Brown, Seth Burgdofer, Jake Carter, Joel Cartner, Tia Clement, Robert Daniel, Stephen Daniel, Harmony Dimmig, Jaylon Driver, Angel Edwards, Borry Etchison, TVIer Gaddy, Haley Gihther, David Hursey, Hali Hutchens, Brooke Johnson, Brandon Koontz, Jamal Lackey, Hayley Lamberi, Jacob Lamberi, Evan Lankford, Caleb Mathis, Sydmey McBride, Davin McLaughlin, Carrie Miller, Lorena Millo, Arturo Moure, Shelby Potts, Will Priestly, Ana Sanchez, Sarah Sponaugle, Alyssa Vancleef; Amber Villasenor, Rachel Williams, Miranda Williams, Kelsey Woolen. Fifth Grade Davis Absher, Priyanko Barad, Cameron Beck, Logan Bryan, Ana Burton, Taylor Carpenter, Heather Cartner, Alex Costner, Josh Crickard, Alyson Eaton, Chelsie Endicott, Betsy Forrest, Alex Foster, Brianna Gaither, Christina Griffin, Colleen Hennelly, Landon Huri, Justin Lanning, Andrea Mejia, Christopher Miller, Jordan O’Neill, Chelsea Oswell, John Parker, Cameron Phillips, Kelly Presley, Chris Rhodes, Hunter Sales, Jose Sanchez, Elizabeth Santis, Kyle Serio, Christina Shrewsbury, Paige Smart, Adam Smith, Hannah Spicer, Armani Steed, Angelo Tyus, Jeremy Whitaker, Ashton Wise, Kacy Yount. Pinebrook Elementary Third Grade Kelsi Atkins, Hannah Ball, Krisian Barney, Jacob Barnhardt, Ben Beeson, Savannah Bias, Clint Boner, Meredith Bowles, Will Brackern, Morgan Bryant, Kirsten Buchin, Dalton Carpenter, Katie Cassidy, Justice Childress, Zachary Coffey, Jonathan Edwards, Ashley Evans, Lee Fortescue, Michael Hanks, Dylan Harris, Matthew Hendrix, Bryan Hiles, Kyle Hottel, Austin Humphries, Austin Kerr, Madison Kirk, Nicholas Logan, Allie Maine, Luke Martin, Haley McDaniel, Keith McKay, Paige Myers, Brandon Oakley, McKenzie Phillips, Will Plott, Brittany Reece, Tara Roy, Allison Smith, Michael Stamper, Clay Thompson, Kayla Thomsberry, Ellen T\itlerow, Andrew Whaley, Jessica. White, Chrissy Workman, Austin York. Fourth Grade Taylor Anderson, Katelyn Ashley, Andrew Ballard, Dylan Bright, Conrad Campbell, Bradley Carter, Haley Carter, Clayton Chilen, Matthew Ellis, Emily Evans, Lucas Foster, Alex Hamm, Luke Harris, Kelsie Hatherlee, Kayla Hendrix, Austin Howse, Julie Keaton, Kari Koty, Adam Lapish, Christian Latham, Daniel Lyeriy, Matt Marshall, Carlos Mariinez, Sydney McCune, Dylan McDaniel, Michael Mtirrillo, Luke Naylor, Jesse Nestor, Garrett Nestor, Samuel Newman, Grace Rauen, Elise Rosier, Jordan Ruble, Austin Sloan, Courtney Smith, Morgan Strickland, Nick Tate, Vincent Taylor, Eric Thomsberry, Jeremy Walker, Luke Walker, Jennifer Webster, Austin Whitaker, Chelsea Whitaker, Tori Williams, Marissa Williams, Jonah Womble, Hayden Wright, Christian Young. . Fifth Grade T.J, Anderson, Morgan Barnhardt, Sarah Battles, Will Beeson, Christina Bobo, Kirklin Bowles, Sarah Boyter, Sammy Brown, Hannah Brunstetter, Jessica Buchanan, Andrew Byrd, Ashley Carpenter, Morgan Carter, Taylor Chandler, Andrew Charles, Tori Clontz, Erika Coffeji,'’W il'dtíiJc. Felish'á' Dalton, Emily Demarest, Tara Dixon, Austain Doby, Sam Dressier, Emily Gardner, Tyron Gibson, Kayla Glenn, Jessica Green, Jesse Gunning, Rachel Hottel, Hallie Humphries, Kaitlyn Hutchins, Sara Johnson, Heather Kimel, Eric King, Wilson Land, Katherine Lane, Jacob Love, Max Lum, Jasmine Lyons, Clara MacDonell, Katrina Maine, Haley McCune, Maegan McGee, Ashley McLaurine, Karia Miner, Amber Minor, Brehesner Montoya, Hollin Morrison, Josh Mullis, Courtney Pardue, Kayla Rampersad, Jake Reavis, Heather Riddle, Nathan Roy, Nick Sheeran, Jaryd Shore, Maggie Simmons, Nathan South, Victoria Stanley, Chelsey Thomas, Lacey Tuthill, Nicole Vaughn, Weston Walker, Jacob Walker, Hannah Whittington, Rebecca Wood, Alyssa York. Shady Grove Elementary Third Grade Alexis Albarran, Kasey Alston, Brandon Armstrong, Ryan Bailey, Ashley Barnhardt, Hunter Baskin, Chloe Berube, Sydney Browder, Megan Callahan, Lauren Campbell, Ivey Carney, Claire Collett, Tristan Comer, Madisyn Creekmore, Scott Dennard, Evan Dowell, David Ervin. Molly Fields, Poul Folmar, Bethany Foster, T. J. Freidt, Allie Fruits, Nadia Gregory, Danielle Hall, Jacob Holcomb, Cosmo Hutchins, Allie Jackson, Jessie James, Cody Jeffries, Colin Joldersma, Eric Kassel, Gilson Kingman, Helen Koeval, Dakota Lemm, Gabby Macaionc, Andrew Marion, Samantha Maurice, Avee McGuire, Michael Mebel, Angelo Micozzi, Seth Morris, Gray Nichols, Cofvonn Peebles, Britani Peterson, Alexandra Plitt, Henry Powers, Katie Reed, Luke Renegar, Katie Roberts, Jack Robertson, Rachel Ruble,' Monica Scheumann, Peyton Sell, Logan Sessoms, Cole Smiley, Lilly Smithdeal, Christian Stoltz, Stone Stroud, Emily Swade, Emily Tester, Jacob Tozier, Teddi Utt, Bryson Weaver, Maggie Webb, Colby Widener. Fourth Grade Landon Adams, Karch Arey, Sarah Morgan Beauchamp, Aaron Brown, Elizabeth Carbone, Morgan Carter, Alex Church, Sarah Cranflll, Kaitlin Creech, Kiran Dhillon, Ashley Dowell, Jill Duffner, Isaac Dunn, Abigail Dupree, Brianna Eichhorn, Sarah Fair, James Ferguson, Amber Finney, Colin Floyd, Bailey Folmar, Scott' Gallimore, Anna Goheen, Allison Griffin, Leah Gryder, Aaron Guttenberg, Madie Haynes, Drpw Taylor Hewitt, Sarah Hinson, Travis Holden, Alice Hoskins, Nicholos Irwin, William Lambert, Kayla Lane, Celeste Long, Katherine McCuiston, Jimmy Miller, Chase Moore, Ke’lyn Nichols, Adrienne Olson, Kelsey Orr, Kristina Parrish, Woody Parrish, Cameron Peebles, Jeffrey Phillips, Suzanne Phillips, Nicholas Ressa, Kayla Revelle, Wilson Rowe, Sydney Rowell, Isaac Rudolph, Allie Slabach, Emily ¿tessman, Andrew Thomasson, Stacy Torrence, Tara Tregarthen-Knight, Ryan Trudeat), Brittany Wall, Bo Walters, Hailey Weatherman, Cassidy Webb, Nicholas Whaling, Claire Whitaker, Sydney Wooten. Fifth Grade Natalie Abernethy, Blaine Adderton. Trevor Albarran, Lexie Armini, Luke Bagetis, Jordan Baker, Josh Ballman, Katie Barber, Kelsey Bhasker, Kristin Bhasker, Megan Bolin, Cameron Brockman, Ellie Carter, Taylor Carter, Nicole Casey, Alex Cloer, Darren Colboume, Hannah Cornatzer, Brea Correll, Dylan Cranfill, Alexis Crater, Tommy Dillon, Janna Dixon, Kristen Dray, Ryan Dunn, Ti-evon Faulkner, Sergio Fernandez, Ryan Foster, Kendrick Fruits, Mark Graham, Hariey Gunter, Paul Guntner, Olivia Harvel, Maggie Hurdle, Teddy Kellogg, Mason Lesper, Katie Lewis, Will Macey, Tony Mannino, Ashleigh McIntyre, Haley McKnight, Hannah McNeil, Williom Mikhail, Davis Mossman, Wesley Myers, Jordan Neal, Bailey Ogle, Bethany Pan, Morgan Parrish, Rachel Peterson, Emma Powers, Madi Pratapas, Brendan Radatovich, Daniel Ritter, Laura Shelton, Stephanie Siler, Joe Sink, Kaitlyn Smith, Spencer Smith, Max Spainhour, Laura Spillman, Sarah Stigall, Katie Sutherland, Jessica Swade, Stephanie Walts, Jennifer Weatherman, Nathan Webb, Jake Whitley, Rob Wilson, John Woltz, Carolina Zakamarek, Brooke Ziglar. William R. Davie Elementary Third Grade Kolin Andrews, Maelena Apperson, Wiley Baity, Anna Belh Carter, Tbylor Blankenship, Michaela Boger, Avery Brown, Tanner Call, Brittany Cranfill, Jonathan Ellington, Joshua Gammons, Johnny Hernandez, Ross Hoffner, Elijah Jones, Matthew Keenan, Kendall Lanier, Sasha Lockhiut, Chloe Mobe, Ryan Macy, Conner Mayo, Todd McBi;ide, Maggie Meagher, Taylor Mohat, Sam Nesbh, Matthew Nesbit, Kristen Ramsey, Samantha Taylor, Desirae Vandiver, Joshua Wagner, Matthew Walker. Fourth Grade Sarah Anderson, Brooke Ball, Cole Blankenship, Brittani Cartner, Jonathan Chaffin, Kirsten Cockerham, Joey Davis, Logan Hendricks, Natalie Ireland, Alex Lashmit, Sherri Parks, Tyier Shoffner, Kendall Tifft, Annalee Tlitterow, Brooke Wallace, Taylor Weatherman,, Cody White. Fifth Grade Brittany Anderson, Ashley Anderson, Aubrey Apperson, Megan Beck, Mary-Kate Beck, Kayla Bell, Haley Caudle, Derek Danner, Могу Ferebee, Courtney Grannaman, Payton Kelly, Sadie Lagle, Tyier Luckey, Nathan Pearce, Nora Taylor, Megan Walker, Madison Whitlock. North Davie Middle Sixth Grade All A’s; Neha Acharyo, Thylor Anderson, Daniel Barrett, Devin Beauchamp, Christopher Breeden, Dane Cook, Kayla Cornatzer, Katherine Davis, Brad Deal, Collin Eichhorn, Peter Fields, Sean Gifford, Jo Elizabeth Hartman, Caitlin Hausert Kora Hiatty .Christy. Holdsclow, Alex Keiser, Erinn Lapish, Parker Lee, Kyle Macey, Motthew Meeker, Cotherine Montgomery, Jamie Morris, Daniel Needs, Alex Newman, Ashley Rowe, Morgan Rowe, Brandon Roy, Conway Shelton, Lake Slabach, Alex Smithdeal, Holly Thompson, Kelsey Tift, Kali Whitaker, Elaina Womble, Chelsea Young. A/B Honor Roll: Maggie Arnold, Donnie Baker, Casey Bames, Paul Beauchamp, Alex Bell, Connor Bodenhamer, Kayla Brewer, Andrew Buchanan, Ryan Budd, Christopher Carter, Matthew Carter, Elliot Chaplin, Justin Cook, Cellie Cornatzer, Jiffany Cox, Christian Day, Zane Duffner, Matthew Dyson, Zochory Foir, Alex Fleining, Holley Folk, Jason Gallimore, Rachel Goheen, Lindsey Guinn, Jasmin Gunning, Megan Hennings, Brenda Hernandez, Esmeralda Hemande;;, Kenneth Hockaday, Chad Howard, David Howard, Michael Howard, Amanda Hughes, Kloi Irving, Steven Jastrow, Zeb Jones, Hannah Keeney, Alice Kim, Cariy Kincaid, Jonah Kinder, Sarah Lambert, Rebecca Lard, Andrew Ledford, Chelsea Ledford, Kaitlin Martin, Brooklyn McCraw, Preston McGurn, Brittany Metcalf, Jimmy Miller, Nathan Milleson, Justin Minor, Ronald Moore, Rachel Morales, Jordan Myers, Miranda Myers, Pete Newman, Sean Newman, Kory Newton, Tori Norris, Cody O’Mara, Melina Obando, Andrew Olson, Zachary Paugh, Brattdon Phillips, Justin Potts, Katelyne Reed, Blake Rosier, Chariie Rothberg, Brandon Rowell, Lyndsey Ruble, Jasmine Sales, Shelton Sales, Cody Schneggenburger, Kathryn Sells, Sarah Shaver, Blake Simmons, Nicholas Sizemore, Andrea Smiley,.Jay Stancliff, Brittani Stewort, Hariey Stroud, Sterling Tkach, Samantha Vannqy, Wendy Villatoro, Zach Waller, Landon Whitoker, Walter Wilson. Seventh Grade A Honor Roll: Nicklaus Asburn, Winston Becker, Rebecca Bobo, Joshua Carter, Morgan Carter, Alexandrea Champney, Elizabeth Davis, Avi Gomez, Emma Gordon, Molly Graham, Ashley Green, Lauren Gryder, Corio Harris, Chelsea Janson, Katherine Johnson, Autumn Jones, Julia Juhasz, Kristen Karns, Moriah Macdonell, Morgan Mannino, Chostner Merrifield, William Mills, Taylor Moore, Clare Moser, Jacob Moser, Sam Moser, Catherine Nichols, Chelsea Parish, Leanna Peedin, Michelle Phillips, Jenna Pummill, Jennifer Rominger, Brianna Sheets, Tyier Shelton, Talor Stokes, Andrew Sutter, Emily T^te, Morgan Thomosson, Coitlin Tutterow, Sunni Utt, Emily Whitaker, Bret Williams. Seventh Grade A/B Honor Roll: Mott Adderton, Jacob. Alston, Bria Backmon, Sarah Barber, Jackie Barney, Luke Bartelt, Austin Bell, Nimetta Bhasker, Jessica Blackburn, Jennifer Booth, Greg Brill, Danielle Brown, Ashlyn Brunstetter, Ben Burton, Anthony Copra, Nicholas Copro, Sam Cassidy, Annelise Chesnee, Tyicr Chilen, Seon Dovidson, Karii Dempski, Koycce Dixon, Zochory’DUnn, John Flowers, Lisa Foster, Kassandra Gerdes, Kathryn Gordon, Kara Harvey, Nora Hayes, Makenzey Haynes, Hannah Hendrix, Vanesso Hernandez, Toylor Hiatt, Tonner Holden, Bridgelte Hooks, Madison Hunt, Megan Hutchens, Kasey Ireland, Brenden Johann, Alyson Jordan, Jacob Kalie, Stephen Kurtz, Kendell Lambert, Brad Landreth, Spencer Lanning, Sam Law, Samantha Ledbetter, Grace Loeffler, Zach Long, Joaanna Lucero, Atticus Lum, Alex Macoione, Jessica Manspile, Joel Martin, Clint Mast, Jake McKay, Megan Medford, Christina Mikhail, Molly Miles, Lindsay Miller, Molthew Mills, Joshua Money, Alyssa Mossman, Melisso Nichols,.Courtney Ogle, Oscar Orellono, Ian Pace, Corrie Phelps, Sofija Pitovski, Jessica Poulsen, Hoyley Robertson, Greg Rogers, Paula Romero, Jacob Rudolph, Jennifer Russell, Chase Sampson, Kaitlyn Simmons, Courtney Sims, Matt Speer, Kotelin Storre, Joel Stiling, Elizabeth Strange, Jessica Strickland, Will Suggs, Brandon Tester, Michael Tilley, Koihryn Van Niman, Brilinie Wagner, Brooke Wagoner, Breck Want. Eighth Grade All A’s: Paige Altman, Continued On Page 9 I T D O N ’T S A Y S E A L Y , I T A I N ’T A S E A L Y ” $ave FR E E R EM O VAL O F O L D B E D D IN G Don’t Buy Just Any Mattress — GetThe Best OneThat Will Last You For Years. We Can Finance SEALY^ SWEETWATER SERIES BETAIL SAL£EB1C£ Twiln Set.........$325.95..................$239.95 Full Set...........$442.50.................$329.95 Quaen Set......$512.50.................$389.95 King Set..........$695.89....3 pc set $499.95 3 piece set Featuring: 336 Colls, 5 turn, 12.75 gauge coll, border rod 6 gauge M o c k s v ille F u rn itu re & A p p lia n c e s , In c . D o w n t o w n M o c k s v ille A fter a ll, w h o k n o w s m o r e a b o u t c o m fo r t a n d s u p p o r t th a n th e m a k e r s o f th e fa m o u s S e a ly P o s tu r e p e d ic . ^ SEALV*THE # 1 MATTRESS CO.. Free Delivery C O M E BY TO D A Y FO R A D E M O N ST R A T IO N 1'»/ r ■ Г-" n ;ir H o n o r S t u d e n t s DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - 9 Continued From Page 8 Allison Campbell, Vince Cioce, 'Elizabeth Coiner, Matthew Coiner, Samantha Contos, Cariy Cornatzer, Diana Green, Sean Griffin, Stacy Jolly, Julie Jones, Adam McCallister, Ashley McCallister, Joshua Pan, Jordan Schultz, John Stigall, Hannah Stroupe, Maggie Tupay. A/B Honor Roll: Chasen Arey, Josh Atkins, Cassie Barnes, Shovonne Barnes, Nathan Battles, Katie Bond, Michael Burford, Bradley Burton, Halle Cartner, Whitney Chilen, Brandi Cockerham, Rachel Cooper, Kayla Drennen, Will Duncan, Neil Edwards, Sarah Evans, Alexandra Folk, Alex Frye,Marcie Garrett,Israel Goheen, Christine Gulledge, Brenden Hanes, Soroh Harvel, Daniel Hennings, Salmo Ibrahim, Samantha James, Justin Keaton, Jordan Kinder, Pamela Lane, Joey Lard, Morgan Long, Kayla Luckey, Avery Lutz, Susanna MocFariane, Somontho Maready, Megan Marshall, Sarah Martin, Jennifer Miller, Christian O’Connor, Julianne Olson, Amber Parrish, Caroline Pratapas, Trevor Reece, Amanda Riddle, Amber Rogers, Ellie Rogers, Michael Rowe, Madelyn Shore, Ben Sink, Tatum Snow, Carli Snyder, Brandon Squire, Will Stone, Leah Vulpitta, Kathryn Walker, Elizabeth Waller, Jade Welch, Katelin Wensley, Natosho Wilson, Michael Wood, Jaclyn Woodward, Ashton York, Monica Zakamarek. South Davie Middle Sixth Grade All A’s; Drew Andrade, Holie Burton, Kali Davis, Erin Deadmon, Mary Elizabeth Dehart, Steven Durham, Ryan Dyson, Caro Beth Hendricks, Rachel Howell, Motthew HUrsey, Shelby Johnson, Willis Jones,Tyier Laymon, Stephonie Parker, Destiny Pearcy, Diana Rodriguez-Salgodo, Lacey Trivette, \V^esley Vanhoy. ' ' A/B Honor Roll: Chan Archer, Tanner Bailey, Jacob Barber, Salvador Benitez- Romero, Jessica Bobbitt, Caitlyn Brake, Haleigh Brown, Cory Cavaleri, Ashley Cook, Rebecca Cook, Christopher Cross, Autumn Denniston, Malissa Diehl, Andrew Domanski, Kehia Ellis, Jackson Evans, Marilyn Farleigh, Denzell Gormon, Andrew Guardado, Nick Holder, Amber Honeycutt, Danesso Howord, Kelley Howord, Joey Ijames, Motthew lies, Conner Jewell, Kevin Jordon, Dillon Lombe, Allison Lambert, Kelsey Lane, Dylan Livengood, Chase London, Louren Morshull, Danielle McClearen, Zach Montgomery, Aldegundo Navarro, Hayley Osgood, William Page,Gary Parra, Javan Phillips, Mikael Pulliam, Dillon Reid, Chelsey Reinhardt, April Rodriguez, Leonel Rodriguez- Salgado, John San Filippo, Mattieu Sawicki-Johnson, Joel Shuler, Christa Smith, Breonna Snowden, Kristen Stiller, Hunter Stone, Ashton Swicegood, Tess Tagnani, Samuel Taylor, Aaron Thies, Brandon Toney, Noemi Valdiva-Lorenzo, Walter Varona, Aoron Veach, Patrick Whaley, Darius Wilson, Bloke Wise. Seventh Grade All A’s; Louren Bailey, Lindsey Bailey, Ciera Beam, Catherine Brake, Brian Bullins, Koitlin Buss, Jessico Butner, Tyler Ham, Summer Holland, Tyier Jewell, Natalie McBride, Greg Nuckols, Josh Peeler, Gerald Stakely,Audriano Taylor. A/B Honor Roll; Roger Adkins, Andrew Allen, Koylee Allison, Melvin Argueto, Amber Arnold, Jordan Autry, Adam Barnhardt, Krystal Beam, Josh Berryhili, Kelsey Bryan, Shane Butcher, Moisés Cisneros- Pastor, Brittany Clark, Kristie Davis, Ryan Denniston, Erin DesNoyers, Shayna Dillard, Zach Drechsler, Lizbeth Enriquez-Jimenez, Will Evans, Patti Evans, Kristin Ferebee, Rosa Flores-Sanchez, Tina Fortney, Heather Foster, Wilder Fuentes-Cruz, Kirsten Gaddy, Bradley Gaither, Devon Gorretson, Zachary Green, Adina Guyton, Michelle Hamilton, Sara Handy, Jesse Hilton, Christopher Hoke, Brandon Hoose, Kendra Hunter, Christopher Hurt, Kayla Ivey, Nicholas Jaeger, Ashley James, Kaleb Koontz, Christian Linton, Gabriello Lopez-Ruono, Kelly Loy, Bryan Morklond, Will Morrs, Sovannoh McGunigol, Greg Miller, Payne Miller, Erin Naylor. Sydney Nelson, Hannah Orrell, Cherina Overton, BJ Plummer, Jacob Potts, Travis Powers, Samantha Prestwood, Keila Prevette, Jake Prim, Katherine Quijada, James Ray, Kierra Rivers, Cecila RodrigueZ:Bravo, Will Rooney, Ismael Ruano-Cruz, Pablo Santiago-Carrillo, Tyler Seaford, Steffi Shaver, Whitney Short, Katherine Sims, Jamie Smith, Taylor Smoot, Anna Smyers, Karen Spry, Tyler Spry, Jessica Stephens, Maleia Stevenson, Lauren Strickland, Kelcey Sykes, Katie Taylor, Katie-Trotter, Elyssa Tucker, Jeremy Tulbert, Rigoberto Uriostegui-Flores, Jordan West, Grace Williams, Jessica Williams, Morgan Wyatt, Keisha Yonker. Eighth Grade All A’s; Michael Brewer, Brittany Mobe, Maggie Maclean, Daniel McBride, Cody Rusher, Gustavo Sanchez, Joseph T. Taylor. A/B Honor Roll: Nancy Alexander, Rode Arcos- Romero, Cody Brown, Trocey Brown, Nicole Copps, Lindsay Cortner, Brittony Dykes, Jock Evans, Jessica Foster, Gorrett Fulton, Gloria Gomez, Britni Grommer, London Horris, Chris Hollingsworth, Hannoh Hursey, Jordan James, Maggie Keeble, Victoria Kennedy, Chad Lee, Paul Lince, Rachel Mackintosh, Adom McKnight, Madison Melton, Nonci Meno-Perez, Aoron Peoples, Jesso Ren, Stacy Sanders, Anna Smith, Kelly Solovtzoff, Chris Sponaugle, Joseph C. Taylor, Zach Taylor, Tonesha Turner, Sam Whitley, Debra Wilson. Davie High Ninth Grade We4( Help Yoa Move Even If Your Friends __________Won't We carry everything you need! •Moving Boxes «Таре •Bubble Cushioning •Peanuts «Markers 15% OFF' All A’s: Sarah Alexander, Alex Appelt, Trey Archer. Brent Beam, Sarah Bishop, Sarah Blockwell, Chelsea Bordner, Allison Bradley, Trent Brooks, Paige Carter, Devon Cosper, Tyler Cornatzer, Morgan Costner, Michael Domonski, Kenneth Downing, Abrohom Drechsler, Tiffany Estep, Andrew Goither, Amy Gilbert, Louren Hauser, Hannah Jakob, Katelyn Jones,Cynthia Kohnen, Lawrence Langton, Skylar Mabe, Ryan Macoione, Chelseo Moness, Kotelyn Monspile, Shttree McPherson, Maria Nail, Richard Newberry. John Porker, Coleb Peorce, Nicholas Pfeiffer, Taylor Randall, Jordan Reavis, Johnathan Roesch, Stacy Saunders, Sarah Sexton, Quinn Tesh, Laura Vanhoy, Matthew Vanhoy, Erika Wentz, Crissy Whitaker, Nicole White. A/B Honor Roll: Mary Absher, Caitlin Atkinson, Brittany Bailey, Matthew Ballard, Jessica Barber, Brittany Becker. Garrett Benge, Lindley Bess, Nicholas Bias, Amonda Blackwell, Whitney Bokeno, Kayla Bowles, Amanda Bridges, Meagen Brookman. Jordan Brown, Kenzie Brown, Elizabeth Budd, Ernest Coin, Courtney Compbell, Andrew Carter, Katie Castrovinci ,Tayler Cave, Dylan Cheek, William Clevenger, Maryette Collett, Dustin Collier, Meghan Collins, Amando Cook, Zeb Cope, Alyssa Corne, Tonya Correll, Joshua Craver, Jonathan Creekmur. Corwin Crews, James Crews, Jesse Crotts, Breanna Dalton, Chelsea Davis, .Sarah Daywalt, Kenneth DeHort, Gregory Devoult. Robert Dillon. Robert Dingey. James Doby, Mogan Doss, Ian Dowdy, Clayton Dwiggins, Quinton Faulkner, Jon Ferree, Evan Fleming, Gregory Fleming. Chris Fletemier, Lameisho Fowler, Mary Frisby, Robert Gassett.Tiffony Gibson, Bethany Gough, Anna Greenwood, Margaret Guntner, John Haftman, Angelia Harmon. Patrick Harris. Ryon Hellord, Roelene Hernandez, Ebony Hogue. Christian Holland. Devore Holman Jr., Eric Howell, Faith Howell. Richard Irwin. Stephanie Jarvis, Kathryn Johnson, Samantha Judd, Andrew Kakouras, Victoria Karlek, Haakon Krey, James Kuell, Andreo Logrotterio, Amy Lanier, Andrew Linhart, Nicole Locastro, Angelica Loj, Eric Lowery, Brannon Lynch, Juvenal Marciol-Cruz. Sherry McKee, Kristin McMillon, Heother Medford, Joshua Medlin, Soroh Miller, Taylor Milleson, William Miner, Sarah Moore, Peyton Murray. Stephen Naylor. Kathryn Newberry, Amanda Nichols, Jeffrey Nuckols, Nicholas O’Brien, Crystal Oliver, Tyier O’Mara. Brooke Padgett, Natalie Pearce, Daniel Peele, Elizabeth Peeler, Justin Phillips, John Piper, Kayla Plumley, Nicholas Potts, Amy Presley, Brittany Priestley, Zachary Proctor, David Pruitt, Amanda Reavis, Joshua Riddle, Adam Ridenhour, Rose Robertson, Anthony Rouse, Matthew Russell, Nicholas Schambach, Justina Scott, Michelle Shadroui. Cassie Shoemaker, Billy Short, Elizabeth Sides, Rachel Simpson, Cayla Sims, Amy Sizemore, Chris Sizemore, Danielle Smith, Kenneth Smith, Jennifer Snyder, Honnoh Speight, Joshuo Spillmon, Mordi Spillman, Jamie Stancliff. Jennifer Stanley. Glen Stanley HI. Kaitlin Stevens, Caleb Stphenson, Chelseo Swyer's, James Toddeucci, Stephonie Tetivo, Chelsea Trull, Daniel Truszkowski, James Tutterow, Alan Underwood, Daisy Vorona, Lauren Walker, Caroline Webster, Trevor White, Andrew Willard, Brooke Williams, Erin Williams, Gino Wlllioms, James Williams. Kirston Wilson. Paige Winkler, Micah Womble, Austin Wood, Jordan Yuenger. 10th Grade All A’s; Christopher Ange, Brion Blackwell, Kevin Boehm, CT Brogdon, Lauren Brown, Ellen Corter, Megon Carter. Danielle Casey, Elizabeth Choplin, Kristina Crews, Jill Durham, Holly Horris, Brittany Hill, Adeno Hockodoy, Thomos Kuell, Jennifer Monn, Lesley McBride, Wess McKnight, Gene Melton, Morgon Owens, All Russell, Jennifer Stancill, Kristi Stonemon, Leo Tarieton. Brondi Veoch. A/B Honor Roll: Bryson Allen, Morio Alvarez, Latasha Arnold, Daniel Atkinson,Taylor Autry. Jessica Bailey. Justin Barker. John Bortlet, Ashlee Boger, Andrew Bosell, Heath Boyd, Taylor Boyles, Kenneth Brown, Jason Buchanan, Alex Burton, Ashlee Burton. Nicholas Buss. Blanca Byrne. Amesha Carter. Audrie Cid. James Crandall. Amanda Cranford, Kevin Creason, Plácido Cruz- Luna, Samuel Curtis, Ryan Davis, Travis Dellinger, Grace Didenko, Robbyn • Dingey, Joshua Dixon, Kimberly Dyson, Travis Dyson, Joshua Eder, Katherine Ellis, Miranda Esposito, Jarret Fleharty, Jade Garrett. Zachary Gentry, Aaron Gibson. Rachel Goin. Deborah Goldner, Andrew Gosnell, Latoyia Gront, Megon Grey, John Grose, Brodley Grubb, Amber Horris, Jennifer Harrison, Sarah Hauser, C.O. Hemondez-Andino, Samantha Hobson, Zachary Howard, Darren Hunt, Michael Jolly, Tiffany Kelly, Bryan King, Brandon Landreth, Benjamin Law, Mondy Lowson, Stephanie Ledbetter. Justin Lee. Mitchell Link, Somonth Loj, Dillon Manship, Will Markland, R.P. McCampbell III, Stacey McDaniel, James Mighion, Kevin Miller, Wesley Millwood, Isaac Morgan, Daniel Mounce, Michael Murphy,Ting Ni Meng, Alyssa Norsworthy, Carmen Paniagua, Lauren Parker, Ben Pawlik, Matthew Pennington. Emmary Phloykaew, Wesley Potts, Andy Ramsbotham, Renee Ratledge, Allyson Reynolds, Rebecca Riddle, . Kenny Rivers, Courtney Robertson, Amanda Russeil, Kati Seaford, Bennett Shipman', Justin Smith, Whitney Snow, Matthew Spach. Kristen Spainhour. Joshua Sprinkle, Ashton Stansberry, Kaylin Stansberry, Brandon Stewart, Shanda Styers, Corey Taylor, Justin Thompson, Katie Vannoy, wilh IMS coupon I The UPS Store I 8 1 0 Valley Road* Mocl<sville I Next to Bl-Lo Supermarket 1^ 751-9990 T I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I J! WOODWORKS QflLLCRTешати® on? G R E A T B U Y S O N E V E R Y T H IN G ! m m m n f p F rid a y , M a y 13 O N L Y 1 0 a m u n til 4 p m 185 N . M a in St., D o w n to w n M o c k s v ille (3 3 6 ) 751-1001 Jonathon Waddell, Derreck Woll, Brooklee Want, Matthew Webb, Jennifer Welch, Brittany Whorton, Rachel White, Molly Whittoker, Knstie Widener, Tyier Wooten. lllh Grade All A’s; Andrew Allen, Amy Bost, Meridith Cheek. Brittany Cooper, Ashley Davidson, Alex Grubb, Dannica Hayes, Russell Hilton, Joseph McDaniels, Brittney Overbey, Francisco Pereira, Jessica Placke, Phillip Scott, Amanda Sloan, Michael Smith, Jennifer Spillman, Lance Stout. Megan Strouse. Concepcion Varona. Christal Willis. A/B Honor Roll; Brent Abendrolh, Meghan Appelt, Matthew Austin, Joshua Bames, Nathan Barnes, Nicholas Barnhardt, Andrew Beeson, Corey Bennett, Lauren Bennett, Michael Binghom, Jason Bowles, Brittney Bridges, Rebekoh Brock, Ben Bruffey, Lauren Burriss,Tabitha Cabrera, Hannah Chopple, Russell Clork, Maegan Cline. Motthew Clutts. Soroh Collis, Heother Cook. Megon Cooper, Brittany Cope, Jennifer Cope, Bradford Corriher, Kelly Crosslin, Jeremy Cruse, Ashley Dempsey, Morcie Dickmann, Timothy Downs, Jonothon Dwiggins, Meghon Dyson, Clayton Edwards, Jeffery Eldred, Kami Ellis, Brandon Emert, ' Diego Fernandez, Joshua Fields, Heather Foster, Kristen Fromal, Jonathan Gadson, Katherine Gaskin, Bianca Grant, Raymon Gray, Stefanie Gray, Brittney Gunter, Dennis Haile, Evan Hall, Dustin Harris, Trent Harrison, Jacob Hauser, Paul Hauser.Tyier Hayes. Brian Hill. Brook Hinman, Adrian Hogue, George Holder, Aaron Hollifield, Jessica Huggins, Rachel Humphries, Phillip Hursey, Michael Jimenez, Ebony Jones, Brittany Keoton, Krystle Kelly, Joseph Knight, Solly Lockey, Matthew Lee, Jacob Lloyd, Joshua Locastro, Lauren Macaione. Jonathan Moyfield. John McCellon, Jonothon McDoniel, Liliono McLean, Roeshon McNeil, Shabrina McPherson, Jordan Michael, Ryan Michael, Danielle Miller. Joe Miller. David Monsees, Melissa Moore. Jessica Morasco, Heather Myers, Dianna Naglleri, Anaraarie Navarro, Sarah Naylor, Jessica Overbey, Justin Pilcher, Joshua Reinsvold, Abby Riddle, Erin Robertson, William Robertson, Erin Sears, Adom Sheesley, Kelli Sifford, Jonathan Sims, Elyssa Sineath, Daniel Smith, Kathryn Smith, Kyle Smith, Seth Spry, Samuel Stansberry, Raymond Stevens, Honnoh Thompson, Evony Tucker, Zochory Vogler, Eriko Whicker, Jomes Wilson, Koyla Wilson, Jeremiah Worrell. 12th Grade All A’s: Jon Anderson, Krystal Angell, Shone Baker, Johnny Benfield, Tanna Beroth, Kurtis Bivins, Troy Brooks, Alon Burton, Cosey Butner, Jonet Carpenter, Brennan Carter, Joseph Cook, Ashley Cornatzer, Kelsey Dyson, Louro Flores- Pino, Brittany Folds, Latoya Gadson, Angela Gaither, Christopher Goode, Annaliese Hoftmon, Cotherine Harris, Joshua Keller, Tanner Manship, Lucretia Marcum, Christopher Mortin, Kelly Mitchell, Charles Monger, Briana Montgomery, Sarah O’Neal, Michelle Pawlik, Corey Peoples, Amber Pharr, Shelley Phelps, James Plott, Thomas Pullen, Jessica Ramey, Denzel Rice, Matthew Rich, Anna Russell, Justin Schultz, Candi Sexton, Josef Shega. Jerica Shoemaker. Amanda Smith, Katie Smith, David Stein, Billy Sweat, Dano Veslol, Beth Walker. Louren Wonucho. A/B Honor Roll: Brandon Adams, Amy Alexonder, William Allen, Tatiana Alonzo. James Arnold. Ashley Atkins, Jessica Barnett, Daniel Barney, Jessica Barney, Elizabeth Bellucci, David Benge, Jennifer Berube, Jessica Blackwell, Ryan Boehm, Benjamin Boger, James Boger, Lucas Boger, Ashley Bordner, Jessica Bowling, . Catherine Boyles, Casey Brewer, Harry Brown, Kara Bruce, Kenneth Caudill, Corderio Chombers, Stephanie Cid, Ronnie Coble, Alicio Cook, Chelsea Correll, Chod Dolton, Andrew Darcy, Samuel Davis, Kara Deodmon, Jessica Deal, Corey Doub, Jodie Draughn, Jamie Durham, Timothy Erb, Spencer Farrell, Paul Ferrell, . Lauren Fletcher, Melisa Folds, Saroh Frozier, Down Garnett. Lisa Gilbert. Laura Glasscock. Mary Graves. Melissa Gulledge. April Guyer, Kourtney Hanrahan, Brent Harpe, Molly Harris, Ryan Harris, Jacob Hartmon,Megon Hendrix.Mork Hennessey, Brittany Holman, Benjomin Holmes, Haley Hunt, Matthew Ireland, Jennifer Jacobs, Sarah Jarvis, Donald Jester, Clarence Johnson, Kendra Johnson, Brandi Kelly, Colby.Kinder, Brandi Knight, Mitchell Lawrence, Erin Lederer, Michelle Lester, Alexis Levin, Joshua Litten, Johnathan Loos, Allison Mackintosh, Nicole Maready, Wesley Martin, Phillip Mashore, Steven McCulloh, Jennifer McGowUi David Mcllwoin. Ashley McKnight, Karo McNabb, Nicole Milles, Kenneth Mitchell, Brittany Moore, Loreno Moreno, Misoel Moreno-Luna,Thomas Nations. Morio Navarro, Tomisha Norris, Landon Overcash, Madison Owen, Michael Paoni, Taylor Parris, Joshuo Parrish, Julie Patton, Justin Patton, Rebekoh Peeler, Kristopher Penlond, Joseph Phillips, Shamika Pompey, Jeremiah Raby, Tedford Randolph. Toni Register. Amonda Reid. Dylon Reynolds. Marie Robertson. Anthony Rogers. Corrie Sain. Candace Scott, Lea Scott, Jerry Selph, Stacey Shores, Jared Shrewsbury, Gregory Simpson, Matthew Smith, Somer Smith, Christy Sparks, Lyna Spillman. David Strand, Melissa Tollmen, Christie Taylor, Hannah Tretler, Serena Vancuren, Jennifer Vogler, Alyson Walker, Morgan Wallner, Kyle Worise, Stephanie Wendel, Erin Whitoker. Ashley Wiles. Christy Williams. Laura Williams, Nicholas Williams, Andrew Wilson, Jennifer Wilson, Terrell Wilson, Megan Wilt, Stepanie Winters, Sharon Woodward, Zachary Yokiey. M O S Q U IT O S E A S O N IS H E R E ! L e t F a r m la n d V e te r in a r y C lin ic h e lp p r o t e c t y o u r a n im a ls Coggins test lialf price when done at the time of your horse’s annual exam and vaccines. w Blood parasite screen half off when done at the time of your dog’s annual exam and vaccines. Blood parasite screen Includes a test for heartworm, Lyme disease and Ehrlichiosis BRING THIS ADD TO RECEIVE YOUR DISCOUNT F a rm la n d V e te rin a ry C lin ic , P .A . 3793 Hw y 64 West, Mocksville (Intersection o f 64 a nd 901) 336-492-7148 (office) _33M 92-5516_(after^^ 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 ■■I •: Cooieemee Plans Annual Clean-Up Days Boyette Honored Joe Boyette, left, gets ready to accept a resolu­ tion from county commissioner, Johnny Frye. The county board adopted the resolution honoring Boyette for his service as the Mocksville/Davie Rec­ reation Department athletic director. Boyette has ac­ cepted a job as Yadkin County’s recreation director COOLEEMEE - A spring cican-up for town residents only is planned for May 23-25. Streets assigned for pickup include: • Monday, May 23 - Allen, Gladstone, Halifax Lane, Hickory, Marginal, Neely, Rocky Hill Trail, Ruffin and Westview; • Tuesday, May 24 - Center, Grove, Holt, Highway 801, Joyner, Midway, Ramars Court and Watt; and • Wednesday, May 25 - Church, Cross, Davie, Duke, Erwin, Junction Road, Main, Riverside and Yadkin. hems must be placed curbside, in front of your house, and will be picked up only on the street's assigned day. Items can be placed at the curbside several days prior to the pickup day. If not placed curbside by the assigned day, the town will not return to pick up any items. The following will not be picked up: brush and limbs,gar­ bage, yard waste including grass clippings, paint and toxins. Notices, with details, have been posted at Cooieemee busi­ nesses on and the town bulletin board between the Cooieemee Post Office and Cooieemee Hard ward Store. If you are handicapped or a senior citizen who needs help getting items to the curb, if you need help getting an item to the curb or for more information, call the town hall at 284-2141 prior to the assigned pickup day. S e c o n d R a b i e s C a s e O f Y e a r R e p o r t e d Officials with the State Laboratory of Public Health confirmed the second case of rabies in Davie County this year. According to Barry Bass, health director, the case involved a fox that tested positive for the virus. The fox had an encounter with a human in the Cooieemee area. The individual involved is receiving treatment. “People need to be especially wary of wild animals that are behaving in a strange or unusual manner,” Bass said. “No one should ever try to pet a stray or wild animal, no matter how innocent or tame it may appear”. Bass stressed the need for rabies vaccinations to be current. “It means the difference between life and death if the animal is exposed to rabies,” he said. A dog or cat with current rabies vaccine would only have to have a booster if it came in contact with a rabid animal. He urges anyone who has a pet and is not sure of its vaccination status to contact the pet’s veterinarian. Should a wild animal bite a domestic animal, livestock, or human, residents are advised to keep the animal in sight and contact the Davie County Animal Control at 751-0227. Anyone having questions about rabies should contact their pet’s veterinarian or Jeff Beauchamp, R.S., Davie Health Department at 751-8760. P a ^ F o i " s p a y ^ 6 6 3 B u s y Neutering ’ At TNs Time Of Year Beef Field Day Set May 21 Davie livestock producers are invited to the Hay, Forage & Beef Field Day Saturday, May 21 at Jeff and Margie Smith’s farm on Buck Seaford Road, just south of Mocksville. Registration will be from 9:30-10 a.m. Industry representatives will discuss herd health - including deworming, parasite control, vaccinating and quality assur­ ance. "Forage ipanagement will be another popular topic, as we dis­ cuss variety selection, proper harvesting (grazing, hoying and baleage), forage sampling and the many aspects of weed con­ trol,” said Phil Rucker, Coopera­ tive Extension agent. “We will get to see demonstrations on dif­ ferent hay making processes and techniques ... from mowing to tedding to baling.” A sponsored meal will be served. Pesticide credits will be available to help meet private applicator license requirements. Bring your license. “The health program is geared toward beef cattle, but the forage information will be useful to all species of live­ stock," Rucker said. “Make plans to attend. It will defmitely be worth your time.” Register before May 18 by calling the Davie Extension Center, 751-6297. There are two programs to help people pay for the spaying or neutering of their pets. One is a 50 percent off cou­ pon for households earning less than $40,000 a year and the other is a free coupon for people who receive assistance from social services such as Medicaid and Food Stamps. To get a form, contact the Humane Society of Davie County at 751-5214. The line is answered by volunteers and someone will call back to tell where to pick up a form. Veteri­ nary offices in Davie County have the form. Carpenter bees are large, black and yellow bees frequently seen in spring hovering around the eaves of a house or the un­ derside of a deck or porch rail. They look similar to bumble bees, but differ in that they have a block, shiny tail section. Males do not have stingers'but are ag­ gressive and territoriol. Females can sting, but seldom do unless highly agitated. Males can be dis­ tinguished from females by a whitish spot on the front of the face. Carpenter bees overwinter as adults, often inside old nest tun­ nels. They emerge in April and May with the males usually the first to appear. Female carpenter bees cause damage to exposed wood on houses by excavating tunnels in the wood, leaving round half-inch diameter en­ trance holes. The female lays eggs inside these tunnels, which may run six inches to a foot. Adult bees die shortly there­ after, with a new generation of adults to emerge from the tunnels later in the summer. The new adults may be seen cleaning out existing tunnels to use as over­ wintering sites for the winter, but do not construct new tunnels un­ til the following spring. Carpen­ ter bee damage is typically niini- mal, unless bees are allowed to drill many tunnels over multiple years. Woodpeckers, however, may damage infested wood in search of bee larvae in the tun­ nels. Preventing carpenter bee damage is difficult or nearly im­ possible. Protective sprays can be costly and are rarely effective. It is impractical and unsafe to try applying a pesticide to all pos­ sible sites where a bee might tun­ nel. Since the bees ai;e nol feed­ ing on the wood and they are ac­ tive for a period of several weeks, they are rarely exposed to a le­ thal dose of the pesticide. Treating the entrance holes with an insecticidal spray or dust containing carbaryl, permethrin, cyfluthrin, or bifenthrin can re­ duce future nesting, Treated tun­ nels should be sealed with alu­ minum foil balls or caulk within 24-36 hours of treatment to pre­ vent future nesting. For niore in­ formation on carpenter bees, other insect pests, or gardening, contact Cooperative Extension at 751-6297. B lu e C ro s s O K A t D a v ie H o s p ita l Baptist Hospital's impending contract termination with Blue Cross Blue Shield will not affect Davie County Hospital, since that contract is negotiated by and for that hospital. Town To Discuss Land Use Plan The draft land use plan for the town of Mocksville will be discussed at a meeting at 6 p.m. Wednesday, May 18 at the Davie County Public Library. Members of the town’s board of commissioners, plan­ ning board and board of zon­ ing adjustments will attend. Copies of the draft plan and accompanying land use map are available at the Mocksville Town Hall and Davie County Development Services between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday-Fri­ day. To learn more, call 751- 3340 or 752-2259. Sports DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - BI Mind-Boggling Tanisha Reynolds Wins CPC Triple Jump As Fill-In By Brian Pitts Davic County Enterprise Record Tanisha Reynolds of Dovie’s giris track-and-field team had been kept out of the spotlight all season by twin sister Tlmiika Reynolds. Thnisha’s impressive freshman numbers in the long jump, sprints and relays had been overshad­ owed by Tamika’s undefeated record in the triple jump and her constant status as multiple winner. But after last week’s Central Pied­ mont Conference championship meet at West Forsyth, Tanisha is no longer the “other” Reynolds. Thmika injured her foot two weeks ago, and the possible stress fnicture side­ lined her for the big meet. Davie coach Daric Beiter needed Tanisha to replace her sister in the triple jump, and it’s safe to say lUnisha delivered. Stepping out of the shadows and into unforeseen sun- 'light, Timisha won the triple jump de­ spite competing in the event.for the first time all year. As ludicrous as that sounds, it hap- JVs 20-3, Tie For CPC Title By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record It was the kind of moment a coach loves and dreads. Tim McKnight couldn’t hide his elation after Davie’s JV baseball team punctuated a sensa­ tional season with Friday's 6-0 excla­ mation mark against visiting North Davidson. He felt overwhelmed by a record that he will remember when he’s old and bald - 20-3‘0verall ‘and 9-3 in the Central Piedmont Conference, good for a first-place tie with West Forsyth. The only thing he didn't like was lhat the season had to end. “The key with this team was they were always ready,” McKnight said. “Twenty-three games is a long season, but the only times we were flat were against Concord (in an 11-0 win) and Reynolds (in last week’s 10-4 win). Two games out of 23 is not bad. When you’re off your game two times out of 23, I’ll take that any year.” The War Eagles reached rarified air Please See King • Page B6 :^drth Noting i.. ' Freshinan Alex Appelt of Davie |tei^s'fimshcd second in singles i|ti ¿fee’ppc Toijmament, Before lo’s- ilhg iin the iflnals, he won two I matches by a combined score of 24- ■ ’ In the CPC championship track:’ ■uid-iield meet, Cooter Arnold of ,0?ivle’s boys fmished first in the long jump and triple jump. 'Dinlsha •Reynolds of Davie’s girls was fu'st \in the,triple jump. Amy Alexander of Davie var- (sity softball pitched a 3-hitter and JWhUpey WUUams scored clinch- ikig W in a l-O winovetW. Rowan, ■J' a Davie JV baseball team ;jhat went 20-3 and tied for, first in ■the'CPC, Colby Seaford led In av- ,‘erage (.380) and runs (30); Justin Thompson led in homofs (S) an^ iRBIs (29), and pitchers Bryaii Kiqg and Chris Brogdon went a , combined 11-2 with four saves. . w In N, Davie’s 11-10 win over S. Daviei Ben Sink earned the win in 'nlief, as well as sparking the deci- iMve run with a seventh-inning' fdouble. ■ W Merrifleld of Davie vor^ vsity baseball went 4 for 4 and Lance Emert;was 3 fpr3 in a 12- vip win over Reynolds that was siis-, pended .April 12 and coinjpleted y a y 2, Brad Corriher pitched a shWQiit for 6 2/3 iimings in a pain- l^l^losstoileynjjld?,' ' ' Tanisha Reynolds Arnold pened. Ttaisha practiced the triple jump on May 3 and conquered it on May 4. If you had gone to Vegas and bet that, you’d be smiling car to ear. "To have an athlete with one day to get ready for an event she hasn’t done in over a year, that’s great versatility,” Beiter said. “She had one day to work on her steps. She’s beeij in relays, we've been relying on her in some sprints and she's scored all season in the longjump. We said: ‘Let's throw her in here and see what happens.' ” T^mika went 7-0 in the triple jump before getting hurt, peaking at 34 feet. At practice Thnisha was less than excited about moving to the triple. Imagine how South Rowon's Angela Stark and the rest of the competition felt when Tanisha turned in a 31-5 to beat Stark’s 31-3.5. Tanisha's substitute presence was supposed to make things easier on the girls from Reynolds, South Rowan, West Forsyth and North Davidson. “At first i didn’t really want to do it, but I said I guess I’ll try it,” Thnisha said. "My sister was teaching me the steps and stuff, and when I did it I just fell natural. She was telling me, ‘It should be me (winning first),’ but she was en­ couraging me all the way. She said to jump, stride out, stretch out and relax while you’re doing it.” Il was Tfanisha’s first high-school vic- ^ tory in an individual event. The timing is the stuff legends are made of. “'Himika had dominated the event all season, and when Ihey got lo the meet and found out Tamika wasn’t going to be in it, they probably had a sense of relief,” Beiter said. "And then Tanisha steps right up and lakes over.” "Now they want me to do it (all the time),” Tanisha said. “I’m like: ‘Oh, gosh.’ " Thnisha was the only gold medalist for Davie’s giris, although Bekah Peeler claimed second in the 3200 for the sec­ ond straight year. The top-two finishers earned all-conference distinction, and Davie’s other all-conference perfor­ mance came in the 400 relay, where Thnisha, Keri Robertson, lyara Wagner and Justina Scott ran a 52.7 to place sec­ ond to Reynolds’ 49.2. "Peeler got a regional-qualifying ■time,” Beiter said. “She hasn’t had the times that she’s been wanting, but she came through in the end. She has every year for us, and I’m proud of the fact that she fmished her high-school career by gelling another all-conference award.” Robertson filled in for Tamika in the 400 and got herself an all-conference patch. The same foursome - Tanisha, Robertson, Wagner and Scott - finished third in the 800 relay. Shanicka Brown was the 2004 shot-put champion as a sophomore, but she was third ibis year. Freshman Jamie Stancliff was third in tlie longjump. Arnold Racks Up Davie’s Rolls Royce, Cooter Arnold, added to his illustrious senior year. He rewrote the football record book last fall, earning a scholarship to North Carolina, and he was Tlie Man in the field events. He captured the long jump and triple jump, picked up a third all-conference honor by helping the 400 relay to sec­ ond and won the league’s field athlete of the year. As a result, he filled the only gap on his resume after finishing second in the triple jump as a junior. “You can put him in sprints up to 400 meters, and you can put him in all the jumps (long, triple and high),” Beiter said. "The high jump is not his best event, but he doesn't complain about the events he's going to be in. We needed the points and he gets fifth. He scored Please See Tanisha - Page B7 South Davie first baseman Brad Gaither lunges for the ball as a North Davie rijnner dives back.- Photo by James Barringer Damage Control: N o r t h B l o w s B i g L e a d , H o l d s O n North Davie baseball coach Danny Allard has seen a lot of crazy things in the North-South rivalry over the past seven years. The unpredictability of past meetings prepared him for what he saw last week at North. His players, how­ ever, failed the history test, hitting cruise control with a 10-2 lead and flirting widi a collapse that would have haunted them for the next 20 years. The Wildcats lost their edge with the large fourtK-inning cushion, but they still managed to pull out an edgy 11-10 win when Ben Sink doubled and repre­ sented the decisive run in the bollom of the seventh. After watching South Davie score eight unanswered runs, the repercus­ sions of the win were more exciting than the manner in which it was achieved. “1 honestly think our guys thought the game was over,” Allard said. “They thought South was going lo fold, and I tried to tell them South teams don’t do that - they keep battling. “It didn’t surprise me, to be honest. Ever since I’ve been here it doesn’t matter what the records arc, it seems like they're always close. When 1 looked up and saw 10-2, I said; ‘This can't be right.'And sure enough, 30 minules later it was 10-10.” This year's series was a microcosm of a rivalry that seemingly always ends whh one team in exhilaration and the other in despair. On March 24 at South, the Tigers overcame a 2-0 deficit to steal a 3-2 decision. , .And once again, this one produced shocking shifts in momentum. South scratched in the top of the first, but the Wildcats answered with five runs in the bottom half. Zach Long and Sink sand­ wiched two-run singles around an RBI hit by John Flowers. Bret Peterson ig­ nited the outburst with the first of four hits. North made the game a presumed rout by exploding for four runs in the fourth. “We were pretty down," South coach Tim Devericks said. "I told them; ‘There's only one way we can go or we're going to go home quickly.' “ While nothing went right for South in the first four innings, nothing went right for North in the fifth and sixth, South’s lyier Seaford sparked a four-' run fifth with a bunt single, and the rally was bolstered by a Chad Lee double and. singles by Shelton Howard, Greg Nuckols and Justin Bell. North’s pitching and defense leaked' more oil in the fifth. Josh Berryhill singled and Howard was hit by a pitch. South was breathing down North's neck when Ryan Carter, Jess Cartner and Lee banged out singles, and an error forged a 10-10 deadlock. At this point South was screaming and North was silenced. “It just takes a little spark and then they all start believing ihey can hit il,” Devericks said. "We were in the same boat as North early in the game: What can we do to find an out? It was one of those times when the ball seemed lo have eyes and found spots where no play can be made.” South’s spirited charge spilled into the seventh as Seaford coaxed a leadoff walk. But South’s next batter failed to move Seaford and North’s reliever, Sink, got three straight outs lo preserve the tie. "Luckily wc-got our heads back in it,” Allard said. “We started playing de­ fense again.” Cartner, who relieved for Devericks in Ihe second, gave South a big lift. The lefty held North lo one run in the sec­ ond and third, and after surrendering four runs in the fourth, he held North to one unearned run in the last three in­ nings. “He did a superb job with location,” Devericks said. “He actually hurt his (pitching) hand trying to field a bunt, bul he stayed in and did a lieckuva job.” Third baseman Howard made a he­ roic play to open the last of the seventh, jumping to spear Rusty O’Connor’s liner. A clutch hit, though, followed as Sink doubled down the first-base line. That ultimately enabled North to escape a Please See Sink - Page B8 Major Meltdown: Errors Sabatoge Corriher’s Shutout By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record One Davie varsity baseball player ripped off his glove and slammed it in disgust. Another player dropped to a knee and stared at the ground. All the War Eagles wore a look of disbelief as they walked through the hand­ shake line. Last week at Reynolds, the War Eagles played so well and came soCorriher close, only to watch a 3-0, sevenlh-ln- ning lead slip away 4-3. On the verge of the first three-game winning streak in three years, they fell apart after there were two outs and nobody on in the bottom of the seventh. Before a horrible four-error melt­ down, they manufactured single runs in the fourth, fifth and seventh, and junior pitcher Brad Coaiher sailed through the sixth with a two-hit shutout. But when they only needed one out to post their first shutout in 36 games, Ihey couldn't get it done. "You had a feeling it was our night,” Coach Mike Herndon said. “It was lough talking to the kids after they played their hearts out. We just didn’t make a play, and two of the plays we make 99 out of a 100 times.” Davie sandwiched a 12-10 home win. over Reynolds and a 9-4 home loss to North Davidson around the 4-3 loss at Reynolds. It finished the Central Pied­ mont Conference in last place with records of 9-13 and 3-9. The other four CPC teams were either 7-5 or 6-6. Mixing three pitches to keep Reynolds offbalance, Corriher faced the minimum through three innings. He benefited from catcher Foo Smith, who nailed two runners trying to steal, Cor­ riher struck out Reynolds’ No. 5 batter to leave two runners standing in the fourth. Corriher had to be something spccial to own a shutout for 6 2/3. His defining moment was the fifth, when two errors put Reynolds at second and third with nobody out. He escaped Ihe major jam by catching a safety-squeeze bunt that was popped up, inducing a fly to sec­ ond and fanning the leadoff man. “Corriher did an unbelievable job,” Hemdon said. “He threw his changeup for strikes. A high-school pitcher can’t jusl rely on one pilch. You’ve got to be able to throw two pitches for strikes, and he was fun to watch.” Davie slowly built the 3-0 lead against senior lefthander Hampton Foushee, who no-hit Dovie for six in­ nings in 0 9-0 shellacking. Foushee’s attempt al another masterpiece at Davie’s expense ended on the first pitch, when Whit Merrifield laid down a bunt hit. Corriher’s fourth-inning sacrifice fly broke up a 0-0 duel. Zach Howard led off the inning with a double and moved Pleose See Dnvle • Page B4 ■ \ V ' M ■■ 4 В2 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 B r ie f s у D a te s Football Camp Coach Doug Illing’s Davie football camp - for ages 7-14 - will lake place May 31 and June 1-2 at Davie. Registration is from 8-8;30 a.m. on May 31. The camp will run each day from 8:30-11:30 a.m. The cost is $60. For more information, call tiling at work at 751-5905 extension 423 or at home at 751-7204. Golf Challenge The Concord United Methodist Men’s third aniiual golf chal­ lenge is May 14 at Pudding Ridge. There will be cash and prizes for holes-in-one and the first, second and third finish­ ers. The cost is $50 per player and $200 per four-person team. For more information, call 998-2344 or check the web at www.concordumchurch.com. Benefit Golf A benefit golf tournament for Brandon Koontz is sched­ uled for May 21 at Pudding Ridge. Registration begins at noon flunch provided) with a shotgun start at 1. The format is four- person captain’s choice. The cost is $60 per person and $240 per team. Contact Ed Robertson at 492-7003 or Ray Tutterow at 492-7754. Y a d k i n V a l l e y V i p e r s Winning the Carolina-Virginia Classic Tournament wilh a 4-0 record was a USSSA 12 and under AAA team of players from Davie, Yadkin, Wilkes and Surry counties, from left; front - Alex Barr, Josh Beaver, Joey Shaffer, Dillon Dobson, Blake Hunter, Alex Newman; second row - Mahlon Matthews, Luke Gragg, Hayden Boles, Scott Gamblll, Jake Barr, Steven Gregory; and coaches Mark Matthews, Rusty Hunter, Rayford Dobson and Danwin Barr. Davie Schedules Basketball Camps f tr l \ P j ^ A u tke n tio Japanese CuiBine Dinc-in or Take-out 678 Wilkesboro St.. Mocksville 336-753-6867 Fax; 336-753-6847 In Former Potmans Location • Business Hours Sunday - Thursday 11 ;00am - 9;00pm Friday - Saturday 11:00am - 10:00pm Pickup Window Available •The Davie High girls basket­ ball camp for all grades will be June 6-9. On June 9 campers will allend from9a.m.-noon for con­ tests, games and awards. The June 6-8 session from 9 a.m.- noon is for grades 1-8, and the evening .session from 1-4 p jn. is for grades 9-12. The cost is S50. • The boys basketball pro­ gram will hold a mini-team camp for rising ninth and lOlh graders June 3,4and6 from l-4p.m.The cost is $70, which includes in­ struction, insurance and T-shirt. • Davie will have boys bas­ ketball camps on June 3-4, June 13-15 and June 21-25. June 3-4 is a parent/child camp. The cost is $50 for parent and child and $15 for each addi­ tional child. The camp will in­ clude instruction on how lo work with your child; games, contests and prizes; a pizza dinner on Fri­ day night; and continental break­ fast on Saturday. June 13-15 is a shooting and player development camp. The cost is $50. The camp will in­ clude skills development ses­ sions with Coach Mike Absher, an appearance by Lenoir Rhyne College coach John Lentz, shoot­ ing technique and emphasis on individual player development. June 21 -25 is a day camp that costs $90. 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S - » 1 MO Ш . 1д м ш о и ’чДр rOKB ^ MMCMV ^' МоскшуШФ Cart NaylorвтШМаюдаг KeHti Davenport S a lta M m a g u ik J Dale RatledgeAss^( Manager Lonnie Burgeaa Chuck WalkerSaito •î ' B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday May 12,2005 li ‘ I; DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - B5 Sophomore standout Brandon Stewart rounds first. Senior pitcher Timmy Erb. Davie Biows 7tli-inning Lead Continued From Page Bl to ihird on Smith’s flyout to deep center. Merrifield singled and stole second in the fifth, and Lance Emert made it 2-0 with a single. “It could have very easily been 3-0 (at that point) if we were playing (at Rich Park),” Hemdon said. “Foo hit a ball to center where it’s 420 and the guy caught it near the fence.” A freshman, Garrett Benge, led off the seventh with a double. Merrifield bunted him to third and Brandon Stewart brought him home with a sac fly. At 3-0, Davie was poised for only its second win over Rey­ nolds in the last 10 tries. It was a little chilly, but all the visiting fans were feeling good. Coniher’s first batter in the bottom of the seventh flew out to center. The next man flew out to right Victory appeared cer­ tain. Then it was like someone sneaked up from behind and whacked the War Eagles across the back with a stick. Davie’s undoing began when Emert made an error on a tough play, backhanding a grounder in thé hole and short-hopping first baseman John McDaniel. A double and two singles fol­ lowed, making it 3-2. Merrifield got a slow roller at second, but the ball rolled up his arm. He compounded the error by throw­ ing wide of McDaniel, which al­ lowed the tying run to score. The next batter sent Vogler back in center field. The ball hit his glove but fell out. Four errors after two outs, Davie had let the 3-0 lead get away. “I said to Whit: ‘Listen, I’d take you on my team any time,’ “ Hemdon said. “There were other plays that should have been made, but that’s baseball. If I felt like he didn’t want the ball hit to him, that’s different. But he wanted the ball hit to him. Emert wanted the ball hit to him. Vogler wanted the ball. That was a tough play, but he had it.” Merrifield was 2 for 3, rais­ ing his average to .473. Foushee finished with a six-hitter and pushed his record to 5-4. Corri­ her fell to 2-3 despite lowering his ERA from 4.40 to 3.33. When Davie boarded the bus, Hemdon pounded a silver lining into the deflated souls. “1 told them, ‘I’m proud of you,’ and they all kind of looked at me like I was crazy,” Hemdon said. “We just blew a three-run lead with two outs in the sev­ enth, but 1 said; ‘I’m proud of you because we’re 3-8 in the conference and you still care about what's going on. Most 3- 8 teams don’t care. They care. They were down. They were hurt That showed character and what they expect They still ex­ pect to win.” Davie 12, Reynolds 10 The game started on April 12 before being suspended by rain with Davie holding a dizzy 7-5 lead in the third. The comple­ tion on May 2 was just as ac- tion-packed. After the visiting Demons forced a 7-7 tie in the top of the third, Davie answered with two in its half and held off two more charges. A Reynolds homer in the fourth cut Davie’s lead to 9-8, but Howard’s double restored a 10-8 cushion. A two-run single by Emert in the fifth pushed the margin to 12-8. McDaniel got the win de­ spite giving up seven hits in five innings. But ojily one of Rey­ nolds’ four runs off the junior were earned. Merrifield and Emert went a combined 7 for 7 as Davie ended an eight-game losing streak in the series. N. Davidson 9, Davie 4 In the bottom of the first Fri­ day at Rich Park, Smith hit what looked to be a three-run double. Center fielder lyier McKenzie, though, dove and robbed him. That was the key moment in a game where North had to win to share first place and where Hemdon couldn’t play every card in his pitching hand be­ cause of the looming CPC Tour­ nament “Wc couldn’t better ourself,” he said. “They were playing for a tie for first and we were sav­ ing our arms. So this game might have been more lopsided than it should have been.” Both pitchers, North’s Zach White and Davie’s Timmy Erb, struggled with control. White walked six and hit one in 4 1/3 iiuiings, and Erb walked three and hit two in four. After a shaky second in which North took a 4-0 lead, Erb settled down and finished with six Ks. Hemdon couldn’t afford to leave him on the mound with the tournament starting in three days, and North blew the game open with five fifth-inning runs. The discouraging thing for the War Eagles was they had plenty of chances. Smith's hardluck out in the first stranded three runners, they wasted a bases-loaded, one-out. threat in the sixth and they wound up leaving 13 runners on base. “We score three runs stand­ ing up if (Smith’s shot to left- center) gets by to ,” Hemdon said. “(McKenzie) made a great play. That’s the way it’s been. I bet we lead the country in leav­ ing men on base.” Emert went 3 for4 with three RBIs. That jacked his mark to .432, second only to the .468 of Merrifield, who had two hits. Vogler also had two hits. “It’s not like we weren’t playing to win, but we were also playing for the playoffs (this) week,” Hemdon said. CPC Tournament To win the tournament and steal one of two state-playoff berths, the fifth-seeded War Eagles must do something they haven’t done since 2002 - win three su^ght games. Although it’s unlikely, it’s very possible. After all, stranger things have happened just about every week of a wild and wacky Davie ab r b blMeniheld 2b 4 3 4 0 Slewvt if 2 2 1 0Einen st 3 1 3 2 Vogler cf 4 I 0 2Corriher Ib 4 I 2 1 Howard 3 b 4 1 1 2Smilhc4 1 1 0 Benge II 4 1 0 0Eibp1 0 0 0 McDaniel p 2 1 1 0ToUU32 12 13 7 Reynolds 142 100 2-10 Davte 522 120 *-12 2B ' Howard (4). SB - Menifield (9). Vogler (4). Howard (4). Benge. Davle IP H R ER BB so Erb 2 3 6 3 5 3McD. W Î 7 4 1 0 2 Reynolds 4, Davle 3 Davle ab r b blMerrifield 2b 3 1 2 0 Slewan rf 1 0 0 1Emen » 3 0 l IVogler cf 3 0 0 0 HowMd 3b 2 1 1 0Smilh c 3 0 0 0 Corriher p 1 0 1 1McDaniel ib 3 0 0 0 Benge If' 3 1 1 0ToUU 22 3 6 3 Davle 000 110 1-3RejrnoldsCOO 000 4-4 2B - Howard (S). Benge. SB-Merri- field (10). Davle IP H R ER BB SO Corriher. L 6.2 5 4 0 1 3 N. Davidson 9, Davie 4 DaHe ab r b blMerrineld 2b 5 1 2 0 Slewait rf 4 0 1 0Emenss 4 0 3 3 Vogler cf 4 0 2 1Howard 3b 2 0 0 0 Smilhc 2 0 0 0Corriher lb 4 0 0 0 Benge If 2 1 0 0Eibp0 1 0 0 Hinei ph 1 1 1 0 Hutchens p 0 0 0 0ToUU 28 4 9 4 N. Davidson MO 050 0-9 Davle 020 002 0 -4 Davie IP H R ER BB so Eib.L 4 4 4 4 3 6Kuell 2 3 3 4 1 IHutchens 1 1 0 0 2 3 m CPC season. Nol only are the War Eagles now 0-0 and a 1-5 record in CPC games decided by three runs or less is forgot­ ten, they’re a talented team with a nothing-to-Iose mentality. On top of that eveiyone is beatable. You know what heads and tails arc? That’s how close West Forsyth (7-5), South Rowan (7- 5), North Davidson (7-5), Rey­ nolds (6-6) and Davie (3-9) are. “We could be 9-3,” Hemdon said. “This whole year's been should’ve, could’ve and would’ve, and now it’s time to put all that aside and see what we’re really made of. I’m tired of hearing would've, could’ve, should've. All the teams are good, but there’s not a team in this conference better than us.” With N. Davidson hosting, the toumament was played May 9-10. The championship is May 11 at 7 p.m. Davie 12, Reynolds 10 Lance Emert and Whit Merrifield (5) turn a double play. - Photos by Jim Barringer Coach Mike Herndon and Timmy Erb share a laugh on the mound. C P C B a s e b a ll CPC OveraU North Davidson 7-5 12-9 South Rowan 7-5 14-8 West Forsyth 7-5 15-8 Reynolds 6-6 14-9 Davie 3-9 9-13 CPC Toumament All games at N. Davidson. D a v i e B a s e b a l l S t a t i s t i c s Record: 9-13,3-9 CPC Timmy Allen Garrett Benge Brad Corriher Josh Eder Timmy Erb Lance Emert T.J. Hines Zach Howard Jonathan Hutchens Logan Joldersma Tom Kuell Dillon Maurer John McDaniel Whit Merrifield Saxon Pratt Foo Smith Brandon Stewart Zach Vogler TOTALS Brad Corriher Timmy Erb Jonathan Hutchens Tom Kuell John McDaniel TOTALS AVG.AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR.316 38 10 12 9 0 0 1.155 32 4 5 2 1 0 1.282 71 6 20 17 1 1 1 .111 18 0 2 1 0 0 0.375 8 4 3 3 0 0 1.432 74 18 32 11 3 0 0.200 20 2 4 0 0 0 0.286 63 12 18 16 5 0 0.000 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.286 7.2 2 0 0 0 0.000 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.111 9 2 1 0 0 0 0.468 79 28 37 8 3 1 1 .222 9 3 ■ 2 0 1 0 0.246 61 10 15 11 3 0 2.308 52 17 16 8 3 0 2.312 77 17 24 20 5 2 2.309 624 135 193 106 25 . 4 11 W-L IP H R ER BB SO ERA2-3 27 1/3 33 22 13 5 20 3.332-4 40 45 38 27 20 46 4.731-1 9 12 II 8 10 6 6.221-1 14 2/3 21 19 11 8 13 5.253-4 60 66 39 25 7 47 2.929-13 151 177 129 84 50 132 3.89 SAVES: Corriher STOLEN BASES: Merrifield 10, Emert 5. Corriher 4, Howard4, Stewart 4, Vogler4 Joldersma 3 Smith 2, Benge, Eder o . . WALKS/HPB: Stewart 21, Howard 15, Smith 13, Emert 11, Merrifield 11 Voder 9 Allen 7 Corriher 6. Benge 2, Eder 2. McDaniel 2, Pratt 2, Erb, Hines, Hutchens ' S p o t l i g h t o n B u s i n e s s Jim Pappas of GIftMasters. GiftlVlasters at Lewisville Corners Unique, tasteful, eye-catching, clever. One quick glance at the wide array of gift items positioned atop lovely antique tables and armolres tells you one thing immediately - this Is not your run-of-the-mill gift shop. And that’s wihat makes GIftMasters so special. When Jim Pappas first envisioned what his gift shop would Include, he saw a store that was truly tailored to the shopper. From the look, feel and even smell of the spacious store inte­ rior, he pictured a place where customers could browse at their leisure, perusing unusual and unique gifts that were per­ fect for any occasion. A “warm and welcoming" shopping experience Today, thanks to the help of co-owners Gordie Pappas (Jim’s wife) and their friend, Sandy Kiger, Pappas’s vision has be­ come a reality. Thanks lo their efforts, a rewarding shopping experience in the Lewisville-Clemmons area is now available at GIftMasters. “Warm and welcoming," Jim explained recently, when asked to describe the atmosphere of GIftMasters. “It’s a fun and re­ laxing place to shop. We like to greet people and then let them browse at their leisure. But if they need us, we’re always there to answer any questions. , “I iike to treat petfpiS the way I liked'to oe treated Wiien I shop.” Conveniently located at Lewisville Corners Conveniently located between Lewisville and Clemmons at the refurbished Lewisville Corners Shopping Center off of High­ way 421, GIftMasters is “the" place to shop when you're look­ ing for something special and affordable. “We have gifts for every Imaginable occasion," Jim contin­ ues. "And many of them are one-of-a-kind items.” Custom gift baskets, rugs, framed artwork and more Asked for a sampling of pieces In his current treasure trove and Jim mentions things like gift baskets, baby gifts, exquisite figurines by Demdaco along with beautiful afghans and throw rugs made in North Carolina. The store also offers custom made glass light boxes, framed artwork and an assortment of hugable stuffed animals. There’s also a year around section dedicated solely to Christmas items. in addition to the Inventory, Jim says that another reason GIftMasters Is so different from other shops is the creative contlbutions of Gordie and Sandy, talented craftswomen who «il CIUteCLEMMONS, NC Providing top quality imtalSotion of ccrumic, porcelain and stone tile Tor over 17 >-eara. From small rcpíürs to compktc remodeling •Floon m W m •ShowCTs • Counters *FlreplBccs * Bacbpliuhcs Don't pay hlglt retail prices Save money by dealing dinxl s^tli the installer Call Rkk for û free estimate, 813-TlLE (8453)_____iHiriw^llmalî.rom U t f Preschool f P 440-6450 A Place to Leam & Qrow © lit a SM Shift« © DiwlopiMittilProsrmi © S|uitkliClii«ttD<№ © mactimdittcirn © Salunlay$SuiKt<riiyAppoliititwil Q A 9> c6w ukt-I2yurt S/iile Mjuchers A fc e / m l D iivle, D iivu h o n A Forsyth Cotmties Davie Academy of Martial Arts 753.8482 «782.0038 We Teach Respect Everyday BAKERY THRIFT STORE Large Selection of Pepperidge Farm Goldfish Snacks & CookiesSCeLowlsvökK^ionTnoraRd.» Ctonrmofis Mon.-Fri. &-7; Sot. 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Qlfl Baskets • Baby Qllts • Cdlege Items • Domdaoo Frames & Figurines • Soy Candles • DIonIs Lotions • Glass Lightboxes • Ploturea & Mirrors • Qournnet Foods Plus Much More....... L e w is v ille C o m e rs S h o p p in g C e n te r (H w y 421 L e w isv ille -C le m m o n s E x it) -4403 rí____ <MxC "petêftic ß 'rv tc . 5723-F Country Club Rd. 9.IS-7BB4 - PICKUP and DELIVERY- "IF YOUR AREA RUGS ARE SOILED" W e W a s ii a n d E x tra c t A ll tV p e s O ld R u g s • A n tiq u e • S p e c ia lty U p h o ls te ry • L e a th e r • P illo w s Call for Estimates - 945-7864 Giistomized G ift Baskets for Gorporatíons or Individuals ^ m G IfT B A S K E T S .C ^ 3„a||ab|e.They',e sure to be U c«u red & used long after the contents are gone, A U budgets a n d occasions l- 8 6 6 - N C G Ì f t - l R E N T T O O W N N O W A V A D LA B L.E Woodworks Affordable Portable B uildings Storage Buildings 5328 st Paul Church Rd. Hamptonville, NC 27020 C ali fo r Directions • N o Sunday Calls Please Alvin Mast Jr. 336-468-1194 have made a variety of gifts for years. ‘Their talents are a big part of why we decided to open this shop," Jim points out, referring to the two longtime friends who are great at creating custom gift baskets. 'Their gift baskets and other hand-made Items have been very popular and are perfect for this type of store. “With their talents staring me in the face and the desire to open a shop iike this, opening GIftMasters was a natural choice to make.” Free gourmet sampling every Saturday One other unique component ofthe GIftMasters experience Is gourmet sampling. Every Saturday GIftMasters hosts gour­ met food tasting and sampling throughout the day. “Customers can stop by and sample store items such as dips, sauces and Savannah mixes (flavors that can be used for cooking or can be added lo other food items such as drinks and ice cream),” he notes, “it's a fun way to try some of the things we carry." Free self-serve gift wrapping station Is a bonus for custom­ ers GIftMasters also features a complimentary self-serve gift wrapping station. Therif,are ijacks with more than a half dozen styles of wrapping paper available for all occasions. "After a customer makes a purchase, he or she can go over to the gift wrap station and wrap the item for free," Jim adds. Open 10-7 Monday through Saturday ' Store hours for GIftMasters are from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mon­ day through Saturday. The store phone number is 766-4403. 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Secure delivery lo a real sireel address Package acceptance (tom any carrier All size packages accepted • Call In Mall Check Ideal location to store computer back up or documents The UPS Store ' m Two Locations: 116 Lowaa Foods Drivo Lewisville, NC 27023 (336) 943.0663 4140 Clemmons Road Clommons, NC 27012 (336) 778-0028 UGLY ROOF STAINS REMOVED FOR A LIKE NEW LOOKII Nation's Largest & Oldest Roof Stair) Removers Roof-Brite^ 785-2030 1 0 0 Royal Oak Dr.. W lnston-Salom . NC 2 7 1 0 7 New Vinyi Tcp Docking Vinyl Decks a Railing Vinyl Replacettient Windows Saaen Rooms Sun Rooms Enclosures Carports Vinyl Skiing SPRING F IXU P TC A U U SI E D W A R D S SIDING & WINDOWS Free Estimates! ^ Q Q C Mobile Phone / 0 ^ - V I O O 3 9 7 8 - 2 2 9 9 Вб - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Coaches Bill Marrs (left) and Tim McKnight come out after the third out.Brent Beam started on the hill vs. N. Davidson and left In the fifth with a shutout. King, Seaford, Thompson Lead The Way To 20 W ins ConMnued From Page Bl despite the loss of freshman pitcher Garrett Benge, who was pulled up to varsity midway through the season. The value of Bryan King and Chris Brogdon skyrocketed with Benge playing left field for thé big team, and they more than compensated. At least one of them appeared in all but five games, and they combined for an 11-2 record and four saves. “I've never had a team where we were six deep in pitching, and Thompson well thrown,” McKnight said. “We just didn't need lo go to him. But we had seven guys we could go to and could be effec­ tive.” The War Eagles won Iheir first six games. Af­ ter losing 5-4 to West Forsyth, they answered with a seven-game win­ ning streak. After losing 8-7 to North Davidson, they grabbed three games in a row. And af­ ter losing 11-5 to W. Forsyth, they blazed to Ihe finish line wilh four straight victories. They had an uncanny knack Matt Oswell could have very for coupling key ouls with clutch */ ■ ^ ^ у , . . ■' у A Л /Jy Л Ч • -* *, >. > . Josh Eder takes a cut. - Photos by Jam es Barringer hits. Eight games weren’t de­ cided until the sixth, seventh or eighth inning, and Davie sur­ vived six of the gutchecks.' Thanks largely to Colby Seaford, Davie nearly doubled opponents in average margin (7.7 to 3.9). The freshman shortstop led the way in average (.380) and runs (30). If he wasn’t tlie top of­ fensive performer, it was Justin Thompson, who hit .357 with team highs in homers (five) and RBIs (29). ■ Brent Beam (.368), Heath Boyd (.339) and Matt Penning­ ton (.304) did their share at tiie plate. Speedster Josh Eder ac­ counted for four of Davie’s five triples, despite playing varsity for the first few weeks. “When they were down, they always felt like they could come back,” McKnight said. "They played with the same intensity and enthusiasm whether they were seven runs up or .seven down.” Perhaps the biggest reason Davie accomplished four win­ ning streaks and never dropped back-to-baclc%ain^s was King, who was amazing at 6-1 witli three saves. Brogdon was even more astonishing, going 5-1 af­ ter missing all of last year with a season-opening arm injury. Benge went 3-1, while Zack Rus­ sell-Myers, Seaford and Beam all went 2-0. The six pitchers limited op­ ponents to a .229 baiting aver­ age, 94 points lower than Davie’s average. “We didn’t have what I would call superstars,” McKnight said. “We had a bunch of real good players that enjoyed what they were doing. Wc didn’t have one game where we played sloppy defense. We averaged 1.5 errors a game." Davie 10, Reynolds 4 The War Eagles weren’t at DAVIS Since 1939 SINCE 1939 A m o lliS. 4® ixit Ш Fuel Prices Costly FREE 5 MINUTE EXHAUST CHECK For Fuel Economy their best, but they still built a 5- 0 lead before Reynolds got on the board. King allowed two un­ earned runs in five innings and Boyd paced a nine-hit attack with two singles. Seaford, Beam, Oswell, Eder, King and Brogdon had the other hits. "We didn’t have the energy and intensity that we generally played with,” McKnight said af­ ter dispatching Reynolds for the third time. Davie 6, N. Davidson 0 In the bottom of the first, Boyd doubled and Beam gave Davie a 2-0 lead with a single. Davie’s offense didn’t need to do anymore with Beam and Brog­ don on the mound. Beam went 4 1/3 innings without giving up a run, and Brogdon didn't allow a hit in 2 2/3. North was Davie's fifth shut­ out victim. By contrast, Davie ' wasn’t blanked one timé all sea­ son. “We knew Beam could throw, and we would have liked to used him a little more," McKnight said ofhis No. 5 hurler. Seaford sealed his team-high average with a 3-for-3 showing. Beam and King added two hits as Davie outhit North 13-3 and avenged an 8-7 loss in Welcome in which a Davie rally was short- circuited by an imerferetice call against a runner. That made the 6-0 dominance taste all the more delicious. “These guys had fire in their eyes,” McKnight said. Notes: Four of Davie’s wins came by six or more runs.That's how good they were in the clutch.... Davie’s two-year coach is on a roll. In his fourth and fi­ nal year as West Stokes' JV coach in 2002, McKnight went 15-2 and 12-0 in the conference. In his last three seasons, he's 48- 13 overall, 28-8 in conference. Chris Brogdon closed the 6-0 shutout with hitless relief. Heath Boyd gets a hand of support from a teammate. S p e c ia l o f t h e W e e k H e r s h e y ’s C a n d ie s ea. Limit Total of 8 While Supplies Last It’s Here! Bring Your Film and Save Money! I n S t o r e P h o t o P r o c e s s i n g • Digital Prints • Enlargements Г(1Г Ц1ЧН1 inCorntiilion on tlriins & lu'iilth probli'ins, ЦО (d Nv\vw.r(i.slcT(iru('co.c(>m Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-4 • Sun 1:30-5 Foster Drug Co. 495 Valley Road • Mocksvllle • (336) 751-2141 ___________ www.fosterdrugco.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - B7Sigh Of Relief: Davie Sheds Monkey With 1 -0 Win Though the season hasn't gone the way Davie’s varsity softball team wanted, the War Eagles picked up quite a conso­ lation prize last week in a non- conference game against visiting West Rowan. The War Eagles entered with an 0-6 record in games decided by one or two runs. With the string of devastating losses weighing on them, they knocked -the monkey off their back with a 1-0 victory. The win also chased off the 0-7 West demons, Davie’s record in the series from 2001 tlirough the 6-1 loss at West in Davie’s fourth game of the sea­ son. Davie (9-11,2-6 Central Pied­ mont Conference), embraced the moment by breaking into gigan­ tic grins and doing a hugfest. For a day, the joy of beating strong Alexander E. Tierney competition was back for a pro­ gram that won with regularity from 1998-2001. “We’ve got a good team, too. We jlist finally got some breaks,” Coach Janice Jackson said. “They went crazy. 1 hope it’ll carry over to (this) week.” The Falcons’ reputation made the moment all the sweeter. They’re 19-5 overall and 14-0 in the North Piedmont 3-A Confer­ ence. The day before, West pitcher Adele Burnside threw a Hall Williams three-hitter in a 2-0 loss to Cen­ tral Cabarrus, which improved to 22-0 with its 46th consecutive win. West, which is coached by 1995 Davie graduate Elizabeth Greene Clarke, stayed close to a team that’s only ranked fourth in the nation. "We’ve played West for four years and had never beaten them,” Jackson said. “It’s kind of like beating a North Davidson or West Forsyth as far as their pro­ gram. They’ve been state cham- Davie Softball Statistics R e c o r d : 9 - 1 0 ,2 - 5 C P C (through May 5) AB R H RBI AVG.2B 3B HR Amy Alexander 58 13 19 13 .328 4 1 0 Brennan Carter 6 2 2 2 .333 0 0 0 Jennifer Cope 15 0 1 0 ,067 0 0 ,0 Tori Fullwood 12 5 4 2 .333 0 0 0 Kaitlin Hall 48 6 11 7 .229 0 0 0 Jetmy Mann 25 3 5 1 .200 0 0 0 Carrie Sain 53 5 13 7 .245 1 0 0 Emily Tiemey 43 9 5 4 .116 1 0 0 Hannah Tiemey ■57 16 20 4 .351 0 2 0 Erin Whitaker 54 7 15 9 .278 2 1 0 Ashley Whitlock 51 5 11 4 .216 0 0 0 Whitney Williams 58 15 18 15 .310 2 ' 3 1 Dana Woodard 19 2 2 1 .105 0 0 0 ■ TOTALS 499 88 126 69 .253 10 7 1 W-L IP H R ER BB SO ERA Amy Alexander 4-6 72 39 26 12 20 95 1.17 Carrie Sain 5-4 53 ' •38 19 ' 13 13 47 1.72 TOTALS 9-10 125 77 45 25 33 142 1.40 STOLEN BASES; H. Tiemey 10, Williams 9. Alexander 4, Sain 3, E. Tiemey 2, Fullwood, HaU, Mann, Whitaker, Whitlock WALKS/HPB: Hall 11, H. Tiemey 8, Williams 8, Alexander 7, Whitaker 6, Whitlock 6. Sain 4, Fullwood 3, Carter 2, Woodard 2, Mann, E. Tiemey Continued From Page Bl more points in field events than any other athlete. He has a lot of accomplishments, but he knows it’s going to make him better for football and he’s a competitive person.” Arnold went 20 feet, two inches in the long jump, better­ ing the 19-8 of Reynolds’ CJ. Washington. Arnold’s 43-2 in the triple topped the 41-11 by Sher­ man Brown of Reynolds. And Jaspen Gray, Jonathan Mayfield, Kenneth Brown and Amold fin­ ished the 400 relay in 43.8, trail­ ing only the 42.8 of Reynolds. All the while, Amold oper­ ated with his typical cool de­ meanor. “He just goes out there and does his job. He’s not stressing about it,” Beiter said. “Some kids are sprinting down the runway and you see the veins popping out of their neck. And Cooter just has a nice, even flow. All three phases of his triple jump were perfect.” Davie’s No. 2 contributor was Gray, who was top-three in three events, including second in the 200 and third in the 100. His 200 time of 22.5 was a whisker be­ hind the 22.3 of Reynolds’ An­ thony Levine. Joining Arnold and Gray on the All-CPC team was Ryan Boehm, who was sec­ ond in the discus with a throw of 143-6. Davie got thirds from May­ field, Brown, Wesley "nimer and Jamar Howell in the 800 relay: Deon Cody in the shot put; Co­ rey Doub, Nathan Bames, An­ drew Minor and Ben Holmes in the 3200 relay; Andrew Allen in .N O W I Brandon Koontz Beneflt Ciolf Tournam ent S aturday, M ay 21“‘, 2005 P udding R idge G o lf Course 1 :0 0 P M S h o tg u n S ta rt (R e g is tra tio n B egins a t 1 2 :0 0 N o o n ) (L tm ch P ro vide d ) I'o i'iiia l: 4 IVrson .Sli uifilil ( 'iiplain's ( 'hoitc I \,r M i ll ll illll lU ll« I n V St ИИИ s I i'- 'i il i>m \ \ lu ll I n sSiMK I Sriiim s I (><i < I \ Olili II ll >11)1 Ki ll let s $60 |)ir |HTS(H1 IS /И/ l*ri/.v s SKI ".Skill l*lll" S li 'i i i i i h l i 's l l ) i i \ t ’ l l>rÌM- ( lo M 's ( lo l l i r r i n л и ¡m icca ls willlo hciicjil lim itd o ii K doiilz In K r> > is ii'i \ liM iii ill I n i S |M H lso i' liiln i'iiu it io ii IM i-asi- ( o iiu u 'l: I d U t> lii'|-|s o ii ill 71111 n r i< .i\ lu tU r im ill I.'W n 1‘> У 7 7 pions and they always have a good team.” ■ - Davie split two CPC games. In the first game of the week, it clocked Reynolds 16-0 in two and a half innings. The momen­ tum from W. Rowan, however, didn’t helped Davie’s cause Fri­ day at North Davidson, losing 10-1 . While the tjlasting of Rey­ nolds snapped Davie’s four- game losing streak, it’s never in­ spiring to beat Reynolds. The War Eagles needed a quality win. With a little luck, they would have a handful of nice wins and would be well over .500. They finally broke through despite get­ ting three-hit by Bumside and reliever Devon Williams, who pitched West to 3-A titles in 2002 and 2003. Whitney Williams set the stage in the bottom of the fourth, drawing a walk and stealing sec­ ond. After Williams issued a free pass to Erin Whitaker, Kaitlin Hall slapped a bunt to the right side, nobody covered first and Williams made a sharp turn • around third. West tried to get Williams, the throw was off and Williams raced home. Davie’s next eight batters went down. The only other giris to manage a hit for Davie were Whitaker and Ashley Whitlock. That was OK because Amy Alexander was nearly unhittabie. Two West batters reached in the first three innings, but neither advanced past first. Alexander worked a perfect third. The top of the fourth was scary, however. Alexander faced a second-and-third, no-out mess, but somehow escaped with the score still 0-0.The key was fresh­ man third-baseman Emily Tier­ ney, who fielded a no-out grounder and faked a throw to first. The runner at third took the bait, and Tiemey tossed the ball to shortstop Williams, who slid over to cover third and then caught the girl in a footrace. Al­ exander followed with back-to- back strikeouts. “That play was beautiful,” Jackson said. “We actually prac­ tice that, but it’s the first time we’ve gotten to use it.” Pumped up by Tierney’s slick move and Hall’s slap bunt, Al­ exander retired all nine batters in the fifth, sixth and seventh. If anyone deserved a break, it was Alexander, who was 3-6 despite a 1.29 ERA. She finished with a three-hitter, striking out nine and walking one. And to think that a leam with 46 straight wins only defeated West 2-0, this showed Davie’s pretty good, too. It just happens to play in a terrifying league. West Forsyth is undefeated. North Davidson is 19-3 and South Rowan is loaded with se­ niors. “They didn’t know (about West’s 2-0 loss to C. Cabarrus),” said a delighted Jackson. “I told them after the game.” Notes: The War Eagles fin­ ished fourth of five teams in the CPC, but they took care of busi­ ness quickly against Reynolds, scoring 11 mns in the first and five in the second. Only two and a half innings were required. Al­ exander was 2 for 2 with two RBIs and three mns, while Car­ rie Sain and Alexander combined on a no-hitter. ... Davie and N. Davidson were tied 1-1 after two innings, but any thoughts of a major upset were squashed in the , Ж г щ ' £ . W IN G S & T H ÏN G S “Just Wing It!”Tanglawood Commons 4146 Cltmmoni Rd. Clemmons, NC 27102 Phone (338) 770-2077 , Mon.-Thuts 11»m-9pm Frl.-S«t. llam-IOpm Sun. 3-8pm third, when North broke loose for five runs. North'had twice as many extra-base hits (six) as Davie had total hits.... Davie is hosting the CPC Tournament, May 10-12. Davie 16, Reynolds 0 Davie ab r h Ы H. Tiemey cf 0 1 0 1 Cope 2 0 0 0 Wlllinms ss 0 2 0 0 Mnnn 1110 Alcnonder 3b-p 2 3 2 2 Whllnkcr c 2 2 I- 1 ■ Whitlock 2b 110 0 Hnll lb 1 I I 1 Woodard 0 10 0 Snin p 1112 Cnrlcr If I 1 0 2E. Tiemey rf 1112 Fullwood 1111 Totols 13 16 8 12 Reynolds 000 -0Davie(ll)5x-16 2B - Alexander (4), E. Tiemey. SB - H. Tierney (10), Willinms 2(8), Alexnndei (4).Davie IP H R ER BB so Snin.W 2 0 0 0 0 3 Alexnnder I 0 0 0 10 Davie 1, W. Rowan 0 Dnvie ab r h Ы H. Tiemey cf 3 0 0 0 Willinms ss 2 1 ,0 0 Aicxnnder p 3 0 0 0Whildkerc .2 0 10 Hnll lb 10 10Wliiliock 2b 2 0 10 Snin rf 2 0 0 0 Mnnn If 2 0 0 0. E. Tiemey 3b 2 0 0 0 Totals 19 1 3 0 W.Rowan ООО ООО 0-0DavieООО 100 х-1 SB-Willinms (9), Wiiillock. Davie IP H R ER BB SO Alex, W 7 3 0 0 1 9 r~ lÍíiy Í2 ~ W ¡ñ g s Î ¡Get 12 W ings 1/2 O ff | j Not valid Wllh any Olher Oiler ■ | Ь р.йШ /05 J Г "{I Buy 1 Combo Get j 2nd Combo 1 /2 O ff ¡ I olequalorlMtarnImNotvalhI NQl valid wllh any olhor o№r E>p. 5/31/05 ^ ^ ■Tanisha Reynolds, Arnold Win CPC Gold Medals T r i a d O o d o E die 110 hurdles; Howell in the long jump; and Mayfield, An­ thony Gadson, Allen and Minor in the 1600 relay. Notes: Cody missed All-CPC in the shot put by three inches. ... Freshman Elizabeth Budd is a future star. She was fourth in the 100 hurdles and 300 hurdles. ... Tamika Reynolds will likely compete in the May 14 Midwest Regional, although the bad foot will keep her out of jumping events. ... The team standings went according to script. Rey­ nolds won both trophies. Its boys tallied 184 points to West Forsyth’s 144, Davie’s 107, North Davidson’s 65 and South Rowan’s 53. Reynolds’ girls rolled with 178, followed by S. Rowan’s 132, W. Forsyth’s 107, Davie’s 84 and N. Davidson’s 51. Ш т т Е Ш ! These Prices Won’t Last Hurry To Triad Dodge ^ 2 0 0 5 D a k o t a S TPick A Daicota For Per 0 9 Month ,uto, Cruise, Tilt, C D Alloy Wheels, Air Conditoning #T2362 Auto, Air Conditoning, Cruise, Tilt, Alloy Wheels 2 0 0 5 D a k o t a Q u a d C a b 4 x 4 I Pick A Dakota ForF --------------- Month M w a K o t a r*79)els m #T1721 2 0 0 5 R a m 1 5 0 0 Pick Ram For Month Auto, Air Conditoning, Chrome Wheels, Sliding Rear Window, Cruise CD #T2390 2 0 0 5 R a m Q u a d C a b Pick Ram Quad Cab For ► * 9 9 ' ^ 'Month Auto, Air Conditoning, Chrome Wheels, Sliding Rear Window, Cruise CD Î IF Y O U M A K E A D E A L W IT H T R IA D D O D G E T H E Y W IL L PAY OFF YOUR TRADE NO MATTER WHAT YOU OWE!! All prices after rebate + 379 doc-fee, 24 month lease 3,000 down, som e prices Include owner loyalty, discounts apply to vehicles leased with cfc W W W .TRIAPDO PG E.CO M 680 PETERS CREEK PKWY, WINSTON SALEM 336-723-0504 C re d it P roble m s-N o P rob lem 24H R H elp L ine 1-800-694-7379 B8 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 r m — “ w South catcher Justin Bell’s tag was just late as Cody Sulier scores the winning run. jyler Seaford of South scampers back to first, with Alex Marion playing first. S in k D o u b le H e lp s N o rth H o ld O n F o r A W ild W in Continued From Page Bl game it tried to give away. After Josh Carter was liit by a pitch, South crroreil Peterson’s grounder and Sinic scored from second. Deverieics’ shoulders slumped as a potential 4-6-3 Zach Long connects for North. - Photos by Jim Barrinc ” I Ц f l ‘ V : m m o l u S A L L STRfK£ OUT T *5 t; -' X double play was bobbled. $outh hustled to retrieve the ball. The throw to home beat Sink’s cour­ tesy runner, Cody Sulier, but the throw was on the first-base side of the plate and allowed Suiter to beat Ihe tag. Sulier’s slide sent North into celebration. But instead of being deflated, Deveiicks was enthused that South came roaring all the way back. "1 told my boys I’m proud of them for not turning it in,” he said. “They kept Fighting and were able to tie it up.” Not only did Sink get the sig­ nature hit, he earned the win in two innings of relief. Peterson and Flowers led North with three hits, and Alex Marion and Sink added two. South 10, N. Rowan 0 Earlier in the week, Howard was dazzling in a five-inning win, striking out nine and walk­ ing none. After N. Rowan’s first two batters of the game singled, the seventh grader didn't give up another hit. It was 0-0 for three innings. But South finally came alive in Ihe fourth, scoring six times. It poured on four more in the fifth. , North 8, China Grove 3 After holding off South, Zach Long pitched a complete game and Flowers and O’Connor had two hits as North cruised to an impressive win. "China Grove is a quality team, and from beginning to end this was the best game we’ve played," Allard said, . Notes: North (10-4,5-3 Mid- South Conference) finished the regular season in a third-place tie with West Rowan. It’s the third straight year North has finished third. Allard’s record tiie last three years is 33-10 and 17-8 in the MSC. “A lot of people prob­ ably wouldn’t have expected that with everybody that we lost (from last year),” he said. “I can’t complain one bit about what these guys have done,” ... The MSC Toumament was played May 7, 9 and 10. It concludes May 13 at Southeast. Coach Danny Allard regroups the ‘Cats, who led 10-2 before barely holding on. Umpire Keith Shields and South coach Tim Devericl<s have words after the final play. Tanner Holden pitched the first five innings for North Davie. N o rth■ Ii. S o c c e r P la y s B e s t In L o s s The North Davie socccr team’s final game looked good everywhere except the scorc- board. Last week tiie Wildcats hosted the only team that had defeated them all season - Mooresville - and played as well as they can in a 3-1 loss. “It was probably our best game of the year,” Coach John Marshall said. "Wc just didn’t get the breaks we needed at the right time.” ' Although Mooresville beat North by the same score in the first meeting, the Wildcats (6- 2-1) controlled most of the re­ match. Marshall said they “outpossessed them 60-40” in the first half and maintained “70-75 percent of the poiises- sions” in the second half. So why did North’s inspiring effort result in defeat? Moores­ ville scored two fluke goals in the last 10 minutes of the first half. First, Amber Parrish’s header deflected into the Noi;th net as she was trying to clear the ball out of danger. Then, as North was winning every 50-50 ball, a Wildcat was knocked to the ground, the ball bounced straight to Mooresville and the enemy drove it over keeper Michelle Phillips’ head. Meanwhile, North couldn’t buy a break, trailing 2-0 at half- time. “Their keeper made some good saves. We were kind of bummed,” Marshall said. Marshall made a switch at halftime. He moved Jennifer.., Booth to sweeper and put Clare Moser at forward “because if we could use her speed, we might be able to create some opportu­ nities,” he said. While the strategy worked, it was Susanna MacFarlane wlio gave North hope. After Katie Gerdon won the ball at midfield, MacFarlane made a nifty move, the keeper came out and she banged it right past her. Eight minutes into the second half. North was within 2-1. When time became a factor, Miirshall had to gamble for a ty­ ing goal. He pushed all of North’s chips to the center. "We were pressing, pressing, press­ ing,” he said. Mooresville wouldn’t crack, however. Then it put the game awnyat3-l. “They got a through ball to one of tiieir fastest players, and she blew through and finished,” he said. The coach wouldn’t allow the loss to tarnish the overall picture. The Wildcats went 6-0- 1 against everybody but Mooresville. They were every­ thing Marshall hoped they would be and more. “Every player gave 100 per­ cent (vs. Mooresville), and it’s one of my best all-around teams,” he said, “In the past it’s been two or three players (car­ rying the load). But this year it’s been amazing how well this group has come together find played so well. It’s really been a joy to watch all year,” GENE’S AUTO PARTS We Make Hydraulic Hoses & MIxAulo Paint 7 6 6 -9 1 4 8 3612 Ciemmons Road Clemmons ’2,2005 - ClDAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12, 9 .5 0 % L J a p y P rc in iu n i M o n e y M a rk e t A c c o u n t H n ilv /\CC('S.S Bank o f The Carolinas www.bonlconheearoliiias.com ADVANCE 352 NC Hwy 801 S. Tel: 336-998-1003 . MOCKSVILLE 136 Boxwood Village Drive Tel; 336-751-5755 ‘Annual Porco'niago Yield (APY) ofloclivo 05/03/05: APY Is variable and BubjocI to change at any tim e; accounl Is availatjie for personal accounts only, com m ercial accounts do not qualify for tho Prem ium M onoy M arket Account; m inim um balance required to ovoid fees, fees m ay reduce M e m b e r earnings on account: If balance drops below m inim um during any m ontti, F D IC rio Inlorest will bo paid on ttie account during that m ontti only. FREE... //V C O M C E R T T h e W o r k m e n Q t. [ A ppearing A t Farmington Baptist Ciiurch M o c k s v ille , N C Sunday, May 15, 2005 6 :3 0 P .M . For Infornnation About Tills Event Cali: (336) 998-5372 F o r W orkm en B o o k in g inform ation: C a ll (7 04 ) 8 7 6 -6 2 8 1 The W orkm en Q uartet » 2 6 1 M elton L a n e » H a y s, N C 2 8 6 3 5 ] D a v i e s p o r t s d e l i v e r e d t o y o u r m a i l b o x e v e r y w e e k ... C a l l 7 5 1 - 2 1 2 0 f o r d e t a i l s It takes an exceptional team of healthcare professionals to provide the level of care . : patients expect at Rowan Regional Medical Center. Physicians. Nurses. Therapists. Technicians,, . AU these people-and more-make Rowan Regional where Rowan County goes for health care.. T h e y s e t t h e s t a n d a r d . T h e y r a i s e t h e b a r . And, thankfully, they work for us. There's no better way to celebrate National Hospital & Healthcare Week than to salute each one of our more than 1,200 employees. Their hard work, devotion and RO W AN R E G IO N A L MEDICAL CENTER commitment to outstanding patient care make us what we are. And for that, we gratefully say-thanks! OSeiier JjeaiiJi, CJ^eller care. ^704j 210-J000 evcvcv. rocvan, o /y Anderson« Sftfqty & ^ecuTlty| Rita AUton, Hun\an Resourcn Standing, left to right: Vivian Norman, RN, Case Management; Kim,Osborne. R^, Education & Wellness: Susanna, ‘ * V " i n'*' S p a rs e r.In te n s iv e Uott;-(|hris^.Spriol(le, Ijirorination Systems; Diane Cranford, CRT, Respiratory Therapy; Shun Gill, Environmental Services; Fatu Freeman, Food & Diata^v Setvfce« ‘ •-T ■ BIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 r É lìS» F r e s h m a n 2 n d In C P C T e n n is T o u r n a m e n t Alex Appeit Alex Appeit of Davie’s tennis team stormed into the singles championship match before set­ tling for runner-up in last week's Central Piedmont Conference Tournament at South Davie Middle. The freshman star ripped apart his first opponent 6-0,6-0. He romped in the semiflnals 6- 2,6-1. At that point, Appeit had won seven of eight matches af­ ter a slow 3-6 start. Appelt’s run ended in the fi­ nals wilh a 5-7,0-6 loss. He fin­ ished his first season as Davie's No. 1 player with a 10-8 record.- The only other Davie win camc from the doubles team of Matt Hauser and Phillip Hursey. The juniors notched a 6-1, 7-6 win in the second round. As a team Davie went 3-5 in the tour­ nament. Every starter will return in 2006 for the War Eagles, who flirted with the state playoffs for the first time in forever by tying for second in the CPC regular season. There were two berths to the playoffs, and thus a drawing was held between Davie, West Forsyth and South Rowan. All three went 4-4 in the CPC. South drew the lucky two to join No. 1 Reynolds in the dual­ team postseason. Davie drew the three seed and West the four, end­ ing the seoson for both. Recreation Plans Seven Sports Camps The Mocksville-Davie Recre­ ation Department will hold seven camps over late May, June and July. • BasketbaU - boys and girls. Moy 31-June 3. Register by May 25. Cost $40. Rising third-sixth graders. Brock Gym 4-6 p.m. Instructors: Mike Absher and Brent Wall. • Boseball - June 20-23. Reg­ ister by June 15. Cost $60, Ages 7-14. Rich Park from 10 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Instructors: Davie coaches Mike Hemdon andlbdd Bumgarner, West Stokes' Kirk Goodson, North Davidson's Bobby Byeriy, college players. • Softball - June 20-23, Reg­ ister by June 15, Cost $40. Sec- ond-eighth graders. Rich Park from 10 a.m.-noon. Instructors: Janice Jackson and Chris Calli­ son. • Wrestling - July 18-21 from 4-5:30 p.m. Register by July 14. Cost $40. K-6 grades. Instruc­ tors: Howard Riddle and Jamey Holt. • Soccer-August 1-4 from 6- 8 p.m. at Pinebrook. Register by July 26. Cost $40. K-6 grades. Instructor: Hugh Lee. • Volleyball - August 1-4 from 10 a.m.-noon at Brock Gym. Register by July 26. Cost $40. Rising third-eighth graders. In­ structor: TVish King. • Tennis - June 6-10 and June 27-July 1, South Davie. Cost $30 per week. Sign up for one or two weeks. Beginners from 9-10:15 a,m. Deadline is a week before camp. Instructor: Tina Arey. O l d S c h o o l Davie Sports News From May, 1977 • Davie's golf team clinched the North Piedmont Conference's regular-season title with a 292 at Twin Cedars. The second-place team, Mooresville, was 28 shots bock. Davie’s scores were: Ronald Webb 71, Stanley Randall 72, Greg Ben­ son 74, Eric Lawhon and Johnny Miller 75s, and Bobby Brownlow 76. Led by Benson’s 72, Davie followed that with a tournament title. It marked the third straight year that Davie won the regular season and tournament wilh an unblemished record, • Davie’s girls track team fin­ ished second of 11 teams in Ihe NPC championship meet. Deanna Thomas was a triple winner, claiming the 220 in 26,28, the broad jump at 16-2 and helping Mary Gardner, Jan­ ice Hunter and Laura Cocker­ ham post a 50,8 in the 440 relay, Cockerham won the high jump at five feet, one inch, Gard- ner, Hunter, Teresa Williams and Cockerham grabbed the 880 re­ lay with a time of 1:50. Another first-place performer for Davie was Rebecca Garwood, • Davie’s baseball team lost 8-5 to South Iredell after lead­ ing 5-0. Davie made six errors lo give South, which committed seven enors, six uneamed runs. In the firsl, Mark Howard singled and later scored on a sac­ rifice fly by Sid Short. Perry Ridenhour keyed a four-run third with a two-run double that plated Ron Bivins and Craig Brown. Davie, however, didn’t scratch again, giving up eight unanswered runs. • The NPC player of the year, Cathy Hutchens of Davie’s var­ sity girls basketball leam, signed a grant-in-aid with Catawba Col­ lege. Hutchens averaged 15.9 points as a senior, 14.9 as a jun­ ior and 11.8 as a sophomore. a c h o i c e f o r C a b l e T V DIC3ITAL VIDEO Ч.. Only $ 3 4 9 5 LJp to two rooms Cable TV doesn't have to be expensive. Choose the package that's best for your family and get more of the channels you want for less from someone you know, ust a local phone call away when you need us, invision. 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MYRUE BEACH, 80INDOOR POOL CALL FOR FREE BROCHURE 1 - 8 0 0 - 3 3 4 - 1 4 6 7 1 - 8 7 7 - 3 3 4 - 1 4 6 7 Uta -------— —• W XURY AT LOW RATES” • Nddl* Pool t Whirlpool • Rooms & Eff. Apt*. • U iy River • Phonta • Sports A D lin ty Ch«nrt«l • Oolf and Honeymoon Pwhag«« I • AmuMtiMnt Park t R«stsur»nts. I IW rö ö o H POOL JACUZZI 2вЮ N. OCEAN BLVD., MYHUE BEACH, 80 СЛ c»« toou ssM. o ra ytw nou«осш ят Toll Free 1-800-533-1338 EXCELLENT RESTAURANT Rooms • EKWoncloa • too Units Room Phonee ■ Kiddle Pool • Whirlpool “WE WELCOME FAMIUES” gQoir Packages • ESPN Sports ^ • 90 ft. Indoor Pool • 60 fl. Outdoor Pool • 200 ft. Indoor Lazy Pool • On^slie Convenience Store • State*of'(he«Ai1 Fitness Center • Game Room •R aicj w b }tci lo change *O ÌK ounu lubjcct to Qvailability Toll Fun |800) 895-3721 or (843) 9164700 m m .c a m e h l-r e s o r u o m Davie F^ple DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - Cl The Rev. Darrell Cox remembers Megan Howell and Lindsay Gales at a memorial service at Davie High School last week. Megan And Lindsay G i r l s R e m e m b e r e d A t S e r v i c e A t D a v i e H i g i i l \ / l e m o r i a l G a r d e n Pastor Darrell Cox remembers well the day Megan Howell told him she thought she had not been saved. She wanted to bc baptized, and she wanted him, the pastor of Trinity Baptist Church south of Mocksvillc, to perform the service. He did it with pleasure, not knowing that a short while later, he would be speaking at Megan’s funeral, and that of her two sisters who had died in the same car wreck. He remembers that day well, too. As usual, he asked for a call to the altar. Lindsay Gales and Ashton Lamb came forward. Just a few days later, on a day when Megan’s parents were almost uncontrollably upset, sitting in their yard, crying, a car drove up. It was Lindsay, there to offer comfort to the parents of her lost friend. i, Some two monlhs later, Lindsay died in a wreck. Last week, a service was held in the memorial garden nt Davie High School for the two would-be members of the Class of 2005. Cox reminded the parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and friends that though the loss is real, the girls are; in a better jplace - not having to face theTlttl^^d rtbulaj^n^f'life’Orr: ■ >• earth. Our time here is just a vapor, Cox said, but life in Heaven is for eternity. - P h o to s b y M ik e B a rn h a rd t Jamie Harper and Kip Snow offer a song in memory of the girls. Hiliary Cartner reads a poem she wrote in memory o f Lindsay Gales. Josh Hilton and Jennifer Hilton sing for the crowd that gathered for the memorial service. Grace Hiifbn'l' Polly Barhha Leola Barnhardt, Jenny Williams and Sandy Grantham pay their respects. JRO TC members Jason Whitley and Andrew Wilson stand guard over the memorial rocks. Molly Harris sings the National Anthem, while JRO TC member Zac Yokley stands guard and assistant principal, Carol Cozart, stands at attention. \I, C2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Mrs. Nicholas Powell Miller R e e d - M i l l e r C o u p l e U n i t e d I n M a r r i a g e Mrs. Carrie Elizabeth Brown B r o w n - S a k a i C o u p le W e d A t F ir s t M e th o d is t Kipperly Michelle Reed of Winston-Salem nnd Nicholas Powell Miller of Mocksville were united in marriage at 3 p.m. Saturday, May 7 at Dutchman Creek Baptist Church. The Rev. Thomas Tuggle officiated. The bride is the daughter of Ron and Tonya Reed and Narcia and Urchel Hill. She is a gradu­ ate of the medical assisting pro­ gram at Forsyth Technical Com­ munity College and is an assis­ tant customer service represen­ tative for The Phoenix Com­ pany, an insurance company. The groom is the son of Dixie and Mike Miller of Country Lane, Mocksville. He is a gradu­ ate of Davie High School and the funeral directing program al Fayetteville Technical Commu­ nity College. He is a funeral di­ rector with Eaton Funeral Home in Mocksville. Given in marriage by Ron Reed, her father, the bride chose her sister, Brittany Hill, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Julia Miller, Chasity Miller, Tiffany Myers and Kennlta Price. Mike Miller, the groom’s fa­ ther, was best man. Groomsmen were Michael Miller, Brad Miller, Brian Hill and Heath Carter. Flower girls were Shianna Reed and Nicole Miller, and Connor Price was ring bearer. The Rev. Ted Tuggle was so­ loist, and Obie Yates was organ­ ist. '-'A fter a reception in the church fellowship hall, the couple went on a trip to St. Tho­ mas. They will be at home on Davie Academy Road, Mocks­ ville. Carrie Elizabeth Brown and Taka Sakai of Aspen, Colo, were united in marriage on Saturday, May 7 at 5:30 p.m. al First United Methodist Church of Mocksville. The Revs. Donald W. Routh and Crystal Alexander officiated. The bride is the daughter of Ron and Dianne Brown of Holly Lane, Mocksville. She is a graduate of Davie High School, attended Meredith College and earned a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Westem Caro­ lina University, where she was a member of the Phi Mu Soror­ ity. She is employed by the As­ pen Skiing Co, The groom is the son of Machie Sakai and the late Sukeyasu Sakai of Scarsdale, N.Y. He is a graduate of Mamaroneck High School and earned a bachelor’s degree in MOCKSVILLE 854 Valley Rd(Across sifcol Irum CCO) 336-751-2222 Q Q Swicegood Wall & McDaniel ,T\i i r\ sn;\7i 1УЧО Aw;ird Winiiinj; Iriiul I.dtaiions' CLEMMONS 2419 LewisvlllB-Clemmons Rd\|AciüS'i sUrct Irom Wciuly ь) 336-778-2221 w w w .c l I s w m .c o m № W n ^ ,j$ 3 5 ,0 0 0 t i ä 2 B R /2 BA $57,900 3 BR /1 BA $81,900 Я $82,900 3 BR/2 BA |4 P |B H i$9 8 ,5 0 0 III IIII I M $106,000 Ш ■ ¿ ■ Щ Ш В Ш $118,900 3 BR/1 BA... 3 BR/1 BA $129,900 $188,900 2BR/2 BA ^ .,S 5 ^ 3 B R / 2 B A2 BR / 2 BA ......■ ............ щ т т т т ' .3BR/2BA $135ДЮ0 & up Towinhorae r $104,900 ' 4 BR/ 3 BA ■ $150,000 (3BR/3BA t $133,900 H m ú 8.25 Ac. Н Н Щ $159,900 В 5 ж Э 4 В В /2 В А к ш и ш и ш и п п '^ $ 1 7 8 ,5 0 0 ^ 3 ВВ/ 2 ВА KifflHnnm iiiir ЛС1. iiHiiiHiraEtii $199,900 Ж М Ж " $233,000 3 BR / 2 ВА |^i4BR/ 2.5 ВА ,<î' P i V, I v ; : 2 BR / 2 BA a « ,.........._ ШГГИПРШГШГИ ( $257,500 5450,ООО ^#?:^íi$618,000kk o no I o DA n ПП / 4 ПЯ МЕП|||0 *тП1П3 BR / 2 BA 3BR/1BA Mrs. Christopher Lee Waddell W a g n e r - W a d d e l l C o u p l e U n i t e d I n M a r r i a g e A p r i l 1 6 economics from the University of Colorado. He is employed by the Aspen Skiing Co. The bride chose Barb Piotrowski as her maid of honor, and Megan Brown as her matron of honor. Bridesmaids were: Miya Sakai, Jennifer Jones Ward, Christina Finger Sims, Allison Buckner Pollard, Erica Deviney Mark, Tracie Sechresl Everhardt, Kena Stone Bowman and Page Archer. Mark Delille was the groom’s best man. Groomsmen were; Greg Siddons, Thomas Clark, Caleb Sakai, Andrew Davies, Nobi Sakai, Williani Kaplan,Davin Brown,Nicholas Brodsky and Colman Cuff. After a reception at Bermuda Run Country Club, the couple went on a wedding trip to Costa Rica. They will be at home in Aspen. Amy Lynette Wagner of Ad­ vance and Christopher Lee Waddell of Boonville were united in marriage at 2 p.m. April 16 at Liberty United Methodist Church. Dr. Mark Evans offici­ ated. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wagner of Advance. She is a graduate of Davie High School and Davidson County Community College. She is employed by ■ Mocksville Vision Center. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Billie Waddell of Boonville. He is a graduate of Starmount High School and is employed by Lowes Distribu­ tion Center, Statesville. The bride chose Erica Overcash, a long-time friend, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were friends of the bride, Paula Lunsford, Erin Chaffin, and Kamryn Wagner. The groom’s father was best man. Groomsmen were Mat­ thew Brown, Russell Casslevens and David Vestal, friends of the groom. Flower girl was Kamryn Wagner, niece of the bride, and ring bearer was Logan Wagner, nephew of the groom. The wedding was directed by Lynn Marrs. Music was pro­ vided by Donna Lanier, pianist, and Julia Whittaker and Rusty Angell, soloists. Following the ceremony, a reception was held in the church fellowship hall. After a wedding trip to Hawaii, the couple made Iheir home on NC 801 Soulh, Advance. Social Events • A rehearsal dinner was hosted by the groom’s parents and catered by Scott Wagner, the bride’s cousin. . • A bridesmaids luncheon was held April 9, hosted by Janet Taylor anti Erica Overcash at Mrs. Taylor’s home in Mocksville. • A shower was given by co- Workers from Mocksville Vision Center. • Family and friends of the bride hosted a shower at Liberty Uniled Metho4ist Church. • The bride's church family at Liberty also hosted a shower. '\^ictDria !E(aim (Bric(a(s F u l l S e rv ic e B r id a l S a lo n B rid e s -a s k u s a b o u io u r | AIJERAIWN SPEOAlg W e a r e a o n e s to p s h o p f o r o il y o u r s p e c ia l d a y n e e d s : B r id a l G o w n s , M o th e r o f ih e B ru le , B rid e s m a id s , F lo w e r G ir l, E v e n in f!, P ro m . S h o e s & A c c e s s o rie s .GIFT CERTinCATES AVAILABLE 129 E. Depot St., Mocksville, NC • (336) 753-8488 Clemmons Pawn & Jewelry B uyin g / S elU ng :IVe Pay Top D o lla r F o r G old 81 D ia m o n ds I J e w c ln j and W atch R e p a ir WDannv Wlngo- Owner 25 Yrs Experience 1609 LewlsTiUe-Clemmont Rd. Clemmon*(Next to Ronnl'i WIngi) Heure M-F 9-e Sat. 9-3 766-8312 www.myolemmons.oom m s m JESLS presents: Jewish Roots of Pentecost with Bruce Rapp Friday, May 13 at 7:00 pm First Baptist Church 204 Marginal St Cooleemee, North Carolina 336-284-2626 W/miwio/i is free. An offering w ill be received fo r the missionary wc o f Jews fo r Jesus. Please call ahead fo r any schedule changes. S p e c ia l A r t s T a le n t S h o w S a t u r d a y A t S o u t h D a v le Special Arts of Davie will host its 7th Annual Talent Show at South Davic Middle School Saturday evening. May 14 at 7. This annual event is popular with not only the participants bul also with the cbmmunity. The talent show gives the develop­ mentally delayed participants a chance to show off their artistic side just as Special Olympics addresses their athletic abilities. Participants will include such favorites as songbirds Stacey Streit-Spry and Scott Nelson, dancers Gary Redman and Seth Grooms, and the a capclla duct of Annie Kay and Debra Nelson. New stars are made each year. SA Davic has performed al SOI World Games, opening ceremo­ nies at SONCC Games including the 2003 Summer Games at Ra­ leigh, and many local functions. Each participant prepares their own talent, choosing their own music, medium, coslume or skit. The Special Arts volunteers then help them to refine their ideas while not changing them, and assemble the acts into a pro­ gram. Each participant is allowed a solo and will also participate in a prelude and the finale. A reception will be held at 6:30 in the lobby. While no ad­ mission is charged, donations of any amount are always welcome. Special Arts of Davie sponsors a variety show in the late fall and a three-day hands on festival in the early spring. Approximately 150 spccial Davic residents par­ ticipate in Special Arts of Davie. O r d e r s B e in g T a k e n F o r S p e c ia l O ly m p ic s B B Q Special Olympics Davie is taking orders for its May 26th fundraiser. The last day to order will be Monday, May 23 by 11 a.m. All dinners must be pre-nrdered. Dinners are $7 a plate which in­ cludes 1/2 chicken, baked beans, slaw, toll and dessert. The hours are 11 a.m.-6 p.m. at the First Methodist Church on North Main in Mocksville. Special Olympics Davie hosts three port- a-pits a year to help fund its year- round program. The May fundraiser provides monies for the Davic Equestrian Invitational at the Mila Eques­ trian Center on May 28 and the local Invitiational Golf Touma- mcnt at Pudding Ridge in June. Equestrian teams will participate in the state finals at Hunt Com­ plex July 15-17. It also provides the funds for starting new rollerskating and floor hockey programs, plus training of cy­ cling, golf, tennis, bocce and bowling for fall competition. “Without these successful fundraisers and the communities support there would not be a spe­ cial Olympics program in Davie County,” said Kathie Streil. It will take 65 large pound cakes to provide the desserts for the an­ ticipated 1,200 plates that will be sold. If you can help by baking one or two, it would be greatly appreciated. Cakes can be delivered to the Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation Department on Wednesday, May 25 before 5 p.m. or at the church on the 26th before 9 a.m. Plain pound cakes with no frosting work the best. Volunteers are always needed to make Special Olympics a suc­ cessful progrram. Your help is needed as coaches, committee members, and as one-day work­ ers. To make the port-a-pit a suc­ cess volunteers will sell dinners before the event; and persons will cut and wrap cake, pack plates at the church (particularly 10 a.m.- noon) and deliver orders to the businesses for lunch. Call 751-2325. G o s p e l T h e a te r S a tu r d a y A t T h e B r o c k An evening of gospel theat­ rical entertainment for the fam­ ily will be hosted by the Davie County Heritage Foundation at 5 p.m. Saturday, May 14 at the Brock Performing Arts Center, North Main Street, Mocksville. Guest speaker will be Busta Brown from WQMG 97.1 and host of the Busta Brown Show on WTWB Channel 3. There will be a performance by the Davie High Steppers. Tickets are $10 adults, $5 students in advance, $ 1 1 and $6 at the door. Proceeds will go to the foundation’s scholarship pro- grom. J There will be productions by Eric Hargrove and Selenea “Babydoll” Barker, with musi­ cal arrangements by Keith Hol­ land. Other local talent will be featured. For tickets or more informa­ tion, contact Hargrove at 712- 9386, Patrece McCullough at 704-876-4113, or Selina Naylor at 462-4024. A d v a n c e C a r S h o w S a t u r d a y The fifth annual Advance Car Show will be held Saturday, May 14 to benefit "What Christ­ mas Is All About” and to Diane Keaton and Grady Smith. Gates to the show at Shady Grove Elementary Schooi, Comatzer Road, Advance, open at 8 a.m. Registration ends at noon. TYophies will be awarded for first, second and third in each class, including specialty tro­ phies. There wiii be door prizes L e t t e r C a r r i e r s C o l l e c t i n g F o o d On Saturday, May 14, postal employees will collect canned food for the needy as they de­ liver the mail. Just leave canned goods at your mailbox, and the mail car­ rier will pick it up. The food will be donated to A Storehouse for Jesus. It is the 13th straight year postal employees have con­ ducted the food drive nation­ wide, sponsored by the National Association of Letter Carriers. More than a half billion tons of food have been donated since 1993, the iiation’s one-day larg­ est effort to collect food for the needy. Leave a bag containing canned foods near your mailbox before the carrier arrives on Sat­ urday to participate. and a 50/50 drawing. There will be a specialty class for tractors, including first and second runners-up and best of show. Other specialty awards include; best of show, best Chevrolet, best Ford, best paint, best GM (non-Chevy), best im­ port, best orphan, best Mopar and best bike. Bikes and tractors on trailers are allowed, cars on trailers are not. For more information, con­ tact Terry Branch at 998-6136. r Gary Bradley Jones ond Dawn Marie Morse announce the birth of their daughter, Emma Marie Jones. Emma was born T\iesday, April 26, 200S at Forsyth Mcdical Cen­ ter. She weighed 6 lbs. 14 oz. and was 19.5 inches in length. Maternal grandparcntsare James and Donna Bergeron of King, and paternal grandpar­ ents are Gary and Karen Jones of Advance. Emma also has a proud sis­ ter, Madison. Jennifer and Carlton Hire of Advancc announce the birth of their son, Lawson Colin Hire. He was born at 1:35 a.m. on April S, 2005 at Forsyth Medical Center. At birth he weighed six pounds, seven and one-half ounces and was 19 inches long. He has an older brother. Mason Lee Hire, age two and » half. Maternal grandparents are Bonnie and Jack Snow of Mocksvlllc. Ma­ ternal great-grandparents are Fred and Rachel Snow of Win- ston-Salem. Paternal grand­ parents are Steve and Delores Hire of Winston-Salem. Pater­ nal great-grandparents are Ray and Doris Hire of Win­ ston-Salem. Randy and Lisa Burton of Mocksville announce the birth of a son, Randy Wyatt Burton at 11:18 p.m. Thursday, April 28, 2005 at Forsyth Hospital. He weighed 4 lbs. 12 oz. and was 18 inches long. Maternal grandparents are Tony and Joyce Wagner of Mocksville. Maternal greal-grandparents are Blanche Jordan and the late Loman Jordan of Cool­ eemee, and Sadie Wagner and the late John Wagner of Mocksville, Paternal grand­ parents are Randy and Donna Burton of Advance. Paternal great-grandparents are Franklin and Minnie Harp of Advance and the late Bobby and Catherine Burton of Ad­ vance. Godfather Is Michael Moore. He has many aunts, uncles and cousins. DAVIE COUNTY ENTIERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - 03 Find your inner svv^imsuit. ¡oin Note 2 f o r 1 Or K ik e 50% t)iril ic s c rv ic c fee. I g This summer take time for yourself with 30- minute fitness and sensible weight loss V Curves. Right now if you join Curves you can split the service fee with any friend. Over 4 million women have found success at Curves. You can too. The power to amaze yourself* 336-753-2348 3 7 5 H o s p i t a l S t . , S t e . 1 0 1 M o c k s v i l l e , N C 2 7 0 2 8 --------------------- Over 8,000 locations worldwide, --------------------- curvesinternatianal.com •OlTcr based on flm visit enrollment, minimum 12 mo. c.d. program. N ot valid with any other oljcr. Valid оп!/ at participating locations thtougli 7/10/05. S o m e t h i n g ’s F i s h y D o n ' t B e I n t i m i d a t e d B y F o o d T h a t S w i m s C4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 By Robin Lowder Davie County Enterprise Rccord 1 think everyone has had a taste of some sort of fish by the time we reach 5 years of age, whether it be those frozen fish sticlcs our Mom's made for us or the shrimp off of Dad's plate from the local seafood restaurant. Who knew that when wc grew into our taste buds that there would be so many choices? We are all familiar with the favorites such as flounder, shrimp, lobster, tuna, scallops and salmon. Then there are those we have either never heard of, or the name of it is just too crcepy to think about eating. I have to admit 1 don't know what a sunfish, bullhead or tilefish is and I will gladly leave the eating of octopus, squid and eel lo those people on the reality shows. I have looked at literally dozens of cookbooks these past couple of weeks and I found fish in some of the most interesting recipes. There were hors d'oeuvres, slews, soups, casseroles, gumbos, main dishes and even one dessert wilh fish. Fish is not only versatile but it is high in protein, vitamins and minerals. When it comes to cooking fish, I was intimidated. My past experience was limited lo frying salmon patties or flounder and making tuna salad, but after attending a couple of cooking classes, I no longer have a fear of baking, grilling or poaching fish. It is a lot easier and tastier than I dreamed possible. First lesson leamed was what to look for when purchasing fresh fish. If you are buying whole fish, make sure the eyes arc clear; the gills are reddish in color: it does not have a strong odor and the flesh is firm lo the touch. If you are in doubt whether or not your fish is fresh, place it in a pan of cold water, fresh fish should float. If you are buying fresh filets or fish steaks, be sure it does not have a sU-ong odor and it does not look dry or slimy. I don’t recommend buying fresh fish until the day you ore going to cook it, unless you are planning on freezing it right away. Fish can be frozen for 4-6 months. Remember lo thaw your fish in the refrigerator overnight and never refreeze fish. The second lesson leamed is not to under or overcook Ihe fish. Undercooking fish leoves it gummy, while overcooking leaves fish dry and tasteless. The general rule of thumb for baking or broiling fish is to allow 10 minutes per inch of thickness. This will produce a white and flaky fi.sh. Lemon, wine, vinegar, ginger or even garlic can be used to cook and marinate fish to help minimize the fish taste and odors. A couple of good pointers I have learned over the years are: burning a candle while frying salmon patties helps to reduce the fish smell in your home and never fry fish in the same oil that you have fried shellfish, in case you have family or guests thot may have allergies to shellfish. I hope you will try some of this week's simple and delicious recipes. If you would like to share yoiir recipe with others or you know of an upcoming cooking event or a spccial subject you would like to see covered, please drop me a note or email to Robin Lowder, P.O. Box 693, Lewisville, NC 27023: or rdlideas® iriad.rr.coin. Baked Flounder Siibm itled by Linda Petitto 6 flounder filets 1/2 cup cracker crumbs or crushed potato chips 1/2 cup parmesan cheese I cup milk Soak flounder filets in milk for 15-20 minutes. Mix crumbs and parmesan cheese together and roll filets in the mixture. Place filets in a greased glass casstiole dish and bake in a 500»degree oven for 10 minutes. Baked Tllapla (I adapted this recipe from Ihe recipe sent in by Linda Petitto.) 4 fresh Tilapia filets I cup milk 3/4th cup of breadcrumbs 1 and 1/2 teaspoons lemon pepper seasoning 1/2 cup grated parmesan cheese Soak the tllapla filets in milk for 15 minules. In 0 medium bowl combine breodcrumbs, lemon pepper and parmesan cheese. Roll the tilapia filets in the breadcrumb mixture. Place Ihe filets in a greased gloss casserole dish and bake in a 450-degree oven for 12-15 minutes. Grilled Salmon Submitted by Linda Petitto (I think this would be good using scallops also.) 2 small fresh salmon filets (enough for 2 people) l/4th cup honey l/4th cup bourbon Place salmon in a large Ziploc plastic bag, pour Ihe honey and bourbon over Ihe salmon and marinate overnight. (Makes a nice glaze as well as adding flavor). Grill the salmon 10-12 minules on each side. Salmon Patties 1 (15 oz.) can pink salmon, undrained' 2 teaspoons finely chopped onion Robin Lowder displays her Bai<ed Tiiapia Fiiets witti lemon slices. — P h o to b y C h ris M a c k ie 2 teospoons finely chopped green pepper One-half teaspoon black.pepper One-fourth teaspoon salt 1 egg ’ 2-3 tablespoons flour 1/2 cup cooking oil form patties. Heat cooking oil in a 10-inch skillet on medium high heat. Add salmon potties and cook until golden brown, flip and cook on the other side until golden brown. Drain on paper towels. Tips and Hints Place salmon in a medium mixing bowl, • To remove flsh odors from cooking utensils, discarding any skin ahd bones. Mash with a fork, use 1 teaspoon of baking soda to 1 quart of woler. add onion, green pepper, black pepper, salt, egg • To remove flsh odors from hands, rub hands and enough flour to hold the salmon together to with lemon juice, vinegor or salt before washing. 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Como in and talk to us about the many mortgage loan options we offer, or about refinancing to ei^joy more of what you ivant in life, Your dream is our starting point. Let's talk about it. A ЛОуеаг/кЫ raf« moit|«ife 0/ UOO.OOO a il A V R 0/.Ш З К . u<0Nl<f Atnv 360 pOtfmeno ofA А(/м1лЬ{« raw montai« ofllOOiOOO. 3<H««ar , u w t í ht№€ 360ffiym eni$ o f 1597,». Ш tubieti to iHctcate afitr й в ÍHÍrlfll fù td mie. ^Southern ( .ommunity B A N K A N D TR U S T Snmll b’noifsh To Caw I f the down payment U U u »han 20% moriiiige ¡Mum hce m ay be needed, which сачЦ {ncm ae ihe m onihiy payment and A P R . Subject » tttd ii oppfweL OflTer «ubiwi to notUe. Additiom \ fe e ta n d c lo tin ic o tlta ^ ly . * 1 er<|{mit{oH flee of itam fani or^/iutr/oii fee, 'VPÌP»MONT>H(Xn ANP,SunR'c)^^kD^NЦ;Co^^>Ц^,^Й iT,Rina(lenQUghtooarq.oQm / (336)7,вЧ^IÎ5po^,^^ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - CS Bermuda Village residents watch the Kentuci<y Derby at a party Saturday evening. B e rm u d a V illa g e N e w s By Lisa O’Donnell Bermuda Village Correspondent Friends ond neighbors gathered in the Bermudh Village Living Room for Ihe Kentucky Derby and the Run for the Roses on Saturday afternoon. An American icon since 1875 and home of the first jewel in the Triple Crown of Thoroughbred Horserocing, the Kentucky Derby is held arinuolly on the flrst Saturday in May. The party began at 5:30 p.m. with cocktails and oppetizers, which included a variety of tea sandwiches, fresh strawberries and creom, peppered jelly cream cheese with crackers. cheese straw, and assorted chocolates. Residents Marti ond Tom Huber were the lucky winners of the day’s race; picking Giocomo with 50 to 1 odds. When asked later how they choose the winning horse Marti replied, “Giacomo is the name of our youngest grandson.” Following the race, residents enjoyed a delicious Derby Buffet in the dining room featuring prime rib au jus, chicken kiev, and dilled salmon. A fresh vegetable medley and long groin wild rice accompa­ nied tile entrees. The dinner was complete with a Derby pie for dessert. Marti and Tom Huber are ail smiles after pici<ing the win­ ning horse. F o u r C o rn e rs N e w s By Marie White Four Comers Correspondent Mother’s Day was observed Sunday at Courtney Baptist Church worship service. The old­ est mother present was Mrs. Dor­ othy Baity and she received 0 gift. Kristen Broyvn received a gift for having the youngest baby present. The pastor's wife, Mrs. Richard Atkins, also received a gift. Ollive Burgess,Beltie Smith, Lucille Melton and Nancy Collette enjoyed lunch Friday wilh Mrs. Peariine Reavis at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Potts and Charles Smith and Charlotte vis­ ited Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Smith Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Shelton visited Mrs. Johnsie Shelton Sat­ urday aftemoon. Mrs. Joyce Parrish and friend Sherry visited Mrs. Johnsie Shelton Sunday aftemoon. Mr. and Mrs. Mark White and Jessica were Sunday dinner guests of his porenis, Mr. and Mrs. Joe White. Mr. and Mrs. Joe White ot- tended the golden wedding cel­ ebration of Mr. and Mrs. John Sain Sunday afternoon at the Lewisville Baptist Church fel­ lowship building.- Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Shelton, S h e ffie ld -C a la h a in N e w s By Jnnice Jordan Sheffield/Calahaln Correspondent Liberty Wesleyan Church is holding revival services Friday, May 13 and Saturday, May 14 at 7 p.m., ending with 11 o.m. services on Sunday, May 15. Retired minister, Donald Dawalt, will be the guest speaker. Everyone is invited. New Union United Metliodist Church’s History Committee reminds you that they ore pre-selling tapestry throws for $50 in honor of the upcoming 225th anniversary of the church. Brenda Bailey has details at 751-7567. Sheffield residents Bill and Jean Cleary have relumed from one of Iheir favorite vacation spots. They spent 0 week in Nossau, the capital of the Bahamas, on New Providence Island. Joining Ihem were Jean's cousin. Ruby Bailey and her husband, Jimmy. The weather was perfect and allowed plenty of time for snorkeling and ■ relaxing. Since Jimmy’s birthday was May 2 and his wife’s birthday wos May 7, it was a wonderful woy to celebrate. Plan now to attend the Memorial Service for Fallen Firefighters on Sunday, May 22 nt 2 p.m. at the Sheffield/ Calahain Volunteer Fire Department station 'on Dyson Road. Meet your local volunteers, tour the fire house, and enjoy refreshments with friends from Ihe community. Start cleaning out your closets, basements, garages and all areas where things you no longer need have accumulated. On Saturday, June 4, you can sell your items at the Community Yard Sale if you rent a table for $10, The sale takes place on the grounds of the Sheffield/ Calahain Volunteer Fire Department. Vendors are welcome to set up, along with indivldiials, for the same fee. Concessions will be available, and auxiliary members will be selling marshmallow blow-guns. Don’t need to sell? Then plan C o u n ty L in e N e w s By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondeni God blessed our mothers in County Line with a beautiful day from morning until night on Mother's Day. Our mothers were beautiful ond beamed whether in morning worship or evening're­ vival services. We trast each of our mothers had 0 great day with family and friends. The Venturing Crew of the Clarksbury Boy Scouts ore hav­ ing a yard sale Friday and Satur­ day, May 13-14, in the church fellowship hall. The sale will begin Friday at 4 p.m. and Sat­ urday at 7 a.m. Anyone wishing to donate items should bring them by the church on Thursday after 4 p.m. or call the church parsonage 704-546-2473. All leftover items will be given lo the Matthew 25 Ministries in Har­ mony. Be sure to come and get some great bargains. The United Methodist Women of Clarksbury will spon­ sor a molher-daughter-sister- friend banquet at 6 p.m. Satur­ day, May 14 in Ihe church fel­ lowship hall. Bring a solod ond join the women for a special evening of food and fellowship. Piney Grove AME Zion Church will have an appreciation service in honor of tlie church's leading lady, the Rev. Cossandra Fisher. The service will begin at 5 p.m. Saturday, May 14, and the guest speaker will be the Rev. Dakota McCullough of Friend­ ship Baptist Church in Gastonia. Following the service, a fellow­ ship dinner will be served in the fellowship hall. The church in­ vites everyone. The United Methodist Women of Salem has postponed their monthly meeting from May 18 to May 25. Dr. Kenneth Hyde, former pastor of Blaise Baptist Church of Mocksville, will be the guest Speaker at the morning worship .service Sunday, May 16 at Soci­ ety Baptist Church, The service begins at 11 a.m. and the church invites everyone. There will be no evening worship service. Upcoming church events for children include Vacation Bible Schools. Two of our churches have set dates. Society will hove 0 pizza kickoff'supper on June 26 followed by classes from June 27-30. Clarksbury will have an all-day school on Saturday, June 4. V-Point Ruritans will hold Iheir regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday, May 12 at the V-Point Building on Old Mocks­ ville Road. After dinner and busi­ ness, a program on how to bum the American flag will be pre­ sented. All interested residents ore invited. The Ruritans will sponsor a couples Rook toumament at 6 p.m. Saturday, May 21 at the V- Point Building. Refreshments will be served. The cost is $10 per couple. If you love to play cards, bring a partner and enjoy an evening of Rook. For more information or a possible partner, call Alice Absher 704-546-7820. Our community extends its deepest sympathy to the family of Annie Koontz Dwiggins. Annie died Friday at Autumn Wade Groce with the magnolia tree planted at the Pud­ ding Ridge Clubhouse in memory of Lottie Groce. F a rm in g to n N e w s Mrs. Ginger Missert and sons, Bobby and William, Dawn and Amanda Hughes, Sondra Shelton, Con, Ken, Hanes and Hunt Shelton visited Mrs. Johnsie Shellon Sunday. Later Sunday afternoon, all these joined Mr. and Mrs. Ken Shelton, Hall and Ryan for supper at K&W Cafeteria. Mrs. Glenda Sapp visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe White Sunday night. By Laura Mathis Farmington Correspondent Farmington has 0 new beauty shop. The former Appearances at Ihe 801 and Farmington Road crossroad, has reopened under new management and name - Farmington Beauty Shop man­ aged by Gina Sheppard. Sheppard has 22 years expe­ rience. She is joined by Sherry Evans Willioms, a beautician, and Amanda Trinidad, a nail technician scheduled to begin in a couple of weeks. The shop offers perms, color, braids, up­ dos and cuts for the family. Hours; Monday-Thursdoy 10 o.m.-8 p.m.; Fridoy 10-5. Wode Groce, his daughter Diana Vuich of San Diego, and daughter-in-law Linda Groce celebrated their birthdoys on Sunday, May 8’ with a family luncheon at the clubhouse at Pudding Ridge Golf Course. Approximately 30 relatives and friends attended including the Gary Groce family, the Earl Groce family, Doris Reavis and family. Bill and Colleen Moon of Winston-Salem ond Mr and Mrs James Essic.A magnolia tree was planted in the lawn at the clubhouse in memory of Lottie Groce for Mother's Day. The Farmington Ruritan An­ nual Golf Tournament is May 27 at 1 p.m. Anyone interested in playing may contact Larry Holbrook at 998-2068 or Jackie Lane at 998-8068. The Farmington Ruritans will have their next meeting May 12at7;30. The Farmington Volunteer Fire Dept, will be having its next meeting May 17 at 7 p.m. For anyone wanting a kitten, I have three that need a good home. They are 8 weeks old and ore potty trained. The momma cat has a gentle nature and I feel like her kittens would be great company for an elderly person or for kids. Anyone interested may call me at 998-0825. to shop that day for plenty of bargains. The fun will begin al 7 o.m. To reserve a space or to get further information, call Tommy Beck at 492-7687. Mother’s Day this yeor was bittersweet for a number of people in our community. No one can even imagine what the many friends and family members of young Christion ond Groce Vasilev have experienced the last several days. With heavy hearts, we want them all to know that they are truly in our prayers, and that we are ever mindful of their sorrow. News for our community column should be called to me at 492-5836 or sent to my email jvfjordan @ hotmail.com. A d v a n c e N e w s Care of Mocksville after several years of declining health. She was a daughter of the late Chris­ topher and Della Cartner Koontz. Prior to moving to Autumn Care, Annie and husband Paul lived on Ridge Road, We send get-well wishes to Pat Swisher of Clarksbury. Pat had eye surgery Monday at Wake Forest University Medical Cen­ ter. Mae Walker continues in re­ habilitation. We give praise that seniors Marshall Godbey and Pauline Stroud are recuperating at their respective homes. Join us as we pray for the Lord’s contin­ ued healing in the lives of Pat, Mae, Marshall and Pauline and other residents who are experi­ encing health problems. In last week’s column I acci­ dentally omitted the name of the church (Society Baptist) where the Rev, Michael Benfield was speaking. I apologize for any confusion or inconveniences this may hove caused. If you have news or memo­ ries to share, call Shiriey 492- 5115, By Edith Zimmerman Advance Correspondent The churches in the commu­ nity observed Mother’s Day Sunday with gifts for the moth­ ers. The Methodist church pre­ sented all mothers with a book­ let titled "Blooming in God’s Garden," a daily inspiration for mothers. The First Baptist Church gave all mothers a long- stemmed red rose. Elbaville Methodist Church gave all mothers an inspirational card and pin. Two red geraniums were on the altar and were given, to the oldest mother, Mattie Tucker, 89, and lo the mother with the most children, Mary Waller, who has 8 children. The church gave $100 to the Preg­ nancy Cenler of Davie County in honor of all the mothers at church. Jeanette Cornatzer was a Mother’s Day luncheon guest of her children, Julia and Robert Nichols and children Catherine and Gray Nichols of Greenwood Lakes. Virgil Potts was rushed to Forsyth Medical Center Satur­ day by ambulance where he un­ derwent emergency gall-bladder surgery. He is in stable condi­ tion in the ICU. A speedy re­ covery is wished for him. Anna Lee Myers was treated to Mother’s Day lunch Sunday at Kinderton Captains Galley by her children and grandson, Cathy and Rommie Barney, Marcia Goshora and son Eddie Goshom. Each mother was pre­ sented with a carnation at the restaurant. Saturday visitors of Edith Zimmerman were daughter Janie Hendrix of this commu­ nity, granddaughter Melissa Bomum ond great granddaugh­ ter Isabelle Bamum of Charlotte. Joyce Robertson, Ruth Latham, Kelly Ward and wife Gena Ward visited Edith. Tim and Peggy Potts spent the weekend in Greenville where they attended their daugh­ ter Tammy’s graduation from East Carolina University. Also present were Tammy’s brother, T.J. Potts, and his girifriend. Get well wishes go out to Elaine Strider who has been con­ fined with a severe attack of shingles. We were happy to see Mildred Robertson at Method­ ist church Sunday after months of absence. She was spent sev­ eral doys at Davie County Hos­ pital, recuperated al the home of her children, the Rev. and Mrs. TommyLee Robertson in Farm­ ington before returning to her home in the Fork community. Get well wishes go out to Ruth Latham who was rushed to ForsyUi Medical Center Monday aftemoon suffering severe chest pains. [!■ H E R C H O IC E R e co rd e d T estim onies O f A b o rtio n D e c isio n s “Leam The True Facts” 2 4 H o u r -A n o n y m o u s w w w .Jhierchoicenc.com 336-748-8777 H o r s e S e n s e R a n c h H e lp s A d o le s c e n ts , F a m ilie s L e a m T o C o p e W ith E v e r y d a y E v e n ts C6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 By Sara Wilson Communications Major Sophomore, Salem College Should I experiment wilh drugs or sex? How do 1 deal with my child’s peer pressure, attention deficit disorder, low self-esteem, or depression? Tliese are just a few of the daunting questions adolescents and their parents asic themselves everyday. Yet, for many area students and their families, the answer to these questions are being found four miles off 1-40 in Mocksville. Hidden Meadows Christian Youth Ranch is a 501c3 non­ profit, faith based organization that provides equine-assisted life-enrichment programs. The ranch focuses on spiritual growth, personal empowerment, and self-discovery for people of all ages. Founder and Executive Director of Hidden Meadows, Vicki Robinson said that she began the ranch in August of 2002 because of her long-time vision and personal passion to make a difference in the lives of youth through spirituality and horses. “I want to empower them,” she said, “to help them see God’s potential in them, and lead them down a good path through the magic of these magnihcent creatures.” The Ranch’s HEAL Program for Youth (Horse Experiential Alternative Learning) helps Robinson and her team of volunteers accomplish just that. The hands-on equine- assisted growth and learning program is an alternative approach to teaching character values, life skills, and academic education. The program is held after school hours from August to May and features devotions, ranch chores, riding lessons, »'■'horse training, and other activities, all designed to help participants deal with tough issues and choices teens have to make in their everyday lives. Some of these issues include peer pressure, fears, body image, self-confidence, and low self- worth. “I think its been a blessing,” one mother of a HEAL program participant said about her daughter. “There’s been a dramatic change in her goals and her grades.” The program is designed for adolescents and teens, ages 10- 17. The programs are separated by gender and meet once a week and during most school breaks. Once a month parents and guardians are involved along wilh their child, in an equine assisted team building session, to help develop better communication skills as a family. “1 like the chares because I like to eam points and go on the trips,” says Koty Newton, 12, of Mocksville, about one of his favorite activities at the ranch. When asked what building a relationship with one of his ranch horses “Buddy” has taught him about life, he responded, “Horses have taught me that you can't rush into friendship. It takes time to build trust.” Kelsea Vaughn, 11, also of Mocksville, says about life lessons she has learned, “You take your experiences with the horse into other situations. Horses teach you to problem solve more than you think you have to.” Aside from the* HEAL program, Ihe ranch offers equine assisted growth and learning services, including hippotherapy, therapeutic riding, corporate teambuilding, and .equine assisted psychotherapy (EAP). While the HEAL program’s main focus takes form in an on­ going after-school life enrichment program, EAP specializes in Ihe treatment of mental health and communication issues, including grief, depression, abuse, anger management, etc. “EAP provides real answers and powerful personal insights to lough problems. This is a wonderful alternative to traditional talk therapy held in an office, which just doesn't work for everyone,” Robinson said. “Obviously I'm a strong advocate of counseling and psychotherapy, but most teenagers, and many adults, find it difficult to engage in therapy in the traditional office setting. Out here (on the ranch’s picturesque property) the atmosphere alone is therapeutic and refreshing. There’s not been a person yet who has not engaged in the therapy once a horse enters the arena or becomes involved in the activity.” EAP sessions are provided through the collaboration of a licensed clinical therapist, a horse professional, and one or more horses. The EAP therapy teams utilize ground activities involving horses in an effort to provide the patient personal insights inlo their own behavior in the areas of communication, assertiveness, problem solving, responsibility and accountability. No horse experience is necessary. EAP is not about horsemanship or riding. In fact, 90 percent of EAP activities take place with pariicipants involved in on-the-ground activities. These sessions are private and confidential, but can involve groups and families. EAP sessions are scheduled on an individual basis and are open to people of all ages. Hidden Meadows has three professional EAP therapy teams Level I or II certified through EAGALA, including a team specializing in Christian counseling. Ranch operations are governed by a board of directors. Programs and scholarships are funded through private contributions, grants, foundations, program fees, corporate donations, and fund raisers. Board members include: president, Stephen L. Robertson, CEO and president of the The Robertson Group and affiliated companies based in Mocksville; senior vice president, founder, executive director, and EAP equine specialist, Vicki Robin­ son, EAP II, CHA II; vice president and co-founder, John Robinson, department manager of Lowes in Mocksville; treasurer, J. Giles Smith III of Smith and Associates Accounting in Lexington; 0EACH'N t a n s 953 SALISBURY RD MOCKSVIU.E, N.C. 27028 Welcomes: Vicki Sink. Nall Technician (Silk wraps, Qels, Manicures, Pedicures, and more.) To our already great staff. Call for start up speclalsllll! 336-751^ 292 secretary, Kristie Staton, CEO of Graphically Speaking marketing and design company in Pffaf- town; EAP clinical therapist, Rebecca Flynt, MA, LCSW, EAP I, CEO of Rebecca Flynt Private Counseling Services in Mocksville; EAP equine specialist. Sue Madden, EAP I, retired Wachovia senior vicc president; Kathy Cornatzer, family nurse practitioner at Medical Associates of Davie in Mocksville; EAP clinical therapist, Ashley Hayes, MA, LPC(P), CEO of Shepherd Equine Assisted Therapy, Inc., in Cornelius; and EAP equine specialist, and director of therapeutic riding services, Donna Ivester of Mocksville. While the ranch is religiously affiliated, Ihey welcome all who are struggling and looking for guidance, regardless of age, sex, race, faith, origin, or income. Christian-based and secular services are offered. For more information, contact Robinson via telephone ot 492-2308 or via email at HMCYR®yadtel.net. Learn more about the ranch at wwwJliddenMeadowsRatichjorg. Applications for the 2005/2006 season of The HEAL Program for Youth are being taken, and will be available off the website by the end of May. If you would like to find out how you can help Hidden Meadows Ranch make a difference in the life of someone you know, call. Donations and professional services to Hidden Meadows Christian Youth Ranch are tax deductible. “Please help us continue lo mold our future, one life at a time, by funding a scholarship to help a needy child or family attend a ranch program, sponsoring the cost of care for a ranch horse, or donating your ibin.son said. Kelsea Vaughn of Mocl<svilie learns to develop balance and self-confidence as she gets a riding lesson from Sara Wilson, an intern from Salem College. Donna Ivester of Mocksville leads students in an experiential educational activity about the digestive system by having each student paint their part of the system on Troy. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - C7 Kory Newton of Mocksville is working on developing good relationship skills with his horse Buddy during a horse training and self-esteem building activity. Hannah Flynt and Raelyn Clark of Cool Springs earn "Ranch Credits” as they clean their horse stalls and learn a good work ethic. Hannah Flynt of Mocksville (on horseback) and Devon Johnson of High Point (blindfolded) learn communica­ tion skills during an equine assisted learning activity. Kelle Lane of Mocksville is led by Katie Ellis during a confidence building activity while on an adventure trip with Hidden Meadows Ranch. ' ■ I A p p ly N o w F o r A n n u a l H o r s e C a m p Mocksville/Davie Parks and Recreation will sponsor its popular horse camp for 8 - 15- year-old children at Dixieland Farm. The camp will be under the direction of Marissa Johnston, who bought the farm in 2003 af­ ter moving to North Carolina from Long Island, N.Y. The camp will be open to a maxi­ mum of 10 campers a week for six weeks. Johnston moved to Davie two years ago wilh her fiance, Kris Brzescinski, in order to fol­ low Iheir dream of owning and operating a hunt seat boarding and training stable, leaving be­ hind in New York a television career in which she had been nominated for an Emmy in 2001 for camera work. Dixieland be­ came available and their dream came true. She is firm yet kind in her methods, and relaxes and arnus- ing in her dealings wilh her stu­ dents. “Way lo go, dude!” and “my hero!” are frequently heard phrases at her classes. Johnston brought to her farm an extensive background in competition, training, instruct­ ing and stable management. Her students' accomplishments are spreading the word of her teach­ ing excellence as they are win­ ning in show after show across the state. Dixieland is the win­ ner of Ihe 2005 Special Olym­ pics Piedmont Triad Area Small Corporation of the Year Award. Camps will include Ihe weeks of June 6-10, June 13-17, June 20-24, June 27-July 1, July 18-22, and July 25-29. Each week will be custom designed to meet the expertise of that week’s campers, by offering training for beginners, interme­ diate and advanced as needed. Beginner level participants will leam basic equine safety and riding skills. (fival (’лл'гга'л', ( ) Slails w illi l)liic »B lue Advantage* Plans • No Referral HMO.PPO and POS Group Plans • Small Group Coverage Johnson Insurance Services, Inc. Jo h n W oo d(336) 75 1 -6 28 1 • long Ttan Care • Medicare Supplement Insurance • Dental Coverage for Individuals and Groups • Blue Extras* Discount Programs BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina ContKt yeuc «jihoAt«! Bk>* Crou kM Bb« Nonh C»rolin» »Mnt for смп md lur*i«r et csv*rto«, Mdutiofii wmi« iioàét which pdicy m«y Ы centinuM In brea. An Indtpéndim lieantM of |h« filu* Crou and eig« Shi«ld A«todtt«n. • т*Л erf th« Bhjt Crt>u ind Diu« Shield AMOClilien. SM Servie« mtii Ы lh> Blu« Cfou *nd Bk<« Shidd AttodMton. U2W4. a/Oi __ ____ A participant in last year’s Horse Camp (left) practices In the arena. ‘The camp Is under the direction of Marissa Johnston, right. Intermediate participants will need lo have basic under­ standing of equine safely and riding skills, and have the abil­ ity to develop their skills to a controlled posting trot and can­ ter. Advanced level campers must have all basic and interme­ diate skills and be ready to ad­ vance to pre and beginner jump­ ing techniques. All campers will develop their riding skills in hunt seal (English) while sam­ pling slock seal (western) and bareback. The day will start with camp­ ers climbing on a recreation van at 7:30 a.m. in Ihe recreation parking lot on North Main Street, Mocksville. Each camper will have a clipboard with a horse puzzle to solve on the way to the farm. The mom­ ing will include a divided pro­ gram with two participants shar­ ing a schooling horse. Campers will be divided into two groups. Both campers will prepare their horse for the day’s activities by grooming and tacking Ihe horse. Camper No. I will then take the horse to the arena for their riding session while Camper No. 2 participates in Ihe equine management part of the pro­ gram. Halfway through the moming Ihey will switch, each having ridden from I hour to 1 1/2 hours each day. Dixieland has a large indoor arena as well as an outdoor one, so weather will not affect the camp instruc­ tion. Before lunch the leam will join up for cooling, unlacking and grooming thek horse before it is turned out for the rest of the day. The horse management pro­ gram will include everything from leading, grooming, feed­ ing and mucking lo all horse health issues and proper tack care. They will learn about breeds, colors, markings and body parts. By the end of the week Ihey will have a general understanding of what a com­ mitment owning a horse of your own is. After lunch, the campers will load into the recreation van to be transported to the afternoon's activities. Monday, Wednesday and Friday will be swim days at a local campground (weather Monday, May 1 6,11 :00 a.m. Golden Corral 4965 University Parkway Winston Salem Thursday, May 2 6,11 :30 a.m. Thursday, May 26, 3:3Q p.m. Golden CorralZeko's 949 Salisbury Road Mocksville 4965 University Parkway Winston Salem PARTNERS^ W V { \\V A W 0 w ic £ ' • More coverage than Original Medicare alone • Prescription dmg coverage • Low copays and predictable costs • Extensive provider network • 37,000 members strong and growing" • Local, personal service • Experience you can count on • The only Medicare H M O headquartered in NC Call to resenre your space todayl 1 -8 0 0 -3 8 2 -1 9 1 5 IT T Y /T D D 1 -8 8 8 -4 5 1 -9 9 5 7 ) Monday to Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. A sales representative will be present to answer questions and help with applications. There is no obliqation to enroll. If you need accommodations for persons with special needs please let us know when you call. PARTNERS Medicare Choice, an HMO, is offered by PARTNERS National Health Plans of North Carolina, Inc,, a Medicare Advantage oiganization with a Medicare Advantage contract. All qualified beneficiaries may apply. You must be entitled to Medicare Part A and enrolled in Medicare Part B, and reside in the CMS-approved service area. Some limitations and restrictions may apply. *With no obligation **Membership as of December 2004 CMS.4002.1070-A3/2005 BRING THIS COUPON to one of the meetings shown above and exchange it for a FREE GIFT*, compliments of [PARTNERS Medicare Choice]. Or, MAIL THIS COUPON to receive FREE INFORMATION by mail, with no obligation. A sales representative may contact you by phone, Name______________________________________________________________ Address_______________ City__________________ST NC Zip. Date of Birth, Phone(_____ □ Male □ Female ___Email Address___ Mall to: (PARTNERS Medicare Choice] 5640 University Parkway, Winston-Salem, NC 27105 permitting). 1\iesday and Thurs­ day will include field trips to horse related facilities plus note­ books and crafts activities at the recreation department, where Ihey will be picked up by 5 p.m. The afternoon part of the pro­ gram is being designed and con­ ducted by Kalhie Strcil; Special Olympics Davie Equestrian Coach and Special Olympics North Carolina Equestrian Sports Development Team Member and Clinician. The camp is $210 per camper for the week, and includes a cus­ tom designed camp shirt. Each camper needs lo wear long pants and boots or heeled shoes. No sandals or sneakers are allowed. Dixieland provides the required helmets. Campers need lo bring a bagged lunch and are encour­ aged to bring a jug of ice water. There is a drink vending ma­ chine at Ihe farm and rec de­ partment. They will need a swim suit, towel, sunscreen, changes of clothes (shorts and t-shirt) and sneakers for the af­ ternoon. An afternoon snack and drink will be provided. Call Streit at 751-2325. B U S IN E S S M IN U T E S . F A M IL Y -S T Y L E . stay connected to your team with 1000 shared minutes and unlimited walkle-talMe. NATIONAL BUSINESS 1000 PLAN lOOOanvtifWCilluiarinlrotes UNLIMITED local walklHilMe UHUMITEDwMs Cellular long distance Included SlflililwUitlMlonilBuilnnilCOOninliyMiyll Thift I Mvtngj o( Sn [w monUi NEXTEL AUTHOIIIIBRIMtUMTMIVl "Friendly KnotvUdgeabU Comtdtants” "Family Owned & Operated“ Tn T b i A c h 3570 Clommons Road,Hwy. 156, Clemmons 766-8911 or 399-2222 Across from Bl-Lo Shopping Conter >icm; в <nv4 pnv SeUdiiy 10 irM pm i шпшмямгапм« MüÜHiei ' ' Ш|б1«М*пИ1 M a hM lâi _____\гЛ MnÎiÎm 4 Лв имашГ! m!!i№ The Town of Mocksville Invites You to a: PUBLIC m eeting on the DRAFT LAND USE PLAN T h e p u r p o s e o f t h i s i n e e t i n g is t o a l l o w t h e p u b l i c a c h a n c e t o r e v i e w t h e d r a f t L a n d U s e P l a n , m e e t w i t h t h e C o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s a n d s t a f f , a n d p r o v i d e c o m m e n t s o n t h e P l a n . This meeting is a follow-up to the Community Visioning Meeting held in .January of this year. S t a f f a n d C o m m i t t e e m e m b e r s w i l l b e o n h a n d t o a n s w e r q u e s t i o n s a n d d is c u s s t h e d r a f t p l a n . T h e m e e t i n g is a n o p e n , d r o p - i n f o r m a t . C o p i e s o f t h e d r a f t P l a n a r e a v a i l a b l e a t t h e M o c k s v i l l e T o w n H a l l a n d t h e D a v i e C o u n t y D e v e l o p m e n t S e r v i c e s D e p a r t m e n t . W h e n ; W e d n e s d a y , M a y 1 8 , 2 0 0 5 f r o m 4 : 0 0 u n t i l 6 : 0 0 p . m . W h e r e : T h e M u l t i - P u r p o s e R o o m o f t h e D a v i e C o u n t y P u b l i c L i b r a r y 3 7 1 N . M a i n S t r e e t , M o c k s v i l l e ■']^ ■■■.' ' - . v .'. ^ ' V' ■ ;''-,'^*;--:í<}«j.< ^v“' -:‘,‘^ -¡'í - ■'' • C8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Obituaries Annie Koontz Dwiggins Mrs. Annie Koontz Dwiggins, 84, of Howard Street, Mocksville, died Friday, May 6, 2005, at Autumn Care. She was bom July 9, 1920, in Davie County to tlie late Christopher and Della Cartner Koontz. Mrs. Dwiggins was re­ tired from restaurant and food service. Mrs. Dwiggins was preceded in death by a son. Bill Dwiggins, in 1985, and a sister, Lizzie Renegar. Survivors: her husband, Paul Dwiggins odMocksville; a daughter, Joyce Shepherd of Myrtle Beach, S.C.; a son, Bobby Eugene Dwiggins of Ab­ erdeen; 8 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. A graveside service was held at 3 p.m., Monday, May 9, at Jericho Church of Christ Cem­ etery with the Rev. George Troyer offlciating. Stephen W illiam Gunter Mr. Stephen William Gunter, 52, of Cooleemee, died Satur­ day, May 7, 2005 at Autumn Care of Mocksville after a pe­ riod of declining health. He was bom in Annapolis, Md, on March 6,1953, a son of the late Cora Evelyn Ridenhour Gunter and Sampson Gunter. He attended a private school in Lau­ rel, Md. He worked for Schlitz Truck Delivery and Hardee’s. He was a member of First Bap­ tist Church of Cooleemee, Survivors; his caregivers for 19 years, Helen and Tommy Daywalt of Cooleemee. His funeral service was held at 4 p.m. Tuesday, May 10 at First Baptist Church of Cool­ eemee with the Rev. Tommy Register, pastor, officiating. Burial followed in Legional Memorial Park, Cooleemee. Memorials; First Baptist of Cooleemce, 284 Marginal St. Professional Assistant for Hire Specializing in business, personal and family issues. Available for travel security, information acquisition, information dissemination, advocacy, negotiation, client/employee relations and consultation. 100% Confidentiality guaranteed. No long term obligation. Your objective is our mission. 336.751.9582 R.C. Gregory Retired U.S. Air Force Mas­ ter Sgt. R.C. Gregory, 80, of Goldsboro, died Tuesday, May 3, 2005 at Wayne Memorial Hospital. The funeral was held Friday, May 6 at 11 a.m. at First Baptist Church, Goldsboro, where he was a member. Dr. Glenn Phillips and the Rev. Scott Thrailkill officiated. Burial with full military rights was in Wayne Memorial Park. Mr. Gregory was born in Cooleemee and was the son of the late Ramie Charles Gregory ond Thelma Imes Gregory. Dur­ ing his military career, he was a prisoner of war in Japan and die Philippines. He was a survivor of the Bataan Death March, Survivors; his wife. Myrtle Sloop Gregory; a son, Rodney Greogry and wife Penny of LaGrange; a daughter, Melissa Attoon of Goldsboro; 6 grand­ children; stepchildren. Gene Blake of Leland, Tommy Blake and wife Faye of Wilmington, Jeff Blake and wife Sally and Jimmy Blake and wife Connie, all of Burgaw; a-brother, M,I, Gregory and wife Betty of Greensboro; and his sister-in- law, Inez Gregory of Greens­ boro. Memorials: the charity of the donor’s choice. Remember When? Louise Stroud does. Read her musings on Moclcsviile history Ihejirst issue o f every month. M ildred O liver Parker Mrs, Mildred Louise Oliver Parker, 73, of King, died Satur­ day, May 2,2005 at Wake For­ est Baptist Medical Center. She was bom March 5,1932 ill Yadkin County to Levi M. Oliver and Pansy Hall Oliver. She was retired from N.C. Bap­ tist Hospital in food services and was a member of Friendly Chapel Church, where she taught the primary children’s Sunday School class for many years and wns active in the Women’s Missionary Group. In addidon to her parents, she was preceded in death by her husband, the Rev. James Edward Parker, and a son, Verlon An­ drew Parker. Survivors; 2 sons and daugh- ters-in-law. Officer E.M. “Mac” and Maribeth Parker of Mocksville, and Gary Steven and Carolyn Parker of Pinnacle; a daughter and son-in-law, Lena Sue and Bob Peddycord of Con­ cord; 5 grandchildren; 11 step- grandchildren; several step- great-grandchildren; several nieces and nephews; 3 sisters and brothers-ini-law, Maye and C.A, Burchette of Ronda, Gaye and Garvey Shore ond Patricia and Bobby Fortner, all of Hamptonville, A funeral service was held at 2 p;m. Tuesdoy, May 10 ot Friendly Chapel Church with Brothers Don Collins and Jerry Pordue officiating, Buriol fol­ lowed in the church cemetery. Nancy C . Lane Mrs. Nancy C. Lone of Mableton, Ga., died May 7, 2005, Funeral services will be on Friday, May 13 at II a,m, at Elizobeth Baptist Church, 4215 Cascade Road, Atlanta, with the Rev, Craig L, Oliver, pastor, of­ ficiating, Burial will be in Mozley Memorial Gardens. Survivors: her mother, Sarah Wiseman of Mocksville; a sis­ ter, Potricia Sullivan of Winston- Salem; a brother, Reginald Lyons of Mocksville; and other relatives and friends. Family visitation will be Thursday,May 12 from 7-8 p.m, at Murray Brothers Cascade Chapel, Atlanta. Clyde Baxter W illiams Mr. Clyde Baxter Williams, 73, of Thomosville, formeriy of Cooleemee, died Monday, morning. May 9, 2005 at the residence of his nephew and wife, Scott and Leslie Williams, with whom he resided. He was bom May 2,1932 in Dovie County, a son of Junie Ross Williams and Ethel Dyson Williams, He was a former em­ ployee with Highland Mills and wos a member of Allendale Bop- tist Church, Survivors; 2 doughters. Sherry Crouse of Cooleemee and Shelia Jones of Greensboro; 4 grandchildren; ond a host of nieces ond nephews. A groveside service wos held Wednesday, Moy 11 ot 11 a.m, in the American Legion Cem­ etery in Cooleemee with the Rev. Bobby Metiers officiating. Patients who need radiation oncology treatments want a comfortable, convenient location where they can go for care. Now Rowan Regional Medical Center provides even better facilities with an all-new location at 229 Mocksville Avenue, just a few blocks from the medical center. Our Cancer Care Center features the most advanced,digital technology to ensure pinpoint accuracy for killing cancer cells with radiation. F o r t h e v e r y l a t e s t in cancer care come on over to our place. Our physicians and staff, alt of whom are specialists in treating cancer patients, bring the highest level of technical skill and patient-focused care. Which means Ф 1//4 , ROWAN REGIONAL patients who come to our Cancer Care Center benefit from the latest advances in M E D IC A L C EN TER technology in a location that provides understanding, compassion, and comfort. And that's a good place to be. O ^eiler£eal{£, С З е Н е г care. ^704^210-6370 cvaicv.rowan, or^ 229 9 1 C o c £ s u iife СЯиепие, S a f/s S u iy , OCG 2S144 IVIyrtle Hawks Head Myrtle Hawks "Mama Head” Head, 85, of Winston-Salem, died April 29, 2005 ot Forsyth Medicol Center. She was bom April 21,1920, in Carroll County, Vo., to Will- iom C. Hawks and MoUie L, Davis, She was a member of South Fork Baptist Church. In years past; she was die owner and operator of a daycare service where she was known lovingly as “Mama Head.” In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a brother, J.W. Hawks; and a son, William Donald Hauser. Surviving; 2 daughters, Glenda Faye Hauser of Winston- Salem and Linda Russell Swicegood; 4 sisters. Ruby Blakley, Julie White, LuzeUa Leonord ond Floro Martin; 2 brothers, Gumie E. Hawks and James Hawks; a granddaughter; a grandson; and a great-grand- son. Funeral services were held at Hayworth-Miller Silas Creek Chapel with Mark Taylor Brown and the Rev. Tim Gammons of­ ficiating. A graveside service fol­ lowed ot Flat Ridge Baptist Chureh in Cana, Va, Hom er Hendrix Mr, Homer Hendrix, 81, of Mullins Road, Mocksville, died Monday, May 9,2005 atKateB. Reynolds Hospice Home in Winston-Salem, He was bom Nov, 12,1923, in Davie County to the late Dalton and Addie Kimmer Hendrix. Mr. Hendrix was re­ tired from Drexel Heritage Fur­ niture as a finishing room fore­ man. He had been 0 farmer with beef cattle ond had worked 0 short time at Dixie Furniture before going to Heritage. Mr, Hendrix was o veteran of the US Army serving during Worid Wor II. He wos a long-time member of Fork Baptist Church, a mem­ ber of the Fork Civic Club ond a former member of the Fork Vol­ unteer Fire Department. Mr. Hendrix was preceded in death by a spn, Jerry Wayne Hendrix in 2004 and 0 sister, Nodine Norman. Survivors: his wife, Debbie Lovelle Hendrix, whom he had been married to for 59 years; 3 sons. Gene (Delores) Hendrix of Advance, Arnold Hendrix of Danville, Va. and Timothy (Maura) Hendrix of St. Peters­ burg Beach, Fla.; a brother, Dovid Hendrix of Mocksville; and 5 grandchildren. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m.; Thursday, May 12, ot Fork Baptist Church with the Rev. Robert Giyrett officiating. The body will lie in state 30 min­ utes prior to the service. Buriol will be in the church cemetery. The family was to receive friends Wednesday, May 11 from 7-9 p.m, at Eaton Funerol Home, Memorials: Fork VFD, US 64 E., Mocksville. ■, Щ1у к. Saiterfield : ' ’,1928 - 2005., ; ,Ч I BERMUDA RUN ; :y James C. Cleary 1938 - 2005 ' ÿ'. ÇLIJVEtAND ' & С Blaçkburn Ъ';: / 1939 - 2005 i ' '.MOCKSVILIB jr. ® МЧП/С,Роре “ ’/i;-„X92I-2005 MocKsviiLB ' I lassie Л1. Moody fey;-,' 1921-2005 il?..!' «^OCKSVILLE ■m î'....... N. Main Street »■'t,-’';MdcksvÎllï,NC' ' C le m e n t G r o v e P la n s W o m e n ’s D a y P r o g r a m The Ladles Auxiliory Club of Clement Grove Church of God 7th Doy, Parker Road, Mocksville, will hold its annual Women’s Doy Program ot 4 p.m. Sundoy, May 15. The guest speaker will be evangelist Ella Mae Parker of Shepherds Church of God in Troutman. Breakfast Saturday At Mocks A country ham and tenderloin breakfast will be held at Mocks United Methodist Church, Mocks Church and Beauchamp roads, Advance, from 6:30-10 a.m. Saturday, May 14. The menu will also include eggs, grits, sausage gravy, biscuits, and beverages for $5, eat-in or take-out. Sponsored by the United Methodist Men, pro­ ceeds will benefit their ministries and projects. H o m e c o m in g M a y 2 2 A t C h in q u a p in G r o v e B a p tis t Chinquapin Grove Missionary Baptist Church homecoming ser­ vice will be Sunday, May 22 at 11 a.m. The speaker for tiie morning service will be the Rev. Anthony L. Woodruff. At the 3 p.m. ser­ vice, the Rev. Marcus Williams and congregation from Greater Faith Missionary Baptist Church in Hickory will be the speaker and guests. Dinner will be served at 1 ;30 in the lower fellowship hall. Ev­ eryone is invited. D im itr y B r u e h i C o n tin u e s T o A c h ie v e I n E d u c a tio n Dimitry Bruehi, a student from the Ukraine who has been sup­ ported by Jerry and Linda Harmon of Mocksville, has completed an associate and bachelor’s degrees and plans to enroll in South- eostem Baptist Theological Seminary in Wake Forest in August. Bruehi came to the United States on Dec. 28, 2000 and earned an associate degree in religion with a 3.96 grade point average from Fruitland Baptist Bible Institute. On May 9, he earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Campbell University, "God is working in my life and I’m so thankful for people who open their hearts to help me with my education,” he said. "The Sun­ day School Light Seekers from Hendersonville have been the pri­ mary support in my education, 'Linda and Jerry Harmon, Trading Ford Baptist and many other North Carolina Baptists participate ond are involved in helping me.” Bruehl’s grandmother attended the graduation from Campbell, and is visiting for three weeks courtesy of the Kettelson family of Buriington. It is her first trip to the United States, and it required the intervention of two Congressmen. He and his grandmother were scheduled to speak at New Hope Baptist Church on Wednesday, May 11 at 7 p.m. The church is on Old Mocksville Road about seven miles from Davis Hospital. Bruehi will spend the summer in Seattle, Wash., where the North Americon Mission Board started a church plant called “The Bridge.” He has spoken at 'Airrentirie, Society and Fork Baptist churches in this area, and will be available to speak at churches when he returns to school this fall. Call the Harmons at 492-5855 to make arrange­ ments. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - C9 Wetmore Farms W O O D L E A F L O C A L STRAWBERRIES • G r e e n h o u s e T o m a t o e s • • O t h e r p r o d u c e a s i t b e c o m e s a v a ila b le • ® Open Monday-Saturday % 8:00 am-6:00 pm Closed on Sundays From Mocksvllle lake 601 South lo 801 latersecllon, lum righi al light 4 miles to cauUon light In Woodleaf. Follow signs to farm. 704-278-2028 N e w L o w e r P r i c e s ! ЕСКЕ1Ю* / I Л n AA A \PHARMACY LOOK For Our Sales Circular in Todau’s paper! ' I. Ц \ rt- IV1 fjt, ■-(> ^; I . I ’ 11 m ' f 1 ^ . i, 14 < , |\/ ‘Ш ч Ш ■ í r , ’ 'r‘ . ' A n d y e s h a ll se e k m e , a n d f in d m e , w h e n y e s h a ll s e a rc h fo r m e w it h a ll y o u r h e a rt. A n d I w ill b e f o m id o f y o u , s a ith th e L O R D : a n d I w ill tu r n a w a y y o u r c a p tiv ity . (Jersmtah 2 9 1 3 -1 4 K fV ) This message brought to you by these local businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. C A U D E LL LU M B ER CO M PA N Y 162 Sheek Street Mocksvllle, NC 27028 ' 336-751>2167 AUTO PARTS MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE 884 S. Main St. • Mocksvllle 336-751-2944 GENTLE MACHINE & TOOL INC. 3319 us Hwy. 158 Mocksvllle, NC 27028 336-998-3350 - . 4 C Ç V IL L A G E H A R D W A R E 5431 Hwy. 158- Advance, NC 336-998-1987 MetaJohnson, LMDT Mocksvllle, NC Uc. # 1-166 IlyAppolnlinenI Only (.136) 751-2'lH Sun T rust M ock svllle < 7 5 1-5936 M ock svllle •7 5 1 -6 1 6 2 C o o le e m e e • 18 4-1S 41 A d va n ce > 94 0-242 0 LARRY'S WOOD FLOORING SERVICE 2 & Y e a rs E x p e rie n c e Sanding • Roflnlshlng Installation • Old & Now Work ¡ M r r y A k C le n iie v • M o c k s v U le 336-751-1721 M OCKSVILLE SHOE SHOPS tio e, B o o t, an d Tack R ep airsFull Line or Western Bools & Work Bools (Large SclGCtlon)M.)ti №un, I n. >) Vt’til. ft Sii. 9-1 336-753-0942Chad Gough. Owncr/Opcrotor 32 Cdiirl Si]iia№, Mocksviiic (InTown.Sijuurc) W .G . W H ITE ft CO. 850 N.Trade St Winston Salem, NC 27102 336-723-1669 ¡W PalkfO ne A PALEX COM PANY I ()5 Turkey Foot Uoad iMoeksvillè N <; 27028 336-492-S56S SEAFORD LUMBER COMPANY 127 Buck Seaford Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-5148 VCX3LER A -SO N S F u n eral H o m e 2849 Middle Brook Dr. Clemmons, NC 27012 336-768-4714 JERRY’S MEATPROCESSINO'No Custom Meat Process Beef - Pork - Deer 30 years experience 692 Ralph RnlMge nd' Mockivllle 336-492-5496 J. P. GREEN M ILLIN G CO., IN C Makers of DAISY FLOUR IKif C iis K w i lile iu l Depot St., Mocksville, NC 336-751-2126 E A T O N FUNERAL HOME SINCE 195! 32,5 North M ain Street M ocksviiic, N C 27028 336-751-2148 DAVIE LUMBER & LOGGING 872 Main Church Rd. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 336-751-9144 CRAIG CARTER BUILDER.INC. 119 Hwy. 801 S, S u ite 200 A d va n ce, NC 27006 336-940-2341 flwUTi)/(W/ÿ'OiiYivn Mmi'/ifiiiff ,W Ifjn Cnig Л. Cancr. ftniJcnl • Mijiin C. Сзпст, W c l*,«. FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 4 9 5 Valley Road Mocksvllle, NC 27028 336-751-2141 I'lfu ripiittn Cull in; 336-753-DRUG F U L L E R ffiS iiir Precision Laser Cutting 81 Metal Fabrication 855 Salisbury Road Mocksville, N C 27028 336-751-3712 < 5 7 \ /d r i i C A R O L IN A D R IL L IN G INC. 3 2 6 Railroad St. M ocksville, NC 2 7 0 2 8 336-751-2961 Fax;336-751-0774 F U L L E R ARCHITECTURAL PROUDIY DESIGNING DAVIE CHURCHES 336 751 0400 Davie Academy of Martial Arts 753.8482 • 782.0038 W e T e a c h R e s p e c t E v e ry d a y MiTUMNCARE OF MOCKSVILLE 1007 Howard St. Mocksvllle 751-3535 Call 751-2129 to A dvertise Y our Business on the Church Page. CIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 On Sunday, May 1, Jon Christopher Moser received his Eagle Scout Award at a Court of Honor Ceremony held at Bethlehem United Methodist Church. He is the son of Carl and Sharon Moser of Advance and a juniorat Davie High School. He is a member of Boy Scout Troop 732 at Bethlehem. Moser began scouting ns a Tiger Cub in 1994 when the troop originated. To achieve his Eagle Scout Award, which is the highest honor of scouting, Moser com­ pleted all ranks of scouting: served in positions of responsi­ bility of Troop Quartermaster, Troop Guide, and Assistant Pa­ trol Leader; earned a minimum Y a rd S a le T o B e n e fit S t o r e h o u s e A yard sale to benefit the building project at A Storehouse for Jesus will be held Saturday, May 14, beginning at 7 a.m. at the EC Brock Gym, North Main Street, Mocksville. Hundreds of items, including pots, pans, dishes, household accessories, lamps, glassware, small appliances, pictures, jew­ elry and more will be sold. A 1990 Jaguar will be among the sale items. “We still have a great need of funds to help complete the building project,” said Sarah Wood. “Donated items are wel­ comed and the public is encour­ aged to come and support this project." All proceeds will go to pay for the new Storehouse building. Ó a v í e ‘P f a c e ^ a Caring iÂssisteci £ivinß C o m m u n ity '\vdere ^oocC Tilings ?lre O^ajjjjening^ The R esid en ts o f D avie Place w anted to create their ow n sp ecial flow er garden. It all began w ith an em pty space w h ich has grow n to be an ey e catch in g area to enjoy. The R esid en ts are k eep in g their sp ecial area o f b egon ias and greenery w atered daily. A w h im sical them e is d ev elop in g as each resid en t adds their ow n p ersonal touch to th e area. T he R esid en ts are proud to call D avie Place hom e. To Inquire About Our Services Contact Dance Students In Two Competitions Jon Christopher Moser earned his Eagle Scout award on May 1. Jon Moser Earns Eagle Scout Award Davie School of Dance stu­ dents participated in two com­ petitions recently. The students attended Dance USA Competition in Charlotte on April 24 wilh more than 18 dance studios from North and South Carolina, Tennessee and Virginia. Leah Davis, 13-14 age group, was first in modem bollet. Jacqueline Hauser, 13-14, was first in ballet, earned a plati­ num in modem ballet and was fourth overall high scorer in her oge category. Stephanie Cid, Leah Davis, Jacqueline Hauser, Ashley Murphy, Corey Spell, Megan Whittaker and Brook Want won Pino News first place in jazz in the 15-16 age category. Stephanie Cid, Leah Davis, Jacqueline Hauser, Ashley Murphy and Corey Spell were first in tap, age 15-16; and earned a special award for tech­ nique and fast foot work. Stephanie Cid, Leah Davis, Kalah Edrington, Jacqueline Hauser, Ashley Murphy, Corey Spell, Brook Want and Megan Whittaker were first in modem ballet, age 15-16. April 29-May 1, the students traveled to Asheville with more than 22 dance studios from North and South Carolina and Tennessee. Cindy Corriher, age 7-8, was first in ballet. Sarah James, 7-8, was first in lyrical ballet and fifth overall high score in her age category. Autumn Stowers, 7-8, was first in open/theater and third overall in her age category. Jada Burroughs, 6, was first in tap. Bianka Alvarenga, Jada Burroughs, Cindy Corriher, Eavan Jennings, Nicole and Nioayla Slate, Ashlee Spillman, Autumn Stowers and Mallory Williams, age 7-8, were first in tap. Leah Davis, 13-14, won a platinum in modem ballet and third high score in her age cat­ egory. Jacqueline Hauser, 13-14, was first in ballet and won a platinum in modem ballet. She was ninth overall in her age cat­ egory. Leah Davis, Kalah Edrington, Ashley Murphy, 15- 16, won a platinum in hip hop. Stephanie Cid, Leah Davis, Jacqueline Hauser, Ashley Murphy and Corey Spell won third in tap, age 15-16. Stephanie Cid, Leah Davis, Kalah Edrington, Jacqueline Hauser, Ashley Murphy, Corey Spell, Brook Want and Megan Whittaker won a platinum in the age 15-16 modem ballet compe­ tition. of 21 merit badges; and com­ pleted a community service project. Moser's community service project was a brick barbeque grill for Bethlehem United Methodist Church. Bethlehem United Methodist Men will use the grill for their annual Good Neighbor Barbeque Dinner. It will also be used for other church and community functions. After the ceremony, family and friends gathered for a cook­ out in Bethlehem's Family Life Center to celebrate his achieve­ ment. Items and pictures from Moser’s scouting career from Tiger Cub up to Eagle Scout were displayed along with a video presentation. By Nora Latham Pino Correspondent The breakfast at Wesley Chapel will be Saturday, May 21 from 6:30-10. Everyone is in­ vited to attend. Visitors at Wesley Chapel Sunday were Joyce Parrish and her son, Danny Campbell, and his friend, Cherry Phaden of Ne­ braska. They came especially to be with his mother on Mother’s Day. Other visitors were Rhan and Christie Gardner of Char­ lotte. It was so good to see Mac and Sara Eure back in church Sun­ day. Mac is recovering from a stroke. Virginia Murray was un­ able to come to church because of health problems. Our thoughts and prayers are with her and also with Mrs. Johnsie Shelton who hasn’t been able to attend re­ cently. Andrea Gentry and Kathy Ellis presented a special Mother’s Day program for all the mothers in church. Afterward they presented gifts to the oldest mother, Marie Miller, the mother with the most children present who was also Marie Miller, and the youngest mother, Kathy Miller. Every mother present re­ ceived a gift too. Her children, Jim and Chinera Latham, Bob and Kathy Ellis and Dale Latham honored Nora Latham with lunch for Mother’s Day at her home. Tom and Toni Horton have returned from Indiana. They were there to celebrate the 100th birthday of Toni’s grandmother. James and Lelia Essie at­ tended a birthday celebration at Pudding Ridge Golf Clubhouse on Sunday at noon for Wade Groce, his daughter, Diana Verich, and his daughter-in-law, Linda WiUiams. After a delicious dinner, there was a dedication ceremony in the side yeard in which a tree was planted honor­ ing the memory of Lottie Groce, wife .of Wade. Dennis Craver treated his wife, Fran, and mother-in-law, Louise Dill, to lunch on Mother’s Day. Matthew and Megan Craver accompanied them. A r t E x h i b i t i o n O p e n s S u n d a y A t S a n d y S p r i n g s • An art exhibition “Of Time And The Wind” will open to the public at the historic two-room Joyner Schoolhouse on Sandy Springs Road Sunday, May 15, from 4-7 p.m. and Monday,May 16 from 10 a.m.-l p.m. There is no admission. Roger Sharpe of Sandy Springs put the exhibition to­ gether, the first in the commu­ nity which counts Yadkin, Davie and Iredell people among its residents. The Joyner Schoolhouse can be reached via Bear Creek Church Road off Liberty Church Road in northwest Davie County. Three eastem North Carolina residents will be featured: retired Greenville firefighter Kacem Sebti, who has created a series of clock faces he titled “Art That Tells Time”; the late Lester Gay, who after his retirement as a to­ bacco farmer in Farmville pro­ duced a collection of brightly- colored windmills and whirli­ gigs; and Wayne Webb of Rocky Mount, who cleans carpets so that at his leisure, he can weld farmyard scrap metal into his menagerie of ^a -Z Kritters. Sharpe was introduced to these artists’ work through his ties with East Carolina. All three artists used material that was salvaged and recycled. Sebti, the only one with for­ mal art training, studied with Norm Tinker at Oberlin College and with Bukichi Inoue in Tokoyo. He attended the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Casablanca. He exhibits in regional shows and his work is earned by the Jill Flink Fine Art Gallery in Ra­ leigh. Gay’s windmills, which he bequeathed to the Fountain Fire and Rescue Department, are be­ ing loaned by Alex and Elizabeth Albright of Fountain. The Albrights own the RA Fountain General Store and Intemet Cafe which showcases the works of more than 40 area arrtists in east­ em North Carolina, including Webb’s. Webb and Gay’s works are examples of what is loosely- labled outsider, folk or intuitive arts, created by unschooled in­ dividuals who seem motivated by their unique personal visions. Webb, who sees his creativ­ ity “ almost as important as food,” says that his art gives him “an opportunity to explore, dream and create something that is unique and unusual from something that was cast off for junk.” He hopes that people who view his creations recognize material parts he has used in them may be prompted “to see other possibilities for recycling in their lives.” Japanese-American artist Kaneko McNeil of Salisbury will be among several special guests attending a private lun­ cheon before the exhibit opens. McNeil has mastered the art of Sumi Calligraphy which she studied in Japan. Sharpe called on McNeill to paint the Sumi characters for Sandy Springs when he was designing a Torii for Junior and Ruby Sharpe’s two-acre spring-fed pond, Japa­ nese maples have been planted in an old family tobacco field nearby his brother and sister-in- law’s cabin and pond, which Sharpe calls “Pilgrim’s Pond.” ■ The Torii of Sandy Springs, which rjses about 10 feet above the water’s surface, is thought to be the first in North Carolina. The vermilion-painted structure. which looks like a majestic gate, wos crafted of mountain lucust and lifted by crane to stand on the pond’s bottom, in about four- feet deep water and near the springs on the north end. Similar structures, modeled after the Torii of Itsukushima at Miyojima, Japan, can be found in botanical gardens in Brook­ lyn, Birmingham and Victoria. Sharpe, a former state sena­ tor, sees the Torii as a symbolic of 0 kairos moment in life- changing décisions, in this case the transition of family farms at the edge of the old flue-cured tobacco belt in the Northwest­ ern Piedmont from tobacco to vineyards and nurseries. H o s p it a l O p e n A ir E x t r a v a g a n z a M a y 2 1 A t T h e P ic n ic G r o u n d s The Davie County Hospital Auxiliary will have its second annual Open Air Extravaganza from 7 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, May 21 at the Masonic Picnic Grounds off North Main Street, Mocksville. The market will include an­ tiques, crafts, collectibles, food and “gently” used items. Booths are available for rent, with the fee going to the auxil­ iary and the proceeds going to the vendor. Call 751-8362 for more in­ formation. White Cane Auction Saturday Morning Y ard S a le To B e nefit D a rle n e P a y n e A benefit yard sale for Darlene Payne’s battle against cancer will be held from 8 a.m.- 4 p.m. Saturday, May 14, at Davie High School. The event will include face painting, a 50/ 50 drawing, hotdog sale, bake sale and yard sale. It Wasn’t A Massage Thè Mocksville Lions Club la soliciting items for its annual White Cane Auction at 9 a.m. Saturday. May 14, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville. May 13 is the deadline to donate an item. No clothing will be accepted. Call Linda Black- bum at 753-6606. All proceeds will go to the assistance of the visually and hearing Impaired. Items already donated in­ clude furniture, household and automotive accessories, jewelry, tools, antiques and gift certifi­ cates. An auction preview starts at 8 a.m. In a recent story about Davidson Community College graduate Brooke Howell the Enterprise Record incorrectly identified what she was doing in an accompanying photo. Howell was performing a, procedure called a “back facial,” She does not perform mas­ sages. P i a n o R e c i t a l T h i s S u n d a y S a l e T o B e n e f i t Y o u t h R a n c h A yard sale to benefit the Hidden Meadows Christian Youth Ranch will be held from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturday, May 14 in the Prime Sirioin parking lot, US 601 North at 1-40, Mocks­ ville. Baby items, children’s toys, clothes, small appliances, fumi- ture, plants and more will be sold, with proceeds going to the ranch. Donations are tax deductible. Cali 492-2308. Piano students of Anita Long and Beveriy Hembree will per­ form in a recital Sunday after­ noon, May 15, al 2 p.m. in the sanctuary of First Presbyterian Church. Playing in the program will be: Rachel Goheen, David Ervin, Harmony Dimmig, Jared Hembree, Anna Goheen, Sam Linville, Colleen Hembree, Jes­ sica Stephens, George preiberger. Savannah Taylor, Steffi Shaver, Kaylee Allison, Ben Brock, Edward Renfroe, Jessica Butner, Israel Goheen, Luke Hollifield, Daniel Renfroe, Caitlin Tutterow, Rebecca Church and John Parker. L e a r n A b o u t S a l v a t i o n A r m y H a r r i s o n E a r n s P u r p l e B e l t On April 28, Daniel Harris of Cooleemee possed his 4th kyu purple belt in Shorinji Kempo karate at Davie Academy of Martial Arts. The next test day will be May 28 at noon and the public is in­ vited to 143 N. Main St., Mocks­ ville. Lessons are available Tuesday, Thursday, and Satur­ day. Call 753-8482 or 782-0038 for more information. The Salvation Army will conduct an information session at 1:30 p.m. Thursday, May 19 at the Davie County Public Li­ brary, North Main Street, Mocksville. The Winston-Salem Com­ mand that includes Davie, Forsyth, Stokes and Yadkin counties, will show a short video. Major Dan Proctor, com­ mander, and his staff will be available to answer questions. The session is sponsored by the Davie County local advisory committee, ot which Frances “Pan” Beck is chair. Feature DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - D1 Davie farmer Henry Wail<er (right) watches as Liia Chung serves "chici<en" nuggets, taco filling and pods - aii made with soybeans - to Mocksville Elementary students. Soy Good Mocksville Students Give Thumbs Up To Soy Nuggets By Mike Barnhardt Davie County Enterprise Record When Henry Walker goes to the gro­ cery store wilh his wife, he takes Ihe time to read the ingredients on the la­ bels of Ihe foods. More often than not, they contain soy. As co-chair of the research and de­ velopment committee of the NC Soy­ bean Producers Association, Walker has a vested interest in soy uses. The Mocksville resident farms about 800 acres of soybeans. “I’m amazed at all the new products with soybeans in it,” he said. “You eat it but they don’t tell you. The hamburg­ ers you get are 60 percent beef and 40 percent soy, You eat it and you don't realize it.” It’s not a bad thing, according to Walker. He was at Mocksville Elementary School last week, along with the soy­ bean association’s Laura Rogers and Lila Chung, president of Delight Soy in Morrisville. They were giving students a soy ' nugget made to taste like a fast-food chicken nugget. They got a small por­ tion of taco filling made with soy. And they got a shiny green soybean; with a couple of beans inside Ihe pod. \ Lunchroom managers got written materials about the benefits of soy. Walker said the program started in Sampson County, where a doctor no­ ticed his patients were mostly over­ weight, even some of the younger pa­ tients. He decided it was their high-fat diets. Soy would provide the same pro­ teins, without the harmful side effects, and the study began. Now, that doctor conducts programs in schools, and cooking classes for the community. Even if you eat meat, you get the benefit of soy, said Rogers. Chickens ore fed with soy meal. Swine is fed with soy meal. Most vegetable oils contain soy. ' The versatile bean can also be used os 0 protein ond a carbohydrate, Rogers said. “It's a complete meal.” That “meal” doesn't mean much if noone eats it. That was one of the rea­ sons for the visit to Mocksville Elemen­ tary. The students got a soy game book and a soy coloring marker. They also filled out a survey after tasting the soy foods. Almost all liked ihe soy nuggets, and teachers were surprised at how well they said they liked the round, green beans that were popped from the pod, Those beans are popular snacks among Asian children, Chung said. "The kids loved them. I was shocked,” Walker said. Mocksville Elementary ws the first school for the testing program. The search for more use of Ihe soy­ bean continue. In addition to school lunchrooms, Walker said the bean is being used lo produce a biodiesel fuel, which bums cleaner than regular die­ sel, North Carolina is the Noi'l con­ sumer of biodiesel, he said. More than 600 food products ure mode from soybeans. Walker said. Laura Rogers, Henry Wali<er and Liia Chung promote the benefits of soy. ■ Photos by Robin Fergusson ii :■ : I i l‘ I 1: < ‘ Liia Chung and Henry Wail<er believe in the health benefits of eating soy products. Ц I " D2 . DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Davie Schools Shady Grove Elementary The PTO spring project is to raise funds to enhance liie playground and'estabiisli a new play area behind the new classroom wing for accommoda- ting Ihe school’s 635 plus students. The PTO hopes to raise at least $10,000. Return donations by May 13. The annual golf tournament for technology will be May 14 at Hiclcory Hill wilh proceeds going toward the technology program. The shotgun start will be at I p.m. Fun Day will be Monday, May 16. The school wide talent show will be Wednesday, May 18 at 1:30. Awards Day will be held on Friday, May 20, May 23 is a.make up day, Kindergarten Mrs. Foster’s class continued a unit on plants. Tliey learned about fruits and vegetables and how they are different and how they grow. In centers, the children made a flower garden, designed their own plant, showed the parts of a flower and planted funny things in a garden. Next week they will be tall<ing about zoo and farm animals. Fun Day will be May 16. Volun­ teers are needed to lielp with the children and events. The K-2 classes have Fun Day in the morning, before lunch. Mrs. Sanders’ students kicked off a two-week unit on the ocean. They wrote ocean books, made Tishbowls, enjoyed Rainbow Fish stories and made a class ocean mural. Tliey were busy making Mother’s Day cards in the computer lab and preparing gifts for moms. Awards Day is May 20. Tliurs- day. May 12, will be the last day reading books will be sent home. The library has closed for students. Return all overdue books as soon as possible. Mrs. Godbey’s class did a unit on gardens. Studenls talked about garden tools, worms, and vegetables. On Wednesday, they enjoyed a performance by the fifth grade chorus from Pine­ brook and Shady Grove, Tliey will begin a two-week long unit on ocean animals. First Grade Mrs. Walker’s students are working hard in all academic areas. In math, they have been working on number facts and place value. During the coming weeks they will be working on reviewing geometric shapes, telling time, and problem solving as they prepare for a summative math test. In science, they have completed a study of energy. The students enjoyed playing tunes on water-filled bottles, experimenting with magnets, and observing wind energy as they blew objccts with a straw. This week they continued a study of plants. Tiie high sciiool intern did a wonder­ ful lesson on the stages of plant growth. Tliey will be studying animals. Students continue to have reading homework until the end of the year. Teachers hope students will read each day throughout tiie summer. Sludcnis of the Week, May 2-6: Colby Tucker; Morgan Sessoms, Lindsey Stroupe, Katie Jira, Molly Fields, Scott Dennard, Isaac Rudolph, Anna Sloul, Megan O’Connell, Ellie Carter, Sara Stigall. Comatzer Elementary The annual Spring Reading Program has finished. The points and the pennies have been counted and six classes enjoyed a swim parly at the Davie YMCA on Monday as a reward. The program raised $5,600, which will be spent on school materials, "Our students are great readers and 1 knew they would do well, but even so, 1 was amazed at just how hard they worked at reading and raising money. They did a lerrinc job and I am so proud of them,” said Assistant Principal Lynn Marrs, who organized the program. In the Purple Hallway the kindergarten class of Mrs. Dalton read the most books, and the first grade class of Mrs. Mannino raised the most money. In the Blue Hallway, Mrs. Robinson’s second graders scored the most accelerated reading points, and Mrs, McDaniel’s class raised Ihe most money. And In the Green Hallway, Mrs, Doss’s fourth graders gained the most points, and Mrs. Smith’s fifth grade class brought in the most sponsorship money. Third grade classes had a unit on bicycle safety. Riding the bikes was a good way to wind down after a tough morning of EOG testing. The classes spent two days inside learning about how to care for their bike and safety hazards they might find on the road. Children brought their bicycles lo school and rode their bikes as they learned about the hazards they can encounter while riding. Each child wore a bicycle helmet as they rode, which is the law. Worksheets provided by the NC Department of Transportation were used to enhance th? children’s knowl­ edge of bi);e safety. ' Mrs. Archer reports from the media center: "As a part of our reading program, third, fourth, and fifth graders enjoyed the novel "Orfin Bob and the Thomas TWins: The Adventure Begins.” They are looking forward to a visit lo Comatzer by author, Mike Gunning, and illustrator, Jill Potts, on May 19, Media studenls are enjoying using Accelerated Reader points to purchase items from the AR cart. The spring AR parly was May 12. Abuy-one, get-one free Scholastic Book Fair was held this week. Sandra Smilh said of her fifth graders: “They have worked so hard this year, and I’m happy to say that the End of Grade lest results have reflected that hard work," In the final science and social studies unit of the year, students studied the earth’s landforms, and enjoyed a visit to the Discovery Place in Charlotte to watch volcanoes and olher land shaping forces come to life. In communications, literary elements are under the spotlight. Students have been tracing their body outlines and filling them with adjectives to describe themselves. "The adjective I would use to describe all my students is wonderful,” said Mrs. Smilh. "I’m so proud that my class raised enough money to win a pool party. But all of fifth grade did an outstanding job; many students got more than 100 points. Meredith Hanes is our top reader with 415 points. Way to go Meredith." A reminder to parents: Thursday May 12, AR parties; Friday, May 13, Field Day for all students; Thursday, May 19, class picnics for second and third grade; Friday, May 20, class picnics for fourth and fifth grade; Friday May 20, noon, Pre-K graduation; Monday, May 23, Awards Day and last day of school for studenls. School ends at 1.45 p.m. Cooleemee Elementary Seventeen ELL students ex­ ited the program. What is the significance of this? English is not the main disadvantage in their academic performance. It does not mean their academic success is guaranteed, but now English is not an issue. These studenls will lake End of Grade BandConcert At South Davie The sixth and eighth grade bands will perform their Awards Concert on Tuesday, May 17 at South Davie Middle School. The seventh grade Awards Concert w ill be Thursday, May 19. Both concerts begin at 7 p.m. The public is invited. Tliere is no admission. Tests without modifications. Tlie student body celebrated their collection of $610 in change for the Mebane Chal­ lenge. On Friday, May 6 a karoake party was held for K-2 and 3-5 students. Mr. Campbell, teachers, bus drivers anti stu­ dents got up and demonstrated Continued On Page D3 Summer Ventures Theses students will attentd Summer Ventures, a four-week, state-funded program for academically talented students who may pursue careers in sci­ ence and math, from left: Jennifer Stancill, Clayton Edwards and Lesley McBride. in g to n o m p a n y E A L T Y N e w L is tm g s Mocksville: 336-751-9400 TOLL FREE 1-800-539-3383 www.penningtonrealty.com Advance/Clemmons: 336-998^8900 TOLL FREE 1-888-828-2234 m N e w C o n s t r u c t io n 3130 M iddlebrook Drive • $219,900 C lenim ons Л r,irc find w ith loads o f o pp ortun ity. 3BR, 2ВЛ опе level hom e Featuring bonus/play room , gazebo, custon> w ooden ca b in cb /m o ld in g , some hardw ood floors., т а л у built ins 224 Foxcroft Drive • $112,900 W inston-Salcm • Lovely brick hom e w ith fenced back yard. 3RR, 2ВЛ. large upclaied kitchen, large storage buildling, convenient location w ilh easy access lo 4 2 1 & F e a tu r e d S u b d iv is io n s 253 Summit Dr *$134,500 218 Summit Drive • $129,900 190 Ash Drive« $108-900 New construction in Nortti Ridge. Great open floor New construction in desireable North Ridae. Ooen In N ortti Ridge________________________ desirable nelghborhood.Vauited ceiiing inliving " ■ -Ftaienf Jew construction in North Ridge. Great open floor New construction In desireabie North Ridge. Open plan w ith large rooms. 3BR, 2BA ranch,custom floor plan w ith 9 'ceilings, 3BR, 2 full BA, built-in features include wood floors,9 'ceilings, oal< —'-------------------- cabinets. microwave, range & dishwasher. ge. 3BR, 2Ba anoraaoie living In hborhood.Vaulted celling Inli Buy now and choose colors. SF tal builders plans. W on't last long. from 221 Ash Drive • $134,500 209 Ash Drive • $134,500 196 Ash Drive • $127,900 Desirable split foyer home on large lot w ith room Desirable split foyer home on corner lot w ith room Buy now & choose colors. A lot of hom e for the for expansion.3BR, 2.5BA, large master suite. Buy for expansion. 3BR, 2.5BA. large master suite. Buy price, 3BR, 2BA, Ig master suite, MBA w/aarden tub now and choose your colors. Cpnverileni location, now and choose your colors. Convenient location. & sep. shower, vaulted ceillno In areat room Larae 100% financing to qualified buyer. 100% rinanclngtoquallfiedbuyer. bonus room over garage S t e r l in g P u c e Pre-SBlling Now For Luxurious Townhome Community nestled in a peaceful country atmosphercl Town water & sewer. One level duplexes slatting In ihe $ 140,000s & Two level Duplexes starting In the $ 1 BO.OOOs. Located 1 mile from 1-40. Wood Land Cul-de-sac Lots In Established Neighborhood available for custom o f speculative homes,Town water available. Building lots priced $23,500-$29,500. C o m m e r c ia l C o m e r Lot 3 Medical Drive • $550,000 Prime location for this .S5AC building lot. Great for office, commercial o t medical o fflceiiulldlng site. Level and ready to build on. 580 Deadmon Road • $89,900 185 Hinkle Drive • $49,900 Gall The JaniceMac Tbam...Listens— Cares— Guides Janice McDanicl 909-0747 Glen Stanley 650-5172 TVresfl Scarlett 918-9802 ShirliIrleyBranyon671-8718 Susan Cohen 655-0084 Melody Hamm Shirley Moyer 577-6647 971-5267 Randy Durso 40^2150 Jackie Coulston 751-9400 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 - 03 Governor’s School From left, Kristen Fromal, Brad Corriher, Lance Stout, Adam Sheelsey, Katherine Gaskin and Jessica Overbey wlll dttend Governor's School this summer. The six-week program Is the oldest statewide sum­ mer residential program and serves 800 students In science, math, English, social science, foreign lan­ guage and the arts. WANTED!!! 4,000 S Q U A R E F O O T O F F IC E S P A C E F O R L O N G TERIVI L E A S E C A L L J A N IC E M C D A N IE L P E N N IN G T O N & C O M P A N Y R E A L T Y 336-998-8900 336-909-0747 www.enterprise-record.com D a v ie S c h o o ls Continued From Page D2 their talent by singing various songs for everyone. There was a special performance’by the Potato Heads, a Cooleemee School original act. The PTA sponsored a grilled steak lunch for staff Friday, May 6. Staff also received tote bags, magnets, candy, and flower seeds in little pots. Mocksville Elementary Terrific Kids, April: Trey Lane, Jonathon Ressa, Exavier White, Joseph Cartner, Alyssa, Godbey, Rachel Trantham, Jo­ seph Myers, Isabel Flores, Natalie Oarcia, Toni Burke, Mario Martinez, Cassidy Stewart, John Tlitterow, Evelyn Ramirez, Aubrey Pegg, Ryan Saunders, Justice Mayfield, Emily Whetsel, Erika Baltazar- Vargas, Amanda Peacock, Isael Uriostegui, Kristin Gillespie, Kayla Perras, Conner Hennelly, Kayla Raisbeck, Sara Wishon, J.D. Darga, Aaron Sheets, Ray Peebles, Alexis Sodlink, Tyier Galyean, Shantelle McPher-son, Diana Moure-Garcia, Crystal Saucedo, Jordan Toney, Barry Etchisoii, Sarah Sponaugle, Danny Bailey, Brooke Johnson, Cody Hayes, Nathan Howard, Chelsie Endicott, Preston Mathis, Anthony Philpott, Heather Cartner,) i Sarah McDaniel, Alex Costner. Student of the Month, April: Jenny Robbins, Hunter Akers, Deanna Torres, Donte McPherson, Madison Riddle, Taylor Godbey, Taylor Gantt, Autumn Stowers, Karina Cisneros-Pastor, Nathaniel Ellis, Maricruz Flores, Isabel McLaughlin, Brock Allen, Josh Brown, Jason Atkinson, Olivia Bowman, Destiny Johnson, Jamal Lackey, Ana Sanchez, Tia Clement, Jonathan Monk, Jordan Hendricks, Ally Eaton, Jeremy Doss. Student of the Week, May 2- 6: Justin Dillard, Nicholas Aus­ tin, Anthony Renegar, Hannah Shuskey, Michael Mock, Hannah Sales, Dustin Hilton, Will Can- ter-Robinson, Taylor Nelson, Hayley Carter, Jonathan Beaver. Mrs. Wyatt and Mrs. Fulton’s kindergarten class is very excited and busy with the end of the school year rapidly approaching. We have thoroughly enjoyed learning about frogs and insects and continue to watch our tad­ poles daily for changes, Phonics has gotten tougher since we finished learning indi­ vidual letters. We have pro­ gressed to digraphs, blends and the “sneaky e” concept. Our reading is really improving with the addition of all this informa­ tion. We’re quite proud of all of our accomplishments this year. It’s amazing to think that we are al­ most first graders. Mrs. Pristas and Mrs. Linder’s first graders have been busy learning about life under the sea. We made scuba divers and t have; written imaginary ^stories about what it would be like to live inside a seashell. We have also been reading many books about sharks and other creatures of the sea. Check out the book Swimmv by Leo Lionni. We loved the book and had fun de­ signing our own shapes for Swimmy and his friends to form. MARY HENDRICKS 1-336-940-7077 BUYING OR SELLING? PUT MY 18 YEARS EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU!! О Р Ш HOUSE « l i « М р ш 143 Wood Lane $189,900 Advance _ large 2nd & 3rd BR's, large closets, formal dining rm, living rni w/ gas log FP, 20x12 ^ wired woilishpp, lenced backyaid. Directions: HOW lo Exil 180 to R eOlN lo Left Wood Line. See Sign. ШьШ?хаШ .^ 33в«е09.1284^ ______ ________130 N Main Street USD,ООО On the Sa.m in D......Mod(SYiiie! Building сал be used as an ollice oi leiaü. Ta< value is (Of 2 buildii^s, 1 BuiltJii^g is (or sale/lease аррш 3600»/- Sq renoveVion. Uíilimiied potential br ollice, retai), restaurani. O u t s t a n d i n g A g e n t s , O u t s t a n d i n g R e s u l t s L o c a l l y O w n e d . . . N a t io n a lly K n o w n 10122 Fonm fiuii am 2sba1.3MC SluFuiinfl one jlofv hoíTie DayfiOW bsmi. 3 ga/age jpac«, scjoned рогсй. 12' vv'w. bonuvmedii <oom Full vntin toserüenl. Eiiensivt haf(Moo(is an<t Him, Dfopane heolina Sicunly swtem Ш\ FIcffilnQ ээа-пст (W3j74A) ЙМ.900 Westphalia Consiruclion. Great operi lloor . Greal MBR suite w/liay ceiling. BKtst In , w/vajltcd ceiling, lots ol tx^wd on ML. Uiilin bsmi. Ashln Mw«ll OOe-llW ^ UniqueТМ.1011ГиС1 ВШ.. . . i style 15 story home Situated on cornei IM. Open 2 Яму lom. faitfAood lloois^ n\ln levtl nusler suite, larf deck Ctiris Ciaide 996-П58 1217,900 ___MYUIPAM DAVII36R25BAIR w/gas log f P, (ile tioors In kit. laundry rm & OAs, walk in closels 1л master & 2(4 BR. covwkJ trt porch, privale side deck, eiUa |? W , r W Ä c b t r i a d . c o m 2003 Coldwell Hunker Heal Usiate Cnrptnetiim. Cotilwell Ranker is u K gU iernl iniücmork of Cniiiwcll linnkcr Corpomlon. An lUiua) Opponunliy Ctimpuny. Utiual Op|№nunlty. Hach {^ГЛсе li indepcmlenlly Owned and О репЫ . IBA First impression makes a taslii Impression wilt) №is wonderlul brickcompletely renovated New e«r)ifiing__kitclien, ail tioor coverings, ^eatpump, paint to name jusia lew. Priced »low (u value Jaw itensl^ ............... ..«lusia lew...............sley!»8HS3(W356SmW.900 I f ! ? li D4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Recognized ,The Davie Board of Education presents a plaque of recognition to Parrish Consuiting (be­ low right) for work on the Mebane Challenge. Pic­ tured, from left: Wendy Horne (Davie Schools), Diana Parrish, Pam Hill and Regina Graham (board of education). Members of the Mebane Challenge cam paign cabinet and the Mebane Foundation (above) were recognized by the board of education, from left: Allen Mebane, Carl Boon, Michelle Speas, Pam Hill, David Owens, Diana Parrish, Linda Mace, Esther Wall, Jim Wail, Elizabeth Bustle, Sissy Bingham and Regina Graham . A plaque was also pre­ sented to the Mebane Charitable Foundation (top, right) for support of schools, from left: Allen Mebane, Wendy Horen, M ichelle Speas and Regina Graham. /WE BUY HOUSES & MOBILE HOMES Any Condition —Any Location7a'ast Cash — Quick Closing (336) 9612777 T r i a d M o r t g a g e I n v e s t m e n t G r o u p Purchases Cashout Deb Consolidation 2nd Homes Lowest Rates Martin Lane Sr. Loan Officer/ Account Executive License #1128513 751-5992 Cell; 610-216-0028 Residential & Commercial mpl60@earthiink.net A g e n t O n D uty 2 4 -7 Call (336) 751-3538 orvIsK www.hovrardrealty.com !]■ HOWARD REALTY 330 s. S alisbury St. M ocksville Hours: Monday-Friday &-6 Saturday 9-12, Sunday By Appt. OFFICE SPACE D o w n to w n O ffic e S p a c o fo r R e n t. 7 0 0 s q . ft. o n D e p o t S t. $ 4 S O P /M C all C onniB ЛУЛП ЛИ1 I L o rS & : l.A N I) #2 Salm oni R oid......... T IttltTrtill.. ........lOAo. $45.050 .................................................................................S O icrat $172,500 Thom ptonLan#.....................................................11 eerct $71,877 Hwy. 601.......................iiTMifiriirnMinTiiin i--- $M,500M l YadUnvllland.......acrat ^ . 0 0 0 629 M adlion Rd (Commarclal)...........................................$425,000 Off Bathal Churcn Rd.........................................6W<acras $60,000 Bear Creek Church Rd------------------------------32W -acret $188,505 SEE OUR AVAILABLE RENTALS IN THE CLASSIFIED SECTION. ___________$129,500 $2,500 Toward Closing Costsll 20x12 deck w/ fenced back yard, gas log FP, large den, 3BR, 2BA, bay window in Kit (w/ new vinyl). WELL KE^BEAUTIFUL HOME!! acres tarm. 3BR. 2BA. out> t)ldgt., creek. $499,000. Spadous 46R, 3.58A, FP, fenced 42-fAac, 3BR. S-stJ bam, pond, YadUnvHle: RenovatedI Better than newl Karmony-36R, 2BA. \ M - acres (3 t)ackyafd. $239 .0 0 0 THIS ONE HAS fT AUI $450,000. 3BR,2flAon10t/-aa $239 ,0 0 0 fenced), 2 stalll)am, $179,900 US Avaioh SuitiT 1 iWk } tHi ADOWVifcw Rd. ] ivv l179 Woodduhn Placei /Ш\ I 179 Моптнипоок Dn. I iWw j 106 Cnowt Sr KM«10n,3BH,2.6BA.(«M0dt*yrd. 3BR, 2BA. txlght & ally with all « R , ZBA. 1.5 tlay, aeened porch, 1400+/-sq. n.. lull basamenl, FP. 3BR, 2BA, woO built, unlia basement. MCuntyiyjL&MOflEII »159 ,9 0 0 appllancasi »169 ,9 0 0 tedmods, storage Udg«. » 1 5 8,900 (oncedbacK yard. »154 ,9 0 0 poM. Homo wairanly. »144,900 458 Dhadmon Rü, 3*/веЛх1«1к.2вН.1,МЛ 1,Э92уй, Wall kept ЗВН. 2BA. with (eflced Home Wananty, 3BH, 2BA. Mona FP. 3BR. 28A. new camel, «рИ bedtoom 3BR, 2BA, 1.1 * plan, iaree master. »02,900.al ippianm . uge. bld. »139,900. 11! backyard. »129,500. » 5 0 0 carpet alow. »98,500. acres lenced, secluded &prtvato. »81,000. $79,000 Alm »l raw ЗВа 2BA. FP, al applar«»a on .Se ac. »71,600 $59,900 2BR, IBA, С оо1еетм тШ house. Zo«dbinC«4i(.^»ta(.m tl73&tfnlL $52,900. ibandoradhcn)i{noviUg^}$40,000. I )i к ,1 \ I s ,\i<i 1 II Ki 1 ( ) ,Si K\ I Y( )i bW AR D 731-8367 M e g h a n G o d b e y E a r n s A w a r d F r o m L i p s c o m b DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 ■ DS Meghan Godbey of Mocks­ ville was presented the financial Executives Institute Award for 2004-2005 at Lipscomb Univer­ sity. Each year, the award is given by the Nashville Chapter of the Financial Executive Institute to the outstanding junior account­ ing or finance student. Yokley In Who’s Who Helen Elizabeth Yokley of Mocksville has been named to the 2005 edition of "Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges." The listing is a publication of Randall Publishing in Tusca­ loosa, Ala. Students are nomi­ nated based on academic achievement, service to the com­ munity, leadership in extracur­ ricular'activities and potential for continued success. Yokley is a senior communi­ cation and pqlitical science ma­ jor at Appalachian State Univer­ sity. She is the daughter of Lynn and Dale Yokley of Mocksville. S a i n A w a r d e d I n t e r n s h i p Adam Sain, a rising senior at North Carolina State University, has been aworded an internship with Bland Landscaping Co. Sain is a dean’s list stu­ dent with a 3.5 grade point average ma­ joring in land­ scape design, with a minor in Sain agriculturol business manage­ ment. Two of 50 applicants earned the honor. Bland Landscaping is a 27- year-old company in Apex, known for work at the US Open golf tournament in Pinehurst. The company specializes in turfgrass, horticulture landscape design and flonculture and hold more than 58 stae and national awards in environmental land­ scape excellence. Sain is the son of David and Ann Sain of Mocksville. A u t o m o t i v e T e c h n i c i a n C u r r i c u l u m S u p p o r t e d Just as cars and trucks have become increasingly sophisti­ cated and dependent on comput­ ers, the skills of service techni­ cians have become increasingly technical and more demanding. Gone is the image of service technicians as someone who knows how to change a carbu­ retor. The amount of jobs for well- qualified service technicians is growing, which can be attributed to the increasing number of ve­ hicles on the road, and to the ever-increasing use of electron­ ics and computers in today's cars and trucks. To grow the number of quali­ fied technicians, Westside Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep of Mocskville would like to see lo­ cal schools adopt the Automo­ tive Youth Education System (AYES), a program which is helping to introduce students to careers in the automotive indus­ try. "Believe it or not, today’s cars and trucks contain more technology than the Apollo spacecraft that carried astronauts to the moon and back,” said Robby Dilmore, of Westside. "A career in the automotive service field requires intensive and ex­ tensive training and we’d love to see our local schools adopt this program." AYES prepares students for entry-level career positions or advanced studies in automotive technology. The program pre­ pares students for the ongoing education thot automotive manufacturers provide. For in­ stance, evety day, nearly 1,000 technicians attend training on the latest diagnostic equipment and vehicle updates used to ser­ vice Chrysler, Jeep and Dodge vehicles. The AYES program is intro­ duced to students at participat­ ing schools during their junior year. In addition to taking the required academic courses to­ ward high school degrees, stu­ dents experience classroom/ laboratory courses in basic au­ tomotive technology or collision repair and refinish. Eligible stu­ dents will then begin an intern­ ship at a dealership on a full-time basis during the summer be­ tween junior and senior years. Under the guidance of a men­ tor, an experienced technician, students can develop technical skills and skills as employees. Upon high school graduation and AYES certification, partici­ pating students are prepared to begin full-time, entry-level em­ ployment, or to advance more technical education. Wishon & Carter Builders, inc. Yadkinville, NCYadkinville338-679-2031 www.wi8honcarter^om Wlnitoh-Salem 338-724-0372 Custom Home Building AiJdltlons Custom Kitchens & Baths Guaranteed Pricing 33 Years Experience Unlimited License In-House Design Free Estimates B A N K o f l Ы (Ж ГНЮ Ц КО ЬШ А JERRY KAPP Manager/Loan Odioef 1336 Westgale Center Ditra Winston-Salem, N027103 MORTGAGE Mortgage rates are the lowest they have been in 40 years! Have you refinanced? Do you want to purchase a home? Please call us today! There coitldn’t be a better time! Telephone; (336) 774-2944 Ш . Mobile: (3 3 6 )4 6 2 ^ ,£¡1 E-Mal: Jkapp&bankolnacom Member РОЮ Volunteers Needed To Help Clean Yadkin The Yadkin River Trail Asso­ ciation has joined a nationwide effort to keep America’s water­ ways clean. Volunteers are needed to assist in cleoning 123 miles of the Yadkin River from May 14-20, in conjunction with the fourteenth annual National River Cleanup Week. “The Yadkin River is prob­ ably the most valuable natural resource we have in our area. Not only is it our major source of water, h is essential to the growth of our businesses and industry," states Yadkin River TYail Asso­ ciation President Montie Hamby. Last spring, 129 volunteers from Davie, Davidson, Forsyth, Surry, Wilkes and Yadkin Coun­ ties gathered approximately 2,000 pounds of trash from the river and along the banks. “That’s 2,000 pounds of trash that didn’t contaminate our drinking water or make a nui­ sance of itself here or on down the river,” said Hamby. The need for volunteers is no exception this year. "One hun­ dred twenty-three miles of river requires a lot of volunteers. Great Outdoor Provision Company is providing the first 20 volunteers each day with free use of canoes, paddles and personal flotation devices," Hamby said. An estimated 40,000 volun­ teers nationwide will be partici- J u n e 1 D e a d l i n e f o r D C P P r o g r a m The deadline to enroll a fann in Direct and Counter-Cyclical Program (DCP) for 2005 without being assessed a late- filed signup fee is close of business June I. Required signa­ tures must be obtained before close of business June 1. A late filed signup fee of $100 per farm shall be assessed for farms enrolled in 2005 DCP between June 2 and Sept. 30. All required signatures must be obtained before close of busi­ ness Sept. 30, for a farm to be enrolled in 2005 DCP. Call Farm Service Agency at 1-800-524-3389. Don’t Blame The Pine Pollen Pine pollen may be coating sidewalks and cars with yellow dust, but it is not to blame for making people sneeze. People suffer from pollen al­ lergies, but pine pollen doesn’t contribute lo it. The chemical composition of pine pollen ap­ pears to make it less allergenic than other types. Because, pine pollen is heavy, it tends to fall straight down and does not scat­ ter easily in the wind. Therefore, it rarely reaches human noses. Among North American plants, weeds are the most pro­ lific producers of pollen, with ragweed most often the culprit in making people sneeze and eyes water. Broadleaf trees, such as oaks, ash, elm, hickory, pecan, and box elder also contribute to the pool of allergy including pol- len. These plants manufacture small, light, dry pollen gronules that are custom made for wind transport. Samples of ragweed pollen have been collected 400 miles out at sea and two miles high in the air. Becouse airborne pollen is carried for long dis­ tances, it does little good to rid an area of an offending plant, the pollen can drift in from many miles away. In addition, most allergenic pollen comes from plants that produce it in huge quantities. A single ragweed plant can generate a million grains of pollen in a day. The blooming, showy flowers such as daffodils, crocus, ond forsythia thot accompany the onset of spring signal the begin­ ning of pollen season, vyhich lasts several weeks. Pollen from Smart Stall Funding Could Be Increased RALEIGH - An additional $26 million will be allocated for Smart Start Partnershijis sefving young children in 60 counties if House Bill 1033 passes. This bill would provide the .funding to assist those counties that receive less than 55 percent of the funding needed to meet the needs of young children in their county. House Bill 1033 is a companion to Senate Bill 678, which was introduced on March 16. Senate Bill 678 has been referred to the Appropriations Committee for review. Davie County Partnership for Children would receive approximately $187,000 in additional funding in fiscal year 2005-06 if this bill becomes low. "This is so important to our children and families; it impacts our ability to meet the needs of an increasing population,” sold Anna Eichhorn, executive director. “There have been decreases or stagnant funding levels to this county since the program began yet the county’s nbeds hnVe continued to inci'ease over the years. This puts tremendous strain on our eariy childhood service system and on oil families with children oges birth to five years.” “We know Smart Start works. Restoring this $26 million will have an immediate and lasting positive impact on young children and their families,” sold Karen Ponder, president of the North Carolina Partnership for Children, (NCPC) the state Smart Start office. In the past four budget cycles, Smart Start has received three years of cuts, followed by one year of steady funding. At its highest funding level. Smart Start received almost $228.2 million. Last year. Smart Start’s allocation was $189.5 million. Each county has a funding need that is determined on on individual basis, taking into 1 Д 1 Д 1 R e a lm s Ш. Ш M is i T h e S i m p l e F a c t s . (336)751- 2055 L is t y o u r p r o p e r t y w i t h u s t o r e c e i v e t h e b e s t i n t e r n e t & n i ii g n z i n e e x p o s u r e ! R e c e i v e p i o f e s s i o n n i eKperlenced service! W h e n y o u r h o m e s e lls , y o u p a y l e s s c o m m is s i o n ! I I IS .1 iHi lii.lin e r d e c i s i o n ! C all to d a y fo r ^ c o m m is s io n as lo w as J $ y ! n o U e d » Ln - Goreeous 4BR 2BA. 2 Hail BA's, 320DtSF, huoe watbar, 3 oKices, empir nolwoiK roady $221,700 W W W . O a k H a T e n R e a I t 7 . c o m B u yers! V isit our w e b site to sig n up for F R E E M L S cu sto m searciies! 133 H ickory D r • 3BR 3BA, near 2000SF. 1.2 acre lot, bsmni, jotted tub, Inground pool. 32x38 garage 1169.400 316 e. Lake D r • 3DR 2BA. 1500 SF. Qreat curb appeal, very well Kept, laundry rm, gorgeous landscape $135,900 229 A ntler D r - Gordeou* Drick ЗВП год, huge ki( w/istand & oak cabinets, 16'X 13' (lie nr sunroom. S149.900 Call Angle Lawrence to view any home In o n a • Spolloss 3BR 2,6nA, 6 y U y " / D o O ACRES, horse community, arch rool. crown moldings, chair mil $323,700 pating in over 300 cleanups of shorelines ond rivers during the 2005 effort. “Educoting people about the sources of litter and pollution in our rivers is the first step in cleaning up four waterways,” said David Brown, chair of Na­ tional River Cleanup Week. “In just a couple of hours a dozen volunteers con collect a moun­ tain of litter from one mile of shoreline. It’s o great lesson in the role of individual responsi­ bility in keeping our rivers free of trosh and debris" For more information on vol­ unteering for the National River Cleanup Week, visit www.YatlkinRlverTrail.org or contoct Homby at 659-0956. We Help You Weather Every Storm. To find out more about our homeowners Insurance — Call me... Stop by... Log on - it's your choicel Jim Kelly, Jr. 281 North Main Street Mocksville 338-751-2937 ке1у{2ФпавопууЪ)о.сот Keith Hiller 1111 Yadkinville Hwy., Mocksville Willow Gala SI»p.Cnlr. 936-751-8131ЬМШпаНотШхал Nationwide* Insurance & Financial Services Nationwide Is On YburSIde Ute Insunnce underwritten by NaUonwkte Ufe Insunnoi Company. Nationwide M utual Iruurtnce Company and Afflltated Companlei, Home Office: C olum M t, OH 43215-2220 Ы 11/00 these showy flowers is large, heavy, waxy pollen grains that are not carried by wind, but by insects such as butterflies and bees, rarely reaching human noses and often are also not the culprit of pollen allergies. The amount of pollen varies widely within local areas and among geographic regions. Weother conditions hove o ma­ jor impact on pollen seoson. A roiny spring or late spring frost that kills flowers often reduces the amount of pollen in the at­ mosphere. The amount of pollen in the atmosphere tends to be highest eariy in the morning on warm, dry, breezy days and low­ est during chilly, wet periods. Short of staying indoors , and even that may not help, there is no easy way to evade pollen. consideration population, median family income gnd olhcr sources of public funds. When Smart Start, began, counties applied to become involved in the initiative each year. A new appropriation from the General Assembly each year determined how many funds were ttvoilable for the new counties. On the last year of enrollment in the initiative, 45 counties joined and were required to divide that year’s additional funding. Iniiially» funding continued to increase, and those, counties that entered with a lower funding percentage received new monies each year to equalize funding percentage. That process was brought to a halt when Smart Start funding began to receive cuts. In 2001-2002, Smart Stan funding was decreased in response to the state budget crisis. For the next two years, cuts were imple-mented. S u m m e r D a y C a m p N o w E i i r o l l i i i g l a e a united method st congfiegation Hillsdale UMC 5228 Hwy 158, Advance Tel: 336-998-1098 www.hlllsdaleumc.com Conveniently located 2/10 miles west of the Hwy 158 & Hwy 801 Intersection In Hillsdale Weekly Rate: $85; Daily Rate: $17/day One-time registration fee: $30/famlly Rising 1st-6th Graders IVIonday thru Friday 6:30 am-5:45pm Program Includes... • Life lessons In Christian Values • Special Weeidy Adventure Trips • Summer Reading Program • tanglewood Park Picnics • Fun Activities Every Day! • iWorning & afternoon snackl Noin Hiring Teaching Assistants! w w w . p r u d e n t i a l c a r o l i n a s . c o m P rudential Clemmons/Davie Co. O ffice c,n,iinasRealty...............3 3 6 - 7 1 4 - 4 4 0 0 * .8 7 7 -3 7 1 -5 8 2 2 Too New For Photo 107 Pembrooke Ridgs $169,900 Bev Supple 151 Keswick $405,000 Cheryl Fink 186 Shady Grove Lane $228,900 Bev Supple a i e - 1020 Fallbrook Lane $379,900 Sandra Johnson 5645 Shamrock Glen Lane $965,000 Andrea Suggs 100 Stoneburg Circle $197,000 Sherri Coram :■ ■ : i i > t'%¡H $239,900 Gloria Matthews $481,500 Sandy Dyson 2 Cameron Village $210,000 Maddalena В. Agnoli 133 Fairway Drive $198,900 Gloria Matthews Jrive $121,900 Gloria Duckworth 719 Harper Spnngs Drive $128,900 Brad Hunter 172 fevernilf $339,900 Cheryl Fink 201 Oleander Drive $229,900 Gloria Duckworth lalem Glen $360,000 Sherri Coram ^i^AjnndegendentljMowne^n^ogeraje^jjember^Mh^PrudenlW If rri ■ Senior Services To Be At Conference Dnvie Senior Services will provide transportation to the "Mini Wiiite House Conference on Aging” from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. on May 23. There will be speakers and work groups on policy issues, which will be reported to the National White House Confer­ ence on Aging. CaU 751-0611 to register. «6 - DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,2005 Saturday Night Q ileu open lot ptadlco ol fl p m FIRST RACE AT a P.M. C R R F T S M R N 100-LA P MODIFIED R A C E Plus Sportsman, Street Stock and Stadium Stock Events A nd m ore; A prize for Ihe fan s ' S500 Gift C ertificate froni B lades by B row n C utlery M B u a Admission: 12 ond o ld e r-S iO «Ages 0-11 -$ 1 Children undor O FREE w ilh adu« oscort PLENTY OF FREE PARKING > In form ation a b ou t stadiu m racin g: (338 ) 723-1819 N ow E nrollins fo r SU M M ER C A M P a n d AFTER SC H O O l CARE C o rn a tz e r U M C C h rist Kids School A ge C are Enroll before May 15 and pay no registration fee! Rates are reasonable and include fees for trips. »«‘Piscounls for families with more than one child** Summer Camp Rates are ?85 per week and After School Oare is 1145 per month. For more Informaflon or to sign up. please call Cornatzer United Methodist Church. 990-0867. Open Mic Nights In Downtown The Davie County Art,s Council, in conjunction with the Downtown Mocksville Histori­ cal Association, will present Open Mic on the last Friday of cach month through September. The event is part of the Downtown Association’s Jammin’ on the Square series. Each Open Mic night begins at 6:30. ' Musicians wishing to play should bring the instrument, amplirier, and any special equip­ ment required. A PA will be pro­ vided. The Arts Council will sell 50/50 raffle tickets at participat­ ing downtown merchants, as well as at the Brock Performing Arts Center at 622 N. Main St. During each open mic, a winner will be announced. Performers may pre-register for a 15-minute time slot by calling the arts coun­ cil at 751-3112. Check the website for more information; www.daviecirls.org. D ix ie l a n d Fa r m S u m m e r C a m p sp o ts a re s till ava lla b le l C a ll to fin d o u t m o re l www.dlxielandfarm.com C onucc H a rim PHone: 33M 9 2 -6 ^3 17M Godbey Road - Mockiville. N C 27028 Ule're just a mouse-click away... D A VIE C O U N T Y ■N-r ONLINE Go to the Davie County Enterprise Record website at www.enterprise-record.com for a convenient link to our latest edition. It’s your online connection to Davie County. C Features ^ C Obituaries^ C Classifieds ') ^Subscription^ CBeader's Polì) UJeather¿^ Davie County... WeVe Got You Covered Online! uiuiui.enterprise-record.com Autumn Care Nurses Autumn Care of Mocksville nurses honored at a luncheon on May 10 for National Nurses Week, from left: seated - Mooneen Kennison, Thea Johnson, Jennifer Bonggot; back - Vanesssa Wilson, Angel Lovett, Ethel Peoples, Cathy Mahaffey, Wendy Blackwell, Ginger Eddingers, Diane Plunkett and Linda Dyson. S m ith F a m ily R e u n io n S e t The second annual Smith Family Reunion will be held June 4 at the Center Communily Building, U.S. 64 West at 1-40, Mocksville, beginning at 4 p.m. Bring a picnic basket, soft drink and old pictures and share memories. A few of the Smith descendants represented last year were Wiley Jacob, Bert Lee, Daniel Wilson, Joel Marvin, William Monroe, Enoc Wash­ ington and James Albert Smith, For more information, con­ tact Ron Smith at 751-3626 or 998-7613. Shirl Gaston (center) is one of the NCH CFA’s "Fabulous 50.” CNA Among ‘Fabulous 50’ Shirl Gaston, CNA, was se­ lected to receivc Ihe Norlh Caro- REAL ESTATE W EEKLY By Debbie Prachel Owner/Broker Premier Carolina Proportios W H A T TO D O A B O U T T E R M ITE S Most real estate offers require an inspection by a licensed exterminator to determine that Ihe house doesn’t have termites or other wood boring insects. The inspector wiHcltjpklfoniWor, things in deciding whether or not a house passes inspection- an active infestation and evidence of a past infestation. If your house does not pass the termite inspection, get a list of qualified exterminators from your Realtor. Find out the treatment options they offer and their charges for the service. Exterminators are usually quite competitive. If your home was treated for a past infestation, the company that perfonned the extermination may be willing to re-certify your home without a second treatment. Arrange for the termite inspection as eariy as possible, so you will have time to determine the best way to get rid of them, if they are found. Debbie is an award-winning full-time professional real estate broker in Davie County. For professional advice on all aspects of buying and selling real estate, you can reach Debbie at Premier Carolina Properties, 336-998-7777 or 336-909-1284, or visit her website at www.pcpnc.com. Team MHance Soccer Club 2005-2006 SOCCER TRYOUTS Who; All U10-U18 Soccer Players What: Player Try-Outs When; May 23-26 6:00-8:00 pm Check-In: 5:30 pm for U10-U15 teams 6:30 pm for U16 • U18 teams CHECK YOUR AGE GROUP FOR EXACT DATE Where; Forsyth Country Day Soccer Complex > New Players will need a copy of their birth certificate. > Bring soccer cleats, shin guards, a ball, and water. To expedite check-ln olavers should pre-reolstBr. To obtain forms and additional Information, go to www.tascsoccer.com, or call George Tasedan at 336-416-6762. CHALLENGE AND CUSSIC TRYOUTS FOR BOYS & GIRLS IN ALL AGE GROUPS Ab9 Group» u-to Boys «Giris U-11 Boys* Girls U-12 Boys »Girls U-13 Boys ♦Girls U-14 Boys ♦ Girts U-15 Boys »Girls U-10 Boys* Girts U-17 Boys* Girts U-18 Boys »Girts Bom Between S im -m m 8/1/94-7/31/95 8/1/93-1/31(94 8/1/92-1/31/93 8/1/91-7/31(92 8/1/90-7/31/91 8/1/89-7/31(90 8/1/88-8^1/89 8/1/87-7/31(88 Trvout Date« Mon. 5ß3/Tue.5fl4 Mon. M 3/TU O .W 4 Mon. W 3/Tuo. 5(24 Wed. S/25/Thu. S/26 Wed. 5/25/Thu. 6(20 W ed.6«5/Thu.6fl6 Mon. 5 «3 / Tue. 5(24 Mon. 5/23/Tue. 5/24 Mon, 5/23/Tue, 5 «4 8PM-7PM 6PM-7PM 6PM-7PM 6PM-7PM 6PM-7PM 6PM-7PM 7PMBPM 7PM-8PM 7PM-8PM H you can't ittsnd your tge group's icheduled tiyouts, you must call George Tassdan (41(HI7{2|, AND ittend the msKo up tiyouts, all leams. lina Health Care Association’s (NCHCFA) “Fabulous 50” Award. This event provides the op­ portunity to acknowledge 50 front line unlicensed personnel who have demonstrated out­ standing achievements in the long-term health care profession. panel of judges from the Eductipn and Programs Commit­ lee .selected 10 nominees from the thousands submitted. One nominee was selected from each .lofiiiOiNorthnCarolina districts. Each of the 10 award recipients was honored at a dinner and awards presentation in their dis­ trict. The awards banquet was held at the Rock Bam Country Club in Conover. Gaston was nominated by Autumn Care of Mocksville be­ cause .she demonstrates leader­ ship among other staff members. She has been employed with Autumn Care since 1998. Gaston helps others without even thinking about it. “I am just there whenever people need help,” she said. Ga.ston lives in Mocksville with her nine children. We’ve got you covered... F r o m t h e c o r n f i e l d s t o t h e c o u r t h o u s e , t h e E n t e r p r i s e R e c o r d c o v e r s D a v i e C o u n t y . S u b s c r i b e t o d a y f o r d e l i v e r y e a c h w e e k t o y o u r m a i l b o x . Call 751-2120 for details D A V ID C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/i^^ECORD PUBLIC NOTICES DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May , 2005 ■ D7 x x m e a s c p s i N ' s x v s x NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CnEDrrORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ot KURT WIULIAfy/l SCHNEIDER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 5lh day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to Ihe undersigned. This the 5lh day of May, 2005. Charlene Schneider, Executor 134 Parkway Court, Mocksville, NC27028 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NailCE As required by federal and state laws, this notice Is to Inform all workers and building occupants and/or Iheir legal guardians about asbestos In school buildings. Any­ one who wishes to see the asbes­ tos files may contact the school or call Tom Evans, Davie County Schools Maintenance Department, 336-751-1991. This the 28th day of April, 2005. 5-5-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY 04SP173 ■ Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained In that certain Deed of Tmst executed by FIDELAAOUILA, and Angel A. Gutlemzto SHAPIRO & Km SM AN, Trustee(s), which was dated SEPTEMBEFi 16,2002andw- corded on SEPTEMBER 17,2002In Book 438 at Page 77, Davie County Registry, North Carolina. Default having been made In the payment of the note thereby secured by the said Deed of Tmst and the un­ dersigned, Brock & Scott, PLLC, hav­ ing been substituted a^Trustee In said Deed of Tmst by an Instniment duly recorded In the Office of the Register of Deeds of Davte County, North Caro­ lina, and the hokler of the note evi­ dencing saki Indebtedness having di­ rected that the Deed of Tmst be fore­ closed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the court- where the pujperty Is located, or the usual and customary location at the county courthouse for conducting the sale on May 20, 2005 at 11:00AM, and will sell to the highest bidder lor cash the following described property situated In DaWe County, North Caro­ lina, to wit: BEO m iN G at a new pin In the line ot Ned and Rudy Boger (Deed Book 117, page 100 and Deed Book 49, page 548) and the Southwestern comer ol the herein described tract; thence North 14 deg. 11 mln. 18 sec. East 133.59 feet to relJarln the line ol Brenda B. Mecham (Deed Book 162, page 504); thence North 13 deg. 11 mln. 15sec.East210.46leettoaret)ar In the line ol Boger, thence North 13 deg. 13 mln. 51 sec. East 169.58 leet to an axle; thence North 13 deg. 13 min. 51 sec. East 19.69leettoaplaced Iron pin the Northwest comer ol the herein described tmct; thence South 80 deg. 42 mln. 20 sec. East 119.92 leettoarallroadsplkelnSR 1416and the Northeast comer ol the herein de­ scribed tract: thence South 04 deg. 33 mln.30sec. West40.00 leet to a new Iron pin (online) In the line of RonakI Swaim and Mary Ann IVIyers (Deed Book 95, page 450); thence South 04 deg. 33 min. 30 sec. West301.25leet to an axle In the line ol Louis S. Myers (Deed Book 83, page 548): thence South 04 deg. 33 mln. 30 sec. West 210.00 leet to a new Iron pin In Ihe Myers line and the Southeast comer ol the herein described tract; thence North 75 deg. 48 min. 42 sec. West 204.86 leet to the POINT OF BEGIN­ NING containing 2.00 acres, more or less, all as set lorth by Drawing Num­ ber 24598-3 by Grady L Tutterow, R.LS., dated 1CV28/98. Save and except any releases or deeds ol release of record, SaW property Is commonly known as 457Rkhie Road (incorrectly reler- enced on DOT as 547 Rkhie Road), Mocksville, NC27028. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs of Forty-Rve Cents (45i) per One Hun­ dred Dollars ($100.00) pursuant to NCGS7A-308(a)(1). Acash deposit (no personal checks) ol five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever Is greater, will tie required at the time of the sale. Following the explratton of the statutory upset bid period, all the remaining amounts are Immediately due and owing. Said property to be offered pur­ suant to this Notice ol Sale Is be­ ing offered lor sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS WHERE IS." There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing In, oti, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale. This sale Is made subject to all pitor liens, unpaW taxes, spedal as­ sessments, easements, rights of way, deeds ot release, and any other en­ cumbrances or exceptions of record! To the best of the knowledge and be­ lief of the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property Is/are W e/ A. Agulia and Angela A Guitenez. Brock & Scott, PU.C, SubslilulB Trustee 5919 Oleander Drive Suite 115 Wilmington, NC 28403 Phone (910) 392^988 Fax (910) 392-8051 File No.; 04-07-20^^-3422 NORTH CAROLINA , DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS FOR THE FOLLOWING ZONING AMENDMENTS: NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursani lo the requirements ol Article 20-B of Chapter 153-A ol the General Statutes of North Carolina and Sec- tton15S.251 ofihe Davie CountyCode of Ordinances, that the Davie County Board of Commissioners will hold a Public Hearing In the Commlsslon- era Room ol the Davie County Ad­ ministration Building, Mocitsvllle on Monday, May 16,2005 at 7:00 p.m. to hear the following requests; A) iQinmy-Prii» has applied to rezone approximately 156 acres of land from Residential Agricultural (R-A)to Residential Suburban Spe­ cial Use (R-12-S) to permit up to 200 dwelling units wHhln the development. This property, also known as Twin Cedars Golf Course, Is located at the end of TWn Cedars Golf Road and Walt Wilson Road and Is further de­ scribes as a portion of Parcel L500000007, and Parcels L5020B0023, -24, -25, -26, -27, and - 28. B) JImmv Gentle has applied to rezone approximately 3 acres of land from ResMentlal Agriculture (R-A) to Industrial Special Use (l-2-S) for a machine tool shop. This properly Is located at 2726 U.S. Hwy. 601 North, approximately 600 feet south of Danner Road (S.R. 1412) and Is fur­ ther described as a portion of Parcel F300000082. rezone 3,36 acres ol land from Resi­ dential (R-20) to Community Shop­ ping (C-S). This property Is located at 228 N.C. 801 South, at the northwest comer ol N.C. 801 and Carter Road (S.R. 1627) and Is further described as Parcel D8090A0001. ( ' D) The Board of Commissioners will consWer a series of amendments to the Zoning Ordinance. The amend­ ments addadefinltionforajunk/aban- doned manufactured home, clarify the requirements for temporaiy manufac­ tured homes, provide for staff to Issue a tempoiary pemilt fora manufactured home while a permanent home Is un­ der construction, revise the permit re­ quirements for zoning compliance permits, and update the standards for nonconforming manufactured homes. The Planning Board recommended the amendments on Aprii 26,2004. A complete copy of the proposed text Is available at the DavIe County Devel­ opment Servtees Department. A sign will be posted on the above listed properties to advertise tho pub­ lic hearing. The public Is Invited to at­ tend the hearing at which time there will be an opportunity to be heard in lavor of, or In opposition to, the above Hems. Additional Information Is avail­ able at the Development Sen/Ices De­ partment on weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336)751-3340. John Gallimore Planning Director NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of MELBA WATSON OWENS, this Is to nollly all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 28lh day ofJuly, 2005, being three (3) months from Ihe first day ol publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recoveiy. All persons In­ debted to said estale will please make Immediate payment to the under­ signed. This Ihe 281h day of April, 2005. Lany Don Owens • EXEC 123 Oti Course Drive, Advax», NC 27006 4-28-4lp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDfTORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of EDWIN EDWARD MIETLOWSKI, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against saM es­ tale to present them to the under­ signed on or belore the 12th day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice VKlll be pleaded In bar of Iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day ol May, 2005. Karen Mieltowski, EXEC 226 Meny Lane, Advance, NC 27006 5-12-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF SUSBSTTTUTE TRUSTEE'S FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY Under and by virtue ol the power and authority contained In that certain Deed of Tmst executed and delivered by Lany lyan, II aka Larry I. ThIes and Katherine S. Thies, Husband/Wile, dated August 26,1998, and recorded In the Olllce of the Register ol Deeds for Davie County, North Carolklna, In Book 284 al Page 797, and because ol default having been made In the payment of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Tmst and falluire to do and pertonn the stipulations and agreements therein contained, and pursuant to demand of the Owner and Holder of the indebtedness secured by saw Deed of Tmst, the undersigned SubslHuteTmstee VKlli expose lor sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the property therein de­ scribed. to wH: All that certain lot or parcel of land sltutated In Jerusalem Township, Davie County, North Carolina, and more partteularly described asloliows; Being Lois Nos. 4,5,6,7, and 8 ol the Sam Foster Subdh/slon as per sun/ey and plat made by A.L Bowles, Surveyor, May, 1953, and said plat recorded In Map Book 3, Page 15, In Ihe Ollfce of Ihe Register of Deeds of DavIe County, North Carolla, to which, reference is hereby made for a more particular description. Present Record Owner(s); Lany Ivan Thies, 11 and Katherine S. Thies The terms of the sale are that the real property hereinbefore described will be soW for cash to the highest bid­ der and that Ihe undersigned may re­ quire the successful bklder at the sale to Immediately deposit cash or a certi­ fied check in an amount equal to the greater of five percent (5%) of the high bid or $750.00. The real property hereinabove described will be soW "as Is, where Is," sublect to any and all superior liens, and sublect to taxes end speclel as­ sessments. The sale will be heW open for ten (10) days tor upset bMs as by law re­ quired. Dale and Hour for Sale: May 27, 2005 at 11:00 a.m. Place of Sale: Davie County Court­ house Date of this Notice: April 1,200S Stephen A Lamb, Substitute Tmstee THE LAMB FIRM PO Box 36158 Chariotte, NC 28236-6158 (704)331-0014 5-12-2tnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualHIed as Executor of the Estate of MADGE B. DAY, late of Davie Counly, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and coipo- ralions having claims against the Es­ tate to exhibit them lo the undersigned al the office of Ingersoll & Associates, PLLC, P.O. Box 25167, Winston-Sa­ lem, NC 27114, on or before August 15,2005, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons In­ debted to said Estate will please make. immediate payment. This Ihe 26lh day ol April, 2005. Chariotte F. Heniy, Executor Marc W. Ingersoll, Altomey: Ingersoll & Associates, PLLC 5-5-4tnNOPfTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDiTORS Having qualified as Executorof Ihe Estate ol HUGH MTTCHELL FROST, this Is to notlly all persons having claims against said estale lo present them to the undersigned on or before the 12th day of August, ^ 5 , being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This Ihe 12th day of May, 2005. ' Willie Rebecca Frost, ADMN 2085Hwy64W Mocksville, NC 27028 5-12-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDrrORS Having qualified as Executorof the Estate of BOYD GILBERT PACK, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before Ihe 28th day ol July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publtea­ tlon or this nottee will be pleaded In bar of their recoveiy. All persons In­ debted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the under­ signed. This the 19th day ol April, 2005. Janell Young Pack 3464 NC Highway 801 South Advance, NC 27006 Martin & Van Hoy, LLP Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 4-284ln NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualllled as Executorof the Estate of OLIVIA STROUD FOSTER, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them to the under­ signed on or before the 5th day of August, 2005, being three (3 )' months from the first day ol publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. Dennis G. Foster, Co-Executor 9B3Tutkeyfool Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 Sandra Foster Vestal, Co- Executor 1324 Hwy. 64 West Mocksville, NC 27028 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualllled as Executor ol the Estate of CYNTHIA MARIE SMITH, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or belore the 21st day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. Thlsthe21stdayofApril,2005. Shiriey Sharber 116 Hogan Drive Gamer, NC 27529 4-21-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of VIDA DUNN , W HITMAN AKA VIDA C. WHITMAN, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them to the under­ signed on or belore the 21 st day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the llrst day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Im­ mediate payment to the under­ signed. This the 21 st day of April, 2005. Marjorie L. Watson, EXEC P.O. Box 5002 Lexington, NC 27293 4-21-4tn.NORTH CARQUI^A ÓAVIE COUNTY^ NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of LINDA DIANE SMILEY, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21st dny of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 21st day of April, 2005. David Eugene Smiley - EXEC 131 WestviewAve. Mocksville, NC 27028 4-21-4IP NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Co-Execu­ tors of Ihe Estate of EDNA S. FOS­ TER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21st day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day ot publication or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 21st day ol April, 2005. Mildred F Pennington - EXEC 2451 US Hwy 601 S Mocksville, NC 27028 X G. Foster, Jr. - EXEC 304 McCullough Road Mocksvllie, NC 27028 4-21-4tp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Execulor of the Estate of MADISON FREE­ MAN, this Is to notify all persona having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the Sth day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the llrst day ol publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estale will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. * Phyllis F Sells, Co-Executor 202 Sowers Ferry Rd. Salisbuty, NC 28144 Francis Craig Freeman, Co- Executor 842 Sain Rd. Mocksville, N0 27028 5-5-4ln Abortion Alternative Employment BEH A VIO R A L M O D IFIC A ­ DAVIE PREG NA N C Y CARE Center offers confidential & free pregnancy tests, support ser­ vices, and referrals. M ake a healthy choica for your IKel Call 753-HOPE for appointment. Apartments TIONS TECHNICIAN needed: to word part-time, weekends and as needed, 2nd or 3rd shift week­ days. Is guaranteed at least 28 hrs. per week. Responsibilities are to guide youth through a planned daily schedule, see that clients get to their appointments.DacnnnciKla mnnitm*inn LARGE 1 BR apartment, down­ town, no kids, no pets. 704-278- 1717 nooUUIlalUm IU( IIIUIlll*Jriny youths behavior and assigning points and using appropriate be­ havioral Intervention (or reinforc­ MOCKSVILLE SUNSET TER­ RACE: All brick energy efficient apartment. 1 & 2 bedroom, pool, basketball court & swings. Kitchen appliances furnished In­ cluding dishwasher. 1.5 baths, ing and redirecting behaviors. Must have at least a high school diploma and one year experi­ ence. Fax resume to (336) 936- 0039 or call (336)936-0029 to apply washer/diyer connections. High energy efficient heat pump pro­ vides central heat and air. Prewired for cable TV & phones. Insulated windows & doors. No wax kitchen & bath floors. Lo­ cated in Mocksville behind the old Hendricks Furniture building (now Carolina Precision Machin­ ery) on Sunset Dr. off of Hwy. 158. OHce hours 1-6 M-F & Sat. IQ- 12. Phone 751-0168. B ER M U D A RUN CO UNTRY Club Is accepting applications for summer time employment for pool snack shop, short order cooking experience a plus, 2 shifts available 10am-3pm and 2:30-7pm. Must be able to work weekends. Apply In person, lor directions cai998-ai55 BURTON'S PRESSURE WASH­ ING looking for 2 experienced painters. Drivers License re­ quired. 336-813-2272, ask for Michael BEADY TO MOVE in 2br fur­ nished upstairs apartment, all utilities included, $500/mo. 751- 1218 or 704-872-3367 Card Of Thanlcs CHURCH SECRETARY/BOOK­ KEEPER PART-tlme, working toward full-time position. HebronRnrvfiot r^hiirr<h l4aV^r^n RH AS YOU KNOW we lost our daughter. Misty Dawn Hall, and Cameron lost his mother In a horseback accident on April 22 of 2005. We would like to thank all our family, friends, and neighbors for all the love and prayers you showed us during this time. W e want to especially thank Ihe friends who donated money at Southern Community Bank for Dcipilol 1 lO noOrun rtU> Statesville, NC 28625. Please submit resume Attn. Mr. Clair Repple CNA'S NEEDED CALL 336-372- 5125 or 336-386-8900 DRIVERS NEEDED. CLASS A- CDL. Local runs. Paid Holidays, benelils. Call 998-8700 for an appointment. the Cameron Trust Fund. Love, Ricky and Linda Vaughn and Cameron Ross EXP. MAINTENANCE TECHNI­ CIAN needed, must be bl-ilngual, for small property, 2yrs. exp. must be HVAC certified, great pay, great benefits. Apply at 800 NorthRidge Court, MocksvllieChild Care BABYSITTINQ AVAILABLE IN private home. Pinebrook, North Davie school area near Farmington Rd. exit, excellent reffirences 940-6664 EXPERIENCED SHO RT OR­ DER cook needed, 5 days a week. B J’s Country Food. Call 998-7290 Commercial Property FARM HELP NEEDED. Must be able to ride young horses. 751- 2771COM M ERCIAL SPACE FOR lease. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. Ga­ rage with potential office. Easy access to 1-40 on Hwy. 601.751 - 0429 or 816-2779 FINISH CARPENTER NEEDED. If you're not making $50,000 plus a year and own your own tools and truck call 336-813-1577 VARIOUS COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES Warehouse & Office space 1 Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Realty 998-8900 FULLTIM E COOK needed. Ex­ perience required. Must be very motivated, fast paced, depend­ able and drug free. Will work morning and evening shift. Must work on weekends. Off on Sun-Hfl\/ PlflflQo nnnlt/ in nnffinn onlv/WANTEDII 4,000 SQUARE FOOT office space for long tern lease. Call Janice McDaniel - Pennington & Co. Realty. 336- 998-8900 or 336-909-0747 ucty« r^ioctoo ciu^iy II1 poioUii uiiiy» No phone calls. Tarheel-Q. M AN A G EM EN T PO SITIO N: SMALL, fast-growing, local con- stnjction-reiated firm seeks ener­ getic person with proven success record. Compensation based on performance. Future ownership position possible for right person.Employment 21 YRS. OR older with valid driv­ ers license to take paralyzed per­ son out, meals Included. 492- 7947 Ooll pilUllo nu< OOO'OnU'O^UU NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS for employment. 336-751-7300, ask for Chris Harris APPAREL CO. NEEDS experi­ enced spreader for cutting room. Apply in person at: Inderà Mills Co. 350 W. Maple St. Yadkinvllle, 8-4:30. EOE PART-TIM E EXPER IENC ED electrician. Osborne Electric. 751-3398 appointment only. PR O FESSIO N A L D RIVER S W ANTED lor flatbed carrier BANK OF THE Carollnas has an immediate opening for a part-time teller In our Advance office. Hours 11:00-2:30 M-F and as needed. Interested candidates must have a high school diploma or equiva­ lent. The desired candidate should be flexible for scheduling and demonstrate good customer service skills. Bank of the Caroli- nas secures consumer credit re­ ports, criminal records check, and pre-hire drug screening. EOE. Interested candidates may com­ plete an application In person or send resumes to: Patty Perry, HR Director, Bank of the Carollnas, based out of Woodleaf, NC. Must have 2 years verifiable OTR ex­ perience. Class A CDL with good MVR a must. Starting pay of .35 cpm minimum with tarp, stop, and overnight pay and yearly bonus. Medical insurance also available. Fax resume to 704-278-4709, or contact Curtis E. Kyles Tnicklng at 2105 Needmore Rd. Woodleaf, NC. Phone: 704-278-3532 REAL ESTATE AGENT - Yadkin Co. firm seeking successful agents. Cordial working atmo­ sphere, lots of potential. 336-849- 7450 PO Box 2032 Ashboro, NC 27204 CUSTOMER RELATIONS FLOOR TRAFFIC CONTROLLER Established Automotive Group seeking motivated responsible individuals to assist in managing showroom customer traffic. Requires excellent communications skills. CUSTOMER RELATIONS TRACKING CUSTOMERS SCHEDULING APPOINTMENTS For an interview, please call Tim Sharpe at 751-5948 D8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May , 2005 $ : DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPKISE RECORD, Tiiursday, May , 2005 ■ D9 Ш Е Х Р Е Ш Ч Е P B Œ T E A B L B Employment Homes For Rent Homes For Sale Mobile Homes/Rent Mobile Homes/Rent Service SO C IA L W O RKER III, Child Placement Worker -Foster Care. Davie County Dept, of Social Services. The worker will be re­ sponsible for managing a caseload of foster care children - working toward family reunifica­ tion. will assume olher duties as required. Some on call required. Graduation Irom a four-year col­ lege or university is required and prefer work experience in social work or related human services fields. Must have a vehicle avail­ able for work and have a valid f'lorth Carolina drivers license. Submit a completed PD-107 and a college transcript of the high­ est degree eamed to Cindy Jus­ tice, Social Work Supervisor, Davie County Dept, of Social Services, PO Box 517, fVlocks- ville, NC 27028. Telephone- 336- 751-8800. Application deadline; Iklay 13,2005. Equal Opportunity Employer. TRACTOR-TRAILER DRIVERS needed for local hauls. Seeking steady hard workers. (No over­ night). Class A CDL required, 3 yrs. min. experience, current DOT medical, clean IVIVR a must; Dmg/alcohol screening required. Benefits. To apply, call 336-492- 5651 between 9am and 5pm for an application. WILLING TO EDUCATE highly motivated individual for a reward­ ing career in Financial Service. Call 926-4862 for interview Farm Machinery CORRAL PANELS— 100s in stock, 4 color choices plus gal­ vanized; Gates; Hay and Bunk feeders; Priefert Squeeze Chutes; Stall fronts; StocK tanks; Dog kennels; Bale spears; Bushogs; Box blades; Post hole diggers; Aerator; Spreaders and more. NC's largest distributor of livestock equipment. Delivery available. Wright farm Gates, 336-998-8637__________________ Furniture KING PILLOWTOP MATTRESS set, new w/warrantu, can deliver $225.00. 336-442-3506 LEATHER SOFA AND love seat, stainless steel stove and refrig­ erator, Bosh washer and dryer, kingslze oak sled frame with mat­tress, all less than one year old, 'excellent condition. 284-2383 M ATTRESS & BOX, queen piiiowtop mattress set, name brand, new in plastic $150.00 336-992-3930 "n ic e SOFA AND loveseat. $350 for bolh. 998-0930_____________ Homes For Rent 2br, Iba - l^cCullough Rd. Oil heat. $475/mo Call Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel 336-751 -2222 ask for Ext. 213 Mon-Fri 8am-5pm or 336-751-5555 Ext. 213 nights & weekends. 2BR, IB A HOME just off 601 N. 704-278-1717 3BR, 2-1«B AT^itoiyhoijie'fw rent. 2200 sq. ft. w/garage. Many extras, Creekwood subdivision. Advance, $950/mo. plus $500/ dep. 940-3643, leave message 3BR, ZBaTÀVAÌLÀBLE In June In Mocksville, $750/mo. No pets. 492-2722 .SumiiUT l.il'(')>uiir(l N m li'd Small Neighborhood Pool seeKs CortKlad Uleguard. Must be mature, dependable, Imslworthy and able to work under minimal supeivlslon. 3-5 years Uloguarding experience necessary. References and Drug testing required. Send resume, relerpnces and salary history/ requirements to: Pool Manager P.O. B ox 8M Clem m on», NO 27012 or »mall to; tnatiauaOmin.com R A D IO L O G Y Hoots Memorial Hospital, Inc., an alfiliale of North Carolina Baplist Hospital, has immediate openings for; Radiologic Technologist All shifts. CT experience preferred. Excelleni benelits, Cail 679-2041, ext. 6763 for more Information. BadlslQav Manager Must be registered by ARRT and be a certified member ol ASRT. Prior supen/isory experience preferred. Excellent benefits. All interested applicants should call (336) 679-6728 for more Information or fax resumes to (336) 679-6716. EOE ООП, nCHU n ic e n o u s e ШГrent, Mocksville, fenced yard. $800/mo. plus deposit. Available In June. 940-3643, leave mes­ sage 601N WM. R. Davie area, 2br, 1 ba with central heat 8i air on pri­ vate lot, includes washer, dryer, refrigerator, stove, dishwasher, microwave, has outside storage bidg. with power access. $475/ mo. plus dep. 492-7634 CLEAN 2BR, house. Call 704- 450-8616 or 704-657-3297 FOR RENTI AVAILABLE June IstI Advance location, 2br, Iba, $750/mo. Call Debbie 336-909- 1284 FOR RENT: LIKE new 3BR, 2- 1/2BA (1/2 bath in full finished daylight basement), appliances, heat pump, fresh paint, new car­ pet, large deck, + /-1 acre lot. In town, no pets, $900/mo., $900 sec. dep. lyr lease. Cali Mary Hendricks 336-940-7077, Pre­ mier Carolina Properties HOWARD REALTY Gena Cline 751-8562 Ibr, Iba, Mocksvllie $400/mo. Mobile Home Lots; Gun Club Rd. $225.00 MOCKSVILLE-2br, Iba, basement, carport, covered patio. No pels $700/mo M0CKSVILLE-3br, Iba, fenced backyard, carport and storage. $650/mo M0CKSVILLE-3br, 2ba, deck, 2-car garage in Charleston Ridge. Available in June Smoko free $900/mo. MOCKSVILLE-2/3br, Iba on 1 ac, basement and 2 car garage $650/mo. MOCKSVILLE- 3br, 2ba, 2 car garage, deck, in Twin Brook. Available Mid May $900/mo. MOCKSVILLE-3br,2ba, DWMH, approx. 2 acres $70q/mo. Pennington A Company 751-9400 NEED A GOOD place to live at reasonable rates. Cali 336-284- 4758 OW NER FIN A N CE, $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695 RANCH STYLE, 3BR, in Fork area, $625/mo. deposit and ref­ erences required. 336-998-9555 Homes For Sale 1880'S FARMHOUSE. BUYER must move, land not included. Best offer. 336-751-5991 3 LARGE BEDROOMS, 1-1/2 ba, kitchen/dining room, new heat/air, plumbing and electrical, some financing $59,900. 751-5925 3BR, 2BA, RANCH, attached garage, paved drive, deck, dog run, FP, new paint, landscaping, many updates. $128,900. Call Debbie at 336-909-1284 Premier Carolina Properties. A GREAT HOME, 3 large BR, 2BA, living room, dining room, large eat-in kitchen, den w/ fire­ place, office, on over 1 acre, $91,900. 336-712-0163 or 336- 575-2695 M OCKSVILLE, 172 HOLLOW Hill Ct. 3br, 1.5ba, recent siding and roof, open floor plan, tax value $88K, price $84K. 336-748- 1390 NEW DOUBLEWIDE HOME, big lot, 3BR, 2BA, front porch, rear deck, heat pump, owners move- in package- 27'’ color TV, DVD player, camcorder, big George Foreman grill. $76,000. reduced to $69,900. 998-5816 or 284- 2653. O W NER FIN A N C E; $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basemerit, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695__________________ Land For Sale 4.6 ACRE TRACT in beautiful Deacons Ridge subdivision. Gor­ geous wooded lot. No mobile homes or modular allowed. $51,500. Call KathI Wall at 909- 1726. Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel APPROXIMATELY 125 ACRES farmland, Wyo Rd,, Farmington area, totally fenced, 5 ponds and creek access. Contact 765-0913 or 766-5481 STICK BUILT HOMES or mobile home lots for sale. 998-5816, 284-2653 YADKIN CO., NICE large lots, singlewides and doublewides, owner financing. Brown Osbome, 336-838-4590__________________ Lawn Care . GREEN SIDE UP Lawn Care mowing, edging, core aeration, fertilizing, seeding, new and ex­ isting lawns. Tractor work avail- able. Call 998-1914____________ Miscellaneous FOR SALE-EVERYTHING must go-Peducedl 1988 Ford F350 ump truck'466'C.I.D. -$7Sd0,'' Dovetail traller-car hauler -$1150, 1999 Wilderness camper w/t slide-out room- $17,800, 1986 Corvette 5.7 tuned port injection, loaded, needs some cosmetic and maintenance work -$9,800. Ail neg. Call 336-840-5534 after 6:00 or anytime on week-ends. G E N E T R E X LE R ROOFING N ew & O ld Roots Sm all Repair Jobs Free Estimates 336-284-4571 FREE: 4 YR. old hardwood - large logs, cut and carry. a v ^ a h le f u l l H O RSE B O A R D IN G ,ttVailUDie, Jnn onelighting riding ring, $275/mo. 336- HONDA EB 11000 generator with wheel kit, 2 yrs. old, like new condition, 68 hrs. $3200. Call 336-886-3235 KENMORE SEWING MACHINE In wooden cabinet -$100. 998- 0930 LINDA'S SUN AND Shade Pe- rennials, 898 Junction Rd. 336- 492-5855 M O TO RC YC LE TR A ILER - $300. Phone; 998-8639 Mobile Homes/Rent 14X70 MOBILE HOME on Balti­ more Rd. No pets. 998-4071 IB R CO TTAG E IN country, large yard, storage building, no pets, singles or couples only. 284-4758 2BR, 2BA SINGLEWIDE on pri- vate lot. $545/mo. 998-3450 2BR, AC, FR O N T and back porch, private lot. 394 Oakland Ave. $350/mo. plus dep. 336- 751-2532 3BR MOBILE home , Shady Acres Mobile Home Park, John Crotts Rd. Hwy 64E. 998-8276 or 998-8222 3BR, 1-1/2BA, also 2br, 1-1/2ba wilh central air. Clean 336-575- 2101 or 828-478-9416(leave message) 3BR, 2BA DOUBLEW IDE, 1/2acre, $550/m o. plus utilities, $550/dep. Between Cooieemee and Mocksvllie. 336-284-6110 3BR, 2BA ON shaded lot with storage shed, carport, front & back deck, maximum 2 adults and 2 children, $525/mo. $525/ dep. 492-5897 601N W M. R. Davie area, 2br, Iba with central heat and air, on private lot. Includes waslSer, 2br, 2ba located Davle/Yadkin lino, 20 mln. from Winston-Sa­ lem, 15 mln. from Mocksville. No small children because of pond on property, no Inside dogs. 336- 751-5200 or 336-406-1981, ask for Steve. READY TO MOVE In 2br, Iba, rivale lot, $450/mo. 751-1218 or '04-872-3367 Mobile Homes/Sale FLEETWOOD HOMES OF Win­ ston-Salem is a factory autho­ rized dealer. W e can beat anybody’s prices. 336-767-3900 MUST SELL 3BR, 2ba ranch tme modular, set on your land, $84,900, value at $110,000. Cali 1 •800-672-9223________________ Motorcycles 1997 HD SPORTSTER 1200 custom, chromed out. $7300. 751:4375..., _____________ Pets 2 AKC MALE chihuahua pup­ pies, will be very small. $400 each, cash only. 998-9573, leave message. BALL PYTHON ENCLOSURE and everything included, 4 yrs. old. Best offer. Call Jeff 492-7947 B. MYERS LANDSCAPING specializing In "Rubber Mulch" mowing, wifi lake care of all your landscaping needs. Free esti­ mates, (336) 492-6385-home or (336) 399-4364-cell E.J. LAW N CARE, mowing, weedeatlng, trimming hedges. Free estimates. 336-284-6120 GARAGE DOOR REPAIRS & ALL ELECTRIC O PEN ER S. CALL MR. ED 336-998-2336 HOME MEDIC home repairs foundation to roof. Vinyl siding, rock, masonry, foundation repairs, gutter discharges, fences, melal roofs, hauling. Free Estimates. Richard Cline 336-682-4237 LAWN MOWER SERVICE and Repair. Pick-up and Delivery. Will buy Iawnmowers in need of re­ pair. 751-5474 MARGARET’S HOME CLEAN- ING Sen/ice. there’s no Job too small or too large. Froe esti­ mates, references If needed. 940- 2633 OSBORNE ELECTRIC for all your electrical needs Free Estimates 751-3398 FULL B LO O DED CHIHUAHUA'S, 9 weeks old, wormed and 1st shots, parents on site. $200, 492-7766 after 5pm.___________________________ RV/Motor Home 1994 DUTCHMAN 32FT. pull be­ hind camper. Sleeps 6. $6000 OBO. 336-751-0575 1999 COACHM AN POP-up. Sleeps six, AC, awning, porta- potti, front storage, ex. condition. $3400. 336-492-2918 C A S H PAID FO R AN TIQ U E S, PAR TIAL O R W H O LE ESTATES, CO LLE CTAB LE S, O LD METAL T O Y S , AN TIQ U E FU R N ITU RE dryer, ref., stove, dishwasher, microwave. Has outside storage bidg with power access. $475/ mo., 1st and iast month rent plus deposit. 492-7634 ADVANCE-3BR, 2BA singlewide plus extra room, 1.5 ac fenced for 1 horse, outbldgs $700/mo. Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Realty 998-8900 WISSCORVSR MINI-STORAGE For all your storage needs, choose usT Come by to inquire about free rental. 2975 Hwy, 64 Bin Fork Codtodoiji (336) 9 9 8 -8 8 1 0 FO R SA LE: Cars • Trucks Utility Buildings Carports: All Sizes, Ail Galvanized All Size Dog Lots 336-751-3442Mocksville, NC Driver - Run the DEDICATED LOOP Ш М Е EVER Y W EEKEND Guaranteed 8> 1-2 Nights/wkI •No Touch Freight •85% Preloaded /Pretaфed •AVg. $888-$988/week Mocksville, NC Terminal Sunday Callers Welcomel CDL-A req’d. 877-428-5627 www.ctdrlvers.com MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL SPRING IS HEBE! BoDcat. aeraioc core nhigoer a more tor rant loilavl I33BI751-2304 Happy 7Sth! “You have to live life to understand it.” You are loved. Have a wonderful year! Luv, Pat (5-16) A U C T I O N A N T I Q U E S , F U R N I T U R E , G L A S S W A R E & H O U S E H O L D W E S T C E N T R A L C O M M U N I T Y C E N T E R , P F A F F T O W NDm£CriONS:iMni»ofhSahmn)aldonti: TtkoHOk) 421-Notih.MaLowi8vthoa244.tumrtaht, golnitaaniilumMonloUmMkhVltnnafkimi Qo3niMoatoYaMnthfio»d.lunfM sih on/lghttmkitak/osmin.ALL DAY-- RAIN OH SHINEI FOOD AVAILABLE. FRED G. MOCK, AUCTIONEER «21 UW Pft SHBETS m iW H 4 » 4 7 » < 3 3 8 )6 9 » 3 4 2 6 SiñfÉmming Pool Attendant Lake Myers RV Resoii: needs Summer Pool Attendant Good Swimmer I C PR Required Various Schedules Apply in person Mon.-Fri. I0am-2pm at Lake Myers RV Resort, 2862 US Hv«o'. M west of Mocksville. AUCTION ALERT!!!! FRIDAY MAY 13^“ 7:00 P.M. 601 AUCTION CO. 1518 HWY 601 SOUTH YADKINVILLE,NC OLb MUSIC BOXES*COLLECTIBLES*OLD GLASSWARE*NASCAR*SOME HARLEY DAVlDSON*OLD DOLL & CRADLE*COCA-COLA*BARBIES(HARLEY- DAVIDSON,HOLIDAY,GRAND OL* OPRY.SET OF COLLEGE UNIVERSITIES)*ELVIS*ET*AND MUCH MUCH MORE!! JEFK COBLE— AUCTIONEER— NCAU7I68 CALL 336.240.4470 FOK MORE INFO. OR DIRECTIONS IF VOU DON’T a l r e a d y k n o w o u r LOCATIONI! E S T A T E A U C T IO N Sat., May 21,2005 • 10 am Personal Property of John & Evelyn Ferebee, (deceased) 1 7 5 2 A n g e ll R o a d • M o c k s v il le , N C 2 7 0 2 8 Directions: From Mocksville, Hwy 601N, 4.3 miles N of HO, turn right on Angell Road. Sale 1.7 miles on left. Pie Safe, Wood Churn, Butter Mold, Pine Tappered Leg Pegged Kitchen Table, Meal Chest, Hooser Cabinet, Pine Tappered Leg Pegged Table, Walnut Sugar Chest Mid M Qs, Wood Tub, Wooden. !ce Box & Wood Bench from LiL Roberts STORE. Round & Flat Top Trunks, Quilts ; 2Q± Great Quality. Childs Cane Bottom Chair, Baby Bed, Baby Stroller 50+ years, Doll 100 years old, Porcelain Doll, Crochet Baby Clothes, Pottery Jugs, Wooden Dove Tail Boxes, Large Wood Picture Frames-Ovai & Rectangle, Poster Beds, Oak Dresser, Wood Mantles, Pink Depression 25+ pieces, Glass Basket, Homer Laughlin Bowl & Pitcher, Hull, Knowles China, Noritake Ivory China, White House Vinegar, Pattern Glass, Shiriey Temple Blue Creamer. Snow King Baking Powder Can, Planters Peanut Jar, Kerosene Lanterns & Lamps, Toms/ Lance Cookie Jars, Aladdin QU Lamp w/oriqinal boxes. Sausage Grinder, Cast Iron Pans, Harmonicas, Juice Harpe & Banjo, Farmington High Schooi Monthly 1935- 1936, Straight Razor, Pepsi Can, Boy Scout Uniform-50 yrs old, Crawford’s Drug Store Fan Mocksville, Marbles-100 yrs. old, Hafner Metal Train, Red Wagon & Cart Corn Sheller, Platform Scales, Wash Pots, Old Drink Bottles, Cheewine Wood Crates, Milk Cans, Chicken Coop, Cross Cut Saw, Mason Marian Jar-Patent Nov. 3!L 3558, 3 pt. Drag Harrow, Hyd Pickup 36 Disk Harrow, Economy Garden Tractor Cultivators & Mowing Deck, Horse Drawn Planters, cultivator & etc. Many More Items Terms: Cash for Good Check Auctioneers Note: This fine collection of antiques and collectibles come from generations of the Safley and Ferebee families. Don't miss out on a piece of history. S p e e r A u ctio n s 261 Rag Road, Mocksville, N C 27028 _______David Speer, N C A L #2984 * 336-998-4162 B L A S S I N K K H E I N S t V E P B O F T C A B L E Service Vehicles Yard Sale Yard Sale Yard Sale Yard Sale SNIDER'S LANDSCAPING & Lawn Service, LLC We Do It Alii Mowing, trimming, bush­ hogging, plugging, tree & shrub prantlng & fertlTlzing, grass seeding & fertilizer application, soil preparation, mloro-irrlga- tlon, licensed pesticide applica­ tor, waler garden Installalion, retaining walls Spring & Fall Yard Clean-Up Leaf Removal Gutter Cleaning Pine Needles Delivered & Spread $6.50/bale Sign 1 year contract and receive your birthday month Ireell Call for Free Estimates Residential & Commercial Office (336) 492-2174 Cell (336)409-0113 Harris Pool & Supplies ClMii«*CI)eiiàal]*lnsta8ation Oiierii« tCtoii« • Vryl Uner Rtpbceineiil Tommy Mauis/Owncr-Ovcr 20 Yrs. Exp. 277 PlciLsaiil Acre Dr., Mock.svlllc Home 1336) 2844817 , Business (336) 9094027 Drivers: MAKE $50,000.00 + iSTYEAROFEMPLOYMIOT! ■NoHatml 'No Forced m' ’ (Ы Home Timo ■Good Miles mW PAY PACKAGE NEWEQUIPMEKr Min. Hiring Requiremenls ClassACDl-iyr.OTRcxp. 1-800-374-8328 G s s - — —/Й Л М РО Я Т Ш Й в. wvw.í:nr¡>olransDortcrs.com 1987 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER, silver, manual trans, 176K miles, some rust, (air condition, $3300. 492-7323 BABY STUFF AND morell 143 Lat Whitaker Rd., Mocksville, off Liberty Church Rd. Fri. & Sat. 7am-untii 1995 CHRYSLAR NEWf Yorker, excellent condition, $3500. Cail 751-5001 2000 W H ITE W IN D S TA R mlnlvan, exc. condition, 89K miles, ac/power wIndow/door , locks, am/fm/cd, cruise, tilt, new tires. $6800. Call 492-7549 or 751-6534 2001 GRAND PRIX QT (black), alloy wheels, power doors/wln- dows, 4 door, excellent condi­ tion. 336-998-8480 BIG YARD SALE Sat. May 14th, 8am-2pm. Clothes, an­ tiques, and misc. Items. Milling Rd. to Snow Hill Rd. Look for signs CAROLYN’S'COLLECTIBLES 2076 Hwy 601 South Mocksville, NC 27028 (336-751-6252) Barbies, Beanies, Furniture and Gifts IJIAY 14, SATURDAY 8;30am- 12:30pm. March Woods subdi­ vision, 109 Holly Hill Ct. Ad­ vance (2 families) Girls baby clothes. lUIOVING SALE 2 family, 120 Fork-Blxby Rd. Advance, Sat. 8- untll MULTI-FAMILY YARD sale Sat. May 1 4 ,8-11am, Hwy 801 North and Four Corners Rd. No early birds. 2002 TOYOTA C ELIC A Gt. loaded 5-speed, blue, 54,000 miles, $15,500 negotiable. Call 336-692-7834 D O N ’T M ISS TH IS 3 family yard salel Friday and Saturday, May 13 & 14. 8;00am -untll. 2157 Hwy 801N near Farmington, lots of household Items, boys , men and womens brand name clothes. M ULTI-FA M ILY YARD sale. May 13-14, lots of plus size clothes, other items, take 158 to Baltimore Rd. to Quail Hol­ low Rd. TOM BERLIN’S LAWN CARE & Handyman Services. All types of Iawncare and handyman ser­ vices, mowing and weedeatlng, bushhogging & trimming trees and bushes, plugging, seeding, fertilizing, leaf removal, mulch­ ing, pine needles. Cail Brent for free estimate (rosidential and commercial services) Home phone 492-5424 Mobile 391 ■ 2266.____________ Statewide CABLE/LINE INSTALLER AP­ PRENTICES. Learn communi­cations systems installation, maintenance and repair. No ex­ perience, paid training. Must be 17-34, high school graduate. Cail 800-662-7231 for local In­ terview. STEEL BUILDINGS. NOW sell- Ing limited number of discounted buildings to be used as displays. Call now for free details and friendly sen/ice. 1-800-405-7501 TICKETS TO NASCAR nextel All-Star Challenge and Coca- Cola 600 at Lowe's Motor Speed­ way from $21. Call 800-455- FANS. Don't pay scalper pricesl www.lowesmotorspeedwav.com YOUR CLASSIFIED COULD be reaching over 1.6 Million homes across North Carolipal Place an ad with our paper for publication on the NC Statewide ClassKled Ad Network- 117 NC Newspa­ pers (or a low cost ol $300 (or 25- ' word ad to appear in each paperl Additional words are $10 each. »The whole state atyotwflngertlpsi It’s a smart advertising buyl Call us (or more information or visit the ' N.C. Press Association’s website at www.ncpress.com WILL PAY CASH for )unk oars. 336-407-8283__________________ Wanted I S T R E T C H W R IN K L E D C A R P E T S Wrinkled Carpet Man 336-998-8402 2 0 Y E A R W A R R A N T Y Longest Lasting 3' Coverage / Many Colors Pole Buildings K/letal Roofs & Siding f 1-888-278-6050 MID-STATE METALS PRIVATE COLLECTOR BUYS coins and collections. Call for ap­ pointment. 753-0986 fiM BER WANTED, pine or hard- wood. We select cut or clear cut. 8 acres or more. Shaver Wood Products, Inc. 704-278-9291. Night 704-278-4433 or 828-430- 8860___________________________ Yard Sale 1189 WAGNER RD. off Liberty Church Rd. Thurs. May 12th, Fri. May 13th, and Sat. May 14th, fur­ niture, odds & ends, etc. 7:30- untii 269 MOCK CHURCH Rd. Ad- vance, furniture, clothes, TV's and miscellaneous Items, Sat. May 14, 7am-noon 5 FAMILY YARD sale, f=rl. May ■ 13, Sat. M ^ 14. Rain or shine. 8am-1pm. Foster's Hair Styling, Ouiln Rd. Mocksville. Dishes, pots, stereo, and lots of house­ hold Items. ^ a .AND 5/14. 367 W. Maple Ave. Furniture, clothes, toys, tools and more. 7 FAMILY YARD sale. Sat. Sam. Desk, Serger, printers, bicycles, antiques, housewares, glass­ ware, toys, clothes, 64W to 143 Fred Lanier Rd. past Lake Myers Resort 917 FARMINGTON RD. Fri. , May 13, Sat. May 14,8am-4pm "ASHLEY’S ANTIQUS & GIFTS S Countywlde antique and yard sale. Rowan County Fair­ grounds, Salisbury, NC May 14, 2005 8am-4pm. Spaces for rent 704-633-9238, over 400 booths last November I Driver 1 JUST DRIVE IT THAT'S ALL! Experionca the best driving Job ever. N o touch freight, tarping or doaling w/lrallers. O no of tha nations largest DrivaAway Co. Is leasing Ind. contractors w/Class A & B CDL's lo pick up & deliver vehlclas to & from all points In Ihe U.S. Must ba 23yrs ot age. Driving school Qrads & BBlirees W alcom e. Bennott M otor Expreaa local 704-342-1S32 800-367-2249 FISHING EQUIPM ENT, AN­ TIQ UES, glassware, clothes, guns, tools, mowers, too much to list. Hwy 158 and Chal Smith Rd. Daylight to dark. Ail week. FOUR FAMILY YARD sale. Sat. May 14, 8-until, 1052 Sheffield Rd. Clothes, kitchen Items, books, etx. FRIDAY 8-1, Saturday 8-untii, 147 Canton Rd. Advance (off of Baltimore Rd.) Baby clothes, toys, TV, and much more. HUGE 3 FAMILY garage saie, 321 Madison Rd. Sat. 6:30-12:30 HUGE COVINGTON CREEK neighborhood yard sale In Ad­ vance. 20 plus families. Sat. May 14,7-untll, located on Hwy 801S HUGE YARD SALEI al Oak Ha- ven Realty. Rain or Shine. Of­ fice furniture, auto parts, car stereos, clothes, wall paintings, bikes, computer monitor, bed­ room furniture, patio set, wheels, tires, mufflers, games and more. Hwy 64 East toward Lexington before Cleary’s Auto Sales on left. Sat. May 14th 7am-1pm MAY 13 & . 2626 Farmington Rd. North. Rain date May 20-21. Pic­ tures, clocks, baskets, tools, books, craft supplies, Serger sewing machine, clarinet (one owner), ladies wigs, giris size 4- 6, boys 6-14, ladles 8-18 RANDY MILLER &SOHS 295 Miller Rond-Moeksville (336) 284-2826 ' Now Pumping Septic Tanks < Skid Sim Work Ttvncher Work Sepile Systems Footings LoBderWork REAL ESTATE AUCTION FRIDAY, MAY 20 - 6:00 PM 2717 Wishon Road, Courtney Height, Yadliin Co. Nice brick veneer home with 2 bedroorns, 1.5 bath.s, kitciien, living room. Сафог1 & above ground pool on good lot. Over 1,000 sq. ft. Has heat pump. Tax value $85,143.00. Great for investors, first time home buyers or renters. TERMS: 10% cieposit day of .sale, balance in 30 days. 10% buyers premium. Sec website for full temi.s. DIRECTIONS: From Vadkinviile follow Hwy. 601 S. to Hlbco Plas­ tics. Left at Courtney Crossing Gas station at caution light to Courtney Huntsville Rd. (SR 1001). Follow 1.6 mi. lo Wishon Rd. on lelt. Signs posted. wwvv.rogcrsrenlty.coni (336) 789-2926 Keith Gunter, Sales Mgr. NCAL #685 for listing & color pictures, please visit ’w w w . v o r k a u c t io n . c o m • NO BUYER’S PREM IU M • A u c t i o n Saturday, May 14, 2009 @ 10am for Sam & Virginia Boger Daywalt - estates (deceased) 1732 Davie Academy Rd *** Mocksville fít tho Intorsoctlon of Hwy. 64 & Hwy. 901 & DavloAcadomyRd. (at Catlnor’s), tako Davto Acadomy Fid. (or 2 тИоз ***'*Dav{o County**** Machíne J.D. side .. „ Lawn Mower ** Wheel Horse mod. 211 '85 Ford Rmiycr Pickup (4x4) good N.H. mod. 200 Manure Spreiulcr * • Ford 501 Mowing Mac delivery Hay Rake ** Angle Blade (3 pt. li.) ** Dirt Pun (3 pt. \\.) ** Cub Cadet mod. 122 Riding Gravely mod. 1138 Riding Lawn Mower w/bagger Gravely mod. 812 Riding Lawn Mower ** Whee 3 Riding Lawn Mower ** Push Lawn Mowers *• Garden Tiller •* Yurd Ferl. Spreader (pull type) •* good Cole Horse Drawn Corn Planter ** Avery Horse Drawn Corn Planter ** Craft.sman Slack Tool Box * • Craf(.sman « hp Bench Grinder *•* Craftsman 6 hp Shop Vac, ** Ford A ir Compressor (110 v.) • • Robin Water Pump (gas) ** Husqvarna 51 Ch ’ * Pioneer P26CI»vin S iw ** Gas Leaf B low er^* 3 Weed Eatcis B & D Hedge Tnmmcr * * B & D Work Mate Ladder * • Hand. Shop & Yard T^ols •* Block & Tackle 6” Shop Vise ** 'Ittp & Die Set *♦ Hand Saws ( Grinder ** Jack.s *• Coleman Lantern Rods & Reels Points * • 2 Hand Tobacco Setters box o f Skeet misc. Pans & Supplies * Chain Saw • ! * * Alum, old Sickle Bicycles ** Plow r-Dining Room Tiible (100” ) w/6 Chairs (Bernhardt) ♦♦small C h e rts ^ (Basset) ** 3 pc. Modern Pino Poster Bedroom Suite • • Cedar Blankei C li C herry..........,Suite (Basset, . ___________- ........................ ................................... Benches • • Patio & Deck Furniture • • modem 2 pc. Wicker Patio Sel * • nice unh. Sofa upU. Rockcr • • small SUowcaso Cabinet. ** Coffee & End .Tables (HcrUngo) • • Mnhi , 3 pc.'Modem Bcdrtwm * S4 Concrete Picnic Table & .. ......................... ...........^_______& Ciialrs • • Recliner * • swivel _______________________ ______ & Emi Tables (HcTitnce) ••M n h og . Style End Tables • * rd. Mahog. Style Lamp Table • • small modem China Hutch ** snuill Mahog. Desk • • TVpowriter Desk Oak modem Swivel O iiice ChaW ** Curd Tables & Chairs RCA Console T V • • Stereo Console •* Hot Point Refrig, (no frost) Maytag Washer • * Kenmore Dryer * * W ind Timnel uph. Vac. Rankin & Sanford l-H Therm. (96 telephone #) •* Marx H5 Dozer TVoclor ** Buddy-L #3 Fire Tm ck • • #26 Speed King Racc Car ** 851 Fire Chief Command Cur ♦• Tonka metul Volksw^en metnl Truck & Horse Trailer metal Bus ** Am. Logs & Tinker Tbys • • '68 Mattel Hot Wheel Sprint Set *• Ttidor Elect. Football Game • • Tlidor Elect. Baseball Gumc •* Games •* Radio Jcl Wagon •* Radio Line tw Wheel Banow •• small Pool Tibbie • * elect. C hild’s Organ ** Iris Pep. Butter Dish ** pr. Sterling Candle Sticks *• Kched Print "B e r^ Pickers" by Jas. S. King • • nice Oak Framed **■ Prints, iTumes & Mirrors • • Ker. Lamps ** Gone-W-Wind Lamp • • Lamps • • Glassware ** Ironware ••M irror • • Prints, Frames & Mirrors • • Ker. Lamps ** Gone-W-Wind Lamp Kitchenware Stainless Waterless Cookware •• Bread Maker ** Punch Bowls Linens •* Cook Books *♦ Xmas Decors. • • Costume Jewelry Many Other Items*'^*Lunch Avoilablc***Restroom Angel Figurines •* Quilt fops ’ ^ 5 6 F o x H u n t e r R c l . , H a r i x i o n y , N . C . 2 8 6 3 4 704-546-2696 or 704-929-9311 cell n c a l 4 *7 4 Ч -Ч"» s in c e 1 9 3 5 SATURDAY, MAY 14, 7-11am, 64W near Lake Myers Camp­ ground to Calaliain Rd. to Bea­ ver Branch Trail, tons of Boy's namebrand clothes, sz. 4-7, women's clothes, sz. 16, men's clothes, sz, XL-XXL, shoes, toys, household Items, and morell NO JUNKll Early birds gel the best selection. S A T U R D A Y rM A Y l?m ,'lan> 4pm, 601N to Liberty church Rd. 1.1 miles on right W H AT CHA G IM M E? Yard sale, Saturday, May 14. Big moving sale. Nothing pricea Just make us an offerì Every­ thing must gol Household goods, kitchen Items, furniture, clothing, holiday Items, games, many more items, too many to name. 8-12noon. Random Rd. Southwood acres, off Hwy 601S behind Davie High. M ULTI-FAM ILY YARD saie, men’s, women, and children's clothes of all sizes, DVD’S, Playstation 1 & 2 games, Disney movies, car seats, nice banjo, too much to mention. Hwy 601N past Wm. R. Davie school to Rithcle Rd. 2nd doublewide on ieft. Sat. 8am-untll M ULTI-FA M ILY YARD sale. Sat. May 14. Furniture, glass­ w are, household, w om en’s clothing ali sizes,LN $2 each, lots of misc. Great prices. By Ingersoll on County Home Ra. 1.7 m iles then lefl at blue Dententlon Center sign, 166 Scenic Dr. veers right, look for signs. 499-5825 SATURDAY 7:00AM-12:00PM“ household goods, clothing, furni­ture, collectibles, etc. 119 Aubrey Merrell Rd. off Hwy 64 East Ц ^ y E x e r c is e Y o u r B r a i n . /? e a d Studies show that reading keeps the mind sharp. Give your brain a boost. Subscribe to the newspaper and expand your mind with a world of information. D A V IE C O U N T Y EN TERPRI/i^ECO RD 171 s. Main St. Mocksville 336-751-2120 N O W Ш В 1 Ш A P P L Y T O D A Y ! H i r i n g f o r t h e s e p o s i t i o n s : • M a te ria l H a n d le rs , • A sse m b ly W o r k e rs • F o rk lift O p e ra to rs • M a n u fa c tu r in g W o rk e rs I s t / 2 n d S h if t s A v a il. Q u a lifie d c a n d id a te s need: M in . ly r m fg . exp. o r I y r. v e rin a b ic w o rk h is to ry , re lia b le tra n s p o rta tio n , a b le to pass p re -e m p lo y m e n t su b stan ce abuse screen in g a n d s ta te w id e b a c k g ro u n d check • F o rk lift O p e ra to r m u s t have m in ly r. exp I *A M o n -T h u rs. 8:30a|ii-1 1:0 o r 1 :0 0 p m -3 :0 0 p m ■ T w o o f In d e n tific a tio n n e e d e d to a p p ly t e m p o r a r y R e s o u r c e s 7 5 1 - 5 1 7 9 300 Main Street Community Y A R D S A L E & C R A F T S A L E AT Lake Myers RV Resort 2862 US Hwy. 64, West of Mocksville Saturday May, 14th 8am untilP New and Used Items, Baked Goods, F U N ! F U I M ! F U I M ! 081113361492-7736 lor dlractlo^ Open Free to the Public .»w--? - i -í -»4 ; í •'•'''-«*«b^ ^ .♦.* *.• ¿«i ;. • ц.. ,ti v.. .т.-г.л.. D10. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 12,200S Davie Dateline Fundraisers Friday, May 13 Yard Sale, at Jesus Life Mission, 2496 Liberty Church Rd., no sale if raining. Saturday, May 14 Yard Sale, at Jesus U fe Mission, 2496 Liberty Church Rd., no sale if reinhig. 3rd Annual Golf Challenge, Pud­ ding Ridge Golf Club, Fannington. Registration 12 p.m., lunch 1 p.m., shotgun start 1:30 p.m. Presented by Concord UMC Men, proceeds lo CampTekoaandothermission/com- munity projects. C ountry Ham & Tenderloin Breakfast) 6:30-10 a.m., at Mocks UMC, S23 Beauchamp Rd., Ad­ vance, eat-in or take-out, $5. Menu: cpunU7 ham, tenderloin, eggs, grits, sausage gravy, biscuits, beverages. Sponsored by Uniled Methodist Men, proceeds lu ministries & projects. 5th Annual Benefit Car Show, at Shady Grove School, Advance. Reg­ istration 8 a.m. Ill 12 noon. Cars, trucks, tractors, motorcycles. Pro­ ceeds lo Whal Christmas Is All About to beneHl Diane Keaton & Grady Smith. Info: Terry Branch 998-6136. Benefit Yard Sale, for Darlene Payne to help fight against cancer. At Davie High, 8 a.m. til 4 p.m. Events: face painting, 50/50 draw­ ing, hoi dog sale, bake sale, Saturday, May 21 Country Breakfast Fundraiser, at Comat3!er-Dulin Vol. Fire Depl., 6:30-10 a.m. Cookbooks will also be on sale. Thursday, May 26 Special Olympics Davle Port-A- Fit Chicken Dinner, al First Uniled Methodist, in old fellowship hall. Plate: $7. Advance sales/carry-out only. Call 751-2325 or 492-2990 for tickets. Saturday, June 4 C om m unity Y ard Sale, by Sheffield-Caiahaln Ladie's Auxil­ iary, 7 a.m. until, at Sheffield- Caiahaln Fire Dept. Table rental $ 10. Contact: 492-7687 or 751 -2121. Reunions Sunday, May 15 Annual Tom Kelly & Julia Smith Howard Family Reunion, at picnic shelter of Bethlehem UMC, 321 Redland Rd., Advance. 1 p.m. Bring food, drink, memorabelia, and pic­ tures. Saturday, June 4 Mocksville High School Class of 1950, will have a get-together al 6 p.m. al Prime Sirloin. Anyone inter­ ested is welcome. Info: 998-3211. 2nd Annual Smith Family Reunion, al Center UMC Commtuiily Bidg., 4 p.m. until. Bring picnic baskot, soft drink, old pics, and share some old memories. Contact: 751 -3626 or 998- 7613. Sunday, June 5 Drew & Jane Smithdeal Robertson Family Reunion, al Fork Civic Cen­ ter, covercd dish lunch 1 p.m. For directions or info, 998-5163. Religion Sunday, May 15 Pastor’s Aid Program, at Boxwood Bapt. Church, 3 p.m. with guest speaker. Women’s Day Program, by Ihe Ladies Auxiliary Club of Clement Grove Church of God 7lli Day Church of God, 4 p.m., wilh guest speaker. Sati.irday, May 21 Vacation Bible School Open House & Pre-Registration, at Ad­ vance First Bapt. Church, 2 p.m. Parents and children of all ages. Sunday, May 22 Homecoming Service, at Chinqua­ pin Grove Missionary Bapt. Church, 11 a.m. moming service, 3 p.m. af- lemoon service. Dinner 1:30 p.m. in lower fellowship hall. Everyone in­ vited. Spedal Events Saturday, May 14 Third Annual Old Time Fiddler’s/ Bluegrass Convention, 12noon-un- lil, at Clement Grove Picnic Grounds. Cash prizes & ribbons awarded. Event sponsored by Cooleemee Civilan Club with proceeds to local charities. Info; 284-4167. Monday, May 16 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Thursday, May 19 Postmaster Talks, Cooleemee Post­ master Craig Mock to speak at Cool­ eemee Post Office, 10 a.m. Ul 12 noon. Greatoppoitunitytoleam more aboul local post office, ask questions, or discuss issues. Saturday, June 4 Rock With Cops, 6-9 p.m. Cool­ eemee Elementary Gym, music, food, fun. Have your bike inspected, re­ ceive ftee bike helmet. Free hotdogs provided by Cooleemee Civilans, games, raffle. Don't miss it. Monday, June 6 Cruise-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, June 20 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Dales to Remember Friday, May 20 Blood Drive, 12:30-5 p.m., at Davie Co. Hospital, Hospital St., Mocks­ ville. Tuesday, May 24 Blood Drive, 2-6:30 p.m., at Davie Co. Chapter of NWNC, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville. Wednesday, May 25 Skin CancerScreenhig,8-11:30 a.m., sponsored by Davie Health Dept By Davie Dermatology, call 751-8700 for appt, (Limited appts. available.) Thursday, May 26 Blood Drive, 6:30-11 a.m.,atIngeisoIl Rand, 501 Sanford Avenue, Mocks- vUle. Meetings Thursday, May 12 Davle Sub-District UMC Mission Board, 7:30 p.m., al Mocksville First UMC, executive board will meet 6:45 p.m. BEACH'NTANS TANNING & DAY SPA 953 SALISBURY RD MCXXSVII1E,N.C. 336-751-4292 ANQEL'S ABOVE & DESIGNER'S LOFT 755YAKINVILLERD MOCKSVILLE, N.C. 3 3 6 - 7 5 3 ^ A ‘FREE’ MONTI^ TANNIN^^ E8 COMING TOGE T an a t eith er of th e s e tw o g re a t TANNING S alo n s during M ay 11th through J u n e 11th 2 0 0 5 an d you could win a Call US today, th e m ore you tan, th e m ore c h a n c e s you h av e to "WIN*. W E A PPR EC IA TE Y O U R B U SIN ESS T h an k Y ou for a g re a t se a so n A ngel's A tx)ve a n d B each'N T an s Ongoing Humane Society of Davie Co,, monthly meetings 2nd Tues. of each month, al Davle County Library on Main Street. Call 751-5214 for info. Davle Partnership for Children board meeting, 4lh Tues. of every other month (began in Jan.) al Davie Library, 8:30 a.m. Questions: 751- 2113. Alathelmers Support Group, 2nd Tuesday of each month, 6:30 p.m., al Autumn Care, Mocksvillc. Davie Civitan Club meets 4thThuti. of each month, Feb.-Ocl., 7 p.m., al Hillsdale Bapl. Church, Hwy. 158. All visitors welcome. Center ECA Club meets 3rd Tues­ day of each month, at Center Conun. Bidg., 7:30 p.m. Please join us. Disabled American Veterans Post 75 meets on third Monday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at 1958 Hwy. 601 S. Contact J. Reniro at 284-46M for more info. Town Of Cooleemee Planning Board, meets 3rd Thurs. of each month al Cooleemee Town Hall, 7 p.m. Autism Support Group 3rd Monday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at Shady Grove, Mocksville. Davie Bus. Women’s Association 1st Wed. of every month, 12 noon, al Mocksville Rotao' on Salisbury Street. Speaker of interest and catered lunch, cost $6. Year membership $25. Con­ tact 998-1153 for more info. Davie County Diabetes Support Group, last Thurs. of every morilh, 7- 8;30p,m., at Davie Co. Public Library Small Conference Room. Info: 751- 8700. Davle Co. Band Boosters, meets 2nd Tuesday of month, 7:30 p.m., Davle High Band Room. Family Services "W hat Every Par­ ent Should Know", parenting classes to interested parents of teens in local areas, every Mon. 6-7:15 p.m., at Mocksville office Sanford Ave. Cost $15. Fdrmore info: 751-4510. Christian Businessmen's Commit­ tee of Mocksville, Thursdays, 7 a.m. Mocksville Rotary Hut. Gold Wing Touring Association, Red Pig Barbecue, Greasy Comer, N.C. 801 at U.S. 601, 6 p.m. 284- 4799. Davie County Stamp Club, 2nd Thurs., Davie Senior Center, 7 p.m. 751-0611. Jerlcho-Hardlson Ruritan Club, 2nd Tuesday, 7 p.m., club building. Health Dept., clinic hours: Mon.-Fri,, 8:30-11:30 a.m., 1-4:30 p,m. Davle County Board of Social Ser­ vices, 4th Tuesday, 5:30 p.m. alDSS. Narcotics Anonymous Against All Odds Group, FirsI Bapl. Church, 390 N. Main Street (upstairs), Thurs. 7 p.m.. Sun, 6 p.m. Drug Problem? Helpline, 336-785-7280. Mocksville American Legion Post 174, VFW Hul, Sanford Ave,, 2nd Thursday, 7 p,m. Mocksville Civitan Club, 7 p.m., 2nd & 4lh Mondays, at CCB, 880 Yadkinville Rd.. Advance Memorial Post 8719 Vet­ erans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary, 4th Tues., 7:30 p.m., post home. Feed Mill Road. Recreation For more information on these events, call 751-2325. Line Dancing BrockBuilding.EveryTuesday 1:30- 2:30 p.m.. Cost; $2. For more info, call 751-5983. Good Timers Square Dance Dance Lessons $5 per month. Volun­ teers for different social events. Con­ tact Ethel at 998-3837. Senior Walking Program Seniors, 50 and up, M-F, 6:30-9 a.m. No charge. Incentive breakfast held quarterly. Register now at Rec. Depl. or Sr. Services. The Dance Company Mon,, Tues,, Wed,, & Sat. Call Emily Robertson, 998-5163. Competition Cheerleading $25 registration and $45 mo, for 2 times per week. Call Wcndy Shoe­ maker 284-6300. Tennis Leagues avaiiablefor men, women,co-ed, jun­ iors. Call Sandra for info. Comm. Clean-Up Day At the RiverPark at Cooleemee Falls, 4th Sal. of each month, 8 a,m. until. Call Bill Gibson 284-4774 or Rec. Dept, for more info. Shelter Rentals Available at Rich Park and RiverPark al Cool­ eemee Falls. Call 751-2325 to make reservations. Davie Youth Council Ages 13 to graduation, meet al Rec. Depl. 2nd and 4lh Tues. nights each months. Call Emily 751-2325 for info. Special Olympics Fun Nite Wednesdays alRec. Depl. 7-8:30p,m. Open to athletes, their families, and volunteers. Special Friends Dance Van Monthly Fri. nighldance in Lewisville. Open lo adults with developmental delays. Reservations required for ttansportation, call Kathie 751-2325 by Thursdays. Van leaves Rec. Dept. 6;30p.m. and intersection ofN.C. 801 6 U.S. 158 al 6:45 p.m. Church League Basketball Call Joo for more info. Wrestling Call Emily 751-2325 for more info. Horse Camp At Dixieland Farm, choice of 6 wks, limit 10 campers per week. 7:30 a.m. Ill 5 p.m. Call Kathie 751-2325 or 492-2990 to reserve space. SpecialAils DavieTalentShow May 14th at S. Davje Middle School, 7 p.m. Reception 6:30 p.m. No admis­ sion but donations accepted. For info; 751-2325 or 492-2990. YMCA For more infonnation, call 751-9622 or visit Davie Family YMCA. Water Exercise Class For beginners and the experienced. All ages. Call forclass types & times. Swim Lessons Choose from 4 wk.. Sat. moming ot private lessons. Reg. begins 2 wks. prior to class. Call for class times. Karate-Carucado Style Tuesdays, 7-8:45 p.m. Ages 7 & up. Tae Kwon Do Ages 6 & up. Meet Tues. & Thurs., 6.00 & 6.45 p.m. Parent's Night Out 2nd Friday of each month, 6-10:30 p.m. Take the night off and allow YMCA to care for your child. Activi­ ties include swimming, arts & crafts, games, and a movie. Dinner served around 6:30 p.m. Cost $7 members/ $10 non-members. DMA(formerlySunshineGlub) For all older adults. Club is full of fun, fellowship, good food, new and old friends and lols of laughter. Monthly pot luck luncheon wiUi speaker. Cost: $10 members/$20 non-members. Seniors All Senior Activities take place at Davie County SeniorServices located in the Brock Building on North Main Street, Mocksville unless otherwise noted. Call 751-0611. Ongoing Sr. Lunchbox, M,T,W, 11:30 a.m., Th,&Fri,, 11 a.m.,lunchserveddaily. Silver Heailh Exercises, East Room of Senior Services, M, W, F, 8:30 a.m. Tues. & Thurs. 9 a.m. at Mock Place, (open to any senior). Quilting Club, every Monday, 10 a.m.. East Room. Scrabble, every Monday, 1 p.m.,Craft Room. Bridge, every Friday, 2 p.m., please call Sr. Services. SKIPBO, Wednesdays, I p.m.. East Room.' Scrapbooking, 2nd Tuesday, 2 p.m. Dr. Dunn, Podiatrist, al Sr. Services every Ihteeweeks,please callfor dates. Free Blood Pressure Checks, once a month, at 10:30 a.m. in the NuUilion Site. Tai Chi Classes, Tuesdays, 10 a.m., Beach "N" Tans (formerly Nature's Gifts). Next class dates (Sept. 6 thru Nov. 8). Discount for Srs. 60+, Call Sr. Services lo pre-register at 751- 0611. Yoga For Seniors, Tues. 2 p.m. (May 3 lo July 12). You must call Sr. Ser­ vices to register. Price $10 for 10 weeks. Painting Class,every Wed., 8:30 a.m. PACE Exercise Class, every other Wed,, 10:30 a,m, SlnglngSenlorsChorus, Thursdays, 10 a.m. Canasta, every Thurs., 1 p.m. Report Davie Dateline Items By Noon Monday Itenu for Davie Dateline should be reported by noon Monday of the pub­ lication week. Call 751-2120 or drop 11 by the office, at S. Main St. across POWER IN YOUR PALM. Phones by Motorola. NEXTEL A U T H O R IZID R K P fttlK N T A T tV C Every Nextel* phone has a built-in walkie-talkie, so you can connect coast-to-coast In under a second. And Nextel phones are GPS-enabled, have speakerphone and wireless web access. Everything you need In one powerful package. i T H E P H O N E P L A C E 121 ORMISI Mockivllle, NC 27028 Mon.-Frt,B;30anv5pin Sel9atn-12noon 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 6 2 6 Trí(í«maík Ollk«. All Ihird perty product w tcrvKe nam« ert (he pfopeHy of ihelr reipetllve ownerv All righi» reserved ‘ \4 " '‘‘if A , i Garden Oasis L o c a l F a m ily R e m e m b e r s M a n W ith M a r k e r In T h e G a r d e n H e L o v e d P a g e C l D A V I E C O U N T Y iivrrothoi^ b l ü t t h i '.1' a r ^ t u d e n t s L è a * \ ü t t h é ' E a h e n t e r p r i / S e c o r d ■ г USPS 149-160 Murder Suspect Pleads To Lesser Charge By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record Murder victim Earnest Howell’s mother sat quietly in court and watched as Donald Ray Nichols, the man she feels is responsible for her son’s death, walked away with a six year sentence. Nichols, who was facing a second degree murder charge, agreed to plead guilty to one count of accessory after the fact for attentpting to hide evidence and ly­ ing about the facts surrounding Howell’s murder. Accessory after the fact is a class D felony. “He did' more to this than she did,” Tammy Foster said. “He needs life without parole.” According to testimony, Nichols and his girlfriend, Donna Denise Blankenship, were critis,ing fpr drugs with Howell throughout the night of Monday, Sept, 15, and into the early moming hours of Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2003. At some point, a fight ensued between Nichols and Howell while Howell was driving his jeep on or near, 1-40 close to the Farmington Road exit. Blankenship testified at her trial in November that Nichols ordered her to restrain Howell. She said she leaned over the front seat and grabbed Howell around the neck and tried to pull him into the back seat while Nichols continued to beat him. She said at some point, Howell told her she was choking him, and let up Niimber 19 Thursday, May 19, 2005 The Class Of The Class Of2005 Leading the Davie High Sctiool Ciass of 2005 as they are awarded diplomas Friday night at War Eagle Stadium will be the three top academic seniors - Alyson Walker, Ben Shega (left) and Matt Rich. For articles and photographs on the class, please see a special section Please See Man - Page 4 inside this jSSUe.- Photo by Robin Fergusson 52 PAGES 2 Charged With Rape, Kidnapping Two men are in custody, accused of forcing a women into their ciir and having sex with her at gunpoint. pilly Ray Redmon Jr., 26, of 373 Village Road, Mocksville, and Ashley Neil Polk, 24, of 135 Giv­ ens St., Woodleaf, were each charged with kidnapping, rape and first-degree sexual offense. They are scheduled to face the charges dur­ ing preliminary hearings Thursday in Davie District Court. Mocksville Assistant Police Chief Wayne Stoneman said that a woman in her mid-20s was walking along Milling Road the night of May 10. The two suspects, who knew the woman, forced her into their car. They took her to a local motel, and displaying handguns, sexually forced themselves upon the woman. She was later taken to Rowan County, and on the night of May 11 she was dropped off in Winston-Sa­ lem . The v ictim then called Mocks- ville police. ' Tlie victim knew both suspects and Jtlentified them, Stoneman said. They were arrested the afternoon of May 12. . ' Picnic Around The Corner It’s almost time for the annual Masonic Picnic to benefit the Ox­ ford Home for Children. The annual week-long event fea­ turing nightly. music and carnival rides sponsored by Davie County Ma.sonic lodges will be, held from May 31-June 3, with the famous pic­ nic lunch on Thurifday, June 2 at noon on the picnic grounds, off North Main Street, Mocksville. Speaker before the meal will be Alzheimer’s Disease expert Dr. Robert J.F. Eisner A c c u s e d M u r d e r e r F o u n d C o m p e t e n t T o S t a n d T r ia l Randy Ridgeway is escorted to court by Davie Chief Jailer Wendell Sain. ■ Photo by Robin Fergusson By Mike Giinniiig Davie County Enterprise Record Accused murderer Randy Greensbury Ridgeway was found competent to stand trial by Superior Court judge Kimberiy Taylor in a hearing held in Mocksville last Fri­ day. But according to Ridgeway’s de­ fense attorneys Clark Fischer and Lori Hamilton-Dewitt, that may not be enough to paye the way for As­ sistant District Attorney Greg Brown to proceed with his plans to bring Ridgeway to trial. HamiUon-Dewitt presented to Taylor that Ridgeway is a member of the Nanticoke-Lenape tribe of New Jersey and Delaware. Because of his Native American status, Hamilton-Dewitt said the tribe may have the right to demand Ridgeway be tried under tribal law in a tribal courtroom, as per an agreement be­ tween the federal government and federally recognized Native Ameri­ can tribes. “Unfortunately, that law doesn’t apply to us,” Uri Ridgeway, a tribal council member of the Nanticoke- Lenape tribe said. “We’re a state rec­ ognized tribe, not a federally recog­ nized tribe.” Uri Ridgeway, who is based in Toms River, New Jersey, is also the first cousin of Randy Ridgeway. Uri said although their fathers are broth­ ers, he and Randy did not know each other well. “For whatever reason, our fatheirs didn’t have a lot of contact with each otherwhen we were kids,” Uri said. “I flrst met Randy when we were teenagers.” Uri said regardless of their rela­ tionship, his position on the tribal council won’t be of help to the ac­ cused murderer. “Randy definitely holds citizen­ ship status in our nation,” Uri said. “But without federal recognitioti. I’m afraid that agreement doesn’t apply.” Ridgeway is accused of killing 14-year-old Danielle Nicole Klase, the daughter of his live-in girlfriend, by hitting her with extreme force on the back of the head with a hammer in their Cooleemee home. According to police, Ridgeway confessed to killing Klase on Sept. 21,2004, by striking her repeatedly in the back of the head with a ham­ mer, He claims to have showered tlie child, then sexvially assaulted her, dressed her in bed clothes and put her in bed. Her mother arrived home from work several hours later and found Please See Ridgeway - Page 4 1 i ! 2. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Exlitonal Р^айе Perkins Site Still Pronnpts Old Worries The Perkins Nuclear Station ... those are no longer household words here. I still think about my old Perkins connections evety time 1 drive past the site on N.C. 801 in the southeastern side of Davie County. Had the plant been built, we would sec huge white plumes of steam on the horizon every morning. Instead, the USOO-acre site is ripe with deer, and I slow down measurably when driving in that area. The Sunday issue of the Winston-Solem Journal had a story about the chance that the old Perkins site might one day be used by Duke Power for electricity production. Might one day... Don’t get your dander up just yet. Perkins was originally slated to open in 1981. Fears of nuclear power, regulatory red tape, protesters and reality got in its way 30 years ago. I was a cub reporter for the Salisbury Post in the mid-1970s and got the Perkins assignment. The hearings were exhaustive. The nuclear power language was harder to decipher than Latin. As the years ground on, Duke Power suddenly awoke to, the fact that it didn’t need the three-unit nuclear station at all. The protesters won. And Ihe site has sat idle. Duke Power realized its long range forecast for electrical consumptioQ was all wrong. Like the Weapons of Mass Destruc­ tion in Iraq, the earlier assumptions were faulty. Now, with demand for electricity growing, Duke Power must consider its options once again — including the Perkins tract. Demand may have relumed, but Duke Power may find even more opponents now. ' Perkins was proposed as half ofn six-pack of nuclear reactors. Three other reactors were planned in Cherokee, S.C. Construction actually began at Cherokee. It was halted after Duke Power had invested hundreds of millions in the process. Davie County leaders, initially, were mostly thrilled to be chosen for a nuclear site. The property tax rate could have been adjusted downward to a single digit with the sudden benefit of a power plant that would be valued at a billion dollars. Neighboring Davidson commissioners grumbled that they should get a share of the tax revenue—just for being close. • Cost skyrocketed on the projeci almost as fast as Ihe national debt. The economy soured. Then America became terrified of nuclear power. , / Had Perkins been built, Davie County would have been able to afford the finest school buildings architects could design. School board members and county commissioners ^ere licking Iheir lips and dreaming of ways to spend all that money. But it didn’t happen. Before the Three Mile Island disaster, nuclear power was considered safe, economical and the energy source of choice for the future. Perkins was defeated bccause. of water, not nuclear worries. Local opponents were categorized as the Yadkin River rats — downstream people worried about Ihe impact of a gigantic vacuum gulping huge volumes pf water. David Springer, Mary Davis, Lawrence Pfefferkom, the High Rock Lake Association and others combined lo make Duke Power sin'ggle lo demonstrate the Yadkin River had enough water to satisfy its thirst and leave enough for others downstream. The Yadkin River never had a better friend than David Springer. The old lawyer-tumed-cattle-farmer, owns the Forks of the Yadkin property downstream. With riparian rights, he claimed a legal stake in Duke Power’s plans for the river. He pulled out his law books and filed motion after molion and made countless appearances before committees, He was a Ihom in Duke Power's side, bul Springer — always courteous, always polite and always there — should have been considered for Ihe company’s board of directors. His tactics actually saved Ihe company hundreds of millions of dollars. An Advance woman called Ihis week, saying the site should be used for a coal-fired plant, not nuclear. Coal plants also require huge volumes of water for cooling purposes. That would mean trains rumbling back and forth daily from the West Virginia coal fields — and tracks don’t go close to Ihe site. Imagine the little-used tracks along Hanes Mall, through Clemmons and Advance being converted lo a major line. Be careful what you wish for. — Dwight Sparks DAVIE C O U N T Y % USPS 149-160) 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 J^ubllshed vi/eekly by Ihe Davie Publishing Co. Owlght Sparks..........................Editor/Publisher Robin Fergusson......................General Manager MIKe Barnhardl.........................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow............................Advertising Director Brian Pitts.................................Sports Editor Starr Snow................................Clrculatlon/Classllied Mockavllle Enterprise DbvIo Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 50 Cents $20 Per Year In N.C, $25 Outside N.C. POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to; Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 O h i Ц,(«> B Y ТНЛГ Y o Ú I R ( / I I ^ O » № L L Í lB U ( К NO Les? ìHAl^ TiMÇ-чиТ«- íTMWhie cAÇe In T h e М а й ... High School Traffic Problem Needs Solution To the editor: I should like to address our community regarding the dangerous and unnecessarily precarious traffic situation that occurs in front of Davie High School and Davidson Community College every after­ noon al 3:15 when school lets oul. The vehicles in the front parking lot are trapped in gridlock, unable lo leave unless someone is kind enough to allow anyone to leave. Students who have to cross over to Ihe college have a risky task, because as soon as the traffic slows for them, a few impatient motorists lhat have been wailing for a break, dart out of Ihe school parking lot. On numerous ocçasiçns cars have darted in between the.oncoming buses that are leaving Ihe high school. This action alone is a recipe for disaster. lhave lak.en Utes^^concem? toVt^p Johtison and a member of the •: school board back in-October 2004. They addressed the issue wilh Principal Bridgewater, and a trafffic person was put in.place for a few weeks, Ihen that was the end of lhat. The only traffic that Ihe high school has made a constant priority has been Ihe buses coming and going. The morning traffic does not cause the problems that the aftemoon traffic does, because it is spread out. To alleviate the haz­ ards and allow for a faster, safer and more orderiy flow of traffic through Ihis critical area, the school only needs to have a traffic per­ son in place from 3:15 to 3:35 or 3:40 p.m. every school day. It would be belter if this person was not part of the local law enforce- menl, so lhal they could be counted on daily, and not subject to avail­ ability. Since the high school charges the students each year for their parking places, they should be able lo afford this minimum and most necessary cost. Just recently, they had the funds for a professionally painted mural, lo be done on Ihe front brick wall of Ihe school, so cost cannot ^ the issue. Smaller schools like Mocksville Elemen­ tary and South Davie Middle School have been able to hire indepen­ dent traffic persons, morning and afternoon, for many years. I should hink that our high school would make traffic safety a high priority,, being lhal they have so many students drivers as well as studeiils car pooling. It's nerve racking enough on the seasoned, experienced driv- ers.haying to negotia|f!.(his m^s e ve ry ,^y ^.. I brought these ¿¿ncems iefofe the school board, Van Johnson and Dub Potts again on May 2. No one seems lo lake this issue seriouslly enough to fix the problem, so I would like the rest of Ihe community and parents to weigh in on Ihe issue. I know it’s Ihe last week of school, but this issue is not going away. It will only get worse. Have we not lost enough young lives at the high school, that we cannot see to lhat they and the rest of the community can clear this area safely every day. This can be fixed easily. Linda S. Newberry Mocksville Editorial Writers Shouldn’t Delve Into Theology To Ihe editor: In your editorial you asked Ihe question; "Is God really a Re­ publican?” The greater issue is, "would God support the Demo­ cratic platform and does support constitute a sin?" In the book of Jeremiah there are many similarities of Babylon and today. For example: the sacrifice of children (Jer. 19:5), the rejection of God's Word (Jer. 6:10), a lack of knowledge of God's Word (Jer. 5:31), a tolerance of all faiths as valid (Jer 1:16), a search for a god lhal wiil bless and not condemn (Jer. 44:16-17), support of a political system that prohibits God's Word in schools, public places, etc. (Jer. 2:11), a refusal lo repent (Jer. 3:13), a refusal to be obedient (Jer, 44:16). The punishment of Israel lasted 2,600 years and included the loss of Ihe Ark, When Jeremiah questioned God about Ihe punish­ ment, God's reply was that Ihe "prophets did not expose the sin" (Lam, 2:14), This pastor exposed Ihe sin and Ihe people should love him for that. Could God use John Kerry? The Bible speaks of the believer as "being sanctified in Jesus Christ" (1 Cor, 1:2), Sanctified means to be set apart for use by Christ. Anyone supporting a platform that condones homosexuality and abortion is certainly not a sanctified believer, bul someone searching for cheap grace. Christ pul Him­ self under the authority of God's Word, so He would never support lhat platform. We should honor this Spirit filled pastor - God will. Editorial writers should not delve into theology for which they are nol quali­ fied. Bob Tutterow Waxhaw H i tetters Welœmed’S’i ^ *1 , The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its reac|- ’ ;/er§.,,The letters may be on topics of local, state, national or 1 intèbational issues. • ; ' i An effort will be made to print all letters; provided they*' are npt libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves j the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. ’ ’ All letters should-include the name and address of the v; writer, including a sigiiature. A telephone number^ not to i be pubUshed, is also requested. ' Please have letters in the newspaper office no later than i 4 p.m. Monday of the week to be published. Davie Gounty i Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99, Mocksville, or emailto;. emews(g)davie-enterprise.con^. ' ' Add your vote to our weekly online poll that asks questions affecting you and Davie County. Log on at wvm.enterprise-record.com and click on reader’s poll to cast your vote. Results will be listed here weeklyGot An Opinion? Should county commissioners give V po n \C 7 Davie County Schools a 16% in- /1/0 crease in local funding for next year? 2 9 % Log on now to cast your vote on the newest question: www.enterprise-record.com In T h e M a i l ... DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - 3 S u p e r i o r C o u r t J u d g e P l e a s e d W i t h C o u r t R e n o v a t i o n s To the editor: 1 Was assigned to court in Davie County this week, and this has been my first opportunity to observe the work that was done on the third floor. The courtroom is greatly improved and is a much more impressive and healthy place for sessions of Superior Court. ■> I think that those attending court, including courtroom person» nel, judges, j'ul^ors and the public, are impressed by how quickly Davie County has completed the renovations. My thanks are on be­ half of mysilf and all those individuals. Kimberly S. Taylor Resident Superior Court Judge , . ' Twenty-second Judicial District C o o l e e m e e E l e m e n t a r y P r o g r a m W o r k s To the editor: I would like to commend Cooleemee Elementary School for the first grade transition class located at then: cariiilus this year. This class was created lo support and nurture those students that needed a little extra push and/or attention in order to be ready for second grade. I feel fortunate that my child was placed in lliis classroom. The teacher Christy Comatzer, along with her assisfarif Mary McClamroch, have surpassed every expectation I had of thisxlass. My daughter has blossomed under their love and care. ' This class utilized the Waterford Program, with Trisha Spry. Chil­ dren were able lo get one-on-one oi- small group instruction with Report From Raleigh her. Reading specialist,.Kerry Blackwelder. has also had a special interest in this class. She has done numerous reading activities with them tftafhsis captured Iheir attention and turned them on to ieam- ing. I higWy recommend that every school take note of this class and Ihe progress they have made. Mrs. Comatzer has been a wonderful leader to her team and'caring friend to her students. Thank you Mr. Campbfell 'and Cooleimee School for this opportunity for my child to shine. , ' • Jenny Ingram ' • Advance Sticks And Stones On The Chain Gang J In the days before liberal lawyers got their fOpt in:, the door, when you did something wrong, bad, or ■ ‘ J stupid you probably got “thirty days òiì? the road”. It was a pretty standard ^ ' .sentence for those that wouldn’t ' ' . behave. It worked; and was more of a detenent than the threat of rehab. That was about the same time parents punished children and welcomed the same from school officials; the net- . result was behavior, order, and education. We no longer have chain gangs. or capital punishment in schools. We •. now have school systems held hostage by . . ‘ ■ undisciplined children and the fear of lawsuits. Out v overcrowded prisons are a joke and a slap in the fa:c^;^ò. ’ the victims paying for it. ' Those chain gangs look better every day. , Bert Bahnson H o u s e A p p r o p r i a t i o n s E x a m i n i n g B u d g e t By Julia C. Howard N.C. House of Representatives This week the House began its review of Ihe Senate version of Ihe State budget. The House Appropriation Committee chairs are in the beginning stages of examining the Senate’s proposed expenditures and cuts in funding. Likewise, the chairs of the House Finance Committee are beginning to examine the revenue sources outlined in the Senate budget and the availability for the next budget year. Soon after availability is known. Appropriation and Finance committees will begin Ihe construction of the House version ofthe state budget. I will keep you updated as the budget bill moves through Ihe House. Bill deadlines in the House passed this past week. Below are some of the bills I thought you might find interesting. HB 1620 Prescription Drug Benefit Purchasing Program. This bill establishes a prescription drug benefit purchasing program in the office of the governor for the purchase of reducing state expenditures for prescription drugs through volume purchasing. HB 1621 Charitable Bingo Fee/Prize Limits Increased.This bill increases tlie annual fee for a bingo license from $100 to $200 and increases the maximunn prize for a game of bingo from $1,500 to $3,000, and the maximum total prize for a session of bingo for an organization that holds only one bingo session during a calendar week from $2,500 to $5,000. HB 162 Increase Excise Tax On Cigarettes. This bill increases the excise tax on cigarettes from 5 cents to 80 cents per pack and provides that 25% of Ihe cigarette tax revenue goes to the Department of Health and Human Services to be distributed 16 each county to reimburse the county for a portion of its share of Medicaid expenditures. HB 1644 Budget Study/ Department of Public Instruction. This bili appropriates $50,000 to create a legislative study commission on the budget of thé Department of Public Instruction. The commission would conduct a zero-based budget review of the Department of Public Instruction and report the results to the 2006 General Assembly Regular Session. If you would like further information on any of these bills or the budget, contact my office. Several classes from Shady Grove Elementary School visited the General Assembly this past Wednesday, To all of you in Ihe classes of Ms. Brown. Ms. Phillips, Ms. Ohr, and Ms. Foil, I hope you had a great visit lo Raleigh. LegisUuive O ffice: 919-733- 5904: M ocksviiic Office: 751- RliPUlLSKNI’/VriVK J u l i a H o w a r d N C H o u se 79th D is tric t Please contact me in: MOCKSVILLE: (336) 751-8567 RALEIGH; (919) 733-5904 State Legislative Building 16 W. Jones Street, Rnn 1106 Raleigh, NC 27601-1096 Email: Jullah@ncleg.net P a i d f o r m J u m U o \ v ,m > . Don't Get Burned! You can be fmed up to $10,000 for illegal open burning in N.C. Smoke from open burning can cause serious health J problems ana pollute the air. That's why the state ^ regulates open burning. Only leaves, brdrfcheyor other plant growth can be burned: ■', < IT'S ILLEGAL TO ' • Garbage, paper nnd cardboard ’ : •Tiics and other rubber prodUt!?/.i i • Building materials, including liimbfec:: •Wire, plastics and synthetic rtVAeriáláf • Asphalt shingles and heavy •Paints, household chemicals and ag ricu ltu ra l products H om e ow ne ts can b u m ya rd trim m in g s - e xclud in g logs and stutnps - il It's allow ed u n d e r local ordinances, no p u b lic pICKup is aváilaU e and it doesn't cause a p u b lic nuisance. O ther allow able b u rn in g Inclildes cam pfires, o u td o o r barbecues and bonfires fo t (esHve o cca sio n ^' . Landow ners also can open b u m vegetation to clear la nd o r rl¿hls-bf- w a y, p ro vid e d tha t; ! • Prevailing winds are away from built up areas and ró^dá' T- • Fires are at least 1,000 feet away from occupied buildings’^- ; • B u rn in g is done betw een 8 a.m .-and 6 p.m . : Rtmtmbtr, bum permíta ísiuett by the N.C. tyivlslon o/Forest keiourétéf' lit agente orany local government do notexeuie a person from /olfoiiingthese Mtate air ijuaUty ralee. For more Information, contaetl WInaton-Salom Regional OKlce Division oi Air auallty N.C. Depariment ol Environment and Natural Ftesouicea Pt\onoi(338)771-(6QO (This ad paid lor by a violator ol the opon burning taw.) . 1Ш Ш ★★ F O O D ★ F U N ★ iz y ^ M o € lta v ia e /D a v le M a s o n i c P i c m c MOJVDAY, M a y 3 0 t h - S a t u r d a y , J u ]\ie 4 t h a t t h e M a s o n i c P i c n i c G r o u n d s , C l e m e n t G r o v e • j u s t o f f N o r t h M a i n S t r e e t , M o c k s v i l l e R id e s & M id w a y O p e n 6 p m -1 1 p m n ig iit ly PiCOTC D a y is T h u r s d a y , J u n e 2 T h e p u b l i c i s i n v i t e d t o b r i n g y o u r w e l l - f i l l e d b a s k e t s a n d j o i n u s f o r o u r t r a d i t i o n a l c o m m u n i t y p i c n i c . (Food should be on fables and ready to .serve by 12 Noon) T hursday’s P rogram begins at 11:00 am Featured Speaker D r. R obert Eisner a t appx. 11:15 am Lunch wiU be a t appx. 12:00 Noon. Thursday's Featured Speaker Dr. Robert Eisner Assistant Professor at Wake Forest University School of Medicine and an internationally rccognizcd expert in Nutrition in Alzheimer’s disease and Alzheimer’s diagnosis Monday, May 30 at 8:00 PM...........................................The Tomm Doollee Band LIVE ENTTEIiTAINIVIENr Tuesday, May 31 at 8:00 PM.....................................................The Craft Brothers Wednesday, June 1 at 8:00 PM;.„................................................Barry Rentz, D.J. ^ IC H N IG HT! ! Thursday, June 2 at 8:00 PM..................................Mel Jones and Bag of Bones Friday, June 3 at 8:00 FM..........................................Southern Gospel Ministries A ll N e w R id ^ s dndl A ttr^ o tio n s ! Midway by: Smokey Mountain Amusements, Inc. Please come out aiid support this 125 year old Davie County tradition benefitting ihe Masonic Children’s Home in Oxford, NC and the Masonic Eastern Star Home in Greensboro, NC Sponsored b y m e M asonic Lo ixjes o fAd k w c e #710, Farm ing ton 11265 & M o c k sv u u: It 134 The Craft Brothers Everyone is invited Thursday for the ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PICNIC LUNCH $ 0 . 0 0 /|>erson vi í i w H ■1i > 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 M a n G e t s S ix Y e a r s F o r In v o lv e m e n t In M u r d e r Continued From Page 1 on the pressure, Blankenship testified that she never intended to hurt Howell, but was trying to pro­ tect him when Nichols started beating him on the head and face. Dr. Patrick Lantz, a forensic coroner with Forsyth Medical center, testified at that trial that strangulation, not the beating, was the cause of Howell's death, Blankenship was convicted of sccond degree murder and sentenced to twelve years last November, According to Foster, the wrong person is serving the twelve year sentence. “She was too high to know what she was doing,” Foster said of Blankenship. “She was on that crack. 1 believe in my heart, it Wasn’t her that caused him to be strangled. I know that he (Nichols) was on top of Earnest, beating him. I believe that he had a hand on his neck while he beat my son. I believe he had to slip his hand under her arm and choked him to death. I know, 1 just know, it was him that killed my boy." Foster said she attended all the hearings and the trial of Blankenship. It was at that trial that she found forgiveness for her son's convicted killer. “There was times when she was playing around and such, like she was trying not to show that she wos bothered at the trial," Fosler said. "But then she turned and looked at me, I looked away, but the Lord forced me to look in her eyes. She said ‘I’m sorry’ to me. Lord, that just touched my heort. I just know there is a good person in there." By contrast, Foster said Nichol’s taunted her at one of his preliminary hearings, “He looked over to me, and put his flst against his neck, and smiled,” Foster said, “It was evil, 1 could see the evil in his eyes." Nellie Foster, Howell’s grandmother, addressed the court moments before ¿uperiof Court judge Kimberly Taylor handed down the sentence. "I had a spccial bond with that boy, he was my first grand­ son," the elder Foster said. “I love all my grandchildren, but there was a special bond with Earnest, and he (Nichols) took him from us." Foster paused to gain her composure. “I try to live my life right, your honor,” Foster continued. “But I'm not living right in my heart right now. All I want is jus­ tice." Defense attorney Harrell Powell argued that Nichols en­ tered the fray with Howell after Howell started fighting with Blankenship and started pulling her hair. According to Powell, Nichols tried to subdue Howell, but Blankenship was the aggres­ sor in the fight, “He beat the man to protect the woman," Powell said, “I told him the only way to make this plea work is to, tell the truth. I believe he has done that, your honor.” One of the few consistencies between both Blankenship’s tes­ timony in November and the facts as presented by Powell is that Howell engaged in smok­ ing crack throughout the night with Blankenship and Nichols, However, no evidence of drug use was found in the autopsy, Nichols did not testify nor make any comments during the proceeding. Donald Ray Nichols (right) and his attorney, Harrill Powell, listen to testimony.• Photo by Mike Gunning 5th Congressional District Democrats To M eet Here The 5th Congressional Dis­ trict Democratic Party will hold it’s annual convention on Satur­ day, May 21 at South Davie Middle School, 700 Hardison St., Mocksville. Registration will begin at noon and delegates will convene at I p.m. Items on the agenda include the election of 5th District Democratic Party Officers for the 2005-2007 term, discussion and approval of resolutions, and remarks from candidates. David R, Crawford, interim disu-ict chair, will open the meet­ ing with a wclcome. Clyde Scott, Davic Democrat Party chair, will wclcome the attendees to Davie. Hayes McNeill, chair of the N.C. Democratic Party Western Task Force, will give the keynote address: McNeill’s remarks will focus on the needs of Western North Carolina and the future of politics in the 5th Congressional District. During the registration hour, delegates and guests will have the opportunity to visit informa­ tion booths set up by 5th district community, civic, and issue ad­ vocacy groups. Refreshments will be available at this time and will be sponsored by Democratic Party auxiliary clubs. While elected delegates are the only individuals allowed to vole on matters brought before the convention, all registered Democrats are invited. "I encourage all registered Democrats and elected delegates in the 5th district to attend this year’s convention," said interim 5th District chair, David R, Crawford of Surry County, "We hope to provide an opportunity for district Democrats to leam more about the issue advocacy groups in our area, to fellowship ............................................... I with delegates from neighboring counties, and to enjoy this ex­ citing time in the 5th District Democratic Party as we prepare for victory in the municipal elec­ tions of 2005 and the Congres­ sional elections of 2006," The 5th Congressional Dis­ trict includes Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Davie, Stokes, Surry, Watauga, Wilkes, and Yadkin counties as well as por­ tions of Forsyth, Iredell, and Rockingham. For more informa­ tion about the 5th Congressional District Democratic Party and for further convention details, visit WWW,iicJiftlicHslricl.net. Ridgeway Could Be Tried This Summer Continued From Page 1 her while Ridgeway napped on a nearby couch. Brown explained to Taylor that the state intended to treat the trial as a capital case, and would be seeking the death penalty, Fischer introduced a sealed report by Dr. James Hilky, a psy­ chologist who interviewed Ridgeway, dated Nov, 8, 2004, Taylor did not find substantial evidence in the report to find Ridgeway incompetent, nor did a more recent report dated May 9,2005 sway her opinion. "I find that the defendant is competent to assist in his own defense,” Taylor said, “No fur­ ther competency evaluations are needed.” Ridgeway’s trial is expected to begin this summer. A N T I Q U E S P R I M IT IV E S G L A S S W A R E T o ll F r e e 8 8 8 -6 4 3 - 9 3 0 2 G R EA T ST y^E A U C T IO N CO ] -------^CAL/505A www.greatstateauction.coin F U R N I T U R E C A R S - T R U C K S T R A C T O R S - iW O R E L o c a l 3 3 6 - 6 6 7 - 9 2 6 5 SATURDAY, MAY 28TH, 9:30 A.MrREGISTRATION 8:00 A.M. SA L E SIT E ; C O R N E R O F FA RM IN G TO N R D . A N D N .C . HWY. # 8 0 1 , FA R M IN G TO N , N .C . (DAVIE C O .) 1-40 TAKE EXIT 174 TO FARMINGTON RD., THEN NORTH ON FARMINGTON RD. 3 M ILES, FOLLOW SIGNS. S A L E C O N D U C T E D F O R : P A N S Y L . F U R C H E S , L IV IN G A u ction eer's N o te; II you like Antique Furniture, are a dealer or a rellnlsher then w e have an auction you must attend. O ver lu u p ieces plus accessory Items by the dozen all Quality, Anilque & Vintage. W e also have a w ide assoitm ent ol olher m erchandise Including som e Q R E A T cars, trucks, tractors, equipm ent, trailers, etc, and w e plan on selling m ost ol the day so plan to slay latell S ale held rain or shine under the tentsll! Y'all Cornell G LASSW ARE ; 90 Pcs. Johnson Bros England "English Chippendale" • 50+ P cs Ruby R ed (Ball Pitcher) - Lois ol EAPG “Georgian" by Hom er Laughlln • "Virginia Rose" by Homer Laughlln - Homer Laughlln Dogwood China (20 Pcs) - Slolson China Co. "Tlllany" - Franciscan China - Apple Walt - Lois ol Old Stem ware - 20 P cs Jadelle by Fire King & M cKee - Blue Ridge China - M cCoy Sen/Ing Pcs - Indiana Glass W ater Set - 30 Pcs England Mason's Red Translerware Glassware - Hand Painted Tea Set - Llm oge Plaller & Olher China Pcs. - Fenlon Large Vaseline Vase - Early Transler W are - Depression Glass (20+ Pcs: Maylair, Louisa, Manhattan, Open Lace) - 25 Pcs Cape Cod Imperial - 50 Pcs OLD Blue Willow ■ Misc. China Pcs - Several Early EAPG Oil Lamps - Lois Crocks & Jugs - North Slate Vase ■ Large Old Paris Vase & Olher Pcs, FURNITtJRE; Mahogany Bow Front China • M ahogany M agazine Rack • Numerous Oak Chairs (T-Back, Press Back) • Mahogany 3 Drawer Chesl • Mahogany Sideboard - Oak Banquet Table w/ Cenier Pedestal (12'- 4 Leaves) - Early Walnut Bookcase w/ Doors - 4 Pc Mahogany Sattee Set • Gentlemen’s & Lady's Matching Walnut Queen Anne Canied Chairs (Upholstered) - Gentlemen’s & Lady's Matching Mahogany Queen Anne CaW ed Chairs - Walnut Pogged Table w/ Drawer • Cherry Pegged Table w/ Round Top - 3 Po Mahogany Settee Set w/ Large Claw Feet - 3 Oak Washstands (2 w/ Racks) - Walnut Pegged Chest w/ Mirror & Glove Boxes • Victorian Can/ed Dresser w/ Mirror - Walnut Petticoat Mirror - Walnut 4 Drawer Chesl Carved Pulls • Mahogany OKsel Chest on Chest ■ Mahogany Poster Bed - Early Pine Rope Bed • Early 3 Board Top Pine Tapered Leg Table - Duck Hoad Platlonn Rocker & Others - Fancy Carved Oak Dresser w/ Mirror & Serpentine Front w/ Roll - Fancy Bow Front Oak Server w/ Mirror & Paw Feel (Can/Ing on Mirror) • Mahogany Pie Crust Tables • Victorian High Back Bed w/ Scroll - Art D eco Oak Chest - Mahogany Drum Table & End Tables ■ Mahogany Library Table Mahogany Claw Feel Table (Small) - Early Pine Book Case w/ Doors - Rosew ood (1850) Love Seal - 4 Mahogany Sleigh Beds (2 Q ueen) • Mahogany Chlllarobe w/ Mirror ■ 2 D eco Mahogany Single Beds - Round Mahogany Dining Table ■ Hoosler Cabinet (Painted) - Hom e Enterprise Cook Stove - Oak Desk & Oak Sender • Oak Kllchen Cabinet - Mahogany China Cabinet - Mahogany Sen/er - Art Deco 6 Po Bedroom Sulle • Round Oak Table - Tiger Oak Sideboard w/ Mirror - Oak Singer Sewing Machine - 7' Pine Hareest 3,Board Top Table - Mahogany Sideboard Sheralon Style • Early Pine Baker's Cabinet • Oak Chesl ol Drawers - Maple Cabinet • Mahogany Gale Leg Table • Mahogany Drum Table w/ Leather Top - Early Pine Mantel - Mahogany 3 P c Matching Fancy Canied Table S et (End Tables & Coltee Table) - Fancy Canied Walnut Victorian Parlor Sola - Early Walnut Corner Cupboard w/ Bracket Feel (12 Pane) - Mahogany Empire Sideboard w/ Mirror • Rosew ood Plano (1890’s, Box Grand, “Chlckerlng" Boston) • Several Marble Top Tables • Mahogany Hand Painted Liquor Cabinet - Ludwig Rosewood Upright Plano • Large Pine Step Back Cupboard w/ Drawers (12 Pane, 2 Doora, 4 Door Top, 7 1/2') - 2 Oak Center Tables - Pair Mahogany Side Tables - Nice Dom e Top Trunk - Nice Mahogany C aw ed Sola - Spinning W heel - Mahogany Desk - Several Mahogany & Olher Side Tables • Phllco Upright Radio - Queen Anne Maple Drop Leal Table • Mahogany Chesl Clfsel ■ Matching Pair ol Mahogany Sheralon Bookcases - Nice Large Walnut Canopy Bed (Q ueen) w/ Turn Posts - Oak Hall Tree/Seal - Empire Mahogany Triple Bow China Cabinet - Mahogany Secrelaiy Broken Arch Top & Claw Feel - Mahogany Library Table - Large Marble Top Walnut Victorian Table w/ Drawers - Peterson & Sons Organ • Bombay Chest w/ Hand Painted Floral Design • Mahogany Drum Table w/ Marble Top - Several Mahogany What Not Shelves - Sheraton Style Mahogany Com er Cabinet w/ Broken Arc & Finale's - Fancy Can/ed Oak Lady's Secretary w/ Mirror, Drawer & Storage Boxes • M odem Secrelary/Bookcasa Hand Palnlad w/ Drawers - Brass Bed (OLD) - Mahogany Poster Bed • Art D eco Vanity - Oak Chimney Cupboard - Mahogany Sheralon Style Sen/er • Walnut Dining Table - Maple Bookcase - Mahogany Display Cabinet Chippendale Style w/ Claw Feet - Mahogany Table w/ Marble Insert • Pair Mahogany Tables w/ Leather Tops • Large Oak Sideboard w/ Claw Feel - Oak Organ Fancy Can/ed - Oak Pie Sale ■ Grandlalher Clock - Oak Liquor Cabinet - Early Oak Library Table . Mahogany Rocker • Set ol 5 Matching Oak Press Back Chairs ■ Mahogany Pie Crust Table - Set ol 4 Oak T-Back - Early Oak W indsor Chair - Set of 4 Lyre Back Chairs - Old Ball & Claw Plano Slool - Several Old Rocking Chairs • Lois ol Wicker (Solas & Chairs) - Numerous Tables & Side Chairs - MIsc, Chairs & Mora, Mora & Morell C LO C K S! O oee Seth Thom as 30 Hr Weight Clocks - O gee N ew Haven 30 Hr W eight Clocks • W elch Walnul Case Clock - Fancy N ew Haven Oak Kllchenelte Clock • Walnul C ase N ew Haven Clock & Olher Clocks. MIS CELLA N EQ U Si Pair Early Victorian Prints • Early Brass Hubbell 3 Light Celling Fixture (1920’s) - Several Yo-Yo Quills (Spool) & Other Handmade (3ullls • 100's ol Dolls - Trunks - Old Prints • 1898 Brass National Cash Regisler S#115599B (Excellent) • Lois ol Enamelware • Lamp Shades/ Lead Glass • Art Daco U m p s & Ashtray Stands - Rare Large Fancy Slain Glass Window • Several Oriental Rugs • Floor U m p s • Dough Tray & Butter Mold - Fantastic Pair Capodamanie Lamps -Pair Black Capodam anie Lamps - Porcelain Coca-Cola Button w/ Bottle Sign ■ 1897 J. Hoover & Sons Winler Scene Print (Orlg.) - -Phlllls" 1899 Copyright W H , McEntee R ace PrInI (ALL Orlg.) - Several Nice Early Prints & Earty S S e d Mirrora Pair Rosew ood O gee Frames w/ Original Prints & Olheie. 1966 Oliver Tractor w/ Mowing Deck - 1957 Allis Chalmers Tractor w/ Bush H og -19 49 Inlerriatlonal Farm All Tractor -1993 2460 Long Trador ■ 1969 D odge RT C on ve^ble (440 Magnum Engine) -1991 Chevy Camera, RS Z28 (305 Eng) - 1995 Pom lac Firebird 6 Speed Big Block V8 - 1990 Lincoln Town Car Limousine • 1989 Chrys er N ew Yorker • 1988 Chn/sler 5th Avenue - 1988 Plymouth Reliant K - 1989 Colt Station W agon - 1972 Plymouth • 1958 Chrysler N ew Yorker (4 Dodr) ■ 1924 Huppmobile ( Running and In Fair Condition) - 1996 Dodge Dooley V10 ■ 1979 Dodge D100 - 1975 Dodge D150 • I960 D odge W recker (383 V8) -1993 Olds Bravada (4x4) -1994 Ford if"'*] Dodge Conversion Caravan - 1975 Dodge Van • Heavy Duly Equipment Trailer - Gooseneck Livestock Trailer • Front End Loader lor Long Tractor ■ 5' & 6' Bush Hogs ■ Ullllly Trailer & Olher Pcs ol Vehicles & Equipment To Be Determined A 8+ HOUR SALE - YO U 'L L BE H A PPY YO U ATTENDEDII Auction Firm R eserves The Right To A dd or D elete Item s Any Announcem ent Made Day o l Sale Su persedes Any Printed Material N O T R ESPO N SIBLE FO R ACCIDENTS Q REAT CO N CESSIO NS AVAILABLE TERM S: A LL ITEMS AR E SO LD "A S IS, W HERE IS " FOR C ASH wllh no guarantees or warranlles ol any type. All payments must be m ade with good tunds which are dellned as cash cashier s check, or pre-approved checks, VIsa/MaslerCard, accepted with 3% lee. All olher checks must be accom panies by a bank teller ol ouaranleei B U Y C R 'S P R E M IU M T O B E A D D E D . D O N 'T FORGET, S A LE STAR TS AT 9:30 A.M. Sale Conducted By: G R E A T S T A T E A U C T IO N C O M P A N Y P.O. BO X 864,104 EA ST M AIN STREET, W ILK ESBO R O , N.C. 28697 www.greatstateauctlon.com Randall Woodrutt Broker M3312 NCALiraese Cell # 957-0926 Evening 336-833-3036 NCAFL<№05B Col. Burt Jarvis Broker #165108 NCALi№723 ’/.глТ ‘ <4. District Court DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - 5 The following cases were heord in Davie Dislricl Court on May , Presiding: Judge L. Dale Graham. Prosecuting: Kevin Beale and Wendy Terry, Assis­ tant DAs. - Benjamin Allred, posses­ sion of open container, dis­ missed, possession of mall bev­ erage under age 2 1, dismissed, misdemeanor possession sched­ ule VI controlled substance, sen­ tenced to 10 days, suspended 12 months, unsupervised probation, $100, cost. - Dannie Angel, driving while impaired, sentenced lo 45 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, 24 hours community service, surtender license, not lo drive a motor vehicle until prop­ erly licensed, $100, cost. - Caroline Athey, no inspec­ tion sticker, dismissed; expired registration, dismissed. - Ronald Austin, speeding 83 in a 70, reduced to improper equipment, $10, cost. - Stacey Baker, speeding 100 in a 70, dismissed; reckless driv­ ing to endanger, cost. - Sherry Barlow, driving while revoked, prayer for judge- ijient, cost, - Louis Beford, exceeding a safe speed, dismissed. - Brandon Bledsoe, speeding , 97 in a 55, prayer for judgement, cost. - Joshua Brewer, driving while impaired, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 24 months, un­ supervised probation, 24 hours community service, surrender, license, not to drive a motor ve­ hicle until properly licensed, $100, cost. - Larry Brinkley, driving while revoked, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 18 months, un­ supervised probation, sunender license, not to drive a motor ve­ hicle until properly licensed, $100, cost. - Claudia Carreon, speeding 68 in a 55, reduced to improper e:quiprrient, cost. - Eyder Carvajal, breaking and entering, sentenced to 30 ' days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, remit cost. - Jonathon Chaplin, reckless driving to endanger, prayer for judgement, cost. - Vernon Clement, misde­ meanor larceny, dismissed; re­ sisting officer, dismissed, - Shanie Clinton, operating vehicle with no insurance, dis­ missed; expired insurance, dis­ missed; failure lo reduce speed, cost, - Jeffery Cope, driving while impaired, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 24 months, unsuper­ vised probation, 24 hours com­ munity servicc, surrender li­ cense, not lo drive a motor ve­ hicle until properly licensed, $100, cost, - Evelyn Coulter, speeding 86 in a 70, reduced to improper equipment, $5, cost, - Deborah Ebright, reckless driving to endanger, reduced to improper equipment, cost. - David Eldred, speeding 51 in a 35, reduccd lo improper equipment, cost. - Gary Oemes, expired in­ spection, dismissed; flclilious license, dismissed; driving while revoked, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 12 months, unsuper- vised probation, surrender li­ cense, not lo drive a motor ve­ hicle until properly licensed, $100, cost. - Eleazar Gonzalez, driving while revoked, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 12 months, 2 days active, supervised proba­ tion, cost. - Clyde Griffith, larceny, sen­ tenced to 120 days. - David Harris, reckless driv­ ing to endanger, prayer for judgement, cost; speeding 100 in a 70, dismissed; following loo closely, dismissed. - Raymond Hellard, driving while revoked, prayer for judge­ ment, cost. - Roguela Hemandez, speed­ ing 94 in a 70, dismissed; no operators license, cost. - Norris Hudson, violation of a protective order, sentenced to 150 days, suspended 2 years, su­ pervised probation, $50, cost. - Gilbert Johnson, 2 counts misdemeanor probation viola­ tion, sentenced lo 1 year, 45 doys. - Richard Kelly, misde­ meanor probátion violation, sen­ tenced to 45 days; unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, dis­ missed. - Jason Lewis, no operators license, dismissed; misde­ meanor possession, dismissed, speeding 82 in a 65, dismissed; possession of drug paraphema- He W asn’t Cited When Johnathan Loos read last week’s Enterprise Record, he was upset. There was his name on page 5 - Johnathan Kane Loos, 17, of Advance, listed as being cited for underage possession of an al­ coholic beverage. Loos was not cited. He had not been drinking. The young man was at the party off of Birdsong Road, and submitted to an Alco-Sensor test by Davie sheriff Is deputies. He registered a .00, meaning he Don't Get Burned! You can be fined up to $10,000 for illegal open burning in N.C. S m o k e f r o m o p e n b u r n in g c a n c a u s e s e rio u s h e a llh p r o b le m s a n d p o llu t e Ih e a i r . T h a i's w h y th e s ta le r e g u la te s o p e n b u r n in g . O n ly le a v e s , b r a n c h e s o r ^ o t h e r p la n t g r o w t h c a n b e b u r n e d . IT'S ILLEGAL TO BURN; •G arbage, paper and cardboard •T ires and o ther ru b be r producís •B u ild in g m aterials, in clu d in g lum ber •W ire , plastics and synthetic m aterials •A sp h a lt stiingtcs and heavy oils •P aints, household chem icals and a g ricu ltu ra l products H o m e ow ne rs can b u m ya rd trim m in g s - e xclud in g lo, if it's a llo w ed u n d e r local ordinances, no p u b lic P‘C*up u ntiisanrp D m or allow able bu ■ »WM«* J a llo w ed u n d e r locai oram antc», i\u puum . p .,j<up is available and it doesn't cause a p u b lic nuisance. O ther allow able b u rn in g includes cam pfires, o u td o o r barbecues and bonfires fo r fra tive occaslom. Lan dow ners also can open b u m vegetation lo clear la nd o r rigm s-ol- w a y, p ro v id e d that: • P re va ilin g w in d s are a w ay from b u ilt up areas and roads • Fires are at least 1,000 feet aw ay fro m occupied b uildin g s • B u rn in g is done betw een 8 a.un. and 6 p.m . Remmber, bun, p,mlt> l»ucd by th, N.C, DW .Ion N.O. Department ol EnvironmenI and Natural ResourcesPhono: (336) 77MOOO . (Thia ad paid fqr by a violator ol tho opon bumlnfl law.) Ua, sentenced to 30 days, sus­ pended 12 months, unsupervised probation, $100, cost. - Jonathon Maverick, finan­ cial card fraud, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 4 years, super­ vised probation, cost. - fimesl Moore, speeding 90 in a 65, prayer for judgement, cost. . - Walter Nicholson, speeding 97 in a 70, prayer for judgement, cost; reckless driving to endan­ ger, prayer for judgement. -• Mark Pelrishen, failure to notify DMV of an address change, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 6 months, unsuper- vised probation, $100, cost; speeding 70 in a 55, reduced to improper equipment, cost; fail­ ure to wear a seatbelt, dismissed. . - Jack Powers, speeding 77 in a 65, reduccd to improper equip­ ment, cost - Martin Ramirez, driving while revoked, dismissed; fail­ ure to reduce speed, dismissed. - Lydia Reed, 4 counts worth­ less check, dismissed. - Bernardo Reynoso, failure to secure passenger, dismissed; no operators license, prayer for judgement, cost. - Monica Rhyne, speeding 91 in a 70, prayer for judgement, cost. - Marcia Serrano, driving while revoked, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, cost. - Justin Sharrock, speeding 89 in a 70, reduced to improper equipment, $100, cost. - Janie Shore, unauthorized use of a motor vehicle, dis­ missed. - Carios Silva, consume beer underage, sentenced to 48 hours, suspended 6 months, $10, cost. - Kevin Simpson, speeding 89 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, cost. - Kimberiy Stacy, expired registration, dismissed; operate wilh no registration, dismissed; no insurance, dismis.sed; speed­ ing 89 in a 55, reduccd to ex­ ceeding a safe speed, $50, cost. - Dunny Stroud, driving while revoked, sentenced to 90 days, ficticious license, consoli­ date wilh prior judgement; fail­ ure to wear seatbelt, consolidate with prior judgement. - Rotonda Stroud, simple possession, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, $100, cost. - Terry Temples, defacing public building, prayer for judgement, cost; resisting pub­ lic officer, dismissed. - Lance West, speeding 90 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $10, cost. - Robert Yokley, assault on a female, prayer for judgement, cost. hadn’t been drinking. Davic Sheriff Allen Whitaker said the error came when mem­ bers of his staff transcribed officer’s notes, and mistakenly put Loos wilh Ihe others who were cited, “I do apologize,” Whitaker said, "It was our error that his name was pul on the wrong list.” Loos, who will graduate with honors from Davie Hifeh School Friday night, will attend Ihe University of North Corolina- Chapel Hill in the fall. ONE STOP FOR ALL YOUR WATER GARDEN NEEDS M ARSH A’S KOI £ WATER M№E№ Ореи; g W-Th-F-g I tlam-ópm | Closed Sunday | Appt MoM-Tues a 1 3 3 6 -4 «? 2 -74 2 3 1 I 64W OF MOCKSVILLE TO CALAHALN RD. | I (NEAR LAKE MYERS CAMPGROUND) s I THEN l.qMI TO BEAVER BRANCH TRAIL | i NEWLY REMODELED WITH LARGER WATER GARDEN CENTER I FAMILY STEAKHOUSE Monday & Wednesday 4 p.m. to Closing S i r l o i n T ip s $ ¿ 9 9 1580 Yadkinville Rd. • Mocksvllle • 336-751-0436 For Franchise Intormation call 1-800-244-1314 or www.prlmeslrloln.com J \'$ \A 0\ Ш \ б 0 т о \ о ^ . W c o e o c e . 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DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Public Records Land IVansfers The following land transfers were filed with the Davie Reg­ ister of Deeds, listed by parties ' involved, ncrcage, township, and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $1,000. - John A. Spillman to Marcel Austin and Evette C. Austin, .69 acre, $230. - Cambridge Isenhour Homes to Gary L. Loeser and Audrey L. Loeser, I villa, Farmington, $542. - The Piedmont Group to Thomas A. Foxx and Virginia A. Foxx, 1 lot, Farmington, $260. - Billie Angeli Horton lo Lighthouse Properties, 5 lols, Mocksville, $340. - Masuki M. Williamson to Peter McGriff and Melissa Aus­ tin McGriff, 1 tract, $40. - Virginia F. Tutlerow to Donald Ray Tutlerow, 1 lot, Jerusalem. - Virginia F. Tutterow to David Eugene Ibtterow, Linda T. Keller, Bonnie T. Zander, Carolyn Suzanne Koontz and Donald Ray Tuuerow, 2 tracts, Jerusalem. - Westphalia Construction to James В. Taylor and Ann J. Tay­ lor, 1 lot, Farmington, $595. - Lou Grace James (1% in­ terest) to Robert Eugene James and Richard Dean James, 4.5 acres, Mocksville, - Robert H. Tysinger to Donald D. Boyd and Ruthie A. Boyd, 1.75 acres. - Robert Dale Carter and Pam Carter lo Charlie Ridings and Rosalind B. Ridings, .75 acre, • Jerusalem. - Jeffrey D. Hayes and Nancy M. Hayes to James S. Jones and MelanieJones, 1 lot, Clarksville, S349. - LaSalle Bank National As­ sociation, trustee lo ITAC 100, 15.56 acres,Mocksville,$3,683. - James C. Ijames and Coleen C. Ijames to Jose Pereira and Edit Pereira, 1 lot, Jerusalem, $100. i.j - Marvin Wayne Bowles and Barbara C. Schneeloch and Paul Schneeloch to Brian Curlis Bowles, 2 tracts, Mocksville. - Barbara C. Schneeloch and Paul Schneeloch lo Marvin Wayne Bowles, 3 tracts, Mocksville. - Odell L. Rhynehanlt Sr. and Gracie A. Rhynehardt to Odell Lewis Rhynehardt Jr., 4 tracts, Farmington. - Eagle Developing Co. to Anthony Dominick Luce, I lot, Farmington, $892. - Morgan Builders to Sabrina Carole Rhodes, 1 lol, Farming­ ton, $910. M A STE R ’S TOUCH A N TIQ U E P LAN K Master’s Touch Antique Plank flooring captures the feel and appearance of original character distinction conditioned over time. Master's Touch Antique Plank flooring wilt continue to evoke historic grandeur and unique styling for years to con,e. ^ a r c f WEAR MAX ADVANCED CERAMIC FINISH Created from the same Itchnology that protects space shutllet jnm atmosphere re-entry heatt WEARMAX" provides inertdibte wear and ttain resistance to keep your floor looking great. No other flooringfinish on the market today can match performance ofWEARMAX'. w éÀ R i - William Johnson Marklin Jr. and Betty Marklin, William Johnson Marklin П1 and Julie Marklin to James H. Mills and Rebecca L. Mills, I lot, Jerusa­ lem, $200. - Roger P. Spillman to Shan­ non Duree Spillman, 1 parcel, Jerusalem. - H. Terry Hutchens, substi­ tute trustee to Fannie Mae, 1 lot, Mocksville. - Jade Associates II to Timo­ thy Wayne Cranfill, 2 tracts, $70. - Travco-BRT to HiLo Enter­ prises, 1 parcel, Farmington, $U 00. - Beth Suzanne Waller to Beth Suzanne Waller and Herman Oscar Waller, .72 acre, Mocksville. - Citifinanclal Mortgage to Gary Dean Butler, J lot, Jerusa­ lem, $30. - ABBA Inc. to Kristin M. Garner, 1 unit, Farmington, $188. - С J. Ramey, attorney in fact for Oak Valley Associates, Ridge Run Properties and Oak Valley Properties to Forrest C. Cranfill Construction, 1 lot, Farmington, $140. - Tama O’Mara to Jeffrey D. Hayes and Nancy M. Hayes, 1 lot. Shady Grove, $40. - Jack D. Feraer and Judith P. Femeer to David B. Rea and Nancy K. Rea, 1 lot, Farmington, $1,650. - James David Comatzer and Christy N. Comatzer to Donald S. Johnson Jr. and Nancy A. Johnson, 1 acre, Clarksville, $246. - Colonial Estates lo Richard P. Hendricks and Carol D. Hendricks, 1 lot, Mocksville, $50. - Wells Fargo Bank to Beeding & Caudle, I lot, Mocksville, $123. - Frances E. Brenner to Ken­ neth N. Lard and Kerri B. Lard, 1 lol, Farmington, $420. - Jeffrey D. Hayes and Nancy M. Hayes to Matthew W, Vaughn and Teresa A. Moore, 1 lot, Clarksville, $290. Mocksville Police The following incidents were reported to the Mocksville Po­ lice Department. - The larceny of an ATM card from a hotel on Yadkinville Road was reported May 10. - The larceny of a wallet from a restaurant on Madison Road was reported May 10. - The larceny of a bicycle from 215 Cemetery St. was re­ ported May 10. - The larceny of fish hooks from Wal-Mart was reported May 10. - The larceny of $15.01 worth of fuel from Fast Track, Yadkinville Road, was repotted May 11. - The larceny of money from drink machines at 1115 Yadkinville Road was reported May 12. - The breaking, entering and larceny of tools, games, money and jewelry from a residence on Mountview Drive was reported May 12. - The breaking, entering and larceny of money from drink machines at 277 Wilkesboro St. was reported May 12. - 'rae shoplifting of a swim­ suit from Wal-Mart was reported May 12. - The larceny of money from Fast Track, Yadkinville Road, was reported May 15. - The larceny of tools from a residence on Center Street was reported May 13. - The larceny of a cell phone from a vehicle on North Clem­ ent Street was reported May 16. - The lorceny of items from a purse at a residence on 268 Milling Road was reported May 16. - A woman reported May 12 that her daughter was assaulted at a restaurant in Mocksville. - The larceny of $20.09 worth of fuel from Homs Ex­ press, US 601 South, was re­ ported May 15. Arrests - Kandi Lavera Jones, 20, of 173 Grey St., was charged May 11 with larceny by employee. TVial date: May 19. - Rhonda Fink Manns, 34, of Lexington, was charged May 12 with obtaining property by false pretense. Trial date: May 19. - Emily Rae Stem, 18, of 150 Deadmon Road, was charged May 12 wilh shoplifting. Trial dale: June 23. - Chasity Renee Holmes, 18, of 3817 US 64 W., was charged May 12 wilh shoplifting. Trial date''/uie‘i3 t’^j>W'? | - James Sheets, 29, of 300 Milling Road Apt. 33, was charged May 15 with assault on a female. Trial date: June 2. Clinton Antwan Cockerham, 30, of 202 Grover Road, was charged May 14 with possession of marijuana, posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia and driving while license revoked and failure to yield blue lights and siren. Trial date: June 17. - Jermil Tryess Cockerham, 27, of Statesville, was charged May 14 with possession of co­ caine and parole and probation ’MAX H rs : M o n . -F ri. 8 -6 & S at. 9-1 2 1 3 N e w H ig h w a y 6 4 W e st, L e x in g to n , N C P h o n e : ( 3 3 6 ) 2 4 9 - 6 6 7 2 C A R P E T & F L O O R I N G C O V E R I N G violations. Trial date: June 17. - Terry Lynn Potts, 58, of 174 Williams Road, was charged May 13 wilh DWI and driving while license revoked. Trial date: June 17. IVanic Accidents - No charges were filedjafter a wreck on Funder Drive at 2:13 p.m. May 9. Silvestre Beiza Garcia, 33, of Woodward Road,backed a 1993 Mercury from the Funder park­ ing area, causing it to hit a 2001 Mack truck driven on Funder Drive by Timothy James Corker, 55, of Cau-o, Ga., reported Of­ ficer Danny R. Chandler. - No charges were filed after a wreck on Rollingwood Drive at 3:47 p.m. May 9. Ashley Renee Sales, 16, of Creekside Drive, drove a 1996 Dodge from a private drive strik­ ing a 1994 Plymouth being driven on Rollingwood by Heather Anderson Grant, 30, of Salisbury Street, reported Of­ ficer R.M. Robbins. - Donald Ray Humphrey, 32, of Lewisville, failed to stop the 2002 Dodge he was driving on Yadkinville Road at 4 p.m. May 9 before it struck in the rear a 1994 Chevrolet driven by Zenen Nazario Lorenzo, 21, of Win­ ston-Salem, reported Officer R.A. Donathan. - Sandra Jones Ray, 62, of Mocksville, was cited for failing to see before starting after the 1986 Ford she was driving struck the rear of a 1999 Ford driven by Patricia Susan Donaldson, 48, of Stonewood Road, on South Main Street at 9:45 a.m. May 6, imported Of­ ficer S.W. Shore. - No charges were filed after a wreck on Wilkesboro Street at 4:28 p.m. May 9. Charles Randolph Goad, 55, of Dogwood Lane, failed to stop the 1994 Chevrolet he was driv­ ing before it struck the rear of a 1987 Ford driven by Sherman Desi Arnold, 49, of Meta Breeze Lane, reported Officer L. Keith Gunter.' Highway Patrol The following traffic wrecks in Davie County were listed by the N.C. Highway Patrol. Woman Charged In Wreck A North Carolina woman was charged with failure to reduce speed after the vehicle she was driving hit another May 12. Allison Smiley Swisher of Harmony was driving her 2003 Ford vehicle south on N.C. 801 in the left turn lane to U.S. 158. Sanford Timothy Wooten of Yadkinville was driving a 2000 Chevrolet pick-up south on N.C. 801 in the left turn lane lo U.S. 158 and had decreased speed for traffic ahead. Swisher failed to slow her vehicle in time and it collided with Wooten's. Trooper M.T. Dalton reported the accident occurred at approxi­ mately 8 a.m. Vehicle Hits Hay Bale No charges were filed after an accident on May 13. Janet Biles Byram of IwCxington was driv­ ing her 1997 Jeep south on U.S. 601. Byram's vehicle collided with a large hay bale in the road. Byrams vehicle went off the road to the right and overturned. Trooper M.C. Howell re­ ported the accident occurred at approximately 8:45 p.m. Man Charged In Wreck A Davie man was charged with exceeding a safe speed af­ ter he wrecked the vehicle he was driving May 14. Robert Daniel Browning of 395 Buck Seaford Road, Mocks­ ville was driving his 1995 Dodge vehicle north on U.S. 601. Browning attempted to make a right turn onto the 1-40 east en­ trance ramp and lost control of his vehicle. Browning's vehicle collided with ihe, curb and sev­ eral small trees. Trooper M.C. Howell reported the accident oc­ curred al 11:46 p.m. Fires Davie County fire depart­ ments responded lo the follow­ ing calls: May 10: Jerusalem, 5:10 p.m., Boxwood Church Road, fire alarm; Cooleemee assisted; Jerusalem, 5:43 p.m., Boxwood Church Road, fite alarm; Jerusa­ lem assisted; Center, 5:58 p.m., 1-40 West, smoke investigation; County Line assisted; Sheffield- Calahaln, 6:43 p.m, Harmony Fire Department, company trans­ fer; Mocksville, 7:36 p.m., N. Main Street, fire alarm; Center, 7:48 p.m., 1-40 West, automo­ bile accident; County Line as­ sisted; Smilh Grove, 7:53 p.m., U.S. 158, hazardous conditions: Mocksville, 7:55 p.m., Cloister Drive, hazardous conditions; Cornatzer-Dulin, 8:14 p.m., Comatzer Road, field fire; Ad­ vance, 8:33 p.m.. Oak Valley Boulevard, hazardous condi­ tions; Advance, 8:43 p.m.. Brier Creek Road, structure fire; Fork assisted; Comatzer-Dulin, 8:52 p.m.. Brier Creek Road, struc­ ture fire; Advance, 9:01 p.m.. Fork Bixby Road, suucture fire; Fork assisted; Comatzer-Dulin assisted; Jerusalem, 9:19 p.m., U.S.64 West,company transfer. May 11: Fannington, 12:22 p.m., Farmington Methodist Church fire alarm; Smilh Grove assisted; Smith Grove, 3:42 p .m., BJ'S Restaurant, automobile ac­ cident; Mocksville assisted, May 12: Center,8:12a.m,,I- 40 East, reported vehicle fire; County Line assisted; County Line, 2:43 p.m., company trans­ fer to Scotch Irish Fire Depart­ ment; Smith Grove, 5:12 p.m., Commerce Drive, business fire alarm. May 14: Advance, 8:39 p.m., Underpass Road, automobile ac­ cident: Center, 1:02 a.m., 1-40 East, automobile accident; County Line assisted. May 15: Advance, 10:29 p.m., Austine Lane, structure fire; Comatzer-Dulin assisted. Arrests The Davie County Sheriffs Department made the following arrests: • - Jeremy Lee Goldner, 20, of 332Pleasant Acre Lane,Mocks­ ville was arrested May 6 for fail­ ure to appear. Trial date: May 23 in Guilford County. - Amy Transou Mise, 38, of 122 Dogtiott Road, Mocksville was arrested May 6 for resisting, delaying and obstructing. Trial date: June 9. - Richard Paul Miller, 22, of Franlkinville was arrested May 7 for DWI, careless/reckless driving, failure to register ve­ hicle, driving wilh license re­ voked, fictitious registration card, resisting a public officer, and fictitious information to an officer. Trial date: June 3. - Morless Edwards Shelby, 37, of 926 Howardtown Road, Mocksville was arrested May 7 for assault on a female. Trial date: June 16. - Rebecca Nellies Pyrtle, 39, of 363 Juney Beauchamp Road, Advance was arrested May 8 for possession of drug parapherna­ lia. Trial date: June 9. - Randau Alexander Beny, 24, of 115 Wills Road, Advance was anested May 9 for larceny of motor fuel. Trial dale; May 26 in Forsyth County. - Quincy Donnell Rodmon, 20, of Woodleaf was arrested May 10 for resisting a public officer, felony possession of co­ caine, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Trial date; May 19. - William Arthur Moore, 78, of 106 Lybrook Drive, Advance was arrested May 10 for viola­ tion of a domestic violence pro­ tective order. Trial date: May 19. - Johnathan David Reeves, 28, of 617 Main Church Road, Mocksville was arrested May 11 for failure to comply. Trial date: May 17. - Richard Eugene Whitling Jr., 23, of 138 Jerusalem Av­ enue, Mocksville was arrested May 11 for violation of a do­ mestic violence protective or­ der. Trial dale: May 19. - Roaty Dean Porter, 44, of 610 Fred Lanier Road, Mocks­ ville was arrested May 1? for resisting, obstructing, and de­ laying. Trial date; June 9. - Bemice Smith Taylor, 79, of442 Riverdale Road, Mocks­ ville was arrested June 12 for assault with a deadly weapon. Trial date: May 19. - Eleanor Romero Gonzalez, 27,of203 Delano's Way .Mocks­ ville was arrested May 12 for assault on a female. Trial date: May 19. - Randy Dean Frank. 43. of 137 Ralph Road, Mocksville was arrestedMay 12forindecentllb- erties wilh a child. Trial date: July 18. Sheriffs Department The following incidents were reported to the Davie County Sheriff’s Department. - On April 18 Tom Lehman reported forgery at a food store on N.C. 801 North, Advance; - Jason Kimrey reported a vehicle was damaged at a home on Cable Lane, Mocksville on May 6. - On May 6 an assault on a female was reported at a home on Howardtown Rioad, Mocks),- ville. - Howard Jones reported a suspicious phone call at a home on Southwood Drive, Mocks­ ville on May 6. - On May 6 Cythnia Holmes reported a cell phone was taken from a home on Bear Creek Church Road, Mocksville. - Judy Gobble reported pre­ scription medications were taken from a home.on Sheffield Road. Mocksville on May 6. - On May 6 Angela Hayes reported a break-in at a camp­ ground on U.S. 64. Mocksville. - Haley Meenan reported a check card was taken from a home on Swicegood Street, Cooleemee on May 7 . - On May 7 Cheryl Dobbiiis and Michael Bohn reported em­ bezzlement and fraud at a busi­ ness on U.S. 158, Advance. - Thomak’liahman reported forgery ■ at a; grocery store on N.C. 801 North, Advance on May 7. - On May 7 child abuse was reported at a home on Elk Lane, Mocksville. - An assault on a female was reported at a home on Swicegood Street, Cooleemee on May 8. - On May 8 James Grose re­ ported a mailbox was damaged al a home on Ollie Harkey Road, Mocksville. - Thomas Martin reported a break-in at a location on Pineville Road, Mocksvllle on May 9. - On May 9 Keith and Audrey Jones reported lost or taken credit cards at a business on Farmington Road, Mocksville. - Kathy Draughn reported harassing phone calls at a home on Lakewood Drive, Mocksville on May 9. - On May 10 Stanley Thomas reported a break-in at a location on'Foster Road, Mocksville. - Rickie Hamby reported the unauthorized use of a motor ve­ hicle at a home on Swicegood Street, Mocksville on May 10. - On May 11 Morris Soard Jr. and David Graham reported a larceny at a gas station on N.C. 801 North, Advance. - John Bracken reported a break-in at a home on County Line Road, Mocksville on May 11 . - On May 11 Joe Lanier re­ ported an assault at a home on N.C. 801 South, Advance. - An assault on a female was reported at a home on Cana Road, Mocksville on May 11. - On May 12 Ruby James re­ ported a check was taken from a home on Casa Bella Drive, Ad­ vance. - Timothy Williams reported the unauthorized use of a motor vehicle at a home on U.S. 158, Mocksville on May 12. - On May 12 Brian Sellars reported an armed robbery at a rest area on 1-40 West, Mocks­ ville, P o lic e H a r a s s m e n t ? Young People Say It’s One Reason They’re Not Happy DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Mny 19,2005 - 7 Members of SURF (Students Understanding Real Futures) presented findings from focus group surveys of young people in Davie County on May 5 at Ihe Public Library. SURF, a youth philanthropy group organized by the Community Foundation of Davie County wilh grant funds from the NC Discovery Alliance, is designed to teach young people leadership skills, gives them a voice in their community, and empowers them lo make a difference. ‘Eight member^ of the 15- member SURF reported the results from 28 focus groups asking questions of more than 435 Davie County young people. SURF asked the young people surveyed to be honest in their answers and respectful of the opinions of others in the group. Survey results were as Friends Of NRA Banquet June 9 The Friends of the NRA ban­ quet will be held at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, June 9 at Bermuda Run Country Club. Tickets are $25. Contact Sen. Andrew Brock at 414-3665. Rock With The Cops Cooleemee To Give Away 100 Bicycle Helmets COOLEEMEE - A hundred bicycle helmets will be given .away at "Rock With Cops" from 6-9 p.m. Salurday, June 4 at the ■ Cooleemee Schpol,gyji;i;.-|- _ Sponsored by the Cooleemee Police Department and busi­ nesses, the goal is to promote bicycle, safety, There will be music, food and free bike,in­ spections. I, , . VTell your friends to come and rock with the Coojeemee Cops,” said Police: Chief Joey Reynolds. Cooleemee Civitans will pro­ vide free hotdogs. There will be a raffie and a DJ. follows: What are the strengths of Davie County, specifically for young people? • Football team / sports • Small town / strong sense of community • Low crime • Know everyone What are the weaknesses / issues? What arc some of the things young people aren’t happy with in Davie County? • Nplhing lo do •Police harassment • No place'to hang out where kids aren’t chased off • Schools - loo small, too crowded • Dmgs ' Racism • No county transportation • No jobs for youth Not enough money for school computers / technology that works What do you think young people in Davie County like to do when they are not in school? • Leave • Party / Drink • Play sports • Skateboard (but then they gel into trouble) • Sleep • Ride dirt bikes • Play video games • Go to movies • Hang out with friends If there was one way that you could help your community, what would you do? • Pick up Utter • Community service for projects we care about (painting, gardening, etc) • Fundraisers for teens • Volunteer (particularly at the Storehouse for Jesus) If there was an empty building in Davie County for young people, what would you want in it?^, , •Movies' . , ,p Shopping opportunities / Mall • Teen Center • Teei) Dance Club • Bowling Alley •Better restaurants, I,, . "BMiXbikepark , . • Commvinity pool , • Cof(ep, house • Second high school “We found the results interesting,” said Community Foundation president Jane Simpson. "Many of the answers we expectcd, but the number of groups discussing harassment by law enforcement and lack of transportation surprised us, "I think most of our community is awnrc of the lack of positive activities for young people. Fortunately, various organizations arc beginning discussions to address this issue.” Those interested in following through on solutions for issues identified will form a Youth Grants Board. Applications are being accepted with members of SURF having priority for the 11- 15 slots. The Youth Grants Board will receive additional training over the summer to become effective grant makers. They will accept proposals from young people and community organizations in the fall to address the areas they choose to focus on. “Thanks to the support of the Community Foundation of Davie County, the Margaret C. Woodson Foundation, and the NC Discovery Alliance, our youth will hove $5,000 to make grant decisions with at year-end. An endowed Youth Fund has been created with the Communi­ ty Foundation to ensure there are dollars for youth needs in the future,” said Simpson, “This will help empower our young people lo choose and fund projects that make a difference for them.” Adult allies will be needed as the youth begin discussing projects, Future funding will be needed to grow the endowment and to provide grant dollars for 2006. Anyone interested in participating or learning more about the SURF survey-or the Youth Grants Board should contact the foundation at 753- 6903, PO Box 546, Mocksville ox mfo@daviefoiimlation'.'org^ Dixieund Farm Summer Camp spots are still available! Call to find out morel www.dlxlelandfarm.com Concacc M arisu Phone: 33M 92*M 03 I7M Godbey Road - Mocksviilc. N C 17018 POWER IN YOUR PALM. Phones by Motorola. NEXTEL AUTHO R IZED R E P R C fC N TA TIV I Every Nextel* phone has a bullt-ln walkie-talkie, so you can connect coast-to-coast In under a second. And Nextel phones are GPS-enabled, have speakerphone and wireless web access. Everything you need In one powerful package. З ^Т Н Е Р Н О Ж P L A C E 121 Depot St. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 Mon.-Fri. 8:30am-5pm Sat. 9am-12noon 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 6 2 6 Ntittl'i Niiionwida Nthvork servei 297 of Iht top 300 mirketi. C2005 Nextel Comfnunicatlons Inc. NEXTEL, DIRCCT CONNECT, NATIONWIDE DIRECT CONNECT iHilemjfli Ollice. All IWrJ party pioiucl or imlce namei in Ihi pioperty ol llnlr tiipetllve owneti. All righli lesMVtd.______________ At Brookridge, we offer the highest level of assisted living and sldlled nursing care in a veiy friendly atmosphere. In addition, you have full access to our on-preniise sem ces such as our libraiy, bank and convenience store. Surround yourself with your personal belongings and invite your friends and family to visit whenever they like. Al Brookridge, we don’t just care for you. We care about you. В щ о У гЙ ^ A Baptist Retiiement Homes Community 1199 Hayes Forest Drive • W nston-Siilcm, NC 27106 • 336,759, HM'i • w\v\v,brli.org M ower Broken? Taking Vacation? 1 Tim e, 2 Tim es, A ii tiie Tim e? We’re Here Wiien You Need Us Dame Lamn care Prices so low... You’ll never mow! Free estimates Commercial & Residential Insured Weekly & Bi-Weekly Services We also pressure wash! (336)345-0061 • (336)909-2554 Nextel ID# 150*25*26008 Dauie 1ашп care 25% OFF 1st Weekly Service (3 3 6 ) 3 4 5 -0 0 6 1 i 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,200S Dinner, Auction i\1ay 25 to Benefit Tiie Storeliouse Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel award winners, from left: seated - Amanda Key Shore, Renee McDaniel Anna Wilson, Elizabeth Swicegood and Cathy Young: row 2 - Mark Robertson, Doris Short, Kathi Wall, Martha Rollins, Alicia Johnson, Robin Myers, Sandy Robertson and Lorri Jones; row3 - Douglas Cooke, Dick Barnes, Bob Church, Jimmy Melton, Troy Shepherd, William Collins, J.D. Mabe, Walt Hash and Mackle M cDaniel. (Not pic­ tured: Barry Schline, Bob Martin, Christie Ruff, Emma Placke, Kelven Cockerham, Kyle Swicegood, Lorie Frye and Hope San Filippo. Reai Estate Firm Honors Employees Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel has announced their top producer for 2004. Alicia Johnson earned the top individual producing sales associates award based on the highest level of scrvicc and productivity. This is the nol the first time that Johnson has earned an award that recognizes her sales production. “The home buyers and sellers of the Triad truly have a reol estate resource they can trust in Johnson," said Kathi Wall, broker-in-charge of the Mocks­ ville branch. "Alicia under­ stands that for many people, buying or selling a home is the most significant purchase of a lifetime, and she leverages her real estate knowledge and pro­ fessionalism to help make each transaction as smooth as possible." “1 am honored to have received the Top Individual Producer Aword. My customers and clients have been loyal and have entrusted me to handle what is one of the most significant and important purchases in their lives," said Johnson. Additionally, Johnson has been awarded with one of Century 21 Real Estate Corpor­ ation's coveted awards, the Ruby Level Masters Award for 2004. Ruby level is awarded to an agent who has met a high level of service and productivity in a calendar year. A gold-plated lapel pin with ruby accent is awarded to the agent during the Century 21 Regional Awards Ceremony, in addition to a trophy and a personal invitation to a Century 21 Top Agent Retreat. Elizabeth Swicegood, sales associate wilh the Mocksville office, was recognized as one of the system’s top-producers nationwide when il honored her with the System’s Emerald Level Masters Award. Emerald Level status is awarded to an agent who has met the required high level of service and productivity within a calendar year. A gold-plated lapel pin with emerald accent is awarded to the agent during the awards ceremony, in addition to a trophy and a personal invitatiqn to attend a Top Agent Retreat. Swicegood earned the top team producer award for 2004. “Elizabeth places her real estate wisdom and passion for life into her everyday business, helping to make clients more comforlable.with the real estate transaction as they make what may be the most significant purchase of their lives," said Maekie McDaniel, general partner of Swicegood Wall & McDaniel. “Elizabeth is a valued and trusted real estate resource for the Triad community and a major contributor to the overall success of Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel and the system as a whole. By attaining and receiving this award, Elizabeth is in the Top 2% of agents in the United States." Johnson and Swicegood also have been awarded “21 Club Elite" inclusion for 2004. The following agents representing the Clemmons and Mocksville offices have camed and have been awarded “21 Club" inclusion commencing the fourth quarter of 2003 and including up through the first quarter of 2005: Doris Short, Anna Wilson, Alicia Johnson and Elizabeth Swicegood, Mocksville; and Dick Bames, Sandy Robertson and Amanda Key Shore, Clemmons. To earn inclusion into the “21 Club", an agent must achieve a high level of service and productivity in a designated quarter. “We all are proud of these individuals for high achieve­ ments in real estate and are looking forward to their con­ tinuing inclusion into these award categories in the future," H E R C H O I C E R ecord ed Testim onies O f A b o rtio n D e cisio n s *%eam The True Facta” 24 H o u r-A n o n y m o u s w w w .h e rc h o ic e n c .c o m 336-748-8777 National Golf Cars H u g e S e l e c t i o n We offer Custom Built Cars Complete Service & Parts Come See the "57 Chevy" Golf Car! 1320 Litton Drive Salisbury, NC ( Í m ile b e h in d th e H ig h w a y Р ш п )1 H e iu lg u a r fe r s ) 7 0 4 -8 5 5 -3 2 0 0 stated Douglas Cooke, broker- in-charge, Clemmons. Another year-cnd award was presented by Swicegood Wall & McDaniel’s affinity in-house partner. Granite Mortgage, Inc. (formerly GLL & Associates). Each year Bob Church, in-house Sr. Loan Officer of Granite, awards one agent in each of the offices, “Granite Mortgage Top Production Agent". Sandy Robertson of the Clemmons office and Elizabeth Swicegood of the Mocksville office receiv?d the yearly honors and have been awarded a plaque recognizing their superior referral efforts. Century 21 Real Estate Corporation presented both offices the 2004 Quality Service Office Award for commitment to providing quality customer service. “Receiving this award is a great honor and o testament to the focus and attention we commit to our clients in ensuring they understand each and every step of the home buying and selling process," stated Cooke. “This award is the collective result of Ihe efforts of each and every member of Ihe teams." This places the local company, in the top 10 percent of all offices in tiie United States. Based on customer feedback. the award recognizes the offices nationwide that earn a minimum customer satisfaction index of 90 percent or better on real estate transactions they closed from Jan. 1-Oct. 31,2004. Sandy Robertson of Ihe Clemmons office has earned Ihe Quality Service Producer Award for 2004. This national award is presented annually to those who have consistently exceeded high expectations of clients. Eight individuals completed the “Fine Homes & EstatesSM" training certification; Amanda Key Shore, Barry C. Schline, Cathy Young, Renee McDaniel, Robin A. Myers, Sandy Robertson, sales associates with the Clemmons office. Alicia Johnson, Elizabeth Swicegood, Mackle McDanicI, sales associates with the Mocksville office, recently added the “Luxury Real Estate Specialist” designation to their professional offerings. Located at 854 Valley Road in Mocksville and 2419 Lewisville-Clemmons Road in Clemmons, Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel is a full service brokerage firm specializing in residential, luxury, fine homes, new home construction, commerciol (CCIM member), property listings. Tlie public is invited lo a ben­ efit dinner ond auction on Wednesday, May 25 in the Fam­ ily Life Center of First Uniled Methodist Church, 310 N. Main St., Mocksville. Proceeds will go lo Ihe building fund of Store­ house for Jesus. A cookoul wilh homburgers, hot dogs, all the trimmings, baked beans, chips, many des­ serts, and beverages will be available from 5:30-6:30 p.m. Poyment for the meal is by do­ nation. From 6 until 6:45, many smoller items will be available for silent auction bidding. High bidders of silent ouction items will be announced at 6:45 p.m. The real fun begins at 6:45 with a live auction of dozens of items going to the highest bidder. More than 100 items will be sold. Items are being added lo the auction list daily. A partial list of items includes: tickets to Carolina Panthers vs. Washing­ ton Redkins in Charlotte; tick­ ets to Panthers vs. Pittsburgh Steelers in Charlotte; full week at a 2 bedroom condo at Myrtle Beach; four nights in a 3 bed­ room beach house at Caswell Beoch/Ook Islond; $100 golf outing al Rock Bam C.C.; golf at Bermuda Run CC; new Mar­ lin 22 caliber semi-automatic rifie with scope; 3 month mem­ bership to Davie Family YMCA for a family; clock from Foster’s Jewelers; white dogwood tree planted by a nursery in your yard; coffee table retail volue of $500; framed photo of Dale Earnhardt’s last ride; fireplace screen; “Contractor for a Day" for rcpair/fix/replace/install anything around the house (la­ bor only); complete dog groom­ ing; golf for 4 at Pudding Ridge GC; several framed prints; a 1923 silver dollar, cert jfi^nt?s.lo Deano’s BBQ; hand-crocheted afghan by Karen Sykes; hand- knitted afghan by Millie Modlin; Bames and Noble cer­ tificate; teapot; Ketchie Creek basket of goodies; Ketchie Creek certificate; simple will and power of attorney by Mar­ tin & Von Hoy; feather/down comforter; $50 savings bond; several handmade designer pocketbooks; pair of wills/pow­ ers of attorney/healthcare PGA/ living wills by Grady McClamrock; beautiful oriental screen; oriental rug; silk flower arrangements; lamps; oriental vase; item from Boyles Furni­ ture; many handmade wooden items by Glenn Miller; new weedeater and various items by Caudell Lumber; potted aza­ leas; last will and testament by Lynne Hicks Byerly; Davie Arts Council tickets; plants; grill set; gift certificate to Cody Creek/ The Depot Restaurant at Dob­ son; Gevalia coffee maker; cer­ tificate to Miller’s Restaurant; quilled baby blanket by Diane Salmon; German meal for four; wooden folk art USA flag; lote bag; glass top coffee table; hand carved wine bottle stoppers; framed original watercolor pic­ ture; many handmade crafts by Libby Banks; collector’s hand­ made hand-painted porcelain doll by Dianna Crabtree; framed verses and art by Judy Bailey; pecan tarts, coconut pies, many cakes, all homemade, plus many smaller items that cannot be listed because of space limita­ tions. Additional items are be­ ing added daily. Most items are new, others are good-as-new. Come for the good food, come for the auction, come to have fun, come to support a good cause. Anyone who has questions may call Ihe office of FirsI Uniled Methodist Church at 751-2503 of Mike Hendrix at 998-2582.' Cooleemee Plans Annual Clean-Up Days COOLEEMEE - A spring clean-up for town residents only is planned for May 23-25. Streets assigned for pickup include; • Monday, May 23: Allen, Gladstone, Holifax Lone, Hickory, Marginal, Neely, Rocky Hill Trail, Ruffin and Westview; • Tliesday, May 24 - Center, Grove, Holt, Highway 801, Joyner, Midway, Ramars Court and Wan; and • Wednesday, May 25 - Church, Cross, Davie, Duke, Erwin, Junction Road, Main, Riverside and Yadkin. Items must be placed curbside, in front of your house, and will be picked up only on Ihe street’s ossigned day. Items can be ploced at the curbside several days prior lo Ihe pickup day. If not placed curbside by the assigned day, the town will not retum to pick up any items. The following will not be picked up: brush and limbs, gar­ bage, yard waste including grass clippings, paint and toxins. Notices, with details, have been posted al Cooleemee busi­ nesses and on Ihe town bulletin board between Ihe Cooleemee Post Office and Cooleemee Hardware Store. If you are handicapped or a senior citizen who needs help getting items to the curb, if you need help getting an item to the crub or for more information, call the town hall al 284-2141 prior to the assigned pickup day. Food Lion Upgrades Store In Hillsdale Clemmons Pawn & Jewelry B u y in g / S e llin g IV f I’a y Tup U o lla r F o r G o ld & D iu m o n d s _ _^ w e lr u u n d lV (iic / i K a p u ir > D u m y W In g o - O w n e r ■ 2 5 Y n E x p e rie n c e I l e o o L e w liv lU e -C le m m o n * R d . C le m m o n a (N ozt to R on ol'a W log>) Hours M -F 9-e Sat. g-3766-8312 rw w .m jc la m m o u .c o m Locally Grown, Hydroponic J o m a t o e s We also now have Grape Tomatoes, Cuccumbers, and Lettuce! Tomato & Bedding Plants, D rop Farm 302Foster Road, Mocksville (Poilei Rd. U ju»» o ff Ritlgo Rd. in We»lcm D*vic Counly) Call For Directions (336) 4 92 -5 28 3 O p e n T i i u r s. & Fr i. N o o t< -5 P M a n d S a t . 8 a m -n o o n ADVANCE - Customers of the Food Lion in the Tanglewood Shopping Center in Hillsdale are seeing changes, as Ihe company completes renova­ tions. Now thal Ihe remodeling work is done, customers are finding new, re-designed depart­ ments and a broader selection of products. The new features and items include: • a newly designed produce department, with more tropical fruits and Ihe addition of organi­ cally grown items; • a re-designed meal depart­ ment, featuring Food Lion’s ex­ clusive Butchers Brand Pre­ mium Beef and Butchers Brand Angus Beef; • a new deli and bakery de­ partment offering specialty cheeses - all bakery associates have received additional, ad­ vanced cake decorating training; • more international prod­ ucts; • Ihe addition of natural and organic dry goods; • re-designed grocery aisles; • a new customer service counter and checkout lanes; and • a new decor package wilh signs, graphics and colors. The Advance store, at NC 801 and US 158, is one of about 70 Food Lion stores in the Triad region being remodeled in 2005. Food Lion officials said Ihe renovations will nol lead to in­ creased prices. The work is part of ihe companys budgeted re­ sources for capital improve­ ments, ensuring Food Lion re­ mains the lowest-price super­ market in the Triad region. The Tanglewood Festival Square Food Lion opened in 1997 and is 34,000 square feet. Just^useY w T im d ^ 4 0 " IdoejM'tnteawyMhavctol wake such an Ugly Face! Happy 40th P'day Skip!!!!! W e lo ve You! I Swiff, Martha Pip. RowJ TtaMdRody itatabovUrther! Davie Dateline DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - 9 Fundraisers Saturday. May 21 Country Breakfast Fundraiser,at Cornalzer-Dulin Vol. Fire Dept., 6:30-10 a.m. Cookbooks will also be on sale. 2nd Annual Open Air Extrava­ ganza, presented by Davie Hospital Auxiliary, 7 a.m. til 3 p.m. (open 5:30 a.m. for set-up), at Masonic Picnic Grounds (behind Brock Cen­ ter, N. Main St.). Antiques, crafts, collectibles, food. Rent a booth (booth rent benefits Auxiliary),sales go lo vendors. Info: 751-8362. May 23-June 30 Photo Fundraiser, by Center Vol- untecrFire Dept.,for info:492-7649. Wetinesday, May 25 Supper & Auction, at First UMC, 310 N. Main St., begins 5:30 p.m., comc enjoy hamburgers, hotdogs, and all Ihe trimmings. An auction of more than- too items will begin 6:45 p.m. Thursday, May 26 Special Olympics Davle Port-A- Plt Chicken Dinner, at First United Methodist, in old fellowship hall. Plate; $7. Advance sales/carry-out only. Call 751-2325 or 492-2990 for tickets. Saturday, June 4 C om m unity Y ard Sale, by Sherneld-Calahaln-Ladie’s Auxil­ iary, 7 a.m. untili at Sheffield- Caiahaln Fire Dept.Table rental $10. Contact: 492-7687 or 751-2121. Ongoing Cooleemee Civilans BBQ Chicken, each 3rd Sat. of month at Cooleemee Hardware Store. Serving 1/2 chicken, baked beans, BBQ slaw, roll, and dessert. Time; 11 a.m. until sold out. Como carly, only prepare 120 halves each montli. R eunioniS Saturday, June 4 Mocksvlllc Illgh School Class of 19S0, will have a get-together at 6 p.m. at Prime Sirloin. Anyone inter­ ested is welcome. Info; 998-3211. 2nd Annual Smith Family Reunion, at Center UMC Community Bidg., 4 p.m. until. Bring picnic basket, soft drink, old pics, and share some old memories. Contact; 751 -3626or998- 7613. Sunday, June 5 Drew & Jane Smithdeal Robertson ' Family Reunion, al Fork Civic Cen­ ter, covered dish lunch 1 p.m. For directions or info, 998-5163. Religion Saturday, May 21 V acation Bible School Open House & Pre-Keglstratlon, at Ad­ vance First Bapt. Church, 2 p.m. Parents and children of all ages. Sunday, May 22 Homecoming Service, al Chinqua­ pin Grove Missionary Bapt. Church, 11 a.m. moming service, 3 p.m. af­ ternoon service. Dinner 1 ;30 p.m. in lower fellowship hall. Everyone in­ vited. Ongoing CareNet Counseling Centers, at First Baptist Church,390 N. Main St., Mocksville, Offers inter-de­ nominational counseling. Academi­ cally trained, certified counselors & mental health professionals, Info.& appt, 751-2041, A Woman’sCallToPrayer,ladie’s Bible study for all ages, Jericho Church of Christ, Mocksville, 7:30- 8:30 p,m, every Wed, thm Dec, Ist, Call 492-6006 for more info, Preschool/Parents Morning Out, Bethlehem United Melh. Time; 9 a.m.-noon. Ages 1 & 2-M ,W orT , Th. Age 3 - M,T, Th. Age 4 & Pre- K - three orfourdaysperweek.Call 998-6820. Preschool, at Center United Meth. Church, Mon., Wed., & Thurs (4 yr. oldclas5)8;30-ll;30a.m.-M on.& Wed. (3 yr. old class) 8:30-11:30 a.m. - Tues. & Thurs. (2 ife 3 yr. olds) 8;30-ll;30 a.m. Before School Prograni for Shady Grove Students, available Mon.- Fri. beginning 6 a.m. al Advance UMC Community Bidg. School bus arrives 8 a.m. lo take children to Shady Grove Elementary. Call 998- 0199 for fees and info. Grief Support Group, "Nobody’s Child But God’s”, 2nd Thurs. of each month, 6:30 p.m., Cooleemee Church of God, 7704 N.C. 801' S., Cooleemee. Info: 75305716 or 284- 2180. Awana & Bible Study, Wednes­ days at 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Taber­ nacle. Spedal Events Thursday, May 19 Postmaster Talks, Cooleemee Rosi- master Craig Mock to speak at Cool- eemeePostOffice,10a.m.lil 12noon. Great opportunity to leam more aboul local post office, ask questions, or discuss issues. Saturday, June 4 Rock With Cops, 6-9 p.m. Cool­ eemee Elementary Gym, music, food, fun. Have your bike inspected, re­ ceive free bike helmet. Free hotdogs provided by Cooleemee Civilans, games, raffle. Don’t miss it. Monday, June 6 C rulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, June 20 Crulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info; 751-3770 or 284-2079. Ongoing Jam Sessions, every Fri. night, at Sheffield Music Hall, call 492-7417 for info. Etetes tp Remember Friday, May 20 Blood Drive, 12:30-5 p.m., at Davie Co. Hospital, Hospital St., Mocks­ ville. Tuesday, May 24 Blood Drive, 2-6:30 p.m., at Davle Co. Chapter of NWNC, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville. Wednesday, May 25 SklnCanccrScreening,8-l 1:30a.m., sponsored by Davie Heailh Dcpl. By Davie Dermatology, call 751-8700 for appt. (Limited appts. available.) Thursday, May 26 BloodDrive,6;30-l 1 a.m..atIngersoll Rand, 501 Sanford Avenue, Mocks­ ville. Ongoing visit Cooleemee's Mill VlUage Mu­ seum, 14 Church St., Tues. & Thurs., 9 a.m.-noon. Sats., 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Tours also available by appt. Call 294-6040. Storytlmes, at Davie Co. Libnuy, Mondays 7 p.m. Family SloryUmc &/ or special program. Tues. II a.m. Toddler Time (stories, songs & fun for ages 1-3). Thurs. 10 a.m. Story liourfor 3-5’s. Fridays 11 a.m.Friday free-for-all, everyone welcome. Pro­ grams free & open lo everyone. Richard Burr Holds ORIce Hours in Davle, 2nd Thurs. of every mondi, 9 a.m. til 4 p.m., Mocksville Town Hall Building. Special Olympics of Davle County, play acUvities & fun nite, Wednes­ days at Brock Bidg. Play acUvities 6- 7 p.m. Fun Nite 7-8:30 p.m. Open to all persons widi disabilities & their families. Meetings Monday, May 23 Davle NAACP Meeting, 7 p.m., at Smilh-Grace Fellowship Hall, Depot St., Mocksville. Ongoing Humane Society of Davle Co., monthly meeUngs 2nd Tues. of each month, al Davie County Library on Main Street. Call 751-5214 for info. Davle Partnership for Children board meeting, 4Ui Tues. of every other month (began in Jan.) at Davie Library, 8:30 a.m. Questions; 751- 2113. Alzhelmers Supporf Group, 2nd Tuesday of each montli, 6:30 p.m., at Autumn Care, Mocksville. Davie Civitan Club meets 4thTiiurs. of each montli, Feb.-Oct., 7 p.m., at Hillsdale Bapt. Church, Hwy. 158. All visitors welcome. Center ECA Club meets 3rd Tues­ day of each mo«th,at Center Comm. Bidg., 7:30 pjn. Please join us. Disabled American Veterans Post 75 meets on third Monday of each mon*,6:30p.m., al 1958 Hwy.601 S. Contact-J. Renfro at 284-4664 for more info. Town Of Cooleemee Planning Board, meets 3rd Thurs. of each mondi at Cooleemee Town Hail, 7 p.m. AutbmSupportGroupSrdMonday of each month, 6:30 p,m„ at Shady Grove, Mocksville. Davle Bus. Women’s Association 1st Wed. of every month, 12noon,at Mocksvillc Rotary on Salisbury Street. Speakerof interest and catered lunch, cost $6. Year membership $25. Con­ tact 998-1153 for more info. Davie County Diabetes Support Group, last Thurs. of every month, 7- 8:30p.m.,at Davic Co. Public Library Small Conference Room. Info: 751- 8700. Davie Youth Council, meets 2nd & 4Ui Tuesdays each monUi, 6:30 p.m., at Mocksville/Davie Porks & Rec. meeting room. Info; Wendy White 287-1292. Davle Co. Hospital Auxllary, every sccond Tues., In board room, 7 p.m. Davle Business Women’s Associa­ tion, first Wed. of each month, 12 noon, at CCB in Mocksville (880 Yadkinville Rd.), luncheon meeting, catered meal available. For info; 998- 1153 or 940-3600. Davle RepubUcon McnsClub,meet3 4UiSaturdayofeachmonth,7:30a.m., Prime Sirloin. Celebrate Recovery .weekly support group for Uiose sttuggiing wiUi or in recovery for bad habits - suchas stress, depression, addiction, abuse, etc. Meets Thurs. 7 p.m. at Farmington Comm. Center, Famiington Rd.Cail 408-8750 or 813-9921 for more info. Davie County HoraeEmei^gcncy Res­ cue Team, 7:30 pjn., downstairs at Ihe Agriculwral Building, Mocksville. Ev- ety 3rd Tuesday each mondi. For info: 940-2111. DavleCo.Band Boosters,mcels 2nd Tuesday of month, 7:30 p.m., Davie High Band Room. Family Services "What Every Par­ ent Should Know",parentingclasscs to interested parents of teens in local areas, every Mon. 6-7:15 p.m., at Mocksville office Sanford Ave. Cost $15. For more info: 751-4510. Christian Businessmen's Commit­ tee of MocksvUlc, Thursdays,? a.m. Mocksville Rotary Hut. Gold Wing Touring . Association, Red Pig Barbecue, Greasy Comer, N.C. 801 at U.S. 601, 6 p.m. 284- 4799. Davie County Stamp Club, 2nd Thurs., Davie Senior Center, 7 p.m. 751-0611. Cooleemee Reereatkui Association, Zachary House, 1st Tuesday, 7 p.m. Homeschool 4-H Club, 2nd & 4Ui Tiiursday. Cail 998-8925 for more info. The Artist Group, Davie County Library,? p.m. lastTues.Call Bonnie C O U N T R V B R E A K F A S T F U N D R A IS E R Cornatzer-Dulin Volunteer Fire Department S A T U R D A Y , M a y 2 1 , 2 0 0 5 6 :3 0 -1 0 a .m . H a m , B a c o n , S a u s a g e , E g g s , G r a v y & B i s c u i t s ¡H elp S u p p o r t Y o u r V o lu n te e r F ire fig h te rs at 998-5274. Center Community Development, 3rd Mon., 7 p.m. Community Bidg. Cooleemee Town Board, 3rd Tues­ day, Town Hall, 7 p.m. unless other­ wise noted. Cooleemee AA,behind Oood Shep­ herd Episcopal, Tues. & Fri., 8 p .m. North Cooleemee and Clark Road Council, 2nd Wednesday, 7 p.m. Friendship Baptist Fellowship Hall. Mocksville AA, closed non-smok- ing meeting, at St. Francis of Assisi Church fellowship hall, 862 Yadkinville Rd., Mocksvillc-. Sat­ urdays 6 p.m. Info: Pat 751-6228 or Jan 753-6863. Davle Domestic Violence Services and Rape Crisis Center. Offers weekly support group for domestic vioIcnce&sexualassnullvictims.The group mcctsevcryTucs,cveningfrom 6;30-8;30 p,m. Please call office for location, 751-3450, Concerned Bikers Association, Foothills Chapter, 2nd Wednesday, Western Steer, U,S, 601 at 1-40,7 p.m. Public welcome, Advancc Garden Club, 1st Tues., 9 a.m.,Mocks UMC, 998-2111. MocksvillcGardenClub, IslThurs., Jcricho Church of Christ fellowship hall, 7 p.m. Visitors welcome. Sons of Confederate Veterans, 1st Monday, Cooleemee Historical Build­ ing, 7 p.m. 4-H Bits & Bridle Club, every Uiird Tues.,6-7;30p.m.atDixicland Farms. Call 492-6403 for more info. Mocksville Rotary Club, Tuesdays, 12:10 p.m.. Rotary Hut. Farmington Masonic Lodge No. 265, 2nd Monday, 7:30 p.m. al the lodge. Mocksville Lions Club, 1st, 3rd Thursdays, 7 p.m., fellowship hall of St. Francis of Assisi, Yadkinville Road, Mocksvillc. Davle Co. United Way Board of Directors, 4th Monday, 5:30 p.m.. Brock Center Annex, Conf. Room 208. Mocksvllle'DavIe Homebuilders, 4th Thursday ,7 pan.,CaptainSteven's. Davle High Athletic Boosters, 3rd Monday, 7 p.m., school cafeteria. Farmington Ruritan Club, 2nd Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Farmington Methodist church. HELPS Ministries, Christian recov­ ery program for women sexually abu!^ as children. Mondays, 7:30 p.m.,41 court Square, Room 210. Parents Resource Organization (PRO) support group for families of children wilh disabilities, 2nd Tues­ day,7p.m.CailRosemaryKropfelder at 998-3311 for location. Jerlcho-Hardlson Ruritan Club, 2nd Tuesday, 7 p.m., club building. Health Dcpt..clinichours; Mon.-Fri., 8;30-ll;30a.m., 1-4:30 p.m. Davle County Board of Social Ser- vlccs,4Ui Tuesday,5:30p.m. at DSS. Narcotics Anonymous Against All Odds Group, First Bapt. Church, 390 N. Main Street (upstairs), Tiiurs. 7 p.m.. Sun. 6 p.m. Drug Problem? Helpline, 336-785-7280. Mocksville American Legion Post 174, VFW Hut. Sanford Ave., 2nd Thursday, 7 p.m. Mocksville Civitan Club, 7 p.m., 2nd & 4th Mondays, al CCB, 880 Yadkinville Rd.. Advance Memorial Post 8719 Vet­ erans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary, 4th Tues., 7:30 p.m., po.st home. Feed Mill Road. Davle County Right To Life, 7 p,m„ 3rd Tliursday,grand jury room,court- house, 751-5235 or 492-5723, Cooleemee Memorial VFW Post 1119,2nd, 4di Thurs,, 7 p.m,, VFW Hall,N.C. 801. Corlntlilan Lodge No. I7F&AM, Saturday Night QalBs open lor practice al 8 p.m. R R S T R A C E A T S P .M . 2nd, 4tli Fridays, 7:30 p.m. at die lodge. Mocksville LodgeNo. 134,1st Tues­ day, 7:30 p.m. at the lodge. Cooleemee Clvltan's Club Meet­ ing, 1st and 3rd Mon. each monUi, 7 p.m.,RcdPig,Hwy. 801,Cooleemee. Cub. Scout Pack SM, sponsored b Fulton United Meth. Church, Ist and 3rd Tues. nights each montli, 7-8:30 p.m. Young boys 1-5 grades who would like to become a member are welcome to attend. DavleCo.MSSupportGroup.2nd Mon. of each month, 6 p.m., Davie Co. Hospital. VFW Auxiliary Post 4024,1 p.m., 4th Thurs .each month in lower level of Brock Bldg.,N. Main Street. Eli­ gible members welcome. Davle Klwanls Club, 1st and 3rd Thursday, 12:30 p.m. (lunch) at Venezia Italian Restaurant, Hillsdale, 753-8282. Recreation For more infonnation on these events, call 751-2325. Line Dancing BrockBuilding.EveryTuesday 1:30- 2:30 p.m.. Cost; $2. For more info, call 751-5983. GoodTimersSquare Dance Dance Lessons $5 per month. Volun­ teers for different social events. Con­ tact Etliel al 998-3837. Senior Walking Program Seniors, 50 and up, M-F, 6:30-9 a.m. No charge. Incentive breakfast held quarterly. Register now at Rec. Dept, or Sr. Services. The Dance Company Mon., Tues., Wed., & Sat. Call Emily Robertson, 998-5163. , Competition Cheerieading $25 registtation and $45 mo. for 2 dmes per week. Call Wendy Shoe­ maker 284-6300. Tennis Leagues available for men,women,co-ed,jun- iors. Call Sandra for info. Comm. Clean-Up Day At die RiverPark al Cooleemee Falls, 4th Sat. of each month, 8 a.m. until. Call Bill Gibson 284-4774 or Rec. Dept, for more info. Shelter Rentals Available at Rich Park and RiverPark al Cool­ eemee Falls. Call 751-2325 to make reservations. Davie Youth Council Ages 13 to graduation, meet at Rec. Depl. 2nd and 4th Tues. nights each mondis.CallEmlly75l-2325for info. Special Olympics Fun Nite Wednesdays atRec. Dept. 7-8;30p on. Open to adiletes, dieir- families, and volunteers. Special Friends Dance Van MondilyFri.nightdanccinLewisville. Open to adults widi developmental delays. Reservations required for WmsportaUon, call Kadue 751-2325 by Thursdays. Van leaves Rec. Dept. 6:30 p.m. and intersecdon of N.C. 801 6 U.S. 158 at 6:45 p.m. Church League Basl<etball Call Joe for more info. Wrestling Call Emily 751 -2325 for more info. Horse Camp At Dixieland Farm, choice of 6 wks, limit 10 Ciimpers per week. 7:30 a.m. Ul 5 p.m. Call Kathie 751-2325 or 492-2990 to reserve space. SpecialAitsOavieTaientShow May MdialS.DavieMiddieSchool, 7 p.m. Reception 6:30 p.m. No admis­ sion but donations accepted. For info; 751-2325 or 492-2990. DOUBLE FIFTIES P r e s e n t e d b y O l d i e s 9 3 50'Lap Modified and Street Stock Races plus Sportsman and Stadium Stock events and a C H A I N R A C E ! Team» o t Iwo ears chained togetherl It's wacky! ¡SkBud Admission: 12 and o W e r-$ 1 0 »A g e s 6-11 - $ t Chlklren under a FREE wUli adult escort PLEN TY O F FREE PARKING Information about atadlum racing: (336) 723-1819 YMCA For more information, call 751-9622 or visit Davic Family YMCA. Water Exercise Class For beginners and die experienced.' All ages; Call forclass types & dmes. Swim Lessons Choose from 4 wk.. Sat. momnig or private lessons. Reg. begins 2 wks. prior to class. Call for class times. Karate-Carucado Style Tuesdays, 7-8:45 p.m. Ages 7 & up. Tae Kwon Do Ages 6 & up. Meet Tues. & Thurs., 6:00 & 6:45 p.m. Parent’s Night Out 2nd Friday of each mondi, 6-10:30 p.m. Take die night off and allow YMCA to care for your child. AcUvi- Ues include swimming, arts & crafts, games, and a movie. Dinner served around 6:30 p.m. Cost $7 members/ $10 non-members. D!VIA(foiTneriySunshineCiub) For all older adults. Club is full of fun, fellowship, good food, new and old friends and lols of laughter. Monddy pot luck luncheon widi speaker. Cost: $10 members/$20 non-members. Ser\iors All Senior AcUvides take place at Davie County SeniorServices iocatiid in die Brock Building on North Main Street, Mocksville unless odierwise noted. Call 751-0611. Ongoing Sr. Lunchbox, M.T.W ,11:30 a.m., Th.&Fri.,l I a.m.,lunchserveddaily. Silver Health Exercises, East Room ofSeniorServices,M,W,F,8;30a.m. Tues.& Thurs. 9 a.m. at Mock Place, (open to any senior). Quilting Club, every Monday, 10 a.m.. East Room. Scrabble,every Monday, 1 p.m.,Ctafl Room. Bridge, every Friday, 2 p.m., please call Sr. Services. SKIPBO, Wednesdays, 1 p.m.,East Room. Scrapbooking, oncc per mondi, call for dates & dmes 751-0611. Dr. Dunn,Podiatrist, at Sr. Services every three weeks.pleasecallfordates. Free Blood Pressure Checks, once a month, at 10;30 a.m. in die Nulridon Site. Tal Chi Classcs, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.. Beach "N” Tans (formerly Nature’s Gifts). Next class dates (Sept. 6 duu Nov. 8). Discount for Srs. 60+. Call Sr. Services to pre-register at 751- 0611. YogaForSenlors,Tues.2p.m.(Aug. 2-Oct. 11). You must call Sr.Services lo register. Price $10 for 10 weeks. PaUiUngCloss,everyWed.,8;30ojn. PACE Exercise Class, every odier Wed., 10:30 a.m. Singing Seniors Charus,Thursdays, 10 a.m. Canasta, every Thurs., 1 p.m. Crafty Ladles, begins Thurs. at 10 a.m. on Aug. 4di. Report Davle Dateline Items By Noon Monday Items for Davle Dateline should be reported by noon Monday of die pub­ lication week. Call 751-2120 or drop it by die office, at S. Main St. across from die courthouse. C o n i p a i e O i i i ' ( ! D H al< \s Bank-issued, FDIG- insured to $100,000 imw^ _ nr ' 3-УМГ 4J20% MUmum MT d«piMR$5,000 W m e ir n i ' HV •Annual P6reunlaQ9 Vlold (APYHntsceat rannol remain on deposit: potlodlo payout ot Merest Is tequliecT Eaity vM taw al Is notpermittod. Eltectve S/I6№. Sutijact lo avallabllily and pdco change. Tlw anvxinl rooolvsd ran a sale ot a CO at oiirait mailiol value may 1» less than It» amount InMailylnvoslod. Call or atop by today. MattVorah 66 Court Square Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 75I-‘WOO www.cdwardjonRif.ROm Edwardjones Serving laOividutllQ'«1871 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Obituaries Nancy Gay Moore Nancy Gay Moore, 77, of Mocksvillc, formerly of Radford, Va., died Monday, May 9,2005 al Forsylh Medical Cen­ ter in Winston-Salem. She was bom in Eggleston, Va. on Jan. 18, 1928 to Ihe late Thomas Marion and Edna Vir­ ginia Sartan Hodge. She was preceded in death by a daughter, Linda Gayle Pack. Survivors: her husband, Henry H. Moore of Mocksvillc; son and daughter-in-law, the Revs. Robert M. and Joyce Pack of Christianburg, Va.; 3 sisters, Christine Brown of Ripplemead, Va., Edna James of Rich Creek, Va., and Lucy Surrett of Bassett, Va.; 2 brothers, Seb (Buddy) Hodge of Bassett and William Henry Hodge of Pulaski County. Funeral services were con­ ducted Thursday, May 12 at 4 p.m. in the Homeward Bound Holiness Church with the Rev. Joyce Pack officiating. Burial followed in Sunset Cemetery Christiansbiirg. Memorials: Homeward Bound Holiness, 1622 McPeak Drive,Christianburg, VA 24073. Iris Shaver Cole Mrs. Iris Shaver Cole, 71, of King, died on Tliursday, May 12, 2005 at Dr. J.R. Jones Medical Center. Bom in Rowan County on Sept. 8, 1933, she was the daughter of the late Waller F. and Middie Whitley Shaver. Mrs. Cole was retired from AT&T and as a housekeeper at the Brian Center. She was of Ihe Baptist faith. She was preceded in death by her husband, David K. Bailey, n brother, Bruce Shaver, and a sis­ ter, Nancy S. Koontz. Survivors; a son, Richard Dale (Gracie) Bailey of King; 2 daughters, Cynthia Moore of Mocksville and Virginia Gail Lineberry of King; 2 sisters, Theolene S. (G.A.) Watson of Salisbury and Janie (Sam) Chaplin of Mocksville; 3 grand­ children; 5 great-grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. A celebration of life service was held May 16 at 2 p.m. at the Davie Funeral Chapel wilh the Rev. Richard Whiteheart offici­ ating. Burial followed in Rowan Memorial Park. Memorials: donor’s choice. Sadie Messick Jordan Mrs. Sadie Messick Jordan, 91, formerly of North Main Street, Mocksville, died Satur­ day, May 14, 2005, at Autumn Care of Mocksville. She was bom Oct. 26, 1913 in Davie County to the late Claude and Dora Dwiggins Messick. Mrs. Jordan was re­ tired from Cone Mills in Salisbury and had worked at Buriington Mills. She was a charier member of Victory Bap­ tist Church.' Mrs. Jordan was preceded in death by her husband, Scott Jor- dan; 3 sisters. Ruby Hellard, Mary Adams and Ethel Hellard; and a brother, Albert Messick. Survivors: a brother, Claude Messick Jr. of Statesville; o sis­ ter, Gilda Chaffin of Durham; 2 stepdaughters, Judy Beck of Cooleemee and Lynda (Barry) Myers of Mocksville; 3 step grandchildren; 2 step-great- grandchildren; and several nieces and nephews. A funeral scrvice was held al 2 p.m.,Tuesday, May 17, al Vic­ tory Baptist Church with the Rev. Shelby Harbour officiating. Burial was in Rowan Memorial Park in Salisbury. T Memorials; Victory Baptist, P.O. Box 686, Cooleemce. S o d a S h o p p e G r i l l a n i i I c e - C r e a m Hwy. 64 E. & Depot St., Mocksville • (336) 751^745 STO R E O PE N : 5:30 am - 1 1 :00 pm Grill c lo s e s at 8:00 pm ''The G o o d o r D a y s A r e B a c k ” S P E C I A L S ! Moiulav & Tuesday 2 Hotdogs for $1,50 Wcdiiesilav 1/2 Price Wings (any number of wings) Tliursday M e a t l o a f & 2 S i d e s $ 4 .9 5 Friday & iSatiirdav Footioiigs 990 Ea. H E R S H E Y 'S le e ^ C m L o m Wa Premium! • M i l k s h a k e s • C o n e s • C u p s Fried Chicken & Fresh Vegetables Served Dally S PE C IA LS G O O D FO R A LIMITED TIME S p e c i a l o £ t h e W e e k 12 o z. P e p s i P r o d u c t s / V Lim it MI 1 1 Case I b H ^ / W hile Supplies Last I t ’ s H e r e ! ■ B r i n g Y o u r F i l m a n d S a v e M o n e ^ j j ^ ^ ^ ^ P r o c e s s i n g • D ig ita l P rin ts • E n la rg e m e n ts ■ I'or (treat iiiloriiutlion on 1 1 drills lie hi-allli prdhlctns, n<i l(i 1 1 « «.r((sler(lrii;>ro.i-oiii 1 Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-4 • Sun 1:30-5 Foster Drug Co. 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • (336) 751-2141 www.foslerdrugco.coni Francis E. Peebles Mr. Francis E. Peebles, 88, of Buriington, died May 2, 2005 after one year of declining health. A native of Lee County, S.C, he was the son of the late Charles Henry Peebles and Mignon Breedlove Peebles. He was a 1939 graduate of Clemson Uni­ versity and on U.S. Army Air Corps veteran. He was a retired agriculture Extension agent who had served in Davie County as an agent from 1947-1952. He was a member of Front Street United Methodist Church, where he had served as a Sunday School teacher, a member of the official board and chair of the Good Shepherd committee. He was a volunteer with Habitat for Humanity, and in 2001 was awarded the Jim Scott Awiird for outstanding volunteer service in Alamance County. Survivors: his wife. Pearl Turner Peebles; 4 sons, H, Edwin Peebles and wife Janis of Norih Wilkesboro; Roberi E. Peebles and wife Jane of Marshall, Joseph T. Peebles and wife Vivian of Bejing, China, and Charies F. Peebles and wife Carol of Buriington; 2 sisters, Lois P. Pearce of Boykin, S.C., and Dorotliy P. Ford of Colum­ bia, S.C.; 2 brothers, Cccil B. Peebles of Pamlico, S.C, and Dr. Charles H. Peebles of Columbia, S.C.; 8 grandchildren; and 4 great-grandchildren. Services were conducted at Front Street United Methodist Church on Thursday, May 5 at 11 a.m. by Dr. Sidney H. Higgins and Dr. G. Robert McKenzie. Karen Richards Prevette Mrs. Karen Lynne Richards Prevette, 53, of Speer Road, Mocksville, died Friday, May 13, 2005, at Forsyth Medical Center, Winston-Salem. Mrs. Prevette was born in Mt. Airy, March 29, 1952, lo Mildred Monday Richards of Ml. Airy and the lale John Lewis Richards. She was a graduate of North Surry High School, class of 1970 and graduated from Ap­ palachian State University in Boone in 1974. She was retired from the Davic County Depart­ ment of Social Services. She had served on the board of directors of the Davie County United Way. Mrs. Prevette was a mem­ ber of Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church where she had served on several committees and was past president of the United Methodist Women. Including her father, she was preceded in death by her son, Wesley Tilden, and a brother, John Lewis Richards. Surviving in addition to her mother; her husband of 31 years, Douglas E. Prevette; a son, Ethan Prevette of Winston-Sa- lem; a sister Libby Willard of Mt. Airy; and 10 nieces and nephews, Funeral services were held at 3 p.m. Monday, May 16, in Eaton Funeral Home Chapel with the Revs. Jim Sanders and Tim Starbuck and Dr. David Gilbreath officiating. Burial was in the Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery. Memorials: Canccr Services of Davie, 622 N. Main St., Mocksville; or Chestnut Grove Methodist Cemetery Fund, c/o Linda Harpe, 470 Elmore Rd., Mocksville. New Lower Prices! PHARMACY Rebecca Nail Lam b Mrs. Rebecca Nail Lamb of Greensboro died Tuesday, May 10,2005, at Moses Cone Memo­ rial Hospital. Bom in Mocksville to the late William Franklin Nail and Mary Call Nail, Mrs. Lamb was of the Methodist faith. She enjoyed gar­ dening, quilling and was an ani­ mal lover. She was preceded in death by her husband, Eari Nixon Lamb, and a son, Dick Nail of Mocksvillc. Survivors include: her daugh­ ter, Dianne Lamb of Greensboro; her daughter-in-law, Peggy Nail of Mocksville; 2 grandsons; and 2 great-grandsons. A private graveside burial was held at Guilford Memorial Park. A memorial service, celebrating her life, will bc held. Memorials; Humane Society of Guilford, 4527 W. Wendover Ave., Greensboro 27409. Elizabeth Barton Foster Mrs. Elizabeth Barton Foster, 65, of Springhill Drive, Mocks­ ville, died Wednesday, May 11, 2005, at her home. She was bom April 1, 1940, in Grayson County, Va. to Mary Osbome Barton of Mocksville and the late Rev. Bryce Barton. Mrs. Foster was a class of 1957 graduate of Marion (Va.) High School. She was an active mem­ ber of Blaise Baptist Church. Mrs. Foster was co-owner/op­ erator of Countryside Consign­ ment. She had been a dispatcher for National Trailer Convoy, a doctors assistant with Farming­ ton Medical Center and an agent with Farm Bureau wilh 12 years of service. Mrs. Foster was preceded in death by a step-son, Richie Fos­ ter; and a step-grandson, Josh Bowling. Surviving, in addition to her mother; her husband, James Fos­ ter of the home; a daughter, Juli (Keith) James of Mocksville; a son, Rusty (Paula) Tucker of Mocksville; a brother. Bill (Glenna) Barton of Shady Val­ ley, Tenn.; a step-daughter, Kathy (Steven) Jordan of Mocksville; 3 grandchildren; 2 slep-grandchildren; and her .spe­ cial caregiver, Elaine Bumgarner of Mocksville. A funeral service was held al 8 p.m., Saturday, May 14, at Blaise Baptist Church wilh the Revs. Ken Furches and Glen Sellers officiating. Memorials; Hospice/ Forsylh, IIOO-C S. Stratford Rd., Winston Salem, 27103. Look For Our sales circular in Todav’s Paper! A sum m er at Sylvan can m ake all the difference In the fall.” • Identify your child's specific needs with a skills assessment • Get individual attention and personalized teaching • Learn from highly trained and certified teachers • Benefit from flexible hours that fit your busy schedule S u m m e r is a g r e a t t im e t o iie lp y o u r c h ild p r e p a r e f o r f a ll. C a ll n o w . ( 3 3 6 ) 7 5 3 - 0 1 0 0 ii ii 1/2 P R IC E SYLVAN SKILLS ASSESSMENT' |||«1 (irin^ \W nlwiMtnl I«» Sii'if» (in tit«' S )lu ii Skill» 113 Marketplace Drive Mocksville, NC • (336) 7S3-0100 N»| ««W «nr otlin «Hm t May J I. XUS.U.»t inwnr {»M i«s pw iw«u#>Mr. S Y L V A N LEARNING CENTER- Learning -fee/s ¿oocC www.edijcate. com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 -11 Courtney Baptist pastor the Rev, Ricky Atkins with wife Debbie Lynn and children Allison and Lee. Courtney Revival May 22-25 The Rev. Ricky Atkins will conduct revival at Courtney Baptist Church May 22-25 at 7 nightly. Atkins began as pastor of Courtney Baptist on April 1. He was bom in Mount Airy and for the past five years has lived in Madison, where he was pastor of Oak Grove Baptist Church. He is married to the former Debbie Lynn Via. They have two children, Allison and Lee Atkins, who live in Mount Airy. Tapestry Throw Highlights History Of New Union UMC The History Committee of New Union UMC has developed a tapesü^ throw showing all church stmctures from 1780 to the present building. The members of the committee are Brenda Bailey, Helen Bulla, Marvin Dyson Jr. and Al Sutphin. Throws will be pre-sold through June 30. If interested in purchasing, contact Brenda Bailey at 751-7567 or via email at bremlmiOO@nisn.com . The cost of these throws are $50. If you wish to order, send a check payable to New Union UMC to Brenda Bailey at 154 Halander Drive, Mocks­ ville. G ra n t C e le b ra te s 9th A n n iv e r s a r y The Rev. James Grant of New Patterson Grove Faith Church of East Bend celebrated his ninth pastoral anniversary on Sunday, May 15. “I would like to thank everyone who has supported me through the years,” he said. Rainbow Tea May 28 The fourth annual organizational Rainbow Tea will be held Sat- urday,May 28 at 3 p.m. at Cedar Creek Missionary Baptist Church, The public is invited. The Rev. Coker Stewart is pastor. A n n i v e r s a r y L o v e f e a s t S u n d a y Macedonia Moravian Church will have its anniversary lovefeast on Sunday, May 22 at 11 a.m. All are welcome to join in the cel­ ebration of 149 years. Ray Boger Awarded John Wesley Fellow Ray Boger, the conference president for the Westem North Caro­ lina United Methodist Men was presented the Society of John Wesley Fellows award at the annual spiritual men 's rally at Lake Junaluska. • Tom Wilson, UMM past conference president, presented the award. “Ray exemplifies a passion for this ministry not only as the conference president, but through his active participation as an of­ ficer on the laity council, his own local church, and his community at large," Wilson said. Boger is a member of First United Methodist Church men 's fel­ lowship. The John Wesley Fellows award has been presented to 582 people since 1982, including President George W. Bush, evangelist Billy Graham, and at the conference level, retired Bishop Bevel Jones, former WNCC Bishop Charlene Kammerer and Jim Harrell, past conference lay leader. The introduction of a John Wesley Fellow into the society may be made by a United Methodist Men's unit in recognition of distin­ guished service to local church missions and ministiy. W e sle y C h a p e l B re a k fa st S a tu rd a y A ham and sausage breakfast will be held at Wesley Chapel Methodist Church from 6:30-10 a.m. on Saturday, May 21. F r o n t P o r c h S i n g i n g S a t u r d a y A t S m i t h G r o v e Smith Grove Ruritan Club is having a Front Porch Singing May 21 from 5-7 p.m. featuring Sounds of Faith and the Macedonia Blue Grass Band, Kevin Jasper, soloist and National Hollering Cham­ pion, and gospel singing by the Smith Grove Trio. Bring your lawn chairs, enjoy the fun. Hot dogs and soft drinks are 25 cents each, Friendship To Honor Pastor Sunday For 3rd Anniversary On Sunday, May 22 at 4 p.m., Friendship Missionary Baptist Church will celebrate the third anniversary of ils pastor, the Rev. Ervin Baker, and co-pastor, the Rev. James Rowdy. Lunch will be served at 2 p.m. The Rev. Dennis Clodfelter of New Life Christian Center in Lexington will be the guest speaker, and members of that congregation will be special guests. W a t c h a n d p r a y , t h a t y e e n t e r n o t i n t o t e m p t a t i o n : t h e s p i r i t i n d e e d i s w i l l i n g , b u t t h e f l e s h i s w e a k . (Matthew 26:41 KJV) This message brought to you by these local businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. CAUDELL LUMBER COMPANY 162 Sheek Street Mocksville, NO 27028 33Ö-7SI-2I67 I AUTO PARTS MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE 884 S. Main St. • Mocksville 336-751-2944 GENTLE MACHINE & TOOL INC. 3319 us Hwy. 158 Mocksviile, NC 27028 336-998-3350 VmGEHARDWARE 5431 Hwy. 158 • Advance, NC 336-998-1987 o 9 S)fvtm o lC a a o ffe MeW Johnson, LMDT ByAppolntmcnl Mocksville, NC Only Uc.#l'l66 (336) 751-2411 S unT rust Mocksville « 751-5936 Mocksville <751-6162 Cooleemee • 284-2542 Advance • 940-2420 LARRY’S WOOD FLOORING SERVICE 2B year.v Experience Sanding • Roflnlshing Installation • Old & New Work Larry McCleimey • Mochtvllle 336-751-1721 MOCKSVILLE SHOE SHOPShoe, Boot, and Tack RepairsFull Line of Wcslern QooU & Work Boots (Largo Selection)M»n. IV«,. Iliuii, J-tl. V-5; WtJ. & Sil. 9-1 336-753-0942Chfld Gou0li, Ownor/Opcrator52 Court Square, MtKkiville (lnTiiwnS<iuarc) W.G. WHITE & C 0 . 8S0 N.TradeSt. Winston Salem, NC 27102 336-723-I669 BMPalletOne A PALEX COMPANY I(k')Turkey Foot Uoad Mocksville NC, 27028 336-492-S565 SEAFORD LUMBER COMPANY 127 Buck Seaford Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-5148 VOGLER frSONS Funeral Home 2849 Middle Brook Dr. Clemtnons, NC 27012 338-766-4714 lERRiS MEAT PROCESSING We Custom Meat Process Beef-Pork-Door 30 years experience 892 Ralph RilMgs Rd. Mockivlllo 336-492-5496 liiiSiii" 1 liifIR 1 1 DAVIE LUMBER & LOGGING 872 Main Church Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-9144 CRAIG CARTER BUILDER, INC. 119 Hwy. 801 S, Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 336-940-2341 Ciaig A. C'unct. ■ MiHin C. Can«. Vkf Pits. J. P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC Makers of DAISY FLOUR Wt Custom Ulvml Depot St., Mocksville, NC 336-751-2126 EATON FUNERAL HOME SINCE 1951 325 North Main Street Mock.sville, NC 27028 336-751-2148 FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 495 Valley Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2141i'mi CiiH in: 336-753-DRUG F U L L E R m siiir Precision Laser Cutting 8i Metal Fabrication855 Salisbury Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3712 CAROLINA \ /d r illin g in c. 326 Railroad St. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2961 Fax:336-751-0774 FULLER ARCHITECTURALPROUDIY DESIGNING DAVIE CHURCHES336 7 5 1 0400 D a v ie A c a d e m y o f M a rtia l A rts 753.8482 «782.0038Tt’ach He.spect tÀ'cryday ^«frUMNCARE 1 OF MOCKSVILLE 1007 Howard St. Mocksville 751-3535 ; C a l l 7 5 1 -2 1 2 9 t o A d v e r t i s e Y o u r B u s in e s s o n t h e C h u r c h P a g e . | 12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 l'i > 4 6 I n d i c t e d B y G r a n d J u r y D u r i n g S u p e r i o r C o u r t S e s s i o n Fourty-six people were in­ dicted by the grand jury on ciiarges ranging from assault wilh ¡1 deadly weapon to inde­ cent liberties with a child Inst week, including Stephanie Lynn McClure, who was charged with 14 counts of common law utter­ ing. Also charged were: - Bryan Wayne Allen, statu­ tory rape, indecent liberties wilh a child. - Phillip Martin Angell, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Dustin Atkins, possessiot^ wilh intent to distribute mari-V juana, trafficking MDMA by possession; possession of drug,, paraphernalia. - Donald Blevins, 2 counts felony larceny, felony financial* card fraud. Andres Carachure- Policaipo, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of cocaine, carrying a concealed weapon, no operotors license, driving after consuming utider age 2 1. - Thomas Chadwick, 3 counts of indeccnt liberties with a child. - Michael Clement, 1st de­ gree statutory rape, two counts 1st degree statutory sex offense. - Michael Cline, 1st degree statutory rape, two counts 1st degree statutory sex offense. - Constancio Cortez, posses­ sion of cocaine, - Nichole Coursey, felony larceny. - Christopher Criner, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Keith Dawkins, felony lar­ ceny. - Stefan Elmore, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Brandi Fleming, feloAy breaking and entering, felony larceny, injury to real property. - Jack Fogler, felony larceny. - Randy Dean Frank, 2 counts indecent liberties. - Bradford Oaither, assauh inflicting serious injury, misdemeanaor larceny, felony larceny of motor vehicle. - Tristan Garmon, felony lar­ ceny, felony breaking and enter­ ing. - James Gilmore, larceny of a firearm, possession of a fire­ arm by as felon. - Jerrold Hayes, speeding to elude arrest. - Brian Hedrick, possession of stolen goods. - Larry Hedrick, possession of stolen goods - Kedrick Ijames, assault by strangulation, assault on a fe­ male, communicating threats. - Angela Jocob, five counts of obtaining property by false pretense. - Wilbur Jacob, five counts of obtaining property by false pretense. - Gilbert Johnson, assault on a female, assault by strangula­ tion. - Christopher Kendrick, felony larceny, felony breaking and entering, possession of a sto­ len motor vehicle. - De Wayne Kiah, possession of marijuana. - Manual Lemus, felony breaking and entering of a mo­ tor vehicle, larceny of a firearm. - Jesse Lynch, speeding to elude arrest; driving while li­ cense revoked. - Frederick McCoy, speeding to elude arrest, assault with a deadly weapon. - Christopher Miller, larceny, assault on a law officer inflict­ ing serious bodily injury. - Kenneth Nieft, two counts felony child abuse. - Justin Osborne, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Landon Overcash, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Cordell Pressley, habitual felon, possession with intent to distribute counterfeit controlled substances. - Arthue Reich, possession of drug paraphernalia, possession with intent to sell or distribute controlled substance, maintain­ ing a place to keep controlled substance. - Charity Faye Reich, posses­ sion of controlled substance, possession of drug parapherna­ lia, maintaining a place lo keep controlled substance. ' - Miguel Rios, three counts statutory rape, 1st degree statu­ tory sexual offense, crime against nature. - Anthony Rivers, possession with intent to distribute cocaine, possession of marijuana up to 1/ 2 ounce, possession of cocaine. - Karen Seaiey, obtaining controlled substance by forgery. ' - Thomas Schmidt, failure to register as a sex offender. - Crystal Steele, five counts uttering a forged endorsement. - Dahny Stroud, habitual felon, felony larceny, misde­ meanor larceny, uttering forged endorsement, attempted uttering forged endorsement, financial card theft. - James Thompson, felony breaking and entering, felony larceny. - Mark Webb, two counts forgery of instrument, two counts uttering forged endorse­ ment. - Eric Whitaker, misde­ meanor larceny. Superior Court The following cases were heard in Davie Superior Court on May 9. Presiding; Judge Kimberiy Taylor. Prosecuting; Robert Taylor and Steve Boone, Assistant DAs. - Rodney Baker, obtaining property by false pretense, sen­ tenced to 12 months, 4 days credit. • Gregory Barranline, posses­ sion with intent to distribute marijuana, sentenced to 6 months, suspended 2 years, as­ sessment, not to possess any drugs, DNA test, $200, cost; possession of marijuana greater Ihen an 1/2 ounce, dismissed; possession of drug parapherna­ lia, dismissed; maintaining a dwelling for controlled sub­ stance, dismissed; simple pos­ session, dismissed. - Gregory Bohannon, 2 counts felony probation viola­ tion, sentenced to 5 weekends. attend sex offenders program, no relationship with Mrs. Godfrey and no, minor children in resi­ dence for overnight stays. - Morris Bowers, embezzle­ ment, sentenced to45 days, sus­ pended 12moi^ths,$200,COST. - Vemon Clement, breaking and entering, sentenced to 14 months,200 days credit, 3 years probation, $200, fine. - Nicole Coursey, felony pos­ session of cocaine, sentenced to 6 months, 121 days credit, 5 years probation, assessment, not to possess any controlled sub­ stance, warrantless tests and searches, intensive probation, successful completion of a GED program. - Dyrell Dalton, felony pro­ bation violation, continue proba­ tion. - Terrell Dulin, felony posses­ sion of cocaine, sentenced to 11- 14 months; habitual felon, pos- session of marijuana up to 1/2 ounce, dismissed. - Genann Etchinson, sen­ tenced to 75 days,suspended 12 months, warrantless searches and drug tests, $ 100, cost. - Crystal Glenn, obtain prop­ erty by false pretense, sentenced to 4-5 months, probation 2 years, assessment, warrantless searches and tests, 34 days credit. - Randy Godbey, possession of controlled substance, dis-- missed; possession of parapher­ nalia, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 12 months, proba­ tion, assessment, $200, cost. - Yosef Handy, attempted trafficking in cocaine, dis­ missed; possession with intent to distribute cocaine, dismissed; selling a controlled substance, dismissed. - Shaun Hemingway, statu­ tory rape, sex offense, reduced to indecent liberties with a child, sentenced to 19-23 months, 5 years probation, 6 months inten­ sive, DNA testing, register as a sex offender for ten years, $300, cost. - Ross King, misdemeanor probation violation, random drug testing, failure results in custody; substance abuse treat­ ment, DRC program. - Kevin Marlow, breaking v and entering, 8-10 months, pro­ bation, 72 hours community ser­ vice, curfew, assessment, not to possess controlled substance, or alcohol, warrantless searches, $200, cost. - Donnie Sellers, felony pro­ bation violation, sentenced to 222 days, 102 days credh. - Anthony Speaks, hiisde- meanor probation violation, sen­ tenced to 150 days, 48 days credit. - Crystal Steele, felony pro­ bation violation, sentenced to 21 days. 'N , - Donald Thomas, probation violation, sentenced lo 75 days. - Cassandra Walker, felony possession of cocaine, sentenced to 6-8 months, probation.assess- men(,'■tests searches. - Jeffery Watson, prayer, for judgement, $200, cost. County Planners M e e t^ Tuesday There will be a meeting of the Davie County Planning Board on Tuesday, May 24 at 7 p.m. in.the second floor Commissioners Room of the Davie County Ad­ ministration Building, 123-Sr Main St., Mocksville. BCM Associates and R ^h Rowe have applied to rezone two tracts that consist of approxi­ mately 7.862 acres of land from Residential Agricultural (R-A) to Highway Business (H-B). These properties are located on the west side of U.S. 64 East, approxi­ mately 631 ft. north of Dalton Road. The properties-are Parcel J600000013 and ^Parcel J60000001302. Smith & Beaty Bolt, Inc, (Greg Beaty and Eric Smith) have applied to rezone approxi­ mately 9,59 acres of land from Industrial Special Use (I-3-S) to Industrial (1-3). The property is located at 2934 U.S. 601 N. al Bracken Road. The property is F300000078I. Kirby Kinder and Mike Lankford have applied to rezone approximately 2 acres of land from Residential (R-20) to High­ way Business Special Use (H-B- S) to repair refrigeration equip­ ment. The property is located on the west side of Farmington Road at Rockydale Lane, The property is a portion of Parcel E50000002406. The meeting is open to the public, Prior to the meeting, any­ one interested may obtain addi­ tion information or ask questions about Ihe meeting by visiting Ihe Development Services Depart­ ment on weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. or by telephone at 751-3340. ' Sports 7^ I- DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - Bl B o y d D e b u ts W ith B ig H it In 7 tli By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record Heath Boyd had it all in his hands - the Central Piedmont Conference Tour­ nament game and Davie's hopes of sur­ viving, advancing and living lo see an­ other diiy. The sophomore handled the pressure like a seasoned senior last week al North Davidson, tying Reynolds with a single in Ihe top of Ihe seventh inning. Brandon Stewart followed with a tiobreaking hit that gave the last-piace and fifth-seeded War Eagles a 3-2 win over No. 4 Reynolds in the play-in game. Sure, it was only one of three con­ secutive wins that the varsity baseball War Eagles (10-13) needed lo steal one of two state-playoff berths. But they found it to be quite refreshing after ab­ sorbing so many agonizing losses, and it was the kind of dramatic win a young team can build on next year. “That's definitely the best game we've played ali year," starting pitcher Brad Corriher said. "And it was Ihe most nerve-wracking." With Davie's margin for error down to zero. Coach Mike Herndon pulled out a bullet that wasn't even in his regular holster. Boyd had never seen varsity lime. He was the second baseman for an outstanding 20-3 JV squad. Herndon fired the Boyd bullet anyway, and lo and behold, the bullet hit its mark as Boyd performed a two-strike, two-out feat that his grandchildren will barely believe. “It’s a big difference between J V and varsity. I'd never played outfield before, and I was a little nervous," said Boyd, who started in left field. “When I was warming up (in the pn-deck ¿ircle). Brad told me to get up there arid do my best and not to think aboul it. That gol me pumped up, and I just got up there and swung." Please See 4 For 4 - Page BS Worth Noting... Alyràn- Walker of Davie soccer scored a tying goat in a 1-1, 110- minute'tie with N. Davidson, which tied Davie for third but won the fi' nal stetc-ployoff bid with a 3-2 edge in penalty kicks. Amy Alexander of Davie softball pitched a no-hitter in a 13-0 CI>C Tournament win over Reynolds, striking out 13 of a po.<isible IS, She also had four RBIs. Heath Boyd’s two-out, two- strike, seventh-inning hit in his var» sity debut tied Reynolds at 2-2, and Brandon Stewart’s 0-2 single pro­ duced, a 3-2 CPC Tournament win and capped a 4-for-4 night. John McDaniel got the win with magiiifi- cent relief, retiring six straight bàt- tersi including four on strikes. Stewart hit 15 for 31 in the last 12 games, and Whit Merrifield fin­ ished with a .442 average. Bret Peterson of N. Davie got the save for winning pitcher Ben Sink in a 7-5 first-round win over Ghiija Grove, as well as contributing two hits and two RBIs. , Perry James of S. Davie track ,ran the 10()-meter dash inlO.49 sec­ ondi setting .school and conference records. James, Santana Ariioldi James Mayfield and Shyteek Brown rim the 400 relay in 46.78 seconds to sot school and conference record I John Lattimore (shot put), Màtt Coiner (110 hurdles and 200 hurdles) and Michael Rowe (800) of N. Davie track won individual gold medals in the conference meet. They went undefeated in those four events, as did the 1600 relay team of Jake Moser, Josh Parks, Jake McKay and Jo.sh Money and Uie 800 relay. team of Parks, Rowe, :McKay and Money. John McDaniel hurls a pitch in a 4-3 semifinal loss to top-seeded North Davidson in the CPC Tournament. - Photo by James Barringer N o r t li N ip s D a v ie In C P C S e m if in a ls Davie’s baseball team found the magic formula in Ihe first round of lasi week’s Central Piedmont Conference Toumament - five solid innings from starting pitcher Brad Corriher, a pair of two-out, sevenlh-inning hits by sopho­ mores Heath Boyd ond Brandon Stewart and two brilliant innings from reliever John McDaniel that wrapped up a heart- pounding 3-2 win over Reynolds. But there was no Davie magic in the semifinals. The fifth-seeded War Eagles stranded seven scoring-posillon runners and lost lo top-seeded North Davidson on its home field, 4-3. That’s the way it went most of the year. Davie played eight CPC games that were decided by one or two runs or in extra innings, and it dropped six of them. “It was just one of those years,” Coach Mike Hcmdon said after Davie, which needed three straight wins and a ioumament title to squeeze inlo Ihe slate playoffs, exited at 10-14. “ It was a would've, could've, should've year. We could have very easily been 9-3 in the conference (Instead of 3-9). II wasn't that farfetched. It was just a year where we didn't get Ihe breaks or we didn't get Ihe key hit when we needed it," It was a seesaw battle from the first inning. The score was 3-3 with one out and a North runner at third in the bot­ tom of the fifth. Davie's complete-game North coach Mike Meadows was re­ lieved to dodge Ihe Davie bullet. If DavIc would have stolen Ihe tourna­ ment, North would have missed one of two playoff bids, “Davie was a hot team coming in and they were the only team left lhat could bump us out of the playoffs," ho said, “We had to make sure they didn't win this toumament. We had to take care of them,” Davie outhit North 8-7. Zach Howard was the. leader (3 for 3), while Slewart followed, up a 4-for-4 first round with pitchcr, McDanielihil6 utch Fuli^h'theV*''two hits aiid' a walk. North's senior back. Fulp rnoved lo second on a ground southpaw, Andrew Hunt, collected eight oul, lo third on a passed ball and scored slrikeou^^ to improve, lo 7-3. McDaniel the decisive iTin on Jay Yount’s suicide was the ibser despite giving up two squeeze. McDaniel fielded the bunt and earned runs and no walks in six innings, went lo first as Fulp scored easily. Singles by Slewart and Zach Vogler gave Davie a quick 1-0 lead in the first, Corriher's RBI double capped a two-run fourth that lifted Davie Into a 3-3 tie, Bul Ihe War Eagles squandered runner- at-second opportunities in the first, sec­ ond and fourth, and they let a golden chance get away in the fifth. Boyd led off the fifth with a single, Stewart reached on an error and Vogler drew a two-out walk.'That loaded the bases, But Hunt gol Ihe No, 5 batter looking at strike three, preserving the 3-3 lie. There were more Davie scoring chances. But Howard’s leadofr double in the sixth couldn't save the War Eagles from a 4-3 deficit, and Stewart’s one- out double couldn't pull them through in the seventh. Please See Tbugh - Page 84 Stunning Upset North Knocks Off South For Track Title South Davie’s boys irack-and-ficld leam ovcnshadowed everyone in Ihe Mid-South Conference throughout the regular season, going 16-0 and rewrit­ ing half its school records. But instead of a South Davie romp in the April 28 MSC championships a| China Grove, North Davie demonstrated anything can happen on a given day and beat South in the meet lhat mattered most, 116-110. Coach Don'Ihbat savored the signifi­ cance of Ihe moment. One day removed from a second straight giris title, he couldn’t believe how his boys achieved a second straight title. And knocking off an undefeated opponent made It even more,special, “This was a total .surprise,” Tabal said. “I did nol look for anyone to beat South Davie. 1 felt they just had too many athletes to overcome. I felt wc were in great shape lo finish no worse, than second, but I really felt after see­ ing South Davie Ihree times lhat Ihe rest of Ihe conference was playing for sec­ ond place. That was a shock. I c(in't be­ lieve we beat South Davie. :They had such a strong leam," Malt Coiner, Josh Parks, Michael Rowe, Jake McKay and Josh Money led the stunner with two gold medals apiece. Coiner captured two Individual events, while John Latlimore and Rowe had one each. The astronomical upset featured six first places, Iwo seconds, two thirds, four fourths, two fifths, two sixths and 13 personal-best marks. Erwin was third with 78 points', fol­ lowed by North Rowan (57), Southeast (43,3); West Rowan (36,7), China Orove (23,3), Knox (12,7) and Corriher-Lipe (11), “1 think South Davie gol hurt a bit bccause some of the olher teams look points they had been getting all season," Tabal said, Tlie Wildcats finished unbeaten in six events, including Latlimore in Ihc shot put (39-10), Coiner in the 110 and 200 hurdles (15.97 and 28.50, respectively) and Rowe in Ihc 800 (2:21.03), Jake Moser, Parks, McKay and Money ran a Please See Wildcats - Page B9 Davie Soccer Falls Just Short Of Playoff Bid By Brian Pitts Davie County Enterprise Record Was lhal a game or what? Consider­ ing Ihe Davie and North Davidson soc­ cer teams were fighting for the final staie-playoff berth on the final day of Ihe regular season May 5 at War Eagle Stadium, has there been a better one in 15 years? Since two overtime periods and two sudden-death sessions couldn't break a 1-1 tie and Ihe outcome boiled down to penalty kicks, has there been a more dramatic one? A more draining one? The momentum switched sides in an endless to.rrent of breathtaking moves as the teams dueled for 80 regulation min­ ules, two 10-mlnute overtimes and two five-minule sudden deaths. Although Duvie was just as good as North for 110 minutes. North seized the third playoff bid from the Central Pied­ mont Conference with a 3-2 edge in pen­ alty kicks. Davie coach Pete Guslafson Walker Woodward Lackey Hnftmnn has never seen anything like il, “It was a battle," he said, “ll was from one end of Ihe field lo the other. It was like a basketball game. It was just up and down all night long," The War Eagles did all they could to join the 1994, 1996 and 2003 teams as playoff qualifiers. When their attempt ended in ultimate heartbreak - Ihe pen­ alty kicks were 2-2 before Davie missed in its final lum and North followed wilh a make - Gustafson was so choked up ■t he couldn’t speak, “1 had to leave (the hudille) for a minute. I got leary-eyed," he said. “They were crushed. They worked the hardest they’ve ever worked, and I’m very, very proud of Ihem, They were lilcrally ex­ hausted, In breaks, we were slrelching calves and stretching hams and getting water. It was incredible. I’m not glad it ended the way ll did, bul I’m glad ihe game went through all the strategies and I'm glad the girls got to see the penalty kicks and It wasn’t a loss of a coin like II was Ihree years ago. We determined the outcome of the game. I left feeling so much pride and sadness. But I know that ll was everylhing they could do and there were no mistakes.” North’s Megan Long scored 15 min­ utes Inlo the first half. After tying North 0-0 in Welcome on April 19, Davie knew one little goal could be the ballgame, “North’s goal was not our mistake. They earned ll,” Gustafson said. “(Keeper Annie) Haftman made a heckuva dive and tipped it, but it just rolled right to the comer,” The score stayed 1-0 for 41 minules, Davie tied it on a memorable hookup between two seniors, Sharon Woodward blasted a 30-yard dead ball and Alyson Walker headed it Inlo the far comer of the net, “It was one of the prettiest goals of all time,” Gustafson said. “Coming from Please See Davie ■ Page B2 í!'- B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Rec Department Plans 7 Summer Sports Camps The Mocksvillc-Davie Recre­ ation Department will hold seven camps over late May, June and July. • Basketball - boys and girls. May 31-June 3. Register by May 25. Cost $40. Rising third-sixth graders. Brock Gym 4-6 p.m. Instructors: Mike Absher and Brent Wall. • Baseball - June 20-23. Reg­ ister by June 15. Cost S60. Ages 7-14. Rich Park from 10 a.m.- 12:30 p.m. Instructors: Davie coaches Mike Herndon and Todd Bumgarner, West Stokes' Kirk Goodson, North Davidson’s Bobby Byerly and collegc play­ ers. • Sortball - June 20-23. Reg­ ister by June 15. Cost $40. Sec­ ond-eighth graders. Rich Park from 10 a.m.-noon. Instructors: Janice Jackson and Chris Calli­ son. • Wrestling - July 18-21 from 4-5:30 p.m. Register by July 14. Cost $40. K-6 grades. Instruc­ tors:, Howard Riddle and Jamey Holt. • Soccer - August 1-4 from 6- 8 p.m. at Pinebrook. Register by July 26. Cost $40. K-6 grades. Instructor: Hugh Lee. • Volleyball - August 1 -4 from 10 a.m.-noon at Brock Gym. Register by July 26. Cost $40. Rising third-eighth graders. In­ structor: Irish King. • Tennis - June 6-10 and June 27-July 1 at South Davie; $30 per week. Sign up for one or two weeks. Beginners from 9-10:15 a.m. Deadline is one week before camp. Instnictor: Tina Arey. Basketball Camps To Be Held This Summer At Davie High • The Dnvie High girls bas­ ketball camp - for all grades - will be June 6-9. On June 9 all campers will attend from 9 a.m.-noon for contests, games and awards. The June 6-8 morning session from 9 a.m.- noon is for grades 1-8, and the evening session from 1-4 p.m. is for grades 9-12. The cost is $50. • The Davic boys basketball program will hold a mini-team camp for rising ninth and 10th graders on June 3,4 and 6 from 1 -4 p.m. The cost is $70, which includes instruction, in.surancc and T-shirt. Old School D a v i e S p o r t s F r o m M a y 1 9 6 6 • The Davie Rebels baseball team scored two runs in the bot­ tom of the seventh to beat Mooresville 7-6. The rally didn’t Boger Gets Hole In One Hubert Boger of Mocksville made his first hole-in-one at Pudding Ridge Golf Course on May 12. He used a 5 iron on the 143-yard second hole. His playing partner was Bill Peterson. open promisingly as Jerry Hen­ drix singled but was picked off first base. Four hits later, Davie was celebrating. Garland Allen and Earl Shoaf both singled. Sanford Sain singled to tie the score and Edgar Osbome singled to plate Shoaf and win the game. Mooresville had scored three runs in the sixth to force a tie and one in the seventh to take a 6-5 lead. Davie improved to 6-6 in the North Piedmont Conference. • The Rebels placed three on the All-NPC team - first baseman Sain, third baseman Shoaf and outfielder Osborne. • Davie will have boys bas­ ketball camps on June 3-4, June 13-15 and June 21-25. June 3-4 is a parent/child camp. The cost is $50 for par­ ent and child and $15 for each additional child. The camp will include instniction on how to work with your child; games, contests and prizes; a pizza din­ ner on Friday night; nnd conti­ nental breakfast on Saturday. June 13-15 is a shooting and player development camp. The cost is $50. TTie camp will in­ clude skills development ses­ sions with Coach Mike Absher, an appearance by Lenoir Rhyne College coach John Lentz, shooting technique and empha­ sis on individual player devel­ opment. June 21-25 is a day camp that costs $90. The camp will include daily lectures with the War Eagles staff, leaming ba­ sic offensive and defensive fun­ damentals, learning rules and terminology, games and prizes, and a championship game on Saturday. Cooperative employees provide good value and reliable service for the people who own their company - YOU. Only n local elcctric coopcmtive like EnergyUnitcd makes every customer nn owner of the business; Unlike other electric utilities, we exist to make sure your needs nre mec- and exceeded - not Just to make a profit. And ^ince EneriiyUnited is locally owned and opetiited, we’re always there with you, reinvesting in our community. EnersyUnited - we'te n cooperative, and our customers have the power. A Tuchttivw En«l(y* CiKircwtlve energyunited.com (800) 522.3793 Pete Gustafson gives a pointer to Whitney Bokeno. - Photo by Jam es Barringer Davie Loses Battle For Playoffs Continued From Page Bl behind with that type of goal was awesome.” For the remaining 24 minutes of regulation, the defenses took turns stifling the other unit. It became an unforgettable, epic display of heroic stands. From the first overtime through the second overtime, from the first sudden death through the second sudden death, neither team would go away. And it was because of play­ ers like Stephanie Jarvis, Sally Lackey, Kourtney Hanrahan, Woodward, Bekah Brock and Sloan Smith. “Jarvis and Hanrahan were awesome," Gustafson said. “Lackey is as dependable as it gets. Woodward was a beast all night. Brock and Smith worked real hard on the outside." Davie got big lifts from three JV call-ups - freshmen Hannah Jakob, Samantha Judd and Chelsea Trull. “Jakob helped out a lot at stopper," he said. “Trull did a heckuva job in the middle. She’s very unselfish. She’ll come off her giri to take a more danger­ ous giri in a heartbeat. She does that a lot. Judd went in up top and in the middle and did a great job. She was very aggressive. It was an incredible team effort.” . Haftman was exceptional in a tough role, filling in for regular keeper Kami Simpson and pro­ viding a stout wall. “Haftman won some free balls in there,” he said. “Every shot that could have been saved was saved. (Volunteer coach) Lauren Fowler coached her hard for two days. She didn't have a whole lot of time to get ready. She’s played some keeper, but that’s, a tough game to play keeper.” Gustafson had five more giris ready if the fifth penalty kick didn't yield a winner. Davie’s fifth shot banged off the post. North’s blew between the posts, and Davie was devastated. As much as it hurt to watch a no-quit, no-surrender effort come up short, Gustafson swelled with pride. “It’s no different than missing a free throw,” he said. “And no keeper in the worid could have gotten (North’s decisive PK)." Notes: Davie (8-7-2, 2-4-2 CPC) and North fmished in a tie for third.... Earlier in the week, second-place Reynolds cruised over Davie 4-0, and Davie couldn't do much about it. “We played hard. They're just so strong and we were veiy low pn numbers (two subs),” Gustafson said. ‘They pretty much pounded us, as they should.” ...Walkerfin- ished with 17 goals. She was three from becoming just the fourth to reach 20. Davie’s next scorer had seven. ... Reynolds blanked Davie’s JV 3-0. “We played a really good game. I was pleased,” Coach Kerstin Plage- mann said. “We ended the sea­ son well. 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Taxes and lees down. ' Special rate ol 5.9% through FMCC W.A.C. See dealer lot details. MUIIUN.. K Mu n o n r / Uocknilit Carl NaylorQ&oen^Kmager Keith DavenportSaJeaManaQOf Dale RatledgoAs^stant Sahs Manager Lonnlo BurgessSatos Chuck WalkerSalús B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 ll Brandon Stewart gets back to the bag on a pickoff attempt. T o u g h S e m ifin a l L o s s E n d s B a s e b a ll S e a s o n Continued From Page Bl "We had our opportunities," Hemdon said. “We had the bases loaded with our 3-4-5 up (in the fifth) and didn’t get a run in. We just couldn’t get that big, key hit.” “ It’s just been heart­ breaking,” Stewart said. “This whole year wc couldn’t put anything to­ gether, We didn’t have that good luck you need once in a awhile.” “We hit tiie ball, but not at the right time,” Howard said. “That’s Howard all it is.” Tlie War Eagles have been Ihrough tough times since the beginning of 2003, but they’re slowly arriving, going from 4-15 10 8-16 to 10-14. Hemdon felt no bitterness after the latest tough loss. “Even though we were 10-14 and it wasn’t the year we wanted 10 have, the kids handled il well and continued to work every day,” he said. “I mean I’d like to go practice today. A lot of 10-14 teams would be ready to pack il in, but this group got better at the end and we started swinging the bats real well.” Stewart batted a gaudy 15 for 31 in the last 12 games. Merri- Tield, another sophomore, was a  W im h S p rim g 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 1 1 3 3 4 3 3 3 3 3 3 28 3 8 2 0 0 0 Davie lirst baseman Brad Corriher stretches out. - Photos by Jam es Barringer machine all year, finishing at .442 and hitting safely in all but four games. The War Eagles re­ fused lo give up on Iheir year, even though they could have eas­ ily done so in carly April. They are unquestionably a team on the rise. If all goes ac­ cording to plan, they will be con­ siderably stronger next year, “There’s some things we have to solidify for us to be as good as we want to be, and we’re go­ ing to work like the dickens in the offseason to do that,” Hemdon said. “I’m going to miss Foo Smith (who provided a late- season boost al catcher), Lance Emert (who flourished at short and hit .395) and Timmy Erb (who pitched effectively in the second half of Ihe season). Those are three pretty good players, but I’m real excited about next year.” Notes; E^vie will retum 13 of 16 players, and that doesn’t count JV call-ups Boyd and Jus­ tin Thompson. ... North, which fmished the regular season in a three-way tie for first. Unproved 10 13-9. But it lost 16-2 to \Yest Forsyth in Ihe toumament final. N. Davidson 4, Davie 3 ab r h bl First-base coach Todd Bumgarner gives a high-live to Zach Howa|^d, who was 3 for 3. 0 1 0 Pitcher John McDaniel beats the North runner to the bag, but the ball is loose. too 200 0 - 3 201 CIO x - 4 2B ■ Sicwart (.S), Howard (6), Corriher (2), SB - Stewart (5), Howard (5). Uavie IP H R ER BB SO M cD .t, 6 7 4 2 0 3 NÜ IP H R ER BB SO Hum, W 7 8 3 2 2 8 B r a n d o n K o o n t z B e n e f i t G o l f T o u r n a m e n t S a t u r d a y , M a y 2 1*“, 2 0 0 5 P u d d in g R id g e G o l f C o u r s e 1:00 PM Shotgun Start (Registration Begins at 12:00 Noon) (Lunch Provided) ¡•’oniiiU: 4 Person .Slniij*ht Capliiin's Clioicc I\ll-1l (ll.n tn*ni Itllll 1* » s St'iiiiilN IlMiil \\ hill It'i SS( mill ^‘(>0»I «\ \\Miiii II lliiiii Ki d Irt'N t < j> i; ])Cf poi son .V Spi'vial ri'i/.vs liK'liitlt". $10".'ikiii I'nt" StriiinliUsl l)ri\r l.iiil',;rsl DriM' ( loSlSl (ll till' I’iii .1// [muTcds will 1^0 lo hcncfil ¡{rantloii Koontz Iti.null >11 |\ .1 Klll«li'l’’.illi.'li >lil>k'ltl .ll lo Ki’t^isUr \ liMlll Ol l or liiUiriiialion 1‘Uiisf ( nnliui: 1.(1 KolKTlMiii at {SMw or Kii\ rnllfiou ill lUí») 4*)2-7754 Davie Baseball Statistics Final Record: 10-14 AVG.AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR.316 38 10 12 9 0 0 a .147 34 4 5 2 1 0 I .333 6 1 2 1 0 0 ■0 -.276 76 6 21 18 2 1 1 .111 18 0 2 1 0 0 0.375 8 4 3 3 0.0 1 .395 81 18 32 11 3 0 0 .200 20 2 4 0 0 0 0.319 69 14 22 16 6 0 p .000 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.286 7 2 2 0 0 0 0 .000 2 0 0 0 0 0 0.000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 .111 9 2 1 0 0 0 0.442 86 28 ■38 8 3 1 1 .222 9 3 2 0 1 0 0.224 67 10 15 11 3 0 2,37i 59 19 22 9 5 I 2.000 4 0 0 0 0 0 0.313 83 18 26 22 5 2 2.307 680 141 '209 111 29 5 11W-L IP H R ER BB SO ERA2-3 32 1/3 40 24 15 .6 20 3,252-4 40 45 38 27 20 46 4.73i-1 9 12 11 8 10 •6 6,221-1 14 2/3 21 19 11 8 13 5.254-5 68 73 43 27 .7 54 2.7810-14 164 191 135 88 51 139 3.76 Timmy Allen Garrett Benge Heath Boyd Brad Corriher Josh Eder Timmy Erb Lance Emert T.J, Hines Zach Howard Jonathan Hutchens Logan Joldersma Tom Kuell Dillon Maurer John McDaniel Whit Merrifield Saxon Pratt Foo Smith Brandon Stewart Justin Thompson Zach Vogler TOTALS Brad Corriher Timmy Erb Jonathan Hutchens Tom Kuell John McDaniel TOTALS SAVES! Corriher STOLEN BASES: Merrifield 10, Emert 5, Howard 5, Stewart 5, Vogler is. Corriher 4, Joldersma 3 Smith 2, Benge, Eder WALKS/HPBi Stewart 22, Howard 15, Smith 13, Eniert II. Merrifield 11. Vogler 10, Allen 7 Corriher 6. Benge 2, Eder 2, McDaniel 2, Pratt 2. Erb. Hines, Hutchens 4 F o r 4 S t e w a r t C a p s B i g N i g h t W i t h T h e G a m e - W i n n i n g H i t DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - B5 Continued From Page Bl Hemdon actually started two JV players, including sophomore Justin Thompson at first base. “I’ve been struggling wilh that all year long. Boyd's an in- fielder but I just feel like he’s one of the top nine players in our pro­ gram,” he said. "I wanted him on JV taking ground balls because he’s a heckuva second baseman. “I told everybody we were starting Heath in left field and they said; ‘What?’ Bull said; 'He can play.’ “ There were many stories within the story; • The first three innings be­ longed to the lefty pitchers, Hampton Foushee of Reynolds and Corriher, who in the previ­ ous week watched in agony as Reynolds scored four runs in the bottom of die seventh after there were two outs and no one on. The four-error collapse wiped but Corriher’s six terrific innings and resulted in a 4-3 loss, Hemdon gave Corriher an-' other shot at Reynolds, and the junior lived up to the challenge. He rolled through two innings, got an infield popup to escape a two-on jam in the third and gave up two mns in five innings. “I struggled with who we were going to start, and I think a little redemption was in the back of my mind'when I decided to go with Corriher,” he said. “He had them baffied last time, we had them 3-0 with two outs and nobody on, and then they got us. I figured if we could get four or five go<)d innings out of Brad and then come in with John (McDaniel), what a change of pace that is." Reynolds' two-run fourth for il 2-1 lead was helped by Davie’s poor bunt defense. “I used the same philosophy as I did (in the 4-3 loss) - just tried to keep it at the knees and let everybody make plays behind me,” Corriher said. “I didn’t strike anybody out, but I'm not trying to do that. I’m trying to get ground balls, popups and give us a chance.” • Stewart, a sophomore right fielder and No. 2 batter, has been hailed as a can’t-miss, multidi­ mensional star since he rose to varsity status early last season. He illustrated his talent with two singles, a double and triple in four at-bats, including the clinch­ ing hit on an 0-2 count. He pounded pitches until his average climbed from .308 at game time to .357. He has evolved into a force after hitting .250 through 12 gaiiies. Since then he's 13 for 28 (.464). "Our JV team was 20-3, and imagine what they would be if they had (Whit) Merrifield, (Zach) Howard, Stewart, (Gar­ rett) Benge and (Tom) Kuell,” Hemdon said. "Today we played five sophomores and one fresh­ man." •And with a runner at sccond, one out and Reynolds still lead­ ing 2-1 in the sixth, Hemdon put the load on McDaniel’s back. The junior righthander who stunned the league lust year had stumbled in his last two outings, giving up 17 hits in 10 innings, and had lost three of his last four decisions, McDaniel relumed to form in timely fashion, retiring all six batters he faced, "We expect so much from him,” Hemdon said. “He hasn’t been bad, but we expect him to go out there and do it every time. People know him now, they didn’t know him last year and they gear up for him.” DAVIE TOOK a i-0 lead in Ihe top of the fourth when Zach Vogler roped a single to score Stewart, who doubled and moved to third on a Lance Emert bunt. Boyd Stewart The War Eagles appeared doomed in the sixth when Foushee got the 3-4-5 batters with Stewart standing at third. Stewart opened the inning with a triple, but couldn’t score. “When you get a leadoff triple and can't score, that gets you down," backup catcher Saxon Pratt said. Of course, the most compel­ ling part of the stoiy was the sev­ enth. Reynolds opened the door by misplaying Howard’s mile- high popup. Howard hit it “up in the silo," and Reynolds’ second baseman moved in when he should have stayed put. Then Pratt came off the bench and put down a bunt that moved Howard into scoring position. “I fouled the first one off," Pratt said. “I took a deep breath. I knew I had to get it down.” “He's probably our best burner, and he laid a beauty,” Hemdon said. The next batter went down on strikes for the second out, Boyd fell behind 1-2, and the War Eagles were at the end of the plank, looking straight down at shark-infested waters. Under that kind of duress, coupled with no varsity experi- enp, has to be one of the tough­ est spots you can face. But Boyd delivered with a line-drive, game-tying single to left. • ' “It pumped everybody up and Coach (Todd) Bumgamer was excited as all,” Boyd said. "It was awesome,” "The hit of the year,” Corri­ her said. “That’s the best hit of the yeor in die conference. That’s as clutch as you’ll ever see, and the pitcher (Foushee) is going to Harvard. For him to come up in a game like that, in a big situa­ tion, the biggest situation of his life, that’s amazing.” “He’s the type of kid you want in that situation because he’s cool and collective and knows what he’s doing,” Hemdon said. “(Af­ ter two curveballs) they threw a fastball, and he smashed it to left.” Merrifield pushed Boyd to second with a soft liner. With the count 0-2, Stewart blistered one up the middle, plating the go- ahead run. McDaniel made sure Boyd's memory will never go away, re­ tiring the side in order in the sev­ enth. That was after a sixth in which he struck out three in a row. Notes: Boyd’s improbable starring role included a crucial defensive play in Reynolds’ two- mn fourth. He jumped to his left and made an outstretched catch. Reynolds tagged up and scored, but it prevented a double and fur­ ther damage,... Foushee lost de­ spite giving up one eamed run. He stmck out eight and walked none. Dnvie 3, Reynolds 2 Davie ab r h h i M errifield 2b 4 0 1 0 Stewart rf 4 1 4 1 Emerl ss '3 0 0 0 Vogler c f 3 0 1 I Smith c 3 0 0 0 Hownrd 3b 3 1 1 0 Corriher p -lb 2 0 0 0 Pralt ph 0 0 0 0 Benge dh 2 0 0 0 Thompson Ib-dh 1 0 0 0 Boyd If 3 1 1 1 Tolalii 28 3 8 3 Davie 000 100 2 - 3 Reynolds OOC1 200 0 - 2 2B • Stewart (4). 3Q • Stcwnrl. Davie IP H R ER BP SO Corriher 5 7 2 2 1 0 M cD .W 2 0 0 0 0 4 e x p l o r e a w h o l e o t l ^ w d ^ l d ^ \ t h a t ' s d ò s e t o h o r n , ' . • Sport »^.Specialty * Teen>’Gvfernígíit « ‘ Visit .www.ykidscamp'org or cäll.(0^7)'888-YMCAìfor your local Y. e a l t h M a y C l a s s e s & E v e n t s Support Groups ADHD Siwort Gnwp Provides support and education for jarcnts of children witli Attention Deficit ^ypcractivity Disorder. May 23 • 6:30 p.m., Salisbury Pediatric Associates, 129 Woodson St., Salisbury. CaJI (704)63&S576for more information. AWAKE (Alert, Weil And Keeping Energetic) Provides a social and educational fonjm for anyone witli a sleeping disorder. Call the Sleep Medicine Center of Salisbury at (704) 6W-1533 fo^m^l^^ Canlac Support Group Provides support and education for cardiac patients, people who are at high risk for leart disease and their families. This group meets the third Tuesday of the month during Febniary, June and September • 6 p.m., Cardiac Rehabilitation & Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call <704) 210'5412 for more information. Coping wHti Grief Support Group Provides support for those dealing with the loss of a loved one. Sponsored by Rowan Regional Home Health & Hospice. Day and evening support groups arc available. Call 1704) 637-7645 fa more information. ProstatB Cancer Support Group Offers support and edication for, people with prostate cancer and prostate cancer survivors. May 19 • 6 p.m., Cardiac Rehabilitation & Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 6394)942 or (704) 2105104 for more informalion....... N u r s e - O n - D u ty For iioiitine, non-emergency medical problems or for answers to your medical questions, call Nurse-On-Duty 24 hours a day, seven days a weeic. It's free, 1-800-33& 4921 Women’s Health All classes meet in the Women's Health Center, 3rd floor, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 210«544 to register or for more information. This class prepares new parents for what to expect prior to delivery, Leam the signs of pre-tenn labor, know when to come to the hospital, and review important policy and registration information, Classes are offered eveiy Tuesday at 3 p.m. New mothers need to sign up for the one-time class between the 22nd and 28th week of their pregnancy. There is no charge for the class, but space is limited. Every 3rd Wednesday of the month, _____ ROWAN REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER Community Programs DUbetes Screenbig — $ 15 fee An individual consultation with a certified diabetes educator. Participants get a fin­ gerstick blood glucose test and are assessed on their risks for developing dia­ betes. This screening is by appointment only. Screenings are held at; Education & Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 Crove St., Salisbury. Call (704) 63S-1437 for an appointment priorITIPi®Jo!°frpa!ipn._____i _______ 5tt Annual Women’s Basebal Gamp Support the Susan C. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and receive on-field instruction in hitting, fielding and pitching from the manager and players of the Kannapolis Intimidators during Rowan Regional's fifth annual Women's Baseball d!amp. The camp costs $40, or pledges totaling $100 or more and is limited to women 16 years of age or older. All pro­ ceeds benefit the Komen Foundation. Tlie camp will be held Saturcby, June 25 at 9 a.m. at Fieldcrest-Cannon Stadium in Kannapolis. For more information or a registration form, visHvww.tcwan.ag a call (7M) ;M0562B; Educafional Programs Connaiy Arteiy Disease bkicaUon Class Leam about tlie risk factors for heart disease and what cardiac rehabilitation options are available. Tlie free class meets the first and third Tliursday of each month from 9-11 a.m, in the Cardiac Rehabilitation & Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Mcdical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 2105412 for more informalion. GestaDonai Dlaiietes Classes A certified diabetes educator provides a special program for expectant mothers with gestational diabetes, The program includes basic facts, meal planning and home blood glucose monitoring. Tliese classes have a fee, which is covered by most insurance plans. A gestational diabetes class will be offered on the following date: May 26 • 9-11 a.m., Rowan Regional Education & Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 Grove St., Salisbury. Call (704) 638-1437 (or more Informalion. Looic Good, Feel Better An American Cancer Society program that teaches cancer patients techniques to address the cosmetic side effects of treatment. Call (704) 857-0614 for an appointment or for more infamalion. Rowan Regional Medical Center offers a variety of health and wellness education ‘ ' A/ classes. For more information or to register for any classes or support groups, ^ ^ call (704) 210-5000 KOWAN KI .CIO N AI. ©12 M o c k s v llie A v e n u e , S a lis b u ry , N o rth C a ro lin a 2 8 1 4 4 w w w .ro w a n .o rg E x te n d e d H o u r s The imaging Center at Rowan Regional Medical Paik offers extended hours for all radiology services. Monday - Thursday: 7:30 a.m. - 7 p.m. Friday - 7;30 a.m. - 5 p.m. New MRI extended hours; Monday - Thuisday - 8 a.m. - 7 pi.m. Friday ■ 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. The Medical Park is located on Julian Road, Exit 74, off 1-85. Blood Pressure Clinic Eveiy Wednesday from 9 a.m. - noon, a free blood pressure clinic is held in the main lobby of Rowan Regional Medical Center. Volunteer nurses conduct the clinic. Free parking is provided in the medical center^s parking garage on Henderson Street. В4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Brandon Stewart gets back to the bag on a pickoff attempt. T o u g h S e m ifin a l L o s s E n d s B a s e b a ll S e a s o n Continued From Page Bl “We had our opportunities,” Hemdon said. “We had the bases loaded with our 3-4-5 up (in the fifth) and didn’t get a run in. We just couldn't get that big, key hit,” "It’s just been heart­ breaking,” Stewart said. “This whole year wc couldn’t put anything to­ gether. We didn’t have that good luck you need once in a awhile.” “We hit the ball, but not at the right time,” Howard said. “That’s Howard all it is.” The War Eagles have been through tough times since the beginning of 2003, but they’re slowly arriving, going from 4-15 to 8-16 to 10-14. Hemdon felt no bittemess after the latest tough loss. “Even though we were 10-14 and it wasn't the year we wanted to have, the kids handled it well and continued to work every day,” he said. “I mean I’d like to go practice today. A lot of 10-14 teams would be ready to pack it in, but this group got better at the end and we started swinging the bats real well.” Stewart batted a gaudy 15 for 31 in the last 12 games. Merri- ficld, another sophomore, was a Л ФтШ&'бШ..* T i l w iw R ^ U ic e m e n t ] *FREE LOW-E, windows must be ordered by May 31,200S f r Су buiudinoCEMOCeUNÔ. U G » Dnvlc M errineld 2b Slüwurl rf Emcrl ss Vogler cf Smllh c Howard 3b Corriher Ib Tliompson dh Boyd If Tolnis Dnvlc N. Dnvidson nb- r h Ы 3 0 0 0 I 2 0 0 0 0 1 I 1О О О 1 3 0 О I I О О О О 1 О 28 3 8 2 100 200 0 - 3 201 010 х - 4 3 1 к в 1 9 В 0 / Ы .С . 6^9 i 3 3 6 ^ 9 9 8 - 2 1 4 0 B r a n d o n K o o n t z B e n e f í t G o l f T o u m a m e n t S a t u r d a y , M a y 2 1 '“ , 2 0 0 5 P u d d in g R id g e G o l f C o u r s e 1:00 PM Shotgun Start (Registration Begins at 12:00 Noon) (Lunch Provided) I'x'ruml; 4 Person .Stniij>h( Captiiiirs Clioifi' « IMi ll pl.n Irttlll ItllK- li-t'sSfiunis ti'Ku \\ liHt IvvsSu|ni S« Mims >6(>ti ,4 Wiiinrii 11 HIM KnI Ins $i)0 i)er person I /h I /с I ini SiH'vUi! l’!'izc-.s liji'IjKlf: 1.10 "Skin I’ol" Sti'iiinhU'sl DriM' l.(u im 's t Diisi' ( lllM'Sl to Ilio 1‘iii Л И ¡m icccds will íit> to IwncfU lin iiu lo ii K tw nlz lil.lll>lt)|l Is .1 KlIlJl-l'J.llK-ll ^llltlrill .11 III KinisUr \ liiiiii III I nr S|iiiiisiir |||Г|1П1|П|||||| 1’li‘iiM' ('(liliali; I II K iih ir lM iii 111 l.M ( il4 ‘>’ -7IHI.l n r liilU 'in w -l‘) ’ -7754 Davie first baseman Brad Corriher stretches out. - Photos by Jam es Barringer machine all year, finishing at .442 and hitting safely in all but four games. Tlie War Eagles re­ fused lo give up on their year, even though they could hove eas­ ily done so in early April. They are unquestionably a team on the rise. If all goes ac­ cording to plan, they will be con­ siderably stronger next year. “There’s some things we hove to solidify for us to be os good os we wont to be, and we’re go­ ing to work like the dickens in the offseason to do that,” Hemdon said. “I’m going to miss Foo Smith (who provided a late- season boost at catcher), Lance Emert (who flourished at short and hit .395) and Timmy Erb (who pitched effectively in the second half of the season). Those ore three pretty good players, but I’m real excitcd about next year.” Notes: dnvie will return 13 of 16 player-s, and that doesn’t count JV call-ups Boyd and Jus­ tin Thompson. ... North, which fmished the regular season in a three-way tie for first, Mnproved to 13-9. But it lost 16-2 to \Yest Forsyth in the toumament final. N. Davidson 4, Davie 3 First-base coach Todd Bumgarner gives a high-five tqZach Howaj^d, who was 3 for 3, Pitcher John McDaniel beats the North runner to the bag, but the ball Is loose. 2B - Slewnrt (.S), Hownrd (6), Corriher (2). SB - Slewnrt (5), Hownrd (5). Dnvlc IP H R E R OB SO M cD. L 6 7 4 2 0 3 ND IP H R E R BB .SO Hum, W 7 8 3 2 2 8 Davie Baseball Statistics Final Record: 10-14 AVG.AB R H RBI 2B 3B HR.316 38 10 12 9 0 0 Л.147 34 4 . 5 2 1 0 1.333 6 1 2 1 0 0 0-.276 76 6 21 18 2 1 1.m 18 0 2 1 0 0 0.375 8 4 3 3 0 0 I.395 81 18 32 II 3 0 0.200 20 2 4 0 0 0 0.319 69 14 22 16 6 0 p.000 3 0 0 0 0 0 0.286 7 2 2 0 0 0 0.000 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 ,000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.111 9 2 1 0 0 0 0.442 86 28 ■38 8 3 1 1 .222 9 3 2 0 1 0 0.224 67 10 15 II 3 0 2 .375 59 19 22 9 5 1 2 .000 4 0 0 0 0 0 0.313 83 18 26 22 5 2 2.307 680 141 ’209 111 29 5 11W-L IP H R ER BB SO ERA2-3 32 1/3 40 24 15 .6 20 3.252-4 40 45 38 27 20 46 4.731-1 9 12 II 8 10 •6 6.22l-l 14 2/3 21 19 II 8 13 5.254-5 68 73 43 27 7 54 2.7810-14 164 191 135 88 51 139 3,76 Timmy Allen Ganett Benge Heath Boyd Brad Corriher Josh Eder Timmy Erb Lance Emert T.J. Hines Zach Howard Jonathan Hutchens Logan Joldersma Tom Kuell Dillon Maurer John McDaniel Whit Men-ifield Saxon Pratt Foo Smith Brandon Stewart Justin Thompson Zach Vogler TOTALS Brad Corriher Timmy Erb Jonathan Hutchens Tom Kuell John McDaniel TOTALS SAVES: Coniher 1 Howard 5, Stewart 5, Vogler 5, Con-iher4, Joldersma 3.Smith 2> Benge, Eder WALKS/HPB: Stewart 22, Howard 15, Smith 13. Einert II, Merrifield U, Vogler 10, Allen 7 Corriher 6. Benge 2, Eder 2, McDaniel 2, Pratt 2, Erb, Hines, Hutchens 4 F o r 4 S t e w a r t C a p s B i g N i g l i t W i t h T h e G a m e - W i n n i n g H i t DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - B5 Continued From Page Bl Hemdon actually started two JV players, including sophomore Justin Thompson at first base. “I’ve been struggling with that all year long. Boyd’s an in- fielder but I just feel like he’s one of the top nine players in our pro­ gram,” he said. “I wanted him on JV taking ground balls because he’s a heckuva second baseman. “1 told everybody we were starting Heath in left field and they said; ‘What?’ But I said: ‘He can play.’ “ There were many stories within the story; • The first three innings be­ longed to the lefty pitchers, Hampton Foushee of Reynolds and Corriher, who in the previ­ ous week watched in agony as Reynolds scored four runs in the bottom of the seventh after there were two outs and no one on. The four-error collapse wiped out Corriher’s six terrific innings and resulted in a 4-3 loss. Hemdon gave Corriher an-' other shot at Reynolds, and the junior lived up to the challenge. He rolled through two innings, got on infield popup to escope a two-on jam in the third and gave up two runs in five innings. “I struggled with who we were going to start, and I think a little redemption was in the back of my mind-when I decided to go with Corriher,” he said. “He had them baffled last time, we had them 3-0 with two outs and nobody on, and then they got us. I figured if we could get four or five good innings out of Brad and then come in with John (McDaniel), what a change of pace that is.” ! ■ Reynolds’ two-run fourth for ii2-lleadwashelped by Davie’s poor bunt defense. “I used the same philosophy as I did (in the 4-3 loss) - just tried to keep it at the knees and let everybody moke plays behind me,” Corriher said. “I didn’t strike anybody out, but I’m not trying to do that. I’m trying to get ground bolls, popups ond give us a chance.” • Stewart, a sophomore right fielder and No. 2 batter, has been hailed as a can’t-miss, multidi­ mensional star since he rose to varsity status early lost season. He illustrated his talent with two singles, a double and triple in four at-bats, including the clinch­ ing hh on on 0-2 count. He pounded pitches until his average climbed from .308 at game time to .357. He has evolved into o force after hitting .250 through 12 gomes. Since then he’s 13 for 28 (.464), “Our JV teom was 20-3, and imagine what they would be if they had (Whit) Merrifield, (Zach) Howard, Stewart, (Gar­ rett) Benge and (Tom) Kuell,” Hemdon said. “Today we played five sophomores and one fresh­ man.” •And with a runner at second, one out and Reynolds still lead­ ing 2-1 in the sixth, Hemdon put the load on McDoniel’s bock. The junior righthonder who stunned the league last year had stumbled in his last two outings, giving up 17 hits in 10 innings, ond hod lost three of his last four decisions. McDaniel returned to form in timely fashion, retiring all six batters he faced. “We expect so much from him,” Hemdon said, “He hasn’t been bad, but we expect him to go out there and do it every time. People know him now, they didn’t know him last year and they gear up for him.” DAVIE TOOK a 1-0 lead in Ihe top of the fourth when Zach Vogler roped a single to score Stewart, who doubled and moved to third on o Lance Emert bunt. Boyd Stewart The War Eagles appeared doomed in the sixth when Foushee got the 3-4-5 batters with Stewart standing at third. Stewart opened the inning with a triple, but couldn’t score. “When you get a leadoff triple and con’t score, that gets you down,” backup catcher Saxon Prottsaid. Of course, the most compel­ ling part of the story was the sev­ enth. Reynolds opened the door by misplaying Howard’s mile- high popup, Howard hit it “up in the silo,” and Reynolds’ second basemaii moved in when he should have stayed put. Then Pratt came off the bench and put down a bunt thot moved Howard into scoring position. “I fouled the first one off,” Pratt said. “1 took a deep breoth. I knew I had to get it down.” “He’s probably our best hunter, and he laid a beauty,” Hemdon sold. The next batter went down on strikes for the second out, Boyd fell behind 1-2, and the War Eagles were at the end of the plonk, looking straight down at sljark-infested waters. Under that kind of duress, coupled with no varsity experi­ ence, hos to be one of the tough­ est spots you con face. But Boyd delivered with a line-drive, game-tying single to left. ■ “It pumped everybody up and Coach (Todd) Bumgarner was excited as all,” Boyd said. “It was awesome.” “The hit of the year,” Corri­ her said. “That’s the best hit of the year in the conference .That’s as clutch as you’ll ever see, and the pitcher (Foushee) is going to Harvard. For him to come up in a game like that, in a big situo- tion, the biggest situation of his life, that’s amazing.” “He’s the type of kid you want in that situation because he’s cool ond collective and knows what he’s doing,” Hemdon said. “(Af­ ter two curveballs) they threw a fastball, and he smashed it to left." Merrifield pushed Boyd to second with a soft liner. With the count 0-2, Stewart blistered one up the middle, plating the go- ahead run. McDaniel made sure Boyd’s memory will never go owoy, re­ tiring the side in order in the sev­ enth. That was after a sixth in which he struck out three in a row. Notes; Boyd’s improbable starring role included o crucial defensive play in Reynolds’ two- run fourth. He jumped to his left and made on outstretched catch. Reynolds tagged up and scored, but it prevented a double ond fur­ ther damage.... Foushee lost de­ spite giving up one eamed mn. He strtick out eight and walked none, Davle 3, Reynolds 2 Dnvlc Merrineld 2b Slownrt rf Gmcrt 8S 'VoBlcrcf Smith c Hownrd 3b Con-ilier p-lb Prntt ph Benge dh Thompson Ib-dh Boyd If Tolnls Dnvlc Reynolds 2B - Slewnrt (4). 3B - Sicwnrt, Dnvie IP II R E R BD SO Corriher 5 7 2 2 1 0 M cD .W 2 0 0 0 0 4 ab r h bl 4 0 1 0 4 1 4 1 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 1 3 0 0 0 3 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 1 1 28 3 8 3 ООО 100 2 - 3 ООО 200 0 - 2 DAMP > ' J ‘ ' '* il r' ' ’* I s Day * Sport * Specialty • Teen> Ov6rnig|ht , \ Visit wwW.yklds.cafnp.org OI* calli(87;7) 888-YlviCA for your local V. Л е а я п ROWAN REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER j i v i M a y C l a s s e s & E v e n t s Support Groups ADHD Support Gnwp Provides support and education for parents of children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. May 23 • (\ay T i • 6;30 p.m., Salisbury Pediatric Associates, 129 Woodson St., Salisbury. Call (704) 638-5576 for mote information. AWAKE (Alert, Well And Keeping Energetic) Provides a social and educational forum for anyone with a sleeping disorder. Call the Sleep Medicine Center of Salisbury at (704) 6ЭТ-15М for mee№^^ Canlac Support Group Provides support and education for cardiac patients, people who are at high risk for leart disease and their families. This group meets the third Tuesday of the month during Febmary, June and September • 6 p.m., Cardiac flehabilitation & Wellness Centcr, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Centcr. Call (704) 210.5412 for more Information. Copbig wttli Grief Support Onup Provides support for those dealing with the loss of a loved one. Sponsored by Rowan Regional Home Health & Hospice. Day and evening support groups are available. Call (704) 637-7645 for more information. Prostate Cancer Support Group Offers support and education for. people with prostate cancer and prostate cancer survivors. May 19*6 p.m., Cardiac Rehabilitation 8t Wellness Center, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Cetiter. Call (704) 6394)942 or (7 M )^0 ^ip 4 for mro infortration. N u r s e - O n - D u ty For routine, non-emergency medical problems or for answers to your medical questions, call Nurse-On-Duty 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It's fee, 1-800-335-4921 Women’s Health All classes meet in the Women's Health Center, 3rd floor. Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 210^544 to register or for more Information. Community Programs Dbbeles Screening— $ 15 fee An individual consultation with a certified diabetes educator. Participants get a fin­ gerstick blood glucose test and are assessed on their risks for developing dia­ betes, This screening is by appointment only. Screenings are held at; Education & Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 drove St., Salisbury. Call (704) 638-1437 for an appointment or for _____; ______ Stii Annu^ Women’s Basebtf Camp Support the Susan G, Komen Breast Cancer Foundation and receive on-field instniction in hitting, fielding and pitching from the manager and players of the Kannapolis intimidators during Rowan Regional's fifth annual Women's Baseball Camp. The camp costs $40, or pledges totaling $100 or more and is limited to women 16 years of age or older. All pro­ ceeds benefit the Komen Foundation. The camp will be held Saturday, June 25 at 9 a.m. at Fieldcrest-Cannon Stadium in Kannapolis. For more information or a registration form, visitvww.icwan.org ct call (704) ^ 0662B. Educational Programs Coronaiy Arteiy Disease Education Giass Leam about the risk factors for heart disease and what cardiac rehabilitation options are available. Tlie free class meets the first and third Tliursday of each month fix)m 9-11 a.m, in the Cardiac Rehabilitation & Wellness Centcr, 2nd floor, Kiser Medical Office Building, Rowan Regional Medical Center. Call (704) 210-5412 for more inlormation. Gestational Diabetes Classes A certified diabetes educator provides a special program for expectant mothers with gestational diabetes. The program includes basic facts, meal planning and home blood glucose monitoring. These classes have a fee, which is covered by most insurance plans. A gestational diabetes class will be offered on the following date: May 26*9-11 a.m., Rowan Regional Education & Wellness Outpatient Services Building, 721 Grove St., Salisbury. Call (704) 638-1437 for more Information. Look Good, Feei Better An American Cancer Society program that teaches cancer patients techniques to address the cosmetic side effects of treatment. Call (704) 857-0614 for an appointment or fa more Informalion. Rowan Regional Medical Center offers a variety of health and wellness education vA'i'/v classes. For nnore intormation or to register for any classes or support groups, ^ ^ call (704) 210-5000 R O W A N RKdlONAl, e i2 iV lo c l^ sv ilie A v e n u e , S a lis b u r y , N o r t h C a r o lin a 2 8 1 4 4 '' w w w . r o w a n . o r g This class prepares new parents for what to expect prior to delivery. Leam the signs of pre-term labor, know when to come to the hospital/ and reviev/ important policy and registration information. Classes are offered every Tuesday at 3 p.m. New mothers need to sign up for the one-time class between the 22nd and 28th week of their pregnancy. TTicre is no charge for the class, but space is limited, Eveiy 3rd Wednesday of the month, this class will be offered in Spanish._____ E x te n d e d H o u r s The Imaging Center at Rowan Regional Medical Park offers extended hours for all radiology services. Monday - Tliursdayt 7:30 a.m. - 7 p.m. Friday ■ 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. New MRI extended hours: Monday - Tliursday - 8 a.m. - 7 pi.m. Friday - 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Tlic Medical Park is located on Julian Road, Exit 74, off 1-85. Blood Pressure Clinic Every Wednesday from 9 a.m. - noon, a free blood pressure clinic is held in the main lobby of Rowan Regional Medical Center. Volunteer nurses conduct the clinic. Free parking is provided in the medical centei's parking garage on Henderson Sti^eet. B6 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Dana Woodard scores as she collides with Reynolds’ pitcher. Davie rolled 13-0 in the CPC Tournament ganne. W est Sends Davie Softball Packing Sain In recent years, Davic’.s var­ sity softball team has endured plenty of frustration from play­ ing in the same conference as state powers West Forsyth and . North Davidson. The week be­ gan with West Forsyth at 25-1 and North Davidson at 21- 3. West is ranked third in 4-A and North Davidson fifth. The War Eagles haven’t t)een great since a special senior class rode off in 2001, but they haven't been bad, either. They have been good enough to win a lot of leagues. Nothing changed last week in the .semifinals of the Central Piedmont Conference Tourna­ ment at Rich Park. Pitcher Car­ rie Sain and Davie’s defense was good enough to beat almost any leam, bul the fourth-seeded War Eagles were left exasperated once again in a 3-0 loss to top- seeded W. Forsyth. The War Eagles (10-12 over­ all) went 1-5 against W, Forsyth, N. Davidson and W. Rowan, and the combined record of those Ih re e ttfter last week was 67-8. South Rowan finished third in the CPC. and .seven of its nine losses came from N. Davidson, W. For- ■syth and W. Rowan. “Two pretty good teams from this league are going to the state playoffs, but two pretty good ones aren’t going,” N. Davidson coach Mike Lambros said. "South Rowan and Davic could win some leagues. I've scouted other conferences and they don't have four quality teams like our four." Aside from N. Davidson - which lost twice, both in 12 in­ nings, to W. Forsyth in the regu­ lar season but beat West 2-1 in the CPC Tournament final - Davie was about as successful as anyone in slowing down the Ti­ tans, who escaped Davie 2-1 in 11 innings on April 5. But stop­ ping them Is another matter. In five of Sain's six innings, not a single Titan runner ad­ vanced past first base. The one exception was the difference in the game. In the second,.West scored three runs on three hits and an error. One of the hits was n mi.sjudged fiyball that should have been caught, Davie coach Janice Jackson said. In the first, third, fourth, fifth and sixth. West got three hits off Sain. “Carrie pitchcd really good," Jackson said. “It was that one inning. If we could just do an in­ ning over here and there, we would have won several more games." West’s three-nni second was more than enough support for ils murderous pitcher, UNC-bound Mendy McKenzie. The .senior pitchcd a three-hitter nnd struck out 13 to offset four walks. Amy Alexander, Erin Whitaker and Kaitlin Hall had the hits. The War Eagles, though, had their chance against McKenzie. In fact, they had three chaiices - a runner at second in the fourth, two on in the fifth nnd two on in the seventh. They were one hit from making things interesting. The game ended with Emily Tiemey lining out to center. Two runners were on the move at the crack of the bat. “Emily hit one as hard as she’s hit all year, and it was right to the center fielder,” Jackson said. “It was a line shot.” Earlier in the day in the pli\y- in game, Davie breezed past No. 5 Reynolds 13-0. That ea.sy win didn't help Davie's rhythm ngainst McKenzie. “It was rough because we had to go from Reynolds' pitching and tuni right around and face McKenzie,” Jackson said. “(As­ sistant) Chris (Callison) took them to the baseball field for bat­ ting practice while North David­ son was playing South Rowan, but it's hard in live pitching to go from Reynolds lo West." Alexander made Reynolds (6- 17) look silly, striking out 13 in a five no-hit innings. She added salt to the wound with two hits and four RBIs. Whitney Williams, Ashley Whitlock and Dana Woodard also had two hits, while Whitaker and Whitlock hnd two RBIs. Notes: Davic has labored nb r 11 Ы I I 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 3 2 0 3 3 2 4 3 1 1 2 2 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 ■ 2 t 1 1 2 1 1 1 I 0 0 0 3 1 2 1 1 t 1 0 2 0 0 0 25 13 12 11 ООО 0 0 - 0 (11)02 Ox - 13 W. Forsyth 3, Davic 0 DhvIc H. Tierney cf W illiam s ss Alexander 3b Whitaker c W hillock 2b Hall lb Snin p Mnnn If Cope If Ii. Tierney 3b Totals D A V I S SINCE 1939 k w m Since 1 9 3 9 Fuel Prices Costly F R E E 5 M I N U T E E X H A U S T C H E C K For Fuel Economy 7 ^ - 1 Ü ® Uuvic W . Forsylh D iivic IP II Sum, L 6 6 Duvic IP II M cK .W 7 3 against West and North since 2002, going a combined 1-19. Its record outside that devastating circle is a respectable 38-23. ... Davie’s JV closed with a 19-0 win over Reynolds and a 7-4 loss to N. Davidson. It finished 13-6 and 5-3 in the CPC, Dnvie 13, Reynolds 0 Dttvtc H, Tierney cf Cutler W illinm s ss AloMimtw p W hilnker c W hillock 2b PullwooU Hall tb Sain rf Mann Woodard if E. Tierney 3b Cope Taluts Reynolds Davic 2B - Alcxiinder (5), Vi'hilakcr (3), W liil- lock. Sain (2). SB - H. Tierney (11). Carter. H nli (2), Woodard, E. Tierney (3). D iivic IP I I R ER B it SO A lcx.W 5 0 0 0 1 13 Amy Alexander fanned 13 of Reynolds’ 16 batters Coach Janice Jackson gives the green light at first. nil r h hi 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 1 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 . 22 0 3 0 ООО ООО 0 - 0 030 ООО x - 3 R ER ВВ SO 3 I О .■> R ER ВВ SO 0 0 4 13 / Erin Whitaker takes a swing.-Photos by Jim Barringer Davie Softball Statistics Final Record: 9-12 Amy Alexander Brennan Carter Jennifer Cope Tori Fullwood Kaitlin Hall Jenny Mann Carrie Snin Emily Tiemey Hannah Tieniey Erin Whitaker Ashley Whitlock Whitney Williams Dana Woodard TOTALS Amy Alexander Carrie Sain TOTALS ЛВ К H RBI AVG. 2B 3B HR63132013.317 4 1 0 6 2 2 2 .333 0 0 01601 0 .063 0 0 013542.308 0 0 0536137.245 0 0 0293 5 1 ,172 , 0 0 0595137.220 1 0 046 9 5 4 .109 1 0 06117214.344 0 2 0597 16 10 .271 2 1 0555114.200 0 0 06315 19 15 .302 2 3 1 20 2 2 1 .100 0 0 054389 132 70 .243 10 7 1 W-L IP H R ER BB SO ERA4-6 75 2/3 45 30 14 21 98 1.3Ü5-6 61 1/3 51 28 18 17 52 2.059-12 137 96 58 32 38 150 1.64 STOLENBASESiH.Tierney 10,Williams9,Alexander4,Sain3.E.Tierney2 Fullwimi ii nMann, Whitaker. Whitlock «M.Hnll, WALKS/HPB,'Hall 12,H.Tierney 10, Williams 9. Alexander7. Whitaker6. Whillock 6 S 'Fullwood 3. E. Tierney 3. Carter2. Woodard 2, Cope, Mann " ’ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - B7 S p o t l i g h t o n B u s i n e s s Betty & Howard Edwards E d w a r d s S id in g & W in d o w s Johnny Walker could not believe It. After eight years of staining, sealing, sanding and painting, his home looked new with almost no maintenance at all. That’s because he called Betty and Harold Edwards, of Edwards Siding and Windows. 'The heat, the sun, the weather continually wore down my deck and front porch,” said Walker of Win­ ston-Salem. "You could wash; you could paint; but you couldn't keep it white," he said. Walker estimated that ho was staining and painting at least twice a year, until ha finally contacted Edwards Siding and Win­ dows. The experienced professionals at Edwards Siding covered Walker’s rear deck with white vinyl, and replaced all of the wooden railing with durable vinyl railings. The anti-slip vinyl flooring which covered the wooden deck floor is also treated to prevent chipping: and can be hosed off for simple cleaning. ■They are very good to work with,” said Johnny Walker of Betty and Harold Edwards’ company. The Edwards worked with the Walkers to design a customized fit for their existing home, with just the right style and appearance that they de­ sired. Walker and his wife were so elated with the clean, virtu­ ally maintenance-free decking lhat they decided to do their front porch and walkway as well, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tran of Winston-Salem also called Edwards Siding and Windows, to replace the railing around their home, and the trim for their windows. “I was very pleased," said Tom Tran of the work which Edwards SldlngjJ|d<^for l)is home. So pleased that he called his father, in order to get the same work done on his father’s home. , ____. ‘They aje good at what they do," he said. Betty and Harold Edwards have owned and operated Edwards Siding and Windows since 1978. They are licensed and Insured, beginning their bus[ness when aluminum siding was Iri vogue. With the advent of vinyl siding and windows, the Edwards have seen their volume of business explode. “We stay kind of busy," said Betty Edwards of the sunrooms, screened In porches, vinyl decking an^]ny| replacement win­ dows which their company Installs. 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The regular-season meeting with Erwin was gruesome, an 11- 1 loss in which the Wildcats fell apart in the field and handed the Eagles nine unearned runs. More taxing on the Wildcats was the fact that Erwin, going into the Erwin-Southeast championship game, was responsible for Southeast’s only loss in 16 games. On top of that, Southeast hammered West Rowan 18-4 in the other semifinal, and West •Rowan hammered North Davie 11-1 on April 27. Even though Ihe Wildcats bowed out with an 8-4 semifinal loss, they eamed a passing grade. They shocked Erwin with three runs in the second, and although Erwin controlled the rest of the game, they only trailed 4-3 go­ ing into the sixth. The outcome moved Erwin to 11-1, while North closed at II- 5. “I knew we could hang with them better than we showed (April 21), and I was pleased wilh the way we played,” Coach Danny Allard said. “We hung with Ihem. We jusl didn’t quite do enough.” In the second. North was un­ daunted by pitcher Alex Litaker and his 4-0 record. Rusty O’Connor singled to put two run­ ners on, starting pitcher Tanner Holden helped himself with a run-scoring ground out and Ben Sink gave North a 2-0 lead with a single. It was 3-0 when Josh Carter’s opposite-field slicer fell and rolled under the right fielder’s glove to enable Sink to score all the way from first. Litaker was lucky North's lead wasn’t bigger than 3-0. With the bases loaded and two outs, Brandon Squier lined out to first. Erwin countered with two runs in the third, tied it in the fourth and took n 4-3 lead in the fifth. “We made some real good defensive plays in the first three innings," Allard said. “Wc turned a couple double plays and kept them at bay,” Erwin finally crxished the sus­ pense with four sixth-inning nms. Litaker rebounded after the Tanner Holden of N. Davie runs through the bag at first. second, stayed unbeaten and also pounded North with his bat, go­ ing 3 for 4 with three RBIs. As the game progressed. North's defense went from superb to shaky. “They finally started timing Tanner out, but if we would have caught the ball a little better I re­ ally think we would have beaten them,” Allard said. It’s nice consolation anytime you can hold your own against tradition-steeped Erwin. Last year the Wildcats reached the tournament final by upsetting Erwin 7-3. They had lost 11 of the previous 12 meetings. “ I would have enjoyed (knocking Erwin out again) as much as anyone else,” Allari said. “We’ve only beaten them once since I’ve been here, and I really felt good (with a 3-0 lead).” The Wildcats’ winning streak grew to four with the 7-5 first- round win over China Grove. Sink eamed the win by pitching 5 1/3 innings, and Bret Peterson starred in relief and at the plate, going 2 for 4 with two RBIs. Zach Long and John Flowers also had two RBIs as North lore up China Grove’s starter with a 7-0 burst in the early going. In the first, Flowers’ two-ron double and O’Connor’s RBI single put North in immediate command. Peterson doubled and Long knocked home two with a single as North doubled its lead to 6-0 in the second. And Peterson’s double in the third made it 7-0. China Grove swung the game by scoring five unanswered runs over the fourth, fifth and sixth. Bul thanks to unassisted double plays by Holden and Nick Capra, China Grove couldn’t come all the way back. The Red Devils had mnners at first and second with one out in the fourth when Holden’s 5-3 DP at third snuffed out a poten­ tial big inning. In the sixth, again China Grove had mnners at first and second with one out. At that moment, il was time for North to make a play or al­ low China Grove to barge through the back door. Sink was done, Peterson was facing his first batter and Capra gave Ihc reliever a nice lift, catching a line drive and stepping on second for an inning-ending double play. Peterson came through under pressure in the seventh, inducing a popup lo short wilh mnners al second and’ third and getting a pop to third with the bases loaded. “I wish Bret could have pitched a little more, but he was our best shortstop,” Allard said. “He’s a quality pitcher, but we couldn’t take him off short.” It’s a good thing Sink and Peterson were able to escape re­ pealed jams because North’s of- Zach Long warms up on the mound as Coach Danny Allard looks on. Erwin's pitcher piunl<s Alex IVIarion.■ Photos by James Barringer S U M M E R B A S K E T B A L L C A M P S msmufífíum G E N E R A L S E S S IO N S : GRADES K - 8 Forsyth Country Day: June 13-17 Glenn High: June 20 - 24 Rising K - 4 Grade ~ 8:30 ano - 12:30 pm Rising 5 - 8 Grade ~ 1:30 pm - 5:30 pm A D V A N C E D S K IL L S : GRADES 6-12 Forsyth Country Day: June 27 - 29 Greensboro College: Aug I - 3 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm fense was no match for China Grove’s reliever, who retired ev­ ery batter in the last three innings. He stmck out four of the nine. “I don’t know why he didn’t start,” Allard said. “They brought him in and we didn’t sniff it. Maybe they were looking ahead, and we hit their first pitcher pretty well.” Notes: No. 7 South Davie was ousted rudely by No. 2 Southeast in the first round. Robbie Ijames held South to four hits and five Patriots produced multiple hits as SE drilled South 12-1.... North’s Sink and Carter had hits against CG. ... There were several positives after the Erwin loss. In the last three years the Wildcats have gone 9-3,14- 3 and 11-5, They’ve finished third, tying W. Rowan this year, each time. Enough seventh grad­ ers contributed this season that 2006 appears quite rosy. “People didn’t expect us to do as well because we were replacing so much. We only had four return­ ers and they didn’t play that much,” Allard said. “I was pleased with the seventh graders. They played a lot, so we’re look­ ing forward to next year. Hope­ fully we can continue this win­ ning we’ve got going.” W W W . R U S T Y L A R U E . c o r v i . 3 3 6 - 2 5 5 - 2 1 4 8 GENE’S AUTO PARTS We Make Hydraulic Hoses & Mix Auto Paint 7 6 6 - 9 1 4 8 3612 Clemmons Road Clemmons S u r e , h e w o u l d l o v e a n o t h e r s h i r t f o r F a t h e r ’s D a y . as long as it comes with a round of golf and lunch! EVENT DETAILS • Captain's Choice style toumament • Cost: $60 per player (includcii: lunch, praclire range, goody bag, mulligans, Ihmw & Icc buster) • Tee Times 8:00 am or 2:00 pm (Choose onc/lirst come, flist served) PRIZES • 1st & 2nd Place, Cash Prizes (each division) • Hole-In-Onc • Door Prizes • Raffle Habitat For Hum anity o i Davie County FATHER’S DAY GOLF CLASSIC S a t u r d a y , J u n e 1 8 t h , 2 0 0 5 P u d d i n g R i d g e NEW LOCATION! TWO TOURNAMENTS IN ONE DAY! Tee Times at Sam and 2pm. W H a b i t a tfor Humanity' For more Info call 751-7515 TEAM REGISTRATION Team Sponsor _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Team C a p la ln __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H/cap_ _ _ _ _ _ Players^____ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _H/cap_ _ _ _ _ _ _H/cap_ _ _ _ _ _ .HVcap_ _ _ _ _ _ Team Handicap Tolal_ _ _ _ _ _to Rftseiw T6am Spot______Deadline Mon. June 13 Proudly co-spoiisorcd by Wal-Mart, Pudding Rhlge Homeowners Association and Habitat for Hmnanity of Davie County A B U S E O F O L D T E S T A M E N T While the Old Testament is of immense value to us (Komans 15:4), to follow its specific rituals and ordinances is lo misuse it. The Old Testament is not the rule of faith and practice for Christians: rather we are unUcrthe New Testament. BETTER PROMISES _ Christians are “dead to the law.” (Romans 7:4) The law of commandments contained in ordinances” has been abolished. (Ephesians 2:15) Ours is a “better covenant with "better promises.” (Hebrews 8:6) The “f *e Old Testament were a mere shadow of things to come.” (Colossians 2:16-17) The ?lf3 N 3 4 ^ “^ * JUDAIZERS those who wanted to go back 10 the Old Testament for iheir religious practices, i ®'''" ^'>‘'6 'he apostfes lived. Ther''"* I"“?!}.! to bring the religious rite of r E S ° 2 ‘he Old Testament nnd bind it upon Ct\nstians. Paul si)id that he would not give in to such a practjce, no, not for an hour.” (Galatians 2:5) Odier K m nn. bought from the Old® ®,'i*®.h Sabbath, holydays, meat and , u, noi tor an hour." (Galatians 2:5) Odier Knmn . bought from the OldTestament were the Jewish Sabbath, holydays,-----‘drink regulations, etc. (Colossians 2:16-17) MODERN CHURCH Sn J A ‘he Old Testament.Some still go back to it for the meat and drink regulations we№*n thesesrhfkt trnfn things we have in2:16-17) Others find in the Old hÏ',. priesthood, ignoringÿç New Testament doctrine of the priesthood of aU believers. (1 Peter 2:9) Still others go to “he Old Testament to justify the use of instmmental music in N orth M ain Street Church o f C hrist 605 North M ain Street Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 nmcofc.org _______Claude Pharr, Minister DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - B9 N. Davie’s boys won the M SC for the second year In a row. Théy are, from left: first row - Robert Sparks, Brad Landreth, Jonah Kinder, Landon Whitaker, Joel Martin, Ryan Hesters, Brendan Johann and Sean Griffin; middle row - David Oakley, Mitchell Boles, Evan Trudeau, Tyler Shelton, Sam Cassidy, Kurils Keiser, Brad Deal, Josh Parks, Jake McKay, Josh Money and Matt Coiner; back row - Damon Jones, Davon Gray, Michael Wood, Chance Davis, Michael Maready, Brian Padgett, Sam Moser, Jake Moser and Nathan Hedgspetti. Wildcats Stun Unbeaten South In Track Continued From Page BI 4:05.60 in the 1600 relay to wrap iip a perfect record, and Parks, Rowe, McKay ond Money com­ pleted a perfect record in the 800 relay with a 1:44. Not only were the 1600 and 800 relays undefeated, they were unchallenged, and Coiner broke a North record in the 200 hurdles. Depth was a key factor as North got second places from Davon Gray (discus) and Moser (400) and thirds from Lattimore (400), Caleb Rominger (400), Coiner (long jump) and Sean Griffin (1600). Chipping in fourths were Rominger (shot put), Griffin (800), Brendan Johann (1600) and Porks (400). “A couple late-season moves really poid dividends” Tabat said. “Lattimore and Rominger were moved to the shot put for the last two meets, and they fin- The gold medalists for North were, from left: front - Josh Parks and Jake McKay; back - Jake Moser, Matt Coiner and Josh Money. ished first and fourth (respec­ tively). We also moved Rowe from sprints to the 800, where he rewarded us with a first-place finish.” The Wildcats came out of no- vyhere to dominate the discus, where they placed second (Gray), fifth (Vince Cioce) and sixth (Devin Trull). All three threw their best distances of the season. South’s Perfect Record Ends At Final Meet The regular season for South Davie’s boys track-and-field team was filled with high-fives, joy and laughter. The Tigers, however, frowned at the Mid- South Conference championship meet April 28 at China Grove. Eyerything went so smoothly in the regular season. The Tigers went 16-0, they were never chal­ lenged and April 28 looked like a foregone conclusion - a South coronation and fight for second place, So what changed as North Davie grabbed the title with 116 points and South settled for sec­ ond at 110.337 Ill-timed injuries cost South 0 perfect season, ac­ cording to Coach Brenda Holmes. “We knew it was going to come down to North Davie and us, just like last year,” Holmes said. “The meet before when we beat (N. Davie) so badly, (N. Davie coach Don Tabat) had iiome kids who were injured. He was healthy at the right time and I wasn’t.” Erwin was third with 77 points. The rest of the order was North Rowan at 57, Southeast at 49, West Rowan at 28.33, China Grove at 23.33, Knox at 14 and Corriher-Lipe al 11. As always, South? Shyteek Brown, James Mayfield, Perry James and Santana Arnold were a thrill to watch. South went un­ defeated (8-0) in four events, and those four authored spotless marks in the triple jump, high jump, 100-meter dash and 400- meter relay. Brown won the triple jump with a performance of 36-7.5. Mayfield performed well below his standards in the high jump (five feet, two inches), and he still triumphed. James did the 100 in 10.49 seconds, topping his previous best by nearly a second. The runner-up was 11.40. And Arnold, Mayfield, Brown and James ran the 400 relay in 46.78, dominating the runner-ups by more than three seconds. “(The second-plaie team) was doing the third exchange when Perry was a few yards short of the finish line,” Holmes said. “No one was ever anywhere close to them. A guy from Erwin was the only one who was close to Perry in the 100.” Brown was the top scorer wilh two first places and a sec­ ond. James had two firsts and a third, Mayfield had two firsts and a fourth and Arnold had a flrst and fourth. James broke his own school record in the 100 and snapped a three-year record of 10.88 in the conference. Arnold, Mayfield, Brown and James broke their own school record in the 400 and a three-year record of47.06 in the conference. Over­ all South broke eight of 16 school records and tied another. This is one of the most spec­ tacular teams in South’s 25-year history. This might be the best, period. Unfortunately for the Ti­ gers, the season ended in what- might-have-been heartache. “We set two conference records and this is the first year I can remember where more than one conference record was bro­ ken,” Holmes said. “It’s just dis­ appointing that we couldn’t carry through in the end. But it came down to injuries.” South got second places from Brown (long jump), Andrew Allen (800) and the 1600 relay team of Josh Ijames, Daniel McBride, Tyler Sanford and Allen; thirds from James (high jump), Ijames (110 hurdles), Kenny Booe (200 hurdles) and the 800 relay team of Shannon Johnson, Jevin Scotl, Michael Wainwright'fthd Booe; and fourths from Josh Burcham (dis­ cus), Wainwright (triple jump), Arnold (high jump), Sanford (pole vault) and Mayfield (200). If not for injuries, Ijames and Johnson could have very well been mentioned in the same breath as the four winners. N. Davie took advantage, taking the crown for the second straight year. “ Ijames' time in the 110 hurdles was way off,” Holmes said. “He had a pulled hamstring and he gutted it out and still placed (third). I lost points from two (injured) hurdlers lhat we normally got, and I had another jumper with a pulled muscle. Ijames typically finished first or second in three events, and Johnson typically finished first or sccond in three events. “That was the (5.66) differ­ ence.” Notes: Booe (30.34 in 200 hurdles) and Allen (2:24.13 in 800) broke South records, while Sanford’s 8-6 in the pole vault tied a nine-year school record. Johnson, Scott, Wainwright and Booe broke their own 800-relay record with a 1:46.69. The first-place performers for South Davie were, from ieft - Perry James, Shyteek Brown, James Mayfield and Santana Arnold. ■ Photos by Robin Fergusson Great Golf! Greai Price! HICKORY HILL COUimYCLUB 18 Challenging Holes In The Best Condition Ever! Mon.-iW....................¡.$20 Sa^ Sun. & Holldnys....$25 Settlors.,..,,...................$18intludéí cart ^ sf^ens/ce Join us fo r our “FATHERS DAY SPECIAL" lOQS VS Open Package - G olf Ahd Dinner Cull I’m Shop for Details and IVe 'nmi\s (336)998-8746 22SIHwy.64E. Mocksville, NC 9 .5 0 % LJ A P Y P r('m iu iii M o iK 'v M a rk e t A fC 'o u n l Bank of TheCarolinas www.bankofthecarollna8.com ADVANCE 352 NC Hwy 801 S. Tel: 336-998-1003 MOCKSVILLE 135 Boxwood Village Drive Tel: 336-751-5755 _____ ‘A rn u a l Parconlaoo Ylold (APY) olloctlvo 05«3/05; APY l9 variable and subject to ctiango at any timo; account is avallablo lor porsonal accounts only, commorclal accounts do not qualify for tho Premium Monoy Markot Account; minimum balanco roquirod to avoid foos, loos may roduco Mom bor oarnlnQs on account; If balanco drops bolow minimum during any montti, FDIC no interost will bo paid on ttio account during that month only. Team Alliance Soccer Club 2005-2006 SOCCER TRYOUTS Who: All U10-U18 Soccer Players What: Player Try-Outs When: May 23-26 6:00-8:00 pm Check-in: 5:30 pm for U10-U1S teams 6:30 pm for U16 • U18 teams CHECK YOUR AGE GROUP FOR EXACT DATE Where: Forsyth Country Day Soccer Complex > New Players will need a copy of their birth certificate. > Bring soccer cleats, shin guards, a ball, and water. To expedite check-in players should ore-reoisler. To obiain forms and additional informalion, go to www.lascsoccer.com, or call George TasBdan at 338-416-6762. CHALLENGE AND C U S S IC TRYOUTS FOR BOYS & GIRLS IN ALL AG E GROUPS Ane Groups U-10 Boys* Girls U-IIBoys + QIris U-12Boys + G]rls U-13 Boys* Girls U-14 Boys* Girls U-iS Boys* Girls U-1B Boys * Girls U-17 Boys* Girls U-18 Boys + Girls TrvoutPataa Mon.5ß3/Tuo.5/24 6PM-7PM Mon. 5/231 Tuo, 5/24;'6PM-7PM Mon.5/23/Tuo.5/24 6PM-7PM Wed. 5/25/Thu. 5/26 6PM-7PM Wed. 6/25/Thu, 5/28 6PM-7PM Wed, 5/25/Thu. 5/28 6PM-7PM M on.5«3/Tue.5«4 7PM-aPM M on.5ß3/Tuo.5«4 7PM-8PM Mon.5/23/Tue.5/24 7PM-8PM If you can't attend your age group's scheduled liyouts, you must call George Tasedan (416.8762), AND attend the make up tiyouts, all teams. Sprint PCS Fair & Flexible America“ No Roaming Charges or Huge Overages V \9 pltn that protvcti you from hugs ov«r«Bei and axpandt your eilling areatoroichmorsthan 293 mllllon ptople nMlonwld«. Ht tprìni PCS F«lr & nixlbli AiMrict*PiM autoiMllctlli Mi4* miniitM ai you nitd tfiMn, •0 you CIA Uik all you waiil aad itili lava naaay. pin, pay n« roaming ebargoi. 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Now that's bottor.** Sprint Sprint PCSVoice Ptione SCP-300bYSanyo* “Friendly Knowledgeable Consultants" “Family Owned & Operated“ ' l i i T h u c h 3570 Clemmons Road, Hwy. 158, Clemmons 766-8911 or 399-2222 Across from Bl-Lo Shopping Cenlsr Hours; Monday-FtWay 9 amfl pm, Saturday 10 am-4 pm UocUv««tW IME "1 HV.Y421 S. r Г -ь li BIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 The 12-under Rivercats, from left; sitting - bat boy Jake Barneycastle and Connor Bodenhamer: kneeling - Cody Schneggenburger, Shane Winters, Caiob Howard, Billy Martin, Shane Carter and David Howard; third row - Javan Phillips, Joe Watson, Peter Fields, Jacob Barber, Seth Constable and Ryan Barneycastle; and back row - coaches Danny Winters, Bill Fields, Billy Carter, Doug Constable and Jeff Barneycastle. Rivercats Win Three More Tournaments The Rivcrcals are an absolute wrecking ball. In the last month, the 12-under USSSA baseball team won tournaments in Gasto­ nia, Yadkinville and Mocksviiic. The loumamenl in Gastonia was the Super NIT, and the Rivercats went 4-0 in each. Tliey finished third in the Super NIT in Kem- ersvilie. Their dominance last week­ end at Rich Park lifted their rccord to 23-4. They have a ton of pitching (Javan Phillips, Seth Constable and Shane Carter have pinpoint control as interchange­ able starters), they get hits from everywhere and Jacob Barber is a monster. Barber, who brings serious gas as a closer, homered Saturday on the lower field at Rich Park, clearing the 280-foot fence in left. What’s more impressive about the defending state cham­ pions is every player’s from Davie County. And what if Peter Fields wasn’t injured. Perhaps their best starting pitcher hurt his arm early in the season and is out indefinitely. Briefs: Softball Tournament, Boot Camp, Benefit Golf Softball Tournament A one-pitch benefit softball toumament is scheduled for May 21 at Rich Park. The entry fee is $120 per team. Contact Ken Hunter at 492-6578. Dancing Boots The Davie Dancing Boot camp will be June 20-23 from 6- 8 p.m. for kindergarten through eighth grade. The cost is $30 for preregistered (deadline June 17) and $35 on June 20. You can find signup forms at cach school. For more information, call Colleen Pitts al 751-5905 extension 762. Football Cnmp Coach Doug llling’s Davie football camp - for ages 7-14 - will take place May 31 and June 1-2 at Davie. Registration is from 8-8:30 a.m. on May 31. The camp will run cach day from 8:30-11:30 a.m. The cost is $60. For more infonnation, call Illing at work at 751-5905 extension 423 or al home al 751 -7204. T r i a d O o d i Ш Benefit Golf A benefit golf toumament for Brandon Koontz is scheduled for May 21 at Pudding Ridge. Reg­ istration begins at noon (lunch provided) with a shotgun start at 1. The format is four-person captain’s choice. The cost is $60 per person and $240 per team. Contact Ed Robertson at 492- 7003 or Ray Tutterow at 492- 7754. M ocksville Legion Baseball Schedule May 21 vs. Asheboro/Mooresville (exhibition games at 12,3 and 6) 22 at Mooresville (exhibition) 23 at Asheboro (exhibition) 25 vs. Lexington 27 at Winston-Salem (exh.) . 30 vs. Winston-Salem (exh.) 31 at Mooresville June I vs. Stanly County , 2 vs. Kannapolis 3 vs. Eastern Randolph (exh.) 4 at South Rowan 5 vs. North Wilkesboro 7 at Concord 9 at Lexington 10 vs. Concord 11 at Rowan County . 12 vs, Rowan County 14 al Kemersville (exhibition) 15 vs. Mooresville 16 at Stanly County 17 at Eastern Randolph (exh.) 18 at Kannapolis 19 vs. South Rowan 21 at North Wilkesboro 24-29 1st round (best-of-5) July 1-6 2nd round (best-pf-S) 8-15 third round (best-of-7) 17-24 4th round (best-of-7) State championship toumament in Cherryville. Note: Games begin at 7 p.m. except on May 21. Jr. Legion Schedule M ay 20 at Taylorsville at 7 (non-league) 22 vs. Cherryville at 5 (9-inning non-league) 25 at Southern Alamance at 7 29 at Mooresville at 3 (doubleheader) 31 vs. Asheboro at 7 June 2 at Cherryville at 5 (9-inning non-league) 3 at Rowan County at 7 4 vs. Mooresville at 4 (DH) 5 at Eastern Randolph at 4 (DH) 7 vs. Montgomery County at 7 9 vs. Eastern Randolph at 7 10 at South Rowan at 7 11 vs. Kemersville at 7 (non-league) 12 at Kemersville at 7 (non-leagite) 14 vs. Southwest Randolph at 7 ■ 18 vs. Pineville at 2 (non-league D H) 19 vs. South Rowan at 2 (sr./jr. 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They arc excited about their end of the year party at Fun Sta­ tion 2000 in Statesville on May 19 and Latin American Day on May 20, Third grade field day is Thursday of this weelc. The end of year party is Friday. Earlier this year, Cooleemee students collected pennies, nick­ els, dimes, and paper money to contribute to the Mebane Chal­ lenge. To celebrate the $610 col­ lected, students participated in karaoke parties. Parris Whitley led the K-2 grade karaoke party. Mr. Campbell stoned the parties by singing "Heartbreak Hotel." Bus drivers: Kathy Dingy, Karen Horne, Sharon Miller, Dianne Oarretson, and Brenda Lyerly enteitained students with "Wheels on the Bus." They sang "On the Bus, Again," to the tunc of "On the Road, Again" for grades 3-5. Another hit in both karaoke parties were the Potato Heads (aka Vanesso Carter, Ste- fanie McDaniel, Mary McClam­ rock, Dianne Snider, and Sharon Miller) in full costume dancing to "Shout." Second graders sqng "YMCA;" first graders sang "TV/ist and Shout;" and kinder- gartncrs sang "Rock Around the Clock." Mrs. Whitley's "Ap- plouse" and "Laugh" signs were a big hil, too. For the finale. Dawn Ludwick led students and staff in singing and dancing the "Tooly-Ta." Melissa Rareshide led the 3-S karaoke party. The following third grade students sang "I Con Only Imogine" and Take Me Out to the Ball Game:" Travis Leonard, Emeral Gadson, Chris Bentley, Allison Barney, Britany Burger, Amanda Allison, Hannah Allen, Courtney Jones, and Patrick Brake. Fourth grade students Katie Bonilla, Rebecca Mickalowski, Ashley Burgess, and Colleen Hembree sang "Get J A C O B 'S 704-278-4973 - 59S Parki Rd • Woadlial Just Arrived Women’s Aura Jeans by Wrangler W te r w f e r &Clothlntf“' InstockWrangler Mens 20x Jeans LEANIN'iTREE,T-ShlrtS AB Occasion QrwtJng Canb Tues-Thurs 10am-6pm F rid a y N o w O p e n 1 0 a m til 7 :3 0 p m Sat 8am-4pm V A C A T IO N H O U R S; June 14-17, 1 0 a m -5 p m G re a t (C overage S ta rts w ith B lu e B lu e A d v a n t a g e * A ffordable, Q u a lity H ealth Insurance If you don't have acce-ss to health cowrage through an employer, or if you just need health coverage for family members, Blue Advantage l,s the program that gives you flexibility, convenience and options lo fit your budget and your lifestyle. Johnson Insurance Services, Inc. John Wood (3 3 6 ) 7 5 1 -6 2 8 1 iw o o d 0 127mari(0lplaco.com Plaii A; • $15 doctor visits • $10 generic prciicriptlons • No lifetime maximum on benefits Plaii B: • $25 doctor visits • $10 generic prescriptions after $200 deductible • $5 million maximum in lifetime benefits l$lii<‘( li cKss «»(■ \ o r lh Ciiroliiiii ум cm« tnd Him »HW4 •( Ne»». »9«<t к* м«м »Ad <hUl« «( »na iwmi ih« реЬсу m#y b* cnni>nu«d -ft An ---------Ikx Dmt »fid »К* Aitea«nan • m*>k e( *>• Pk>« ОоиV»W<IAt»oa««en iM SwMt« o4lb« Оои •'«1 Аи<х>*ь«п U^Jn.IV This Party Started" and "Com­ plicated." "Cowboy Take Mc Away" was sung by Kaytlyn Shoemaker and Cassie Soard. Also, from the fifth grade Bran­ don Wilson, Josh Key, and Mick Spillman sang "I'm a Believer." Student Council members sang "YMCA." Mrs. Rareshide led everyone in "Rain." She hod everyone participate in the macareha for the finale. Tricia Spry kept the karaoke machine ready for each group's perfor­ mance. The audiences enjoyed Joining-in on the choruses. The last Accelerated Reader breakfast for this yeur was held Friday. The following students made point clubs: 25 POINT CLUB: Sabrina Aumick, Brian Plott,Logan Daniel, Anna Gayle, Blair Carson, Jacob Horne, Emily Martinez, Donnie Wilson, Rachel Wilson, Courtney Honeycutt, Ashley Dobbins, Jorge Hernandez, Mortha Amora, Dylan Bumgarner, Brianna Brewer, Eva Hicks, Corbin Kopetzky, Kelly Martinez, Joseph Spry, Jada Burroughs, and Amber Youngblood. 50 POINT CLUB; Nicole Ebright, Alex Anderson, Tyler Grubb, Quomeshio James, Michelle Mickalowski, Andrew Montgomery, Chantal Cisneros, Katie Miller, Chelsea Bultako, Anaslazia Calhoun, Daniel Wil­ son, Makayla Johnson, Jacob Crews, and Elexicia Carter. 75 POINT CLUB: Garrett Beck, Chasity Miller, Kiyomi Taylor, Rcbecca Mickalowski, Josh Hicks, and Taylor Cranfill, 100 POINT CLUB: Kasey Potts, Kaytlyn Shoemaker, Anne- Marie Tow, Aaron Dodd, Bran­ don Ruth, and Josh Peters. 125 ■ POINT CLUB: Tyler Bush, Melanie Brannock, and Nick Endicott, 150 POINT CLUB: TVler Bush, Jansen McDaniel, and Austin White. 175 POINT CLUB: Jason Sellers. 200 POINT CLUB; Colleen Hembree. 225 POINT CLUB: Dustin Pott.s. 250 POINT CLUB: Shelby Stephens. 275 POINT CLUB: Shelby Stephens. 300 POINT CLUB; Kenny Goodin. Cornatzer Elementary Despite cloudy skies and cool weather, students had a “hot" time at their annual Field Day. They enjoyed games such as waterball horseshoes, beachball balance, water marble race, sponge relay, water balloon toss, tire roil, water goggles race, and more, Tammy Reavis, who organized the Field Day, thanks volunteers who helped make Ihe day special and enjoyable. The English Language Learners for Davie County had a celebration on April 21 at Soudi Davie Middle School. All students in Ihe county who are learning English and their families were invited to dinner, and then the students sang songs and performed dances for parents and relatives. More than 200 people were present. Nineteen ELL students from Cornatzer and their families attended the celebration. They sang a song called “ Big, Beautiful Planet" as a culmination , of Earth Day studies. Mrs. San Filippo and Mrs. Pena were proud of the studerils - they sang beautifully and remembered all of the words ' and hand motions well, they said, English Language Learners in Ihird, fourth and fifth grades have been preparing for Ihe End of Grade tests. The following students scored high enough on the English proficiency test to graduate from the ELL program: Pedro Benitez-Lozano, Ivan Enriquez-Jimenez, Angel Perez, and LIyanis Ariza. Mrs. San Filippo and Mrs. Penn would like to thank the following Davie High Spanish Iir students for all their help and support for the English Langu­ age Learners: Brandi Knight, Erin Lederer, Nicole Maready, Susy Navarro, Francisco Pereira and Kyle Smith. The elementary students had a lot of fun with you and learned a. lot, too, the teachers said, Mrs, Bullins' second graders have been learning about, dinosaurs. Her students are familiar with the types of dino­ saurs that once roamed Ihe earth, and the time period in which they lived. As a culminating activity, the class hod a dinosaur dinner complete with swamp juice, stegosaurus plates and prehistoric trees. Mrs. Bullins' class joined all second graders to honor their mothers with a program and a Mother’s Tea. The students read poems, sang songs, and wrote special letters to their Moms. A reminder to parents; Thursday, May 19, Class picnics for 2nd and 3rd grade; Friday, May 20, Class picnics for4lh and 5 th grade; Friday, May 20, noon, Pre-K graduation; Monday, May 23, Awards Day K-2 11-noon, 3-5 8:30 to 10:45. Last day of school for students. School dismisses at 1:45 p.m, Mocksville Elementary Student of the Week, May 8- 13: Zachary Palmer, Cheyenne Stewart, Brandon Hendricks, Setli Akers, Patrick Gordon, Jes­ sica Randolph,Kevin Pastor, Joel Johnson, Katie Koontz, Taylor Crotts, Conner Hennelly, Claudia Evans, Rachel Williams, Nicho­ las Sheets. Mrs. Bell and Mrs. Knight’s first graders have been studying ocean life ond Ihe different ani­ mals found in nnd around the ocean. It Is such an exciting unit and a great way to welcome the neor return of summen The dol­ phins seem to be a favorite to study, while the shark is always scary ond fascinating. The stu­ dents are anxiously walling for the annual Ocean Day, and can't wait to go “crabby crazy" and get wet at school. Mrs. Bell and Mrs. Knight cannot believe lhal an­ other year has almost come and gone. It has been a terrific yer and the growth that we have wit­ nessed has been unbelievble. We hope all of our students have a wonderful summer break and August will be here before we know it. The title of the unit that Mrs. Wall Smith and Mrs. Pruitt’s sec­ ond grade class is studying is “Circle of Life." We watched our chicks hatch, dur tadpoles de­ velop Into frogs and our bulter- fiies emerge. The circle of life continues os we measure and document the growth of several different plants. The students did several water cycle activities. The science experiment involved making rain inside the classroom. Mrs. Strickland's third grad­ ers have been preparing for End of Grade tests. We took math and reading this week . We ore also studying about Old Salem and colonial life to get ready for our field trip later this month. Schools To Conduct Early Intervention Screenings Davie Schools is providing a free early Intervention screening for children turning 4 on or be­ fore Oct. 16, on May 26 from 1- 6 p.m. at Central Davie Educa- llon Center on Campbell Road in Mocksville. Parents should bring the fol­ lowing items to the screening; • proof of age 4 on or before Oct. 16,2005, (a copy of a birth certificate); • verification of being a Davie County resident, (water bill, power bill, lax records, etc.). The goals of Ihis screening are: • lo review with parents their child's developmental progress; • to help parents know what to expect next in their child's development; • lo identify possible develop­ mental delays or physical prob­ lems; and • to provide parents with help­ ful information/guidance abbut lehri child's emerging skills. Call Central Davie at 751- 0016 to set up a screening ap­ pointment or for further informa­ tion about the process. Blue Ridge unior Rodeo Nay 20 & 21 • 7:30 p.m . Diamond V Arena • Harmony ( o/ne See Tomonows Rodeo Stars Today Directions: Hwy 64 to Sheffield Rd. to Rock Springs Rd, on right. Arena on left. Hwy 901 to Sheffield Rd, to Rock Springs Rd, on left, _________________Arena on right. Admission: ^6 Adults Kids under 6 Free Concessions Available For Life For Home For Auto For... Ever. We can help you protect the things you value most. And, we'll be there when you need us. For more information — Call me,.. Stop by... 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Nationwide M utud Imurance Company and AfflUatBd Companfts, H om t Office: СЫ итЬиь OH 43215-2220 Misa 11/00 S TU D IO O P n c S 560 North Ihide Street Wiiislon-Salcm, N.C. 27101 • 336-726-2006 www.snidiooptics.coni Hr: Wal, Tluirs, Fri 10-6:30; Sat 11-4:30 Oilier Hours By Appointment T7je Art o f Eyewear A u th e n tic Japanese C u isin e Dinc-in or Take-out 678 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville 336-753-6867 Fax; 336-753-6847 In F orm er Potm ans Location Business Hours Simday - Thursday 11 ;00am - 9:00pm Friday - Saturday 11:00am - 10;00pm Plcltup Window Available s e r a N ow Enrolling fo r CA M P a n d A rrS R SC H O O l CARE C o m a tz e r U M C C h rist Kids School A ge C are EHroll before May 19 and pay HO registration fee! Rates are reasonable and include fees for trips. *‘*Piscount8 for families witli more than one cliild** Summer Camp Rates are §85 per week and After School Care is ^145 per month. ■w more information or to sign up, please oaii Comatzer United l\/letiiodlst Churoii 898-0887. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Tiiursday, May 19,200S - B13 Kid Strong Run Raises $12,000 For Cancer Researcii By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record Family and friends of former Davie Higii soccer standout Dan g) I Callahan gathered for the first ¿annual Kid Strong three mile run V, »end one mile walk on Saturday, ;if(April23. A fund raiser for the Lance f/M Armstrong cancer research foundation, it raised $14,643, North Davie Middle School media specialist Chris Callahan said after expenses, she expects to send a check for over $ 12,000 to the foundation. Callahan said she and event coordinator Dana Keeney fretted right up to the day of the event whether the run/ walk would be a success. They needn’t have worried. "It was such a great day,” Callahan said. “They were predicting bad weather, but it cleared up, it was just perfect." Callahan said family and friends of her son came from as far as Raleigh' and Atlanta, where he works as a market analyst. Dan Callahan is currently in remission after three surgeries and three rounds of chemotherapy were needed to fight testicular cancer, the same cancer lhat Armstrong battled. Armstrong, the six time winner of the Tour De France, is also in remission. Callahan said the success of the event was due to over fifty volunteers, composed mostly of North Davie PTSA, students and staff. Even with all those who came out to lend a hand, she said il was still one of the hardest things she ever tried to do. “We thought at first, this might be the start of an annual thing,” Callahan said. “A few weeks before the event, there were still so many things lo do. I started to think, maybe this will be a one time thing. Now that it’s over, I don’t know. It was worth the effort, and now we know what we’re doing. Who knows, maybe we will do it again next year.” Callahan said the Kids Strong Committee, which comprised of North Davie Runners start the Kid Strong race at Tanglewood Park, organized by North Davie Middle staff and students. Middle School teachers Keeney, Kitty Hartung, Candy Poplin, John Marshall, Deb Gustafson, and parents Chris Lum, Nancy McKay nnd Trace Cundiff, gathered corporate sponsors that donated over 100 prizes for drawings and participation. Elizabeth Davis, a .seventh grader at North Davie, was rewarded for her fund raising efforts wllh a bike for raising the most money. Sean Griffen, a North Davie eighth grader, placed third in the 3 mile run. T h e C r o s b y R e t u r n s ... O n A M u c h S m a lle r S c a le By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record In its heyday, the Crosby Na­ tional Celebrity Golf Tourna­ ment brought such names as Joe Montana, Yogi Berra, Deacon Jones, Michael Jordan and Dean Smith to Davie County. For 19 years The Crosby brought people from surround­ ing states to watch their favorite entertainment^^stars and sport personalities ^ay golf at Ber­ muda Run Country Club. Then it was gone. The economic landscape changed from the lale 90s, when the Crosby flourished as one of the premier celebrity golf events In the country, lo the lum of the century, when funding dried up. For several years, the Crosby Scholars fund continued on the strength of a $4 million endow­ ment. Bul without a key event lo draw attention to the charity, donations have slowed down. Board members saw a need to create a plan to insure the long term viability of the foundation. Enter Paul Fulton, a former CEO of Sara Lee. Fulton, who was involved wilh the Crosby Celebrity Toumament for many years, said he saw a need to bring attention lo the scholarship fund, and decided it was time to bring the tournament back. “This ’is the mini-Crosby,” Fulton said. “We have 32 teams, a few celebrities, and a lot of old friends getting back together.” Fuhon said he doesn’t expect the toumament to ever get back lo the full scale event of the past. “Those days are gone,” Fulton said. “This is a lot more manageable. We’ll raise about $100,000, and that’s a good con­ tribution to make for the pro­ gram. Something smaller like this is a lot easier to sustain.” Celebrities were the biggest attraction of the game in the past, and proved to be this time around as well. “I’ve been lo each of the tour­ naments over the years,” said former UNC coach Dean Smith. D a v i e C a m p u s O f f e r s C l a s s e s The Davie Campus of Davidson County Community College will offer the following classes beginning June l.Cail 751-2885. Cha Cha (Social Dance) This five-hour course will teach you the basic steps and patterns of “American-Social Cha Cha,” one of the simplest and most attractive dances useful with a variety of music. This course is self-supporting, and fees wiil be charged to all students. $2S, June 6-July 25, Th, 7-8:40 p.m., 5 hours, , Instructors: Jerry Cope & Iva Mosko. Conversational Spanish To enhance productivity, safety and quality of the work­ place, English speaking person­ nel need to be able to communi­ cate with Hispanic associates. Instruction is tailored to individ­ ual workplace situations. Cul­ tural differences are explained. Participants should bring a list of industry specific phrases, questions or commands. Bank of the Carolinas, Advance, $55 June 7-Juty 19, T, 6-9 p.m., 21 hours. Instructor: Meredith Perez, TRCs: 2.1. Fundamentals of Investing Course covers common road­ blocks to financial success as well as keys lo success. Risk and cash management, retirement and college planning, stock market terminology are covered as well as guidelines on how to fmd slocks that are right for you. Lunch will be provided. iiHic 7, T, H:30a.m-I p.m., 1.5 hours. Instructor: Brenda Battle, Materials Fee: $10. Retirement Plans That Work for Your Business Do you want lo enhance the benefits you o f f e r , employees? Have you considered retirement plans too costly? Leam options employers can offer, June 9, Th, 6-8 p.m., 2 hours. Instruc­ tor: Brenda Battle. Building Level II Standard Inspection Course This course fulfills the Code Officials Qualification Board’s prescribed training course to gain admission to the qualifying examination for a Standard Certificate al Level II (in­ specting up to 60,000 sq. ft. at one story, or four stories at 20,000 sq. fl.) or Level I. Participants should be familiar wilh the applicable code sections, $60, June 10-19, F, Sat, Sun, 8 a.m.-5 p.m., 40 hours. Instructor; William Whaley. Computer Skills For the Beginner This course Is for the new computer user. This course will Introduce the user to computers, computer terminology, the differences between hardware and software, basic mouse applications, and some functions using Windows and file management. $55, Jtme 8-Jtdy 20, W, 6-9 p.m., 21 hours. Instructor: Paul Wylie, Technology Fee: $5TRCs: 2.1. Microsoft Windows Students learn to load software, manipulate the mouse and desktop, manage files, work in multiple windows, and switch from program to program. Copy, move, delete, and olher functions will be explained. This course may be taught using Windows NT computers. Students will need a 3.5” hlgh- density disk. Pre-requisite; Basic Computer Skills or equivalent experience. $55, June 6-July 25, M, 6-9 p.m., 21 hours, Instructor: Paul Wylie Textbook: Approx $37, Technology Fee: h.TRCs: 2.1, Experienced Motorcycle Rider Safety Course (2-Up) This one-day course is designed for experienced motorcycle operators, wilh their riders, to sharpen skills and techniques for safer riding. Students wiil need to provide their own motorcycle with safety gear for both. Riders must register. This is a self-supporting course and fees are charged lo ail students. $38.75, Jtme 18, Sat, 8 a.m-6 p.m., 9 hours. “I’ve been so impressed wilh what this program docs, with the volunteers, it’s ju.st a wonderful event and I’m glad Paul started it up again.” CBS sporls broadcaster Billy Packer agreed. “This is a homecoming for me,” Packer, a former resident of Bermuda Run, said. “This is one of those events and one of those programs lhal you can re­ ally embrace. It brings so much good will inlo the community.” Katherine Crosby said she was thrilled when she received the call from Fulton announcing his interest in starling the tour­ nament again. “This event couldn’t happen anywhere bul here,” Crosby said. “There is such massive support. It’s just amazing that ail these people, who all have places to be right now, lake all this time out of their schedule to make this happen, liiey’re all just wonderful.” . Crosby welcomed the crowd and directed their altenlion lo a group of student representatives who completed the Crosby scholars program. “In Hollywood, they talk aboul all the beautiful people,” Crosby said, “But I’m looking at you young people, and you arc gorgeous,” Similar to many scholar pro­ grams, students who participate in the Crosby Scholars must be of good character and maintain a certain grade point average. Unlike any other program, stu­ dents must also guarantee they will stay drug and alcohol free and perform several hours of community service. Mona Lovett, executive di­ rector of the Crosby Scholars Community Partnership, said she was thrilled the toumament had a rebirth. "This provides us with a way lo slay in the public’s eye, lo let them know lhat we’re still here,” Lovett said. “We're continuing lo serve the community needs, and this puts a familiar face back on the Crosby Scholars Pro­ gram.” Instructor: G. Grotberg, Insurance Fee: $1.25 Cooking for Father’s Day Cook for Dad and Grandpa after learning aboul greal sandwiches that are easy to eat before the golf game. Get ready for advanced cooking wllh wild game, duck and salmon. This class is recommended for those who are comfortable in the kitchen. Bring a cutting board, knife, and apron. This is a self- supporting course, and fees will be charged to all students. $20, June 7, T, 6-9 p.m., 3 hours. Instructor: Melissa Darr, Materials Fee: $l5Jnsurance: $1.25. Guitar for the Beginner This course is designed for individuals wanting to leam the basics of how to play an acoustic guitar. Students will leam hand condition, cords, and basic scales. Students must bring their own guitar. This Is a self- supporting course and fees will be charged to all students. $55, June 7-Jidy 12, T, 6-8 p.m., 12 hours. Instructor: Staff, Insurance: $1.25. Self-Awareness for Women in Public Placcs Self-defense Is aii about surviving a situation where there is a risk of physical harm. A woman can be attacked at any time and In any place. This course will show you how lo be aware of surroundings and how lo stay safe. The course is self- supporting, and fees will be charged to all students. $11, June 20, M, 7-9 p.m., 2 hours. Instructor: A, J. Farmer. Women Defending Ourselves Ail women live wilh a certain level of risk of violent crime. Leam the basic rules of self- defense and how not lo become a victim. This course is suitable for all adult women of all ages and sizes, This course is self- supporting, and fees will be charged to all students, $18, June 8-15, W, 7-9 p.m., 4 hours. Instructor: A. J. Farmer, Insurance: $1.25. U l e ’ r e j u s t a m o u s e - c l i c k a w a y . . . D A VIE C O U N T Y ONUNE Go to the Davie County Enterprise Record website at www.enterprise-record.com for a convenient link to our latest edition. It’s your online connection to Davie County. С Features J ^ Obituaries ^ f Classifieds^ (Subscriptions^ ^Reader’s Polli) f lüeather ? Davie County... WeVe Got You Covered Online! w w ui.enterprise-record.com si is i ii/- fr.] ir--] Ii '■ . u ’- W- I i-t . h B14 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 South Davie Middle School Envirothon team members include, from left: Alexis Free­ man, Corey Spell, Kaitlin Dodd, Mindy Jablonski and Kara Dodd., Davle High School Envirothon team members Include, from left: front - CISiyton Edwards, Jessie Ramey, Stephanie Wendel, Brandi Knight; middle - Ben Tutterow, Adam Sheesley, Ben (Rodriquez) Bruffey, Susie Navarro, Hope Ledford; back - Coaches David Burman and Stephen Long. Davie Teams Compete In State Envirothon The Enigmatic Enviroihon team from Davie High School participated in the Southern Piedmont Envirothon in April at the Catowba College Center for the Environment in Salisbury. Team members were Ben Bruffy, Clayton Edwards, Adam Sheesley, Jessie Ramey and Ben Tutterow. Also participating from Davie High were Stephanie Wendel, Brandi Knight, Ben Tutterow, Susie Navarro and Hope Ledford, Coaches were David Burman and Stephen Long, Participating from South Davie Middle School were the Tigers 2, including Alexis Free­ man, Corey Spell, Kaitlin Dodd, Mindy Jablonski and Kara Dodd. The Envirothon is a hands- on environmental education pro­ gram for teams students. The Southern Piedmont Envirothon was sponsored by the Area 8 counties of the NC Association of Soil and Water Conservation Districts (Davie, Rowan, Davidson, Iredell, Cabarrus, Stanley, Union , Mecklenburg and Lincoln. Students study aquatics, en­ vironmental issues, forestry, soils, and wildlife as a group, and then compete as a team. Advance Student Wins Sweet Potato Essay Contest Anna Mitchell Earns Degree An Advance fourth grader was recently honored for doing her homework. Suzanne Phillips, a Shady Grove Elementary School stu­ dent, was a Hnalist in the First North Carolino Sweet Potato Commission Essay Contest. The essay written by Phillips was chosen as the best among her school's fourth grade classes and competed against more than 60 essays in the statewide competi­ tion. Phillips, a student in a class taught by Vanessa Brown, wrote her essay as part of an educa­ tional unit' that included study about the slate’s official veg­ etable, sweet potatoes. In announcing the award lo Phillips, NC SweetPotato Com­ mission Executive Director Sue Johnson-Langdon said, “Our contest provided a good oppor­ tunity to let teachers get an as­ sessment of their students’ writ­ ing skills and provided an incen­ tive for the students to use their creativity." The Sweet Potato Commis­ sion also award Brown with a “Build a Spencer” doll that can be used as part of the sweet po­ tato educational unit in future years. Anna Riddle Mitchell, the daughter of Vance and Karen Riddle of Advance and grand­ daughter of Avilon and Doris Frye of Mocksville and Lawrence and Dolly Riddle of Advance, graduated from the School of Pharmacy at the Uni­ versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a Doctor of Pharmacy on Saturday, May 14. She was a member of Rho Chi National Honor Society, Kappa Psi Pharmaceutical Fra­ ternity, the Carolina Association of Pharmacy Students, and Tak­ ing Action by Service, After graduation, Mitchell will be working for Walgreens in Jacksonville, t h i s s u m m e n MM: Sadly, sa te llite custom e rs often lose reception during su m m e r slio w e rs. S om e say tlie y have to pay m ore to m ain tain very expensive equipm en t. And sa te llite custom e rs say they have to pay m ore ju s t to w a tch TV In little Jo h n n y’s bedroom , too. Ted does n o t w a n t th is to happen to you! H e’s here to help! He w a n ts you to kn o w you can g e t u p to 1 2 0 c h a n n e ls fo r u n d e r $ 3 0 a m o n th stra ig h t up until 20 0 6 . He has m ore fo r you, too! A lso included in th is special are: • All your favorite local channels at no additional cost • A digital receiver and remote control • FREE INSTALUTION Davie People DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - Cl Josephine McClamrock sits among the blooms In her garden (left). Above, she looks at the stone placed there this year In memory of her husband, Bill. A Special Garden The blooms were especially pretty tliis spring among the aza­ leas in Josephine McClamrock’s Mocksville garden. It would have made her hus­ band, the late Bill McClamrock proud. His family placed a memory stone in the garden, and on April on a garden tour.the garden. Matt and Tim Higgins have been helping care fot rthe garden; Tim Hiqgins and Josephine McClamrock help Jimmy i7,hosted more than 100guests Matt Higgins shows guest Stacye Joyner and Holly Marion the garden as they tour Jam es through the garden. m Bill and Joseohine McClamrock loved their garden behind their Avon Street home in Mocksville. Bill spend many hours in the garden before his death. . i ■ ■ ' i ■ , i ■ X i i C2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 M ick-L ed b etter C o u p le M arried Megan Mitchell Mick of Ad- vhnce #nd Brian Harrison Ledbetter of Advance were mar­ ried at 5 p.m. Saturday, May 14 in Maple Springs United Meth­ odist Church. The Rev. David Smith officiated. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Peter Jay Gustafson of Advance and Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Dwight Mick of Bonita Springs, Fla. Grand­ parents are Betty Jane Fairchild and the late James E. Fairchild and Naomi Mick and the late Richard Mick, all of Elkhart, Ind. Step'grandparents are Ruby Snow and tlie late Herman Snow of Galax, Va. She is a graduate of the University of North Caro­ lina at Greensboro, where she is a sister and alumnae of the Chi Omega Sorority. She is em­ ployed as planning director for the town of Wilkesboro. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sidney Ledbetter, and the grandson of Bonita Belding and the late Talmadge Belding, and the late Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ledbetter. He plans to graduate from High Point University this summer. Escorted by her father, the bride wore a strapless Richard Glasgow dress in the hue of ivory and gardenia around the waist and bust. She wore a ca­ thedral length Fenaroli veil. Her bouquet was ivory roses, with freesia, and was lied with a satin champagne ribbon. Maid of honor was Anna Forsyth Williamson, a sorority sister of Madison. Matron of honor was Amy Ledbetter Kiger of Advance, sister of the groom. Bridesmaids were; Lauren Ashley Harris of Fayetteville, Mrs. Brian Harrison Ledbetter Lindsey Drake of Galloway, N.J., Salem Martin Rainey of Asheville, and Katie Elizabeth Craven of Newark, NJ, all so­ rority sisters of the bride; Tara Dennis Young of Advance, a friend of the bride; and Caryn Marie Maeriender of Greens­ boro, a friend from college. The groom’s father was best man. Groomsmen were; George Sulecki and Garrett O’Neil, childhood friends, and Todd Kiger, the groom’s brother-in- law, all of Advance; Jason Swisher of Greensboro atid Jeffery Casterline of Myrtle Beach, S.C., college friends of the groom; Walker Posey of North Augusta, S.C., the groom’s cousin; and Zach Gra­ ham of Sycamore, Ga., a child­ hood friend. Ushers were Jason Shermer and Phil Patterson, college friends from Greensboro. Scriptures were read by Julie Agejew of Advance and Kim­ berly Hannigan of Pawtucket, R.I. Flower girl was Delaney Mick of Hopkinton, Mass., sec­ ond cousin of the bride. The wedding director at the church was Linda Coleman. Overall director was Derek Fri­ day. The program attendant was Annie Gustafson, step-sister of the bride of Wilkesboro. The guest register was attended by Linda Paulinz of Linnegatan, Sweden, sorority sister of the ■ bride. Music was provided by or­ ganist Dennis Raley. The reception was held at the Graylyn Manor Home with a cocktail and o’dourves hour with acoustic music from a violinist and a cellist, followed by a sit- down dinner with music pro­ vided by The Headliners. The couple will live in Wilkesboro. Social Events • There was a couples shower on April 1 at Ritchy’s Uptown Bar and Grill in Greensboro, hosted by friends of the bride, • There was a bridol shower on April 23 at Pinebrook Coun­ try Club, hosted by Amy Kiger, sister of the groom. • There was a dinner on May 12 at New Town Bistro in honor of the bride and groom, hosted by Jeff and Elizabeth Mick. • There was a bridesmaids luncheon on May 13 at the Vine­ yards Restaurant in Reynolda Village hosted by Jerri De Vault, Ruby Snow, Betty Fairchild and Naomi Mick. • The rehearsal dinner was on May 13 at 7:30 p.m, at The Pied­ mont Club, hosted by Robert and Doris Ledbetter. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher Robin Hammonds Meacham-Hammonds Couple Wed April 30 Essex-Graves Couple Married At Pine Lake Pavilion Near Mebane .Kerry Elizabeth Bentson Essex and Jason Randell Graves were married May 7 at Pine Lake Pavilion near Mebane. The bride is the daughter of Nancy and Paul Essex of Crested Butte, Colo, formerly of Raleigh. A graduate of East Carolina Uni­ versity, she is a supervisor with the West Hollywood (California) Recreation Department. The groom is the son of Jack Graves of Jacksonville, Fla. and Vickie Foster of Clemmons. A graduate of East Carolina Univeristy and Davie High School, he is a flight instructor in La Verne, Calif. After a honeymoon in the Dominican Republic, the couple will reside in Glendale, Calif. Danielle Marie Meacham of Advance and Christopher Robin Hammonds of Winston-Salem were united in marriage at 2 p.m. April 30 at Eaton’s Baptist Church in Mocksville. Pastor David Gilbreath officiated. The bride is the daughter of Mike and Sherry Meacham of Advance. Her maternal grandparents are Cliff and Eva Warnstaff of Charlotte. Her paternal grandparents are Mary Meacham and the late DeArmon Meacham of Charlotte. She attended East Carolina University and is a graduate of Forsyth Technical College, She is a registered radiology technologist employed by Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem, The groom is the son of Dennis and Susan Millsaps of Winston-Salem. His maternal grandparents are Tina Shelton and the late Buford Shelton. His paternal grandparents are Boyd and Kat Millsaps. He served in the U.S. Army Reserves and is employed by Winston-Salem Casket Company. Escorted by her father, the bride chose her long-time friend Suzy Pence Lenzraeir of Charlotte as matron of honor, as well as singer. The groom’s father was best man. Ushers were Chris Vogler, Donnie Mabe, and Dale Schaffhauser. The ring bearer was Hunter Meacham, the bride’s nephew, A reception was held in the church fellowship holl immediately following the service. The groom’s family hosted a rehearsal dinner at the Long Creek Golf Club, After a wedding trip to Emerald Isle, the couple will reside in Winston-Salem, “C E N T U R Y 21 R e a l E s ta t e C o r p o r a tio n , L L C a w a r d s le a d in g c o m p a n y a n e w r e g io n a l n a m e ' CENTORY 21 Real Estate Corporation, LLC has awarded tho former CENTURY21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniol with a now and distinct regional nomo, ronecting tho companies regional impact in sales olToct and purpose. The now namo awarded is CENTURY 21 TRIAD which will bo phased in over tho coarse of tho next 30 calondar days. Mackio McDaniol, President of tho corporation said “Since our association with tho Contuiy 21 brand two years ago, our company has soon tremendous growth in tho IViad. Thorofore, wo made tho decision to Iw identified based on tho area and region that wo serve”. CENTURY 21 TRIAD is proud to have a Mortgage Banker Senior Loan OlEcor (not merely a mortgage originator) in-house to exclusively service customers and clients with Direct Underwriting capabilities. This is made possible through CENTURY 21 TRIAD’S AtEnity Agreement with industry loader Granito Mortgage, Inc, This has been accomplished consistently over tho course of tho past two yoarn and has load tho company to oven forther increases in market share. Bob Church, Sr. Loan Officer with Granite, who is part of the Ruth Hudspeth Ibam, is available daily in CENTURY 21 TRIAD’S Clemmons and / or Mocksville offico<s) to underwrite loans, thus making the company a truly “one stop shopping source” for all of tho publics real ostato needs. Tho company has deep roots in the community dating back to 1967. During the course of the past two years, CENTURY 21 TRIAD has grown substantially in regard to agents, listings and sales, thereby increasing their market share throughout tho Triad area. “ It’s humbling to realizo that we began as a threo person operation, and now wo have close to 30 agents serving a muclrlaiBor area. We are truly A full Borvico brokerage operation,” Kathi Wall, Shareholder said, “This is impressive considering maintaining a nearly porfect customer / client satisfaction rating. More recently, CENTURY 21 TRIAD was presented with the covotcd “Quality Service OfHce” award for 2004 for each (Clemmons and Mocksvillo) office, including an unheard of and highly heraldod 100% customer / client satisfaction rato for the Clemmons olTico. This also places CENTURY 21 TRIAD in tho top 10% of all CENTURY 21 ofScos in tho entire United States. “CENTURY 21 TRIAD continues to grow utilizing one of a kind service including enrolling virtually overy customer / client in CENTURY 21’s “Preferred Client Club" for 5 full years after tho salo. It’s part of tho companies ongoing commitment to provido a valuable resource that tho customer / client can tap into altor tho closing whether buying or selling. Tho company ombraces and guarantees tiffany services before, during and aftor the sale which separates tho company from any other real estate company in tho marketplace! It’s part of our winning conunitmont to make evoiy customer a client for life” says Douglas Cooke, Broker-In-Chargo - Clemmons office and General Managon CENTURY 21 TRIAD is locally owned by shareholders Kyle Swicegood CCIM, Kathi Wall and Mackio McDoniel. Tho organizational structure of tho company remains tho same. I{yle Swicegood, Sharohholder stated, “This company is proud to have its roots in tho TViad. Although we have exporionced tromendous growth, our do^cation and sorvice to our customors and clients romain tho pinnacle of our ohjoctivo. I believe we ore poised to help load in this changing real estate, market that tho IViad is oxperioncing.” C E N TU R Y 21 T R IA D U a AUl w rvic« brokerage Arm ip c d a litin g In rw»<.,. 4 M n ,iw, •v tv ito uiuM rn«D »inu^jw auauug in rwucicnual, luxury, fine homea, now homo w ^ e U c m , Both oOIcm have ogenU who aro certified in orooa o fR n o Homoa & E atat«". “Senior M arket SpociMwU. and C o i^ e r r ia l. CEN TURY 21 Real E itate CorporaUon (www.cenlwy21.com) U Uw fra n c h iw of the world'* largoat raiidenUal real etUWe r iS S ? o ^ n litr a llo n a ^ m orkeUng lupp ort for Uw enUro CEN TURY 21 Sjmlem. TV® Syslem U ^ p r i^ o f m iO T than 7.OT6 Independently owned and operated francW iod b ro k e ro filcu iIn 3 5 countrieaand te rrilo rie i worldwide. C EN TURV21 Reol E itat« Corporation !• a »ubddiaiy o f Cendant Corporation (NYSEiCP). AUo find th e ir Dronertiai on ww w.R RAl.TnR m m com nndw w w № nturv21triR iinrt. Jm H a u ^ i v » ,ni» i.ttffW iCCnmrr.^l.roin OQU y m f f iCKSyILLE* 854 Valley Rd 336-751-?222 QllAUTVSKmlCE DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - C3 N i c h o l s o n - W i l l i a m s G r o c e - G r e e n E n g a g e m e n t A n n o u n c e d E n g a g e m e n t A n n o u n c e d Emily J. Groce of Advance announces the engagement of her daughter, Totiya Elizabeth Groce of Salisbury to Joshua Lee Green, the son of Jimmy arid Beth Green of Lexington. ' The bride-elect is à 1999 graduate of Davie High School, and earned an associate dègree in nursing from Forsyth Technical Com­ munity Collège in 2003. She is employed by Northeast Medical Center in Concoril. The grooth-to-be is a 1998 graduate of Sheets Memorial Chris­ tian School, and in 2002 earned a bachelor’s degree with honors in political science from the University of North Carolina at Greens­ boro. He is employed by Richard Childress Racing. The wedding is planned for June 4 at Fork Baptist Church. C ouple P lans J u n e 4 W edding Harold and Eleanor Nicholson of Lincolnton announce the en­ gagement of their daughter, Dana Nicholson of Hickofy to Michael Ray Williams, the son of Lester Ray Williams of Yadkinville. > The bride is a 1993 graduate of Mt. Pisgah Academy and is employed as a critical care nurse at Gaston Memorial Hospital. ' The groom is a graduate of Forbush High School. He is em­ ployed by Freightliner, ' The wedding is planned for Oct, 15 at St, Paul Lutheran Church in Newton, Mrs. Christopher Lee Waddell W a g n e r A N a d d e H C o u p l e ^ U n i t e d I n M a r r i a g e A p r i l 1 6 nephew of the groom. Flower girl was Kamryn Wagner, niece of the bride, atid ring bearer was Logan Wagner,' - nephew of the bride, . ■ The wedding was directed by'' Lynn Marrs, Music was vided by Donna Lanier, piariisfi ‘ and Julia Whittaker and Rusty' Angell, .soloists. Following the ceremony, a reception was held in the church fellowship hall, After a wedding trip to Hawaii, the couple made their home on NC 801 South, Advance, . Hanna Renee Gaitlier and Travis Ajllen Perrin, both of Or­ lando, dkla, will wed Saturday, June 4 at I p,m. at Whispering Falls Farms in Harmony. The bride-to-be is the daugh­ ter of Cathy and Michael Gaither, Hiumony.The groonj^to-be is the son of Sherry Perrin, Stillwater and David Perrin,'OrIando. ' Gaither atttnded North Iredell High .School, olin, and will graduate from Oklahoma State University May 2005 with a bachelor’s degree in animal sci­ ence. She is employed at Stillwater Steel Supply. Perrin attended Stillwater High School and graduated from Oklahoma State University De­ cember 2004 with a bachelor’s degree in business. He is em­ ployed at Stillwater Equipment Company, Inc. Amy Lynette Wagner of Ad­ vancc and Christopher Lee Waddell of Boonville were united in marriage at 2 p.m. April 16 at Liberty United Methodi.st Church. Dr. Mark Evans offici­ ated. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wagner of Advance. She is a graduate of Davie High School and Davidson County Community College. She is employed by Mocksville Vision Center. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Billie Waddell of Boonville. He is a graduate of Starmount High School and is employed by Lowes Distribu­ tion Center, Statesville. The bride chose Erica Overcash, a long-time friend, as maid of honor. Bridesmaids were friends of the bride, Paula Lunsford, Erin Chaffin, and Kamryn Wagnet The groom’s father was best man. Ushers were Matthew Brown, Russell Casstevens and David Vestol, friends of the groom. Groomsmen were An­ drew Wagner, the bride’s brother, and Darin Waddell, the groom’s brother. Junior grooms­ man was Brantley Waddell, Social Events / ■ • A rehearsal dinner was hosted by the groom’s parents and catered by Scott Wagner^ the bride’s cousin. • A bridesmaids luncheon was held April 9, hosted by Janet Taylor atid Erica Overcash at Mrs, Taylor’s hoiiie;'»i'n Mocksville. ' * t. 'i • A shower was given by'cij^ workers from Mocksvill^'yisibh Center. ' • Family and frieritis of-t^ bride hosted a shower at tiiierty United Methodist Church. • , • The bride’s church.family at Liberty also hosted a^hower. Mrs. Carrie Elizabeth Saltai Brown-Sakai Couple Wed At First Methodist Carrie Elizabeth Brown and Taka Sakai of Aspen, Colo, were united in marriage on Saturday, May 7 at 5:30 p,m. at First United Methodist Church of Mocksville. The Revs. Donald W. Routh and Crystal Alexander officiated. The bride is the daughter of Ron and Dianne Brown of Holly Lane, Mocksville, She is a graduate of Davie High School, attended Meredith College and earned a bachelor’s degree in marketing from Westem Caro­ lina University, where she was a member of the Phi Mu Soror­ ity. She is employed by the As­ pen Skiing Co. The groom is the son of Machie Sakai and the late Sukeynsu Sakai of Scarsdale, N.Y. He is a graduate of Mamaroneck High School and earned a bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Colorado, He is employed by the Aspen Skiing Co. The bride chose Barb Piotrowski as her maid of honor, and Megan Brown as her matron of honor. Bridesmaids were; Miya Sakai, Jennifer Jones Ward, Christina Finger Sims, Allison Buckner Pollard, Erica Deviney Mark, Trade Sechrest Everhardt, Kena Stone Bowman and Page Archer. Mark Delille was the groom’s best man. Groomsmen were; Greg Siddons, Thomas Clark, Caleb Sakai, Andrew Davies, Nobi Sakai, William Kaplan, Davin Brown, Nicholiis Brodsky and Colman Cuff. After a reception at Bermuda Run Country Club, the couple went on a wedding trip to Costa Rica. They will be at home in Aspen. Wetmore Farms W O O D L E A F L O C A L STRAWBERRIES • G r e e n h o u s e T o m a t o e s • • O t h e r p r o d u c e a s i t b e c o m e s a v a i l a b l e • ® Open Monday-Saturday 8:00 am-6:00 pm Closed on Sundays Fmm Mockiville take 601 South to SOI Intersection, turn rIs IM at light 4 miles to caution light In Woodleaf. Follow signs to farm. 704-278-2028 We'll Help You Move Even If Your Friends Won't We carry everything you need! •Moving Boxes «Tape •Bubble Cushioning 'Peanuts ‘Markers 1 5 % O F F '.wHh this coupon I The UPS Store I SlOValley Road •Mocksville I Next to Bi-Lo Supermaáet T I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I . %C A M I L L E G A R D E N S Garden, Greenhouse^ IkMiitil'iil ll:inyiiiL’ Biiskcls K filiic al III SS I w PlaiU w nil an\ piiivlnisc Fmm Mocksvillc-Hioy 601N to Ijamea Church Road ^ (turn at C'a BBQ) then leß on GrunnarnnnD^ O P E N T a T H E R U B L K C i ^ T o w n & C o u n t r y H O M E S H O W C A S E By MBS for •CABINETS • FLOORING •CERAMICTILE •WINDOWS & DOORS • BRICK & VINYL SIDING SanrfyLShMh rwtH(C«nm(li Keo}oniin lí«n» Doyit* Mcheni>(Sigw Kithcn Pnyirf 5275 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 27006 (Tanglevwod Cros^g Shopping Center) (336)998-7800 0pm Saturday byAppLonly Mocksville Builders Supply’s T o w n & C o u n t r y By MBS H om e Showcase Center Is your local one stop shop v\^ith an attractive, showroom atmosphere. Our professional design team will give you the personal attention you just can’t get in those big city stores. ñ W !| '.f IS Л V I' C4 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 S t r a w b e r r ie s A r e H e r e By Robin Lowder Davie County Enterprise Rccord They’re here. Big, sweet, red, beautiful, luscious strawberries. When you see these beautiful berries overflowing in the market, you know winter is officially behind us. Strawberries are one of the first fruits to ripen in the spring. I don’t think there is a person out there who does not wait with anticipation for the local straw­ berry farms to open each year. Whether you pick them yourself or you have them picked for you, there is nothing more gratifying than that first sweet taste of the season. Wilh hundreds of recipes for using strawberries out there, it is enough to keep this avid fan and cook awake at night just thinking about how lo use them. Strawberries are naturally sweet as well as loaded with vitamin C. Strawberries contain more vitamin C than oranges and have more sugar per ounce than apples. If you think that is good news, I read’ that 2.S cups of strawberries are less fattening than 10 jellybeans. If you are one of many Americans who are counting calories and carbs, you will be glad to know that a cup of strawberries only contains about SO calories and 11 grams of carbs. Overall, 1 would say strawberries are a great addition to any diet. When shopping for the berries there are a few things to keep in mind when purchasing ones that are prepackaged. Look for berries that are bright in color and arc fragrant. If they are still somewhat green, they are not yet ripe. Never purchase a package with even one that has mold. The mold spores can travel throughout the package. Once you haVe gotten your selection home, they need to be used, stored, cooked, or frozen promptly. If you are going to use them within a couple of days, store them in a bowl in the refrigerator loosely covered with plastic wrap. Don’t wash your strawberries until you arc ready to use them, and don’t let them sit in cold water. Rinsing your berries under cold water by placing them in a colander is the best way to w^sh them. I read some interesting fun facts about strawberries. The strawberry is the only fruit with the seeds on the outsii'7 and there can be an avei jge of 200 of those seeds. California and Florida produce the largest percentage of the nation’s strawberry crops, but strawberries are grown in every state in the United States? And lastly, did you know that if you laid all the strawbeaies grown in California in one year side by side, they would circle the worid over 15 times? Now let’s get to the really good part, what to do with all those wonderful strawberries. You can make a chilled strawberry soup, ice cream, muffins, quick breads, pancakes, cakes, cookies, jams, jellies, preserves,salsas, pies, dressings, beverages, salads and more. Easy Strawberry Cake 1 prepared angel food cake' 2 cups fresh strawberries, sliced and sweetened with 1/4 cup sugar 3 large strawberries sliced for decoration Icing; 1 (8oz.) pkg. Cream cheese softened 3 cups confectioners’ sugar 2 cups whipped topping 2 teaspoons vanilla In a medium bowl beat cream cheese until smooth. Add confectioners sugar and vanilla and beat again until smooth. Add the whipped topping and beat just until blended. Set aside. Cut the angel food cake in half horizontally about an inch from the top. Scoop out some of the ongel food cake to form a tunnel in the cake. Spoon as many of the strawberries into the tunnel as possible. Place the top half of the cake back on top. Ice the cake with the prepared icing. Decorate with the sliced strawberries. Chill for one hour before serving. Strawberry Ice Cream 1 can sweetened condensed milk 1 (5oz.) can evaporated milk 1 cup sugar 1 tablespoon vanilla extract 1/2 teaspoon salt 1 cup heavy whipping cream 2 cups fresh chopped strawberries, sweetened with 1/ 4cup sugar 1/2 - 1 quart milk Rock salt Ice In a large mouth 2 quart beverage pitcher, combine Robin Lowder displays tier Easy Strawberry Cake. — Photo by C hris Mackle sweetened condensed milk, evaporated milk, sugar, vanilla, salt, whipping cream, fruit and one cup milk. Shake well being sure ail flavors are blended. Fill the phcher rest of the way up with milk. Shake well again. Chill until ready louse. Pour ice cream mixture into ice cream freezer container and fill with remaining milk to desired capacity. Place container into ice cream freezer tub and prepare freezer by alternating layer of ice and rock salt, Proceed according to ice cream maker’s directions. Strawberry Lemonade 10 lemons 1 cup sugar ' 2 cups pureed strawberries 2-3 qls. Water Ice Into a one-gallon pitcher, ,-^ueeze the juice of the lemons, discarding the lemon skins. Add the sugar and mix well. Add the water and pureed strawberries and enough ice to make one gallon of beverage. Mix well. Chill for one hour before serving. Patients who need radiation oncology treatments want a comfortable, convenient location wliere tliey can go for care. Now Rowan Regional Medical Center provides even better facilities with an all-new location at 229 Mocksville Avenue, just a few blocks from the medical center. Our Cancer Care Center features the most advanced digital technology to ensure pinpoint accuracy for killing cancer cells with radiation. For the very latest in cancer care come on over to our place. Our physicians and staff, all of whom are specialists in treating cancer patients, bring the highest level of technical skill and patient-focused care. Which means patients who come to our Cancer Care Center benefit from the latest advances in ROWAN REGIONAL M E D IC A L C E N T E R technology in a location that provides understanding, compassion, and comfort. And that's a good place to be. J^eH er£eaM , !Ъ е И е г care. (704)210-6870 cuww.rocvan.or^ 229 Жос^лиШеСЯьепие, Saf/s£ury, OCG 2S144 • When you freeze, whole strawberries, place them on a baking sheet in a single layer, flash freeze them then place them into plastic bags. C a r e g iv in g S e m in a r S c h e d u le d More and morc family mem­ bers are keeping loved ones at home and caring for them instead of placing them in a'facility. Come leam how you can best care for your loved ones when that time comes. Kelly Sloan, social worker/ community resource specialist with Davie County Senior Ser­ vices, will present the American Red Cross FamiIjjCaregiving Module, “Caring^r a Loved One with Alzeheimer’s Disease or Dementia.” The seminar will discuss how to deal with the dif­ ficult behaviors of the person you are coring for, how to develop a j)lon forgetting through the daily 'acti\uiies such as dressing, bath­ ing and eating, and how to care for yourself so you can best care for your loved ones. This semi­ nar is open to those caring for loved ones, those who think they may in Ihe future or anyone who has an interest in the topic. A pizza dinner will be served. The seminar will be held Tuesday, May 24 at 5:30 p.m. at Davie County Senior Services. Pre-register al 751-0611. mmBzzzz. B e e k e e p in g In t e r e s t G r o w in g North Carolina Slale Univer­ sity Apiculture Program solicited applicants for a new beekeeper cosl sharing program eariier this year to increase the number of active beekeepers and honey bee colonies in Ihe slale. There is greal concern over Ihe fate of the honey bee in North Carolina as pe.sts and disease have dramatically decreased the honey bee population over the past 20 years. Davie County Cooperative Extension will hold a Davie County Beekeeper Interest Meet­ ing on Monday, May 23 at 6:30 p.m, This will be an informal, meeting to discuss the objectives of the organization, wants and needs of participants, a future meeting schedule, and any other items lhal may be of concern. The meeting will be held at Ihe Extension Centcr, located at 180 S, Main St. in downtown Mocks-' ville, beside Ihe courthouse. . Call Ihe Extension Center al 751-6297 by May 20 to register. This meeting is open lo anyone interested in beekeeping. B e rm u d a V illa g e N e w s DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19, 2005 - C5 By Lisa O’Donnell Bermuda Village Correspondent Celebrity Kathryn Crosby was here for the Crosby Oolf Tournament al Bermuda Run Country Club on Tuesday, May 10. In addhion lo the tournament and other commitments, she graciously entertained the residents of Bermuda Village with songs and a slide presentation of her life with Bing. Along with the slides Kathryn shared heart-warming stories of her lale husband and their family, ■ Dressed in a beautiful mint green pantsuit with a colorful scarf draped over her shoulder, Kathryn was ever the gracious lady when she opened Wednesday night to a full house. Accompanied by Davie resident and pianist Dan Tatum, Kathryn began with Swinging On A Star, Appropriately so - because she was swinging on a star after she met Bing, Other songs included; Pennies from Heaven, I Wish You Lové, Accentuate the Positive, and more. Residents were enraptured with Kathryn - not only by her beautiful voice but by the intimate memories she shared. Dan Tatum accompanies Kathryn Crosby during a concert at Bermuda Village Kathryn Crosby sings at Bermuda Village, \ * ^ I I— — ii__________ Kathryn Crosby meets Village residents, including John and Susan Herrman (left) A d v a n c e N e w s By Edith Zimmerman Advance Correspondent The Methodist church Fam­ ily Fun Day will be Sunday, May 22. There will be contempory Christian music by "Driven" from Mt. Airy. Worship service will be in Ihe sanctuary at 11 a.m., followed by a covered dish dinner at the Recreation Center. Casual dress. The graduating high school seniors were recognized Sunday prior to the worship service and were given devotional books. Virgil PoUs has been moved from ICU in Forsyth Medical Center to the 8th floor. His room is 8441. Medford and Nancy Shoaf suffered a great loss last Tues­ day night when their house was struck by lightning during a se­ vere thunderstorm and caught fire, doing extensive damage, plus killing the family pet dog. Fortunately, Medford and Nancy and daughter Melany were nol at home. They had gone out for dinner. They report it will lake over 6 months to get straight­ ened out. Ruth Latham was hospital­ ized at Forsyth Mecical Center ''last week with heart problems, She came home Wednesday af­ ter having two stints inserted in the arteries, Meredith Hendrix of Ariing- ton, Va. and friend Adam Kerr of Castlelon, Va, arrived Thurs­ day night lo spend Ihe weekend with her mother Janie Hendrix. On Friday night they visited a sister Amanda Hendrix in Salisbury, and Saturday they attedned a college friends’ wed­ ding in Chariotte. Sunday after­ noon they came by to see grand­ mother Edith Zimmerman. Denise Farley of Washing­ ton, DC arrived Thursday night to spend the weekend with her grandmother Edith Zimmerman, Denise rode down with cousin Meredith Hendrix and Adam Kerr, She accompained. her grandmother to a dinner party Friday night al Tama O’Mara’s home, Denise and Edith enjoyed a brief slop at the antique car show at the Shady Orove School grounds on Salurday. They vis­ ited Bess Bennett in the Comatzer community Saturday night, and Denise was among the visitors at the Mehodist church Sunday. Tama O’Mara entertained 14 ladies from the community with a dinner/party at her home on Shamrock Lane Friday night, May 13. Carol Peters son Bryan un­ derwent emergency surgery for a ruptured appendix Saturday at East Memorial Hospital in Snellville, Ga, Carol left imme­ diately to go lo Georgia to be with her son. A speedy recov­ ery is wished for him. The Advance First Baptist Church Vacation Bible School is coming up soon. Open Hou,se and Pre-registration May 21 at 2 p,m. Parents and children of all ages. Pre-register and meet your tour guide, see your room and have a snack in the fellow­ ship hall. MARY HENDRICKS 1 -3 3 6 -9 4 0 -7 0 7 7 BUYING OR SELLING? PUT MY 18 YEARS EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU!! Mocksville: Advance/Clemmons:mgton 3 3 6 -7 5 1 - 9 4 0 0 3 3 6 -9 9 8 - 8 9 0 0 o m p a n y TOLL FREE 1-800-539-3383 TOLL FREE 1-888-828-2234 R E A L T Y www.penningtonrealty.com jSksi ^ TheJaniceM ac Tfeam... Listens— C ares— Guides Advance/Clemmons: N e w L i s t i n g 127 Pepperstone Drive* $132,900 185 Charleston Ridge Dr • $169,900 400 Raymond Street • $114,900 ' ' " C ustom b u ilt 3BR.2BA ranch b e a u tifu lly W ell m a inta ined 4RR.2BA ranch o n great landscaped. H dw d floors In LR, sunroom & corner lo t.C onvenient In -tow n locatlon.G as N ice brick fro n t ho m e In q u ie t & peaceful P epperstone S ubdivision. Large corner lot. 3Bh,2BA ranch w ith open liv in g area,eat-)n3B^,2B A ranch w ith open liv in g area,eat-)n MBR, 6 ceiling fans, custom blinds, gas lo g log fireplace, sunroom , deck and storage kitchen & d in in g room , large MBR, Berber fireplace, recessed lig h tin g , fenced backyard b u ilding, carpet, AHS H om e w arran ty. w /cu sto m storage b1dg. Large bonus room . 4 1 7 0 M o m D rive $15 1,9 00 l.iuli-n lub, м'р.и.М.' sh IH'll l-'i rU’W slot,4)1' bt) 442 Oakland Ave • $132,500 130 Underpass Road • $183,400 779 Junction Road • $115,900 C ou n try setting fo r this ro o m y 3BR, 2BA Historic 2 story home In Advancc.Lots of room for Great country setting for this 3 bedroom brick ranch In excellent co n d itio n . Featuring eat- family W/4BFL2BA, living room & den & 2 bonus rarKh.Kitchen/diningcom bfthardwoodiloofs.2 I rooms on 2nd level,? Fifcplaces.Front porch w / swing & beautiful setting w/small garden area. Convenient to Shady Grove School. In kitchen, large b onus/gam e room , fireplace w ilh gas logs and h o b b y / w orkshop. fireplaces.Many u(M ates.№ acy& more w ith mature trees and garden space. ihirlev BnuYon 67Î.B71B lU ndy D ano 4№ 21S0 L o c a l l y O w n e d . . . N a t io n a lly K n o w n c b t r i a d . c o m 2ШЗ Coldwell UunVer Real liiiulc CoriKirutioii. Colaceli Hanker it » retiUictctl iriiJcmuik »rC iiiilw cll Пипкег Corporulioii. An &|ual Oppiiitunity C«ni|)any. lùiual ilouiiiig Op|xittuiiily. Uuih nftice Ik iiide|icmleiilly Ownci) und Opcmlcd, Snelli Ouilon VicUFltmiiK] 998-1180 908-1167 CX>LPUUeULBANKeRQ TRIAD, REALTORS’ I ! t. i •у I Í C6. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 www.prudentia1carolinas.com P r u d e n t i a l C le m m o n s / D a v ie C o . O f f i c e CaniiMiRMity 3 3 6 - 7 1 4 - 4 4 0 0 • 8 7 7 -3 7 1 -5822 T o o N e w F o r P h o t o 1 9 0 0 D u n m o re L a n e $ 4 5 5 ,0 0 0 C h e ry l Fink 1 0 7 P e m b r o o k e R id g e $ 1 6 9 ,9 0 0 B ev S u p p le S h a d y G r o v e L o n e $ 2 2 8 ,9 0 0 B ev S u p p le 5 6 4 5 S h a m ro c k G le n L a n e $ 9 6 5 ,0 0 0 A n d r e a S u g g s 151 $ 4 0 5 ,0 0 0 C h e ry l Fink 1 0 2 0 F a lb r o o lT ix in e $ 3 7 9 ,9 0 0 S a n d ra J o h n s o n 1 0 0 S to n e iju rg C irc le $ 1 9 7 ,0 0 0 S h erri C o r a m 2 1 5 Sale $ 3 6 0 ,0 0 0 S h erri C o r a m T ie ro n V illa g e $ 2 3 9 ,9 0 0 G lo r ia M a tth e w s 3 3 0 4 B e rm u d a V illa g e $ 1 3 9 ,5 0 0 B ev S u p p le 9 8 B e rm u d a Run $ 4 8 1 ,5 0 0 S a n d y D y so n 'est 2 C a m e r o n V illa g e $210,000 M a d d a le n a В. A g n o li 1 3 3 F a irw a y D riv e $ 1 9 8 ,9 0 0 G lo r ia M a tth e w s 7 3 4 0 L a la n d a D riv e $ 1 2 1 ,9 0 0 G lo r ia D u ck w o rth 1 7 1 9 H a rp e r S p rin g s D rive $ 1 2 8 ,9 0 0 B ra d H u n ter ^¡Wndegendertl^wne^n^ogerote^riember^iMhePrudentla^ea^^ V-Point Ruritans get help from Scouts and members of the community as they con­ duct a flag retirement ceremony (above and below). C o u n ty L in e N e w s By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondent The V-Point Ruritans had a full house at their meeting last Thursday evening. Besides Rurilan members, there were 43 guests who came lo observe the solemn and meaningful United States flag retirement cercmony. Guests included several local civic organizations - Ebeneezer 4-H, Clarksbury Boy Scouts and Venturing Crew, Harmony Boy Scouts, etc. Ruritans Johnny Towell and Joe Stine led the multi-step cer­ emony. The flag must be disas­ sembled in a particular order. The first step is to disassemble the grummet side. The next section is that of the stars which must be kept together. Then each stripe is cut individually. Each of the pieces is wrapped individually and tied. Finally, each is gently A g e n t O n D u t y 2 4 - 7 Call (336)751-3538 or visit www.howardrealty.com H Ö W ^ R O КЕАШМ 330 s. Salisbury St. Mocksville HouiK Monday-Fiiday 8-6 Sahirday 9-12, Sunday By Appt O F F IC E S P A C E D o w n t o w n O ffic e S p a c e f o r R e n t. (2 ) 7 0 0 s q . ft. o n D e p o t S t. $ 4 5 0 P /M e a c h Call Connie A v a ii.a h i i; L o i s & I ,a n d 12 Salm oni Road.. Tbom pton Lane.... Hwy. ¿01 ........10 Ac......11 acrtaf inw. ............................... BulldInQ Lot901 Yadkinville Rd.......Ш ш Ш З Ш я .......acres ^_________ 629 Madison Rd (Commercial)...........................................1425,000 Qtf Bethel Churcn Rd.........................................ew* acres UO.OOO Bear Creek Church Rd..................................324/- acres $188,505 S E E O U R A V A I L A B L E R E N T A L S I N T H E C L A S S I F I E D S E C T I O N . * Feature Property * 118 Autumn Court _______$124,900 NEW LISTINGII B«autHuHy Landscaped 3BR, 2BAILocated In cul-de-^c development.2 rear decks, large kitchen, large laundry, 2 car garage. lOOt/' ocros farm. 3BR. 2BA, out bidoa.. creok. $499.000. Spacious 4ва Э5ВА, Fp, tuK td 42t/-ac, 38R, 2BA, Я М bam, pom), YadklnvlaiRanMM IBM lBrllwinml H a im K v W 2 B \ tlW - « о м (3 back yam. $ 239 ,0 0 0 TWS ONE HAS IT АШ >450,000. 38R.2SA on 10«A>c. $238 ,0 0 0 lanced), 2 tulliani. $ 1 7 9 ,0 0 0 115 A v a lo n S tr e e t 17МП t0 6 M e a d o w vie w R d. Г Т И Г 1 1 7 9 W o o u m iiiii Pi a i;i I / Ш I i7 q ы < т и ш Kinaorton. 3BR. 2.6BA, loncod bk yrd. u a riiy syst. 1 MOREII $159,900 3BR, 2BA, ^ h t 4 ally wllti all « R 2BA, 1,5 8>»y, cmnad pofdi, I400t/- »q. П., M ЬаамгиШ, FP, з т г В А л и Г Я Г З п Т ! ! ^ ^ appllancasl $1 5 9 ,900 hardKxxIs, storage bldgs. $158,900 lanced back ya«l. $ 1 5 4 ,9 0 0 pots. H orn wairanly. $144 ,8 0 0 3t(.8«k.io<i«c,2Bft.l 58A.1.392W sl. Woll kopi 3BR. 2BA, with lanced Homo Wamuity, 3Ba 2BA, Mona FP, 3BR ,2B\naw alapplancos.tigo.bU $139,900. backyard. $129,500. $2.S00carpalakw. $96,500. plan,laigaiiuitar. cam* spit b«toom ЗВП, 2BA, 1.98 a c m t«K *d, ar. $82,900. акЫ а<1 & pdvM*. $81,000. $79,000 AJmosJ new 3BR, 2BA. FP. oppiances on .96 ac. $71,500 $59,900 2BR, 1B ^C ooleвm м m lU tю us«. Z n dliM iC artK im inH m lT S M iiÿt $ 52,800. itiK lndham |m «ilagM $40,000. Ol'K . \( .1 Ч I s /\ui 1 I i Ul I ( ) Sii(\ I ^ < II placed into the fire. The group closed the impres­ sive ceremony by singing “God Bless America." The ladies of Pleasant View Baptist Church will meet at 7 p.m., Tuesday, May 24 in the church fellowship hall to plan for upcoming church events. The United Methodist Women of Salem will meet at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday, May 25 in the church fellowship hall. The program will be led by Jennifer Godbey, The women invite oth­ ers to join them in their study and fellowship. The Rev. Michael Benfield of Statesville will be the guest speaker at the 11 o'clock worship service at Society Baptist Church on Sunday, May 22. There will be no evening worship service. Anna Dively will have a spe­ cial service in memory of her fa­ ther Frank Scavone at' i ip.m.; Thursday, May 19 at Society Baptist Church. All friends and relatives are invited to come. Four of our local churches have now set dates for their Va­ cation Bible Schools. Clarksbury will have an all-day school on Saturday, June 4. Pleasant View will have a one-day school, Sat­ urday, June 11 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Calvary’s school will be 7- 9 p.m., June 13-17. Society will have a pizza kickoff supper on June 26 followed by classes from 7-9 p.m, June 27-30. Make June a fun-filled Bible leaming month by taking your children to each of Ihe above schools. The V-Point Ruritans will sponsor a couples Rook tourna­ ment at 6 p.m., Saturday, May 21 at the V-Point Building on Old Mocksville Road. Refreshments will be served and prizes will be awarded. The cost is $10 per couple. If you love to play cards, bring a partner and enjoy a fun evening of Rook, snacks and fellowship with others. If you don’t have a partner, just come anyway and find one there. For more infor­ mation, call Alice Absher at 704- 546-7820, Upcoming Ruritan events in­ clude a sausage and ham break­ fast on Saturday, June 4 at Ihe V- Point Building, All proceeds wil benefit community projects. Our community sends get- well wishes to Beatrice Lackey and Marshall Godbey. Beatrice lias been hospitalized at Dk'vls Regional Medical Center, Marshall suffered a kidney infec­ tion and had to return to Lake Norman Regional Medical Cen­ ter. Mae Walker continues in re­ habilitation. Pat Swisher is recu­ perating at home. Her doctor opted lo treat her eye with radia­ tion rather than surgery. Join us as we pray for the Lord’s blessings and healing in the lives of these residents and others who are having outpatient treatment. If you have news or memo­ ries to share, call Shirley at 492- 5115. S h e ffie ld -C a là h a ln N e w s DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - C7 P in o N e w s By Janice Jordan Sheffield/Calahaln Correspondent Sixteen members of my family gatliered on Sunday for lunch at Bermuda Village as guests of Arlie Foster. We took the opportunity to celebrate the seven May birthdays and two wedding anniversaries amongst us. Davie School of Dance held its year-end recital later that same Sunday evening at the Brock Center. Krystal Foster was one of the participants. This was the first year that she has performed a solo, so all of her family was happy that it went well. Several family friends came to see her dance, and their presence was appreciated. Any­ one who can sit through nearly three hours of a recital is a good friend, indeed. As I have driven through the area, I have noticed many residents have been enjoying the outdoors and are sprucing up their landscaping. It was sad to see the old bam at the Gobble’s farm on Sheffield Road end up on a bum pile, but its demise actually happened many weeks ago when it was toppled by a strong wind. As many of the old banis and houses disappear from our neighborhoods, some of the history and charm of the community is lost. If anyone has any old photographs of the community as it “used to be” , consider lending them for this column. The Sheffield/Calahaln Volunteer Fire Department Auxiliary has been busy planting flowers and sprucing up the station in preparation for the Memorial Service for Fallen Firefighters Sunday aftemoon May 22 from 2-4 p,m. at the station. The physical address is 435 Dyson Road, just off Turkeyfoot Road, Local talent will provide the musical portion of Ihe program. The Auxiliary will serve refreshments. Resi­ dents of the district who would like to attend will have the opportunity to meet the volun­ teers and to leam more about the services provided. A memorial garden containing markers with names of the deceased fire- F a u -m in ^ to n N e w s By Laura Mathis Fannington Correspondent On Sunday, May 15, The United Methodist Women of Farmington United Methodist Chureh honored the 2005 high school graduates. Zach Falls was presented a Bible by Margaret Jo Brock. Zach,son of Mike and Alison Falls, will be attending UNC ot Wilmington in the fall. The church will celebrate homecoming Sunday, May 22, Former pastor, David Nolan, will deliver the message, A cov­ ered dish lunch will follow the morning services. The Farmington Country Club will be meeting at the Cody Creek Restaurant, on 601 near Dobson,Thursday, May 19 at 7, The Red Hat Revelers will be meeting May 24, For more in­ formation, call Tib Hoots at 998- 8815, The Mocksville Wal Mart donated $500 for the Piedmont Down Syndrome Network's 2005 Buddy Walk April 16 at Tanglewood Park in Clemmons, The Buddy Walk had more than IjOOO participants from Davie, Davidson, Forsyth, Surry, Stokes and Yadkin counties and raised more than $32,000, Ail proceeds go to the , PDSSN to enhance the lives of indivuduals with Down syn­ drome and provide support to Volunteers take part In the flag retirement ceremony. J C o m e a n d e n j o y t h e f u n a t t h e w h e r e G o d is a i th e c e n ie r a n d th e lo v e n e v e r e n d s . a part of the adventure at the Circle C Ranch, Vacation Bible School at Advance United Methodist Church, May 31 to )une 4, irom 9am until 12 Noon. Come and ask, seek and knock on the door to a deeper re ationship with God, Each adventure Is filled with a powerful Bible story and fun crafts, games and music, and much more. ' Usso' some fun wllh your friends at (he Circle C Ranchi For information call 336-998-7750. ________________n>.fn№ and After rhitdcare Awibble—------------------- fighters is located adjacent to the fire house at the flag pole. Part of my weekend was spent gathering clothes and other items that I am going to offer for sale at the community yard sale on Saturday, June 4 at the fire department grounds. Residents and crafts vendors can rent a table space for $10. Concessions will be available, and Auxiliary members will sell marshmallow blow-guns. The fun will begin at 7 a.m. To reserve a space or to get further information, call "Rimmy Beck at 492-7687, Linda Drye was unexpectedly admitted to N,C, Baptist Hospital in Winston- Salem over the weekend, She is undergoing treatment, and I understand she is upset that she is missing the last week of school with her students. We want her to know that our prayers for a speedy recovery are with her, and that many good wishes are being sent her way. New Union United Methodist Church’s History Committee reminds you that they are pre-selling special tapestry throws for $50 in honor of the upcoming 225th anniver­ sary of Ihe church, Brenda Bailey has details at 751-7567, News for our community column should be called to me at 492-5836 or sent to my email jvJjordan®)ioliiiaH.com. F o u r C o rn e rs N e w s By Marie White Four Comers Correspondent Revival services will begin Sunday, May 22 at 10;30 a,m, at Courtney Baptist Church and continue each night dvough May 25.Everyone is inviled lo attend. The Rev. Ricky Atkins is pastor. , The Senior Citizens of Courtney Baptist Church toured Victory Junction and the Rich­ ard Petty Museum in Randleman Tuesday. It was a very interest­ ing and enjoyable trip, Mrs. Batry Smith visited Mrs, Johnsie Shelton last week. Lillie Cole Haneline spent Monday with his great-grandpar­ ents, Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Smith, By Nora Lathnm Pino Correspondent The breakfast at Wesley Chapel UMC will be this Satur­ day, May 21 from 6:30-10, Ev­ eryone is invited lo attend. Homecoming at Wesley Chapel will be Sunday, June 5 at 11, Ted Baity will be the guest speaker. The following members at Wesley Chapel have birthdays in May, Gene Smith, Andrea Gen­ try, Suzanne Lakey, Diane Robertson and Mariene Trivette. We wish them all a happy birth­ day. Vemon Dull entertained the Region I Advisory Committee on Aging at his home on Macy Langston Road. Twenty-eight members from five counties, Yadkin, Surry, Stokes, Forsyth and Davie, were present. Every­ one enjoyed bitfbecue with all Ihe trimmings, Neal and Brenda Essie and their granddaughter, Sadie, spent Saturday wilh Sadie’s great- grandparents, James and Lelid Essie. 716 Sain R oad M o cksville For Sale By Owner Beautiful 4B R/2B A1800+SQ FT Full unfinished b a sem en t Beautifully lan d scap ed 1/2 acre lot w ith m ature trees. L o w cou n ty taxes. Excellent con d ition , $145,000 336-751-5552 C o rn a tz e r N e w s By Dottie Potts Comatzer Correspondent Our community extends sym­ pathy to Janie Chaplin and fam­ ily in Ihe death of her sister. Iris Cole of King, who died Friday. Mrs. Carolyn Cooper has re­ tumed home from Forsyth Medi­ cal Center where she had re­ ceived treatment for three weeks. She resides wilh her daughter, Karen Byrum, on Cornatzer Road. Lena Wall returned home from Forsyth Medical Cenier to her home on Baltimore Road Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Fivecoat spent last weekend at the beach, Willie Mae Jones is recover­ ing from knee surgery, Mr, and Mrs, Homer Potts were recent visitors of Carolyn Cooper and Mae Starr, A ladies’ brunch was held at Comatzer Baptist Church fellow­ ship hall Saturday, REAL ESTATE WEEKLY By Debbie Prachel O w nor/B rckor P rom lor C arolina P roportlos WHEN IT’S YOUR MOVE! Contacting different moving companies is one of Ihe first steps in moving to a new home. You will find a variety of service options and price ranges from which to choose, whether you are moving across town or thousands of miles across country. Call several companies for estimates. Ask each company exactly how their charges are calculated and what is included. How much insurance is included in Ihe eslimate? What is the cost for additional coverage? Are there special provisions for fragile or unusually valuable items? Is the delivery date guaranteed? If economizing is important, ask if there are ways to cut down on Ihe bill by providing your own boxes and doing the packing yourself. Household movers are competitive, and comparison-shopping can help you get the best value for your moving dollars. Debbie is an award-winning full-time professional real estate broker in Davie County. For professional advice on all aspects of buying and selling real estate, you can reach Debbie at Premier Carolina Properties, 336-998-7777 or 336-909-1284, or visit her website at www.pcpnc.com. Wal Mart store Manager Tim Stewart, and Anlke Fuller (holding Christian Collins) daughter Karl! and Rachel Collins. Down’s Group Gets $500 For Buddy Walk families. The network assists families by providing regular family support gatherings, par­ ent resource notebooks, and scholarships for educational pur­ poses. It works widi health care pro­ viders, schools, employers and the community to increase knowledge and understanding of Down syndrome and encourage full community inclusion. For more information, see www.pdssn.com. O u t s t a n d i n g A g e n t s , O u t s t a n d i n g R e s u l t s C8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 PUBLIC NOTICES NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY HQTICE QF EQRECLOSUBg SALE 05SPS5 Under and by virtue of a Power ol Sale contained In thal certain Deed of Tnjst executed by Sherry D. Mixon ( single) and EmesI W. Mixon and wife, Sheila Mixon (o Lawrence N. Smith and Charles 0. Robison III, Both, TnJ8lee(s), which was dated N'ovembsr 3,2000 and recorded on November 3, 2000 In Book 350 at Page 469, Davle County Registry, North Carolina. Default having been made In the paymeni of (he noie thereby se­ cured by the said Deed of Trust and (he undersigned. Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substituted as Trustee In said Deed of Trust by an InslrumenI duly recorded In the Office of the Register ol Deeds of Davle County, North Carolina, and Ihe holder of (he note evidencing said Indebtedness having directed (ha( (he Deed ol Trust be fore­ closed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the cmiflhpuae rioor of (ha cnnnty COUflhPUSB where (he property la localed, or (he usual and custom­ ary location at the county court­ house for conducting (he sale on June 1,2005 at 2.-00PM, end m sell to the hlghes( bidder for cash the follovylng described property situated In Davle County, North Carolina, to wll; BEQINNINQ at an Iron In Ihe Northeast comer ol the within tie- scribed tract, said Iron lying Soulh 26 deg 40 mln 55 sec East 87 SO feet from an Iron In the Southeast comer ol Robert C Qln, Deed Book 132, Page 183, said beginning point being the Southaaslem most comer ol the above described219 acre tract thence from Ihe POINT AND PLACE O F BEQINNINQ wilh the edge of the right of way of hAumtord fioad. South 26 deg 02 mln 36 sec East 75 92 feet to an Iron, thence Soulh 78 deg 38 mln 09 sec IVesM i3 39 feet to an Iron, -Southwest comer ol the wlihin de­ scribed tract thence North 33 deg 30 mln 52 sec IVesf 59 28 feet to an Iron, (Northwest corner ol the within described tract thence North 69 deg 35 mln 37 sec East 117 96 leet lo an Iron, THE POINT AND PLACE O F BEQINNINQ contain­ ing 0 174 acres more or less, as surveyed May 5,2000 by Qrady I Thtterow, Professional Land Sur­ veyor (Drawing No 13100-3, File name TC-MUM) .Subject to easements and re­ strictions of record For back title, see Deed Book 337, Page 818, Deed Book 322, Page 2S0 Deed Book71, page206,and Deed Book 64, Page 214, Davle County Registry See Plat Book 7, Page 125, Davle County Registry See also Tax Map H -6 BIk B, Pci 16 02, located In Mocksville Township, Davle County, North Carolina Note This was part Of Tax Map 1-4-6, BIk B Pci 16 In 2000 Sava and except any releases or deeds of release of record. Said property is commonly known as 219 Mumford Drive Mocksville, NC 27028. Third party purchasers must pay tho excise lax, and the court costs of Forty-Flva Cents (45e) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursu­ ant to NCGS7A-308(a)(1). Acash deposit (no personal checks) ot (Iva percent (5%) of the purchase price or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever Is greater, will be required at the time of Ihe sale. Following the expiration of the statutory upset bid period, all the remaining amounts are Immedi­ ately due and owing. Said property lo be offered pur­ suant to (his Notice of Sale Is be­ ing offered for sale, transfer and conveyance "AS IS WHERE IS.” There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing In, on, a(, or relating to the property being of­ fered for sale. This ;ale Is made subject to all prior Hens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, ease­ ments, rights of way, deeds of re­ lease, and any oifier encum- brances or exceptions Qfrecoid. To Ihe best of Ihe knowledge and be­ lief ol the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property Is/are Sherry D. Mixon and Ernest Mixon. Substitute Trustee Brocit & Scott, PLLC By;- NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE 05 SP 28 Under and by virtue of a Power ol Sale contained In that certain Deed of trust executed by Timothy Eugene Mayo and Laura Renee Mayo to Fritz & Austin Fritz & Aus­ tin, Trustee, dated September 23, 1999, and recorded In Book 315, Page 186, Davle County Registry, North Carolina, Default having been made In the paymeni of the note secured by the said Deed of Trust and the un­ dersigned, Priority Trustee Ser­ vices of NC, L.I.C., having been substituted as Toistee In said Deed of Trust by an instalment duly re­ corded In Ihe Office of the Register of Deeds of Davle County, North Cerollna, and the holder of the note evidencing said Indebtedness hav­ ing directed that the Deed of Trust be foreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, In the City of Mocksville, Davle County, North Carolina, at 1:00 P.M, on Wednes­ day, June 1, 2005, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash the fol­ lowing described property situated In Davle County, North Carolina, to wit; Being all of Lot 9 of Oak Qrove Subdivision as shown on plat re­ corded In Plat Book 7 at Page 19, Davle County Registry. Said property Is commonly known as 119 Old Oak Lane, Mocksville, NC 27028. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs of Forty-five Cents (4Se) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00). Acash deposit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whichever Is greater, will be required at the time of the sale. Following the expiration ot the statutory upset bid, all the remain­ ing amounts are Immediately due and owing. Said property lo be offered pur­ suant to this Notice ot Sale Is be­ ing offered tor sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS WHERE IS.” There are no representations of warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing In, on, al, or relating to Ihe property being of­ fered for sale. This sale Is made- subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, land transfer taxes, if any, and encum­ brances of record. To the best of the knowledge and belief of the undersigned, the current owner(s) ol the property Is/are Timothy E. Mayor. Priority Trustee Sen/Ices of NC,I.LC. Substitute Trustee P.O. Box 3868 Cary, NC 27519 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF SUSBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S FORECLOSURE SALE OF REAL PROPERTY Under and by virtue of Ihe power and authority contained In that certain Deed of Tmst executed and delivered by Lany Ivan, II aka iJiTTy I. Thies and l4therine S. Tliles, Husband/Wife, dated August 26,1998, and recorded In the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davle County, North GarolWna, In Book 284 at Page 797, and because of default having been made In the payment of the Indebtedness secured by saW Deed of Tmst and falluire to do and perform the stipulattons and agreements therein contained, and pursuant to demand of the Owner and Holder of the Indebtedness secured by sakl Deed of Trust, the undersigned Substitute Tmstee will expose for sale at publk; auction to the highest bidder for cash the property therein de­ scribed, to wit: All that certain lot or parcel of land situtated In Jerusalem Township, Davle County, North Carolina, and more partteularty described asfoltows; Being Lots Nos. 4,5,6,7, and 8 of the Sam Foster Subdlvslon as per sun/ey and plat made by A.L Bowles, Surveyor, May, 1953, and said plat recorded In Map Book 3, Pago 15, In the Office ol the Register of Deeds of Davle County, North Carolla, to which reference Is hereby made for a more partteulardescriptton. Present Record Owner(8): Larry Ivan Thies, II and Katherine S. ThIes The terms of the sale are tha( the real property hereinbefore described will be soki for cash to the highest bid­ der and that the undersigned may re­ quire the successful bWder at the sale to immediately deposit cash or acertl- fied check in an amount equal to the greater of five percent (5%) of the high bkl or $750.00. The real property hereinabove described will be sokl “as Is, where is,” subject to any and all superior liens, and subject to taxes and special as­ sessments. The sale will be heW open for ten (10) days for upset bWs as by law re­ quired. Date and Hour for Sale; May 27, 2005 at 11:00 a.m. Place of Sale; Davie County Court­ house Date of this Notk»: April 1,2005 Stephen A. Lamb, Substitute Tmstee ,, ,,T)iE,LAMB FIRM* ' ' PbBox 36158'^ Chark>tte,NC 28236-6158 (704) 331-0014 5-12-2tnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE C O U f^ NOTICE TO CREDtTORS Having qualified as Executorof the' Estate of MADGE B. DAY, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons, firms and corpo-' rattons having claims against the Es­ tate to exhibit them lo Ihe undersigned Our File No.: 066,0421042NC/^ Ingetsoll & Associates, CGW PLLC, P.O. Box 25167, Winston-Sa- (SEAL) James P. Bonner, NCSB No. 15788 5919 Oleander Drive Suite 115 Art)oretum Center Bidg 2 Wilmington, NC 28403 PHONE: (910) 392-4988 FAX: (910) 392-8587 File No.; 05^2378 5-19-2tn 5-19-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYMEETING NOTICE TOWN OF MOCKSVILLE COMMISSIONERS BUDGET WORK SESSION The Town of Mocksville Board of Commissioners will hold a bud­ get work session from 5-7 p.m., Wednesday, May 25, 2005 in Ihe Town Hall Conference Room, 171 Clement Street, Mocksville, North Carolina. Christine W. Sanders Mocksvilie Town Manager 5-19-1tnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDTTORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ot MELBA WATSON OWENS, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the underelgned on ot belore the 28th day of July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publi- catkxi or this notk» will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons in­ debted to sakl estate will please rruke Immediate payment to the under­ signed. Tills the 28th day of April, 2005. Larry Don Owens • EXEC 1230idCoutseDihe,At)vance,NC 27006 4-28-)lp NORTH CAROUNA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Execulor of (he Es(a(e of EDWIN EDWARD MIETLOWSKI, this is to notify all per­ sons having claims against sakl es­ tate to preseni them to the under­ signed on or before the 12th day of August, 2005, being three (3) nxmths from the first day ol pubitealton or ttils nottee Wiill be pleaded In bar of Ihelr recovery. Ail persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day ol May, 2005. Karen MIelkjwskI, EXEC 226 Many Lane, Advance, NC 27006 5-12-4tn lem, NC 27114, on or before August 15,2005, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons in- Immediate payment. This the 26th day of April, 2005. Charlotte F. Henry, Executor Mato W. Ingetsoll, Attorney: Ingorsoll 81 Associates, PLLC 5-5-ltnNORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUtviTY NOTTCETOCREDrrORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of HUGH MITCHELL FROST, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the undersigned on or before the 12th day ot August, 2005, being three (3) rrvDnths ftom the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. TTtls the 12th day of May, 2005. Wiilla Rebecca Frost, ADMN 2085 Hwy 64W Mocksville, NC 27028 5-12-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY НОТЮЕ TO CREDITORS Having qualilied as Execulor of the Estate of BOYD GILBERT PACK, this Is to notHy all persons having claims against sakl estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 28th day ot July, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of риЫкя- tk)n or this notk» will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons In­ debted to sakl estate will please make Immediate payment to the under­ signed. TTlls the 19th day of April, 2005. Janell Young Pack 3464 NC Highway 601 South Advance. N027006 Martin 8. Van Hoy, LLP Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square fHocksville, N027028 4-28-4tn ц ш т 1 6 LASSÜF 1 EDS DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,200^цС9 miOi:h fb o ftea b lb NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ot OLIVIA STROUD FOSTER, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them to the under­ signed on or before the 5th day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. Dennis G. Foster, Co-Executor 983 Turkeyfoot Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 Sandra Foster Vestal, Co- Executor 1324 Hwy. 64 West Mocksville, NC 27028 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY LEGAL NOTICE Notification Is hereby given that Woodforest National Bank, 13301 East Freeway, Houston, Texas 77015, has filed an application wilh the Comptroller of the Currency on May 12, 2005 spacilfied In 12' C.F.R. 5 In the Comptroller's Manual for National Banks, lor per­ mission to establish a domestic branch al the following location: Mooksvllle Walmart • 1063 Yadkinville Rd., Mocksville, Davle County, North Carolina 27028. Any person wishing to comment on this application may tile com­ ments In writing with the Licensing Manager, Southern Dislricl Office, 1600 Lincoln Plaza, 500 N. Akard, Dallas, Texas 75201-3394, within 30 days of the data of this publica­ tion. The nonconlldentlal portions of the application are on file with the Licensing Manager as part of the public file. The file Is available for public inspection during regular business hours. 5-19-1 In NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYCREDITORS NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of MARY C. POPE, late of Davle County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said eiftato to present Ihem to the un­ dersigned on or before August 19, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of Ihelr recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make imme­ diate payment to tho undersigned. ' This 13th day of May, 2005. Eugene L. Pope 259 Cedar Creek Road Mocksville, NC 27028 Martina Van Hoy, LLP ^ Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square Mocksville, NC 27028 5-19-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of KURT WILLIAM SCHNEIDER, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 5th day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the llrst day of publi­ cation or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of May, 2005. Charlene Schneider, Executor 134 PmkwayCourt,Mocksville,NC 27028 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDtTOHS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of MADISON FREE­ MAN, this Is to notify all parsons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the Sth day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from Ihe first day of publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Imme­ diate paymeni lo the undersigned. This the Sth day of May, 2005. Phyllis F. Sells, Co-Executor 202 Sowers Ferry Rd. Salisbury, NC 28144 Francis Craig Freeman, Co- Executor 842 Sain Rd. Mocksville, N0 27028 5-5-4ln Abortion Alternative DAVIE PREGNANCY CARE Center offers confidential & tree pregnancy tests, support ser­ vices, and referrals. Make a healthy choice for your llfel Call 753-HOPE forappolnlmenl. Apartments LARGE 1 BR apartment, down­ town, no kids, no pets. 704-278- 1717 MOCKSVILLE SUNSET TER­RACE: All brick energy efficient apartment. 1 & 2 bedroom, pool, basketball court & swings. Kitchen appliances furnished In­ cluding dishwasher. 1.5 baths, washer/dryer connections. High energy efficient heat pump pro­ vides central heat and air. Prewired for cable TV & phones. Insulated windows & doors. No wax kitchen & bath floors. Lo­ cated in IHocksvllle behind the old Hendricks Furniture building (now Carolina Precision Machin­ ery) on Sunset Dr. off of Hwy. 158. Office hours 1-6 M-F & Sat. 10-12. Phone 751-0168. READY TO MOVE In 2br fur- nlshed upstairs apartment, all utilities Included, $500/mo. 751- 121 a or 704-872-3367_________ Art/Artist ART LESSONS FOR children, 1/ 2 hr. $6,1 hr. $10.751-5213 Child Care BABYSITTING AVAILABLE IN private home. Pinebrook, North Davie school area near Farmington Rd. exit, excellent references. 940-6664 CHILD CARE -GOOD Christian home. Ages 8mos. and older. 940-5281. Advance____________ Commercial Property 1000 SQUARE FOOT office building available Call Janice McDaniel for details Penning(on & Co. Realty 336- 998-8900 or 336-909-0747 COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR lease. Approx. 1000 sq. ft. Ga­ rage with potential office. Easy access to 1-40 on Hw/y. 601.751- 0429 or 816-2779 WANTEDII 4,000 SQUARE FOOT office space for long term lease. Call Janice McDaniel - Pennington & Co. Realty. 336- 998-8900 or 336-909-0747 Employment 21 YRS. OR older with valid drivers meals lnclude§^49^79^ BEHAVIORAL MODIFICA- TIONS TECHNICIAN needed: to word part-time, weekends and as needed, 2nd or 3rd shift week­ days. Is guaranteed at least 28 hrs. per week. Responsibilities are to guide youth through a plannetf dally schedule, see that clients gel to Ihelr appointments. Responsible for monitoring youths behavior and assigning lavioral Intervention for reinforc­ ing and redirecting behaviors. Must have at least a high school diploma and one year experi­ ence. Fax resume to (336) 936- 0039 or call (336)936-0029 to apply Employment BERMUDA RUN COUNTRY Club Is accepting applications for summer time employment (or pool snack shop, short order cooking experience a plus, 2 shifts available 10am-3pm and 2;30-7pm. Must be able to work weekends. Apply In person, for directions call 998-8155 BERMUDA RUN COUNTRY club Is accepting ^plications for part-time valets, Thursday and Saturday 5 until 10pm, clean driv­ ing history required. ............... call 998-8155 for dire CHURCH SECRETARY/BOOK- KEEPER PART-tlme, working toward full-time position. Hebron Baptist Church, 175 Hebron Rd. Statesvlile, f^C 28625, Please submit resume Attn. Mr. Clair Repple CLASS A CDL driver needed. Pre-employment drug screen re­ quired. Must have 2 years expe­ rience. Home weekends. Cali 704-546-2277 CNA’S NEEDED CALL 336-372- 5125 or 336-386-8900 OAVIE CLEANING SERVICE is now accepting applications for part-time evening work and part- time daywork. Clean background check required. 336-751-3700 EXPERIENCED SHORT OR-DER cook needed, 5 days a week. В J's Country Food. Call 998-7290 FINISH CARPENTER NEEDED. If you're not making $50,000 plus a year and own your own tools and truck call 336-813-1577 f=ULL-TIME EXPERIENCEDelectrician. Osborne Electric. 751-3398 appointment only. MANAGEMENT POSITION: SMALL, fast-growing, local con- slrucllon-relaled firm seeks ener­ getic person with proven success record. Compensation based on performance. Future ownership position possible for right person. Cell phone no. 336-540-3900 MANUFACTURING POSITION FIRST and second shifts, high school education, basic сафеп1гу skills, hand tools, apply In person: ICS, 323 Farmington Rd. IHocksville, M-F between 7 and 4 NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS lor employment. 336-751-7300, t> sk tor Chris Harris NUTRITION ^OGRAM COOR- DINATOR part-time position ■ 9:00am-1:00pm, Mon.-Frl. Man­ age, coordinate and supervise all components of the senior lunch program. Duties include: Interact with caterer to order food, resolve problems, etc; plan and conduct dally activities; prep site, serve meals and clean up from lunch; train and schedule volunteers; deliver homebound meals when needed. Training will be provided. Prior exp. in food service helpful, but nol required. Must be ab e to stand on feet for periods of time and lift minimum of 10 pounds. Must have own transportation (or use during work time. Must be able to use computers, do basic mathematical calculations and Interact well with seniors and the general public. $9.00/hr. Apply al Davle Co. Senior Service, 622 N. Main St., Mocksville. Applications will be received until position is filled. Davle County Is an equal Opportunity Employer. SEUrTFAST ШТИЕ CLASSIFIEDS! The first 10 words are $6.50 - each additional word Is 100. Yard Sate ads must be paid In advance. Deadline for classified ads is 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Oavie County Enterprise Record 171 South Main St. • MocksvillD • 336-751-2129 Rcmcirkahlc Pcoj^lc. Rcu]ariai hie M eclicinc Fbrsyth)MEDICAL GROUP »(Wliwd ■«liU N o vaM HEALW »nil Fotsy ti> MtOKAL «NTEIf Medical A»»ociatM ol Davic in Mockivllle, offillatcd witi\ Fotsyiii Mcdical Group, cuirentiy lias the (oliowins oppouunlty a'iailable. LPN PRN/On-Call Ofiicc Viourj M-F, 8-5. Must be a graduate of an accreJUcd nutslnu program. LPN with current NC iiceasc. Ptiot phvsto" office experience ptefcried. Qunlified candidate« may «pply on>\lne ot www.nov»ntlieolth.i)rg, or hx ««un« to (JJ6) oi: m»ll niurne tofonytb Medical Group, ' ! Hunan Rnourceii 2085 Frontli Plaia Blvd., Wliiiton>$«l«n, NC 2710). We are an equal ppponunity employer committed to pioviding diveislty in the woritplace. w w w .n o vaiu h eh ith .o rg Employment Homes For Rent PLUMBER OR PLUMBERS helper needed with some expe­ rience. Must be 18 or older, prel- erably with drivers license. Shores Plumbing & Heating, 1485 N. Main SL, Mocksville REAL ESTATE AGENT - Yadkin Co. firm seeking successlul agents. Cordial working atmo­ sphere, lots of pofenllal. 336- 849-7450 REFER AN OLDER worker to Experience Works when: They are In need of greater earnings, they are having trouble makCng entis meet, for example, buying medicine and paying for food and rent. They have barriers to em­ ployment such as being Isolated, have a disability, or live In a re­ mote area. They are at least S5 interest In finding a% b. They need basic computer skills or other training. They need help In creating a resume, participating In a job interview, or filling out an employment application. Does' this sound Ilka someone you know? Call Martha Nichols, 338- 651-2540 SEEKING EXPERIENCED MA- SON. Must be able to lead crew. Also looking for mason helpers, Call 751-9486 TRACTOR-TRAILER DRIVERS needed for local hauls. Seeking steady hard workers, (No over­ night). Class A CDL required, 3 yrs. mln. experience, current ~T medical, clean MVR a must; MOCK8VILLE-3br, 2ba, deck, 2-car garage in Charleston Ridge. Available in June Smoke free $900/mo. MOCKSVILLE>2/3br, Iba on 1 ac, basement and 2 car garage $650/mo. MOCKSVILLE- 3br, 2ba, 2 car garage, deck. In Twin Brook. $900/mo. Pennington & Company 751-9400 2BR, 1-1/2BA, excellent condi- fa'rge^d Homes For Rent CLEAN house. Call 704- 450-8816 or 704-657-3297 COUNTRY LIVING AT It’s best, 2039 801N near Farmington, lo­ cated on owner’s farm, single story brick, 2br, fireplace, pond, omouildings, barn, $100C)/mo. 336-998-3160 FOR REMTI AVAILABLE June 1 sii Advance tocatlon, 2br, 1ba, $750/ mo. Call Debbie al Premier Caro­ lina Properties. 336-909-1284 I an application. I VOLUNTEERS NEEDED. CAN- 1 CER services needs volunteers In Davle County to transport can- ifffi cer patients to radiation appoint­ a i ments. For more Inlormallon con- f it a c t (336)760-9983 or visit 1;. www.cancerservlcesonllne.org WILLING TO EDUCATE highly * u motivated Individual for a reward- 'T Ing career In Financial Service. tion, ’$eo67mo.' deposit required. 998-4925 or 751-1634 2br; fba • McCullough Rd. Oil heat. $475/mq 2br, 2ba, condo In River Walk across from Tanglewood Park. $700/mo. 2br, Iba home with oil heat and central air. $500/mo Call Century 21 Swicegood Wall 8. McDaniel 336-751 -2222 ask for Ext. 213 Mon-Fri 8am-5pm or 336-751-5555 Ext. 213 nights & weekends. 2BR, 1BA HOME just off 601 N. 704-278-1717 2BR, IBA IN COOLEEMEE, bfg ym ^ HUD accepted. 336-909- 3BR, 1-1/2BA, kitchen, dining room, heat and air,. Main St., Cooleemee, $550/mo. with $550 dep. or rent to own. 751-5925 3BR, 1-1/2BA, with 1 acre lot. Frost St, (Im lle from Snook's BBQ on Hwy 158) $700/mo. 577- 2494 or 940-2099 illiu ........................................ '«W I Call 926-4862 for Interview Farm Machinery iio H N DEERE 1010 tractor, |700 hrs., org, paint, Ilve lift iSOO. 492-5509______________ Furniture KING PILLOWTOP MATTRESS . set, new w/warrantu, can deliver ?$22S.OO. 336-442-350,6,,,,,,, IleATHER SOFA AND love seat, stainless steel stove and refrlg- erator. Bosh washer and dryer, kingsize oak sled frame with mat- "'yress, ali less than one year old, icellent condition. 284-2383 .IATTRESS & BOX, queen plilowtop mattress set, name ; brand, new In plastic $150.00 336-992-3930 NICE SOFA AND loveseat. $350 ■ for both. 998-0930 Advance, $950/mo. plus $500/ dep. 940-3643, leave message 3BR, 2BA, 2 car garage, 10 miles from Moci<svllle, newly remod­ eled, $750/mo., $750/dep, 704- 546-2089 3BR, 2BA, AVAILABLE In June In Mocksville, $750/mo. No pets. 492-2722 ■3BR, 2BA, REAL nice house for rent, Mocksville, fenced yard. $800/mo.plus deposit. Available In June. 940-3643, leave mes­ sage FOB BENT! LWE hew 3BR, 2-1/ 2BA (1/2 bath In full finished day­ light basement), appliances, heat pump, fresh paint, new carpet, large deck,-f/-1 acre lot, in town, no pets, $900/mo., $900 sec. dep. ly r lease. Cail Mary Hendricl<8 336-940-7077, Pre­ mier Carolina Properties HOWARD REALTY Gena Cline 751-8562 • Ibr, Iba, Mocksville $400/mo. Mobile Home Lots; Gun Club Rd. $225.00 OWNER FINANCE, $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0895 RANCH STYLE, 3BR, In Fork area, $625/mo. deposit and ref­ erences required, 336-998-9555 Homes For Sale 3BR, 2BA tiOME , up to 100% financing with payments as low as $500 to $550 per month. Call 336-760-1209 A QBEAT home, 3 large BR, 2BA, living room, dining room, large eat-in kitchen, den w/ fire­ place, office, on over 1 acre, $91,900. 336-712-0163 or 336- 576-2695 Homes For Sale HOUSE FOR SALE; 108 Highland Rd. Dutchman Hills. 1-1/2 story, 2 car garage, 3br, 2-1/2ba, comer lot, all appliances, outside storage. Seller to help with closing cost. $144,900. Call 336-477-4016 MOCKSVILLE, 172 HOLLOW Hlil Ct.3br, 1.5ba,recents(dlngandfoof, open floor plan, tax value $88K, price $84K. 336-748-1390 OWNER FINANCE: $8000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, countiy, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695 THE URGEST CAPE cod display In the area at the absolute lowest prices. The Madison 2,200 total sq. ft. only $65,000. The Brightmore 2,000 total sq. ft. on^ $54,095. The Timberlake 3,200 sq. ft. only $75,000. The Bentley 2,200 sq. ft. only $69,995. Come see and save. Phone toll free 1-877-2834344 or local 704-924-8393______________ Land For Sale 4.6 ACRE TRACT in beautiful Deacons Ridge subdivision. Gor­ geous wooded lot. No mobile homes or modular allowed. $51,500. Call Kathi Wall at 909- 1726, Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel APPROXIMATELY 126 ACRES farmland, Wyo Rd., Farmington area, totally fenced, S ponds and creek access. Contact 765-0913 or 766-5481 MOCKSVILLE, RESTRICTED BUILDING site lot ffl in Southwood acres, established residential area, near ' ' Land For Sale STICK BUILT HOMES or mobile honie lots lor sale. 998-5816, 284-2653 YADKIN CO., NICE large lota, singlewides and doublewides, owner llnancing. Brown Osbome, 336-838-4590__________________ Lawn Care GREEN SIDE UP Lawn Care mowing, edging, core aeration, fertilizing, seeding, new and ex­ isting lawns. Tractor work avall- able. Call 998-1914____________ Lost & Found FOUND: LAB, KINDERTON area, 940-3959, must give accu­ rate Information. LOST: REWARD FOR THE re- tum of the contents In a wallet “lost” on Salisbury St. Monday May 9th. No questions asked. Please call 751-5304 and leave a message.____________________ Lots For Sale MODULAR LOTS AVAILABLE for sale at $22,000. County wa­ ter lap Included. Owner financed wilh 10% down and 30 yr, term. Phone toll free 1-877-283-4344 or local 704-924-8393 Miscellaneous FOR SALE-EVERYTHINQ mustgo-Reducedi 1988 Ford F350 ump iruck 460 C.I.D. -$7500, Dovetail traller-car hauler -$1150, 1999 Wilderness camper w/t sllde-out room- $17,800, 1986 Corvette 5.7 tuned port Injection, loaded, needs some cosmetic and maintenance work -$9,800. All neg. Call 336-940-5534 after 6:00 or anytime on week-ends. HONDA EB 11000 generator with wheel kit, 2 yrs. old, like new condition, 68 hrs. $3200. Call 336-886-3235 KENMORE SEWING MACHINE In wooden cabinet -$100.998^)930 LINDA’S SUN AND Shade Pe- rennlals, 893 Junction Rd. 336- 492-5855 MOVING? PACKING BOXES lor sale. Call 753-8435 NC TOOL WHISPER Deluxe, 2 burner horseshoer’s forge, like new, originally $410, asking $200.998-9665, leave message PIONEER STEREO FOR sale; CO player, dual cassette, tuner, speak­ ers. $450.00. Call 264-2294IDI lau II luiuwwM» ................... —• I — with 10% down and 30 yr. term. M n h lln H n m e s /R e n t Phnna loll free 1-877-283-4344 IV IO P IIB n o m e a f n P lil Miscellaneous 8’ ALUMINUM CAP for truck, $75.492-2415 Cook N e e d e d Hickory Hill Country Club 2251 Hwy. 64E„ Mocksville (336) 998-5746 or (336)998-6400. Ask for Brigitte or Arthur H iring N ow ORDER PICKERS, MATERIAL HANDLERS, ORDER PROCESSORS $7.50yHR. 1 St Shift - 7:00am - 4:30pm 3rd Shift - 7:30pm - 6:00am Positions Start ng Weekly, steady Wori< Hisltory and ability to pass pre-employment substance abuse screening and statewide backgrtxind check required. Temporary Resources (336) 751:5179 300 Scuth Main St. ‘ Apply Mon-Thurs. 8:30 - 11:00 or 1:00 - 3:00■Tlease Bring In 2 Forms of Identlncatlon_______ ANIt^AL ADOPTION PROGRAM vlHaH«iy*«tMlMnrHttpltii *4«ptlm Hmim MtiirAqn 1-3:S0pm ITI In lioliMMt IM yur iliott iMlMtir/Miittr Animals at Vlllag« Way lo be vlilled aro: M alt, 4 mo. old Pointer mix • M ile, 1 yr. old Golden Ralrloviif Soveial C an and Kltlpna ot all colots ond agas Olhet animats In lo s ttf homes: 4-UW Co«l0 mixes, I -Bladi U t) mix 2 y(. old Dalmatlon. 2 VI. old Siamese Mix, V»ilO(ja(<lttena № nn M -r 7:lll№ 7 :M p a l i l l . I:3tim-3:3«p>n Call a M 4 M l (at n o n H la n m io a C oin« ol ip o iu o iiiia i I iw u i w t tQ and Davie High School, direct sale, cail 336-751-2000 or 248- 651-9179 IDrlver - Run the DEDICATED LOOP HOME EVERY W EEKEND Guaranteed & 1-2 Nights/wkI •No Touch Freight •85% Preioaded /Pretarped •Avg. $888-$988/week Mocksville, NO Terminal Sunday Callers Weloomol CDL-Areq’d. 877-428-5627 www.ctdrlvers.com BUYING ALL OLD coins. High­ est prices. 413-6696 , C A S H ,PAID F O R A N TIQ U E S. PAR TIAL ‘ O R W H O LE ESTATES, ' A d e c c o IMMEDIATE NEED fo r th e fo llo w in g 2 ^ S h ift p o s itio n s •Forklift Operators(Ch«nvp(cl(erexp.a-») •Mechanical Assembly Operators__________ Apply in person at 504 Sanford Ave., Mocicsville, or online al Til. 3^3 3 R A D IO L O G Y Hoots Memorial Hospital, Inc., an affiliate of North Carolina Baptist Hospital, has Immediate openings for; All shifts. CT experience preferred. Excellent benefits. Call 679-2041, exL 6763 for more Information. Radiology Manager Must be registered by ARRT and be a certilled member of ASRT. Prior supervisory experience preferred. Excellent benefits. All Interested applicants should call (336) 679-6728 for more Information or fax resumes to (336) 679-6716. EOE WESTSIDE CHRYSLER DODGE JEEP CUSTOMER RELATIONS FLOOR TRAFFIC CONTROLLER Established Automotive Group seeking motivated responsible individuals to assist in managing showroom customer traffic. Requires excellent communications skills. CUSTOMER RELATIONS TRACKING CUSTOIVIERS SCHEDULING APPOINTIVIENTS Retiree preferred, part-time For an interview, please call Tim Sharpe at 751-5948 A g i s . FMtllY CKNTSKS R N , L P N o r C M A Young FamUy Practice, Full-time Clinical position requires valid state RN or LPN license or certification from AAMA / current CPR, office experience preferred. Send resume lo : Recruitment Coordinator/ Aegis Family Health Centers 2000 Frontis PI. Blvd. Ste. 300 • Win.ston-Saiem, NC 27103 Fax; 336-774-6903 or email: ilott®wf\ihmc.edu EOE SOUTHEASTERN SEWING A c c e p tin g A p p lic a tio n s f o r V a r io u s D u tie s In c lu d in g : 1 . Heavy Lifting 2. Operate Forklift ' 3. Delivering-Valid Driver’s License 4. Must Speak English 5. 40 Hour Work Week 6. Motivated-Dependabie-Drug Free C a li fo r In te rv ie w 7 5 1 -0 8 7 8 IBR COTTAGE IN country, large yard, storage building, no pefs, singles or couples only. 264-4758 2BR, 2BA SINGLEWIDE on prl- vate lot. $545/mo. 998-3450 3BR MOBILE home , Shady Acres Mobile Home Park, John Crotts Rd. Hwy 64E. 998-8276 or 998-8222 I6 E M E T H E M .E B R O O H N G N ew & Old Roots Sm all Repair Jobs F ree Estlmatea 33e-2B4-4571 CNA will care for elderly in-home care to private setting. Also, will do light housework. Call 336-998-2307 MILLER EQUIPMENT ^ I RENTAL SPRING IS HEREl Bolical. ai;r<noi core pliiyijer a more lor rent loilav! m::,I33G1751-2304 I Driver 1 Harris Pool & Supplies Tommy Hams/Owntr-Ovcc 20 Yts, Exp. 277 Pleasant Acre Dr., Mocksvillc Home 1336) 284-4817 Builnets|338)90MQ27 J U S T D R IV E IT T H A T 'S A L L ! Experienco tho bost drlvlna job ever. N o touch trelght, larplng or dealing w/lrallars^ O n e of the nations largest DrIveAway C o, Is leasing Ind, contractors w/Class A & B COL’S to pick up & deliver vetiloles to & Irom all points In the U ,S, Must be 23yrs of ago. Driving school G rads & R etirees W elcom e. Benn«« Motor Expres» local 704^42-1532 800-367-2249 Autumn Care of Mocksville Is hiring tfie following positions: RN or LPN full time or part time on both 7-3 and 3-11 shift. Also hiring prn RN or LPN. CNA’S full time 3-11 shift. Autumn Care of Mocksville offers a wonderful benefits package. Including Iree heailh care insurance for nurses. We also offer 401-k, Christmas club, 6 paid holidays & 1 paid personal day, sick days with option to cash in if not used, perfect attendance bonus, autonfiatic deposit, and option lo take 5 days vacation after 6 months of employment. Come Join our cEiting team of healthcare givers. Apply in person at Autumrt Care of Mocksville, 1007 Howard St., Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3535 or send resume to fax 336-751-0028. You may also email your resume to donlOl @ aulumncorp.com. v^i4UTUMNCAREOFMOCKSVIUE EOE A P P L Y DAILY!, ASSÉM BLŸ^ WfORKER M A N U FA C TU R IN G W O RKERS $ 7 .5 0 - $7.90;H R . 1 st Shift - 6:00am - 2:30pm M-F 2nd Shift - 3:00pm -1 :30am M-Th Qualified Applicants must be able to pass pre-employment sutistance abuse screenlna atid statewide backaround check._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ C AS H IE R • $7.00 /HR. • Pi«. Exp. Raqulivd F O R K LIFT OPERATORS • $7.50 - $9.00 • lyr. Exp. Required LO AD ER S/U NLO AD ERS » $7.00 -$8.00 M at Shut T e m p o r a r y R e s o u r c e s 1751-5179 |300 Main St. ‘ Apply Mon -Thurs. B;30 -11:00 or 1:00 - 3:00 •Please Bring 2 forms o f Identification I I CIO ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 C T jA iSSST F T W T lg ш д а ш в м з П У Е f b o f t e a b l e M o b ile H o m e s /R e n t 3BR, 1-1/2BA, also 2br, 1-1/2ba with central air. Clean 336-575- 2101 or 828-478-9416(leave message) 3BR, 2BA DOUBLEWIDE, 1/2 acre, $550/m o. plus utilities, $550/dep, Between Cooleemee and Mocitsvllle. 336-284-6110 3BR, 2BA ON shaded lot with Storage shed, carport, front & back deck, maximum 2 adults and 2 children, $525/mo. $525/ dep. 492-5897 ADVANCE-3BR, 2BA slnglewlde plus extra room, 1.5 ac fenced for 1 horse, outbldgs $700/mo. Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Realty 998-8900 ju c T iO N r d ; d e l u x e slnglewlde, 3br, 2ba, Island kitcnen, laundry room, lease agreement, background check. $550/m o„ $350 deposit. 704- 892-1284 READY TO MOVE In 2br, Iba, rivate lot, $450/mo. 751-1218 or ’04-872-3367 M o b i l e H o m e s / S a l e FLEETWOOD HOIWES OF Wln- ston-Salem is a factory autho­ rized dealer. W e can beat anybody’s prices. 336-767-3900 MUST SELL 3BR, 2ba ranch true modular, set on your land, $84,900, value at $110,000. Call 1-800-672-9223________________ M o t o r c y c l e s 1977 G O LD W IN G GL 1000, 29,000 miles, radio,-windshield, solid bags, 2 new tires. $2700. 998-5667 1997 HD SPORTSTER 1200 custom, chromed out. $7300. 751-4375 N o t i c e __________ CONGRATULATIONS BRITTANY VOYLES. You made the dean’s list both semesters. We are very proud of you. i-ove, l^om and dad__________________ P e t s 2 AKC MALE chihuahua pup­ pies, will be very small. $400 each, cash only. 998-9573, leave message. BALL PYTHON ENCLOSURE and everything included, 4 yrs. old. Best offer. Call Jeff 492-7947 FULL iio O D E D CHIHUAHUA'S, 9 weeks old, wormed and 1st shots, parents on site. $200,492-7766 after 5pm. LAB PUPPIES FOR sale. Fuli- blooded black and chocolate. Ready now. $175.336-998-4161 R V / M o t o r H o m e 1994 DUTCHMAN 32FT. pull be­ hind camper. Sleeps 6. $6000 OBO. 336-751-0575____________ S e r v i c e B. M YERS LANDSCAPING , specializing in “Rubber liflulch" mowing, will take care of all your landscaping needs. Free esti­ mates, (336) 492-6385-home or (336) 399-4364-cell E.J. LAW N CARE, mowing, weedeating, trimming hedges. Free estimates. 336-284-6120 GARAGE DOOR REPAIRS & ALL ELECTRIC O PEN ERS. CALL fk^R. ED 336-998-2336 LAWN MOWER SERVICE and repair. Pick-up and delivery. Will buy lawnmowers In need of re­ pair. 751-5474 LAW N M O W IN G WEEDEATING, clean-up. Mark Parchment 492-7671 MARGARETS HOME CLEANING Service, there’s no job too small or too laige. Free estimates, references if needed. 940-2633 S e r v i c e S e r v i c e S t a t e w i d e V e h ic l e s MASONRY WORK, BRICK or block, foundations, garages, chimneys , porches, steps, etc. Built new or repaired, 33 yrs. ex­perience, insured, reasonable rates. Free estimâtes. 336-462- 4550 or 336-998-4765 OSBORNE ELECTRIC for all your electrical needs Free Estimates 751-3398 SNIDER'S LANDSCAPING & Lawn Service, LLC We Do ItAIII Mowing, trimming, bush- hogging, plugging, tree & shrub planting & fertilizing, grass seeding & fertilizer appHcatlon, soli preparation, micro-lrriga- tlon, licensed pesticide applica­ tor, water garden Installation, retaining walls Spring & Fall Yard Clean-Up Leaf Removal Gutter Cleaning Pine Needles Delivered & Spread $6.50/bale Sign 1 year contract and receive your birthday month freell Call for Free Estimates Residential & Commercial Office (336) 492-2174 Cell (336) 409-0113 TOMBERLIN'S LAWN CARE & Handyman Services. All types of iawncare and handyman ser­ vices, mowing and weedeating, bushhogging & trimming trees and buslies, plugging, seeding, fertilizing, leaf removal, mulch­ ing, pine needles. Call Brent for free estimate (residential and commercial services) Home phone 492-5424 Mobile 391- 2266.__________________________ S t a t e w i d e A IR LIN E M EC H A N IC - rapid training for high paying career. FAA predicts severe snortage. FAA approved. Job placement assistance. AIM 888-349-5387 DRIVER S-D ED ICA TED ANDCTR runs available. Top miles and pay. $.36-$.41 CPM, home weekly, CDL A plus 1 year CTR. 800-775-2352 NC M OUNTAINS- panoramic views and mountain streams In high elevation between Boone and Asheville. Tracts range 1-5 acres with access and utilities from $49,900. 800-455-1981 ext. 146 YOUR CLASSIFIED COULD be reaching over 1.6 Million homes across North Carolinal Place an ad with our paper for publication on the NC Statewide Classified Ad Network- 117 NC Newspa­ pers for a low cost of $300 for 25- word ad to appear In each paperl Additional words are $10 each. The whole state at your flngertjpsl it’s a smart advertising buyl Call us for more Information or visit the N.C. Press Association’s website at www.ncpress.com___________ WILL PAY CASH for Junk cars. 336-407-8283 V e h ic le s 1967 VW CUSTOM chopped top, truck bed, yellow, 160cc engine $3500. 998-5667 1997 PONTIACTRANSPORT Van; V-6, aufo, $875 down, total $2,300. Dealer 63941 704-633-5932 1989 BUICK LESABRE 4 door, $500. 940-5134 2002 TOYOTA C ELICA Gt. loaded 5-speed, blue, 54,000 mlles, $15,500 negotiable. Call 336-692-7834 ‘91 FORD PICK-up SB, 6 cyl. auto $850. Also '85 Fondplck-up SB 302 V8, auto $1050.492-5509 ■93 PO N TIA C FIR EB IR D , loaded, V-6, auto, cold AC $2500. Also '95 Mitsubishi Galant, auto, 4dr, cold AC $1400.492-5509 W a n t e d PRIVATE COLLECTOR BUYS coins and collections. Call for ap­ pointment. 753-0986 TIMBER WANTED, pine or hard- wood. We select cut or clear cut. 8 acres or more. Shaver Wood Prod­ ucts, Inc. 704-278-9291. Night 704- 278-4433 or 828-430-8860 WANT TO BUY riding mowers that need repair. 998-2627 Y a r d S a l e s 3 FAMILY YARD sale, too much to mention, Fri. and Sat. 8-untll, 3685 Needmore Rd. I STEVE IJAMES CARPET CLEANING DISCOe THE BEAUTY OF YOUR CARPET! ■ Residential & Commercial ■ Carpet & Upholstery Steam Cleaning • Deodorizing & Soli Guard • Water Extraction Service J . Q O . O C J . C FREE ESTIMATES “ V f c f c P a r k o r Rd., Mocksville Veteran in the Business and 45 Year Resident of Davie (336) n o t i c e o f u p c o m i n g for iltiing & color piclurci, pittic «Itit w w w .v o rk a u c tlo n .c o m * N O lU Y I R * # P R i m u a *.TJCSTIO M ' S aturday M a y 28, 2005 @ 1 0 am 10 S aturday Sam & R uth ShortShort h.» told Ihtit home A f»nn wj H wnvtnt |л1о « fttlrtirwnl h< 370 Sain Rd. ** * Mocltsville, N.C. c n rly 1800 s D n vie C o. W o rk T a b le w /p u d fe ci A n tiq u e s l-iim i(u re C o lle ctib le s T ro y -B Ilt T ille r Y a rd T o o ls see nc*l week s pnper for listing ••• • call for list o rv iilt www.VQrkaHctlon.CQai 356 Fox llu m e r Kofld H arm ony, N .C . 28634 7 04-5 4 6 -2 6 9 6 o r 7 04-929-9311 c c ll • * " n c a l# 7 4 i l n u 19 3 5 FO R S A LE :Cars • Trucks Utility Buildings Carports: All Sizes, All Galvanized All Size Dog Lots 336-751-3442 Mocksville, NC UiISgC0RV8R MINI-STORAGE For all your storage needs, choose us! Come by to inquire about free rental. 2975 Hwy. 64 E in Fork C oil todayl (336) 998-8810 2 0 Y E A R W A R R A N T Y Longest Lasting 3' Coverage / Many Colors Pole Buildings Metal Roofs & Siding f 1-888-278-6050 M ID -STA TE M ETALS A U C T IO N Estate of Roland C. Poindexter (Dcccnscci) Saturday, M ay 21st at 9 am Preview at 8 am R ain D ate: Saturday, M a y 28th a t 9 am Sale to bc held at 3725 Union H ill Road, East Bend, N C 27018 *** No Buvers Premium *** Partial list or Items; Vthlclr. 1390 Ctwiiolel C jp ta Classic BioubIbth, 4^)001. One (wnct, like nM -W k3dual miles (suliiKlloconliittBllon). Gum: Daisy (195 Bun Barton Special BB Gun; Fm Stolinjm illi 20 oa. dtil-tiaiiel Shotgun: Remlnston Model 11-12 oa. Automatic Shotjun wilh 2 extra barrels; Winchester Model 63 - 22 LB Automalic Bille *ilh sco(»; BotmlscM WillsnlatKik A. G. IH PWG Model 27 7.65 calitar Womallt Plslol; H M Model 923 22 caliber RevoWer Pistol' Stevens Model 311 <10 dht-barrel Shotgun (like new); Stevens Blrddoj 20 ga, dbl-barrel Shotgun. (Eislil nermils required la nurchase hanrlnunsi Collacllblei: Case pocket knives Butter mold.2 milk cans,guilt rack.2 guilts, Je«l S Acorn 1 gal. Shorlening Cans; Old Picture Frames; The Pony Une 6-day Manila Clock; Utile Bln Bitile K Hymn Book, dated 1882, Depression Glass pink & green; Fenton; Hull; Old Books dated back to 1871; Southern Dairy Glass Bollies - Cream, Butter t, Cliocolale Milk; American South Alrlcan Line 1945 War Calender. FiiraiturcOtk Center №l.,2 chr>.,(piggad|Sic.Onli(nagli| Library Desk; StraloM-back Chairs, sel ol 6; Maple Chesl ol Dfa*«rs; Maple End Tables; Mahogany End Table; Washboard. Eiiuliim inl, Tooli It M lu .: Cast Iron Items Including Grlsnold; Tractor Seal; Single Trees: Horse Collars; Bee Gums; Horse-drawn Equipment; Harness; Chains: Morlar Box; Lumber: Melal: Cemenl Blocks; Bushhog Brand Bushoa 5'; Aluminum Siding; Melal Scallolding; 1965 Ford 3000 Tractor IGas), Boom Pole, 3 point Carry-AII; 3 polnl Fertllta Spreader; Cemenl Mixer; Heavy Doty Log Chain; Ladders: Wooden Benches; Old Tobacco Brrcks; Old Tobacco Slicks: Hand Tobacco Sellers: Old Corn Sheiler: 5 gal. Oil Cans; King Cobra Bicycle, Columbia Bfcycle; 2 Penn Rod & Reels; 2 Wheal Cradles; 2 Sausage Grinders; Cherry Seeder; 16 hp 42' cut Im es '(ard Tractor; McCuiioch Model 700 Chain Saw; Weedeatet 22" col Pushmowr: Parker Lawn Sweeper. 5 hp pusti-lype Leal Blower, like new; Eagle Beaver hand held leal Blower; Homelile XL98 Cement Saw; McCullocli Weedealer: All Types ol Elecirk: Power Tools; Packard Air Compressor; Atlas Table Saw; Gieytwunil Arc Welder; Acetylene Torch; Cummins 5 speed heavy duty Drill Press: Craltsman Commercial Grinder: Crattsman Planer; Lincoln Model 225 Arc Welder: Shop Fans: Old S Very Rare 1-man Slandup folding S j* Mactiine: Assorted Handloolj; Lois ol Eledrlc Handlools; Winctiestei Hatchet; Winclieslei Handsaw: and other Handsaws; Axes; Hammers; Draw Knives; C Clamps: Floor Tool Boxes: levels: Plpewtenclies: Wlllon 6' Vise: Búllalo 6’ Vise: Wheelbarrows: Clevis: Chain Binders; Lois t Lois ol Bolls & Nuts in Bins; Wood Planes; Crosscut Saw; Old Wooden Wheal Cleaning Machine: Shop Wood Slove. OUiw H m t too Bumoroiu to minllon. AactloMOT M tr. Excellent opportunity lo acquire some classic articles Irom yesleryeai as well as like-new lools and equipment. Don1 miss this cliance to lake a piece ol the past home wilh youl Retreshmenls available on sale slie. Term ol u lo : Cash or apotoved check day ol sale. (All Items sold as Is. where Is. Auctioneer Is nol lesponslble tor any discrepancies or Inaccuracies in advertising ) Announcements day ol sale supercede all printed material. Nol responsible lor accidents on grounds. No Buyer's Premium. DlroctloM to M il: From Winston-Salem, travel Hwy 67 West lo East Bend, Take the Hwy 67 Business to the right and travel _ mile and turn right onto Union Hiii Rd Travel aboul 1 mile, sale site Is on lelt. From Elkin, travel Hwy 67 East lo East Bend, Take the Hwy 67 Business lo Ihe lell and travel 1 mile and lum lell onlo Union Hiil Rd Travel about I mile, sale site Is on lelt. (Watch lor auction signs.)Sale Conducted by: Myers Auction Service. 6236 Old U.S. Highway 421, East Bend, N.C. 27018. For more information on sale contact Lynn Myers at 336-699-4123. ___________________NCAL 06647: VAL r»29070028l4: NCAFL *7909; Mcmticr of NCAA E S T A T E A U C T IO N Sat., May 21,2005 • 10 am P e r s o n a l P r o p e r t y o f J o h n & E v e l y n F e r e b e e , (deceased) 1 7 5 2 A n g e ll R o a d • M o c k s v ille , N C 2 7 0 2 8 Directions: From Mocl<sville, Hwy 601N, 4.3 miles N of i-40, turn right on Angell Road. Sale 1.7 miles on left. Auctioneers Note: This line collection of antiques and collectibles come Irom generations of the Salley and Ferebee families. Have you ever wanted to go back in time? Here's your chance. This Is not Ihe ordinary auction. These items are extremely rare. The quills that Aunt Lynn Ferebee stitched a 100 years ago are a labor of love. John Roe Ferebee & Joe Harpe played wilh these marbles when they were youngsters. Can you Imagine the apple pies that were kept In Ihe pie sale, the butter (rom the wood chum, and the mold lhat formed it. The sugar chest Is one ol a kind. The Mason Jar, Nov 30,1858, whal could it have been used lor? The stories from times past around Ihe Wooden Ice Box & Bench, from Robert's Store. In tribute to Robert's Store, a cold RC Cola & Moon Pie will be given to the lirst 100 people lo register sale day Don’t miss out on a piece of history. Pie Safe, Wood Churn, Butter IVIold, Pine Tappered Leg Pegged Kitchen Table, Meal Chest, Hooser Cabinet, Pine Tappered Leg Pegged Table. Walnut Sugar Chest Mid 1800s. Wood Tub, Wooden Ise Box 4 Wood Bench from l~G. Roberts STORE, Round & Flat Top Trunks, Quilts • 2Qt Great Quallfa. Childs Cane Bottom Chair, Baby Bed, Baby Stroller 50-t years, Doll 100 years old, Porcelain Doll, Crochet Baby Clothes, Pottery Jugs, Wooden Dove Tail Boxes, Large Wood Picture Frames- Ovai & Rectangle, Poster Bads, Oak Dresser, Wood Mantles, Pink Depression 25+ pieces, Glass Basket, Homer Laughlin Bowl & Pitcher, Hull, Knowles China, Noritake Ivory China, White House Vinegar, Pattern Glass, Shlrlev Temple Blue Creamer. Snow King Baking Powder Can, Planters Peanut Jar, Kerosene Lanterns & Lamps, Toms/Lance Cookie Jars, Aladdin Qll Lami5 w/orlalnal boxes. Sausage Grinder, Cast Iron Pans, Harmonicas, Juice Harpe & Banjo, Farmington High School Monthly 1935-1936, Straight Razor, Pepsi Can, Boy Scout Unilorm-50 yrs old Crawford's Drug Store Fan Mocksviile, Marbies-100 yrs. old, Hafner Metal Train, Red Wagon &' Cart, Com Sheiler, Platform Scales, Wash Pots, Old Drink Bottles, Cheewine Wood Crates, Milk Cans Chicken Coop, Cross Cut Saw, Mason Marian Jar-Patent Nov. 31 IM , 3 pt. Drag Harrow, Hyd I^lckup 36 Disk Harrow, Economy Garden Tractor Cultivators & Mowing Deck, Horse Drawn Planters cultivator & etc. Many More Items. Terms: Cash or Good Check Speer Auctions ç,YÔ^® 261 Rag Road, Mocksville, NC 27028 _______David Speer, N CAL #2984 » 336-998-4162 NEED TO PUT SOME CASH Ads are $6.50 for tlie first 10 words^ and 10< for eacli additional word, per Vi/eek. If you run your ad three weeks, you'll get the fourth week FREE! Yard Sale ads must be paid when placing the ad. Deadline for placing ads is 10:30 a.m. on Tuesdays. DAVIE C O U N T Y E N T E R P R I / ^ E C O R D yOURHAND» Stop by our office today! 171 S. Main Street Mocksville, NC If you're paying by credit card, call us at 336-751-2120 or visit us online at www.enterprise-record.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 - Cll Y a r d S a le s 601 NORTH LIBERTY Church Rd. to Bear Cresk Church Rd. to 349 Ben Anderson Rd. Thursday, Friday and Saturday B IG -B IG -B IG basement and Yard Sale. 128 Pinebrook Dr. off Farnnlngton Rd. or off Hwy 158 at end of Pinebrook School Rd. Directions: Pinebrook Dr. 2 miles North from 1-40 on right or 2 mlles south on left from caution light at 801 and Farmington Rd. From 158: 5 miles west from intersec­ tion of 158 and 801 to Plnebrook School Rd. at end of road turn left, 1st house on right. Huge se­ lection of silk flowei' arrange­ ments and stems, misc. house­ hold and decorative Items, an­ tique picture frames and framed prints, big band and ballroom dance albums In excellent con­ dition, kitchen table with 4 chairs, large screen TV slant' ' reel push mower and c Y a r d S a l e s CAROLYN’S COLLECTIBLES 2076 Hwy 601 South (vlocksvlile, NC 27028 (336-751-6252 Barbies, Beanies, Furn ture and Gifts FIR. 20TH AND Sat. 21st, 7-un- tll. 1409 (vlllling Rd. Motor hoist, 12 ga. shotgun, gas pole saw,Sthel backpacl< blower, Craltsm an table saw, )ushmower, sandbox. Barbie eep, lots of other items. large screen TV stand, like new eel push mower and garden and yard trailers, many clothes both dress and casual most size 8 and medium, end tables, retro tulip shaped light fixture, Christmas decorations and much, much more. Friday and Saturday May 20th and 21st 7:00-7:00 WE BUY HOUSES & MOBILE HOMES A n y C o n d itio n — A n y L o c a tio n F a s t C a s h — Q u ic k C lo s in g (336) 961-2777 Wishon & Carter Builders, inc. Yadkinville, HCYadkinville 336-679-2031 www.wishoncarter.com Wln»ton-Salem 336-724-0372 Custom Home Building Additions Custom Kitchens & Baths Guaranteed Pricing 33 Years Experience Unlimited License In-House Design Free Estimates REAL ESTATE AUCTION FRIDAY, MAY 20 - 6:00 PM 2717 Wishon Road, Courtney Height, Yadkin Co. Nice bricic veneer home with 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths, kitchen, living room. Carport & above ground pool on good lot. Over 1,000 sq. ft. Has heat pump. Tax value $85,143.00. Great for investors, first time home buyers or renters. TERMS: 10% deposit day ofsalc, balance in 30 days. 10% buyers premium. See website for full terms. DIRECTIONS: From Yadkinville follow Hwy. 601 S. to Hibco Plas­ tics. Left at Courtney Crossing Gas station at caution light to Courtney Huntsville Ril. (SR. loot). Follow 1.6 nni. to Wishon Rd. on left. Signs posted. www.rogcrsrealty.com Ч Ч гН .|к « (336)789-2926 Keith Gunter, Sales Mgr. N C A L //685 W IN ST O N -SA L E IV I A U C X I O N 10:AM SAT. MAY 28 * U q u i d a l i o n S a l e * Salem Graphics Publishing Company 130 Stratford Court, Winston-Salem Business 1-40, Stratford Road exit Across from Thruway Shopping Center < M I U . I O N I X ) L I J ^ R ' A R T IN V E N T O R Y Limited Edition Prints - Beautiful IVllrrors Framing Shop Equipment and Supplies, Office Desk, Computers, Fie cabinets, 20 Foot Traier w/AircondWon 1993 Ford Cargp Van Alrconipressor Wall to wall (»mplete liquidaUon ofthe entine ''Million Dollai'’ business operation.****** Registering begins 8:30AM Tams: Cash, IvlastefCard, Voa, Good check with your thumb print 10% Buyer premium added to all purchases A U C T IO N E E R - B R O K E R K E IT H J. P IE R C E , G R I (336) 731-2003 » NCAL » 154. NCRBL #99460. FISH IN G EQ U IPM EN T, A N ­ TIQUES, glassware, clothes, guns, tools, mowers, too much to list. Hwy 158 and Chal Smith Rd. Daylight to dark. All week. FOUR FAMILY FRI. and Sat. 7am-untll. Furniture, clothes, and much morel 64W, Center picnic shelter. G AR AG E SALE 849 Duke Whitaker Rd. Friday fVlay 20 and Saturday IVlay 21. Lots of good name brand clothes, boys up to 4, girls up to 12, some adult clotnes, household Items, kids size 5 racing boots worn 2 times, 1999 24ft. Wilderness Travel trailer, bow and arrow. Y a r d S a l e s Y a r d S a l e s GARAGE SALE FRI. and Sat. WILKESBORO ST FRIDAY IVlay May 20 & 21, 8-untll at 137 20, 8am, lots of stuff Joyner St. Cooleemee. Rain or Shine. GARAGE SALE; MEMORIAL Day drop-ins $10.00 plus miscel­ laneous floral Items. 707 Coun­ try Ln. Mocksville, look for signs HUGE 2 FAMILY yard sale Fri. 20th and Sat. 21st, 8am-untll. Please no earlv birds. Lots and Y A R D S A L E S a t , M a y 2 1 • 7 a m 184 Kennen Krest Rd. (off Fcinnington Rd) Baby & Household Items, Furniture lots of stuff. 737 Milling Rd.1 mile , , . from Main St. PORTABLE FRIDGE- $35, bed­ spread and shams -$5, sheets- $2, shower/tub bench- $20, walker-$20, curtalns-$2ea., panel kitchen table, 2 chairs -$35, pine coffee table hand made-$20, new stuffed anlmals-$1, more misc. Call after 10am 338-499-5825 SAT. MAY 21, 8-2, Huge yard sale at Cornerstone Christian Church (old Food Lion bldg. In Bermuda Quay shopping center) For benefit of Youth Missionary. Come and find a new treasure and help spread God’s word. Rain or shine. RANDY MILLER &SONS 295 Miller Rond • Mocksvillc ( 3 3 6 ) 2 8 4 -2 8 2 6 • Now Pumping Septic Tanks ■ Skid Sleer W o rk V p ^ i^ 'M r TiencherWork Sepllc Svslems L o a d e r i ALL INCOM ING C A L L S ARE FREE. From anyone. From any network. At any time. Only from Nextel. FREE INCOMING PLAN FREE INCOMING cellular calls UNLIMITED local walKle-talkle minutes UNLIMITED nlqhts and weekends 3 0 0 outgoing cellular m inutes Nationw ide cellular long distance Included No roam ing charges $ 4 9 .9 9 ESWiXfiJri,». LIMtTED-TIME OFFERS ON THESE POWER PHONES. Walkle-talKle. CPS-enabled.Speaktrphone.’ Web access. Free Ml """" *Ш SAVE $75 B » j on this color screvn phont. 'ae' 1М» SAVE $75hitnoi bittd on tgrH^titt •п4Шм<11пг|Ы11. N E X T E L Auit<««iu6 «imciCHtMtyi ¡ п Т Ь г л с Ь . 3570 Clemmons Road, Hwy. 158, Clemmons 766-8911 or 399-2222 Across from Bi-Lo Shopping Center Hours: Monday-FfWay 9 am*6 pm. Saturday 10 am-4 pm “Friendly Knowledgeable Consultants” "Family Owned & Operated" UxUvIKsrylSeE. (ky42tS !s FnUtxM Iren 421 "Miiri ihe Unpotn I ri»9rim> Coil 1ко«1Гт (fKU tl |l SS w U U Ih* FKI h not iIji n 9ndwi»nl t (Nvg*’ludln w»«li«fiAe«4 h tfiflrltf d DA *g phOM mcM iic*p( im h l»(lUr[l^oл« («»«M. n m onm; Mt П KM (or upMt Uil] iinitii (ЛЫЫи tpNif «1 i nr* «(»ilion «id crrd>l KtrnA h tl«( puiiuit > t«o lorat of itlU MntifKi(«a Irn UOi offrr H bitdw У4И («tul ptKt (*л US mm tn rtUfi. Unm «t tM »1 lUO «I tiiid on Nilion« Piomo hlCH Ы fiXWif) *4 U499aUCi ftaUimtiH itdM U ofitrt de not KUt Us«i ((ttbUird Ы(о(* th« ittxl«) or otM iukIjIM ImOnittbiliМГ pfm pwcKiM. I«« rovr Mitif S«(TKt let nitMtr M l«rmtAcn«llont oa 1ЫМ rrteli toim or Ггн ккояИrunt; Onrtttr coAirtct rtguIrM ДМКМ fHV $»0 •«)( ttrawillen «id tn ttlu» Ih ptt »tow. McniMr Ml IncM* fHi to (om c«m o( comp^ ■ilfiltdMJifrogtmwlalSHMfMitndUUptfptaAt rm>MitiliKdkK«lof09t««iiwri(<(i'ff>«f»r*'NiP>ut40T«<rmnltim/tmCiluUr. OfBWtWWnwiVfWiaíwiÜHttwíWiiMffiwí« МчЛ1|(»00рч lo?OOOTJ.It«Undi(m»OOpni(o Пел iOCUflil 0(11« ItnitMililrnKyfi IM(lÿi(U«»ififrtftr(mniU№tiionirt*t«iTtiffli0»«iimiin«tN«>i>UM<in«lnKMt0IWcer>ttiO(<iiiU)«iply RtiliriN^liomMtNtt««! wmt Ш Ы tlw to» И0 MTtHi. CMS Kiitti CoiwwMtliOAL Inc NUftl «Ad IM Ctifir Utitt lego «i urtki mtin ttMinvki i-a/bt it>itrr»d гкпп «« prop«tlr«(IM( »m UiigMt inmM www.pierceauction. com A U C T I O N A N T IQ U E S , FU R N ITU R E A tO d L S PERSONAL PRO PERTYO F FLOSSIEC. WALKER. " POW ER OF ATTORNEY: MAXINE HAYES. MT. • MAY 21 • 9:M (KAIN OK а ш № Ш CASS ov КАШ, 8ALB vn u . BB VNDiiit т к т ) . Vs"/wm.L|jW R.'OAyiE 8Ct<gOL^ DAVIE COUNTV) DIrectioM: From Mocksville: Travel Hwy. 601 North for 5.6 mlles (4 miles north of 1-40). Turn left on Liberty Church Rd. Go 1 V 2 miles. Turn left on Bear Creak Church Rd. Sale VZ mile on right. Personal Property; Original old tin-punoh door pie safe, fine 6- drawer pedal sewing machine with deep carving on side, Troybllt tiller, 2 primitive benches, 5’ Sidewinder rotary mower FfvIC, Sellers kitchen cabinet, wood cook stove, oak dresser (3-drawer), Jenny Und type spool double bed, wardrobe, freezer, Phllco refrigerator. Whirlpool washar, Kenmore dryer, old pine countiy table (1-draw6r), maple dining table with six chairs, two maple Tale City captain chairs, Hotpolnt refrigerator, sofa, rockers, bookcase, Duncan Phyfe table, two end tables, Art-Deco drop-center dresser, 4-drawer chest, bookcase poster bed, china cabinet (large and unusual), vanity stool, fabric, coffee table and two end tables. Lady Kenmore dishwasher, Frlgidalrs microwave, Formica table and chairs (basement), buffet, server, electric sewing machine, miscellaneous glassware, dishes, stainless steel, miscellaneous pots and pans, blue fabric recliner, Ihree wash tubs, wooden barrel, seed planter, grain sifter, aluminum ladder, cross cut saw, old miscellaneous hand lools, old fool edge, two-wheet 1Z' farm trailer, pitch forks, old tvtlller's hand truck, grain scoop, old stand-up corn sheiler, old grinding stone, seed planter (Precision)... many small old timey Itemsll F ood S s rva d on G rounds T e rm ii Cash or Approved Check. Everything sold as Is/where la. No warranties exprossod or Impllacl. Auctioneer Is nol responslbiD tor any dlscrepanclas or Inaccuracies In advertlslna or for any additions or delallons. Nol responsible In case o l accldonl. F R E D G . M O C K , A U C T I O N E E R NCAL#21 • (336) 699<3426 w w w jn o c k a u c tlo n 8 .c o m QUALITY WATCHES ON SALE 2 0 -5 0 % O F F DIAMOND WRAPS 2 0 -5 0 % O F F DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS 2 0 -5 0 % O F F W O W ! SHOP DAVIE JEW ELERS FOR ALL OF YOUR DIAMOND DESIGNS QUALITY WEDDING BANDS 6 Month Layaway L^ ^ Y O N EC H A R M ^ I ^ G E T ONE ^ r FREE! > ! I —J DIAMOND EARRINGS! FOR KIDS ' I Equal or 1^ Lesser Value « year am i D M M 0 N D 6 ^ G 0 L D gallery Mocksville 751-3747 WATCH BATTERIES k i i I■I.ií¡ \ { l \ Í 1 I ^ C12. DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 19,2005 Free Skin Cancer Screenings !\^ay 2 5 Free skin canccr screenings will be held on May 25 from 8- 11:20 a.nt. at the Davie County Health Department to coincide wilh Melanoma/Skin Cancer Detection and Detection and Prevention Month, sponsored by the American Academy of Dermatology; Suzanne P. Hess, M.D., Davic Dermatology PA.; and Davie County Health Department. The screenings are part of a national campaign to encourage early detection and teach prevention of skin canccr, the mo.st common form of cancer in this country. Approximately one million new cases of skin cancer will be diagnosed in the United States this year. The academy’s national detection and prevention program is in its 21st year and was launched this year on May 2 - Melanoma Monday, to raise awareness of melanoma and urge Americans to regularly examine their skin for signs of this serious fohn of skin cancer. Melanoma Monday was tike New Year’s Day for dermatologists. It was a day when dermatologists encouraged everyone to start a new life-saving habit of examining their skin. Skin self­ examinations consist of periodically looking over your body for any changcs in the si/.e, color, shape or texture of a mole, the development of a new mole or any other unusual changes in the skin. Any of these signs should be reported to a dermatologist right away. To do a thorough exam, it’s important to use a full-length and hand-held mirror so you can see the back of your head, your back and buttocks. Don’t forget places like your scalp, the soles of your feet and between your toes, under your arms and the palms of your hands. A survey commissioned by the academy showed that fewer than one-third of Americans examine their skin for signs of melanoma and more than half don’t know the signs of melanoma. Dermatologists want to change this bccause when treated in its earliest stages, melanoma can be cured. If not treated early, the disease can quickly spread to other parts of Ihe body and can be fatal. The key to Ihe successful treatment of mosl types of cancer is early detection and treatment. With melanoma, early detection is easy because the signs are visible on the surface of the skin. Aboul 95,880 new cases of melanoma were expected to occur in 2004, and 7,910 people were expected to die of the disease. Since the 1930s, the incidence- of melanoma has increased more than 2000 percent. One person dies of melanoma every hour. The members of the American Academy of Dermatology, Dr, Suzzane Hess, and the Dayie County Health Department invites the public lo take advantage of the free screenings during Melanoma/ Skin Cancer Detection and Prevention Month. For more information and/or an appointment, call 751-8700. K o o n tz R e u n io n T h is S u n d a y The Koontz fomily reunion will be held at the Salem United Methodist Church picnic shelter al I p.m. on Sunday, May 22. All family members and friends of the family are invited. Bring a well-filled picnic basket to share. Forks, plates, napkins, cups and ice will be furnished. For more information, call Phyllis Williams at 998-8303 or Jack Koontz at 492-7116. 5 0 Y e a r V e te r a n ’s P in Belle D. Boger was presented her 50-year veteran's pin for membership with the Mocksville Chapter of the Eastern Star. Boger’s daughter, Marlene Shamel, was in attendance. Pictured: Patsy Staley, Worthy Matron, Belie Boger, Marlene Shamel, and Cecil Cartner, Worthy Patron. J a c k ie N a y io r R e c e iv e s U N C -A L e a d e r s h ip A w a r d The University of North Carolina at Asheville recently presented awards to students and faculty at the 19th annual Aca­ demic and Leadership Awards Celebration. Jackie Naylor, daughter of Gary and Delphia Naylor of Mocksville and o 2001 graduate of Davie High School, received a Leadership Award from UNC Asheville’s education depart­ ment. Naylor, a history major, is a UNC Asheville senior. Smith Reunion June 4 Historical Society To fHeet The second annual Smith Family Reunion will be held June 4 al the Center Community Building, U.S. 64 West at 1^40, Mocksville, beginning at 4 p.m. Bring a picnic basket, soft drink and old pictures and share memories. A few of the Smith descendants represented last year we(|e Wiley Jacob, Bert Lee, Daniel Wilson, Joel Marvin, William Monroe, Enoc Wash­ ington and James Albert Smith. For more information, con- ^•tact Ron Smith al 751-3626 or 9915-7613.^ The Davic County Historical Society will meet at 7'p.m. Mon­ day, May 23 at the Brock Gym, North Main Street, Mocksville. Anyone interested is invited. To learn more, call Aubrey Wensil at 284-2615 or Doris Frye al the Davie County Public Library.Friends Of Tiie Library To Meet On i\/lay26 “Be a friend, bring a friend," says Beverly Maurice, president of the newly formed Friends of Davie County Public Library. Interested people are invited to a short meeting to hear what the Friends group is all about. The meeting will be at the library, in Ihe Community Room, Thursday, May 26, prior lo the Daniel Boone program at 7 p.m. The Friends of the Library support the Davie County Public Library in assisting and developing and improving the resources, services and facilities of the library; all this in an atmosphere of fun and community fellowship, Maurice said. “Come and join us and bring a friend.” Hazel Claire Marion was born on Thursday, April 14lh, 2005 at 2:08 p.m. at Forsyth Medical Center. She weighed 61bs. 1 oz. nnd was 19 1/2 inches lung. Her parents are Kevin and Susan Marion of Mocksville. Maternal grand­ parents are Carl and Carolyn Boger of Mocksville. Paternal grandparents are Gerald and Gloria Jean Marion of Green Mountain, NC. Paternal great­ grandmothers are Ola Marion of Pinnacle, NC and Kathleen Anderson of Charleston W.Va. Mike and Vanessa Lankford announce the birth of their son, Benjamin Couper Lankford, at 4:22 p.m. May 4, 2005 at Forsylh Hospital, He weighed 7 lbs. 4 oz. and was 19.5 Inches long. Maternal grandparents are Neal and Judy Medlnger of Moncks Corner, S.C. and Jean Medlnger of Salisbury. Pater­ nal grandparents are James and Jan Lankford of Cooi­ eemee. in T h e F o o ts te p s O f D a n ie l B o o n e S e m in a r i s M a y 2 6 A seminar titled “In the Foot­ steps of Daniel Boone” will be held Thursday, May 26, at 7 p.m. at the Davie Counly Pub­ lic Library, North Main Street, Mocksville. Hear Randell Jones, Ihe au­ thor of “In the Footsteps of Daniel Boone” talk about this combination travel guide/ his­ tory book that allows Ihc reader to actually walk where Boone walked. The book elaborates on. the basic facts and tells the sto­ ries connected to the various sites. The event is free to the pub­ lic. Call 751-2023 for more in­ formation. Autographed copies of In the Footsteps of Daniel Boone and RandelUones's other book Scoundrels, Rogues, and Heroes of the Old North State will be available for purchase. CaJiHowfov^facaUlon 0each Resemtiotts at :• Jyrtle, North Myrtle, Garden City and Dine Out at Golden Griddle andln-Motel Restaurants. Fun in The Son... Come On P o m ! Vie fishing is G feA ' BEST PANCAKES AND WAFFLES ON THE BEACH AT... GOLDEN GRIDDLE PANCAKE HOUSE M ain St. O coan Dr.. N. M yrllo Booch, SC - Open 6;0Q AM - 7 Days A W eek { REALTY, INC. 1605 S. Madison Drivo P.O. Box 1004, North Myrllo Doach „ South Carotina 29598 | SALES - RENTALS & w w w .w h tte * ro a lty .c o m 1 -8 0 0 -M 9 -4 4 8 3 (re»«rvallon8only) 1»843-272-8115 Wtite torFm« Brochure- N. MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. VACATION RENTALS OCtANFMiNT (OONB^I «пммш;HOMES, OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK www.elllollreally.com P.O. B ox 3200 N. M yrllo Bench sc, 295D2 ELLIOTT U • i: * Л • L • 1 • Y 1-800-525-0225 - wmv.beveriymotel.com Email: bevmotel@8ccoa8Ìnet 70Э N. 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OCEAN BLVD., MYRTLE BEACH, SC c m c v i/ a a is iH i’ O K n t m ii o mоси» mmSUytlwSlliilaiF1l£E(except Midap and special emts) Toll Free 1-800-533-133а EXCELLENT RESTAURANT Rooms ■ EHiclonclea • 100 Unils Room Phonos ■ KIddio Pool • Whlrloool "WE WELCOME FAMILIES" Goll Packaoos • ESPN Sports ’ 90 ft. Indoor Poiil ’ 60 ft, Ouldoor Pool ■ 200 ft, IndiHir Laiy Pool ' On-site Convenience Store ' Slnte-of-the-Att Fitness Center ' Game Room •Rates lu b jK t to clianse •Discounis subjcci lo availabiliiy Toll Free (800) 895-3721 or (843) 916-4700 w m v .c u m e lo i-rc s m l.c o m SlftOOQ Rabttra f. r tf « r - Л . Davie High School Qass O f 2 0 0 5 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/Eb||ECORD Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 1 S m a r t T h in k in g Top Three Encourage Fellow Graduates To Set Goals, Be Happy Alyson Walker, Ben Shega and Matt Rich will lead the Davie High Class of 2005 as diplomas are handed out Friday night at War Eagle Stadium. Walker, daughter of Steve and Tami Walker of Mocksville and the top- ranked academic student of the class, will follow a family tradition next year. She’s attending the University o f. North Carolina at Chapel Hill, “be­ cause that’s where my daddy went and my sister went and I love it." Walker will possibly study business. She enjoyed her four years at Davie High School, and mentioned teachers Terry Hoyle, Pat Noel and Regina Lon­ don as making leaming challenging and fun. Walker’s advice to fellow class members? "Work hard and follow your dreams. Like what you do and you’ll be happy.” Her dreams are to have a family, be able to support that family and be happy. Shega, son of Paul and Kay Shega of Mocksville, will be attending Hamp- toji-Sydney College this fall to study histoiy. He became Interested in the Virginia college last .year at a college fair. Hampton Sydney was interested in landing Davie High’s second-ranked academic student, as well. Shega’s favorite teacher, of course, is a history teacher - Jeremy Byrd. He also liked English teacher Hoyle. “I liked their teaching methods. They’re enthusiastic,” Shega said. "They know what they teach, and they’re very smart.” Rich, son of Stephen and Noia Rich of Mocksville, will attend Princeton University, possibly to study molecu­ lar biology. He visited Stanford last summer, and considered Yale and Brown uni­ versities. “I never really wanted to go to Carolina like everybody else in the county,” Rich said. “When we went to Princeton, I said ‘Yeah, this is it’.” Rich enjoyed his four years at Davie High, where he was an award- winning trombonist wilh the band. He hopes to continue with his music at Princeton. His advice to fellow members of the Class of 20057 “Find a goal and follow it. Stay motivated toward your goal. My mo­ tivation is what has helped me.” Alyson Walker, Ben Sliega and Matt Rich will lead fellow seniors across the stage at War Eagle Stadliiin Friday night. - Photo by Robin Fergusson T r o u b le d S t u d e n t G e t s O n T h e R ig h t T r a c k By Mike Barnhardt Davie County Enterprise Record Things began to fall into place for Ryan Harris during his sopho­ more year. He was getting used to the . discipline in JROTC, and he was enrolled in the Alternative Educa­ tion Program taught by Judy Fann. In the ninth grade, he was in trouble academically and behaviorially, a pátí'em'fó which ’ ■''' parents James and Doris Harris had become accustomed. Ryan had been in five pf Davie’s nine schools. He was diagnosed dyslectic in the fourth grade. “Between those two programs, it's really made a difference,” his mother said. Teachers in both programs marveled at Ryan’s success, and attributed it to more one-on-one attention. “Ryan was never disrespectful, he was just never motivated,” Fann said. “He wasn’t very successful, and we had started this alternative program." The program includes Fann and up to eight students. She averages 2- 6 in the class, which meets in a mobile unit at the back of the school. Fann said she tries to let the students feel success. “I try to make them feel instant success so they can feel well about themselves. Some­ times they stay a couple of weeks, sometimes months, sometimes a whole semester. “They get a lot of one-on-one instruction, trying to get their attitude, motivation and wanting to be successful. It’s just the students and myself. “It’s really been wonderful because the programs started up the time Ryan needed the service. Ryan was so successful.” Fann said Ryan puts an effort in academics, something he didn’t do before the programs. “He's not just going through the motions. He’s more attentive in his studies, and I’m real pleased with his behavior. He’s such a nice young man and we’re all so proud of him.” His interest in JROTC could be in his blood. His father fought in Vietnam, his grandfather in World War II, his brother in the War on Tenor. When he graduated from pre-school to kindergarten, he wanted to join the Army. When he entered JROTC, Ryan was making D’s and F’s. Now, A’s ___ and B’s are the nonn. He got a lot of Harris ponders his future. He knows the JROTC program at Davie High School helped change his life - for the good. , Please See Ryan-Page 14 , ^ ^ Photo by,Robin Feptsson Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 2 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/i^ECORD B randon E dgar Adam s C am eron B rett Adam s Joshua M atthew A iken O m ar D a vid A l S w citi A m y M a rie A lexander A ndrew Wayne A llen Taurus R am ie A llen W illiam A lexander A llen Tatiana S tilam ilh A lonzo M oneada Jon W allace Anderson K rysta l D aw n A ng e ll Jam es C lifton A rn o ld Jr. A shley D iane A tkins Jessica A nna B ader Shane R eginald Stennette B aker Jaim e Lou Banks N a ja B ritta n ia Bares Jes.iica Tracy B arnettt D an ie l Adam B arnet Jessica Leigh B arney M a rk E dw ard Beaver A ndrew Q uintín Beck C h risto ph e r L in k Beck E lizabeth C aroline B e llu cci Johnny Eugene B enfield Jr. D a vid W alter Benge Jennifer N icole B erube K u rtis Wayne B ivins Justin P aid B lackburn A m ber Hope B lackw ell Jessica M a rie B la ckw ell T roy A lexander B lakley Ryan M icha e l Boehm B enjam in Lee B oger H eather N icole B oger Jam es B enjam in B oger Lucas B rett B oger A shley Anne B ordner Jessica Lee B ow ling C atherine Joyce B oyles May the future hold » '■ W K /successes! S iM ta J S T U 8 W ntor Street, M ockavillo • 751-593G 880 Yndkinvillo Road, M ockavillo * 761-6201 Coolcom co Shopping Contor, Coflleonic« • 28-1-2542 ■ ■ 5361 U.S. Hwy. 158, Advnnco • 910-2.120 G c u i ^ a t u U i i o n s to the Class of 20 0 5 Gifts & Office Supplies 121 N, Main St., Mocksville, N.C. 27028 (336)751-3418 \ o u r hard m w ork ^ B e s t o f l u c k g r a d u a t e s ! EATON FUNERAL SERVICE 325 North Main Street, Mocksville, NC 751-2148 Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 3 DAVIE C O U N TY E N T E R P R I / i ^ l l E C O R D G aston Ja m a r B ratche Casey N icole B rew er Joshua R ay B rig h t Johnathan M ich a e l B ritt W endi N ico le B ro ck Y o u D e s e r v e T o C e l e b r a t e ! Lots o f hard work went into getting lhat diploma. We’re proud of your achievement. M iller’s R estaurant 336-751-2621 intersection 601 & 64 M ocksville, NC Troy B a rn w e ll B rooks H a rry Jerom e B row n Justin G regory B row n R ich ard B ryson B row n K a ra E lizabeth B ruce B ra d fo rd Jam es A le x T yler C lijfo rd Eugene A la n Jo.ieph Casey Ryan B ru ffe y B uckles B urns B u rto n B utner 3 f o e t e r ’ e V a e f a e b r B » , Se r v in g M o c k s v il l e & D avie Co u n t y FOR O v e r 50 Y e a r s 171 North Main Street, Mocksville, NC 751-2737 ' / 7 Z S c = = = I ANDREW BROCK N. C. Senate JULIA HOW ARD N. C. House o f Representatives BRENT SHOAF Regi.iter o f Deeds t i KEN BOGER Clerk o f Court ALLEN W HITAKER Sheriff TO M FLEM ING County Commissioner JOHNNY FRYE County Commissioner RICHARD POINDEXTER BOBBY K NIG H T County Commissiomr County Conmmsioner M IC H A EL ALLEN County Conwmsloner ' flM M Y L . MYERS District Court Judge Dear Graduates^ May, 2005 Congratulations on a major accomplishment! A high school diploma is something to be proud of. You have worked hard for many years to reach this milestone and the Republican Party salutes you for this accomplishment. A s you plan your future, please remember that you can play an important part in the future of your country by becoming involved in the political process. The Republican Party encourages you to register to vote and we invite you to register as a Republican. But regardless of the party with which you choose to register, we urge you to become familiar with the issued, the candidates, and to vote in the upcoming elections. Once again, congratulations and best wishes. Sincerely, T H E D A V IE C O U N T Y R E P U B L IC A N PARTY Paid for by The Davie County Republican Party. Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 4 D A V I E C O U N T Y E N T G R P R I f ^ E C O R D D a n ie lle M a rie C allahan B ritta n y N ico le C am pbell P a iilila C astaneda C a rb a ja l F e lix C a rb a ja lJ r. Janet A b ig a il C arpenter B rennan E lizabeth C a rte r C ayla Brooke C arter K im b e rly M a rie C a rte r ^ - Jl K enneth Lee C o rd e ria Johnaphen Stephanie N ickole A risbeth C a u d ill C ham bers C id C isneros P astor P a tric ia M iche lle C line R onnie Lee C oble Jr. Wesley D io n Cody Jam es D ennis C offey Jr. C andice Lee C ohen K ourtney D enise C ohen DeW ayne E llio it C o llin s A lic ia W hitney C ook Joseph A aron C ook A shley Deneen Cope A shley Lois C om atzer Chelsea C h ristin a C o rre ll D a n ie l F ra n klin C raver A m anda N ico le C iid d A ashley Ryan D a lto n C had A m ontue'Lee D a lto n Tim othy Joshua D aniels A ndrew Joseph D arcy Sam uel B raden D avis K a ra E lizabeth D eadm on Jessica D arlene D e a l C ory D ean D oub Jodie A nn D raughn H a le y J. D unn B ritta n y Renee D urham Jam ie Ryan D urham Kelsey M arie Dyson Tabitha Lee E asting Davie Medical Equipment I f C u *. tM . 959 Salisbury Rd. Mocksvllle (336)751-4288 A J. Burton C m S 0 f 2 0 0 5 The dawning of a new era in your life, a time to grasp what life has to offer. To accomplish anything your mind wants to, to grow, to learn, to prosper. To enter the world with your great desires and make a difference on this earth. To realize you can do anything you want, using your God given potential and your worth. The future is youB to live how you will, wd make the most of the talents the Lord has instilled in you. We congratulate you, A J. on how much you have grown, and pray the Lord TOtches over you, as you venture into the unknown. Love, Mom, Dad &Auttina • - V E n e rg y U n ite d B e lie v e s In EnergyUnited proudly supports North Carolina's youth thnDugh , our Bright Ideas and Youth Tour programs. EnergyUnited hopes you will find great success in life. Best wishes from EnergyUnited. excellfnce. commitment, integrity. 8 0 0 . ‘) ? . ’ ,3 / 9 Î WWW. fii(M (| y iin ito il. to rn a —I .1, ..iU .t-.y* ►WV'V-«»'-'-«'r,«k> V.»- mr-' n •• Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday,'May 19, 2005 Page 5 DAV IE CO U N TY E N T E R P R I / I ^ è i - C O R D P a id M ich a e l Eddy Lance A ndrew E m ert Tim othy Jam es E rb Zachary Thom as F a lls Spencer Lane F a rre ll Seha.s'tian Fernandez G ira ld o P au l D urham F e rre ll Lauren E lizabeth F letch e r L a u ra F lores P ino B ritta n y LeeAnn F olds M elisa M a rie F olds Jonathan A ndrew F o rd H u n te r W ilde Foster Sam antha D a n ie lle F ra n k Sarah Lym i F ra zie r H eather N icole F ritz L a toya Shanice A ngela M a rie Areesha Shanne N icholas D e co ria n M egan L a u re l D aw n M a rie K im b erly Ann R achel Lauren G adson G a ith e r G a ith e r G a ith e r G am ble G arnett G arnett G arrett L isa M a rie G ilb e rt C a rl B randon G inn L a u ra Leigh G lasscock Jonathan C ra ig G obble C h risto ph e r Jordan G oode B randon D e vra ! G oolsby Wade E m ery G ough W hitney B rooke G ough M a ry A lliso n G raves B ritta n y Janee Green Jordan M cD o n ald G rim es M elissa Rhea G ulledge A p ril M a rie G uyer A nnaliese M a rie H aftm an B ra dfo rd Jefferson H ale Lakisha N ico le H am pton ^ Congrotulotiofts Tb- Tke New... 2005 Orcicluotes Good Luck, Success, Best Wishes, and Congratulations For Your Excellent Achievement! Foster Drug Company 495 V alley R o ad • M ocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fosterdrugco.com CONGRATULATIONS D A V IE H IG H C L A S S O F 2 0 0 5 and Thank You Davie Students & Families, W e A p p r e c i a t e Y o u r B u s i n e s s H o rn O il C o m p a n y 190 N. Main street 751-2181 . H o rn 's E x p re ss # i H o rn 's E x p re s s #x 266 S. Salisbury St. Across from Lee Jeans, Hwy. 601 751-7676 751-5789 H o r n ’s A u t o / T r u c k P la z a 1670 us Hwy 601 N 751-3750 P i A S S II, D a v ie H ig h S c h o o l C la ss o f 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 6 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/^ECORD Lauren M iche lle K ourtney M iche lle H anes H iim ahcm N icholas Todd H ardcastle B rent K ristop h e r H arpe C atherine Brooke H a rris M o lly E laine H a rris Jeffrey Scoli H a rris Jr. A bby C arol H artm an Jacob E li H artm an M eagaii Leigh H e iu lrix M a rk G rizz Henncssev Jeffrey Tray H inson W illiam M atthew B ritta n y M arisha H ockaday H olm an Benjam in Robert Holm es H eather N icole H oover Am anda Lee H osier Adam Ross H o w ard Rebecca Jo H o w ard H aley M arg ue rite H tm l Rueben Jeffrey Ijam es M atthew P aul Zachary Stephen Ire la n d Isenhour M argie Ann Jackson ' *'„• . i " ' "I Je n n ife r M a rie Jacobs Shawn P atrick Jam es S arah E lizabeth Jarvis S arah Joan Jarvis D o n a ld R ay Jester C h ristia n R obert Johnson Clarence Adam Johnson *1. D usty Lynn Johnson K endra M a lia Johnson H a rriso n Steven Judd Joshua Lee K e lle r B ra nd i N icole K e lly C olby Leigh K in d e r Am anda M a rie K ing B ra nd i N icole K night M iranda B arbara Koontz W A L -M A R T SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS Congratulations Davie High Graduates! / Ô ln e o 1 9 â OV A t lv » n c s , N .C . 998-2140 Christy Sparks Amber Blackwell Chrisly Sparks nncl Amber Blaclnvell, graclualing seniors al Dnvie High School have each been selected to receivc a $1000 Sam Wnllon Communily Scholarship from Ihe Mocksville Wal-Mart slore. Strong academic performance and involvement in school and communily activities contributed lo this scleclion. Since 1979, Wal-Mart has presented more than $80 million in community scholarships. Wal-Marl Is very pleaded lo award Ihese academic scholarships to such outstanding students. Special Wishes to... Jeremiah Raby, William Hockaday, Kurt Bivins, Jennifer Vogler, Lisa Gilbert, Christian Johnson, A.J, Burton, Tommy Pullen, Adam Howard and Joshua Bright Take us with you W hether you g o to college or lo w ork, take us along. A subscription lo the Enterprise R ecord is only S20 a year in N .C ,, wilh TOllege subscriptions available. _Call 751-2120 for d e tn iu We>e Proud O f Youl Davie Discount Drugs Cooleemee Shoppi„sCe„,„ 284-253T .vie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19, 2005 Page 7 D A V IE C O U N TY jî C olleen E lizabeth ' Kopetsky ' ' f e A m y E lizabeth K rissak You’re the best A t least we th in k s o . Gooij luck as you start another chapter In your life, D A V tB C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/E^ECORD Jim’s Fruit and Stuff ^ 3311 us Hwy 601N • 4d2-2625 T G ra n t Stephen Lakey Ashton Tiffany Lam b 1} K ris tia n Brooke .i/ii L a n kford % 'i 1 ' _ E m ily M ich a e l Leonard Photos Not Available Christopher Shawn Allison Tanna Hunter Beroth Emilie Savannah Carpenter Ryan William Creekmur \Elizabeth Arroyo Encizo Katherine Lynn Goldner Ryan Jonte Harris Casey Daniel Harrison Austin Tyler Jojfe Kara Leigh McNabb Edward Charles Mitchell II M /iae / Morena Luna Heather Michelle Oakley Shawn Christopher Owens Kevin Louis Robertson II Mark Anthony Rosensteel Jennifer Marie Shinault Kayla Michelle Snyder Talena Autumn Tagnani Cody Scott Tharpe Hannah Robbins Tretler Jesus Uriostegui Maldonado Candice Nicole Wood Congratulations We Wish You The Best For The Future auto ntnts MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE 336-751-2944 884 S . M ain S t • M ocksville If you tfiink your education's been a long road, BBandTcom ©2003 BB&T M ember FDIC just imagine all the places it will take you tomorrow. Congratulations to this year's graduating class. At BB&T we believe in the power of a solid education. So to those leaving the classroom behind this spring we wish you the very best of luck, no matter where your tomorrows will take you, BB&r Km can tell we want your business. Two locations to serve you: 119 Gaither Street (336) 751-5951 Willow Oak Shopping Center (336) 751-5956 Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 8 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/i^ECORD Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 9 DAV IE C O U N TY E N T E R P R I / i ^ l ^ E C C R D Kenneth C rai}! L in k Joshua P h illip Litten Ram on Valentin L o m e li ' Johnathan Kane Loos K athryn M ario n Lord A lliso n H iidson M ackintosh Kasey A nthony M annino Tanner H o w e ll M anship S ara D a n ie lle O 'N e a l Ashley Lynn Om en таерш London Scott Overcash M adison Everett Owen R obert G ray P adgett A ndrew M ackenzie P aige M ich a e l D a vid P aoni T a ylor A ndrew P a rris D am ian M arce lin o L iicre tia Ann M arcum N icole Iris M aready C hristopher Lee M a rtin P a tricia K elly M a rtin Wesley F e rre ll M a rtin Jr. Jessica M artinez P h illip M icha e l M ashore Joshua E dm und E lb e rt P arrish Vikas Jay P atel Jid ie E lizabeth P atton Justin M icha e l P atton M iche lle N icole P a w lik Rebekah Illa h Peeler K ristop h e r D a vid P enland C orey R aD ale Peoples Travis Lee M elton H o lly E lizabeth M ickalow ski N ico le Yvonne M ille s K e lly M a rie M itch e ll Kenneth Lam ar M itc h e ll M arkita D everaux M ock C harles G arnett M onger B ria n a M a rie M ontgom ery Stephen B a rre tt Sham ika Yolanda K rim m P o lla rd Pom pey Thom as G ra n v ille Jerem iah M ich a e l P ullen V R aby Jessica Lynn Ramev Tedford Joseph R andolph D ustin K irk R eavis B a sil Ray Reed Lorena M oreno D ustin Lance M organ C hristopher Scott M oxley Joshua G rant M yers Thom as B roc N atiotis M a ria Azucena N avarro Tomisha Lee N o rris C o n g r a t u l a t i o n s t o a ll o u r D a v i e H i g h G r a d u a t e s ! From Junior & Aaron York Z a ch a ry Scott O 'B rie n Y o r k E x x o n IS-I S .ilishiiiN Sl . \liv k s 4 lk - . N C • 7S| 2 ” || 2-11 lour Wrecker Servicc • Full Service SUllon • Official N.C. Inspection SMIIon VV.ish and Wax Serv'lce • Drake Service HOWARD R E A L T Y Congratulations Class of 2005 W ishing You Success and Prosperity F or Your Future __________Plv.(336)7Sl-3S3S Fl«: (335)751-7632 Good Luck Davie High Graduates! We're proud of you. D E A N O ’S B A R B E C U E A Tradition Since 1975 l'io N. Clement St. Mocksville, NC 751-5820 Davidson County Community College Your Connection TbThe Future Congratulations Graduates! CONQRATULATIONS K e l s e y D y s o n a n d a ll th e 2 0 0 5 G ra d u a te s! David Dwiggins IVIike Dwiggins Peggy Dwiggins 122 Wllkesboro St., Mocksvllle, NC (336) 751-2379 Ш T « s ï f " ' w i F Toni M a rie R egister Am anda C a ro l R eid D yla n M organ R eynolds D enzel Ja m ar R ice M atthew Saul R ich Presidential S t u d e n t s E a r n A c a d e m i c H o n o r Tiie following students were recognized at the awards night on May 12 for earning the President’s Academic Achieve­ ment award; Amy Marie Alexander, Ryan Michael Boehm, Jessica Lee Bowling, Casey Nicole Brewer, Troy Barnwell Brooks, Kara Elizabeth Denclmon, Sarah Lynn Frazier, Lisa Marie Gil­ bert, Annaliese Haftman. Molly Elaine Harris, Haley Mar­ guerite Hunt, Amanda Marie King, Alexis Lee Levin, Johnath(in Kane Loos, Tanner Howell Manship, Kelly Marie Mitchell, Charles Garrett Monger, Zachary Scott O’Brien, Joshua E. Parrish, Corey Radale Peoples, Shelley Mae Phelps, James Read Plott, Matthew Saul Rich, Lea Talin Scott, Ernest Scott Sexton, Josepii Benjamin Shega, William Gregory Simpson. Katie Marie Smith, Matthew Kirby Smith, Serena Patricia VanCuren, Alyson Lynn Walker, Beth Louisa Walker, Lauren Elizabeth Wanucha, Kyle Andrew Warlse, Stephanie Ann Wendel and Zachary William Yokley. Congratulations to the Class of 2 0 0 5 ! Tarheel Banana Co. Hwy 801 • Advance • NC • 27006 • 336-998-8202 Walter Orrell You can do it all in one place. WE CAN BOX AND SHIP YOUR CLOTHES AND STUFF We Package and Ship Furniture & Antiques We HAVE Boxes & Packaging Supplies Davie Graduates — You're Great!! 810 Valley Road • Mocksville, NC 27028 Next to Bl-Lo Supermarket 751-9990 02003 United Parcel Service o f America. Inc. A V e r y S p e c i a l ' o b W e l l D o n eUr to e a c h 2 0 0 5 D a v i e H i g h G r a d u a t e ir o m - . 162 Sheek Street • 751-2167 <1V ■ J 'V - , Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 10 ENTE D A V I E C O U N T Y ECORD M a rie A im R obertson Ja iiics Ryan Robinson A nthony Janies R ogers Anna K a tivy n Russell C a rrie Rae Sain A ndrew Lee Sanders Justin M ichael Sludiz Candace D enise Scon Lea Talin Scott Jeram ie Wayne Seamon Jesse M ac S e lf Je rry G lenn Selph Jr. C andi E lizabeth Sextan Ernest Scott Se.xton F alecia M one' Shedrick Josef B enjam in Shega Sarah D enise S heppard Je rica N icole Shoem aker Am anda Jacqueline S hort Jared Wayne S lire m h u ry R yan Lew is S ilvia Jesse D ean Sim pson K am i Lee Simpson W illiam G regory Sim pson A shley L a ra Sizem ore Am anda Lynn S iiiith B ryson C u rt S m ith E rik a Renee Sm ith Justin K eith Sm ith K atherine M a rie Sm ith K e lly S ierra Sm ith M atthew K irb y Smith Som er D eA nna Sm ith C h risty Lynn Sparks Lyna N icole S pillm an M a ry C hristin a Spry Terry A lexander D a vid Joseph Jacqueline Amlnmetie Benjam in Preston Steele Jr. Stein Stevenson Stockner C o u n t O n C a m e r o n S t u d e n t C o m p l e t i n g 1 3 Y e a r s O f S c h o o l W i t h o u t M i s s i n g A D a y Cumeron Adams is cumplcting his 13 years in Davie County Schools without missing a day. - Piioto by Robin Fergusson 1 -------------------------------1---------------------------------------—------ Expect to see Cameron Adams waiic across the stage Friday night. Wiiy wouldn’t he be tliere? For Ihe past 13 ye ws, Adams has been to school every day - from iiindergarten in 1992 and early grades at Shady Grove Elementary to middle school ot North Davie to Davie High. When he makes that walk to receive his di­ ploma, he’ll complete his years in Davie County Schools without missing a day. It wasn’t something he started out to do. “When 1 was younger, I never really got sick," Adams said. “Then, in about the seventh or eighth grade, 1 realized it was something I could do.” T He did make some sacrifices, There was a time he was in the hospital at night with a kidney stone He made it to the next school day. There was the time he had the'flu. He made it to the next school day. The son of Mark and Sharon Adams of Fair­ way Drive. Advance, Adams will attend Liberty University in the fall. He wants to be a youth min­ ister, It was a decision he made during his sopho- more year. ^ “I had thought about it, then I told God I didn’t want to because I’m so shy," he said, “He spoke to me through a story my youth leader gave L " Adams attends Green Meadows Baptist church )avie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 11 DAV IE C O U N TY [R o b e rt A le xander D a vid G regory B illy R ay M elissa D a n elle C hristie Lynn Wesley C had Jerem y L o yd Tim othy R ay Stone S trand Sweat I I I Tallm on T a ylor M itc h e ll Thom as Thom pson Thom pson Thom as R oy T royer C harles M a rio n T u rn e r IV B ra dle y S cott Tutterow Jacob Shane Tuttle Jesus U rioste gu i M aldonado C la u d ia Ive tt Valencia C harles C u rtis VanCuren Serena P a tric ia VanCuren ~)ana M a rie Vestal K yle A ndrew W arise A ndrew F letcher W ilson Jam es M a rvin Y onkerJr. Get It Weekly Nothing says home lli/ce Ihe Davie County Enterprise Record. Whether you go to college or to work, |*e c ;) lip wilh ihe home ' folks wilh a J subscription to your ^hometown newspaper. Call 751-2120 Je n n ife r D iane V ogler M ic h a e l Vincent V ulpitta A lyson Lynn W alker B eth Louisa W alker B ra nd y Renee W aller M org an Jeanette W allnei^, Lauren E lizabeth W anucha S tephanie A nn W endel E rin E lizabeth W hitaker Jason S cott W hitley A shley M a rie W iles C h risty N ichole W illiam s L a u ra A nn W illiam s N icholas A nderson W illiam s Je n n ife r M a rie W ilson T e rre ll A la sta ire W ilson M egan Kaye W ilt Stephanie N icole W inters N yeshia M a ria W oods S haron H ope W oodw ard Z a ch a ry W illia m Yokley The Junior Marshals The top academic students in the junior class will serve as marshals at the 2005 graduation exercises, and include, from left: front - Lance Joshua Stout (chieO, Adam David Sheesley, Clayton Palmer Edwards, .Jessica Ryan Overbey, Michael James Smith; row 2 - Kristen M arie Fromal, Benjamin Thomas Bruffey, Paul M atthew Hauser, Phillip Joseph Scott, Jonathan Stephen MayHeld, and Bradford M ark Corriher. ’ - Photo by Mike Barnhardt r >■ V i ; i; t. » . . ^ « ■ »/A D a v ie H ig h S c h o o l C lass o f 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 , Page 12 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/^ECORD ; il Brittany Green, Justin Blaclcburn and Kayla Snyder arc ready to graduate. Teacher Dreama Barber goes through the 2005 yearbook with graduates of the functional curriculum, Justin Blackburn, Brittany Green and Kayla Snyder. - Photos by Robin Fergusson J u s t in B la c k b u r n G r a d u a t in g ... T h e n C o m in g B a c k T o W o r k By Mike Barnhardt School cnfctcria, and you Davie County Enterprise Rccord might get scoldcd by Justin Blackburn. Wear your hat in Leave your tray on the the building and you can table in Ihe Davie High expect the same. Brittany Green admires the bulletin board full of her ac­ complishments. Kayla Snyder points to her photo on the bulletin board. Justin loves school, according to his mother, Sherrie Musgrave. And although he’s one of three students graduating through the functional diploma program, Blackburn will be back next year. He will be working with Brenda Abshire in the cafeteria, doing much of the same job he’s already doing. That ability to have a job is one of Ihe things that motivates Blackburn. He’s a neat freak, and loves clean­ ing. His mother said the graduation will be a miracle. He was diagnosed with Williams Disorder, a brain disease. At age 6 months, doctors told the family he would not live to be a year old. “The doctors didn’t know what to do and just gave up,” Musgrave said. “Now with the grace of God, he’s graduating.” Blackburn smiles. He docs that a lot. Even when he’s scolding a fellow student for nol obeying the rules, he does it with a smilei and they don’t mind. “The kids love him,” said his teacher, Dreama Barber. Two years ago Justin was in class about a day a week. Barber noticed that when Principal Larry Bridgewater jokes around with three of hi.s favorite graduates. things needed to be done, Justin did it. He watered plants, dusted shelves. “He was tired of the same of thing, year after year,” Barber said. “Then 1 noticed if anything needed to be done in class, he did it.” They decided to let him work with Abshire, and it worked well for both parties. “Justin is the most happy child,” Barber said. His graduation is special to her because she was his kinder­ garten teacher. Wesley Martin, a senior who helps in Barber’s class, made a special bond wilh. Blackburn. He picks him up for school on Fridays. Sometimes they go to bfeakfast. You may see them on Saturday nights at Farm­ ington dragway or at Bow­ man Gray. “Wesley’s been a god­ send,” his mother said, Justin’s father is Eddie Blackburn and stepmolher is Tina Blackburn. His stepfa­ ther is Steve Musgrave. “Justin has come such a long way,” his mother said. ■ Brittany Green and Kaylai Snyder also have plans after graduation. Brittany plans to babysit children for her aunt. “Brittany has the best self-' esteem of anyone I know,” Barber said. “Brittany loves other people, gives compli­ ments freely. She is so kind.” She helps calm class­ mates, nnd genuinely cares for others. Barber said. She loves working with children and is a good singer. She’s active in Special Olympics, and like Justin, went to the prom. “She’s doing a lot of things,” Barber said. Kayla will attend a day programfor vocational training after graduation. Kayla is social, loves pink and painting fingernails during “beauty shop,” Barber said. “Kayla can say the funniest things. She’s so sweet.” And what about Wesley Marlin. Barber’s student assistant. He could be back soon, too. Martin plans to enroll at Forsyth Tech. He wants to come back to the class as a teacher's assistant. C o n g r a t u l a t i o n s t o t h e C l a s s o f 2 0 0 5 127 Marketplace Drive • Boxtiwrf УШа^е • Mocksville (336) 751-6281 ITAUAN Fa m iiy Re s ta u r a n t Congratulations to all our 2005 Graduates! We’re Proud Tanglewood Shopping Center • Hillsdale 940-6787 u i a t i o n s t o I O f Y o u ! V Brenda Abshire will be Justin Blackburn’s boss next year. Justin’s mother, Sherrie, hugs her son, who doctors said wouldn’t live to be a year old. Justin kids around with Principal Larry Bridgewater. Congratulations Graduates! S S Y L V A N LEARNING CENTER' 113 Marketplace Drive, Mocksvllle, NC • (336) 753-0100 Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 13 D A V I E C O U N T Y ENTERPRI/^ECORD Catawba College’s Gordon Kirkland congratulates Molly Harris for earning a $34,000 Neal Essie presents a James and Lelia Essie scholarship to Joe Phillips, scholarship for theater and academics. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt C la s s O f 2 0 0 5 E a r n s M o r e T h a n $ 1 ,7 M i l l i o n I n S c h o la r s h ip s For some two hours, mem­ bers of the Davic High School Class of 2005 walked across the stage at the Brock Performing Arts Center. Receiving scholarship after scholarship from community groups, from colleges and uni­ versities, from the military and corporations, the students were awarded a total of $1,774,680 to continue their education be­ yond Davie County Schools. Following is a list of the stu­ dents and the scholarships they received. • Abby Carol Hartman - Al­ pha Delta Kappa Beta Mu Chapter Mary Wall Sexton Me­ morial • Candace Denise Scott - Al­ pha Kappa Alpha Sorority , • Dana Marie Vestal - Appa;:.^ lachian State University • Kimberly M. Carter - Baylor University • Catherine Brooke Harris - Bermuda Run Garden Club • Abby Carol Hartman, Madison E. Owen, Corey RaDale Peoples, Katie Marie Smith - Big Brothers/Big Sis­ ters Award • Lauren E. Wanucha - Bos­ ton University • Molly Elaine Harris, Harrison Steven Judd, Erin Elizabeth Whitaker - Catawba College • Amanda Lynn Smith - Class of 1959 • Ryan Michael Boehm, D.J. Rice - Coastal Carolina Univer­ sity • Jessica'Tracy Barnett - Davidson County Community College • Brent K, Harpe, William M. Hockaday, Zachary W. Yokley - Davie County Associa­ tion of Educators • Catherine Brooke Harris - Davie County Cattleman’s As­ sociation • Shawn Patrick James - Davie County Craft Association • William Gregory Simpson, Kara Elizabeth Deadmon ,- Davie County Crosby Scholar • Abby Carol Hartman - Davie County Education • Brennan Elizabeth Carter, Jessica R. Benfield - Davie County Firefighter’s Associa­ tion • Amanda Lynn Smith - Davie Schools Food Service • Abby Carol Hartman - Davie Retired School Personnel • Carrie Rae Sain, Ashley Marie Wiles - Davie Schools Administrators Association • Haley Marguerite Hunt, Jonathan Michael Britt - Davie County Teacher Assistant Asso­ ciation • Lauren Elizabeth Fletcher - Davie Association of Office Professionals Lucille T. Randall Memorial • Abby Carol Hartman, Am­ ber Marie Pharr, Candace Denise Scott, Zachary William Yokley - Roy and Ruth Eldridge - J ,.,,« Jessica Benfield, Haley M. Hunt, Joseph T. Phillips, Amanda L. Smith - James and Lelia N. Essie • Amanda Marie King, Abby Carol Hartman, Benjamin Lee Boger, Lucas Brett Boger - Farmington Rurltan Club • Brandi Nicole Knight - Gardner-Webb University • Jessica Marie Blackwell, Phillip Michael Mashore - Gra­ ham Funeral Home • Nicole Iris Maready - Guilford College • Josef Benjamin Shega - Hampton-Sydney University • Amanda Jane Phillips - Sh­ annon Alyssa Holmes Teaching • Kara Elizabeth Deadmon - Megan Howell Memorial • Molly Elaine Harris - Ingersoll-Rand • William Alexander Allen - Knights of Columbus Col. Tom Ferebee Memorial • Edward C. Mitchell - Lees- McRae College • Jessica Marie Blackwell, Amanda Jane Phillips, Candace Denise Scott, Terrell Alastaire Wilson - Le Jour des Femmes Club • Elizabeth C. Bellucci, Janet Abigail Carpenter, Lance An­ drew Emert, Zachary S. O’Brien, Rebekah 1, Peeler, Shelley Mae Phelps, Candace Denise Scotl, Somer Deanna Smith - Lenoir-Rhyne College ' f B e s t W i s h e s 2005 G r a d u a t e s ! 1лГе • Heallh • Car • Home • Hii.sines.s S tev e R idenhour & M ark Jo n es, Agents 852 US Hwy. 64 West (Next to Bi-Lo Shopping Center) — ■■■-.- Mocksvllle, NC 27028/Hlstate. (336)751-0669 These members of the Class of 2005 were among those awarded scholarships. • Amanda Marie King - Mar­ tin, VanHoy, Raisbeck, Smith History Award • Catherine Brooke Harris - William Edward McCiamrock • Brennan Elizabeth Carter, Allison H. Mackintosh, Jessica Ramey, Amber Hope Blackwell, Jennifer Horton, Brent Skiver, Brian Fromal - James B. McGuire • Kyle Andrew Warise - Mercer University • Julie Elizabeth Patton - Mocksville-Davie Homebuild­ ers Business • Jeremy Loyd Thompson - Mocksville-Davie Homebuild­ ers Construction ■ Catherine Brooke Harris - Mocksville Garden Club • Brennan Elizabeth Carter - Mocksville Lions Club C. Frank Stroud Jr, • Jessica Tracy Barnett, Catherine Brooke Harris - Mocksville Woman’s Club Community College • Kara Elizabeth Deadmon - Mocksville Woman’s Club Sallie Southall Gotten • Corey Dean Doub, Whitney Brooke Gough - Mount Olive College • Christie Lynn Taylor - N.C. Elks Lodge 449 Nursing • Haley M. Hunt, Kendra M. Johnson, Matthew S. Rich, Zachary W. Yokley - North Davie Ruritan • Margie Ann Jackson, Johnathan Kane Loos, Zachary William Yokley - Pepsi • Laureji E. Fletcher - Queens University • Alexis Lee Levin - Rose- Hulman Institute of Technology • Amber Hope Blackwell, Abby Carol Hartman, Haley Marguerite Hunt, Lauren Eliza­ beth Fletcher, Zachary William Yokley - Rotary Club of Mocks­ ville • Amanda Jane Phillips - SECU People Helping People ■ Serena P. VanCuren г Ha­ zel Dyson Smoot • Amy Marie Alexander, Brennan Elizabeth Carter, Sarah Lynn Frazier, Molly Elaine Har­ ris, Brandi Nicole Knight, Allison Hudson Mackintosh, Marie Azucana Navarro - Span­ ish Club • Jessica Marie Blackwell, Lauren E. Fletcher, Shamika Yolanda Pompey, Corey RaDale Peoples, Candace Denise Scott - J.E. Suiter Merit • Amber Marie Pharr - Jim Tutterow • James Clifton Arnold, Johnathan Kane Loos - UNC Chapel Hill • Sarah D. Sheppard, Mat­ thew Paul Ireland - UNC- Greensboro • Christie Lynn Taylor - UNC-Pembroke • Mark Hennessey, Laura Glasscock, Katie McKnight, Chrisiy Williams, Andrew Wil­ son - US Army National Guard • Matthew Kirby Smith, Aiyson Lynn Walker - US Army Scholar Athlete Award • Matthew Saul Rich, Aiyson Lynn Walker - US Marine Corps Scholastic Excellence • Ryan Michael Boehm, Allison Hudson Mackintosh - US Marine Corps Distinguished Athlete • Jessica Lee Bowling, Mat­ thew Saul Rich - US Marine Corps Semper Fidelis Band Award • Omar D. Al-Sweiti, Johnny E. Benfield, Timothy J. Erb, April M. Guyer, C. Adam Johnson, Christian Johnson, Mitchell E. Lawrence, Christo­ pher L. Martin - US Navy Col­ lege Fund • Angela Marie Gaither - V- Point Ruritan Club • Kara Elizabeth Deadmon, Tedford Randolph, William Gregory Simpson - Wake For­ est University • Amanda Jane Phillips - James & Ester Wall • Christy Lynn Sparks, Arh- ber Hope Blackwell - Wal-Mart • Brandi Nicole Knight - Glenn White Trust • Molly Elaine Harris, Jo­ seph Phillips, Jessica Ramey - White-Martin ■ Dustin Lance Morgan, Wesley Dion Cody - Winston- Salem State University • Alicia Whitney Cook, Miranda Barbara Koontz, Jes­ sica Ramey, William Gregory Simpson, Amanda Lynn Smith, Christie Lynn Taylor - Woodmen of the World • Jonathan Stephen Mayfield - Woodmen of the World His­ tory Award Coegratulatioins Class of 2005 from Autumn Care of Mocksville and Special Congratulations To Our Extended Family Taurus Allen Latoya Gadson D.J. Rice VVe Wish You All The Best! ^>«JTUM NCARE 1007 Howard St. O F M OCK SV ILLE nc W e w is h t h e v e r y b e s t o f lu c k a n d m u c h s u c c e s s t o a ll o f t h e 2005 g r a d u a te s ! SHORES PLUMBING & HEATING Richard Shores/Owrrer 1485 North Main St. • Mocksvllle, NC • 751-5653 i •! Î i ' *4 r Davie High School Class of 2005 Thursday, May 19,2005 Page 14 DAVIE C O U N TY ENTE ECORD Col. Terry Hales a^d Sgt. Donald Jones talk with Ryan Harris.James and Doris are proud of son Ryan’s success at Davic High School. - Photos by Robin Fergusson R y a n H a r r i s S u c c e e d s I n J R O T C , A l t e r n a t i v e P r o g r a m Continued From Page 1 help from Col. Terry Hales and First Sgt. Donald Jones. “Ryan has come a long way," Hales said. “Me and the first sergeant talked and talked about Ryan. He had a chip on his shoulder and didn’t fit in. He didn’t have many friends ... now he gets along with everybody. He started changing and I’m glad to say, for the good.” Hales defers the credit to Jones. “He’s hard, but he has a tremendous rapport with the kids. They love him ... and he can get their attention,” Hales said. Jones uses Harris as an example of how one can positively change their lives. “I would do one on one counseling, talk to him,” Jones said. “He’s always had a lot of rcspcct.” “1 know of no other student in JROTC who has made Ihe improvements Ryan has,” Hales said. Ryan was named most improved cadet his sopho­ more year. “From Day 1, it’s been a great big difference,” Jones said. “He goes out of his way now to help the other cadets.” Jones said that Ryan puts forth 0 100 percent effort. They let him know early that lo be in the programs he wanted in JROTC, he had to walk the line. “I told Ryan his freshman year, if you get into trouble, you come to see me. We try to instill in kids you’re going to behove in this class, but wc expect you to behave in the other classes,” Jones said. Ryan said that talking lo Col. Hales and First Sgt. Jones helps. “There were some goals I had. I wanted to be on the rifle team and drill team. The colonel said you have to change your ways,” Ryan said. “You see evciybody else do well and get ribbons and it makes you want to do well." Ryan plans to be in ROTC in college, His parents are proud, and realize that although he had a lot of help, Ryan had to work hord to be a member of the Class of 2005. “He worked hard,” his father said. “All we could do was stand in his comer.” G R A D U A T E S ! We Salute You! A s y o u r h o m e t o w n n e w s p a p e r w e h a v e b e e n p r i v i l e g e d t o f o l l o w y o u f r o m t h e b e g i n n i n g . W e h a v e w a t c h e d a s y o u h a v e g r o w n f r o m s m a l l c h i l d r e n f i l l e d w i t h d r e a m s t o y o u n g a d u l t s r e a d y t o v e n t u r e o u t a n d m a k e y o u r m a r k o n t h e w o r l d . W h e r e v e r y o u g o a n d w h a t e v e r y o u d o , a l w a y s r e m e m b e r — D a v i e C o u n t y I s H o m e A N D W E W I L L A L W A Y S B E P R O U D O F Y O U . DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRI/^ECORD Covering Davie County From Kindergarten to Graduation and Beyond !CN :h:oj : CO I ro They Remember H i g h S c h o o l G r a d u a t e s H o n o r R e t i r i n g K i n d e r g a r t e n T e a c h e r Page C1 ; !r-j H J o 'z ) B c jy E i's íá ’ii^'c J s iJ Íjv ^J y r j ì z i ^ j i è i ì -J'J Ï m y I;. D A V I E C O U N T Y USPS 149-160 Number 20 Thursday, May 26, 2005 40 PAGES D A C lo s e T o D e c is io n O n S h e riff’s D e p a rtm e n t By Dwiglit Sparks and Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record After six months, an investiga­ tion of the Davie County Sheriff’s Department is still in the hands of District Attomey Garry Frank. “I have not determined-what ac­ tion I will take at this point,” Frank said. “I’ve been studying ond trying to determine what the appropriate action is on my part.” Sheriff Allen Whitaker requested an SB! investigation of his depart- Masonic Picnic Is Next \Neek Carnival rides, plenty of home- cooked food, nightly entertainment and an expert on Alzheimer’s Dis­ ease will highlight the annual Ma­ sonic Picnic next week in Mocks­ ville. Sponsored by Masonic lodges in Davie County, the event will include carnival rides Monday-Friday nights. Nightly entertainment under the arbor at 8 will include The Tomm Doollee Band on Monday, The Craft Brothers on Tuesday, Barry Rentz (DJ) on Wednesday, Mel Jones and Bag of Bones on Thursday and Southern Gospel Ministries featur­ ing Willie D. Williford and The Blaise Brothers on Friday. The Thursday morning program is famous, ending with a picnic lunch at noon. With proceeds going to the Oxford Home for Children, many of those young people often attend the Thursday morning’’pro­ gram, as do residents from the East­ ern Star Home. The guest speaker prior to the noon lunch will be Dr. Robert J.F. Eisner, an assistant professor in the Department of Family and Commu­ nity Medicine at Wake Forest Uni­ versity School of Medicine. He has significant experience in developing and conducting scientific studies in psychology, nutrition and aging. He is an internationally recog­ nized expert in nutrition in Alzheimer’s disease and diagnosis. The speech will be followed by a picnic lunch. Tickets for the lunch will be sold during the morning pro­ gram Thursday. ment after an anonymous letter sur­ faced last November. In January, SBI agents began a three-week on-site investigation. Frank said he received thè SBI’s re­ port March 3, and asked for more information. He received the final report in early April. Frank wouldn’t say when he would make the final decision about whether the sheriff’s department should be cleared or whether crimi­ nal charges could result. Please See DA - Poge 10 D e a d l i n e s E a r l y F o r N e x t W e e k The Enterprise Record office will be closed Monday, May 30 in observance pf Memorial Day. Please have all advertisements, news articles and other submis­ sions in the newspaper office no later than 5 p.m. on Friday, May 27 to be included in next week’s issue. And remember to buy a poppy this weekend to help veteran’s orr ganizntions. C o u n t y B o a r d M a y H a v e D i s c u s s e d I s s u e I l l e g a l l y By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record A closed session meeting that lasted close to 40 minutes by thé Davie County Board of Commis­ sioners may have been in violation of North Carolina Open Meetings Law. According to minutes and au­ dio tape of the May 16 meeting, county attorney Robert Price rec- ommended the board go into closed session upon conclusion of business on the agenda. The closed session was not announced on the agenda made available to the public. ' ■ Upon Price’s recommendation, commissioner Johnny Frye made the motion, and Richard Poindexter seconded. A closed session is allowed if the board meets certain criteria defined by statutory basis. Price offered two statutory ba­ sis for the closed session. Price claimed the closed session was necessary so the board “could con­ sult with an attomey employed or retained by the public body in or­ der to preserve the attomey-client privilege," and “ to hear or investi­ gate a complaint, charge, or griev­ ance by or against an individual Please See County’s - Page 10 A Hot Job Firefighters battle a blaze that destroyeii a towhhouse in Bermuda Run last Week. For a story and more photographs of the fire, please turn to page 4. - Photo by Dwight Sparks Man Gets 5-6 Yeiars For Deathi^f 3 Women By Mike Gunning Davie County Enterprise Record A Greensboro man has been con­ victed of three counts of involuntary manslaughter and one coiint of DWI after a Guilford County jury found he was responsible for the deaths of three Davie women in September of 2003. Jeffery Niles McFayden w ill serve five to six years for ramming his 1998 Ford F-150 pickup into the rear of the limousine that was car­ rying sisters Tara Howell Parker, 29, Mysti Howell Poplin, 24, and Megan Elizabeth Howell, 16, on I- 40. The limo, which was stopped in heavy traffic caused by construction. was taking them home from a Fleetwood Mac concert at the Greerisboro Coliseum. According to reports, the limou­ sine exploded in flames seconds af­ ter impact, trapping the women in­ side. TTie driver, James Canady of New Ellenton, S.C., escaped through a broken window. He was treated for broken ribs. McFayden was found to have a blood alcohol content'of .17 , more than twice the legal limit, after the accident. ’ For Ricky and Brenda Howell, the parents of the three victims, the verdict was not nearly enough. "I was shocked,” Brenda Howell said. “We had hoped for a murder two. Five or six years is not enough time for him to serve for all three of our daughters.” .Both Howells said even though; they,weren’t satisfied with the sen­ tence, they were glad the tria|,was ■ over. “It took us a year and a half after our daughter’s death to get to this . point,” Brenda said. “We need to get on with our lives.” Ricky Howell agreed. “I’m glad to get,this part over 'Jvith,” Ricky said. “There was testi­ mony of witnesses who tried to help the girls, tliat opened some wounds. But we got through it. I wasn’t happy about the sentence, but I told my wife, the verdict is not the worst : -i' : thing that’s ever happened to us,” Howard Neumann, chief assis­ tant: district attorney of Guilford County, said he was surprised when the {jury came back with the invol­ untary conviction. “Involuntary, manslaughter is a lesser included offense to second degree murder,” Neumann said. “There is a huge drop off (in sen­ tencing) betweeii the two.” Neumann said if the jury came back with a second degree murder conviction, McFayden, who liad a prior DWI conviction, could have been sentenced to up to 15 years for each of the sister’s deaths. Please See Man Convicted - Page 8 2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 E^torial Райе Secrecy Taints Board’s Actions The Davie County commissioners are now wanting to police the sheriff’s department? If Monday’s closed door session really was about sheriff’s department “personnel,” the commissioners’ ship has drifted too far from its mooring. They have no business getting involved in the controversy swirling around detcctive Jimmy Phipps and some “employee” who fired off an anonymous letter months ago to District Attorney Garry Frank. This whole mess smacked of political backbiting when it first surfaced. Now it looks even more like a attempt to settle a grudge.. Commissioners don’t have any authority over the deputies or Sheriff Allen Whitaker — except to appropriate money for the department. Whitaker is an elected offlcial — just as they are. He answers to the voters. He hires and fires his employees — not the commissioners. Homing in on this investigation would be an abuse of power. Meeting in secret session to cloak this discussion only adds to the error. Secrecy and anonymity breed misbehavior and fuel specula­ tion that this is less than it seems. To clear himself and his department of any hint of wrongdoing, Sheriff Whitaker put his deputies at the mercy of an SBI investiga­ tion. The agents came. Questions were asked. Statements taken. Careers were put in jeopardy. How many other county departments would volunteer for this kind of inquisition? There have been no indictments. Nobody cleared. Nothing. The delay in resolving this has been frustrating — especially for some commissioners, it seems. If the commissioners think they can exert political influence on District Attorney Garry Frank, they must have a poor opinion of his fairness. The District Attorney hasn’t made a habit of polling politicians before he acts — or doesn’t act. The anonymous letter accused Phipps of misusing county property — borrowing county traffic cones and tables for private events and other things, such as wasting time by watching deer in a field. If he violated some personnel code, let the sheriff deol with him. This is a matter for the voters to decide — not the county commissioners. Or even the district attorney. It’s time for Phipps’ critic to come out of Ihe shadows and declare his candidacy for sheriff. Win, and he can fire Phipps and all the deputies he wants. The commissioners need to come clean, too. If Monday’s meeting was about the sheriff’s department, they should admit the mistake, release minutes of the meeting and apologize to Phipps and Sheriff Whitaker. G iv in g U p O n IV Iy G a ll O f T h e W ild Jack London is no longer my friend. He has moved with me four times and occupied a prominent place on my book shelf. No more. I packed his unabridged writings — all 1,138 pages — this week to take to the library. I’m giving him away. Back in my salad days, I loved to backpack the wildernesses of westem North Carolina. I fancied myself moving up to the real adventures — hearing my own Call of the Wild — that London famously wrote of the Yukon and the Klondike gold rush. I always worried London’s book would break my foot if it fell off the shelf in an earthquake. The only time it ever left its dusty resting place was when I moved or when I wistfully picked it up to think about reading it. I always put it back. I read a lot, but it’s mostly kiddie books to my boys at night. I often have read to them about o silly goose named Petunia who found a book one day on the farm. She tucked it under her wing and took it everywhere. All the other farm animals decided she must be very wise if she carried a book, and they began to ask her advice on many things. I’ve been like Petunia for 30 years now — carrying Jack London's book with me, displaying it on my shelf, and having visitors think me intelligent because 1 own such weighty titles. If you want to impress your friends, you might be able to buy my book at the next library book sale for 50 cents ... and actually read it, — Dwight Sparks D A V I E C O U N T Y USPS 149-160) 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksvllie, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Ihe Davie Publishing Co. Dwight Sparks..........................Editor/Publisher Robin Fergusson......................General Manager Mike Barnhardt.........................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow............................Advertising Director Brian Pitts................................Sports Editor Starr Snow...............................circulatlonyciasslfled Mocksville Enterprise Oavie Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 50 Cents $20 Per Year In N.C.. $25 Outside N.C, POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to; Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville. NC 27028 5/17 In T h e M a i l ... ‘P o lic e H a r a s s m e n t’ A r tic le B r in g s O u tr a g e for being a part of publishing such junk in our small town newspa­ per and how I personally hope that you do not receive any support in this county if this is the type of information you are going to issue. You should use your grant money to educate young people about respect, courage, rules, laws, true Davie County issues such as vol­ unteer fire departments and what they do for this county and how everyone in this county should be assisting them (but that's a topic for a different letter). But whoever chose this title for this article, shame, shame, shame on you.There really was a legitimate problem and that was “dmgs." but instead you chose to take junk and make that the title. In my opinion, what our young people need is discipline, respect of others, but most of all they need Jesus. Get your children in a good Bible-based church and they won’t have time to worry about the junk published from this survey. Benita Brandon Finney Advance To the editor: I would like to express my outrage at the article printed in last week’s edition titled “Police Harassment? Young People Say It's One Reason They're Not Happy." It seems rather ironic to me that the name of the group of young people who sponsored this survey would have a name like Students Understanding Real Futures, be­ cause it seems lo me that if they are willing to actually publish infor­ mation as ridiculous as the information listed, then they apparently do not understand real futures at all. If this survey truly shows the thinking of our young people today, then we are really missing the mark on raising our children and as parents we should be very ashamed. The comment that startles me the most was the police harassment listing under the weaknesses/issues section. . I wonder if the category is titled correctly? Do our young people actually mean “police" or do they mean "law enforcement?" The “police" work in the towns of Mocksville and Cooleemee, “law en­ forcement" means the entire county. Second, I wonder how the children expect the “drug” issue to be settled if law enforcement officers are not supposed to “harass" ony- one. Thirdly, they state that one of the things they like to do when they are not in schpol is to “party/drink.” Guess what kids, you are not old enough to party and drink and if you are caught doing so and the “law" does something about it that is not harassment, that is the law arid they are sworn to uphold the law. My assumption on the issue is that the groups of students who have been caught underage drinking and partying by law enforcement are mad because they got caught and considering some of the comments that I hear from parents, their parents are probably supporting their cause because they would rather be upset with the "law” than to actually admit that their children are in the wrong. There are many more issues that I have with this published sur­ vey, however, if I really told you how I feel I would take up quite a lot of paper. But as far as law enforcement is concerned, let me tell you. our law enforcement officers in this county are underpaid by county/city govemment and underappreciated by the public; yet these officers leave their families and work their shifts, not knowing what they will encounter. And folks, we don’t live in “Mayberry” any­ more; these men and women are taking a chance on putting their lives on Ihe line, there are bad things going on in our communities and our officers hove sworn to protect citizens from danger. I bet when you have a problem at your house you are mighty glad to see an officer arrive to help after you have called 911. And many of you call 911 and wish for an officer to help you with a problem that is of your own doing and even some of you call 911 and ask for an of­ ficer to come help you with a problem and then turn the tables on the very one that has come to help you. My husband is a law enforcement officer and he leaves two chil­ dren at home every time he goes to work, and I thank God that so far each time he has come home. I am proud of my husband and the mony friends that I have in law enforcement because I promise you they ore doing their jobs because they want to and they core because they are certainly nol paid sufficiently for their sacrifices in Dovie County. Therefore, the least that I ask of you for my husband is the respect that law enforcement officers deserve. As for the Community Foundation, how ashamed you should be F o r k B B Q A S u c c e s s To the editor: Fork Volunteer Fire Department would like to express their ap­ preciation to all who supported the recent barbecue chicken meal. Your help is essential to support the local fire department. We sin­ cerely appreciated the mony cokes lhat were donated. A special thanks to all who worked in the preparation. We need your help. Please let us know of onyone who has who has been a port of the Fork Fire Department since it was organized 50 yeors ago. Call Grady Bamey at 998-5007 so that we moy honor you with a 50th anniversary patch. Please help us find you in cose of an emergency. You may con­ tact us to get a reflective sign..And we ore always in need of firefighters. Call 998-5545 or just come by for an application. Gladys Lowe Fork Letters Welcomed The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from Us read-' ers. The letters may be on topics of local, state, national or international issues. : An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they . are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. All letters should include the name and address of the; writer, including a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is also requested. Please have letters in the newspaper office no later than 4 p.m. Monday of the week to be published. Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box. 99, Mocksville, or emml to: emews@davie-enterprise.com. Add your vote to our weekly online poll that asks questions affecting you and Davie County. Log on at www.enterprise-record.com and click on reader’s poll to cast your vote. Results will be listed here weekly.Got An Opinion? S h o u ld c o u n ty c o m m is s io n e rs g iv e V p o . 7 9 i V D a v ie C o u n ty S c h o o ls a 1 6 % in - / Z , / 0 c re a s e in lo ca l fu n d in g fo r n e x t y e a r? 2 8 % Log on now to cast your vote on the newest question; www.enterprlse-record.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - 3 In T h e M a il • • • ^ ^ Ernest Deserved Better A p p r o p r i a t i o n s S u b c o m m i t t e e s M e e t i n g To the editor; With regards to your article “Murder Suspect Pleads to Lesser Charge,” you spelled the murder victim’s name wrong. It is Ernest. Ernest was a person. A person who many people loved and who touched many lives. It is an insult to him and to his memory that you could hot even bother to double check the spelling of his name. Was this because he was African-American? Or openly homosexual? Or poor? Is that the same reason even the prosecutor seemed to think that six years was an appropriate punishment for o horribly brutal homi­ cide? I guess it’s not much of a crime in Davie County to kill a gay black man. I wonder. I wonder if Ernest had been white or female or lived in Bermuda Run if you would have made sure you spelled his name right? I wonder if he had been straight and done something other than work at a restaurant if the prosecutor would hove felt that six years was enough? Amber Pittman Atlanta. GA W e N e e d M o r e D a v i d S p r i n g e r s To the editor; Thanks for your balance, caution and the "be careful what you wish for" advice to the county and some of our gung-ho constitu­ ents herein. What we don't need in Davie County right now is a coal fired power plant on the Yadkin, or a nuclear plant either. There is growth in this area and in all the Yadkin Valley because of the relatively clean and rurol environment that refreshes the body ond speaks to the soul. We don't need Duke Power's millions, we need concerned citizens. What we do need is o 64/601 bypass oround Mocksville. o new elementary, middle ond high school, and improvements to the ex­ isting infrastructure to accommodate growth. We need to value the land and plan judiciously to include open spaces, greenways, and places for our kids to play. We need to encourage remaining agri- culnire and not lose the heritage by default. I agree that David Springer's fight is a legacy worth remember­ ing and reviving. We need more folks who will take a far sighted stand like he did over 30 years ago. Davie County is defined geo­ graphically os the lond between the South Yadkin River and the main Yadkin. How will we be defined in the future? What will Mocksville and Dovie County look like 30 years from now? As the new "Super" Wal-Mart ond Lowes are completed this summer, as traffic and trosh, litter, and water pollution increases and the overcrowding of our schools does too, we need champions for the water and the land between the Yadkins. We need them today. Gregory Stiling ^ Farmington Graduates Standing At A Crossroads To the editor: As seniors, we stand at a crossroads in our lives. We are prepor­ ing for college, careers, and mainly the future. We look bock at the last 13 years, and though we felt it would never come, it hos become but a fleeting thought. I hove often found myself trying to hold on to every last memory of the past four yeors because these were the good times. We had cars that most of us didn’t pay for. sported the latest fashions that most of us couldn’t have a№rded without our parents' monetary support, and most of all lack of responsibility for our own actions. Most of us have come to the shocking realization that all of those luxuries are obout to change drastically and for me the thought of holding my fate in my own hands and being responsible for my fu- Uire and ultimotely my own success scares me greatly. We hold des­ perately to the memories of high school and remember everything from the deaded freshman gym class, daunting English exams in Mrs. Patricia Noel’s closs, the three-inch long roaches in the cafete­ ria and locker rooms, and the hour and a half long fire drills to the pep rallies, homecoming events. Mrs. Bustle's chemistry labs, and last but not least, prom. We as a class have united on issues such as what grades should be allowed at prom, the dress code, and to get Davie County to vote down the bond referendum, the first time. It is that unity that binds us together as a class. We began freshman year divided North against South and today we have broken those choins that bound us to form some of the stron­ gest sports teoms Davie High School has ever seen, not to mention a well-rounded student body. I would like to say thank you for helping to make my last four years memoroble ond I hope to see you at our class reunions if not before. Love ya' always. Alicia W. Cook Mocksville Post Office Food Drive A Success To the editor: To oil the individuals who contributed to the Mocksville Post Office food drive on Soturday. May 14. All of the food items col­ lected will be donated to Storehouse for Jesus. Thonks again for the generosity you extended in order to make this such a success. Ellen Bishop and the Mocksville city and rural letter carriers Locally Grown, Hydroponic iT o m a to e s W e a lso n o w h a ve Grape Tomatoes, Cuccum bers, and Lettuce! Tomato & Bedding Plants, « 302 Foster Road, Mocksville (R a lo R il U iusl o ff Rid»« R i In W ejKm Davie Counly) Call For Directions (336) 4 92 -5 26 3 Open Thurs. & Fri. Noon^pm and Sat. 8 am-noon By Julia C. Howard NC House of Representatives This past week, the Appro­ priations Subcommittees in the House began meeting extensive­ ly in Iheir efforts to produce the House version of the state budget. Much concern has been expressed over the proposed $600 million in tox increases as well as a number of cuts to vital programs that the Senate version of the budget includes. The House Appropriations Sub­ committees are closely examining these issues to address the present concerns and develop the best possible plan to balance the need for services without drastic tax increases. I'll keep you updated each week os work on the budget moves forward in the House. All bill filing deadlines have passed in both the House and Senate. Below are some of the bills that were filed just before the deadlines that I thought you might find of interest. HB 1649 Study Soles And Income Taxes. This bill appro­ priates $50,000 to the Revenue Lows Study Committee for о study on the stole tax system with the goals of simplifying the system, broadening the tax bose, and lowering tax rates. HB 16S3 Mandatory COLA For TSERS Retires, This bill provides a mandatory cost-of- living adjustment (COLA) increase for retirees of the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System. HB 1664 Covenant Marriage Of 2005/Funds. This bill establishes the Covenont Marriage Act of 2005, which provides that a man and a woman may contract a covenant marriage by executing a declaration of intent lo contract a covenant marriage upon submission of their marrioge license opplicotion. Parties to the covenant must receive marriage counseling and must agree to the terms of a declaration and affi­ davit, which include a recogni­ tion that marriage is for life and a commitment that the couple will moke all reosonoble efforts to preserve the marrioge. Couples already morried would be able to designate their mwriage as a covenont morrioge. This bill provides that a spouse to 0 covenant marrioge may obtain a judgment of divorce or judicial seporation only upon proof that their spouse hos committed certain actions. This bill appropriates $15,000 for the development of an informational pamphlet thot details the consequences of entering into о covenant morriage. HB 1709 Voluntory DNA Database. This bill appropriates $300,000 for the establishment of 0 DNA dotobonk at NC Central University that accepts voluntary submissions by individuals to advance scientific study of links between genetics and common diseases to im­ prove diagnosis and treatment of these diseases. This bill includes provisions to ensure confidenti­ ality ond segregation of records. HB 1721 Funds To Aid Counties With Medicaid Payments. This bill directs the Department of Health and Hu­ man Services to allocate funds appropriated to aid counties with Medicaid payments.The alloca­ tion is to be a percentage of funds appropriated equal to the percentage о county’s Medicaid expenditures bears to total slate Medicaid expenses. HB 1724 Funds For NASCAR Hall of Fame. This bill appropriates $5 million for 2005-06 and $5 million for 2006-07 lo Chariotte for costs of land and construction. HB 1746 Cigarette Tax/ County Share of Medicaid. This bill roises the excise tax on I cigarettes from 5 to 40 cents per pack and uses proceeds of Ihc cigarette tax to reimburse counties for 0 portion of their shore of Medicaid expenses. Counties would receive $201,300,000 for 2005-06 ond $229,900,000 for 2006-07. HB 1779 Property Tax Paid With Vehicle Registration. This bill modifies the property tax collection system by having property taxes on a vehicle paid at the some lime os the registra­ tion fee. Currently, property taxes ore due four months after the vehicle has been registered or its'registration renewed. This bill appropriates $10 million in 2005-06 to the Department of Transportation to develop and implement an integrated compuler system to fulfill the provisions of the bill. HB 1781 College Savings Plan Tax Deductible. This bill provides that amounts contri­ buted to a quolified tuition progrom moy be deducted from taxable income for purposes of figuring one's North Corolino individual income tax. If you would like further information on any of these bills or the budget, contact my office. I enjoyed visiting with a number of Davie County folks this past week. Vernon Dull. speaker of the Senior Tar Heel Legislature, was in Raleigh this past Tuesdoy and. os always, we enjoyed a pleasant visit. Also in Roleigh on Tuesdoy were Jerry King. Jock and Kay Allen, Bob Gloss, and Harry Call, all of Mocksville. It was great to see all of you during your visit to the Legislature. On Wednesday, I was delighted to have a number of folks from Davie County Group Home stop by the office. Judy Rosser, who serves as executive director, along with Deborah Nelson, Scott and Sharon Hager, Eric Greco, Chris Collins, and Allison Smith, were visiting the General Assembly as a part of the “Coalition 2001” Day at the Legislature. I hope each you had a great lime visiting in Raleigh. Thursday was a busy day full of visitors. Several classes of fifth grade students from Mocksville Elementary School toured the Legislative Building. To oil of you in Mrs. Freeman's. Mr. Brooks’. Ms. Idol’s, and Mrs. Myers’ classes. I hope each of you enjoyed your tour of the Legislature and that you learned a great deal. Legislative O ffice: 919-733- 5904; M ocksville O ffice; 751- 8567; E -m ail; Juliah@ ncleg.net V I N I-: V Л R I) S Ä W I N к R у SprtlA.0 FltlA.0 Comí celcbratc tínt season witVi out- 2003 av/ard. winvdi\ÿ win« flad barbccuc nbs availablcforfurahaicfroiv. B en n ett ’s Smokehouse & Siiloou 1&СЙСИ m m s U b y niiHed imoUon# R e s e R V A T tO N S R .B C O M M 6 N l> E t> (3 3 & )j^ 8 > 3 lO O W W W .rflylfiw V ÍA íyflrrfS .C O V U M O C K S V IL L E 8 5 4 V a lle y R d (Aero!,«i stfiíi'l liom C( 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 2 2 2 Q О ггАщ . C L E M M O N S 2 4 1 9 L e w is v ille -C le m m o n s R d TR IA D s 3 3 6 -7 7 8 -2 2 2 1 i\M> Au,11(1 W’inninü lit,1(1 I m.(Mutis V\ \N l J I SW M I t (M i' 569,900 ^ ^ Ш й 1!4ВВ/ЗВД III I I 11 II I M ' $78,500 - 3 BR/1.5 BA ^ ‘^ $ 1 0 2 ,ООО ^ ;^ 1 ^ в е т $ 1 1 5 Д ) 0 0 l á i a Z BR/ 2 BA ^ ' ' * 13RR 1 1 RB l î ’l î i P ^ a S ’ 2 9 ,9 0 0 fl® 2 B R /2 B A $149,300 3 BR/2 BA '3BR/1.5BA $129,900 3 BR/ 2 BA $169,900 3 BR 1 3.5 BA $119,500 3 BR / 2 BA ЕШ жПШ Ж П* $174,90 ’^ ^ ^ ^ Р | З В В /2 ВА....... 'ч'Р Townhome $187,500 ^ 3BR/2BA I $200,000 3 BR / 2 ВА $229,900 \ т % 1 ,^ ^ в 4 В Н /2 .5 В А - и р ш а тти п ш Ё ьыодилгашя |Ж " В А $239.900 r * l l 4 B R / 3 B A $249,000 ^ $370,000 2 BR / 2 ВА ^ 1 >4 4 BR/ 3 ВА ■ ш п л га та та * Е т л п и ш т ш * ■’ ^ ^^^^3 B R /2 B A ¡Я Ш Ш П в Ащ т* t ‘ I ^ - - ij 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Firefighters douse the propane tank with water as flames race through the air. Townhouse Destroyed By Fire The men on the left and right of this photo escaped the blaze. By Dwight Sparks Davie County Enterprise Record Firemen battled a dangerous propane tank fire Thursday dur­ ing a blaze that destroyed a Ber­ muda Run town house. The Fire may have been sparked by an electricai shortage inside the 170 Pembrooke Ridge Court home. “It was in the wall and got way out of hand before wy body knew it,” said Smith Grove fire chief Don Howard. The fire melted the copper line to the lOO-gallon propane tank outside. “It was Katie-bar-the-door then,” Howard said. “The tank was wide open. When it went, it took off.” » While hot flames blew 25 feel high from the tank, torch­ ing the upstairs of the house and spreading the fire rapidly. About 75 firefighters from Smith Grove, Advance. Clemmons, Comatzer and Fann­ ington responded to Ihe 6:15 p.m. blaze - dousing the propane tank with water to keep il from exploduig. A man living at the house was taking a shower when the fire broke out. A youth was also at home. His girlfriend came by and alerted them that something was on fire, Howard said. The house was owned by Susan Meek. A dog died in the fire. •There was a dog upstairs, but it was too dangerous and too far along to go gel it. It was a bad situation all the way around,” Howard said. An adjoining house - pro­ tected by a fire wall - had minor damage. “There was a little water and smoke damage, but you could live in it right now. The fire wall did it’s job last night,” Howard said. It was a beautifully serene setting for such a violent fire — surrounded by maple trees and freshly manicured lawns. Neighbors huddled close as they daied to watch the fire.Neighbors gather to watch the fire.- Photos by Dwight Sparks Emily Young (right) tall<s with a neighbor. Advance Fire Capt. David Mooneyham, junior firefighter Mitchell Boles and others take a break from the hot job. Soda Shoppe Hwy. 64 E. & Depot St, Mocksville • (336) 751-4745 STORE OPEN: 5:30 am -11:00 pm Grill ctoies st 8:00 pm "The Good Ol' D a y s A r e B a c k ” S P E C I A L S ! Monday & Tu«s<liw 2 H o t d o g s f o r $ 1 . 5 0 VV«dnc,4dav 1/2 Price Wings (any number o( wings) Thursday M e a t l o a f & 2 S i d e s $ 4 . 9 5 Friday & Satui dav Footlongs 990 Ea. HERSMETS I c e C M o m Ifm P r e m i u n U • M i l k s h a k e s • C o n e s • C u p s F ried C hicken i Fresh Vegetablea S erved D ally SPIcCIALS QOOD FOR A UMPTED TIME Firefighters try to keep the fire from spreading. BUSINESS MINUTES. FAMILY-STYLE. stay connertid to your team «rith BOO stiared mlnutM and unMted walMHalli]«. NATIONAL BUSINESS 1000 PLAN l(MO «ytm ciU» minjt« UKUWrnilouluOut-Ukl« WUHITEOimttnli CMtMloiiqdsliKiiKlwM Sl)l 1« tr M M m liin u ECO № ly Iby J MMi)alsa»H>aa1i>sn>№ NEXra uTwtim iiMiiiiTAmi “Friaulfy KnowUdieabU Comultams“ "Famify Owntii & Opirnted' 3570 O«flvnons ROdd. Hwy 156, Oemmons 76M911 Of 399-2222 Acrou from BbLo Shopping Center мят «|<и«ва WIW»^ ^ *■<*« WN Ш Ul ■ I iE#W W » W» i* M ■ l( IMM кяи M IB Mi II ti t яМк II ЙМ su Ml* ■■ V Mi к I* M Ili M MM* ЮТ11 w « til ем M МММ tal Ш ««M 1^<»»»»>ашДтуиадую£ЬрВИП1ДИНЯ0ШР»ШИИ11>»11|1И|<<1ШИ>»М1ГИ1И1№11ЯЖ1К Don't Get Burned! You can be fined up to $10,000 for illegal open burning in N.C. S m o k e J r o m o p e n b u r n in g c a n с а ш е s e rio u s h e a lth p r o b le m s a n d р о И м е th e a i r . T h a t's нЛ у th e s ta te r e g u la te s o p e n b u r n in g . O n ly le a v e s , b r a n c h e s o r o th e r p la n t g ro y ^ ih c a n b e b u r n e d . ITS ILLEGAL TO BURN: •Garbage, paper and cardboard •Tires and other rubber products •Building materials, including lumber •Wire, plastics and synthetic maleriab • Asphall shingles and heavy oils •Paints, household chemicals and agricultural products Homcownere can bum yard trimmings - excluding logs and stumps - f It s allowed under local ordinances, no public pickup is available and it doew t cause a public nuisance. Other allowable burning includes campBres, outdoor barbecucs and bonBres for festive occasions. Landownera also can open bum vegetation to clear land or rights-of- way, provided that; ® • Prevailing winds are away from built up areas and roads • ^ e s are at least 1,000 feel away from occupied buildings • Burning Is done between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. DMilon «/Г0Г..1 RMOurc«, "*7 *'" * 7 i»'*™««» *> «01 txcuu a f man from followhs th e s e i U t e * i r rvt««. For m or* 1 п /о г т а в о п , e o n ta e t: N.C. Department Of Envir<mmwi and Naiural Resources Phone: (336} 771-4800 (TWe ad paid for by a vldalof ol the open bumlnfl law.) District Court DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - 5 The following eases were heard in Davie District Court on May . Presiding; Judge L. Dale Graham. Pro.secuting; Steve Boone nnd Wendy Terry, Assis­ tant DAs. Donald Allen, misdemeanor larceny, sentenced lo 45 days, suspended 18 months, super­ vised probation, cost. - Gaudencio Balcazar, aid and abetting impaired driver, dismissed; aid nnd abelting driv­ ing while revoked, dismissed. - Ronnie Bean, failure to no­ tify "DMV of address change, cost. - Brian Birdsong, failure to wear sentbelt, dismissed; reck­ less driving to endnnger, dis­ missed; driving while impaired, sentenced lo45 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, surrender license, 24 hours com­ munity service, not to drive a motor vehicle until properly li­ censed, $100, cost. - Candice Boger, improper equipment, $75, cost. - Christopher Bradford, as­ sault inflict serious injury, re­ duced to assault and battery, prayer for judgement, cost. - Jackie Brady, speeding 80 in a 70, reduced to improper equipment, $5, cost. - Jason Bustos, driving while revoked, dismissed; no inspec­ tion, dismissed; failure to wear n seatbelt, $25, cost. - Travis Cnrd, misdemeanor breaking and entering, sen­ tenced to 100 hours community service, cost; misdemeanor lar­ ceny, consolidate with prior judgement; breaking into a coin" machine, consolidate with prior judgement. - David Carrnsco, misde­ meanor brenking and entering, misdemeanor breaking and en­ tering, sentenced to 100 hours community service, cost; misde­ meanor Inrceny, cpnsolidnte with prior judgement; breaking into a coin machine, consolidate with prior judgement. - Randy Cheek, speeding 92 in a 70, prayer for judgement, cost. - Dewayne Chunn, misde­ meanor probation violation, sen­ tenced to 120 days, suspended, 48 hours active, - Erik Cotton, misdemeanor possession schedule,VI, sen­ tenced to 10 days, suspended 12 months, unsupervised proba­ tion, $50, cost; possession of paraphernalia, dismissed. - Jason Damell, possession of open container in passenger area, dismissed; aiding abetting driving while impaired, dis­ missed; driving while revoked, dismissed; fictitious lags, dis­ missed. - Richard Evans, no opera­ tors license, dismissed; expired inspection sticker, dismissed; driving while impaired, sen­ tenced lo 60 days, suspended 2 years, unsupervised probation, 24 hours community service, $100, cost; operating motor ve­ hicle with no insurance, dis­ missed. - Martin Folliard, assault with a deadly weapon, dis­ missed. - Ramon Gist, driving while revoked, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 2 years, supervised probation, 48 hours n'clive, nol to drive a.motor vehicle unlil properiy licensed, $100, cost. - Russell Hancock, injury to real-properly, dismissed. - Kennelh hnrdy, misde- mennor Inrceny, dismissed; pos­ session of drug paraphernalia, sentenced to 120 days, sus­ pended 2 years, supervised pro­ bation, $100, cost; assault on a female, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 2 years, supervised probation, $100, cost; brenking and entering into a moior ve­ hicle, consolidate wilh prior judgement. - Jason Hicks, speeding 55 in a 35, reduced lo improper equip­ ment, $75, cost. - Sinem HursI, speeding 65, in a 45', reduced lo 54 in a 45, $10, cost. - Ronald Keaton, driving while revoked, prayer for judge­ ment, cost. - Michael Luffman, 2 counts misdemeanor probation viola­ tion, sentenced to 60 days, con­ tinue on intensive probation, strike community service. - Jesse Lynch, misdemeanor probation violation, sentenced tb;45 days. , - Pamela Lyons, niding and abelting Inrceny, prayer for judgement, 24 hours community service. Cost. - Maikel Market, assault on a female, sentenced lo 60 days, 20 days credit. - Gilberto Martinez, as^ull on a female, dismissed. - Pamela McLaughlin, driv­ ing while impaired, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 2 years, un- sttpervised probation, not to drive a motor vehicle for 30 days, assessment, surrender li­ cense, $100, cost. - William Michaels, assault with a deadly weapon, reduced to simple assault, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 2 years, un­ supervised probation, $25, cost; false.imprisonment, dismissed. - Bradley Morgan, misde­ meanor breaking and entering, sentenced lo 100 hours commu­ nity service, cost; misdemeanor Inrceny, consolidale wilh prior judgement; breaking inlo a coin mnchine, consolidale wilh prior judgement. - Justin Morgan, misde­ meanor breaking and enlering, sentenced lo 45 days, suspended 18 months, supervised probn- lion, 48 hours active, assess­ ment, cost; misdemeanor lar­ ceny, consolidate with prior judgement; 4 counts breaking into a coin machine, consolidnie wilh prior judgement. - Joshua Roesch, driving af­ ter consuming under age 2 1 , sentenced lo 30 days, suspended 12 months, unsupervised proba­ tion, nol lo drive a motor vehicle for 30 days, surrender license, cost; possession of mnrijunna, . dismissed; carrying concealed weapon, dismissed, possession of drug paraphernalia, dis­ missed, - Qiuli Straeht, expired reg­ istration, dismissed; expired in­ spection, dismissed; improper equipment, $10, cost, - Frederick Tiilberl, larceny of n firearm, reduced lo posses­ sion of stolen goods, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 2 years, supervised probnlion, $500, cost; 6 counts Inrceny of a fire­ arm, dismissed; 2 counts break­ ing nnd enlering, dismissed. - Tim Tiilberl, nssnull wilh a deadly wenpon with intent lo in­ flict serious injury, reduced lo simple assault, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 12 months, un­ supervised probation, $200, cost. - Bernice Taylor, assault with a deadly weapon, dismissed. - Jonathon White, expired in­ spection, dismissed; reckless driving to endanger, dismissed; driving while impaired, sen­ tenced to 120 days, suspended 2 years, supervised probation, 48 hours community service, $100, cost; failure to burn head­ lights, dismissed; driving while revoked, dismissed; improper towing, disinissed; simple af­ fray, dismissed; misdemeanor possession, dismissed; posses­ sion of paraphernalia, dis­ missed. - Ricardo While, driving while revoked, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 2 years, unsu- pervised probation, not to drive a motor vehicle until properly licensed by the DMV, $10, cost. - Ryan Wilson, misdemeanor breaking imd entering, sen­ tenced to 100 hours community service* cost; misdemeonor lar­ ceny, consolidate with prior judgement; 4 counts breaking into a coin machine, consolidale with prior judgement, - Allen Wyse, driving while impaired, sentenced lo 120 days, suspended 3 years, supervised probation, $100, cost; driving while impaired, sentenced lo 2 years, suspended 3 years, super­ vised probation, 45 days active, assessment, not lo drive u mo­ tor vehicle unlil properly li­ censed by Ihe DMV, $750, cost; expired inspection, dismissed; failure to wear seatbelt, dis­ missed; no liability insurance, dismissed; open container after consumption, dismissed. 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F r e e e s t i m a t e s C o m m e r c ia l & R e s id e n tia l insured W eel< ly & B i-W e e l< ly S e r v i c e s W e also p r e s s u r e w a s til (336)345-0061 • (336)909-2554 Nextel ID# 150*25*26008 Dauie 1ашп care 25% OFF 1st Weekly Service ( 3 3 6 ) 3 4 5 - 0 0 6 1 t ' 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Fhablic Records DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - 7 1-^ . Land Transfers The following land transfers were filed with the Davic Reg­ ister of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, township, and deed stamps purchased, wilh $2 representing $1,000. - Jean Sinclair lo Mark Sinclair, 7 lots, Mocksville, - Randnll Scott Brooks (fourth interest) and Robin Dale Brooks (fourth interest) to Vernon Lee Brooks and Nancy M, Brooks, 7,58 acres, Jerusa­ lem. - BR 549 to Alan 0. Fletcher Conslructibn,' 1 lot, Farmington, $139. - Alan G. Fletcher Construc­ tion to Tony M. Bledsoe and Marcia Ё. Bledsoe, 1 lot, Farmington, $139. - Sheila Boswell and Albert ’ Boswell to Larry E. TVndall and Kathryn F. Tyndall, 5,23 acres, Clarksville, $10. • Rita Mack and Clint Mack to Carrie Hardin, 2 acres, Fulton, $82. - Cambridge Isenhour Homes to Gary L. Koontz and Virginia B. Koontz, 1 villa, Farmington, $441. - Albert C. Valentine and Joanne C. Valentine to Dale Jr. Boardman and Wendy Michelle Boardman, I lot, Calahaln, $26. - J. Chriss Huff, commis­ sioner to Countrywide Home Loans, 1 parcel, $261. - Rural Affordable Housing to Jason Paul Whitaker, .79 acre, Mocksville, $190. - Thomas Glen Baysinger and Mary Lynne E, Baysinger lo Jason D, Knight and Karen R. Knight, 1.15 acres, Mocksville, $170. - Glenn C. Fosler and Dor­ othy L. Foster lo Christine Fos­ ter Baker and Elizabeth Foster Smith, 18 acrcs, Mocksville. - BR 549 lo Homes by Jonathan Lee, 1 lot, Farmington, $149. - BR 549 to Homes by Jonathan Lee, 1 lol, Farmington, $149. - C,J. Ramey, attorney in fact for Oak Valley Associates, Ridge Run Properties and Oak Valley Properties lo Essex Homes, 1 lot, Farmington, $198. - New South Development to Jeff Ferguson, 1 lot, Mocksville, $78, - Marshall A, Cain and Pamela C, Cain lo Benjaniien T, Gobble and Jessica L. Gobble, 1 lot, Calahaln, $214. - BRC Development to Marshall A. Cain and Pamela C. Cain, 1 villa, Mocksvilk-,. $213. - Mark A. Cline and Jane C. Cline to Eileen L. Churchill and Paul F. Churchill, 5.04 acres, Mocksville, $100, ■ Hillsdale Group lo MBHF Properties, 1 lot, Farmington, $808, - BR 549 to W, Wayne Frye Organization, 1 lot, Farmington, $112, - Mulvaney Homes to Clay M. Kirkman Jr., I lot, Farmington, $363, - Eugene D, Geanron, D,C, Lawrence and Patty Sue Lawrence, Raymond J, Markland and Ruth S, Marklaned lo Central Triod In­ vestments, 4 lots. Shady Grove, $224, - Carol C, Roberson and Dwight Creason, and Judy C, Fuller and James Fuller Jr. lo Paul H. Gale III and Susan J. Gale, 68.5 acres, Calahaln, $670. - Mabel Elwood Laird lo Cathy Laird, 1,69 acres, Farmington, - Mabel Elwood Laird to Bobby Laird, 3,94 acres, Farm­ ington. - Blanco Thckaberry Combs & Malamoros, substitute trustee to Bank of North Carolina, 1 lot, $350. - Dwight L. Myers to Phillip D. Shore and Tammie L. Shore, 52.25 acrcs, Calahaln, $366. - The Bank of New York to Mark A. Hurley and Amanda D. Hurley, 1.77 acrcs, Mocksville, $150. - Willie Bess Bennett, Delbert Bennett and Martha H. Bennett, and Garnclte Nance Chapman to Edward McClain Parker and Maribeth Minetz, 1 lot, Mocksville, $83. - BR 549 to Alan G. Fletcher Construction, 1 lol, Forminglon, $149. - Richard A. Carson and Ezell ^P. Carson to Roger Lee Byerly and Misty L. Byerly, 1 lot, Mocksville, $192. - Dick Anderson Construc­ tion to Patricia S. Koeval, 1 lot. Shady Grove, $511. - Mary A. Crews to Jerry Crews and Janie Crews, 1.58 acres, Clarksville, $12. Mocksville Police The following incidents were reported lo Ihe Mocksville Po­ lice Department. - The larceny of $37.80 worth of fuel from Rushco, Yadkinville Road, was reported May 20. - The larceny of Yu-Gi-Oh trading cards from Wal-Mart was reported May 20. - The lire lo a car parked off Yadkinville Road was cut, it was reported May 13. - The larceny of a rule and a cap from Wal-Mart was reported May 20. - The larceny of a BB gun. A n n o u n c i n g t h e o p e n i n g o f R o w a n G a s t r o e n t e r o l o g y , P G D r D a u l a t H a l d e a Medical School: SMS Medical College in Jaipur, India Internship: University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey Residency: Lincoln Hospital in Bronx, New York and New York Medical College in Valhalla, New York Fellowship: Gastroenterology, New York Medical College in Valhalla, New York Board certified in Gastroenterology, Imemai Medicine, Gcriatrics and Pediatrics :4V' l-i Rowan Gastroenterology, PC 310 Mocksville Avenue x t t » i t Salisbuiy, NC 28144 ROWAN REGIONAL (704) 636-0995 M E D IC A L C E N T E R www.rowan.org wireless phone, CD and body products from Wal-Mart was re­ ported May 21, - The larceny of cell phones from a vehicle on Clement Street was reported May 16, - The larceny of personal items from a pocketbock at a residence on Milling Road was reported May 16, - A bottle of water was thrown at a gas sign at 579 E, Lexington Road, it was reported May 17, Arrests - Mellon Guthrie, 29, of Newport, was charged May 20 with misdemeanor larceny, TYial date: July 28. - Donald Steve Barfield, 24, of 107 Pleasant Lane, was charged May 16 with assault on, a female. Trial date: June 9. - Jermeil Tyress Cockerham, 27, of Statesville, was charged May 16 with possession with intent to sell or deliver mari­ juana, maintaining a vehicle for the sale of a controlled sub­ stance, possession with intent to sell or distribute cocaine, traf­ ficking in cocaine, conspiracy to traffic in concaine and posses­ sion of marijuana. Trial date: June 17. - ’Ru’a Michelle Green, 25, of Winston-Salem, was charged May 23 with unauthorized use of a vehicle and larceny. Trial date: July 1. - Marques Dee Dixon, 28, of Spencer, was charged May 20 wilh shoplifting. TVial date: July 28. - Randy Eugene Davidson, 23, of Lewisville, was charged May 19 wilh possession with intent to sell or distribute co­ caine, possession of cocaine, possession with intent to sell or distribute marijuana, possession of marijuana, maintaining a ve­ hicle for a controlled substance, operating a vehicle without in­ surance, expired inspection and registration and obstructing and delaying on officer. TVial dale; May 26. - Genann Stroud Etchison, 34, of 100 Etchison St., was charged May 20 with possession of cocaine and possession of drug paraphernalia. Trial date: June 2. TVafflc Accidents - A Mocksville woman was cited for failing to reduce speed after a wreck on Yadkinville Road at 5:40 p.m. May 20. - Karen Horton Bowers, 48, of McClamrock Road, failed to stop the 2003 Honda she was driving before it hit Ihe rear of a 2001 Chevrolet driven by Rob­ ert Conrad Call, 50, of Salisbury, reported Officer R.A. Donalhon. - No charges were filed after a wreck on Valley Road at 8 a.m. May 23. - Farrah Anne Lewis, 28, of Winston-Salem, failed to stop the 1994 Cadillac she was driv­ ing before it hil the rear of a 2001 Chevrolet driven by Eric Wesley Alspaugh, 26, of Winston-Sa- lem, reported Officer E.M. Parker. - A Mocksville man was cited for failing to reduce speed after a wreck on Yadkinville Road at 12:30 p.m. May 17. Tracy Lynn Mohat, 30, of Fred Lanier Road, failed to stop the 1977 Chevrolet he was driv­ ing before it struck the rear of a 2005 BMW driven by Enoch Edward Vogler Jr., 44, of Or­ chard Park Drive, Advance, re­ ported Officer Danny R. Chan­ dler. Fires Davie County fire depart­ ments responded to Ihe follow­ ing calls: May 16: Sheffield-Calahaln, 6:41 p.m., Salmons Road, hay on fire. May 17: Mocksville, 10:20 a.m,. New Hampshire Court, carbon monoxide detector; Cen­ ter assisted; Mocksville, 2:50 p,m„ Davie Co. Landfill, com­ pressor fire; Fork assisted. May 18: Smith Grove, 3:51 p,m„ U,S, 158, tractor fire; Ad­ vance assisted; Smith Grove, 6:21 p.m,, Pembroke Driv^ house fire; Advance assisted. May 19: Smith Grove, 6:53 a.m., Pembrook Ridge Court, house fire rekindled: Advance assisted. May 20: Center, 7:25 a,m,, Davie Academy Road, automo­ bile accident; Mocksville as­ sisted; Fork, 9:15 a,m,, U,S, 64 East, car fire; Smith Grove, 2:25 p,m„ Baltimore Road, automo­ bile accident; Comatzer-Dulin assisted; County Line, 2:33 p,m,, U,S, 64 West, automobile acci­ dent; Center assisted; Mocks­ ville, 1:06 a,m,, N, Main Street, fire alarm; Smith Grove assisted; Mocksville, 6:08 p,m,, Yadkinville Road, automobile accident; Jerusalem assisted. May 21: Jerusalem, 2:34 p,m„ Cummings Lane, traffic accident - pedestrian struck. Arrests The Davie County Sheriffs Department made the following arrests: - Karen Renee Aulrey, 29, of 110 Liberty Circle, Mocksville was arrested May 13 for failure to appear. Trial dale: June 6 in Watauga County, - Robert Joseph Beddington, 65, of 184 Daisy Lane, Mocks­ ville was arrested May 15 for assault on female and solicit for prosecution. Trial date; June 2, - Joseph Stanley Bender, 36, of 1091 Joe Road, Mocksville was arrested May 16 for failure lo appear. Trial dale: June 9. - Jonathan David McDowell, 47, of 1090 U.S, 601 South, Mocksville was arrestedJune 16 for worthless checks. Trial date: June 29 in Wake County, - Patrick Joseph Von Wellsheim,32,ofl642U,S.601 South, Mocksville was arrested June 17 for probation violation. Trial date: June 6 in Alamance County. - Michael Ramon Pruitt, 30, of Salisbury was arrested June 17 for contempt - child support. Trial date: May 17. - Bobby Dean Moore, 37, of Traphill was arrested May 17 for failure to appear. Trial date: not_ listed. - Linda Gail Barry, 36, of 376 Ijames Church Road, Mocksville was arrested May 17 for assauU with serious injury. Trial date: May 31 in Stokes County, - Brooks Marie Robertson, 39, of 521 Pineridge Road, Mocksville was arrested May 18 for assault v/ith a deadly weapon with a minor present an'd simple assault. Trial date: June 30. - Russell Dale Clark, 17, of 118 Lonetree Circle, Advance was arrested May 18 for em­ bezzlement. Trial dale: July 7, - Diego Giraldo Fernandez, 17, of 396 Kingsmill Drive, Ad­ vance was arrested May 18 for embezzlement. Trial dale; July 7, - Richard Eugene Whitling, 23, no permanent address listed, was arrested May 19 for viola­ tion of a domestic violence pro­ tection order. Trial date: June 9. SherifTs Department The following incidents were reported to the Davie County Sheriff’s Department, - On April 14 Ramond McBride reported an assault at a home on Wyo Road, Mocks­ ville, - Laura Keaton reported a vehicle was taken without per­ mission from a home on Swicegood Street, Mocksville on May 14, - On May 14 Kathy Hamilton reported a missing person at a home on Loop Street, Mocks­ ville, - Eric Robinson reported a break-in at a home on Williams Road, Advance on May 15, - On May 15 Gina Brannock reported gas was taken without pay al a gas station on N.C. 801 North, Advance. - Bobby Everhart reported gas was taken without pay at a gas station on N.C, 801 North, Advance on May 15, - On May 16 Andrew Hansen reported a generator was taken from a business on Farmington Road, Mocksville. - Cruelty to animals was re­ ported after a dog was shot at a home on Harvest Way, Mocks­ ville on May 16, - On May 16 Edres Brahim reported a break-in at a business on U,S, 64 East, Mocksville, - Gay McClamrock reported a break-in at a storage building located at N, Davie Middle School, Mocksville on May 17. - On May 17 Shirley Moore reported money was taken from a home on N.C. 801 South, Mocksville, - Lynette Green reported sil­ verware, jewelry, chain saws and money was taken from a home on Yadkin Valley Road, Advance on May 17, - On May 17 Brandon Frakes reported tools were taken from a home on Shady Grove Lane, Advance, - Ralph Head reported a tres­ passer at a home on Ridge Road, Mocksville on May 18, - On May 18 an assault was reported at a home on Nolley Road, Mocksville, - An assault on a female was reported May 18 at a location on Wesiside Drive, Mockville. - William Sills reported dam­ age lo properly at a home on Riverside Drive, Mocksville on May 18. - On May 19 William Sparks reported a prowler at a home on Pinebrook School Road, Mocks­ ville. - Dustin Seaford reported a motorcycle was taken from a home on Greenhill Road, Mocksville on May 19. Highway Patrol The following traffic wrecks in Davie County were listed by the N.C. Highway Patrol. Man Charged In Wreck A Davie man was charged with failure to secure load, ex­ pired inspection, and registration violation after an accident on May 18. ' Edward Howard Hamilton of 383 Ridgeview Drive, Mocks­ ville was driving a 1978 Chevrolet pick-up west on U.S. 158. Jennifer Kuzan Barney of 708 Liberty Church Road, Mocksville was driving her 2005 Toyota vehicle west on U.S. 158 and had pulled out to pass Hamilton's trilek in a passing zone. As Barney's vehicle ap­ proached Hamilton's a card­ board box filled with brick chips came off Ihe truck’s trailer and collided wilh Bame's vehicle. Ttooper M.T. Dalton reported the accident occurred al approxi­ mately 6:10 p.m. and there were no accidents. Wreck On Country Lane A Davie woman was charged with unsafe movement after the vehicle she was driving hit an­ other May 18. Elizabeth Honeycutt Jones of579 Pudding Ridge'Road, Mocksville was making a left lum onto Country Lane from Campbell Road in a 1994 International, Faye Myers Whitaker of 894 Country Lane, was driving her 1978 Ford pick­ up north on Counlry Lane and had stopped at Campbell Road, Jones turned her vehicle loo sharply and it collided with^ Whitaker's, Trooper M,Tf Dalton reported tho accident oc­ curred al approximately'4'pir Man Charged In Wreck A North Carolina man was charged with left of center and license violation after he wrecked the vehicle he was driv- ipg May 19, Terry Lee Barker ofJonesville was driving his 199g Ford vehicle south on N,C, 801 Barker drove his vehicle aerosi the cemerline and ran off the road to the left. Barker’s vehicle.continued out of control and col- lided with a mailbox. After driv-mg his vehicle back onto the road Barker then drove his ve- hide off the road again to the right. Barker slated he had swerved his vehicle to avoided “ ding with 8 deer that had crossed the road. TVooper M T Dalton reported the accident oVcurred al 1:44 p.m. .да S h e f f i e l d - By Janice Jordan Special lo the Enterprise The Memorial Service for Fallen Firefighlers was held al Sheffield/Calaholn Volunteer Fire Department on Sunday afternoon. May 22. Community residents, special guests, and family members of the firefighlers gathered on the lawn in folding chairs. The firefighters entered the area from the side nnd formed a line behind a podium that was set up in front of two of the fire trucks. The audience could see the Mcmoriol Garden and Ihe markers for each fallen firefighter as they passed by on the way lo their seals. The American flag, the North Carolina flag, and a Maltese Cross Fire Department Flag flew al half-mast in Ihe center of the garden, Janice Jordan, a member of the department’s board of directors, opened the service by I leadingthe Pledge of Allegiance to Ihe American Flag, Afterward she introduced David Beck, the station’s fire chicf. She reminded the group that Beck has been involved with the fire depart-ment since he joined as a junior firefighter in 1978. His father, Paul Beck, was a charter member of the station land remains active. David has been chief for the past seven iyears. Their involvement is a [family affair, including Belly leek, Paul’s wife,'and Duvid’s |wife, Tammy, who volunteer |heir time running the auxiliary Support group. David’s daughter, iBrandi, is also a firefighter, as her fiance, Andy Drye, David Beck welcomed the Pudiencc and then introduced the fofficers and roster of Ihe. ¡department and the members of !the board of directors. The Rev, Wayne Swisher was asked to step forward to give his comments and the opening prayer. He was followed by firefighter Justin Dyson, who captured evejyone’s attention by • singing “Find Rest”. Justin was accompanied by his father, Tfcrry Dyson on Ihe guitar, Kevin Ward, assistant fire chief, spoke of Ihe most recent fallen firefighter, Brandon Miller, Brandon, a member of the unit for two years, had joined as a junior firefighter, InAugust, 2004, Brandon’s life was cut short when he was fatally injured in a four-wheeler accident. First responders to the accident were comrades of Brandon from Sheffield/Calahaln, Kevin spoke of the special bond that forms between the members of the department, and the anguish they feel when Ihe victims are [One of their own, David Beck read the names ¡of all of the deceased firefighlers and their length of service to the jfire department. They included: • Brandon Miller, 1987- [2004,2 years service; Neil Church, 1944-1979,3 years service; ’ • Albert Reavis, 1913-1987, i years service; • Enoch Prevette, 1928-1988, |1 2 years service; Not Forgotten C a l a h a l n H o n o r s A u x i l i a r y , D e c e a s e d F i r e f i g h t e r s Junior firefighter Brandon iVlilier died in August of 2004, • Mike Fowler, 1948-1996, 12 years service; • Raymond Shores, 1919- 1996, 20 years service; • John Roy Smith, 1928- 1996, 20 years service; • A, Wade Wright, 1929- 2000,23 years service; •JenyBttiley, 19.M-2003,24 years service; • Jimmy Smith, 1946-2003, 24 years service; • James Keller, 1940-2001, 24 years service; and • Frankie Allen, 1946-2001, 24 years service. “I Wish You Could,” an emotional poem read by Sheffield/Calahaln member Randy Groce, detailed the many dangerous incidents and heart­ breaking circumstances that may be encountered by firefighters. The poem was followed by Lt. Gary Allen’s rendition of Amazing Grace on the saxophone. The auxiliary members were called forward and surprised by Sandy Shepherd, who had assisted Chief Beck in preporing a special recognition for their efforts to support the fire depart­ ment. Roses were handed lo each officer ond member of the group. They included: Tammy Beck, president; Betty Beck, vice president; Alisa Allen, secretary; and Christy Ward, treasurer. Other members present were; Lena Allen, Barbara Trent, Vicki Groce, ond Karen Jordon-Foster. Members unoble to attend, but recognizcd, were Pat Reilly and Jomie Johnson. For the first lime, while roses were placed in the memoriol garden in memory of the two deceosed ouxiliary members, Naomi Reeves and Janel Gaither. Justin Dyson stepped up again. This lime he sang “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” once more occomponied by his father on guitar. The Rev. Scott Newton of Liberty Wesleyon Church spoke ot closing and quoted scripture from Revelations 2:18 and Matthew 5:14. After Ihe final prayer, the Memoriol Service participonts were invited to stay for refreshments that included homemade ice cream, cookies, and cakes prepared by the auxiliary. Dixieland farm S u m m er C am p jp ots are still avallablel Call to (Ind out m oral www.dixlelandfarm.com Contact' MaritM Pfione; 336-H92*6403 1784 Godbey Road - Mockiville. N C 27020 ¡irefighter Justin Dyson ang two songs for the cer- pioriy. K K PU K .SK .M A i n к J u l i a H o w a r d ;V< llousi' 7>JHi /)ixli icl Pliwe coiitcicl iiw in: MOCKSVILLE: (336) 751-8567 RALEIGH; (919) 733-5904 State Legislative Building 16 W. Jones Street, Rm 1f06 Ralalgh, NC 27601-1096 Email: jullah@ncleg.nat l'Mi> m iiyJuM llowAnn Sheffield-Calahaln firefighters at Sunday’s memorial service included, from left; kneeling - Tommy Gobble, Kevin Ward; standing - Earl Trent, Alien Groce, Paul Beck, Brittany Alien, Kent Knight, Jay Lockhart, Justin Dyson, Crystal Doby, Chris Jordan, Mac White, Dell Foster, Gary Alien, David Becl<, Brandi Beck, Andy Drye and Karen Jordan-Foster. . Photos courtesy Pat Moore / Sandy Shepherd recognizes members of the fire departments auxiliary for their support. Board members Janice Jordan opens the ceremony by leading the Pledge of Allegiance. The Rev. Scott Newton closes the ceremony wilh remarks and prayer. New Lower pplcesl i J J f d r J » ! LOOH For Our Sales Circular in Todav’s Paperi Don't Get Burned! You can be fined up to $10,000 for illegal open burning in N.C. S m o k e f r o m o p e n b u r n in g c a n c a u s e s e rio u s h e a lth p r o b le m s o n d p o llu t e th e a i r . T h a t's w h y th e s ta te r e g u la te s o p e n b u r n in g . O n ly le a v e s , b r a n c h e s o r o t h e r p la n t g r o w t h c a n b e b u r n e d . IIS iLLEGALTO BURN: •Garbage, paper iind cardboard •Tires and olher rubber products •Building materials. Including lumber •Wire, plastics and synthetic materials •Asphalt shingles and heavy oils •Paints, household chemicals and agricultural products Homeowners can bum yard trimmings - excluding logs and stumps - if it's allowed under local ordinances, no public pickup is available and it doesn't cause a public nuisance. Other allowable burning Includes campfires, outdoor barbecues and bonfires for festive occasions. Landowners also can open bum vegetation to clear land or rlghts-of- way, provided that: • Prevailing winds are away from built up areas and roads • Fires are at least 1,000 feet away from occupied buildings • Burning is done between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. R im tm b e r / bum fifn n tts (sfUtU by ift* N.C, O ftiljlo n p / F o m t R e iO H rc e t, it» a s e n tt o r a rty lo c a l g o v e m m e n t d o n o t e x n t e a p e rs o n /r o m /o llo w ln g th e s e s ta te a ir iju a llty ru le s . F o r m o re In /o rm a tto n , c o n ta c t! Wlnston-Salsm Regional Ollice Division ol Air Quality N,C, Dopartmant ol Envitonment and Natural Reaourcos Phono: (336) 771-4600 (TMs ad paid lor by a violator ol Ihe opon burning law,) lì ■' \ 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 •'v■I Í;' Ф 'i I iM''. i'-' Pi Í YADKIN COUNTY CHALLENGE SOCCER TRYOUTS! Is yuur son or daughter interested in playing soccer at a higher level? If so, bring them lo the Ityoul listed below lhat corresponds wilh Iheir age. (Please bring a COPY of your chlld’.s birth cerlilicale wilh you lo tryouls.) Sat., .lune 4tli & Vadkln County Parit U13 10 am-t2 pm I Age range: Bom Inter lhan 8/1/92 Team Contact; Jason St. John - 699-4150. UU 12 pm-3 pm Age range: Bom lalerthan 8/1/94 Team Conlact; Ted Baity - 463-5600 ■Sun., .lune 5th & Vadldn County Park UlO 2 pm-4 pm Age range: Bom later tl»an 8/1/95 Team Coniaci; Allen Walker - 468-4538 *Check our website for more info,: www.'/adkinsoccer.com Needle Cast Affecting Local Pine Trees There is a disease of pine trees that is becoming noticeable in Davie County. Pine Needle Cast is turning needles brown. The disease does not kill the tree, but attacks sec­ ond year needles on all South­ ern Yellow Pine species except Long Leaf Pine. The disease appears in the early spring and is noticed as the needles turn brown from the tip to the point of infection. During this stage, the basal portion of the needle remains green. Later, some of the needles turn brown entirely. The tree may shed its infected needles prematurely. Needle Cast is transmitted to other needles by wind-carried spores under favorable weather conditions. To control Needle Cast, re­ move old needles as they fall to the ground and bum them. Sani­ tation around the trees will help to keep the disease away. When checking for Needle Cast, make sure it is not the Southern Pine Beetle causing the problem. This culprit will kill all pines if left alone. Look on the trunk of the tree to see if there are pitch tubes or boring dust. Direct questions to the N.C. Forest Service at 751-5319 or visit the office in the Davie County Office Building between 8 and 9 a.m. Monday-Friday. Tax Office Workers Earn Certification R E A L E S T A T E W E E K L Y By Debbie Prachel Owrar/Brokar Premier Carolina Propartlea SOLD! Some things are hard lo measure, nnd others are easy. Success in a real estate sale is easy. It occurs when the "SOLD” sign is in your front yard. And having that occur as quickly as possible is another goal. You have undoubtedly heard that old saying about the "hard way” and the "easy way” to do something. The hard way to get the “SOLD" sign up is to try and sell it yourself. And Ihe easy way is to use Ihe services of a sales professional, someone who is not only buined to get it sold ASAP, but to get as much for your home as the market will bear. Remember, the agent doesn’t get paid until your home is "SOLD”. And the amount they earn in commission is dependent upon the amount of the sale. That's a lot of genuine motivation io do the job right. So save yourself headaches and frustration when you are i'c,idy to sell-call a professional Realtor. Debbie is an award-winning full-time professional real estate broker in Davie County. For professional advice on all aspects of buying and selling real estate, you can reach Debbie at Premier Carolina Properties, 336-998- 7777 or 336-909-1284, or visit her website at www.pcpnc.com. Two employees of the Davie County Tax Administration Of­ fice received certification at the North Carolina Tax Collectors Association annual conference April 20-22 in Greensboro. Shirley Jacobs and Linda Potts, assistant tax collectors, received the professional desig­ nation of certified assistant tax collector. To earn certification, they had to attend hours of (Classroom instruction and fulfill other re­ quirements. Jacobs has served as assistant tax collector for 10 years. Her family includes husband Mike, son Brian, his wife Christy and their daughter, Grace; and daughter Jennifer. She enjoys reading, participates in Relay for Life and is a member of Vic­ tory Baptist Church in Coolee- Potts has been an assistance tax collector for more than 14 years. She has two children, daughter Shelby and son, Wesley. She enjoys reading and is a member of the Mocksville Elemnetary School PTA. Tree Assistance Program Signup Ends iViay 31 May 31 marks the end of the sign-up period for the Tree Assistance Program (TAP) that began Feb. 7. TAP provides financial relief to owners of eligible trees, bushes, vines and forestland damaged by natural disasters. TAP is the flrst of several programs to be launched in 2005 to help producers recover from natural disasters that occurred in 2003 and 2004. Owners of eligible trees, bushes and vines from which an annual crop is produced for commercial purposes and eligible forestland owners who produce crops of timber for commercial purposes moy receive assistance. TAP for orchardists has been authorized for benefits for losses from Dec. 1, 2003 to Dec. 31, 2004, to replant trees, bushes and vines that were grown to produce an annual crop. TAP for forest timber producers assistance is available to eligible producers who meet all requirements and produce periodic crops of forest timber for commercial use, and who suffered timiier losses or damage from Dec. 1, 2003 to Dec. 31, 2004. For more information, or to apply for TAP assistance, tree owners should contact the FSA office at 301 E. Center St., Lexington, (1-800-524-3389) prior to the May 31. Additional information is available on FSA’s website at: mvw.fsa.usdo.gov. ‘Move Over’ Signs Installed On i-40 S a t u r d a y N i g h t Oates open for practice at 6 p m FIRST RACE AT 8 RM. O O D C a E 1 0 0 L A D I E S ’ N I G H T ! •m il» («na »«imltlad rot $1 (no tte o rt taqultid), e o u ittty ot Oodg*. 100-Lap M odified R ace Plus Sportsman, Street Stocl< and Stadium Stock races Fans' p rize s Iro m R acing E le ctron ics: Four S200 sca nn er packages m u dopneuL »H» ятюя Admission; 12and o ld or-$IO « A g 8» Q -1 1 - * 1 ChiWron under 6 FREE wilh adult escort PLENTY OF FREE PARKINQ Information about itadlum racing; (336) 723-1819 N.C. Department of Trans­ portation (NCDOT) crews are installing signs along 1-40 in Davie County in an effort to edu­ cate motorists about the state’s “Move Over” law. Signs, which read: “Move Over or Reduce Speed for Stopped Emergency Vehicles” are being installed on eastbound 1-40 at mile marker 172 and westbound 1-40 at mile marker 178. “NCDOT’s top priority is im­ proving safety along the state’s highways,” said Transportation Secretary Lyndo Tippett. “These signs remind motorists to slow down or change lanes tc^ protect emergency personnel.” Effective Jan. 1, 2002, the law requires motorists to move to another lane when approach­ ing an emergency vehicle with its lights flashing on the shoul­ der of a road with two or more lanes in each direction. When it is not safe to change lanes, or when on a road that has only two lanes, motorists must signifi­ cantly reduce speed while pass­ ing the stopped vehicle. Violators face o $25 fine, an estimated $100 in court costs and two points, on their drivers license. While several signs are al­ ready posted in western North Carolina, the sign installation program is being expanded to . include sigtis at state lines and at 50-mile increments along North Carolina interstates. The effort is part of an on-going edu­ cational campaign by NCDOT and the State Highway Patrol to inform motorists of the law. As part of the educational campaign, the department has included information about the law on the 2005 state transpor­ tation map, displayed posters about the law at all state rest ar­ eas, developed several public service announcements about the law and distributed informa­ tional cards to law enforcement agencies and municipalities throughout the state. Addidonally, the department has promoted the law at events such as the state fair and the Drivers Educators annual meet­ ing. The department is working . with the Division of Motor Ve­ hicles (DMV) to include infor­ mation about the law in the Driv­ ers Handbook as well as to in­ stall posters in all DMV offices. Howard Joins Tourism Caucus On Tourism Day, May 10, Rep, Julia Howard (R-Davie) announced membership in the newly formed Legislative Tourism Caucus. ■Ninety-seven legislators from all over the state have joined to help promote tourism in North Carolina. Howard encourages North Carolinians to vacation here - starting with a visit to www.visilnc.com. “The tourism and travel industry generates over $13 billion in revenues, employing 183,000 North Carolina citizens,” Howard said. “Tax revenue produced for state and local govemmeiits is $l billion.” Even though many sectors have seen revenue losses, tourism in North Carolina'is consistently one of the fastest growing industries and plays a critical in providing new jobs while manufacturing has seen an employment decline, she said. The Splttiebugs Are Back HURRY. SALE ENDS SOON. Many homeowners in Davie County are finding what appears to be spit on some of their trees, shrubs and lawns. This frothy mess is caused by an insect nymph called the spittlebug. The nymph is inside the mess where it finds protection from its en­ emies and also from the drying heat of the sun. The spittlebug nymph has needlelike mouthparts that it in­ serts into the plant and sucks out the life juices of the plant. The mouthparts do vei^ little damage to the plant but removing the juices causes weakened and stressed plants. To control the nymphs, the homeowner can use an insecti­ cide recommended for their con­ trol. There are two that the home- owner can use in North Carolina. These are Orthene and insecti­ cidal soap. It if you use a pesti­ cide, always follow the label be­ cause it is the law. It is best to apply the insecticide late in the aftemoon because the nymphs ate nearer the top of the froth. If you have any questions about the spittlebug, call the NC Forest Service at 751-5319. G e t t h e ¡ 2 0 5 F R E E W u lk ie -tü ih ie S p C iik e r p h o n o G P S 1‘ fw tD led W i#b .ic c e s s * ° --------- ----------------------------------------------W * W .v u v » jy i tU / J X - J J i: / . M a n C o n v i c t e d O f I n v o l u n t a r y M a n s l a u g h t e r Continued From Page 1 “Just having to see what this “ - " ................ family went through, is still go-The involuntary manslaugh­ ter charge carries a maximum sentence of 19-21 months per count. Neumann said this case was one of the hardest he has ever been a part of. ing through, was difficult," Neumonn said. “I couldn’t just say, ‘I’m just the lawyer here’, I couldn’t distance myself emo­ tionally from this case.” The verdict ends an emo- POWERFUL SAVINGS. 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McFayden’s attorney, Krispen Culbertson, argued that the fire erupted because of a faulty gas tank is located in the rear of the vehicle, Neumann ar­ gued that regardless of whether the gas tank was faulty or leak­ ing, McFayden caused the fatali­ ties when he decided to drive while impaired, showing a lack of regard for human life. The jury agreed. "The judge said this punish­ ment does not fit the crime,” Ricky Howell soid. “I agree I really believe he’ll (McFayden) be out and driving drunk again m just a few years, 1 only hope l i e . - ' ■.i ' : {' D A V IE C O U N T Y E N T E R P R ISE RECO R D , Thursday, May 26,2005 - 9 S p r in t h a s n e v e r s h o w n y o u a n y th in g lik e th is b e fo r e . $19.99 a month for DISH Networi(® Satellite TV! W e've brought you local, long-distance and w ire le ss calling. W e've brought you high-speed Internet. And now w e 're offering you som ething even m ore entertaining - DISH N etw ork S atellite TV. 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A ccordin g to Am anda M ar­ tin , an attorney w ho specializes in m e d ia access to p u b lic re co rd s, the s ta tu to ry basis given w o u ld be enough if the county has a c iv il lia b ility issue, and the em ployee be in g d is ­ cussed is a county em ployee. In this case, the basis m ight not apply. A ccordin g lo som e in atten­ dance at Ihe closed session, the topic o f discussion was the on­ going investigations o f S h e riff A lle n W hita ker and L t. Jim m y P hipp s o f the D a v ie C o u n ty S h e riff’s D epartm ent. Since nei­ ther the county m anager nor the board o f com m issioners has fir­ in g o r h irin g re s p o n sib ilitie s over em ployees o f the s h e riff’s departm ent, the question as to w hether the basis applies fo r the board to go to a closed session rem ains. “ T he statute doesn’t apply,” M a rtin said. “ I f the board had no supervisory responsibilities over the em ployee, then the em ployee was n o l a co u n ty em ployee. They could no m ore discuss the em ploym ent o f a cop in R aleigh than one in D avie C ounty under that statute.” M a rtin added that the board m ay have failed to m eet the bur­ den o f p ro o f that privileg e ex­ isted fo r the attom ey-client p ri­ vacy Price cited as a reason to go to closed door. “ The statute is designed to protect the patties interest in the event o f c iv il lia b ility . Since there is no lik e ly c iv il lia b ility , there appears to be no statutory basis fo r going to a closed ses­ sion,” M artin said. Phipps sold he was caught o ff guard to hear the com m ission­ ers were talking about his case in a closed session. " I ’ m su rprised they w ere talking about m e,” Phipps said, “ I ’ m not a co unty em ployee, o n ly S h e riff W hita ker can hire or fire m e.” C ounty M anoger Terry B ra l­ ley said he d id n 't believe th e . board acted inappropriately, but added that he agreed that Phipps w as not considered a co unty em ployee. “ W e certainly try to do ev.ery- thing above board,” B ralley said. “ I ’m not going to hide anything. I ’d radier lay everything on the table fo r all to see.” The Enterprise R ecord made a w ritte n request to release the m inutes o f the closed session, but Price declined, stating “ the sh e riff and his deputies are cer­ ta in ly pu b lic o ffic ia ls w ith the pow er to set county p o lic y in certain areas. Further, they cer­ ta in ly have an extensive rela­ tionship w ith the county, w hich has the responsibility fo r fiscal co ntrol over the departm ent.” M ik e T ad ych , an attorney and associate o f M a rtin ’s, said the dispute is not over whether W hita ker and Phipps are public officers, but w hether the com ­ m issioners have any legal ju ris ­ d iction over them . • "T h e y d o n ’ t answ er to the board,” Tadych said. “ T h e y’re (county) thro w in g up a red her­ ring .” The audiotapes o f the open session indicate that Price m ay have prearranged the closed ses­ sion w ith at least one o f the board m em bers. H ow ever, there is no record to indicate w hich com m issioner wanted to discuss the investigation o f the sh e riff’s departm ent being led by D istrict A ttorney G arry Frank. Price said all o r m ost o f the com m ission­ ers knew about the plans to call fo r a closed session. C om m issionerTom Flem ing said he was unaware o f Price’s plans. “ I had no idea w e were go­ ing Into closed session,” F lem ­ ing said. “ I don’t know if it was prearranged. I d id n ’t say any­ thing o r have any com m ent be­ cause I ’m not real fa m ilia r w ith the situ a tio n . I ’ m o u t o f the loop.” Price and FienM ng said the com m issioners did not m ake any decisions. H ow ever, com m ission chair M ic h a e l A lle n stated that the board voted unanim ously on a m otion that was discussed dur­ ing the closed session. A lle n re­ fused to com m ent on w hat that topic was, ond w ou ld neither ac­ know ledge or deny that Phipps investigation was the subject o f the m otion. "H o n e stly, w e discussed a personnel’s contract, that’s a ll I can say about it,” A lle n said. “ O th e r than that. I ’m n o t a l­ low ed b y law lo say anything else.” A lle n said he and the other com m issioners were advised by Price not to disclose any in fo r­ m atio n fro m a closed session because the law forbids it. Research o f the state statutes shows there is no law , b ill o r stat­ ute in N orth C arolina that fo r­ bids a participant o f a closed ses­ sion to freely discuss afterw ards what was said or w hat m otions were raised in a closed session. Price said he never advised the b o ard n o t to discuss the Phipps case w ith anyone, no r did he tell the board it was illeg al fo r them to discuss closed m atters. Price added that as a general rule, he has advised the Board against discussing closed session m atters. “ The purpose o f the closed session is to discuss m atters p ri­ vate to the board,” Price said. “ I f m em bers o f the board discuss those m atters, it frustrates the purpose o f a closed session.” W h ita k e r said he w as u n -' aware that the com m issioners w o u ld be discussitig his depart­ m ent in closed session last week. "A t the tim e, I had no idea they were going to be ta lkin g a b o u t th is d e p a rtm e n t," W hita ker said. “ Since then. I ’ ve heard a ll kinds o f things about w hat m ay have been said. A nd o f course I ’m always concerned w hen m y departm ent is being discussed.” W h ita k e r was asked if he thought it was appropriate fo r C om m issioner A lle n to be a part o f a closed session w h ire the s h e riff’s d e p a rtm e n t o r L t. Jim m y Phipps was being dis­ cussed. A lle n 's w ife , K aren, is em ployed by the s h e riff’s de­ partm ent, and is a direct subor­ dinate o f Phipps. “ Y ou’ll have to ask com m is­ sio n e r A lle n th a t,” W h ita ke r said. A lle n did not excuse him self from the m eeting because o f any perceived c o n flic t o f interest. Price said he d id n ’t need to. "T h e w o rk in g re la tion ship between his w ife and Phipps is not enough to give (A llen ) a con­ flic t o f interest in the eyes o f the la w ," P rice sa id . “ I lo o k to M ichael A lle n to say I can't fu lly participate in this discussion be­ cause o f co nflict. M ichael d id n ’t do that.” Price said he didn’t believe A lle n entered the conversation w ith any prejudice. “ I d id n ’t feel he was not ob­ jective at a ll," Price said. “ I f he says I can't be objective, I w ould counsel him to get out.” D ‘Fairly’ Close To Decision C o n tin u e d F ro m Page 1 “ I hate to put arbitrary tim e fram es on som ething that is not close to resolution,” Frank said. “ T h is is fa irly c lo s e , b u t I w ouldn’t put a tim e fram e on it.” Frank said he has heard m any rum ors and speculations about the course o f the investigation and w hat he w ill do about it. “ Som e folks have w ritte n to me that they got from a reliable authority x-y-z. I have found it am using. It m ust not be so re li­ able an authority," Frank said. “ I have had folks from all over on both sides o f the fence saying w hat they have heard. W hen I take a position, the public w ill know precisely. I can’t control the rum or m ill.” T h e a u th o r o f the le tte r claim ed to be a sh e riff’s depart­ m ent em ployee. In Decem ber, W hitaker said he believed he knew the author, w h ic h he described as a d is ­ gru n tle d em ployee. R ecently, W hita ker said he was not so sure w h o the author was. “ It could be anyone,” W h i­ taker said earlier this w eek. “ I don’t know , ju s t like you don’t know . It could be a current em ­ ployee o r a form e r w orker. I ju st d o n ’t kn o w . I re a lly h a v e n 't thought m uch about it.” In spite o f the long period, W hitaker said the investigation has not affected his departm ent. “ W e’re d o in g business as usual,” W hitaker said. “ I do n’t believe this has been a distrac­ tion at a ll.” W hita ker added that he has not discussed any findings w ith Frank, but he w asn’t concerned w ith w hat Frank w ill fin d in his investigation. “ I expect it w ill turn out w ith no crim inal findings,” W hitaker said. “ 1 don’t th in k there w ill be a problem ." F ra n k, w h o serves a fo u r county d istrict - D avie, Ire d e ll, Alexandet^and Davidson ’- ^ id the investigation focused on the s h e riff's departm ent, b u t that several county em ployees, in ­ eluding C ounty M anager'Terry B ralley, were also interview ed. B ralley said the S B I agents w ho questioned him were lo o k­ ing fo r g e n e ra lin fo rm a tio n .''--^ “ They aSked m e a’few ques­ tions, asked fo r some inform a­ tio n," B ralley said. “ B ut l!m lim ­ ited to w hat I could tell tfifem. I really don’t kn ow what goes on o v e r th e re , o n ly the s h e riff know s that." B ralle y said his involvem ent w ith the s h e riff’s office is lim ­ ited, because although the de­ partm ent is run on county funds, it is an en tity that does'not fa ll under his supervision. B ra lle y said neither his o ffice, no r the b o a rd o f c o m m is s io n e rs to w hich he answers, have h irin g or firin g responsibilities over the s h e riff’s departm ent. T hat re­ sp onsibility fa lls d ire ctly w ith the sheriff. Frank said an investigation into the sh e riff’s departm ent was not unique to D avle C ounty. “ I ’ve had a num ber o f these types o f requests from alm ost all four o f m y counties. They have to be evaluated on the m erits o f the case," he said. T he letter w h ich prom pted the inve stiga tion was pa rticu- la riy critica l o f ch ie f detective Jim m y P hipps, c itin g h im fo r spending tim e on duty w atching deer in a field, letting a girifriend take a de p a rtm e n t co m p u te r hpme fo r personal use, and or­ dering subordinates to bring traf­ fic cones to a supporter o f Sher­ iff W hitaker fo r a private party. T he last charge allege dly oc­ curred on county tim e. The let­ ter also accused Phipps o f allow ­ ing his fa m ily mem bers to u ti­ lize departm ent vehicles fo r per­ sonal use. W hitaker said Phipps has not been disciplined in any form fo r any o f the alleged infractions. F ra n k sa id a n u m b e r o f things m ust be considered to de­ term ine if som ething m erits a crim ina l charge - such as an em ­ ployees position on the chain o f com m and and county policies, “ A ll those factors go into the evaluation,” he said. “ In this par­ lic u la r case, I see m yse lf in a little different capacity. I was re- . quested to investigate the detec­ tive departm ent by the sheriff. I want to conclude this as soon as possible, professionally and re­ sponsibly, 1 also want to do m y duty to the citizens o f the county, fa iriy and com prehensibly," DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Tliursday, May 26,2005 - Bl Boyette Helped Hundreds Of Kids In 21 Years Here B y B ria n P itts D avie C ounty Enterprise Record There’s a touch o f sadness in D avie C ounty these days. D avic C ounty has lost a piece o f its soul. W hen it com es to ru n n in g yo uth leagues, Joe Boyette is as good as they come. H e became the M ocksville-D avie Recreation Departm ent A th le tic D irec­ to r in 1984, he inherited a sm all sports program and he b u ilt it into som ething sp e cia l, H e b u ilt it in to co untless Disputed Home Run Beats Mocksville The M o c k s v ille L e g io n boseball team w as ro llin g S un day n ig h t at M ooresville. The enem y dugout was ro a rin g w hen Zach V o g le r and D an Poindexter crossed the plate on a Foo S m ith smash that was m ishandled in the ou tfield. A thre e-iijn fifth inning had extended its lead to 5-1 and seem ingly put the 2-0 visitors in com plete control. N ot so fast. A fte r M ocksville con­ trolled the first four and a h a lf innings, M ooresville dictated term s in the final four and came charging back fo r an 8-5 non-league w in. The decisive m om ent came in Ihe seventh, when M ooresville’s Jeffrey B allard launched a tiebreaking, three-run home run to avenge a 10-5 loss at R ich Pork the day before. “ (B ra d ) C o rrih e r w as c ru is in g olong,” Coach M ik e Lovelace said o f his starting pitcher. “ B ut M ooresville’s reliever (M att M arshall) was unbeliev­ able in the last three innings.” The decisive ploy was controversial. B a lla rd ’s blast o ff C orey M a rtin was high and long, but hugged Ihe le ft-fie ld line. Fair or foul? The plate um pire ruled fair, brin ging Lovelace out o f the dug- out. “ W e couldn’t see it from ’ where we w ere, but the um pire said it m ay have been fo ir by (the w id th o f a) b a ll,” Lovelace said. “ I told him he had better eyes than I did. A lo l o f people in the stands thought it was a foul boll. It’s just one o f those judgem ent colls.” ' M o cksville turned a 1-0 de ficit into a 2-1 lead in the Ihird. B rod C orriher doubled o ff the center-field w a ll ond Lance Em ert follo w ed w ith a hom e run thot wos no doubt the instant it left the bat. That's tw o dingers in three gomes fo r Em ert, w ho h it a cool .395 fo r Davie H igh but never le fl the yard. M ocksville gave C orriher m ore sup­ port w ith three fifth -in n in g runs fo r the 5-1 lead. P oindexter fo llo w ed a w alk and error w ith a run-Scoring single, and tw o runs crossed when S m ith’s sinking lin e r to tig h t was juggled and dropped. M o cksville looked in com m and as C orriher sailed through the second, third and fourth innings. He established dom i­ nance after a lough start in w hich three straight soft singles opened the bottom o f the first. He w orked out o f a ja m in the second and b e n e fite d fro m a P o in d e xte r-to -D a vid B oyle s (5 -4 -3 ) double play in the fourth. C o rrih e r, h o w e ve r, w atch e d M ooresville ra lly w ith three runs in the fifth , cutting M o cksville ’s lead to 5-4. The rising senior from D avie was be- Iroyed b y tw o erro rs, ond three o f M o o re sv ille ’s runs o ff the lefthander were uneomed. “ I fo u n d a gu y w ho can p itc h ,” Lo velace said, "C o rrih e r kept them offbalance," The errors in the fifth were am ong several things Lovelace lom ented. A n ­ o the r u m p ire m ig h t hove ca lled the clinching hom er foul. The right fielder ran dow n a S m ith bullet in the seventh. That came w ith tw o on, tw o out and the scored tied at 5-5. “ The hom e run was h it," Lovelace said, “ B ut other than that eveiything was jusl seeing-eye singles," Tho hom e run aside, Lovelace liked the debut o f M artin, a Forbush senior who has signed w ith W estern Carolina, Despite getting charged w ith four runs in 3 2/3 innings, he s till m arveled tu I , Please See 4 -R u n - Page B7 leagues, clinics and opportunities fo r all shapes, sizes and ages. • B ut after 21-plus years o f helping D avie C ounty kids and touching hun­ dreds o f lives, Boyette has m oved on. H is fin a l day in his B rock G ym office was M a y 11 as he became the director o f the Y ad kinville /C ou nty R ecreation Departm ent. H o w s h o u ld w e re m e m b e r Joe B oyette? A s a gem w ho valued w hat recreation ba ll is all about. “ Joe is alw ays real cautious about m aking sure every kid gets a fair shake,” said Jim Henderson, w ho has coached ond/or officiated soccer here since 1985. “ H e is not going to ollow any unfair­ ness. In soccer he always told m e what he w ould lik e to see happen is every gam e end in a tie. He d id n ’t w ant to bu ild up one child and destroy another one. T hat was his philosophy and every year it always seemed to w ork. O cca­ sio n a lly you w o u ld have som e ru n ­ aways, but fo r the m ost part the teams were pretty even.” “ H is is all about the kids,” said D avic H ig h boys b a ske tb a ll coach M ik e Absher. “ A n y decision he made, it was w hat created the best situation fo r the kids." “ I f Joe had his w ay, every team w ould be .500," said T im Prcvette, w ho has coached in rec leagues, fo r the last 17 years. “ H e doesn’t like to see some­ one go undefeated, but he can’t stand to see someone not w in a game, either. H e’s out fo r the kids first, last and al­ ways. I ’ve had teams that haven’t lost and he’d really lik e to see you lose. I ’ve had kids that w eren’t w inning, and it just tickled him to death lo see a team fi­ na lly w in ." Boyette, w ho w ill rem ain on Sain Road in M ocksville w ith w ife Sandra and their children, hasn’t enjoyed the ottention he’s received since onnounc- ing his leoving. H e m ode it cleor he didn’t w ant a farew ell story (no one de- ' tests center stage m ore than Boyette). Please See A d m ire rs - Page B IO Zach Vogler and teammates come out to salute Lance Emert for his game-winning homer against Randolph. - Photo by Jim Barringer Pitcher McClannon Looks Strong In Win I ' . : M o ck sville Le gion boseball coach M ik e Lovelace was in a blissful m ood Saturday night, thanks to Lance E m ert’s w a lk -o ff hom e ru n to beat R andolph C ounty 10-7 in the noon game at R ich Park and A ndrew M cC lannon’s im pres­ sive pitching in 010-5 w in over M oores­ v ille in the 6 o ’clock game. The second non-league w in o f the day was pretty close to a com plete ef­ fort. Four players had tw o hits (Zach- Vogler, Em ert, Dan Poindexter and M att H utchens) and fo u r had m ultiple R B Is (Em ert, Foo S m ilh, W esley Douglas and B rad C orriher) as M ocksville collected fiv e extra-base h its and fo u r stolen bases. A n d on the m ound, M cC lannon’s victorious start was backed by encour­ aging re lie f from tw o guys w ho saw lim ­ ited varsity tim e fo r D avie H igh, Tom K u e ll and Jonathon Hutchens. ■ “ Every little thing we tried to execute seemed to w o rk," Lovelace said. M cC lannon’s stu ff had the coach rav­ ing the m ost. H o scattered seven hits in fiv e innings, struck out eight and left w ith a 10-3 lead. The w in squared the third-year m em ber’s career record at 5- 5. ; . M a kin g the outing m ore im pressive is the fact M cC lannon hadn’t pitched all year os a freshm an backup fo r G uilfo rd Collège. “ He held dow n a good M ooresville team ,” Lovelace said. “ This is probably the best team they’ve put together in a w hile. H e got out o f some big jam s w ith some nice strikeouts. H e was real im ­ pressive.” The righthander got plenty o f help from his offense, M ocksville scored the first fo u r runs o f the game in the third, starting w ith a Vogler double over the ce n te r fie ld e r’s head, E m e rt and Poindexter socked back-to-back triples and D avid Boyles contributed the fourth h it o f the inning. A fte r M ooresville clim bed w ith in 4- 3 in Ihe top o f the fifth , M ocksville put Ihe game away w ith a six-run bottom half. S m ith doubled fo r a 5- 3 lead. T lie big b low was a pinch-hit appearance by Corriher, who blooped a single into shal­ lo w right, scoring tw o runs fo r an 8-3 cushion. T lie shock o f Ihe night was see­ ing E m ert’s in fie ld single produce tw o runs. The first runner scored easily from third as Em ert got a bong-bang call on a grounder to short. Josh Eder was in ­ serted to run fo r C orriher, and he scored all the w ay from second, standing up as he crossed the plate. “ Scoring from second is pretty im ­ pressive fo r a young player," Lovelace said. “ You don’t sec that m uch, and that put Ihe dagger in them ," K u e ll gave up tw o runs on three hits in the sixth, but “ he m ade some greal pitches fo r a sophom ore that didn’t pitch m uch at D avie," Lovelace said. M o o re s v ille loaded the bases on M o c k s v ille 's th ird pitcher, Jonathon Hutchens, in the seventh. B ut the rising senior got a strikeout to end thé game. “ H is ve lo city looked very go od," Lovelace said, "T lia t's going to be the typo o f situation w e’ll use him in ," M o c k s v iilc 10, M o o re sv ille 5 Davle ^ ab г h bi Vofilcrcf 4 I 2 0 nm.crt ss 4 1 2 3 PolndexicrSb 3 2 2 I Smith I f .3 1 ""I 2 Prnll ph 1 0 1 0 Thompson If 0 0 0 0 Boyles 2b 3 1 1 0 Boyd 2b I 0 0 0 Dougins c 3 I I 2 Diuchcnko c 1 0 0 0 M. Huichcns lb 4 I 2 0 Marlin rf ' 2 1 0 0 McClttimon p 2 0 0 0 Corriher ph 1 1 I 2 Edcrpr 0 0 0 0 Howard ss 1 0 0 0 Totals 33 10 13 10 Mooresville ООО1 032 0 -5 . Mocksvllle 004 060 x -1 0 2B - Vogler, Smilli, M. Ilutchcns. 3D - Emert, Poimlexicr, SB - Vogler, Poindoxler, Boyles, Dougins. Mock II* H R ER ПВ SO McC, W 5 7 3 3 2 8 Kuell 1 3 2 2 0 0 J. tiulchens 1 1 0 0 0 1 \ ■i <;i Hollifield Piles Up Wrestling Accolades If there were any w ay possible, Aaron H o llifie ld w o u ld w restle som ebody eight days a week. A fte r helping D avie achieve second in the 4 -A duals and a 42-1 re c o rd , he juniped right into a rigorous offseason routine. The risin g .se­ n io r is a u n iq ue blend o f talent and tire le ss prepa ro- tio n. He wrestles in a n A A U toum a­ m ent virtu a lly ev­ ery w eekend. He goes to B o n d ys H igh tw ice a week lo d rill and to A l- bem arie once a week. He w o n ’t relax u n til he ensures a college career on th e ' m at. He w o n ’t relax until he jo in s Scott Beauchamp, Jon W ard, Scotty Spry, N eil Com atzer, Patrick Low ery, Ryan Boehm and T im m y A lle n as D avie slate cham ­ pions. Hollineid H o llifie ld has a year to go and he’s already one o fth e all-tim e greats. W ith a 127-26 record, he’s fifth in career wins (team m ate R ussell H ilto n is fourth ). H e’s one o f four to reach 100 w ins by his ju n io r year (H ilto n and T im m y A llen are tw o o f them ). H e’s one o f five lo notch 50 w ins in a season (A lle n , H il­ ton and K ylo S m ith are on that list). And he still tries to gel better week after week after week. H is com m itm ent is easily seen on his offseason resum e: H e w on the freestyle stale title fo r the second straight year. H e w on the G reco stale title after fin ­ ishing second in 2004. He w on the iron- rhon award in G reenwood, S.C., w hich means he w on his 135 w eight class in three different styles (free, G reco and fo lk) in a .span o f three days, O nly one other guy from N orth C arolina earned iron-m an status. In the Southern A A U N ationals in C oncord - an .attraction that included wrestlers from South C arolina, Florida, G eorgia, V irg in io, W est V irginia, Ten- nessee ond Alabam o - he finished third. He coptured first in a Fila toum am ent to q u a lify Ib r the Fila nationals in South Carolina. In Ihe lost tw o ond o h o lf m onths, H o llifie ld fig u re s h e ’s w restled the equivalent o f a high-school season. The A A U rocket ride has landed him on tw o h ig h -p ro file teams, the N orth C arolina N ationals and the N orth Caro­ lina Duals, N ow he’s looking to raise $1,700 so he can travel w ith the N ,C . N ational Team to Fargo, N .D ., and w ilh the N .C . D u a l Team to E n id , O k. H o llifie ld has to pay his ow n airfare and m otel b ills. "G oing to Bandys, I get to w ork out w ilh some o f the best kids,” he said., “ They’ve gol three state champs and tw o runner-ups, and I get lo d rill and wrestle w ith them . I ’ve been in som e b ig m atches in the offseason already, and that’s going 10 prepare mo fo r next year,” W hen H o llifie ld w on iron m an in G reenw ood, S,C ., he w ent 14-0 over three days. Included were three w ins o ver a thre e-lim e state cham p fro m South C arolina. N o, that’s not a typo. He beat the acclaim ed M att Leach in free, fo lk and Greco. In the freestyle fi­ nals, he upended a guy w ho finished fi^ rth in the slale o f Georgia. The am azing dom inance o f Leach came by m argins o f technical fa ll in free, one point in fo lk and 4-0 in Greco. "T h a t’s Ihe m ost prestigious w ins I ’ve had,” H o llifie ld said. "O nce I beat him a bunch o f guys came up and said; ‘W ho are you?' That is one o f their b ig names in Soulh C arolina." F or D avie, H o llifie ld m ade it lo the state finals last February at Law rence Joel C oliseum . H is dream was crushed by a bu ll from Cary, leaving him w ith a 50-3 ju n io r record. H o llifie ld took it like a m an and got rig h t back up. H e's raising his gam e week by week. R aising $1,700 w ould mean everything to him . I f anyone is in ­ terested in helping him fund the trips to N orth D akota and O klahom a, contact him at 7^51-0817, • B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Arnold, Tamika Reynolds Lead The Way In Regional Meet N o th in g slo p p e d D a v ie ’s in ju ry that sidelined her in tlie ing on com petitors tw o and three Tam ika R eynolds in the Track conference cham pionships. N ot years older, and Field M idw est 4 -A Regional the rust from being out fo r sev- A fte r sitting out and watching M ay 14 at M ount Tabor. N ot the cral weeks. N ol the odds o f tak- tw in sisterTanisha Reynolds w in D avie C o u n ty F riends o fth e N R A D in n e r T h u r s d a y , J u n e 9 * 6 p . m . B e r m u d a R u n C o u n t r y C l u b C o s t : $ 2 5 p e r p e r s o n R S V P b y J u n e 7 t o : A n d r e w B r o c k 4 1 4 - 3 6 6 5 S l a y t o n H a r p e 9 4 0 - 3 4 4 0 B o b S h e l t o n 7 5 1 - 5 6 2 8 R o b e r t C o o k 7 5 1 - 3 9 3 9 P r o c e e d s G o T o S u p p o r t L o c a l S h o o t in g & S a f e t y P r o g r a m s Some Items To Be Auctioned, Door Prizes or Raffled Include: 2005 Gun of the Year 2005 Knife of the Year •4 5 A C P K im ber Eclipse II 2005 Print of the Year One ofthe Nations Best New NRA Clubsin2004 the conference crow n in the triple ju m p , Tam ika returned in the re­ gionals and showed w hy she’s a prize freshm an. The top four in each event qualified fo r the stale m eet, and Tam ika qu a lifie d In tw o events by placing third in the long ju m p and triple jum p. F o r D avie's boys, w ho fin ­ ished sixth out o f 16 team s, Ryan Boehm earned a state berth fo r the Ihird straight yeor and C ooler A rn o ld fin ished th ird in three events. B ut the biggest news was the freshm an w ho doesn’t ju m p like an ordinary freshm an. “ She missed tw o meets and d id n ’t participate in jum ps fo r three o r fo u r w eeks,” C oach D ane B elter said. “ I was weary about it. I didn’t w ant to push her w hen you hove a possible stress fracture, but we got her cleared and she w anted to participate. She has that desire, and she did it. She’ll have the sum m er to re­ cover. “ In m y six years, we haven’t had a freshm an qu a lify (fo r the stale), m uch less in tw o events.” R eynolds lo n g ju m p e d 16 feet, five and a h a lf inches. She tripled jum ped 33-5.5, claim ing third in both. D avie’s giris were fifth in Ihe 400 relay as the R ey­ nolds sisters, TVara W agner and Justina Scott - a ll freshm en - put together a tim e o f 51.65 seconds. "W hen yo u ’ve got a love fo r it, it’s hard to sit ihere and watch other people do it,” Tam ika said. “ I w asn’t at a fu ll 100 percent, but I was close. I could have done belter.” The D avie boys made noise b y accum ulating 32 points and fin is h in g th ird in fiv e events. R eynolds (119), M o u n t Tabor (80.5), East Forsyth (65), West Forsyth (37) and Northw est G u il­ fo rd (3 5 ) fin is h e d ahead o f D avie. “ F or a w hile w e were in third pla ce because o f o u r fie ld events,” B eiter said. “ W e’re still ve ry pleased w ith sixth . W est Forsyth was five points ahead o f us and N orthw est G u ilfo rd was tw o points ahead o f us. So fourth was de finitely w ith in reach. “ This is the m ost people to q u alify in the six years I ’ve been here.” A m old, a senior, was the ring­ leader w ith third places in three events (long ju m p ,' trip le ju m p and 400 relay). S enior Boehm (discus), senior Deon C ody (shot put) and the 400 relay o f A rn o ld , juniors Jaspen G ray and Jonathan M a yfie ld and sophom ore K en­ neth B row n a ll m et qu a lifyin g standards. A rn o ld d id n ’t p ic k up any style points in his forem ost event (trip le ju m p ), but it’s not obout style once you gel to the three- w eek stretch o f cham pionship meets. It’s about heart and com ­ ing through in the clutch. A nd that’s precisely w hat A m o ld did, barely m aking it out o f the trials and then com ing less than a fool from first. “ In the trials he jum ped 41 feet and got the last position in the finals,” B eiter said. “ Then he goes tw o'm ore feet to p u ll out a good ju m p in the finals.” N otes: A rnold was third in the triple ju m p in lost year’s region­ als, w h ile Boehm was second in the discus.... D avie’s giris tallied 10 points, fin ishing tied fo r 12th am ong 14 team s. ... The W ar Eagles dedicated the day to D e­ vore H olm an, the beloved coach w ho came dow n w ith a scary in­ fection and was hospitalized for nearly tw o weeks. H e has since returned hom e, on his w ay to a fu ll recovery. “ They wanted to get it done fo r H olm a n ,” said Beiter, w ho doubled up and took over the boys’ reigns. “ H e was sitting in the hospital bed calling me about every 10 m inutes to fin d out w h a t’s go in g on. H e wanted to be there so badly and the kids knew it.” Schleupner Caps Record-Setting Career 0 1 ^ U J S a l i s b u r y S u r g i c a l A s s o c i a t e s 'a n d R o w a n R e g i o n a l M e d i c a l C e n t e r W e l c o m e D r . E m i l C e k a d a C ollege; D avidson C ollege - M ed ical School: East C arolina U niversity School o f M cdicine Internship; East C arolina U niversity School o f M ed icin e/U n iversity H ealth Systems o f Eastern C arolina Residency; Siirficry, East Carolina University School o f M edicine/U niversity H ealth Systems o f Eastern C arolina \ \ | i / Hoard certified in G eneral Surgery Salisbury Surgical Associates 327 Mocksville Avenue Salisbury, N C 2 8 I4 4 (704)637-2750 B elm ont A bb ey senior fo r­ w ard H eather S chleupner fin ­ ished he r C rusader career in style, as she put her name a ll o v e r the s c h o o l’s record books and earned a ll- c o n fe r - ence honors in the p ro ­ cess. T h e M o c k s v ille native and form er star at N orth D avie M id dle (1995-97), D avie H igh (1997-99) and M ount Ta­ b o r H ig h (1999-2001) led her Crusader squad to a 22-8 overall Schleupner record and a 16-4 record in the C arolinas-Virginia A thletic C on­ ference, good fo r second place. The Crosaders were in line fo r a bid to the N C A A East Regional Tournam ent, but upsets in the other conference tournam ents in their region put teom s in that were ranked behind B elm ont Abbey. Schleupner finished her se­ nior season averaging 15.9 points and 4.3 rebounds. She was fifth in the conference in scoring and third in 3-point fie ld goals made w ith 75. That earned her H onor­ able M ention A ll-C V A C honors, the first lim e the senior had made an all-conference team. Schleupner, w ho was a team captain in her ju n io r and senior seasons and graduated w ilh a Bachelor’s Degree in M arketing, set a career high in points when she poured in 32 in a 98-61 vic­ tory at Lim estone on February 5. In that gam e, she set a school record w hen she h it an am azing nine 3-pointers. H er 75 3-point- ers made is second on the single­ season career list. F or her career, she finished w ith 178 treys, good fo r second a ll-tim e , and her 1,201 points is good fo r eighth on the school’s all-tim e list. A l­ though the Cm saders fe ll in the C V A C fin a ls to A n d e rs o n , Schleupner did her part, scoring 24 after she hit fo r 26 in the semi­ final w in over Barton. ROWAN REGIONAL M E D IC A L CENTER w\w,rownn.org C ooperative einployees provide good value and reliable service for the people w ho own their com pany - YOU. Only « local elccttlc cooperative like EnergyUnitcd makes every customer nn owner ofthe business. 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See salesperson for details. • 'ii i' .l ( " J IIm fii B 6 • D A V IE C O U N T Y E N T E R P R IS E R E C O R D , T h u rs d a y , M a y 2 6 ,2 0 0 5 I S DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - B7 X Zach Vogler swings away In a season-opening win. The throw to first beats Foo Smith as he stretches for the bag.- Photos by James Barringer Coach Mike Lovelace argues a plckoff play against a Mocksville runner. Mocksville players get pumped up for coming to bat. I.I. . Mocksville is looking for Dan Poindexter to build on last year's success - six wins and two saves.Matt Hutchens slides into first as the ball gets away. calel ALL BRANDS V W e H a v e D i s c o u n t e d E v e r y B r a n d U p T o 4 0 % - 5 0 % O F F F o r T h i s S p e c i a l S a l e / O u r P r i c e s B e f o r e Y o u P u r c h a s e Y o u r N e x t N e w F u r n i t u r e a n d S a v e A L o t ! A M R O A D S H O W — Collection— n m C O C H R A N E i B a s s e lf •B ro y h ill MILLENNIUM PLUS MANY OTHER BRANDS Mocksville Takes Opener On Emert’s Game-Ending Homer W hat a way fo r Lance Em ert and the M o ck sville A m erican Legion baseball team to kic k o ff the 2005 season. Em ert cranked a three-run, w a lk-o ff hom e run in the bottom o f the eighth inning Saturday at R ich Park to give the hosts a 10-7 w in over R andolph County. T he ho m e r cam e w ith the score tied, and it enabled M ocks­ v ille to overcom e fo u r errors. F ive D avie H igh players saw ac­ tion, and a ll five contributed to help ease the sting from a frus­ trating 10-14 high-school season. Besides E m ert’s gam e-w inning shot, Zach V ogler had a single and w alk, Foo S m ith was 1 fo r 1 w ith tw o w alks and three runs, B rad C orriher doubled in his only at-bat and John M cD aniel got the w in in relief. " It seemed like w e did every E m e rt M cD a n ie l little th in g that w e could do,” said M ik e Lovelace, w ho began his seventh year as head coach, “ The D avie kid s played fro m behind all year and lost a lo t o f close gam es, and those guys stepped up,” T he game, the first o f tw o fo r M o c k s v ille on S aturday, was scheduled fo r seven innings, but it was tied at 7-7 at the end o f seven. In the last o f the eighth. M att Hutchens reached on an in fie ld error and M cD aniel m oved him w ith a bunt, Randolph Co, inten­ tio nally w alked Vogler to put the force on and bring up Em ert, w ho was hitless. B ut Em ert made up fo r fo u r fruitless at-bats w ith one m em o­ rable cut. O n the second pitch, he h it a clo th e slin e shot that barely clim bed over the le ft-fie ld w all, Em ert enjoyed an outstand­ ing senior season at D avie, h it­ ting .395 and starting at shortstop in all 24 games, but he d id n 't hom er in 84 o ffic ia l trips to the plate, “ H e d id n ’t get it done eariier in the gam e w henever he had opportunities, but it was abso­ lutely sm oked,” Lovelace said, “ H e's the m ost im proved player I'v e seen com e through in the last tw o to three years. H e’s gotten N o t e s & Q u o t e s L e g i o n W ill R id e T h e P o i n d e x t e r M a c iiin e • O n ly s ix tim es in 23 years has M o c k s ­ v ille fa ile d to achieve a w in n in g re cord. T he lo ca l A m e ric a n Le g io n baseball team is lo o k ­ in g fo r a th ird stra ig ht w in n in g season un der C oach M ik e L o ve la ce , and e ve ryth in g starts w ith D a n P o in d e x te r. T h e slugger/ace p itc h e r is a ce rti­ fie d C orvette. La st ye ar he h it .427 - the th ird -h ig h e s t m a rk e ve r - w ith nin e ho m e rs and 4 0 R B Is. O n the m oun d he w en t 6-2 w ith tw o saves, strik in g o u t 5 6 in 57 1/3 inning s. P o in d e xte r, w h o d id n ’t bat b u t pitche d 35 inning s as a Le noir-R hyn e freshm an, is one o f fo u r co lleg e guys w ea ring the M o c k s v ille u n ifo rm . The o th e rs are D a v id B o y le s (W ilk e s C o m m u n ity C o lle g e ), A n d re w M e - C la n n o n (G u ilfo rd ) a n d W e s le y D o u g la s. “ T ho se co lle g e guys are a great nucleus,” L o ve la ce said. L a st ye a r D ou gla s h it .346 in 104 at-bats and B o yle s h it .284 w ith fiv e hom ers. H o w unpre dictable can baseball be? F o o S m ith h it .324 in 102 A B s last year, but o n ly .224 this sp rin g fo r D avie . • N o one has a greater appetite than D o u ­ glas, w h o w en t nine m onths w ith o u t seeing liv e p itc h in g b u t w en t 3 fo r 6 in the firs t tw o gam es. “ H e looks in the best shape since h e ’s been w ith us,” Lo ve la ce said. “ A fte r n o t p la y in g a ll sp rin g , h e ’s sh o w in g som e leadership be­ h in d the pla te .” • M o c k s v ille w as m issing one p la y e r in the firs t three gam es. D u s ty S n o w is a p itch e r fo r W est F orsyth, w h ic h played a th ird -ro u n d p la y o ff gam e Tuesday. S now entered the p la y­ o ffs w ith a .454 ba ttin g average. • M o c k s v ille has the m aking s o f a good p itc h in g staff. Besides P oindexter, the lik e ly starting ro ta tio n includes C o re y M a r tin , the ace fro m F orbush; B ra d C o rrih e r, w h o was strong in his last tw o D avie outings and strong P o in d e x te r again in S u n d a y’s 8-5 loss at M o o re s v ille ; M cC la n n o n , w h o stru ck o u t e igh t in fiv e in ­ nings Saturday: J o h n M c D a n ie l, w h o pitched- three on e-h it innings S aturday; and S now , w h o has b e e n a ro u n d s in c e 2 0 0 2 . L a s t y e a r M cD a n ie l w ent 4-2, S now 3-3 and M cC lann on 3-4. “ W e can g o s ix deep as fa r as s ta rte rs ,” L o v e la c e sa id . “ A n d S n o w ’s g o in g to be one o f o u r key bats, to o .” • M o c k s v ille ’s biggest concern is o ffe n s iv e p o p . P o in d e x te r an d B o y le s are th e o n ly o n e s w ith p ro v e n p o w e r, a lth o u g h L a n c e E m e rt hom ered tw ic e in the firs t three gam es. It w ill also be ha rd to replace N ic k S ie g a -R iz, the o n ly e lig ib le re tu rn e r w h o decided n o t to com e back. H e chose instead to p la y fo r the new W estem F o rsy th team . La st ye ar at lea d o ff, he h it ,325 w ith team high s in stolen bases (1 7 ) and w a lks (25). • E r ik W a lk e r, w h o pitched fo r M o c k s v ille fro m 2 0 0 0 -0 2 , p ic k e d up his 12th save in C h a rio tte ’s 9-7 w in at M e m p h is on M a y 20. T h a t broke the C h a rio tte (3 0 -2 3 ,1 2 -1 7 C p n - ference U S A ) re cord fo r single-season saves. T lie ta ll righ th and er has a team -best 1.86 E R A , and h e ’s tie d fo r fo u rth o n C -U S A ’s sin g le ­ season saves list. • La st year M o c k s v ille used a to rrid streak to fin is h one gam e o u t o f firs t place in the S ou th em D iv is io n . It sw e pt C on cord in the firs t ro u n d o f the p la y o ffs be fo re lo sin g three gam es to one to R ow a n C o u n ty in the S D se m ifin a ls. It w en t 11-5 in the d iv is io n and 19-11 ove ra ll. • M o c k s v ille ’s a ll-tim e record tliro u g h 2004 w as 44 0-3 13. O n ly fo u r team s have fin ish e d b e lo w .5 0 0 .... T he re have been fiv e coaches, and L o ve la ce is second in w ins. H e began his seventh ye ar at 102-83, tra ilin g D a le Ija m e s (1 9 8 9 -9 5 ) b y 73 w ins. M O C K S V IL L E F U R N IT U R E DOWNTOWN M OCKSVILLE, N.C. 7 5 1 - 5 8 1 Z ON THE SQ UARE 7 5 1'5 S X Z Mocksvilie Legion Statistics Record:2 - 1 , 1 0-0 SD A V G .A B R H R B I 2B 3B H R Heath Boyd .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 D avid B oyles .200 10 2 2 3 0 0 0 B rad C orriher .600 5 4 3 2 2 0 0 John D iachenko .000 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 W esley Douglas .333 9 1 3 5 0 I 0 Lance Em ert .385 13 4 5 8 0 t 2 Spencer Hodges .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Zach H ow ard .000 1 0 0 0 0 0 0. M att H utchens .182 11 2 2 0 1 0 0 C orey M artin .100 10 1 1 0 0 0 0 A ndrew M cC lannon .000 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 John M cD aniel 1.000 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 D an Poindexter ■ .600 10 3 6 3 0 1 0 Saxon Pratt 1,000 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Foo S m ith .250 8 4 2 2 1 0 0 Zach V ogler .231 13 4 3 0 1 0 0 T O T A L S .293 99 25 29 23 5 3 2 W -L IP H R E R B B SO E R A Brad C orriher 0-0 4 1 /3 9 4 1 0 2 2,08 Spencer Hodges 0-0 12/3 2 2 ■ 2 1 1 10.80 Jonathon Hutchens 0-0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0,00 T om K u e ll 0-Ó 1 3 2 2 0 0 18.00 C orey M artin 0-1 3 2/3 3 4 • 4 3 4 9,82 A nd rew M cC lannon 1-0 5 7 3 3 2 8 5.40 John M cD aniel 1-0 3 1 0 0 0 5 0,00 D an Poindexter 0-0 3 1/3 8 5 5 2 2 13,50 T O T A L S 2-1 23 34 20 17 8 23 6.65 S T O L E N B A S E S : Boyles, D ouglas, M artin, Poindexter, V ogler W A L K S /H P B : M artin 2, Poindexter 2, S m ith 2, Boyles, Con-iher, M . Hutchens, V o g le r h im self ready to be our everyday shortstop, and that was a big lift fo r our team .” Yet, the guy w ho delivered when M ocksville needed it m ost was D a v id B o yle s. W ith tw o outs, one nm in and M ocksville tra ilin g 3-2, he blooped a single over first lo produce a 4-3 lead. W esley Douglas follo w ed w ith a tw o-run triple to right-center, M o ck sville ’s 6-3 lead d id n ’t last long, but Sm ith singled in the fifth , m oved lo Ihird on the play bccause o f an error and scored on a ground out by Boyles, That gave M ocksville a 7-6 lead, and R andolph Co, tied it ogain in the sixth. Boyles and Douglas had three R B Is each. N ine M ocksville bat­ ters had a hit, but Douglas was the on ly one w ith tw o. M cD aniel had an equally big game, allow ­ ing one hit and no w alks in three innings. H e struck out five. “ A n d th a t’s against a ve ry g o o d te a m ,” L o v e la c e said. “ T h e y had 10 h its p rio r to (M cD a n ie l’s arrival w ith no outs in Ihe sixth).” M ocksville.w as clinging to a 6-5 lead when Spencer H od ges' relieved starter Dan Poindexter. The le fly from Starm ount inher­ ited runners at the com ers, but made the lead stand by inducing back-lo-back pop flies. “ That was a big lift fo r us,” Lovelace said. “ H e picked up where he le ft o ff last sum m er.” Last year P oindexter was a one-m an w recking crew, hittin g .427 w ith nine homers and 40 R B Is and going 6-2 w ith a team - best 3.76 E R A . However, he was out o f sync in Ihe first appearance o f his fourth legion cam paign, g ivin g up eight hits in 3 1/3 in ­ nings. M o ck sville 10, R a n d o lp h C o . 7 IMock ab r h Ы Vogler cf 4 2 1 0 Emert ss 5 2 1 3 Poindexter p-lb 4 0 1 1 Smith if 1 3 I 0 Boyles 2b 3 1 1 3 Douglas c 3 0 2 3 Diachenko c 1- 0 0 0 M. Hutchens 3b 3 1 0 0 Marlin tf 4 0 1 0 Corriher lb 1 I 1 0 Hodges p 1 0 0 0 McDaniel p I 0 1 0 Totals 31 10 10 10 Randolph Co. 102 211 00-7 Mocksville 015 010 0 3 -1 0 2B - Corriher, 3B - Douglas, HR - Emert. SB • Marlin. Mocii IP H R ER BB SO Poindexler 3,1 8 5 5 2 2 Hodges 1,2 2 2 2 1 1 McD, W 3 1 0 0 0 5 4-Run Lead Slips Away r n C o n tin u e d F ro m Page B l M a rtin ’s fastball. He could be one o f M o c k s v ille ’s m ost dy- n a m i c fire b a lle rs in the la s t d e ­ cade, “ M artin did w e ll. H e ju s t m ade that one p itc h ,” Lovelace said, “ He was con­ sistently pop­ p in g 8 7 -9 0 m ph - w ilh a nice slider. H e had Ihe confidence to get a fastball by (B allard), and he turned on it. “ We haven’t had a guy that’s as dom inating as he can be since E rik W a lk e r (a M o c k s v ille pitcher from 2000-02 w ho just set C harlotte’s record fo r saves M a r tin in a season). H e’s a great addi­ tion and w e’re lookin g fo r big things out o f him .” E m ert (2 fo r 4, tw o R B Is) and Poindexter (3 fo r 3, w a lk) did Iheir part in ' the 2-3 spots, but C orriher had the on ly other hit. M o cksville d id n ’t score in the last four innings. M arshall was just loo strong, facing one above Ihe m inim um over three innings. “ W e hit some balls hard - it was just right at them ,” Lovelace said. “ S m ith h it the b a ll hard tw ice and d id n 't have anything to show fo r it.” N otes: P oindexter's perfect night raised his young average to .600. A ll three hits were crisp, a grounder between short and third on a 1-2 cu rve b a ll, a h it that chalked the le ft-fie ld line and a grounder through the m id d le .... M o c k s v ille and M o o re s v ille have exchanged blow s Ihe last tw o years. They sp lit fo u r games last year. M o o re sv ille 8, M o c k s v ille S Mock nb r h Ы Vogler cf 5 1 0 0 Emert If 4 1 2 2 Poindexter 3b 3 1 3 1 Smith c-if 4 0 0 0 Boyles 2b 4 0 0 0 Douglas Ib-c 3 0 0 0 Diochenko c 1 0 0 0 M, Hutchens ss 4 0 0 0 Martin rf'p 4 0 0 0 Corriher p-lb 3 2 1 0 Tolnis 35 5 6 3 Mocksville 002 030 000 -5 Mooresville 100 031 30jt-8 2B - Corriher (3), HR - Emert (2). Mock IP H R ER BB SO Corriher 4.1 9 4 1 0 2 Mnrtin, L 3.2 3 4 4 3 4 Brian Plus can be reached al er5poris@ilavie-enlerprise.com Howell, Howard Key Opening Win For Jr. Legion Baseball T he M o c k s v ille Ju n io r L e ­ gio n baseball team w ent 29-8 tw o years ago and 2 7 -1 4 last year. Its th ird season got o ff to a another prom ising start Sunday a t R ic h P a rk, w h e re C oa ch Charles K urfees’ team staved o ff C h e rry ville 6-5. “ W e beat a good team ,” he said. “ T h e y 're g o in g to be a team to deal w ith w hen the pla y­ o ffs ro ll around.” M o ck sville sent an im m e d i­ ate m essage b y grabbing a 3-1 lead in the bottom o f the first. Z ach H o w a rd and Josh E de r provided hits and Justin T ho m p­ son contributed a sac fly. M ocks­ v ille increased the m argin to 5- 1 in the sccond as B o yd and H o w a rd fo llo w e d C lin t H o w e ll’s single w ilh R B I hits. H o w e ll singled again and scored on C o lb y S eaford's sin g le as M o ck sville regained a four-run lead (6-2) in the fourth. M ocksville didn’t score again in the nine-inning contest, bu l il d id n ’t m atte r as S eaford and C hris Brogdon contained a m en­ acing C h e rryville lineup. “ You can’t ask anybody lo do Legion Roundup M o c k s v ille 10, R a n d o lp h C o. 7 W ilh Ihe score tie d in the eighth, Lance Em ert hits a three- run, w a lk -o ff hom er. R eliever John M c D a n ie l pitches three scoreless innings fo r the w in. M o ck sville 10, M o o re sville 5 A nd rew M cC lannon strikes out eight in five innings. Em ert gels tw o hits and three R B Is as M o cksville never trails. M o o re sville 8, M o ck sville 5 M o ck sville squanders a 5-1 lead, lo sin g on a tie bre aking , three-run hom er in Ihe seventh. D an Poindexter goes 3 fo r 3 and E m ert hom ers fo r Ihe second tim e in three games. U p co m in g opponents; M ay 25 Le xington (hom e), M a y 27 W inston-Salem (aw ay). M ay 30 W inston-Salem (hom e), M ay 31 M o o re s v ille (a w a y ), June 1 Stanly C ounty (hom e). H o w a rd H o w e ll any better than they d id ,” K u r- fees said. C h e rry ville turned the tide w ith single tuns in Ihe fifth , sixth and seventh, m aking il 6-5, and il put runners at second and Ihird w ilh one out in the eighth. A sac fly lies Ihe game and a hit lik e ly beats M o cksville , but Josh Eder made Ihe key defensive play by com ing in, leaving his feel and snaring a sinking liner. A s a re­ s u lt, C h e rry v ille ’s ly in g run never cam e hom e to roost. S eaford earned the w in by pitch in g six innings, and B rog­ don g o l the save b y h o ld in g C h e n yville to oine run in three innings. A fte rw ard, ihere were sm iles a ll a ro u n d as ^ o c k s v ille ^ jum pstSrted w hat it hopes lo be a Ihird successful season in as m any years. “ W e le ft'Ih e bases loaded three lim es, but w e had a lo t o f guys sw inging the bat that d id n ’t sw ing it m uch in the sp ring,” Kurfees said. “ W e have 22 pla y­ ers and we tried to get e ve iy- • body in .” Notes: This was a non-league (gam e. ... M o c k s v ille plays at Southern A lam ance on M a y 25 al 7, a doubleheader at M oores­ v ille M a y 29 at 3 and at hom e to Asheboro on M ay 31 at 7. *Wbere tbe batrels of 12-gauges blow M ake yourself at home at Yadkin County's pt'emiere famlly-fun shooting facility. Friendship Sporting Clays: • All ages and skill levels • 14 shooting stations • 28 different challenging targets • V\/obble trap pyramid shooting skills challenge • Meeting facility for private and corporate events • Over 150 acres of refreshing scenic landscape Non-meinber rates (walk in any time): • $20.00 for fifty targets • $ 3 5 .0 0 for one hundred targets • Lessons and equipment rental available • Group rates available (please call for more Info.) Reservations requested for groups of 8 or more. Open Wednesday to Saturday 8:00am to 6:00pm & Sunday from 1:00pm to 6:00pm. (336 ) 6 9 9 -8 6 9 4 4805 Siloam Road • East Bend, North Carolina 27018 www.friendshipsportingclays.com I i ¡1 B8 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 A B r o o k ie Lewis Swicegood shows his dad Kyle a brool< trout caught on May, 14 at Stone Mountain State Parl<. 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All prices after rebate + 379 doc fee, 24 month lease 3,000 down, some prices include owner loyalty, discounts apply to vehicles leased with cfc WWW.TRIADDODGE.COM 680 PETERS CREEK PKWY, WINSTON SALEM 336-723-0504 Credit Problems-No Problem 24HR Help Line 1-800-694-7379 it’s Summer Camp Time Rec Department T iie M ocl<sville-Davie Recre­ ation Departm ent w ill iio ld seven camps over lale M ay, June and July. • Basi<etbali - boys anti giris. M ay 3 1-June 3. Register by M ay 25. Cost $40. R ising tiiird -sixtii graders. B rock G ym 4-6 p.m . Instru ctors: M ilce A b slie r and Brent W ail. • Baseball - June 20-23, Reg­ ister by June 15. Cost $60. Ages 7-14. R ich Park from 10 n.m .- 12:30 p.m . Instructors: D a vic coaches M ike Herndon and Todd Bum garner, W est Stokes’ K irk G o o d so n , N o rth D a v id s o n ’s B obby B ye rly and college play­ ers. • S oftball - June 20-23. Reg­ ister by June 15. Cost $40. Sec­ ond-eighth graders; R ich Park from 10 a.m .-noon. Instructors: Janice Jackson and C hris C a lli­ son. • W restling - July 18-21 from 4-5:30 p.m . R egister by July 14. Cost $40, K -6 grades. Instruc­ tors; H ow ard R iddle and Jamey H o lt, • Soccer - August 1 -4 from 6- 8 p.m . at Pinebrook. R egister by July 26. Cost $40. K -6 grades. Instructor: H ugh Lee. •V o lle yb a ll-A u g u st 1-4 from 10 a.m .-noon at B ro c k G ym . Register by July 26. C ost $40. R ising third-eighth graders. In ­ structor: T rish K ing. • Tennis - June 6-10 and June 27-July 1 at South D avie, Cost $30 per w eek. Sign up fo r one or tw o weeks. Beginners fro m 9- 10:15 a.rn. D eadline is one week before cam p. In stru cto r: Tina Arey. DHS Basketball • The D avie H igh girls basket­ ball cam p - fo r all grades - w ill be June 6-9. O n June 9 a ll cam p­ ers w ill attend from 9 a.m .-noon fo r contests, games and awards. The June 6-8 m orning session from 9 a.m .-noon is fo r grades 1 -8, and the evening session from 1-4 p.m . is fo r grades 9-12. The cost is $50. • The D avie boys basketball program w ill hold a m ini-team cam p fo r rising n in tli and 10th graders on June 3 ,4 and 6 from 1 -4 p.m . The cost is $70, w hich includes instru ctio n, insurance and T-shirt. • D avie w ill have boys bas­ ketball camps on June 3-4, June 13-15 and June 21-25. June 3-4 is a p a re n t/ch ild cam p. The cost is $50 fo r parent and child and $15 fo r each addi­ tional child. The cam p w ill in ­ clude instruction on how to w ork w ith your ch ild ; games, contests and prizes; a pizza dinner on F ri­ day night; and continental break­ fast on Saturday. June 13-15 is a shoptlng and player developm ent cam p. The cost is $50. The cam p w ill in ­ clude s k ills developm ent ses­ sions w ith Coach M ike Absher, an appearance b y L e n o ir Rhyne C ollege coach John Lentz, shoot­ ing technique and em phasis on individual player developm ent. June 21-25 is a day cam p that costs $90. The cam p w ill include d a ily le ctu re s w ith th e W at Eagles staff, leam ing basic offen­ sive and defensive fundam entals, leam ing rules and term inology, games and prizes, and a cham pi­ onship game on Saturday. Old School Davie Sports News From May 1989 • M att M ario n o f D avie’s var­ sity baseball team h it a three-m n hom er to give the W ar Eagles a 3-2 w in over visitin g W est For­ syth. The w in secured D avie’s third straight C entral Piedm ont Conference title on a day when a W est w in w ould have created a four-w ay tie fo r first place. M ario n cleared the left-cen- ter w a ll in the fifth inning. The count was 3-2, there were tw o outs and he fo u g h t o ff a lo w curve before hom ering fo r the seventh tim e on the season. Ear­ lie r in the fifth , A lex N a il singled and, after tw o strikeouts, M ike M cD a n ie l was h it by a p itch. D enny K ey pitched tw o innings fo r the save. • In the first round o f the state p la y o ffs , R ic h a rd B o w le s pitched a n o -h itte r as D avie 's va rsity baseball team blanked C hariotte O lym pic 8-0. Bow les fielded a com ebacker fo r the f i­ nal out, then was drenched over the head by a bucket o f ice w a­ ter. M arion had tw o hits, w hile Bobby Bow ers had three R B Is. • South D avie’s baseball team beat Southeastem Stokes 5-3 in eight innings to break a firs t- place tie w ith SE Stokes and give Coach G rim es P arker’s Tigers th e co n fe re n c e title . In the eigh th, A n d y E verhart reached on an e rro r, Jason M c C ra y singled and Jason G arw ood and R andy B rew er knocked in one run each w ilh singles. M cC ray sparked a ra lly from a 3-1 d e ficit w ith a hom e run, and G arw ood w ent 5 fo r 5. • A lecia Johnson and Debbie Evans o f D avie’s track-and-field team qu alified fo r the state meet by fin ish in g third in the region- als in the long ju m p and discus, respectively. • D a v ie ’s JV baseball team suffered its o n ly loss in the last game, 3-1 at West Forsyth. Rusty Palm er gave up a tw o-ran hom er in the first, but w ent on to pilch a tw o-hitter. D avie finished 14-1 overall and 10 -1 in the C P C . Its top h it­ ters on the season were B rian B asham (.5 0 0 ), Jo ey S loan (.457) and Lee L in v ille (.444). Tony Renegar w ent 8-0 on the m ound. • In the CPC cham pionship m eet, Robbie W elch led D avie’s g o lf team w ith a 77. The other scores were Jason Eads’ 79, A lex M cG uire’s 84, B rian B aker’s 85, Jim m y Sum m ers’ 86 and D aniel W ard’s 90, Briefs, Dates Hole-In-One Ken M ille r o f Salisbury aced the second hole at P udding Ridge on M ay 18. W ith the hole playing 124 yards. M ille r used a pitching wedge fo r his first hole-in-one. M ille r was playing w ith Jim Runvan. Tennis League ■ The M ocksville -D avie Recreation Departm ent is offering a ju n ­ io r tennis league, w hich is designed to give players the opportunity to play tennis in a relaxed atm osphere. Grades: rising 7th- 10th. Cost; $15. Location; South D avie M id d le School. Dates; June 2 2 ,2 3 ,2 7 , 2 9 ,Ju ly 6 ,1 1 ,1 3 ,1 8 . G iris and guys w ill play each other. A tourna­ m ent w ill be played at the end o f the season. Dancing Boots The D avie D ancing B oot cam p is June 20-23 fro m 6-8 p.m . fo r kindergarten through eighth grade. The cost is $30 fo r preregistered dancers (deadline June 17) and $35 on June 20. You can fin d signup form s at each school. F or m ore inform ation, call C olleen Pitts at 751-5905 extension 762. Football Camp Coach D oug lllin g ’s D avie football cam p - fo r ages 7-14 - w ill take place M ay 31 and June 1-2 at D avie. R egistration is from 8- 8:30 a.m , on M ay 31. The cam p w ill m n each day from 8:30-11:30 a.m . The cost is $60. For m ore inform ation, call Illin g at w o rk at 751-5905 extinsion 423 o r at hom e at 751-7204, A sum m er a t Sylvan can m ake all th e difference in tine fa ll.” • Id e n tify y o u r c h ild 's s p e c ific needs w ith a s k ills assessm ent • G e t in d iv id u a l a tte n tio n a n d p e rso n a lize d te a c h in g • Le arn fro m h ig h ly tra in e d a n d c e rtifie d te a ch e rs • B e n e fit fro m fle xible ho urs th a t fit y o u r b u qr schedule Summer is a great time to help your child prepare for fall. Call now. 1/2 PRICE SYLVAN SKILLS ASSESSMENT " Ii Jii«i lirin^ (hit Ili Hiur H ln-iliili'ii 4|>{Miiiiit)U'ni ¡ (o w\v 50‘ifi ni) liti- Syluii -SUtli A»imnK n|. I 113 Marketplace Drive ! Mocksville, NC* (336) 753-010 0 j 4itm (u»«nnw> | ( 3 3 6 ) 7 5 3 - 0 1 0 0 S Y L V A N L E A R N IN G C E N T E R ' ¿earnlr^ -fee/s ¿oocC www.educate.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - B9 Spotlight on Business iHelping l-iands Adult Services W hat’s In a name? At Helping Hands Adult Ser­ vices, the answer Is simple. Everything, Open since April 1993, Help­ ing Hands Adult Services pro­ vides an affordable alternative to nursing homes and sitters. It also oHers a place of comtorl which feels like a hom e-aw ay-from - home for your loved one. Director W anda Matthews, a registered CNA, cares deeply about making sure the care and surroundings are the best they can be. She also explains why this Is such a needed and valu­ able service for the area. “I worked for home health care and hospice for 10 years and left to pursue this endeavor because I saw such a need," she says. 'This type of care just wasn’t be­ ing provided around here." Helping Hands Adull Services ■ Is part of the United W ay Agency and Is a private, non-profit resi­ dential and adult day care facil­ ity. Goal Is to promote Inde­ pendence and active lifestyle "We have 12 employees and our day care Is state certified," she Is quick to note. "We also have a board of directors that keeps up with the everything that’s going on here. "Our main goal for our seniors is to promote Independence and for them to rem ain active. In­ volved and healthy.” “W e have 16 beds for the resi­ dents who can live on the pre­ mises," she continues. 'There Is 24-hour supen/lslon and all meals are provided, along with houses keeping and the dispensing of medication. W e also have adult day care wllh scheduled activi­ ties." Adults must be 18 years and older to qualify to come. Right now W anda says that the major- I'ty of their folks are seniors. Bingo, arts and crafts, social outings áre offered Both the residents and day care folks can enjoy outings, bingo and arts and crafts, just to nam e a few of the many fun ac- Helplng Hands Adult Services In Yadkinville promotes Independence and active lifestyles for seniors. tlvlties that W anda and her staff provide. "We also have a social day care which everyone enjoys. W e do things like go on shopping trips, do some gardening and go out to lunch," Overnight Respite helps families who are caregivers Another one of Ihe wonderful services that Helping Hands Adult Sen/ices provides Is called over­ night respite, ‘This Is where families - who are caregivers 24 hours a day, seven days a week - can bring In their loved one to stay several nights to a few weeks to give fam­ ily members a break In caring for their relative," W anda says, “W e are very flexible to whatever the needs of the families are," Located across from Hoots Memorial Hospital In Yadkinville Come by and visit W anda and the staff at 633 W est l^aln Street In Yadkinville, They will be happy to sit down and discuss your In­ dividual needs. Helping Hands Adult Services Is located across from Hoots M e­ morial Hospital, W anda can be reached at (336) 679-7052. 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Mobile Phone 9 7 8 - 2 2 9 9 Bio - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005Admirers Pay Tribute To Joe Boyette Continued From Page Bl The rec threw a ceremonial luncheon on Boyette’s final day al the Brock, and dozens of folks dropped in to pay tribute to his tre­ m endous tenure o f providing leagues for children and adults. “H e’s done more good for the children in Davie County than anybody I know of, and w e’re going to sorely miss him ," said Hank Van Hoy, who had three boys com e up through the rec leagues. “ Joe has touched the lives of many o f our youngest citizens, and m ade a lasting impression upon their lives," said Terry Bral­ ley, the county manager who was tow n m anager fo r m ost o f Boyette’s 21 years. “I do not re­ call ever receiving a negative call about Joe during his time here." "H e ’s one o f the most out­ standing people I know in this county - bar none," said Keith W hitaker, a Davie High athletic director who has two daughters in sports, “Any time I had to deal with him I l^ew it was going to be a fair shot and somebody’s working hard for you. I can’t think of any school and rec that work together better than wc worked with him and he worked with us. We shore facilities and he just did what’s best for the kids. People like Joe make it easy, 1 come from Cabarrus County w here they didn’t work with you. Here, there never was an issue; so w e’re go­ ing to miss him." Afterthe 1979 Forbush gradu­ ate completed his education and baseball coreer at W ingate C ol­ lege, M ocksville-D avie Recre­ ation Director M ike Gam er hired Doyette in January o f 1984. He found the right man to take over a program that had four leagues. He found the right man to build the soccer and basketball youth leagues to 400-500 players in each. W hen Boyette arrived, there was a four-team soccer league with all ages clumped together. two basketball divisions (grades 4-6 and 7-9),T-ball and slow-pitch softball for teenage girls. That was it. TWenty-one years later, there’s youth soccer and adult coed soft­ ball in the fall, and winter offers youth wrestling, five age divisions in youth basketball, K -2 basket­ ball and church basketball for adults. Spring offers open" and church sohball for adults, T-ball, peewee baseball, little sluggers baseball, girls fast-pitch softball and volleyball ieagues for grades 3-8. And in the summer there’s camps, camps and more comps, a ju n io r tennis league and a women’s tennis league. W hile Boyette maintained his modesty on the way out the door, others are happy to tell his story. “W e’ve done a clinic every year in January and February for K -2." Absher said. “He opened that up for me and m y (high- school) players lo do, which I thought was exceptional, a great way to start working with kids at a young age. In summer camp he always gave me the opportunity lo work there, He created an at­ mosphere that you loved working in. He gave us an opportunity to promote our program through his programs.” "W hen we moved soccer to Pinebrook. it was just un old. rutty field,” Henderson said. "Soon a^ ter thal the county came together with Ihe school system, and that’s a beautiful facility now. I ’ve ref­ ereed all over W estern North Carolina, and for thal size you won’t find a better field. He re­ ally knows how to build a pro­ gram up. and everything that he works around alwoys seems to flourish. H e’ll be lough lo re­ place.” “Anybody in Davie County would be very smart to follow Joe Boyette’s lead," W hitaker soid. "When il comes lo how to run o little league program, he!s very simple; H e’s going to do it the right way. he’s going to do il his way and you hove no problems with that because it’s fair to the kids that ploy and anybody that’s involved in it.” Among Boyette’s qualities was finding jobs for teenagers. If you needed part-time wofk, he would find something for you to do, whether it was dragging Ihe field and painting foul lines, taking up money at the door, keeping score, officiating or running the conces­ sion stand. "H e has given many teenagers their first job,” Prevette said. "You doii’t know how many kids he’s kept out of trouble, that he pul to work and kept them playing ball. One or two of them would prob­ ably be in prison if it wosn’l for Joe. A lot of kids in this counly look up to Joe Boyette. H e’ll pot them on the back and say some­ thing to them, and you can see that it lights them up.” Boyette’s youth leagues were never about wins and losses. They were never about who scored the most or who finished first, They were always about his love for kids. His integrity set'the tone for the whole program. Just about everyone would tell you that. Everyone, that is, except Boyelle. “He never recognized you for winning the league,” Prevette said. "The sportsmanship oward is whal he gave oiit. ond that’s what’s on the wall. You could go undefeated and you didn’t gel any recognition, but you did if you were Ihe sportsmanship winner.”. Putting together balanced leagues is only a piece o f Boyette’s legacy. He does things that people never see. like form­ ing a strong team o f officials and grooming them from the boitom lo the high-school level. No one is more'supportive during or af­ ter a tough game. "H e always bocks the o ffi­ cials,” Henderson soid. “If there is some kind of dispute or some­ thing. he jumps right in the middle of it. W hen an official makes a . call, that’s the call and that’s the end of it. He likes to bring kids along in officiating. I ’ve worked for 0 lot o f different booking agents and some of them don’t (stand by you). Some o f them try to please everybody, and you just can’t please everybody. On every call you moke, there’s always go­ ing to be somebody happy, and somebody mad. Tlial’s the nature of the thing. There’s no way you can keep everybody happy, and Joe stands behind you and encour­ ages you. H e’s an official himself and he knows what you’re going through. “ I ’ve been to some rough places. I ’ve been escorted put be­ fore. Joe just doesn’t pul up wilh il. It’s always a real pleasure ex­ perience to go to Pinebrook. Ev­ erything is generally so smooth, h’s really kind of a joy.” Some ^ o p le have a genius for business or computers. Boyette has a genius for running youth leogues. Prevette gets emotional when he looks ot Dovie County’s loss and Yadkin County’s gain. “W e’re going to deeply miss that man," he said. “The first time I met Joe, I didn’t like him. But I got to know him . he’s like a brother to me now. and it broke my heart when he told me. We arc so fortunate as a rural county to have all the different sport activi­ ties available for our children. I hated to.call (daughter) Ashlee at Chapel H ill and tell her Joe wasn't going to be there. She cried when I told her. I love him to death and always w ill," Note: As o f last week. Gamer had 20 applicants for Boyette's void. Ho said he’ll name the new A D by July 1. “It’ll be tough shoes to fill, but w e’ve got some good candidates," Gam er said. "I ap­ preciate all Joe’s done. Hopefully Yadkin County w ill let him 'do whal he’s done here and develop a program that he can be proud of.” Brian Pills can be reached at crsporls@davie-enterpnse.com Up to two rooms C able TV doesn't have to be expensive. 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Indoor Lazy Pool • Oii-siic Convenience Slow • Slute-of-ihe-Art Fiincsa Ccmcr • Game Room •Rales Mibjcct tijchangc •Discwiws subjett to uviiilabiliiy -.„ TollFree (800) 895-3721 Ш or (843) 916-4700mvw.comclohn'sçrtxom D avie P to p le DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,200S - Cl A G o o d S t a r t D H S G r a d u a t e s P a y H o m a g e T o R e t ir in g T e a c iie r By Dwight Sparks Davie County Enterprise-Record Before they graduated last week, 10 Davie Higli seniors paid homage to their kindergarten teacher — the one who got' thein started 13 years ago. ' They sliowed up Thursday moming at Shady Grove Elemen­ tary School to visit Marilyn Ellis and her current — and final — crop of kindergartners. She retires this week. The visit took her by surprise. Mouth agape, she found herself in a mix of 2005 children and her 1993 class. “You have made an old woman happy,” she said. The seniors wore name tags around their necks — much like they did on their first day in kin­ dergarten. "This is unbelievable,” Mrs. Ellis said. “I wish you all the suc­ cess in the world. Make good choices. The world is yours. You made good choices when you were here.” Then she turned to her 5- and 6-year-olds: “Boys and girls, you’re going to grow up one day and be like this.” One of fhe seniors, K elly Mitchell, had fond memories of her first teacher. “She was won­ derful — great with kids. She gave us a good start.” O thers making the trek in­ cluded Jordan Grim es, Corey Doub, Tanner M anship, Sarah Frazier, D .J. Jester, A shley Cornatzer, Jennifer Vogler, Jake Hartman and Andrew Allen. Her teacher assistant from that year, Deitre Junker, also cam e,’ and grade mother Susan Mitchell. Oi\e by one, she led the seniors through another round of show- and-tell, having them all tell their future plans. The current crop of kindergarteners took it all in with wide eyes. With some prom pting, they wore Carolina blue that day be­ cause of Mrs. Ellis' devotion to the Tarheels. It was a struggle for some. “Most of them are for Wake Forest,” she said. . , ■. Mrs. Ellis has now closed her 36th year teaching, seeing lots of changes along the way. “When I first started teaching there was no kindergarten in pub-, lie school,” she recalled. North Carolina implemented the kinder­ garten program in 1974, and she shifted from first grade to kinder­ garten in 1976— when she came to Shady Grove. “I love it. I love teaching. I love kids,” she said. She welcomed hör visitors last week as the best way to cap a ca­ reer. “That is what teaching is about. It’s the children. I felt very loved. The best way to end a career is to have your seniors come back to visit. I felt so in love with those kids all over again. It was a spe­ cial group.” Marilyn Ellis recognizes her kindergarten class from 13 years ago, now Davie High School graduates, from left; seated - Corey Doub, Jake Hartman, Jennifer Vogler, Jordan Grimes; and kneeling - Kelly Mitchell, Andrew Allen, Tanner Manship, Sarah Frazier, Ashiey Cornatzer and D.J. Jester. Former assistant Deitre Junker Jordan Grimes re-enacts a show-and-teil moment from 13 years ago. hugs Mrs. Ellis.- P h o to s b y R o b in F e r g u s s o n г ^ Ы 'Ш т -г :' г П , ivlt I ' ''Vf( (f-'í'í- >J V Current class members who watched their older counterparts included Chad Minor with Mrs. Ellis, and, from ieft: front - Luke Pratapas, Savannah Everette, Kennedy Larrimore; and back - Adam Gallagher, Tyler Osborne and McKay Chamberlain. i ■ , C2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,200S B a i t y - M y r i c k E n g a g e m e n t A n n o u n c e d M r. and M rs. Kenneth Baity o f M ocksville announce the engage­ ment o f their son, Daniel Baity, to Sherry M yrick o f Salisbury. The groom -lo-be is a 1996 graduate o f Davie High and is em­ ployed by Freightliner. The bride-elect is Ihe daughter o f M r. and M rs. Robert M yrick and is a 2001 graduate of West Rowan High School. She is em­ ployed by Davie Counly Large Anim al Hospital. The wedding is to be held on July 2 at Eaton's B ^ tis t Church, the couple w ill reside in M ocksville. Yep...They’re G olf Cars Models & Styles To Fit Your Use National Golf Cars 1320 Litton Drive • Salisbury, NC 11 mile heliind the Highway Patrol Headquarters) 7 0 4 - 8 S S - 3 2 0 0 M y e r s - H i n s h a w E n g a g e m e n t A n n o u n c e d Debby and Doug M yers o f D ublin, Ohio announce the engage­ m ent o f their daughter, Lindsay Renee, to K evin M ichael Hinshaw, son o f Jean and M ike Hinshaw o f M ocksville. The bride-to-be graduated from Dublin High School in 1995 and eamed a bachelor’s degree from M iam i University in 1999. She is a hospital sales specialist for Schering-Plough Pharmaceuticals. H er fiance received a degree in business administration from the Kenan-Fiagler Business School at the University of North Carolina. He is employed at Woodbridge Furniture o f High Point. The wedding w ill lake place in June at St. Brigid o f Kildare Catho­ lic Church in Dublin. Come and enjoy the fun at the w h e r e G o d i s a t i h e c e n i e r a n d t h e l o v e n e v e r e n d s . 5e a part of the adventure at the Circle C Ranch. Vacation Bible School at Advance United Methodist Citurch, May 31 to |une 4, from 9am until 12 Noon. Come and ask, seek and knock on Ihe door to a deeper relationship wilh Cod. Each adventure Is filled with a powerful Bible story and fun crafts, games and music, and much more. Lasso some fun with your friends at the Circle G Ranchi For information call 336-998-7750. :________________Before and After Childcare Available M i l l e r - C r a n f i l l E n g a g e m e n t A n n o u n c e d R ick and Debbie M iller o f Advance announce the engagement o f their daughter, Am anda Lee M ille r o f Advance to Darren Spen­ cer Cranfill o f Clem mons, the son o f O lin and Diane C ranfill of Advance. The bride-elect is a 1995 graduate o f Gospel Light Baptist and in 1999 eamed a bachelor’s degree in composite science from Bob Jones University. She is a real estate broker with Coldw ell Banker Triad Realtors in Advance. The groom -to-be is a graduate of West Forsyth High School. He eamed a bachelor’s degree in business administration from Elon College in 1991, and in 1994 eamed a juris doctor degree from the W ake Forest University School o f Law . H e is in private law prac­ tice in Clemmons. The wedding is planned for June 11 at M ocks United M ethodist' Church in Advance. C l u b T o H e a r S u s a n J a c k s o n Susan Jackson o f Lew isville w ill present a program on “Sum ­ m er Creations" to the Mocksville Garden Club on Thursday, June 2 at the M ocksville Library, fol­ lowing the serving o f refresh­ ments at 7 p.m. The 2005-2006 elected offic­ ers w ill be installed after the pro­ gram. Vishors are welcome. M A S o m c P i c n i c MolVDAY, M ay 3 0 t h - S aturday , Juive 4 th a t t h e M a s o n i c P i c n i c G r o u n d s , C l e m e n t G r o v e • j u s t o f f N o r t h M a i n S t r e e t , M o c k s v i l l e Rides & Midway Open 6pm -11 pm nightly PiCMC D a y isThursday, Jui\iE 2 T h e p u b lic is in v ite d to b r in g y o u r w e ll- f ille d b a s k e ts a n d jo i n u s f o r o u r t r a d it io n a l c o m m u n ity p ic n ic . (Food should be on tables and ready to serve by 12 Noon) Thursday’s Program begins at 11:00 am Featured Speaker Dr. Robert Eisner at appx. 11:15 am Lunch will be at appx. 12:00 Noon. T hursday’s F eatured Speaker Dr. Robert Eisner A.ssistant Professor at Wake Forest University School o f Medicine and an internationally recognized expert in N u tritio n in A lzheim er’s disease and A lzheim er’s diagnosis L IV E E N F E R T A IN M E N T E A C H N IG H T !! Monday, May 30 at 8:00 PM.......................................The Tomm Doollee Band 'Riesday, May 31 at 8:00 PM................................................The Craft Brothers Wednesday, June 1 at 8:00 PM...............................................Barry Rentz, D.J. Thursday, June 2 at 8:00 PM................................Mel Jones and Bag of Bones Friday, June 3 at 8:00 PM......................................Southern Gospel Ministries A ll N e w R id e s a n d A ttra o tio n s ! Midway by: Snnokey Mountain Amusements, inc. Please come out an d support this 125 year old D avie C ounty tradition benefitting the M asonic C hildren’s H om e in O ^o rd , N C a n d the M asonic Eastern S tar H om e in Greensboro, N C Si'ONSoRED in- m t: M asonic Lodges of Advance it? 10, Fakminoton »265 & Mocksville »134 The C ra ft Brothers Everyone is invite«! Tiiursday for the ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT PICNIC LUNCH $6.00 /|№rSOn A n audition w ill be held for M issoula C hildren's Theatre production o f The Jungle Book on M onday, June 13, at I p.m. at the B rock Perform ing Arts Center. Those auditioning should ar­ rive at 12;30and plan to stay un­ til 5:30 p.m . Cast members w ill be asked to stay fo r a rehearsal im m ediately following the audi­ tion. Those that are not in re­ hearsal are invited to participate in enrichment activities provided by the Davie County Arts Coun­ cil. Am ong the roles to be cast are; M ow gH (the man-cub), his friends Bagheera (the panther) and A kela (the leader o f the pack), the entire w o lf fam ily, Shere Khan (the tiger) w ith his side-kick Tabaqui (the jackal). Nag and Nagaina (the cobras), D arzee (the bird), H athi (the John Harrison Klger Tbdd and Amy Klger joy­ fully announce the birth of their son, John Harrison Klger, born on Monday, Feb­ ruary 28,2005 at 9:55 a.m. at Forsyth Medical Center, He weighed 8 pounds 11.5 ounces, and was 21 and 1/2 Inches long. The baby’s maternal grandparents are Bob and Doris Ledbetter of Advance. Paternal grandparents are Bob and Patsy Byerly of Lex­ ington, North Carolina, m o w FAM ILY ST E A K H O U SE DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - C3 Monday & Wednesday 4 p.m. to Closing S irlo in T ip s $ ¿ 9 9 1580 Yadkinvilie Rd. * Mocksville • 336-751-0436 For Franchise Information call 1-800-244-1314 or wvw.prlme8lrloln.com A u t k e n t i o J a p a n e s e C u is in e D in e -in o r T a ke -o u t 678 W ilke sb oro St., M o ck sv llie 336-753-6867 Fax: 336-753-6847 In Fortner Potmans Location B usiness H o u rs Sunday - Thursday 11:00am - 9:00pm Friday - Saturday 11:00am - 10:00pra P icku p W indow Available S e a m o n C o u p le C elebrates 60th Ernest and Jean Forest Seamon o f Davie Academ y Road, M ocks­ ville, celebrated thier 60th wedding anniversary in Nolensville, Tenn. at the home of their son, Jonathan. They were married on M ay 9, 1945, one year following their high school graduation from Cool Spring H igh School. This year’s celebration began on M other’s D ay as sons Jonathan and M ichael and their fam ilies along w ith other guests enjoyed M other’s D ay and an anniversary lunch as Om ikoshl in Nashville. The Seamons w ill leave from Nashville to go on a week-long Carib­ bean cruise w ith Charles and Dorothy M aberry o f O ak Ridge, Tenn. (Barbara’s parents). Their three sons are M ichael (Karen), Jonathan (Barbara) and P atrick (B o nnie). M ic h ael lives in H ig h P oint, Jonathan in Nolensville, Tenn. and Patrick in Palm Bay, Fla. They have nine grandchildren: Katherine M orrow (Lee), M ary Jean, TV, Hannah, Justin, Benjam in, Bethany, Bryant and Brittany. A great-grandchild is due to arrive later this month. ChUrJren’s Theater Workshop, AurJitions Start On Ju n e 1 3 'epUwement •FREE LOW-E, windows must bs ordorsd by Mny 31,2005 B U IU IS IN GKEMOOeLINÔ, Ít-C ’ Sincâ 1960 / M ynca, N.C. 336^998-2140 (íi'e a t C o v e r a g e S ta r ts w ith B lu e B I u c A d v a n t a g e ' A ffo rd a b le , Q u a lity H e a lt h In s u r a n c e I 'i If you don't have access to health coverage through an employer, or Ifyou )ustneed heitli coverage for family members, Blue Advantage Is the pcogtam that gives you flexibility, convenience and options lo fit your budget and your lifestyle. Johnson Insurance Services, Inc. John Wood (336) 751-6281 )woodai27markotplnce,com Plan A: • |1 5 doctor visits • $10 generic prescriptions • No lifetime maximum on benefits Plan B; • i25 doctorvlslls • $10 generic prescriptions after $200 deductible • $5 million maximum In lifetime benefits liltic C J (O.S lí lt ic S liií ld (»I N d i l i i ( !iii ( ilit u i Conuci yo>j HvM Creit ind e< No>*t Cvalin« igtni ter .»«n *nd kvthw dtikJi elwrfu*oni ir«i |.rmt »»»* th* pel<<y miy b« in to»M An. ind.f>«fMi*nt I««««* ol th. >lw* CfMI »frf Ik4 AiMOKcn • çl *• CroH№dl)w.{h«ldAit9<il«on $M S#>M«4mi(koMK« Ng* Got« *nd Sl<.ld An»a№er< 11/tM master elephant), R ikki-T ikk i- Tavi (the mongoose), K aa (the rock-python), Buck (a buck) and o f course the M onkey-People. Students grades K -1 2 are en­ couraged to audition. N o ad­ vance preparation is necessary. Assistant directors w ill be cast to assist with the technical as­ pects o f the production. M issoula Children's Theatre (M C T ) touring productions are complete w ith costumes, scen­ ery, props and makeup. TTie Jungle Book w ill be pre­ sented on Saturday, June 18 at 3 p.m. and 7 p.m . at The Brock Perform ing Arts Center, 622 N . M ain St., downtown Mocksville. The theatre residency in M ocks­ ville is sponsored by The Davie County Arts Council. For m ore inform ation, call 751-3000 or check the website www.daviearts.org. T h i s is t h e H i g h - s p e e d n t e r n e t o f f e r y o u ' v e b e e n v y a it in g a n d w a i t i n g a n d y v a it in g fo r. N e w lo w e r price. G u aran teed fo r one year. Mike and Vanessa Lankford announce the birth of their son, Bei^amln Couper Lankford, at 4:22 p.m. May 4, 2005 at Forsyth Hospital. He weighed 7 lbs. 4 oz. and was 19.5 inches long. Maternal grandparents are Neal and Judy Medlnger of Moncks Corner, S.C. and Jean Medlnger of Salisbury. Pater­ nal grandparents are James and Jean Lankford of Cooi­ eemee. He Joins a brother, Tyler Medlnger. 1. $29.99 a month fo ri year. Taxes and surchargos apply. Ona-yoar term agroement requlrod. Ahor ono year, pay S34.99 a month. SSO online rebale covers $49.99 activation foe. S p r in t Now you can snioy High-speed Internet at a price that was worth the wait. Sprint high-speed Internet with Earthlink* means always-on access at a low monthly price that won't lump up after three or six months. Use it to shop, email, get news and more at speeds much faster than dial-up. All with the security of 24/7 technical support and a suite of froe blocking and protection tools. Sprint local customers get it all for just $29.99 a month whan you combine it with other qualifying Sprint services. Cali 1-800-Sprint-3. Click sprlnt.com/liigli-speed. Service nol available In all areas. Monthly rale offer Is good for new High-speed Inlemal residential customer only end applies to up to 1.5 Mbps speed service. Nol valid with any additional olfsrs or discounts. Oilers are sut^ect to cliange or cancel without notice. Monlhly Fia; Promotional monthly rate ol $29.99 applies for 12 months while customer subscribes lo a qualifying Sprint Solutions" bundle and other torint services. Alter 12 monlhs, standard monthly rale ol $34.99 will epply. Customer Is renulred to subscribo lo Sprint Solutions" Standaid plan, Sprint Special Plan Plus or Sprint Premium Plen along wilh one olher Sprint service such os Sprint PCS* or DISH Nelworkf $49.99 activation fee will epply. Monthly rale varies by area. Taxes and surcharges are additional and ate based on standard monthly rats. Spiint hlgh->pMd IntwnM: A lea ol $33 will be charged lor early termination. Actual perlormance may vary due 10 conditions outslda bl Sprint!! network control. Tliasa conditions may include variables such as customer location, physical equipment limllallons. network congestion, server and router speeds ol VWi sites accessed. Inside wiring or telephone conditions. Minimum level n| speed Is 3B4 Kbps! Additional restrictions may apply. Roliato: Customer must request and submit $50 rebate online el hsirebate.sprlnl.com within 45 days ol inslallalion. Sprint high-speed inlernet account must be active and In Qood credit standing to receive rebate, limit ol one rebate per household. Sprint will not honor lost, late, damaged, misdirected, illegible, incompleto or duplicate rebate lonns. ®2005 Sprint. All rights resenred. Sprint, the diamond loqo design, Sprint PCS and Sprint Solutions are trademarks ol Sprint Communications Company l.R'EattliLink i: o toglswrod trademaik ol EartliLlnk, Inc. All other trademaib are property ot their respective owners. Fire Up The Grill M e m o r i a l D a y B u r g e r s , S t e a k s W i t h A T w i s t C4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 By R obin Low der Davie County Enterprise Record M e m o ria l D ay m arks a season o f good endings and great beginnings. Kids have fm ished another school year, seniors arc celebrating graduation, the pools have opened and grilling seoson has officially begun. Be it gas or charcoal, it is tim e to clean up the grill and fire it up. I hove already seen quite a few plumes o f smoke from grills throughout the neighborhood. Is it the fact that as adults we are fascinated with playing with fire outdoors, or is it the sheer delight we get from the taste o f food that has been seared to perfection? A grill doesn’t have to be the most expensive or the fanciest to achieve a great smoky flavor in grilled foods. O rilling just takes a little practice and “know­ how” to m ake everyone think you are a professional. These days you can cook you r w h o le m eal ou tsid e, beginning w ith appetizers and ending w ith desserts. There is nothing sweeter than munching on grilled fresh pineapple while you are waiting on your burgers, steaks and veggies to cook. Once you have finished your main course, you can end with grilled banana splits or roasted peaches with vonilla ice cream. There are few foods that can’t be adapted to cook on a grill. 1 know there are a lot o f us who have been grilling for years, but it d o esn 't hurt to have rem inders aboul food safety when grilling. M arinated meats arc a delicious part o f any meal, but re-using the marinade after you have taken the meat out is good w ay for bacteria to creep into your m eal. If you want to use any o f your marinade while cooking be sure to set some aside in separate co n tain er before placing the meat inlo your liquid lo marinate. W ashing yo u r hands frequently and after handling raw meat w ill help to prevent the spread o f any bacteria. Once you have placed your m eat on the g rill, wash the dish or plate im m ed ia tely before placing cooked foods back on it to prevent the possibility o f any food illness. To p reven t cross contam ination, it is wise to have separate cutting boards, one to use only for preparing raw meats and a second to use fo r vegetables and fruits. Perishable fo od should not sit unrefrigerated for more than two hours. I f the tem perature is above 90 degrees it should not set unrefrigerated for more than one hour. W h en g rillin g m eats rem em ber to use a thermometer to test the internal temperature o f the m eat. The U S D A has issued guidelines fo r safe meat temperatures; hamburgers -1 6 0 degrees, steaks and roasts -1 4 5 degrees for m edium rare, 160 degrees fo r m edium and 170 degrees fo r w e ll done, fo r chicken 170 degrees for white meat and 180 degrees for dark meat. W hen you choose m eat for grilling, for burgers choose fresh ground meat and one that has no less than 1 0 -1 5 percent fat for great taste. W h ile preparing ground b ee f fo r p atties, rem em b er not to handle or squeeze the meat tightly, as Ihis w ill toughen the meat. Choosing a steak is a matter of personal preference, but in my opinion, the ribeye or the t-bone are the best choices, because they are tender cuts of meat and both grill w ell. Poultry is another personal preference cho ice but 1 do recom m end using boneless breast or thighs when possible to reduce cooking lim e. H ow about fish or seafood? Anything you can put inlo a fish basket is a great catch. And lastly, don’t forget the pork ribs and chops. E njoy the g rillin g season and most o f all, happy Mem orial Day. M eatlo af B urgers If you love meatloaf sandwiches, you w ill love these burgers. 1-pound ground beef 2 heaping tablespoons minced onion 2 helping tablespoons minced green pepper 1 teaspoon celery seed 3 tablespoons tomato soup 1 tablespoon breadcrumbs 2 tablespoons ice water 1 teaspoon mustard Com bine all ingredients in a m edium bow l and m ix w ell. D ivide into four equal parts and form into four patties. G rill on a preheated g rill u n til Ihc intem al temperature reaches 160 degrees. (About 5-6 minutes per side.) Three Cheese Stuffed B urgers 1 and one-half pounds o f ground beef 1 and o n e -h a lf teaspoons seasoned salt 2 tablespoons minced onion 1 tablespoon steak sauce 3 tablespoons ice water 1/3 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese 1/3 cup shredded swiss cheese 1/3 cup shredded A m erican cheese Com bine cheeses in a small bowl and set aside. In a medium bow l, combine ground b ee f, seasoned salt, minced onion, steak sauce and ice water. M ix w ell. Separate meat into six even portions. Pat out the portions, very Ihin. Place about 2 tablespoons o f the F o r Y o u r S p e c i a l G r a d u a t e ( I i j i m :i)r \i \ W К s I I Ì с ш ш т т ' 4 „ , 'л,- V r . - i '- . T ''* Key Ring Watch by Colibri $ 2 9 9 5 m I v ' Sterling Silver Vji-, Charm Bracelet with Toggle Clasp $ 1 9 9 5 >'h * Starting at PULSAR b, S E IK O W here iiibjtanct! tiifcu style Watches50* Off Great for Grad or Dad Pewter Cuff Bracelet $ 9 9 5 Free Monogram New Towne Shopping Center • Clemmons, NC ( 3 3 6 ) 7 6 6 - 8 5 0 5 Institute G ets N e w H a n ga r DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - C5 Robin Lowder displays her meatloaf and three cheese stuffed burgers. — P h o to b y C h ris M a c ld e cheese blend in the m iddle of three o f the patties. Place one o f the rem aining patties on top o f each o f the other three. Seal the patties together. Place patties on a heated grill and cook until the intem al temperature reaches 160 degrees. About 5-6 minutes per side. G rille d 'H ina Steaks 2 fresh tuna steaks 3 tablespoons yellow mustard O ne-half teaspoon pepper O ne-half teaspoon salt One and one-half tablespoons fresh or dried chopped dill weed In a glass pie plate, combine m ustard, salt, pepper and dill weed. M ix w ell. Place the tuna steaks in the mustard m ixture and rub the m ixture into the tuna steaks. G rill on each side for 10-12 minutes. G rille d Banana S plits 3 ripe bananas 3 tablespoons m elted butter I qt. Vanilla ice cream Chocolate sauce W hipped topping Chopped walnuts in syrup Cherries for garnish. Cut the unpeeled bananas in half, length-wise. Brush with m elted butter and place the sliced bananas on the grill cut side d ow n. G rill u n til the bananas are ligh tly brow ned, turn and grill fo r2 more minules. Rem ove the bananas from the grill and let cool slightly. Rem ove the peel and place two banana halves into a bow l. Add tw o or three scoops of ice cream, top w ith chocolate sauce walnuts, whipped topping and cherries. Serve im m ediately. Tips and H ints • B y adding a few tablespoons o f ice w ater to ground b ee f, it w ill m ake hamburgers juicier. • W hen m eat reaches the proper internal tem perature rem o ve it fro m the heat im m e d ia te ly because the in te rn al tem perature w ill continue to rise as the meat sits. • Send recipes, comments or ideas to rldideas@lriad.rr.com or P. O . Box 693, Lew isville, 27023. N o w ' s T h e T i m e T o W i t h a 1 0 0 % EQUITY LINE W ant to freshen u p y o u r life s ty le nnd need the fu n ds to do it? N ow yo u can get a S ou th e m C o m m u n ity lin e o f cred it fo r up to 100% o f the e q u ity In y o u r h o m a Use tills special o ffe r fo r college tu itio n , re m o de lin g , landscaping, a trip , o r fo r a n y o th e r b ig idea you m ig h t dream up. T h e o n ly tric k w ill bo d e cid in g w h a t to choosa A t S outhern C o m m u n ity, wo th in k yo u deserve 100% fro m y o u r b ank. ^Southern ( .ommumtyA(<uimum (nan amoiirif ilQQ.OQO, Member fPÍC» BANK AND TRUST Small Emiigb To Cam Hubìtcì tQ creiUt aiipraml. Offer fubject la cha»gc. ' í4 ',t.;.'.w w w J e in a U e n o uìn a ljQ n Q w g h ^ o Small Б пт ф То Caw ' ' ® i * ‘‘'u 14.,» ■4 A new training facility and hangar for Missionary Aviation Institute at Sugar Valley Airport, just o ff Farmington Road, was dedicated on Friday, M ay 6. Missionary Aviation Institute is the training division o f Pied­ mont Baplist College in Winston- Salem , and the dedication was part o f Ihe school’s graduation and alum ni days celebrations. This new facility w ill be used to continue training prospective missionary pilots during an in­ tensive, one-year, 1,900 hour course in aircraft maintenance and repair. This one year is part of a larger five-year bachelor o f science program . The degree trains students in missions, flight, and airc raft m aintenance in preparation for serving various missions agencies, using the air­ craft as a tool, to spread the gos­ pel in the remotest parts o f the world. The structure has been built with donated funds. Site prepa­ ration, concrete, steel erection and electrical work hove been done by licensed contractors. A ll other work has been done by vol­ unteers who have donated hun­ dreds o f hours of time. Thanks were expressed at the dedication to all o f the students and other individuals, as well as Agape Faith and Blaise Baptist Churches fo r putting together teams, which have worked on the hangar. Individuals and teams are welcom e to volunteer as interior work progresses toward comple­ tion.This new hangar wiil serve the Missionary Aviation Institute. F r e e D i a b e t e s S c r e e n i n g F r i d a y Free diabetes screening and blood pressure checks sponsored by the M ocksville Lions Club w ill take place Friday, M ay 27 from 9 a.m.-noon at Foster Drug, 495 Valley Road, M ocksville. M cdical staff and trained vol­ unteers w ill obtain a drop o f blood by finger slick and it w ill be tested in a glucometer. If re­ quested, they w ill measure your blood pressure. Results o f the test(s) w ill be given at that time. A ll test(s) and results are kept confidential. Fast 6 to 8 hours before checks is requested, but not required. Report results to your fam ily physician. Shir! Gadson Named One Of ‘Fabulous 5 0 ’ M a r v e lo u s B o o k P r o m o t e r s The Mocksville Marvels recently hosted a Red Hat Society book release party at Barnes and Nobles Bookstore in Winston-Salem to celebrate the second Red Hat Society book "Laugh Lines” by Sue Ellen Cooper, the founder and Queen Mother of the Red Hat Society Pictured above, left to right: Yuleene Broome, Cindy Mann, Debbie Broadway, Queen Eileen Smith, Kathy Mashburn, Chinera Latham, Rachel Randleman, Linda Leonard, Barbara Taylor and Betty Beeson. Missing: Sue Chaffin. Shiri Gadson, C N A , was se­ lected to receive the prestigious N orth C aro lin a H ea lth Care A ssociation's (N C H C F A ) “Fabulous 50” Award. This event provides the op­ portunity to acknow ledge 50 front line unlicensed personnel who have dem onstrated out­ standing achievem ents in the long-term health care profession. The "Fabulous 50” Awards pro­ gram honors individuals who are Ihe backbone in our facilities be­ cause of the care they provide our residents. A panel o f judges from the Eduction and Programs Com ­ m ittee selected 10 nom inees from Ihe thousands submitted. One nominee was selected from each of 10 North Carolina dis­ tricts. Each of the 10 award re­ cipients was honored at a dinner and awards presentation in Iheit district. The awards banquet was held at the Rockbam Country Club in Conover. Gadson was proudly nom i­ nated by Autumn Core of Mocks- ville bccause she demonstrotes leadership am ong other stafl m em bers. She has been em ­ ployed with Autum n Care since 1998. Gadson helps others without even thinking about it. W hen asked, Godson’s reply was, “I am just there whenever people need help.” Gadson lives in M ocksville with her nine children. A N T I Q U E S P R I M I T I V E S G L A S S W A R E T o l l F r e e 8 8 8 - 6 4 3 - 9 3 0 2 А1И ЯП Ш^ AUCTION CO ^ --------------------N C ^ /S O ^ -C onsider it sold’ ' F U R N I T U R E C A R S - T R U C K S T R A C T O R S - M O R E L o c a l 3 3 6 - 6 6 7 - 9 2 6 5 SATURDAY, MAY 28TH, 9:30 A.MTREGISTRATION 8:00 A.M. SALE SITE: CORNER OF FARMINGTON RD. AND N.C. HWY. ^01, FARMINGTON, N.C. (DAVIE CO.) 1-40 TAKE EXIT 174 TO FARMINGTON RD., THEN NORTH ON FARMINGTON RD. 3 MILES, FOLLOW SIGNS. SALE CONDUCTED FOR: PANSY L. FURCHES, LIVING Auctloneor's Note; II you llko Antique Furniture, are a dealer or a rellnlsher then we have an auction you must attend. Over 1UU pieces plus accessory Items by the dozi Quality, Antique & V№tage. We also have a wide assortment ol othor meichandlse Including some QBEAT cars, trucKs, tractors, equipment, trailers, etc, and we plan on selling of the day so plan to stay latell Sale held rain or shine under the tentslll Y’all Comell ____ dozen all most GLASSWARE! 90 Pcs. Johnson Bros England “English Chippendale" ■ 50+ Pcs Ruby Rad (Ball Pitcher) - Lots ol EAPQ “Georgian' by Homer Laughlln • “Virginia Rose" by Homer Laughlln - Homer Laughlln Dogwood China (20 Pcs) • Stetson China Co, Tilfany" - Franciscan China ■ Apple Walt - Lols of Old Stemware - 20 Pcs Jadelte by Fire King & (ИсКае - Blue Ridge China - IHcCoy Serving Pcs - Indiana Glass Water Set - 30 Pcs England Mason's Red Transfenvare Glassware - Hand Painted Tea Set - LImoge Platter & Other China Pcs. - Fenton Large Vaseline Vase - Early Transfer Ware - Depression QIasa (20+ Pcs'. Maytalr, Louisa, IHanhatlan, Open Lace) - 25 Pcs Cape Cod Imperial - 50 Pcs OLD Blue Willow ■ Misc. China Pcs - Several Early EAPG OII Lamps - Lols Crocks & Jugs - North Stale Vase - Large Old Paris Vase & Olher Pcs. FURNITURE: Mahogany Bow Front China • Mahogany Magazine Rack - Numerous Oak Chairs (T-Back, Press Back) ■ Mahogany 3 Drawer Chest - Mahogany Sideboard - Oak Banquet Table w/ Center Pedestal (12'- 4 Leaves) • Early Walnut Bookcase w/ Doors - 4 Pc Mahogany Settee Set ■ Qentlemen'a & Lady's Matching Walnut Queen Anne Carved Chairs (Upholstered) - Qentlemen's & Lady’s Matching Mahogany Queen Anne Can/ed Chairs - Walnut Pegged Table w/ Drawer - Cherry Pegged Table w/ Round Top - 3 Po Mahogany Settee Set w/ Large Claw Feet - 3 Oak Washstands (2 w/ Racks) • Walnut Pegged Chest w/ Mirror & Glove Boxes - Victorian Carved Dresser w/ Mirror - Walnut Pelllcoat Mirror - Walnut 4 Drawer Chest Carved Pulls • Mahogany Offset Chest oh Chest • Mahogany Poster Bad - Early Pine Rope Bed - Early 3 Board Top Pine Tapered Leg Table - Duck Head Platform Rocker & Others - Fancy Carved Oak Dresser w/ Mirror & ВефвпИпе Front w/ Roll - Fancy Bow Front Oak Server w/ Mirror & Paw Feet (Caivlng on Mirror) - Matiogany Pie Crust Tables - Victorian High Back Bed w/ Scroll - Art Deco Oak Chest - Mahogany Drum Table & End Tables • Mahogany Library Table Mahogany Claw Feet Table (Small) - Early Pine Book Case w/ Doors • Rosewood (1850) Love Seat ■ 4 Mahogany Sleigh Beds (2 Queen) • Matiogany Chlffarobe w/ Minor - 2 Deco Mahogany Single Beds • Round Mahogany Dining Table - Hoosler Cabinet (Painted) • Home Еп1ефг1ее Cook Stove - Oak Desk & Oak Server - Oak Kitchen Cabinet - Mahogany China Cabinet ■ Mahogany Sen/er • Art Deco 6 Po Bedroom Suite - Round Oak Table ■ Tiger Oak Sideboard w/ Mirror - Oak Singer Sewing Machine - 7’ Pine Harvest 3 Board Top Table ■ Mahogany Sideboard Sheraton Style - Early Pine Baker's Cabinet - Oak Chest ol Drawers ■ Maple Cabinet • Mahogany Gate Leg Table - Mahogany Drum Table w/ Leather Top - Early Pine Mantel Mahogany 3 Po Matching Fancy Carved Table Sal (End Tables & Coffee Table) - Fancy Carved Walnut Victorian Parlor Sola - Early Walnut Comer Cupboard v// Bracket Feat (12 Pane) Mahogany Empire Sideboard w/ Mirror - Rosewood Plano (1890's, Box Grand, “Chlckerlng" Boston) - Several Marble Top Tables • Mahogany Hand Painted Liquor Cabinet - Ludwig Rosewood Upright Plano - Large Pine Step Baclt Cupboard w/ Drawers (12 Pane, 2 Doors, 4 Door Top, 7 1/2') ■ 2 Oak Center Tables - Pair Mahogany Side Tables ■ Nice Dome Top Trunk Nice Mahogany Carved Sola - Spinning Wheel • Mahogany Desk - Several Mahogany & Other Side Tables - Phllco Upright Radio - Queen Anne Maple Drop Leaf Table - Mahogany Chest Offset - Matching Pair of Mahogany Sheraton Bookcases - Nice Large Walnut Canopy Bed (Queen) w/ Turn Posts - Oak Hall Tree/Seat - Empire Mahogany Triple Bow China Cabinet Mahogany Secretary Broken Arch Top & Claw Feet - Mahogany Library Table - |.arge Marble Top Walnut Victorian Table w/ Drawers ■ Peterson & Sons Organ - Bombay Chest w/ Hand Paintad Floral Design - Mahogany Drum Table w/ Marble Top' - Several Mahogany What Nol Shelves • Sheraton Style Mahogany Comer Cabinet w/ Broken Arc & Finale's - Fancy Can/ed Oak Lady's Secretary w/ Mirror, Drawer & Storage Boxes • Modern Seoratary/Bookcase Hand Painted w/ Drawers - Brass Bed (OLD) • Mahogany Poster Bed - Art Deco Vanity - Oak Chimney Cupboard - Mahogany Sheraton Style Server - Walnut Dining Table - Maple Bookcase - Mahogany Display Cabinet Chippendale Style w/ Claw Feet - Mahogany Table w/ Marble Insert - Pair Mahogany Tables w/ Leather Tops - Large Oak Sideboard w/ Claw Feet - Oak Organ Fancy Can/ed - Oak Pie Safe - Grandfather Clock - Oak Liquor Cabinet • Early Oak Library Table - Mahogany Rocker - Set ol 5 Matching Oak Press Back Chairs • Mahogany Pie Crust Table ■ Sat ol 4 Oak T-Back ■ Early Oak Windsor Chair - Set ot 4 Lyre Back Chairs - Old Ball & Claw Plano Stool - Several Old Rocking Chairs - Lots of Wicker (Sofas & Chairs) - Numerous Tables & Side Chairs - Misc. Chairs & More, More & Moreil CLOCKS; Ogaa Sath Thomas 30 Hr Weight Clocks ■ Ogee New Haven 30 Hr Weight Clocks ■ Welch Walnut Case Clock • Fancy New Haven Oak Kitchenette Clock - Walnut Case New Haven Clock & Olher Clocks. MISCELLANEOUS! Pair Early Victorian Prints - Early Brass Hubball 3 Light Celling Fixture (19Z0’s) • Several Yo-Yo Quills (Spool) & Other Handmade Quilts - 100's of Dolls - Trunks • Old Prints - 1898 Brass National Cash Register S#115599B (Excellent) - Lots ol Enamelware • Lamp Shades/ Lead Glass - Art Deco Lamps & Ashtray Stands • Rare Large Fancy Stain Glass Window • Several Oriental Rugs ; Floor Lamps ■ Dough Tray & Butter Mold - Fantastic Pair Capodamante Lamps -Pair Black Oapodamanle Lamps - Porcelain Coca-Cola Button w/ Bottle Sign - 1897 J. Hoover & Sons Winter Scene Print (Orlg.) - “РЬННа" 1899 Copyright W.H. McEntee Race Print (ALL Orlg.) - Several Nice Early Prints & Early Gold Quilted Mirrors - Pair Rosewood Ogee Frames w/Original Prints i Others. VEHICLES; 196S Oliver Tractor wf Mowing Deck - 1957 Allis Chalmers Tractor w/Bush Hog - 1949 International Farm All Tractor-1993 Z460 Long Tractor • 1980 Dodge RT Convertible (440 Magnum Engine) ■ 1991 Chevy Camaro, RS Z28 (305 Eng) - 1995 Pontiac Firebird 6 Speed Big Block V8 -1990 Lincoln Town Car Limousine - 1989 Chrysler New Yorker - 1988 Chrysler 5lh Avenue ■ 1986 Plymouth Reliant К • 1989 Colt Station Wagon ■ 1972 Plymouth • 1958 Chrysler New Yorker (4 Door) • 1924 Huppmoblle ( Running and In Fair Condition) - 1998 Dodge Dooley V10 -1979 Dodge D1G0 • 1975 Dodge D150 • 1988 Dodge Wrecker (383 V8) -1993 Olds Bravada (4x4) -1994 Ford Explorer (4x4) -1989 Dodge Conversion Caravan -1976 Dodge Van - Heavy Duty Equipment Trailer ■ Gooseneck Livestock Trailer - Front End Loader lor Long Tractor ■ 5’ & 6' Bush Hogs Utility Trailer & Other Pcs of Vehicles & Equipment To Be Determined A 6+ HOUR SALE • YOU'LL BE HAPPY YOU ATTENDEDIt Auction Firm Reserves The Right To Add or Delate Items Any Announcement Made Day ot Sale Supersedes Any Printed Material NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS GREAT CONCESSIONS AVAILABLE TERMS; ALL ITEMS ARE SOLD "AS IS, WHERE IS" FOR CASH wllh no guarantees or warranties of any type. Ail payments must be made with good funds which are defined as cash, cashier’s check, or pre-approved checks, VIsa/MaslerCard, accepted with 3% fee. All other checks must be accompanies by a bank letter ol guaranleel 6% BUYER'S PREMIUM TO BE ADDED. DON'T FORQET, SALE STARTS AT 9;30 A.M. S a l e C o n d u c t e d B y ! GREAT STATE AUCTION COMPANY P.O. BOX 864,104 EAST MAIN STREET, WILKESBORO, N.C. 28697 w w w .g re a ta ta te a u c tlo n .c o m Randall Woodruff Broker#33312 NCALMaea Cell #957-0926 Evening 336-838-3036 NCAFL#S0S8 Col. Burt Jarvis Broker #165108 NCAL #6723 Сб - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 J o a n C h u rc h A B a y a d a ‘H e ro ' F arm ington R uritan president Larry H oibrook w elcom es new m em bers, M ike D eal an d H arold Seats. Bayndn Nurses is iionorlng Joan Church o f Mocl<sville as a “Nalional Hero.” She was recog­ nized as port o f Bayada Nurses Heroes on the Hom e Front Pro­ gram for outstanding dedication and commitment lo excellence in serving her clients. The program honors one reg- istered nurse, one licensed prac­ tical nurse and one home heallh aide as a “National Hero” from a pool o f over 10,000 candidates nationally. Church, a registered nurse (R N ), is being recognized for her care o f a 10 -year-old boy with dwarfism . H er positive attitude and de­ term in atio n im pressed her client’s fam ily lo describe her as his “scribe, advocate, teaching assistant and trusted friend with whom he has flourished.” "Joan gains great jo y from seeing h im experience new things and accomplish goals set before h im ,” says the boy’s mother, “and she always finds ways for him to participate in whatever may come along.” Church, who has not missed a shift, is a single grandmother raising two teen-age boys on her ow n w h ile serving as youth leader for her church. F ^ gton News— d B W A L e a rn s A b o u t Y a rd A r t '{ By L a u ra M ath is Farm ington Correspondent James Lee (Jim ) Sm ith,who grew up here in Farm ington, passed aw ay M ay 21 after a long illness. Jim w as born S e p t.1 6 ,1 9 3 8 lo B en jam in Sm ith and Jessie James Smith. Surviving are his sons M ike Sm ith and G reg Sm ith w ith , w ife, Debra W orkm an Sm ith o f L ew isville. Jim graduated al Farm ington H ig h School in 1956. H e was employed for 18 years al Piedmont Airlines as a flig h t attendant and crew dispalher. H e laler becam e a Teamster and retired from the Teamsters in 1997. Jim's inter­ ests were in aviation. He held a pilot’s license and owned a J-3 Piper Cub, which he loved to fly. Farm ington held a special place in Jim's heart, for he spoke often aboul hi.s memories here. I can rem em ber him talking about his grandfather, Else C , James, who was Farmington's Postmaster and how at the lim e, the post office hnd the only working telphone in town. Jim's other grandfather was Enoch G. Sm ith. H e was a surveyor. Ce­ dar Creek was one o f his favor­ ite places to bc with his friends when he was young. They en­ joyed swinging o ff the bridge from a rope and swim m ing in the creek. W ee Brock lold me o f the lim e when Jim was little and was to be in a Christmas play at church. He was so scared that he forgot his lines and be­ gan tu rn in g cartw h eels instead.This shows the great sense o f humor that Jim had and is whal people loved aboul him. There was a m em orial for M r. Sm ith at the Voglers Funeral Hom e in Clem mons M ay 25 at 6 p.m .The fam ily w ill be grant­ ing his request lo have his ashes spread over the Farm ington crossroads. Jim w ill be greatly missed by all who knew him . Farm ington United M eth­ odist celebrated Hom ecom ing Cedar Rock Assisted Living o f M ocl<sville Cedar Rock Assisted Living is blessed to have many wonderful volimleers. Many come on a weekly basis and bring sunshine inlo our days, Some may come and entertain us, while others come and visit wilh us. Some may come and offer a service lo our residents. We are so pleased to have Ms. Lola Collar who lives in our Independent Living Aparimetus and Is a Licensed Manicurist, come weekly ond provide free manicures for our ladies and gentlemen. They enjoy her vi.tils sol She sets up In our Beauty Shop and the fun begins. One by one we are buffed, polished, and calch up on ihe news. When Miss Lola is nol at Cedar-Rock treating our hands, you will fuul her in her yard, tending her blossoms. She has a green thumb and can make anything grow. Her little poodle Baby can be found out ei\}oying the gardening wilh her. Tluink you for all you do for us Miss Lola, our hearts and our hands love you! C e d a r R o c k 191 Crestview Drive Mocksville (336)751-1515 D a v ie B usiness W om en Association (D B W A ) members held their m onthly m eeting on M a y 4 at the R otary H u t in M ocksville. G uest speaker was Leslie H am lin, who talked about yard art. H am lin creates yard art for resale. She displayed some o f her creations m ade from old windows. In addition, she gave suggestions on how decorate your yard or garden w ith items other than flow ers. F o rty -th re e w om en attended. T h e focus w as on m em b ersh ip and m any members brought guests. In celebration o f M o th er’s D ay, all o f the wom en received a g ift provided T in a N o a o f Advance, T h e m ission o f D a v ie Business W om en’s Association is to bring together business­ wom en o f diverse occupations to help themselves and others g ro w p erso n ally and p ro fe s s io n a lly through n e tw o rk in g , sup port, and camaraderie. T h e next D B W A m eeting w ill be W ednesday, June 1 at noon at the R o ta ry H u t in M o c k s v ille . T h is is a networking meeting that allows members to share inform ation about th e ir occu p atio n or business. W om en interested in attending as a guest or want m ore inform ation about joining D B W A - should contact President lanel Hensley at 998- 1153. Four Corners News Jam es Lee S m ith show n in his senior picture, died on M ay 21. on Sunday, M ay 22. The Rev. D avid Nolan delivered the mes­ sage. D avid was the paslor at Farm ington from 19 91-1995. Special music was presented by the handbell choir and several youth o f the church. A bounte­ ous covered dish lunch was served on the front lawn follow ­ ing the service. M em bers and visitors enjoyed the afternoon reminiscing and looking at scrap­ books from Ihe years Rev. Nolan paslored the church. The church also honored Josh Falls during the worship service. Josh'has re­ lum ed from deployment in Iraq. Truly a special homecoming for Josh and his fam ily. On M ay 12,2005 the Farm ­ ington Ruritan club met at the M e th o d is t C h u rch . L a rry H olbrook, president, presided. A fter a m eal, a discussion was held on our upcoming golf tour­ nament at Pudding Ridge M ay 27 at noon. M oney raised w ill go for their scholarship program. Come on out and join us for a wonder­ fu l day o f g o lf and barbecuc plates at the end o f the round. The Rurilans also introduced two new members to iheir club. H arold Seals and M ike Deal were voted into the club. The members are looking forward to w orking w ilh them to im prove our Farmington community. B y M a rie W hite Four ComersjCorrespondent Shiriey W all had lunch Thurs­ day w ilh M rs. Johnsie Shelton. M rs. Bobby Shelton and Ken and H all Shelton visited M rs. Johnsie Shelton Saturday. M rs. Patricia H am m of Caro- ' lina Beach spent several days with M r. and M rs. Kenny Smith. M r. and M rs. Thomas Smith visited M r. and M rs . K enny Smith Sunday afternoon. M r. and M rs. Joe W hite at­ tended a celebration honoring John T. Brock and W illiam E. H all for over 50 years in the prac­ tice o f law in M ocksville. The event was held M onday after­ noon al the Superior Courtroom al the D avie County Courthouse. A reception was held following the ceremony in the Com m is­ sioners Conference Room . The law offices o f M artin and Van Hoy and Grady L . M cClam rock, Jr. were the hosts of the occasion. Advance News B y E d ith Z im m erm an Advance Coirespondent The M ethodist church Vaca­ tion Bible School w ill start M ay 31 from 9 a.m.-noon. The theme w ill be Westem . A ll children are invited. W e were glad to see Karen M artin at church Sunday after absence due to illness. C on¿ralulalions to D anna V estal w ho w .is aw arded a surpise scholorship at the high school graduation excersises on Friday night. Jack and D o ro th y C arter spent the weekend in the N C mountains at Linville. Virgil Potts has been adm it­ ted to Berm uda Terrace rest hom e after spending several days in Forsyth M ecical Center for gall bladder surgery. Frank and M argie M arkland and daughter Janice Jackson drove to H ic k o ry M o n d ay night. M ay 23 to celebrate their son and brother, D ave M ark- land’s 50th birthday. They had dinner at the J&S Cafeteria in Hickory then went to D ave’s for a visit w ith he and w ife Cheryl and daughter Ashley. Jerry M arkland o f Florida spent the weekend visiting rela- tives in the com m unity. They were Larry Vogler, Frank and M arg ie M arkla n d and Sudie How ard at Som erset Assisted L ivin g in M o ck sville. Jerry works for N A S C A R and the time here was a business/plasure trip. James and Lillian B ailey of W inston-Salem were Sunday af­ ternoon visitors o f Lillian’s sis­ ter and brother-in-law, Frank and M argie M arkland. Sheffield-CaleJialn News Shelia Sammons B y Janice Jordan Sheffleld/Calahain Corre.sponder.t The W om en’s Fellowship of N ew Union United M ethodist Church invites you to mark your calendars for June 14 so that you can jo in them at th e ir next m eeting. It w ill be at 6:30 p.m. at Z e k o ’s V illa g e at 94 9 Salisbury Road in M ocksville. Please call Brenda Bailey at 751- 7567 for further inform ation. On June 4 , at the Sheffield- C alahain C om m unity Center, members o f the Reeves fam ily w ill gather for a reunion. A covered dish dinner w ill begin at 4 p.m . A ll fam ily members and friends are invited. Bobbie Jean Sm ith Andrews, a M o c k s v ille resident w ho form eriy lived in Sheffield, died Thursday, M a y 19, 2005 at F o rsyth M e d ic a l C en ter in W inston-Salem . She had been seriously ill for several weeks. O ur condolences are offered to her husband, daughter, and all of her other fam ily members. L iz z ie R eeves has been experiencing a painful episode o f shingles, bul is recuperating gradually. Although she was nol feeling up to par, it was good to see her Sunday afternoon at the Fallen Firefighter M em orial S ervice at the S h e ffie ld / C alahaln V o lu n teer F ire D ep artm en t. She deserves thanks for contributing items that w ill be sold at the communily yard sale Saturday, June 4 at the fire department grounds. Anyone who would like to participate by renting space to sell their own items should contact Tam m y Beck at 492-7687. L in d a D ry e rem ains a patient al N .C . Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem and needs the continued prayers of everyone. la ^ m c k l Saturday, Ju n e If, 2005 q:oo am - 12:00 noon Ages 5-m Rain Date; June 11,2005 * Meet in front of Wal-Mart store in Mocksville at 8:30 am. Ф ') щ т м " -. • An adult ntust accompany aii participants. Bring your own fishing rods. • Ciieerwine will be donating iunch^ to ail participants. REOISTER IN ADVANCE, NOW THROUQH JUNE 4.2005AT MOCKSVILLE WAL-MARTS SPORTINQ QOODS DEPT. W A L * M A R T Yadkinville Road, Mocksville, NC • (336) 751-1266 W ord comes from W illiam R. Davie Elem entary School that her young students have missed her being with them. Several children from out area were present on the last official day o f school, Monday, M ay 23, at W . R . D avie’s awards ceremony. Am ong the recipients were Sasha Lockhart, who won several honors, and K rystal Foster, who was recognized foi having perfect attendance. Congratulations to these and all other young students w ho received certificates. It was good also to hear that people in the audience were discussing out news colum n. Thank you to all interested parties w ho are enjoying it and are helping by contributing inform ation. Please continue lo send youi news or comments to me at 492- 5836 or to m y em ail address jvfjordan@ hotmail.com. (ли 11|)аге O l i i C D I b i o s Bank-issued, FDIC- in s u re d to |100,000 h 4 , A m |Ц|м«$5,000 Ш Ш •Annua) Perantaoe'Vleld (APVHntecest M S S Call or «top by today. K M tVoraii 66 Court Square Mocksville, NC 27028 (336)751-4400 ^.cdwtrdjonci.com»iPC ■ -------------- E d w a r d j o n e s C o u n t y L i n e N e w s DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Tliursday, May 26,2005 - C7 i l # By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondent During M ay Cool Spring and Harmony have their alumni din­ ners. Some classes have special reunions. The members o f the Harmony H igh School Class of 1955 provided a novel 50th an­ niversary celebration o f their graduation. They decided to “re­ live” their senior trip. Fifteen class members and nine spouses left Monday, M ay 9 by bus for a sightseeing lour of W ashington, D .C . The group toured m any sites including ihe Capitol, M ount Vernon, Vietnom M em orial, W orid W ar II M em o­ ria l, L in c o ln M e m o ria l, Roosevelt M em orial, Arlington, Cem etery and House, and N a­ tional A ir and Space M useum . They ended their tour w ith a cruise on the Potomac Wednes­ day evening and returned home [the next day. County Line alum ni making [the trip included Linda Reavis 'obey, Louann Church Jones nd husband P arks, Jonell laither Lew is arid husband Jim , md Jeanette Cartnpr Tbm er and lusband Jim . W hile visiting the iapilol, the group visited with ,ep. Virginia Foxx. Schoool is out for Iredell and 'avie students. D avie seniors iraduated last Friday evening nd Iredell seniors w ill graduate iis Friday. O ur community ex- inds ils congratulations to Ihese iniors; Erica James, graduated Ih honors, Shawanna Nichols: [d Janna Payne o f North Iredell School; and M ira n d a intz and Sharon Owens o f 'ie High School; and Brandon ler o f Bulner H igh School, rity A chievem ent Award graduated w ith honors. ^e also congratulate these 8th le graduates from South M iddle School: Stephen ;ner; Cody C lark, Perfect A t- lance and Coach’s Award in itball; Ryan Thorne, Excel- Award in Dram a; Jonathan M em bers o f the H arm ony H igh S chooi C lass of 1955 are show n at the C apitol on th eir senior trip W est; and from N orth Iredell M iddle School: Kim berly Sneed. T h e U n ite d M eth o d ist W omen o f Clarksbury w ill spon­ sor a prayer breakfast at 8:15 a.m . Sunday, M a y 29 at the church fellowship hall. The pro­ gram w ill be led by M elinda Sm ith. The women invite olhers to join them in this special prayer service. Clarksbury United Methodist Church w ill have a covered dish dinner following the 10:30 morn­ ing worship service to celebrate N ell M cM ahon's 85th birthday. Clarksbury invites N ell’s friends and fam ily to bring a covered dish and join them in thè celebra­ tion. The Rev. Ray Davis, Direc­ tor o f M issions fo r the B riar Creek Baptist Association, w ill be the guest speaker at the 11 o’clock worship service, Sunday, M a y 2 9 al S ociety, B ap tist Church. Later that evening. So­ ciety w ill have a gospel singing at 6 p.m . The featured group w ill be The Gospel Voices o f Union Grove. Tlie church invites every­ one lo attend both services. John Hansel and M atthew Y ork w ere crow ned “ R ook C h am pions” at the V -P o in t Ruritan Rook tournament on Sat­ urday evening. The evening was a success and the Rurilans plan to hold another tournament in the fall. Sharpen up your Rook skills and plan to join Ihe fun next lime. M arshall Godbey is recuper­ ating at home. Beatrice Lackey remains al Davis Regional M edi­ cal Center and M ae W alker con­ tinues in rehabilitation. Join us as we pray for the Lord’s contin­ ued healing in Ihe lives o f Ihese residents. I f you have news or m emo­ ries to shore, call Shiriey al 492- 5115.' '^ o o lee m e e S e n io rs To M e e t J u n e 1 3 >' The Cooleem ee Senior C iti- taken from Genesis 1: the cre- ^zens Club met M ay 9 in the fel- ation o f heaven and earth, sun, moon and stars are created. M an is made in the image o f God, and the appointment o f food. The roll call was answered by 10 members. The sunshine and treasurer’s reports w ere owship hall o f the Frist Baptist Jiurch. I The m eeting was called to der by Ihe vice president. The bup sang “M y Faith Looks Up iT h ee.” The assistant chaplain gaveN given. A nnouncem ents w ere tie devotions. The text was made aboul Senior Services ac- G r e a t e r * 4 9 F r e e d o m 99mo. Regulatory: Fee Large calling area Lots of minutes 1 0 0 0 Anytime Minutes ’ U N LIM ITED Night & Weekend Minutes U N LIM ITED Mobile-to-Moblle Minutes Nationwide Long Distance Kyocera Kxl SoHo • Speakerphone • Voice Activated Dialing • 25 Pre-loaded Ringtones . • Alarm Clock , • Scheduler I t I E Р Н О Ж P L A C E 121 Depot st lUlocksvllle.NC 27028 Mon.-Fri. 8:30am-5pm Sat. 9am-12noon Clltelш1га1осо 336-751-2626 w ireless oulhorUod agont Additlonol luxoe, eurchotgoe 1 leea may apply. Incluaino a see llooulolmv Cort Rocovaiy lea » a 6Se Telocom Connecllvily loa, Tliesa laoa aro noi laxas or aovemmanl-raqulred charQaa. Oltiar surcharges may Includa fadDral* A stata-mandalad Universal Service Fund looa & a Oil loa ol up lo $1 04. Umlled llmo o«et al nartlclpallnii locollons, Haqulraa senrlca aoreemenl, credit approval & opprovod handsal. J200 eaily lamilnatlon lee applies. Acllvallon lee» may apply. Olhar reilrlcllona apply. Tarro» 4 oondlllona aro available al Authorlied Agent locations or www.alltsl.com. "This ollar through The Phone Place only, wilh a 24 month conlracl. M em bers of the class visited W ashington again in M ay, and are pictured w ith their spou se s and R ep. V irginia Foxx. tivities, and members discussed going on a trip. M inutes o f the last meeting w ere rend. Several m em bers read poems. Door prizes were awarded. A fter prayer, the group sang the club song. The next meeting w ill be June 13. $Д !| H ф\ r i i Presents IT'SAJUNCLE OUTTHERE W o ite lio p s f o r S tu d e n ts Davie County A r ts CouncU B r o c k P e r f o r m in g A r t s C e n t e r T H U R $ n A y ,;U N E 2 > F U R N IT U R E P A IN n N < :> C iU D E S 3 -6 ,1 P ^ P Personalize your own Jungle! Bring an unfinished piece of furniture to tfiis worksliop and create a masterpiece tfiat your son or daugt)ter will ctierlsh for years. Wear old clotlies & sfioes.Safari Guide; Jill Potts. Cost: S25. Lasfday to register: May 27. ‘ 1 H U I» n i\Y J U N E 9 > P A IN n N C & P n A V y iN C $ES$iO N 1;C R A O E$ K -X 1 0 A -1 2 P S E S flO N ^ C n A D E $3 -«, IP ^ P The Jungle Book theme will be our starting point to stimulate your child's Imagination. Instruction and materials will be supplied so that each child and paint. Wear old clothes and shoes In case of drips. Safari Guide: Sue Boggs. Cost: S15. Last day to register: June 2. M O N n A y -F R in A Y , JU N E 13-17, C R A D ES K -U , 1 P ^ 3 0 P M IS S O U L A C H IL D R E tfS T H E A .'m E 'lH E IU N C U B O O IC Our favorite touring theatre company returns to us for another week-long day camp. Kids will not want to miss being a part of this wonderful experience. PERFORAAANCES: Saturday, June 18 at 3p & 7p. SS, general seating. Check our website, www.davlearts.org, for more information. Cost: S85, Last day to register: June 6. M O N D A Y ,/U N E 2 0 > V /IL D D A Y !> C R A D E S K -« ,2 P 4 P f Join us for a Wild Day - no one knows whal to expect when you show up for this Wild Jungle Adventure. Local artist, Leslie Hamlin will guide you through this safari. Be sure to wear clothes that can get messy »because there's no telling what this group will get Intol Safari Guide: Leslie Hamlin. Cost: $20. Last day to I reglster:June 17. j M O N D A Y ,|U N E 2 7 > J U N C L E A P V E N 1 U R E S > P R E S C H O O I,9 -3 0 A -1 1 3 0 A Art adventurers for our youngest artist. Enjoy a Jungle adventure using your senses. Safari Guide: Sharyl Beck. Cosl;$5.Last day to register: June 24. I A \O N D lA Y S ,J U L Y 1 1 & 1 8 *P U P P E m Y > C R A D E S 3 ^ ,1 P ^ P k Starting with a blank piece of paper, this workshop will take you through the process of creating shadow & khand puppets, writing the story and performing the final product. The only material you need to bring lo the Tungle for this workshop is a creative mind. *Thls Is a two-day workshop. Safari Guide: Claudia Parrone. Cost: >30. Last day to register: June 30. ' M O N n A Y ,J U L Y 2 5 *C O U A C E P A P E R M O S A i< 3 SESSION 1: C R A D ES K -2 ,1 0 A -1 2 P S E S S IO N 2 :6 R A D E S ^ « ,1 P 4 P What Is your child's favorite Jungle Animal? They can create a collage using all kinds of unique findings of, the Jungle and all its' galore. Safari Guide: Sharyl Beck. Cost: $30. Last day to register: July 21. 'm U R S n A Y ,jU L Y 2 8 > W IU > D lA Y > C R A D E S K -« ,2 P 4 P Join us for our last Wild Day - another summer Jungle Adventure sure to enlighten the senses while exercising your child’s Imagination, hut you'll never guess what we're going to do. Is it a bird? A plane? Who knovvsl? Safari Guide: Lyndon Bray. Cost $20. last day to register: July 25. M O N D A Y , A U C U S ri • P A P E R M A K IN C F O R T H E B IR D S >C IR A D E S 3^,1P 4P Learn more about the process of making paper from scrap as Claudia Parrone leads everyone through a workshop that will create a beautiful birds nest with Its own precious eggs. Safari Guide: Claudia Parrone. Cost; $20, Last day to register: July 28, M O N D A Y ,A U C U S r8 & T H U R S D lA Y ,A U fiU $ T 1 1 PR IN nNC H: BLO CK P R lN n N C , S T A M P IN G S E S S IO N 1:eR A D E S K -2,lO A -12P S E S S IO N 2 :C R A D E S ^ « ,2 P ^ P , Create a Jungle masterpiece for wall hanging through Styrofoam block printing. In the second session of this ,series, personalize your own stamp for use wherever things need a little personalizing. Safari Guide: Sharyl Beck, Cost: $30, Last day to register: August 5, TO RECISTCRCOhn-ACTTHE Aim<XXJNCIL AT751-M110R MAILTO: INFO@PAVIEARn.ORC, MONDAY-FRIDAY, 10AM-5PM. I'Л' ' ' i i f i u .' C8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Obituaries Ell “Jack” Ireland Jr. M r. E li W ashington (Jack) Ireland Jr., 78, o f Advance, died W ednesday, M ay 18, 2005 at W ake Foresit University Baptist M edical Cenler as a result o f in­ juries sustained in an auto acci­ dent. He was bom Feb. 3 ,1 9 2 7 in Forsyth County to E.W . Sr. and Blanche Llew llyn Ireland. H e served w ith the U .S. Navy dur­ ing World W ar II and was retired from Associated Sprinkler in Greensboro. Survivors: his w ife o f 55 years, JoAnn Gregory Ireland; a son. Jack G regory Ireland ond w ife Donna: a daughter, Anita Sharon Ireland and fiance Kurt Kcseei 2 grandchildren; and a sister, M ary Kothiyn Brewer and husband Bob. A m em orial service was held at 2 p.m . Saturday, M ay 20 at M acedonia M oravian Church w ith the Rev. Roger Kim ball of­ ficiating. W illiam A. Shanks Sr. W illiam Anslow Shanks Sr., 54, of Altavista, Va. died M ay 21, 2005 in Lynchburg General Hos­ pital after a brief illness. H e w as born in R ow an County, son o f Viola Davidson and the late W illiam Shanks Jr. Survivors; 3 sons, W illiam s Shanks Jr. o f Washington, D .C ., W illiam Shanks III and G ary Jones, both o f Altavista, Va.; a daughter, M ichelle Shanks o f Altavista, Va; his mother, Viola R . Davidson o f Cooleemee; 2 sis­ ters, Rochello Shanks and Cathy Clem ent, both o f Cooleemee; 3 brothers, W ayne Shanks o f Greensboro, Kenneth Shanks of Salisbury and Charles Neely o f Salisbury. His funeral service was held on M ay 24 at noon in the chapel o f G raham Funeral H om e in M ocksville. Bi.shop W illie Joe G ray ofriciated and burial w ill fo llpw in Liberty A M E Zion Church Cemetery. W W W . enterprise-record .com GENE’S AUTO PARTS We Make Hydraulic Hoses & Mix Auto Paint 766-9148 3612 Ciemmons Road Clemmons С Ч ’ У/А / / / / ’( 7 //A f N m iaj G. Moore 1928 - 2005 M OCKSVlLtE Iris s. Cole 1933 - 2005 KING Sadie M . Jordan 1913 - 2005 MOCKSVILLE iHi Fraud E. Peebles Died M ay 2, 2005 BURLINGTON (H) Karen R. Prevelle 1952 - 2005 MOCKSVILLE Rebecca N . Lam b D ied M ay 10.2005 GREENSBORO Elizabeth B. Foster 1940 - 2005 MOCKSVILLE I uiUT.il Sor\ il l' 325 N . M ain Street Mocksville, N C (336) 751-2148 K atherine G. Hanes M rs . K ath erin e G reg o ry Hanes, 83, o f Rainbow Road, Advance,died Tuesday,M ay 17, 2 0 05,at Bermuda Terrace Nurs­ ing and Rehabilitation. She was bom Aug. 7, 1921 in Davie County to the late Tho­ mas Sain and Eva Sm ith G re­ gory. M rs. Hanes was a home­ m aker. She was a m em ber o f Bethlehem U nited M ethodist Church. M rs. Hanes was preceded in death by her husband, W ayne M arvin Hanes in July, 1998, whom she married on Sept. 28, 1941; and 2 brothers, Carl G re­ gory and Joe Gregory. Survivors; a son, Don Hanes o f Advancc. A funeral ser.'ice was held at 2 p .m ., F rid a y , M a y 2 0 , at B ethlehem U nited M ethodist Church w ith the Revs. H . D . Butch Sherrill Jr. and Donald Funderburk officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery. M em orials; Good Neighbor Fund, B ethlehem M ethodist, 321 Redland R d., Advance. M argaret L. Edw ards M rs . M arg are t Louise C ollette Edwards, 90, o f W in ­ ston-Salem ,died Saturday,M ay 21,2005 at The Oaks Bt Forsyth. She was bom Dec, 28 ,1 914 in D avie County to the late W il­ liam S. and N ellie Stonestreet C ollette. M rs. Edwards was a m em ber o f C a lv a ry B aptist Church and a form er m em ber at Eatons B ap tist C hurch in M ocksville. She was retired from W estern Electric, where she had been a member o f the Telephone Pioneers. She had w orked fo r Sara Lee and Chatham M ills. M rs. Edwards was a graduate o f Davie County Schools. M rs. Edwards was preceded in death by her husband, D avid Roy Edwards in 1993; 4 sisters; and 2 brothers. S u rvivo rs; a daughter, Kathryn E. Lazenby o f W inston- Salem : 2 grandchildren; a step granddaughter; and 2 great­ grandchildren. A funeral service was held at 11 a.m ., Tue.sday, M ay 24, at Eaton Funeral Chapel in M ocks­ v ille . B urial fo llow ed in the church cemetery. Mem orials: Forsyth Hospice, 1100 C S. Stratford Rd., Winston Salem , 27103; Eatons Baptist Church, c/o Brenda Hunter, 188 Pudding Ridge Rd., M ocksville; or Calvary Baptist, 5000 Coun­ try Club R d., W inston-Salem , 27104. Remember When? Louise S troud does. Read Iter mustns.t on Mocksville history tlte first issue of each month, only in the Enlerprisfi Record. Bobbie Jean Andrews M rs . B obbie Jean S m ith A n d rew s, 7 6 , o f W andering Lane, M ocksville, died Thurs­ day evening. M ay 19, 2005 at Forsyth M edical Center in W in­ ston-Salem. She had been in declining health for several years and se­ riously ill for eight weeks. M rs. A ndrew s w as born in the Sheffield Com m unity o f Davie County to the late W illiam Wode and M a ry H o lla n d W rig h t Sm ith. She graduated from high school at Peace Junior College in Raleigh and earned an asso­ ciate business degree fro m Averette College in Danville, Va. In 1949, she married Victor Lee Andrews Jr. Nineteen years later their daughter, C lara Holland (H o lly) was bom . M rs. Andrews was involved in various social, political, educational and reli­ gious aspects of the community. She was the first fem ale to be elected to public office in Davie County having served on the Davie County School board for tw o term s. M rs . A ndrew s worked along side her husband in his dental practice until their retirement in 1988. Survivors; her husband. D r. Victor L . Andrews Jr.; a daugh­ te r, C la ra H o lla n d (H o lly ) Sinopoli o f M ocksville; 2 sisters. M arietta Sm ith Seats and Colean Sm ith Foster, both o f M ocks­ ville; 2 grandchildren; and sev­ eral nieces and nephews. A funeral service was held at 3 p.m ., Sunday, M ay 22, at First Boptist Church w ith D r. Von Lankford officiating. Burial was in Rose Cemetery. M em o rials: F irs t B aptist C h u rch , 3 9 0 N . M a in S t., M ocksville, Katie Sue Bridgers M rs . K atie Sue G lascock Bridgers, 53, o f Hillsborough, died Sunday, M ay 22, 2005, at U N C Chapel H ill Hospital. She was bom A pril 28,1952, in Iredell County to Lois Cartner Glascock of M ocksville and the late Richard C lyde Glascock. M rs . B rid g ers attended Alam ance Com m unity College, W ake Technical College and re­ ceived degrees from N . C . State U n iv e rs ity in R aleig h and Stratford Womens College. In addition to her m other, M rs. Bridgei-s is survived by; a dau ghter, Jessica N ea l o f Hillsborough; 2 sisters, Delaine (Steve) M ehder of Greensboro and C indy (K ip ) Schroder of Asheboro; and a nephew. A mem orial service was held on Wednesday, M ay 25 at 2 p.m, at F irs t B ap tist C hurch o f M o c k s v ille w ith D r. Von Lankford officiating. M em orials: charity o f the donor’s choice. R uth Jarvis Tbtterow R uth Thom ason Jarvis Tutlerow died M ay 17, 2005, aftef a brief illness. She was bom Aug. 13,1909, in C o o leem ee. She w as the dau ghter o f the late June Franklin and M ary Katherine Thomason Jarvis. M rs. Tlitterow graduated from M ars H ill and Catawba colleges with degrees in elem entary education. She taught 40 years in elem entary schools. Center in Davie County, Dukeville in Rowan County and then Farmington and Cooleemee in D avie County. M rs. Tutterow was a member o f Centcr United Methodist Church, serving many years as Sunday School teacher for children and adults. She was preceded in death by her husband, Henry W ilson (Bo) Tutterow; a brother, Paul Jarvis: a sister, M ary Alice Stokes; and a son, Junie M artin Tutterow. Survivors: a son, Henry W il­ son Tutterow Jr. and w ife Char­ lotte o f Ackworth, Ga.; a son, R i­ chard K eith Tutterow and w ife Pat o f N ew lond; a daughter, Horriet Ruth Jennings anti hus­ band Ed o f Roleigh; о brother, W olter Glenn Jarvis o f Three M ile in Avery County; о sister, Kotherine Stokes o f Salisbury; 7 grandchildren; ond 4 greot- grandchildren. A m em orial service was held at 11 a.m ., Friday, M ay 20, at Center United Methodist Church w ith the Revs. Stephen B lair, Chories Sisk end Keith Tlitterow officiating. Inum ment was in the church cemetery. M em orials; Center M ethod­ ist Cem etery Fund, c/o Linda O w lngs, 728 W ilkesboro St., M ocksville; or to the Cooleemee Historical Association, P. O . Box 667, Cooleem ee. John Lenzie Lyons M r. John Lenzie Lyons, 78, of M ocksville, died M ay 19,2005 in Forsyth M edical Center fol­ lowing a brief illness. H e was 0 native o f D avie County, ond 0 member o f Shiloh Baptist Church. Survivors; 3 sons, Sleven Lyons o f Long Island, N .Y ., Jesse N . Lyons o f L ex in g to n and Bryant Lyons of M ocksville; 4 daughters, L e v in e Lyons o f M ocksville, N adine Lyons o f South Carolina, Lula Debase and Gwendolyn Elam , both o f Lex­ ington; 3 brothers, the Rev. Jesse Lyons Jr. o f W estbury, N .Y ., Frankie Lyons o f M ocksville ond Jaihes Lyons o f Salisbury; 4 sis­ ters, E lla M ae D u lin , Em m o Louise H ow ell and Virginio W il­ liam s, oil o f M o cksville, and M argaret Transou o f Lexington; 12 grandchildren; and 10 great­ grandchildren. The funeral was at 4 p.m. M ay 24 at Shiloh Baptist Church in M o c k s v ille . The R ev. Jesse Lyons Jr. officioted ond buriol followed in the church cemetery. E q u it y L in e 1 . 9 9 Susan C. Barton M rs. Susan C . Barton, 56, o f Pfafftown, died Saturday, M ay 21,2 005 at her home. She was I bom June 22, 1948 in I S alisb u ry to Roy and Ruth Hendricks Collette. M rs. Barton was a graduate o f Davie High School and Pfeiffer College. She was a member of S h ilo h Lu th eran C hurch in Lew isville where she was active in the W om en o f the Church. She was a member o f the Am eri­ can Business W om en’s Associa­ tion and was one o f the first women to join the Lion’s Club in North Carolina. She was a former vice president at People’s Bank and a business analyst for W achovia Bank. She was preceded in death by her father and a brother, B ill Collette. S urvivors: her husband, Ronald Barton of the home; her daughter, Anna Barton Hart and husband Joseph M . o f W inston- Salem ; her m other o f M ocks­ ville; ond a num ber o f nieces, nephews ond friends. The funeral service was con­ ducted M onday, M ay 23 at 11 a,m . at Vogler & Sons Reynolda Road C hapel, W inston-Salem by the R ev. R ay B est. A graveside service follow ed at 2 p.m . at Catawba M em orial Park in Hickory. M em orials; Hospice/Pallio- tive Care, 1100-C S. Stratford Road, W inston-Salem , 27103. John Calvin Efird John Calvin E fird, 80, died A pril 23, 2005 at the Veteran’s A d m in is tra tio n H o s p ita l in Salisbury. H e was bom in Davie Couhty on S ept. 2 , 1 9 2 4 , a son o f Stephen and E m ily Josephine Foster Efird. H e grew up in the Turkeyfoot community o f Davie County. H e served with the U .S. M arine Corps during W orid W ar II. H e was a graduate o f High Point U n iversity and retired from the city o f High Point wa­ ter filtration plant. His hobbies included golfing and bowling. S urvivors: his w ife , the form er Frances M oore; a son, Gregge A llen E fird and w ife Faye o f Cary; a granddaughter; a sister, D ovie Efird Suggs of High Point; and several nieces, nephews and cousins, several o f whom live in Davie and Iredell counties. H is fu neral w as held at Cum by Funeral Service in High P o in t w ith the R ev. E ric Peacocck. B urial follow ed in Floral Garden M em orial Park. M em o rials; W estchester Baptist, P.O. Box 5188, H igh Point, 27262. Linda IVivette H aire L in d a Peterson T riv e tte Haire, 64, o f Bear Creek Church Road, M ocksville, died Wednes­ day, M ay 18,2005 at her home. She was bora A pril 15,1941 to M rs. O llie Floyd Peterson and the late Benjam in T. Peterson. She retired w ith 33 years o f ser­ vice from Sara Lee Corporation. M rs . H a ire graduated fro m Gaffney H igh School, class of 1959. She attended Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church and enjoyed traveling and gar­ dening. , She was also preceded in death by her husband. Tom m y Trivette in 1995; and a sister, Roxanne Stoechert. S urvivors; her m other; 2 sons, G reg (D onna) M cC raw and Tim (M artha) M cC raw , all o f A d van ce; a sister, Patsy (Jim m y) Bridges , 2 brothers, Frankie (Danessa) Peterson and Vem on (Rachel) Peterson, all of G affney, S.C.; a granddaughter; a grandson,T. J. M cC raw ; 2 step grandchildren; several nieces and nephew s; and a special caregiver, JoA nna B ro w n o f Ham ptonville. Funeral services were held at 2 p.m . S unday, M a y 22 at Shuford-Hatcher Funeral Hom e Chapel in Gaffney, S.C. Burial was in the Frederick M em orial Gardens in Gaffney. M argie Agner Hakos M rs. M argie Agner Hakos, 87, o f Salisbury, died Saturday, M a y 21, 2005 at Row an Re-: gional M edical Center after a period o f declining health. She was born M arch 2 1 , 1918 in Row an County to the ■ late A d a K es ler and W a lte r Hom er Agner. She is a graduate o f Granite Quarry Schools and attended Rowan Cabarrus Com ­ m unity College for a practical nursing degree in 1972. She w orked at R ow an R eg io n al M edical Center sitting w ith pa­ tients. She was a member o f St. John’s Lutheran Church, Am eri­ can Legion, Golden Opportunity C lub. V F W 3006 A uxiliary and the Lutheran Theological South­ ern Seminary. H er husband, John Hakos, preceded her in death on M ay 18,1972. S u rvivo rs : a son, John M ichael Hakos o f Cope Coral, Fla.; 2 daughters, Donna W ill­ iams and Joan W illiam s, both of M ocksville; 2 brothers, Vonnie Agner and Ned Agner, both of Salisbury; a 6 grandchildren. H er funeral service was held Wednesday, M ay 25 at 1 p.m . at St. John’s Lutheran Church with Dr. Cori R . Sachtleben and the Rev. Jennifer G inn, pastors, of­ ficiating. Burial was in O ld H is­ to ric N a tio n a l C em etery in Salisbury. M e m o ria ls : S t. Joh n’s Lutheran, 20 0 W . Innes S t., Salisbury, 28144. % A P R * NO • C lo s in g C o s t f-v ЬГ Г г Ь ш utefor i mom>u.K»Cc lubjm loclunge/lTic muliimmAimuil I'crccntage Rate it I8?b<.r llic pcrmilteci lij-bw. whichever I» Uii. For quillflcd buyer». 1‘iymcm* niuit Jw frum *n Allegjcy Ch<cking »ccMiuit. AUcg*cy ju)» cloilug cwU wp ti> J 500. You will be nntlfte<l of wiy doling oiiu excwtling 1500 prior lo Intwrlng »ny other jwtiiblc fee». ^irocfcsÿi] S m a r t B a n k i n g f o r t h e G o o d L i f e . C booseA IIegacy.org 3 3 6 .7 7 4 .3 4 0 0 800.7 8 2 .4 6 70 egacy f e d e r a l c r e d it u n io n P r e g n a n c y C a r e C e n t e r G e t s D o n a t i o n F r o m S h a m r o c k R u n On Wednesdoy, M ay 11 , Father Andrew R . Draper, T O R , pastor o f St. Francis o f Assisi Catholic Church and Jim Arnold, race di­ rector o f Ihe Shamrock Run, presented a check for $ 1,000 to G wyn Jones w ilh the Davie Pregnancy Care Center. The 17th Annual Shamrock Run, one o f Ihe most popular runs on Ihe area race calendar, was held M arch 12. The run donates a portion o f it's proceeds to a different charily each year. Last year, A Storehouse for Jesus was the recipient. This year’s recipient, Ihe Davie Pregnancy Care Center, offers peer counseling and support services lo anyone experiencing a crisis related to pregnancy. In addition, educational programs for our area youth and parents re­ garding the significance o f abstinence ’until marriage, inform ation on all pertinent com m unity resources, and an opportunity to hear about Ihe Hope and Peace that come through a relationship wilh Jesus Christ, are offered. Next year's Shamrock Run w ill be held on Saturday, M arch 11. V B S J u n e 5 - 1 0 A t A d v a n c e F ir s t B a p tis t Vacation Bible School w ill be held Sunday, June 5-Friday, June 10 at Advance First Baptist Church, 6:30-9 p.m. Take an imaginary “Ram blin’ Road Trip” each night to places like Washington, D .C ., Yellowstone National Park, Knott’s Berry Farm in Califom ia and more. O n the journeys leam the answer |6 “W hich W ay D o I Go?” There w ill be classes for babies through adults. E a to n s B a p tis t P la n s V a c a tio n B ib le S c h o o l Eatons Baptist Church invites children to Serengeti Trek; where kids are w ild about G od’s love. “This year our church is crawling with excitement as we go on a Serengeti Trek,” said pastor David Gilbreath. “O ur Serengeti Trek program w ill provide fun, memorable Bible-Ieam ing activities for kids of all ages. Each day kids w ill sing catchy songs, play team­ work-building gomes, nibble W olering Hole snocks, take on a daily challenge to let God’s love grow into their homes, experience elec­ trifying B ible adventures, collect Bible m em ory Buddies to remind them o f G od’s W ord, and create Bible Point crafts they’ll take home and play w ith all summer long.” “Serengeti Trek is an exciting way for kids to learn more about G od’s love,” says Gilbreath. “W e’ll be studying stories about Bible characters w ho were w ild about God. Plus, kids w ill join neariy a ® m illion children in North Am erica and take part in a hands-on mis- sion project that w ill reach needy children in Africa. Each day con­ cludes at Ihe M ane Event - a celebration that gels everyone involved in living what they’ve leam ed. Fam ily members and M ends are en­ couraged to join us for this special tim e each night al 8:32 p.m . W e hope Serengeti Trek w ill leave a little bit o f God’s love in our com­ munity.” Serengeti Trek begins on Sunday, June 5, and continues through Thursday, June 9. M eet at Eatons Bapdst Church (located on Eatons Church Road at Richie Road) each evening from 6:30-9. For infor­ m ation, call the pastor at 998-6149. Outdoor Movie NightFREE B ring the fam ily (m ovies edited fo r fa m ily view ing) Friday June 3 - 8pm Q u e s tio n s ? 9 4 0 - 6 6 1 8 Н 1 И И М Я И BAPTIST CHURCH 4815 u s Highway 158 One mile W est 0( 158/801 MEMORIAL DAY \ SERVICE \ May 30 at 2 p.m. W E .S T L A W N GARDENS \ О F M E M О R Y , t ' Free Hot Bogs and Drinks Local'WFW, West Forsyth Color.Guard \ and More! a \ 766-4731 J Attention CHRONIC PAIN SUFFERS Attend this meeting to learn about getting relief NATURALLY DATE: May 31 ST TIME: 7:00 PM Locaton: Dockside Seafood in Clemmons For More information Caii 336-284-4406 or 336-940-2745 FREE ADIVIISSION Call to Reserve your place DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - C9 This m essage brought to you by these local businesses w ho encourage you to w orship at fhe church of your choice. CAUDELL LUMBER COMPANY 162 S heek Street M ocksville, N O 27 028 3 3 6 -7 5 1- 2 16 7 AU TO PARTS MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE 884 S. Main SI. • Mocksvllle 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 9 4 4 GENTLE MACHINE & TOOL INC. 3319 u s Hwy. 158 Mocksvllle, NC 27028 3 3 6 -9 9 8 -3 3 5 0 M S VILLAGE HARDWARE 5431 Hwy. 15B- Advance, NC 3 3 6 -9 9 8 -1 9 8 7 oKauat/c .Я^еш/иу Meta Johnson, ШВТ МосЫПе, NC Uc. » Й 66 Ily Appolnlmenl Only Ш 6) 751-2411 S un T r u st Mocksvlllo « 7 5 1.5936 MocksvDIo* 751-6162 Cooleomoo • 284-2542 Advance • 940-2420 LARRY’S WOOD FLOORING SERVICE 2H Years Kxiieriencr Sanding • RcllnlsMng inslallallon • Old & Now Work Utrry AkCU'tinfv • MocksviUc 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -1 7 2 1 M O CKSVILLE SHO E SHO P Shoe, Doot, and Tack Repairs full Line of Western Qools & Work Boots (UrgcSolec(lon)M.m, liirt .IhuK.l'li.V.^.Wril JltSlt.‘>1 3 3 6 -7 5 3 -0 9 4 2 Clifld Goiiali, Owncr/OpcMtor .<2 CoiKl Stiiiarc, MocUvillc (III I'liwi) Si(uuic) W.C. WHITE & G 0 . 8S0 N.Trade St. Winston Salem, NC 27102 3 3 6 -7 2 3 -1 6 6 9 S M P a l l e f O n e A PALEX COMPANY I (¡Л ’I'll I'kcv I'Viol Koad M()ck.svilh! N C , 27 02« 338-492-S565 SEAFORD LUMBER COMPANY 127 Buck Scaford Rd. Mocksviilc, N C 27028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -5 1 4 8 V O G L E R < ^ S O N S Funeral Home 28 49 Middle Brook Dr. Cleminons, NC 27 012 336-766-4714 lERRiS MEAT PROCESSING Wb Custom M eat Process Beef - Pork - Deer 30 years ¡experience 092 Ralpli nulsdoe nil' Mockavlllii 3 3 6 -4 9 2 -5 4 9 6 J. P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC, Makers ol D A IS Y FLO U R HV Cii.tivm Weml D epot St., M ocksvllle, N C 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 1 2 6 E A T O N FUNERAL HOME SINCE ¡951 .125 North Miiln Street Mocksville, NC 27028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 1 4 8 DAVIE LU M BER & LOGGING 8 7 2 Main Church Rd. Mocksvllle, NC 27 028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -9 1 4 4 C R A IC CARTER R U IL D E R JN C . 119 Hwy. 801 S, Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 3 3 6 -9 4 0 -2 3 4 1 HmUiTof Qujliiy üiUivii /Ллкч /îrcicr.W Qráf Л. Смш. fíni * Mifiin С. Can«, Vice fíe». FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 4 9 5 Valley Road Mocksvllle, NC 27 028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 1 4 1I'n-Hiipiioii Coll in: 3 3 6 -7 5 3 -D R U G F U L L E R t t № i r Precision Laser Cutting & Metal Fabrication 855 Salisbury Road Mocksville, NC 27028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -3 7 1 2 CAROLINA ^DRILLING INC. .326 Railroad St, Mocksville, NC 27028 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -2 9 6 1 F a x : 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -0 7 7 4 FULLER ARCHITECTURAL PROUDLY DESIGNING DAVIE CHURCHES 3 3 6 7 5 1 0 4 0 0 Davle Academy of Martial Arts 7S3.&482* 782.0038We Ti'och Respect Everyday MIIUMNCARE OF MOCKSVILLE 1 0 0 7 Hoviiard S t. Mocksvllle 7 5 1 -3 5 3 5 C a l l 751-2129 to ApvERTiSE Y our B u siness on xpE C h u rch P^g e . I i с ю . DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 ■ I r 0 I l 1 R o t a t o r C u f f I n j u r i e s C o m m o n ; H e a l i n g T a k e s T i m e By Nina Whitley Special to the Enterprise ' As Connie Kowalske discov­ ered, her rotator cuff recovery took longer than she expected. When a bone is broken, it takes 6-8 weeks for il to heal. A tendon takes much longer. Tendons are not fully healed un­ til 12 weeks after the repair. Ten­ dons are a lot more complicated, there is scar tissue that can form and cause them to adhere to other tissues if movement is not started soon enough. If a therapist docs not supervise the movenient and too much streess is pul on Ihc repair il can result in rupture, which can add more lime to the healing process. Rotator cuff repair, also com­ monly refencd to by laymen as “ rotary cup repair” or “ rotator cup repair," is a common surgery. “ I never noticed so many people had their arm in a sling, until il happened to me and now, everywhere 1 go it seems I meet someone who has had the same surgery as me. I ’ve compared stories with several people I have met. One lady I met was having lo go and privately pay for mas­ sage to get relief from her pain. I told her that was part o f my therapy at the Martinal Outpa­ tient Rehabilitation Center," Kowalske said. “ In fact, that was my favorite part, getting the ultrasound to warm the tendons up before the stretch and then the massage to help prevent the soft tissue from restricting the tendon’s move­ ments." Rotator cuff surgery is per­ formed when the rotator cuff ten­ dons tear as a result of sudden trauma or more commonly as the result of chronic impingement syndrome. Chronic impingement syndrome is where the humeral head at the top of the arm com­ presses the tendons against the acromion. The acromion is the bone that comes off Ihe back of the shoulder blade toward the front of the shoulder joint. Some­ times the acromion becomes larger or spurred causing a reduc­ tion in the space where the ten­ dons pass through, in tho shoul­ der joint. This cause; compres­ sion which causes gradual thin­ ning o f the cuff tendons and eventual tearing, lliis can result In severe pain and limitations in the use of the arm, especially with reaching activities. In Kowalske’s ease, this pain caused a restriction in her golf game for quite awhile, In fact, Kowalske first noticed her shoul­ der pain when she was playing golf. She felt a sudden pop in her shoulder when she performed a golf swing. After Ihe pop, she was only able to play a few more holes and had to stop bifcause the symptoms worsened. Kowalske first consulted her primary physician’s office at Medical Associates of Davic and was seen by Anne Lake, FNP. She was then referred by Lake to occupational therapy at Martinal Outpatient Rehabilita­ tion Center in Mocksville. There, Angelia Wood, OTR/L treated Kowalske for her first diagnosis o f impingement syndrome. She made gains in active movement o f her shoulder; however, expe­ rienced minimal relief o f her pain. When her symptoms per­ sisted, she was sent back to Lake who then referred her for a M RI and for an orthopedic consult. “ M y M RI showed a tear in my rotator cuff and I saw Dr. Gregg Cregan at Orthopedic Specialists of the Carolinas. He diagnosed me with a tear in my rotator cuff. He scheduled me for surgery for a massive repair," Kowalske said. “ After the sur­ gery, Dr, Cregan wrote a pre­ scription form e to begin therapy after my rotator cuff repair and I requested to go back to Martinal Outpatient Rehabilitation lo see Angelia Wood again. I had 16 weeks of therapy which was« re­ ally painful at first. The first three weeks I was in a sling and only could take it off for passive ex­ ercises. Those are the' ones where Angelia moved my arm through the different movements w ith varying amounts and precautions as the doctor instructed. "During this lime, I also could do exercises with Ihe help of my body’s movement. I gradually moved to some active movement with my other arm assisting. Fi­ nally at six weeks, I was cleared to begin lifting'm y arm on my own. S till, I could not start strengthening with weights until 8-12 weeks and then it was a gradual thing. “ Angelia always made my shoulder feel better after a ses­ sion. The ultrasound and deep tissue massage really seemed to take Ihe pain away and help loosen me up. I no longer have to go to therapy, bul I still do my stretches and strengthening ex­ ercises they showed me at home. I have returned lo doing yard work and to doing most of the activities that I have always been used to doing. M y doctor said il w ill take a year lo get totally back to everything. I plan to return lo g o lf in the next year," said Kowalske. “ I really enjoyed all of the employees al the Martinal Cen­ ter. It was so convenient to be able to gel my therapy locally and nol have to waste my time driving out of town. I was able to get started with therapy as soon as I called and was able lo get the appointment times I needed wilh my work schedule. 1 highly recommend Angelia Wood and the Martinal Outpa­ tient' Rehabilitation Center in Mocksville for therapy," said Kowalske, Angelia Wood explains the Injury to Connie Kowalski. Angelia Wood (right) leads Connie Kowalski through physical rehab.Wood warms the tendons prior to physical therapy. i e d i s ^ fo lk s m a k e th e rig h t c h o ic e f o r th e ir T V s th is s u m m e r... Sadly, satellite customers often lose reception during summer showers. Some say they have to pay more to maintain very expensive equipment. And satellite customers say they have to pay more just to watch TV in little Johnny’s bedroom, too. Ted does not want this to happen to you! He’s here to help! He wants you to know you can get up to 120 channels for under $30 a month straight up until 2006. He has more for you, too! Also included in this special are: • All your favorite local channels at no additional cost • A digital receiver and remote control • FREE INSTALUTION Adelphia Call 1-866-4-ADELPHIA (1 -8 6 6 -4 2 3 -3 5 7 4 ) D avie S c h o o ls DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,200S - D1 Cooleemee Elementary The fifth grade students in Mrs. Wilcox's room are gearing up for summer after a number of end-of-lhe-year activities. They worked hard on the End of the Grade tests and were successful. The field day activities were a lesson in responsibility and lead­ ership as they had to run events for younger students. The trip to Fun Station in Statesville was a highlight. Latin America Day was a success. Students went lo a Mexican restaurant and Mr. Munoz taught Ihem to dance. Mrs. Wilcox cleaned her room up and gave students lols of goodies. They w ill have plenty to read over the summer since each received eight books from Mrs. Wilcox and a book from the , school. With a grant from the Davie Foundation, each stiidenl in the school received a new book for summer reading. First grade enjoyed field day and thank the fourth and fifth graders for their help. They vis­ ited Ihe Zachary House and learned about children's chores in the old days o f Cooleemee. Students slopped hogs, gathered eggs, fed chickens, mode butter, washed clothes on a scrub board, planted a garden, and led a cow to pasture. M rs. S aville's class has worked hard to present Ihe play The Electric Cat. They had a . pizza party for Ihe end o f Ihe year. Kindergarten students cel­ ebrated the end of a successful school year with a trip to Cool­ eemee Park. Students played with friends from all classrooms and enjoyed a Happy Meal be­ fore reluming to school. In class­ rooms, the last few days have been spent preparing Hooked on Reading "tackle boxes" for each child to use during the summer. Children w ill hang fish on their lines for each book read. Then, when school begins again in August, all fishing lines w ill be displayed at school. Kinder­ garteners and their teachers thank Mrs. Jones for organizing and providing books fo r the summer reading program. The fourth graders are cel­ ebrating the end of a successful year. Shelby Stephens ended the year with 287 points. Brie White had 89 points, and Jason Sellers in had 189 points. Everyone agreed that they enjoyed study­ ing about North Carolina and are ready lo check out Ihe beaches on the Outer Banks. Second graders went to Dan Nicholas Park for Iheir end-of- year party May 19. The students rode the merry-go-round and the train. They visited the petting bam and had a program at Ihe nature center where they were able to see a turtle, snake, and chinchilla, Comatzer Elementary f Indents and staff spent the week of the school year having fun und looking forward to summer vacation. Many classes went on field trips and students enjoyed end o f year picnics, fun and, games. M rs. M oore and M rs. Campbell’s second grade class have had a terrific year. “ We have just finished leaming aboul dinosaurs. Students had the chance to research one dinosaur and write a report about it and share it with the class," said Mrs. M oore. "They read several dinosaur books including Dinosaurs Everywhere, Dinosaurs Before Dark, and Danny and the Dinosaur. We ended our study on dinosaurs with a Dinosaur Dinner prepared by the Corriatzer cafeteria. We had stegasaurus’ bony plates, T- Rex teeth. Dinosaur bones, and Dinosaur eggs. To top off the lunch, students ate volcanoes made w ith ice cream and Cheerwine. Our second grade class also had a great time on our last field trip of the year lo the zoo. Students got to see all types of animals from habitats around the worid. They had a fantastic time seeing animals from areas that we had been leaming about all year. To top off the school year, our second grade enjoyed an end of the year party filled with games, food and lols of fun. We w ill certainly miss this great groilp o f second graders as they move to third grade next year." Principal Barbara Owens, assistant principal Lynn Marrs, the faculty and staff at Comatzer w ish all students ,and their fam ilies, a happy, safe nnd relaxing summer. . Shady Grove Elementary Kindergarten “ We have enjoyed your children so much and have had the opportunity to watch them grow so much this year," said Mrs. Foster. "We are going to miss them very much. We hope you all have a fun and safe summer. We hope you have had a wonderful time in our class this y^ar, and w ill come back to visit next year when you all are in first grade. Thank you to all of Continued On Page D3 North Davie Middle School's award-winning algebra team includes, from left: John Stigall, Winston Becker, Michelle Phillips, Josh Pan and Coach Steve Rareshide. At right is David Wilson, the one who ran the regional competition. ND Student Wins Algebra Competition North Davic Middle School took first place out of 13 schools in Northwest North Carolina in the Algebra I competition . at Wake Forest University April 16. Team members were John S tigall, W inston Becker, Michelle Phillips and Josh Pan. They were coached by Steve Rareshide, who spent a few af­ ternoons with the students pre­ paring for the competition. Individually, all four students placed inthe top 10, and Phillips took first overall. Phillips, along wilh 27 other regional finalists from around the state, advanced to the next level of the competi-^ lion at UNC-Grcensboro, where she took first place in Ihe state. The Algebra competition is sponsored by the North Carolina Teachers of Mathematics and is held every year. State middle algebra competition winner Michelle Phillips with North Davie teacher, Steve Rareshide. Curry, Thom as Earn DHS Jr. Civitan Top Honor Davie High Junior Civitan members Wesley Thomas and Chelsea Curry were presented the Junior Civitan of the Year award on May 17. They earned the award by set­ ting the example for members and peers. Each were eager and w illin g to participate in all projects and events. Thomas, 12th grade director, is a May graduate. He plans lo enlist in the Marines, Curry, pub­ lic relations coordinator, is a ris­ ing senior. Members have the opportu­ nity to develop leadership skills through com m unication and teamwork, all while he or she develops a sense o f public re­ sponsibility through community service. Involvement in a Junior Citivan Club promotes the skill needed for a positive self-image and helps create a positive pub­ lic image for all young people. Some o f the club projects: goody basket for a local fire de­ partment, Uniled Way’s Day of Caring, Davie Senior Center’s "niste of the Town fundraiser, at­ tended and helped with a picnic and swim party for the Davie County Group Homes, partici­ pated in Civitan Intemational’s Can Do food collection, spon­ sored a Breast Caner Awareness program, donated to the Civitan International Research Center and V ictory Junction Gang Camp, held a fundraiser, spon­ sored three “Little Lambs” for Storehouse for Jesus, brought and assembled goody bags for the Exceptional C hildren’s classes as w ell as donating Christmas ornaments for stu­ dents lo paint, helped group home residents paint Christmas ornaments, held an induction cer- emony, helped with South Davie Junior C ivilans’ charter cer­ emony, helped decorate for "Snacks fo r Santa,” helped Mocksville Civitan Club with Ihe Festival of Lights fundraiser, col­ lected canned food for two food drives for “Food for His Flock,” held a Christmas party, held a Teacher Appreciation Day at Davie High, made and delivered Valentine cupcakes to the EC class, helped at M ocksville Civitan Club with Spring Fling Arts and Crafts Show, held ad­ visor and sponsoring club appre­ ciation, held an Environmental Awareness Campaign, went to the district meeting, held awards ceremony and end-of-year party, .did'yard work for senior citizen. Officers are; president, Josh Reinsvold; vice president. Matt Austin; secretary, Beth Bennett; treasurer, Phillip Hursey; PR co- ordinator, Chelsey Curry, histo­ rian, Megan Cooper; sergeant at arms, Jason Bowles; 12th grade director, Wesley Thomas; 11 th grade director, Jeremiah Worrell; lOth grade director, Miranda Esposito; acting 9th grade direc­ tor, Seth Spry. Members are; Rickard Ander­ son, Courtney C all, Kristina Crews, Marissa DeHart, Josh Fields, Brittany Green, Dustin Harris, Jordan Hempstead, Jenna Hendricks, Lauren Kirk, Bran­ don Landreth, Joseph McDaniels, Bobbi Kay Messick, Jessica Overby, Caitlin Reavis, N ick Sexton, Jonathan Sims, Christina Snider, Lea Tarieton, Emily Teague, Daniel Wood and Kyle Wooten, The Davie High Junior Civitan Club is sponsored by the Mocksville Civitan Club, Their ' advisor is Ms, Barben ■ -I i Davie High Jr. Civitan president, Josh Reinsvold, wth Junior Civitan of the Year award winners Chelsea Curry and Wesley Thomas. South Davie Middle Schooi Junior Civitan Club members pose with their advisors, Jill Gaither and Debbie Sponaugle. South Davie Jr. Civitans Have Successful First Year The South Davie Junior Civitan Club’s first year has been a success. The club was chartered on Nov. 1,2004. The club w ill receive Honor Club status through Civitan In- teraational. The club has been busy this year with starting up and in Ihe school and community. Some of their projects include; charter (j;fl-en\ony, made and sold spirit • scarves for Spirit Week, made decorations and helped with the Davie County Partnership for Children, “Snacks with Santa,” bought games for the Eagles Team, sponsored two "L iltle Lambs" for the Storehouse for Jesus, helped Mocksville Civitan Club with the Festival o f Lights fundraiser, held a Christmas party, made and sent Christmas cards to Brenner’s Children’s Hospital, cleaned u|f front yard area of school, made posters and collected money forTiunam i re­ lief, St. Patrick’s Day party for the Eagles Team, donated to the Victory Junction Gang Camp, held an advisor appreciation and sponsoring club appreciation, held an Environmental Aware­ ness Campagin, helped Mocks­ ville Civitan with Spring Fling Arts ond Crafts Show, had a face painting booth, and held an end- of-year party. O fficers are: president, Maggie Maclean; vice president, Rachel Mackintosh; secretary, Rebecca Hendrix; treasurer, Jen­ nifer Allen; PR coordinator, Sa­ rah Dinkins; historian, Victoria ' Kennedy; sergeant at arms, Lyndsey Garrett; 8th grade direc­ tor, Jessa Ren; 7th grade direc­ tor, Payne M iller; 6th grade di­ rector, Destiny Pearcy. Members are: Roger Adkins II, Shelli(y Beaumont, Stephanie Collins, Rebecca Cook, Devon Cross, Nina Dalton, Jessie Felts, Kristin Ferebee, Britni Grammer, Shelby Holland, Luke Hollifield, Rachel Howell, Hannah Hursey, Matthew Hursey, Josh Ijames, ' Christopher Jacobs, Mary Jarvis, Shelby Karriker, Allison Lam­ bert, Pat Mandarano, Meghan Matthews, Asia Moore, Desirae Moses, Chelsey Reinhardt, Cody Rusher, Mariah Sanders, Steffi Shaver, K e’aira Sm ith, Tesj Tagnani, Megan W hitaker, Kristina Yourdon. Advisors are; Ms. Gaither, Ms, Sponaugle and Ms. Lewis. Being a Junior Civitan gives members the opportuity to de­ velop leadership skills, team­ work, a sense of public respon­ sibility through community ser­ vice as well as promoting a posi­ tive self-image. The Mocksvillc Citivan Club spottsors the club ^ D2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTER^»RISE RECOKI). Thursdny, May 26,2005- Eugenia Ijames Starting Family Tradition Of Education DCCC Graduate Eugenia Ijames is congratulated by Dr. Thomas Walker, DCCC’s Dean of Enrollment and Student Services, following the 2005 Commencement Ceremony May 13. Eugcnin Ijnincs o f Mock.sville graduated froih Davidson County Com m unity College M ay 13 with a iw o-year associate degree in health inform adon technology, and she w ili1)egin a new career M a y 3 1 in 'Forsyth M e d ic a l C en ter's M e d ic a l R ecords D epartm ent.-,' Ijam es Was n il smiles during the D C C C ' C cm m enoem enl C erem ony, because she had successfully fulfllled the Hrst step o f her educational and career goal. H er secori.djitep w ill soon fo llow as ishe-tr^nsferf to East Carolina Univeisity to pursue her b ac h elo r's*d eg re e in health inform ation management. “The best part is that I w ill not have to move from M ocksville to Greenville since I w ill be earning m y bachelor’s degree on-line,” said Ijam es, a 1982 graduate of Davie High School.' T h e o n -lin e cu rricu lu m means she w ill be able to work full-tim e while taking a full load at East Carolina. Ijam es’ focus on education has rubbed o ff on two o f her sisters and all three daughters. H er oldest daughter, Jackie, graduated from D av ie H ig h School M ay 20, and w ill m ajor in early childhood education at D C C C this fall. H e r m id d le daughter, G lenda, is a student at D avie High School and plans to enroll at D C C C in 2006. L a tric e is her youngest daughter who is a student at South Davie M iddle School. Ijam es’ sisters, Em m a W hite and P h y llis S tevenson, are enrolled at D C C C m ajoring in m edical assisting and early ch ild h o o d edu cation, respectively. Ijam es’ future was uncertain in D ecem ber 2002 when she , experienced a jo b la y -o ff at Lexington Hom e Brands’ Plant 1 1 w here she was the lead w o rker in her dep artm ent. Divorced, Ijames was the sole wage earner for her household. A t first she was anxious until she learned the educational options available at Davidson County C o m m u n ity C o lle g e . She enrolled nt D C C C in January 2003. “M y la y -o ff was a m ajor hurdle I was able to overcome with help from Davidson County C o m m u n ity C o lle g e ,” said Ijam es, one o f 14 children bom to the late E m m a and A tlas Stevenson of M ocksville. Ijames was hired as a w ork study student in the D C C C adm issions office in January 2 0 0 4 , a jo b that led to a permanent part-tim e position in the same department since she performed her duties w ell. No matter whether she was assisting a student, filing documents or entering data into the computer system , Ija m e s ’ w ork ethic, professionalism and office skills were all outstanding, according to her supervisor. “Eugenia rarely missed a day o f w ork even when she was caring for her elderiy father nt home when he was term inally ill,” said K im Sepich, D C C C ’s d ire cto r o f adm issions and retention. “W e w ill miss her in the admissions department, but we are so happy that she w ill be working in her field, and that she is continuing her education.” Agent On Duty 24-7 C all (336) 751-3538 o r v isit w w w .how a rd rea lty.co m HOWARD REALTY 330 s. S a lis b u ry S t. M o c k s v ille ' Hours: M onday-Friday &-6 Saturday ^12, Sunday By Appt. ÍF0n A v a i l a b l e L o t s & L a n d #2 Salmoni Road.Thompson Lana...Hwy. ¿01.....................M l Yadklnvlllo Rd..........................629 Madison Rd (Commercial)......OH Baihal Church Rd............!........Bear Creek Church Rd.......... ......10 Ac. $45.050,.11 acros $71.677......Building Lot $34,500'......acros $600.000..........................$425,000........6fA acres $60,000....32W-acres $188,505 r l E S a S E Z H I B e - D o w n to w n - O ffic e S p a c o fo r R a n t. (2 ) 7 0 0 s q . ft. o n D e p o t S t, S 4 S 0 P /M e a c h Call C onnlo 100*/- ncfos (omi. 3BR, 2BA, out- 42+/-8C, 3BR, 2 ^ 5-slaI bam, pond, bldgs., croek. $499,000. THIS ONE HAS (TAai $450,000. S E E O U R A V A I L A B L E R E N T A L S I N T H E C L A S S I F I E D S E C T I O N .Buittinte32.neodscx)nìpl.(caofat)oa.4BR. Yadkinvüle; Rencwatedl Better than new! Наппопу-ЗВЯ, 2BA, 1W* acres (Э IBA. enormous polcnbal $245,000. ЗОЯ ZBAonlOfA ac, $239,000 ferrod), 2 siali turn. $179,900 129 Hawthorne Ro. Г Л П 115 Avalon Street Г Л П Ю б Meadow view Rd. Г7и Г|179 Woodouhn Place Hickory Hill, brick rarv:h on iac.. 3BR, Kindorlon, 3BR 2 5BA, foncod bk ytd. 2BA, many umontlos. $169,900 socuhty syst. & MOREIIS159,900 GBR. 2QA, bright & oiiy with ail 4BR, 2BA. 1.5 Mory. cteonod porc^, 14004/- sq. It., lull basement. FP, oppliancosl $159,900 hardwoods, storagebi^s. $158,900 fonced back yard. $154,900 3BR, 2EÎA, woll buitt. unlin. basemofil. W«i! m CroeVvrtMd 57ac, tvisomorl, poM. Homo wa/fflnly. $144,900 30П. 2 5BA, spiit tovpi $142,500 3»/-5oduiJed ac 20R.1.5QA, 1,392+/-sl, Woll kopi 3BR, 2DA, wilh fenced Better Than New! 3BR. 2BA, MOVE IN all appliancos. slao. bW. $139,900. back yard. $129,500. CONDmON.i^ndscapod. $127,000, 118 Autumn Court i i 411 Ijames church Rd. i /ш \ i 2113 Junción Rd. Г 7 М П 4S3 Ijames Church Но.Г Т И П 458 Deadmon Rd. 3BR, 2BA, 2 rear docks, lg kilch, (g Нопю W.vranly. 3BR. 2DA. stono FP. laund. 2 car garage. $124,900 $2,500 carpct allow. $98,500. CM^ihg bndi home ЗвЯ IBA. beavy 3BR, 2BA, now camel, splil bedroom 3BR, 2BA, 1.96 acres fencod, Lvriicap,2bidgj.(bo(?\w-ei€ct) $98,000 plan, largo master. $82,900. secludod & private. $81,000. 156 AVON St. ^ 1110 Stone Wood Rd. Г Л П 312 Micheals Rd. $74,900 Almost new 3BR, 2BA. FP. all appiiartcos on 9G ac. $71,500 $59,900 2BR, IBA, Cooloemoo mill houso. ZonedTiTim(kiriter,100]i190bt,srnel73CM-sq.ll $52,900. abardofied hcrne (no value дш) $40,000. O u r A g e n t s A r h H u r í: T o S r k v i Y o u ! % JULIAllOWAUD751*8567 LISAWISE 751-8572 BEVERLYRUSS99M156 Amanda Hooker On Honor Roll A m anda Lee H o o ke r o f M ocksville has been named lo the Presidential Honor Roll for the 2003-2004 academic year at Catawba College by maintaining a m inim um 3.7 grade point av­ erage in 30 or m ore semester hours. Amanda Phillips Earns Credit Union Scholarship SEC U Foundation, funded by the State Em ployee’s Crfcdit U nion’s m em bersiiip, has pre­ sented a $10 ,0 00 , four- year co lleg e scholarship to Amanda P h illip s , a graduating se­ n io r at D av ie High School, She is the dau ghter o f Edford Phillips Jr. and Patricia Phillips. This scholarship was aw arded fo r study at U N C Asheville. It w as given based on S E C U ’s philosophy o f “People H elping People,” recognizing the recipient’s com m unity in­ volvem ent, leadership skills. P h illip s character and integrity, as w ell as scholastic achievem ent of m aintaining a 2.5 or higher grade point average. The schol­ arship w ill be used for tuition and university approved educa­ tional expenses over eight con­ secutive semesters. State E m p lo yees’ C re d it U n io n ’s local advisory board chair M artha Boger said; “In keeping with the People H elp­ ing People credit union philoso­ phy, SEC U 's members, via the foundation, are helping local stu­ dents further their education through North Carolina’s univer­ sity system. It is with great plea­ sure that we award this scholar­ ship to Am anda Phillips. As a representative o f S E C U ’s m em ­ bership, I ’m proud o f our com ­ m itment to education and our ef­ forts to help students succeed.” Olivia Steele Completes UNC Research Project A year-long research project by University o f North Carolina at Chapel H ill student O livia Steele earned her the right to graduate w ith honors. The Mocks­ ville native re­ ceived her di­ plom o during graduation cer­ emonies at the U N C C hapel H ill School o f Nursing on M ay 14. S te e le Steele was among four stu­ dents to graduate with honors us part o f their bachelor o f science in nursing degrees. Steele’s honors project was titled “Nursing Hom e Placement o f Rural African American Older Adults; W ho Gets to Choose.” For completing the project, she received a $ 10 0 award from the Tam m y Flake Fund. The class­ m ates and parents o f Tam m y Flake, u nursing student who died in an automobile accident just before graduation in 1989, established the award. D iiv if/C lc m m o iis O flic e Iiitc-isection o fH w y s 158 & 801 .W 1 W S -8S I6 K clo cm io n l-S O O -3 1 7 -4 3 9 8 : Locally Owned...Nationally Known _________... ОАЛЕ 38fl ÍBAVinUije 1900s Fiim Siylfi house lemcOeW liom the grouni] up lieeds noining td л% o«te(' Sitija:»! m pfww Oift'e icicaion w 4»/ • aciej ltó*i [lows inofuoroti Pieniv ol charwef Cftfij Gaide 998-1150 (W35lSl2)Я й В гп RINOSMIU ORIVE OAK vmiY OAVIE 36Я 2 5dA ImrrkKuiaie fiñoii ol e<lias »а'кчп paniry. la/ge laundry *ñut> aruj iiom, КЛИ1, »wk im, o"ice aO’Oins itlsI/, be paiio «»'coveted poicfi Li'm liiyien, jpu I cbtriad.com 21X15 CuKIacU lU»Vcf Kut 1’л Ш е Ciiiawcll l\knVcr it a ttgltlercil traU«indtK of CoMhcII DinUr CnriMirulliin.An iu|ual 0|)(4)rluiiliy Сол1|^4лу. 1Циа1 Hmiiing Oppt^tunlly, ГжИ «ilicc U imkpcrukntly Owmd uml Opcmlcil. c o L O i u e u . b a n k g r b I'R IA D , RK ALTO R S' Davie Schools DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - D3 Continued From Page 01 the wonderful parents, too; we appreciate all that you have done, especially sending us your children.” “Parents, thank you for all you have done this year to support our class,” M rs. Sanders said, “You have collected tons of change, donated canned foods, sent in special snacks, counted to 100 too many times, read take home readers and volunteered your tim e and talents. W e could not have done it without you. Your children are precious, and we are so grateful to have had the opportunity to teach them.” “O ur year is com ing to a quick close,” M rs. Tew said, “W e have enjoyed teaching your children this year. W e have enjoyed getting to know each of you. You have made this year a spccial one. I w ish to thank everyone who volunteered this year. You hove fulfilled mony duties and spent a great deal of tim e h elp in g us. It is appreciated.” First Grade "It is well documented that ch ild ren w ho do not read regularly w ill lose ground in m aking reading progress,” M rs. M arion said. “This summer w ill be a long one, and your child needs to read as often as possible to hold and continue the wonder­ ful progress made in reading this year. If the summer passes w ith­ out reading practice, your child w ill not begin the next school year at current level, and ground w ill be lost. Please (and I know this is hard) go to the library this sum m er and read, read, read. Thank you for all your support and hard w o rk w ith yo u r children this year.” Second Grade “M rs. M oser and I have had an exciting experience w ith this group o f children this year,” M rs. Spach said. “You parents have been wonderful to us. W e thank you for all of your support and help this year. A ll o f you, who have been able to volunteer in some way, thank you.” Third Grade “T h ank you to all o f the p aren ts,” M rs . B ak er said. “Thank you for your tim e, effort, supplies, and general good w ill throughout this school year. You are appreciated.” “ D uring this last w eek o f school the students have had quite a fun filled week,”, M rs. Harvey said. “M onday wos our field day and the students had a great tim e playing board games they brought in the class and doing all the exciting activities M rs . U m b erg er planned. C o n g ratu latio n s to all the students for com pleting 30 or m ore o f these activities and playing w ith good sportsman­ ship. I would like to congratulate them on winning the third grade tug-of-w ar contest. W e had the sm allest class size w ith 17 students, but their hard w ork paid off. Tuesday the students had the chance to create some in terestin g cushions and containers fo r on egg drop contest. They really got into this activity and were successful in protecting their egg from the 8 foot drop. They won an ice­ cream for a job w ell done, W ed­ nesday I had the chance to join the students during PE to play M onster Boll. M y team won to oil the other student's dissatis­ faction. W e watched the school talent show. The students who performed were great. Thursday the students had a chance to create hand print T-shirts fbr our class and then met with the entire third grade to get them auto­ graphed. Friday was our class party. T h a n k you to M rs. M cN eill for organizing tho party and to all the other mothers who helped make this doy happen. Report cords w ill be sent home on Monday. For any student who w ill not be here that day, these can be picked up at the office by the porent once school is out. I wont to take this opportunity to thonk oil of the porents for being so supportive this year. It has been a privilege in working with your children and helping them grow in both mind and spirit. I wish them all the best for the future. Thank you.” “M rs. Plyler and I would like to thank yoii for allowing us to be a small part o f your children’s lives,” M rs. Hendrix said. “It has been our pleasure and we thank you for your continuous support throughout the year. Have a safe, restful, and fun-filled summer. Rem em ber that there ore won­ derful summer reoding programs avoiloble at area libraries.” “Thank you to all our parents who have helped us this year in whatever way you contributed. You are a wonderful group, and it has been a pleasure,” M rs. Johnson said. “The Raleigh trip was a great success. M y appreciation is extended to those o f you that were able to attend. The students seemed to have a great tim e,” M rs. O hr said. Students of the W eek; Brian O g le , C a itiy n R ad a to v ich , Q u in n H o lc o m b , T ro y W olverton, Chelsea M ietlow ski, Luke Renegar, M ikeacla Sm ith, Gypsie Nelson, Crystal Agüero, Stepahonie Siler, Jake W hitley, Kristen Bhasker,Quwana Doby. Awards D ay was heldM ay 2 0 . S everal aw ards and certificates were given out. M ark Graham and K oitlyn S m ith received owords fo r “Outstanding Citizenship o f the Yeor” selected by the faculty. M r. L an ier read a good-bye slory. M r. Larry W ayne Lanier is retiring. Mucksyillc Elementary Student o f the M onth, M ay; Zachary Palm er, T.J. M artin , R iya Barad, Samantha Rivera, C ariy Thom pson, Em m a Etter, Hannah Spears, Hannah Sales, C onnor C o rn eliso n , D ustin H ilto n , Logan K o o n tz, M cKenzie H all, Ethan M cCoy, Chelsea Byeriyk, K ellie Viers, A riel Harvat, Nicholas D ow ell, H aley Lam bert, Shelby Potts, Yarimeth C astro,H ali Hutchens, Jose Sanchez, Austin Bearden, Clay Cave, Davis Absher. T errific K ids, M ay; Jenny Robbins, Nicholas Austin, Dylan Foster, Marcus Salazar, Meredith Driver, Donte McPherson,Angel Helm andollar, Lesly Albarado, Natalie Garcia, Benjamin Juarez, Patrick Gordon, W arren Foster, Bryant K im m er, Brittany W il­ son, Drue Parker, Devin W ilson, K orbin Sm ith, Touren W yse, Tabitha M orris, Jose Nava, Ryan Robinson, Zach Frye, Daniel Forrest, Zachary Finney, DoRyus Scott, Salm a Barajas, Aubrey Bearden, Tom m y Joe Boyette, N au d ia Johnson, S um m er S cardino, L azaro Sanchez, Alexis Callison, Sum m er Smart, Ryan W ood, Jonathan Barker, Joel C artn e r, V erenice Granadero, Britney Kilby, Caleb M athis, Jaylon D river, A ngel Edw ards, K atera C ockerham , Hunter Sales, A lberto Barajas, Tanner Koontz, Brittney Perras, Ranees Cisneros, Anna M arie W hitaker, Student o f the W eek, M ay 16- 20; Liam Shaw, K aily Vem on, Alexandra Salas-Romirez, Lesly Alvorodo,Taylor Godbey, Laura Eusaro, Cesar Cruz-Luna, Jas­ mine Randolph, Jessica Rebbe, S hantelle M cP herson . A le x W E B U Y H O U S E S & M O B I L E H O M E S Any Condition— Any Ijocation Fast Cash — Quick Closing (336) 961-2777 M yrick, A licia Spalding. The first graders in M rs. Bea­ ver and M rs. M elton’s class have enjoyed a unit about ocean life. They have read books, written stories, and learned many inter­ esting facts bout the ocean.They celebrated their enthusasim for leiirning with an outdoor fun day o f w ater aftd beach gam es. Thanks lo all the parents who volunteered and made this day possible. Ourclass was also very fortunate this week to receive a package and letter from Patrick Gordon’s dad, who is currently overseas serving our country. The children hod sent letters nnd supplies to him eariier in the year, 'rhe class was presented an Am ericaii flag, which was flown aboard one o f his missions for their support o f Patrick’s dad’s unit. Tlie flog w ill be flown over the .school this week. We ore very fortunate to know such a brave soldier and arc honored that he remembered our class in such a special way. M rs . Starnes and M rs. S u tto n ’s second graders are counting dow n the days. We hove been wrapping up the year with an economics unit and a drug unit along with our final Risk Watch lesson and math as­ sessments. Field Day on Friday was a fun woy to end the week. Students spent their moniing ro­ tating oround centers filled with various activities. tT.r ' . 7 1 6 S ain R oad M o c k s v ille For Sale By Owner Beautiful 4BR/2BA 1800+SQFT Full unfinished basement Beautifully landscaped 1/2 acre lot with mature trees. Low county taxes. Excellent condition. $ 1 4 5 ,0 0 0 3 3 6 -7 5 1 -5 5 5 2 Mocksville: Advance/Clemmons:mgion 336-751-9400 336-998-8900ompany TOLL FREE 1-800-539-3383 TOLL FREE 1-888-828-2234 E A L T Y w w w .p e n n in g to n re a lty .c o m H m e i ^ Call Th e JaniceMac Team... Listens— Cares— Guides C o m m e r c i a l 218 Summit OrlvQ>$129»900New construction in deslreablo North Itldnc. YOUR NEW HOME IS READY! Great Open floor plan with 9'celllngs,3BR,2 full floor plan with large rooms. 3BR, BA. built-in microwave, range & dishwasher. Hardwoods in kitchen,dining & llvln 1902Hwy801 South-$149,900 4641 Kinnamon Road • $164,900 4106Hw y601 South *$119,900This home has It all! Advance location with Move-in condition. 2tOOv/* SF brkk ranch In Immaculate home with 3BR.2BA In move-in oppor tunity galore. 4BR, 2BA. move-In Clemmons area.4BR. 2BA w/office area, den condlilon, beautifully landscaped Gas log condition, situated on 1.54 acres. Bsmt & 4thBR in finished bsmt. Large laundry rm fireplace In den.gaiden tub & sep. shower in apartment w/sep entrance could be in*law not In SF. Beautiful updated interior, 2 MBA. Privacy fenced backyard, 2 permanent or teen suite. fireplaces. Large fenced backyard. wired outbldgs & I metal outbldg. 25S Summtt Drive • $134,500YOUR NEW HOME IS READYI Great open .............. 2ВЛ. 273 Wandering Lane • $185,900 Spacious brick ranch on tree shaded 1.69............ acres In the town of Mocksville.lots of room-.......................-........ning & living areas, with 3BR. 2.5BA,new roof in 2004, Interior9it.ceIlings.ceramlctlle,aaKcabinei5&a ......................................beautiful rock fireplace.recently painted, laige laundry room, gas log fireplace In den & 2 storage buildings. emier C a ro lin a P ro o erties 3 3 6 - 9 9 8 - 7 7 7 7 , ■ vv w w . p c p n c , c o m ti3 ¿¡à C o m m i t t e d T o C u s t o m e r S e r v i c e 42S Mallaid landing $289,900 House Under Consliuclion! Buy now ctoos« tolois, llooiing, cabinels. HOA csliimled al $150 pei year. Agent itlaM lo o«nei, Pholo is similai lo homo. Lnt St Elisha Creek $161,500 NEWCONSinUCTION! 4ВП, 2,5 BA, Basemenl wilh room lo expand. WDU,U|U raiA UIIIB «itraJOO NlCB 5Bh.BA home willl approx 2200 Sqll. Foirnal Dining Rm Living Rm w/gas log FP, Main level master wim Ы. loti, lenced bacliyaid, convenient lo new Dellsile. 2 * 4 ÆîesJû Foïfci 143 Wood Lane $189,900 Advance Localod anprox 2 miles Irom 1-40 llils 3BR, 2BA home lealuies: Master BR 'Hi lull ball), larae 2nd & 3id BR's, laige closels, loimal dining im, living im w/ gas log FP. 20x12 wired woikstwp, (smed backyard.Diwctlom: l-mto ail ISO lo li SOItllo Lell Wood Lm. See Sign. 33B-066-2840 f-.<1* Й : D4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Raising The Flag Гм'. 8 3 0 8 Tralee Road $ 3 3 9 ,9 0 0 Andrea Suggs 146 Brookdole Drive 5 2 6 9 ,9 0 0 G loria Duckworth 5 6 4 5 Sham rock G len Lane $ 9 6 5 ,0 0 0 Andrea Suggs 170 Spring Park Cl. $ 1 6 7 ,9 0 0 Brad Hunter 1656 Siane Road $ 3 1 4 ,9 0 0 Andrea Suggs, ABR 10 0 Stoneburg Circle $ 1 9 7 ,0 0 0 Sherri Coronri 4 6 1 5 M eeting House Lone $ 2 2 8 ,0 0 0 Kristina Farrell nuda Kun West $ 4 9 5 ,7 5 0 Pat Kinnannon 201 O leander Drive $ 2 2 9 ,9 0 0 G loria Duckworth 8071 Peak Road $ 1 2 2 ,9 0 0 Sandy Dyson 172 River Hill $ 3 3 9 ,9 0 0 Cheryl Fink 8 1 6 5 Dull Road $ 4 3 5 ,9 0 0 Sandy Dyson jreenhQven $ 1 9 9 ,9 0 0 Sherri C oram 2 1 3 Salem ülen $ 3 3 9 ,9 0 0 Sherri Coram 3 0 C am eron Village $ 2 3 9 ,9 0 0 G loria Matthews AnJndegendenlljj^wnedon^ogerQle^membero^^ IVIemorial Day Services To Be Sunday, Monday There w ill be nt least two scr­ viccs forM em orinl Day in Davie County, one on Sunday in Cool­ eemee and another on M onday in M ocksville. V F W Post 11.19 o f C o o l­ eemee w ill host Sunday’s cel­ ebration al 2 p.m. at Cooleemee U n ited M eth o d ist C hurch. Kcnnon A . “Ken” W hile, former U S M a rin e , w ill be guest speaker and spccial music w ill be by Jeremiah Bradshaw. W illiam M . Ballanger, A n ­ drew Thomas Trexler and Ray W elton Trexler w ill be m em ori­ alized during the Cooleemee ser­ vice. The public is invited. A t noon on Monday, all vet­ erans, m ilitary persomiel, their fam ilies and guests are invited to a service at the Brock Per- Patrick Gordon (left), a first grader at Mocksville Elementary School, is as­ sisting Cameron Davis, Adam Smith, and Jennifer Custer in raising the Ameri­ can flag at the school. Patrick's father, CW3 Jeffrey Gordon, who is overseas serving this counlry, sent the flag to Jane Beaver and Linda Melton's first grade class for their support of his unit's efforts. The children sent letters and sup­ plies to Mr. Gordon earlier In the year. The flag, which was flown aboard one of Mr. Gordon's helicopter missions, will be flown at the school to recognize the brave efforts of all soldiers. www.prudentialcarolinas.com Prudential Clemmons/Davie Co. Office 'C iro iin a.R eaiiy 3 3 6 - 7 1 4 - 4 4 0 0 • 8 7 7 - 3 7 1 - 5 8 2 2 D otson A r r o w O f T h e U g h t . Logan Brown and Payton Kelly of Cub Scout Pack 503 received theirArrowof the Light Award In a cer­ emony on Aprii 28. The Arrow of Light is the highest award achieved as a Cub Scout. Both boys earned 20 of 20 pins in the Webelos program of Cub Scouts. They also met requirements to receive the World Conservation Award. Logan and Payton have Joined Boy Scout Troop 525 sponsored by Holy Cross Lutheran Church. They are pictured with Lynn Byerly. MARY HENDRICKS 1-336-940-7077 BUYING OR SELLIN G ? PUT MY 18 YEARS EXPERIENCE TO WORK FOR YOU!! Wishon & Carter Builders, Inc. YadKlnvllle336-679-2031 Y a d k ln v lll*, N C www.wshoncarter.com Wln«ton-S«lem 336-724-0372 Custom Hom e Building Additions Cuslom Kitchens & Baths G uaranteed Pricing 33 Years Experience Unlim ited License In-House Design Free Estim ates forming Arts Center, North M ain Street, M ocksvillc. The event is sponsored by the Tow n of Mocksville and Graham Funeral Home. “W e want lo recognize all of our veterans and all o f Ihe m ili­ tary and their fam ilies,” said Nellie Frank, one of Ihe organiz­ ers of Ihc M ocksvillc event. “Ev­ eryone is invited.” Open Mic Night Friday Comc to downtown M ocks­ ville Friday evening for an open m ic night. Expect to hear a vari­ ety of tunes from local musicians from 6 :3 0 -9 :3 0 p.m , on the square. The event is free. Bring a chair if you desire. Dotson Graduating From Elkin High Am ber Elizabeth Dotson w ill graduate from E lk in H ig h S chool on M ay 27. She is the daughter o f Lisa M eats and Eddie D otson. H er grandparents arc Brodis and A lice C lontz and D o r­ othy Dotson and the late Clarence Dotson. Speer Graduates K atie Speer is graduating w ith honors from South V iew High School in Hope M ills. She at­ tended W illiam R . D a v ie E l­ em entary from k in d e rg a rte n u n til th ird grade, and moved to Hope M ills where her dad is stationed in the U .S. A ir Force at Pope A FB , Som e o f her accom plish­ ments include: Outstanding Se­ nior, Student Govem m ent Presi­ dent, C aptain Varsity C heer­ leading Team, Salvation A rm y Tutor for Homeless Children of Fayetteville, N ational H onor Society, Fayetteville ^.eadership Academ y and Teaching Fellows Regional Finalist, Interfaith vol­ unteer, and numerous com m u­ nily services hours for her com ­ m u n ity o f_H o p e M ills and Fayetteville. Speer has been accepted to the University of North Carolina at W ilm ington where she is go­ ing to m ajor in elementary edu­ cation and m inor in marine bi­ ology. She is the daughter of M .S gt, Donald and Stephanie Speer of Hope M ills. Bolh are graduates of Davie High School, She is the granddaughter of Lib Speer and the late Roy E, Speer o f M ocksville, S p eer | Щ Ж | Rea№s M i s ] (336)751-2055 ^ 170 Leed« Ln • GofQoaui 4BR 2BA. 2 half BA's, 320<HSF. huflowotbar. 3 offices, cmpu netwofX ready 1221,700 B u y e r s ! V i s i t o u r w e b s it e t o s ig n u p f o r F R E E M L S c u s lo m s e a r c iie s ! The Simple Facts. List your propetty witli us lo receive tlie liest internet & magazine exposure! Receive profession.il experienced service! Wtien your home sells, you p,iy less commission! It IS ,1 no-hrainei decision! Call today for ■J Q Q / commission as low as J » y www.OakHavenRealty.com гz^ Bracken Rd • Clean 3DR 2DA, beautiful area, great for horses. 2 wired bldg», 13xiedeck. $272,000 228 Amier Or • Cotdeous Bilck 3QR 2BA, huge kit w/laland & oak cabinets, \t' X 13' tile fir sunroom. (149,900 316 E. Lake Dr • 3BR 2BA, 1600 SF. flroat cuib oppool. very woll kopt, laundry rm. QOfQeous landscape $138,000 C all A n g le L a w re n c e to v ie w a n y h o m e in th e T ria d 1 -------------------------------lQ n Q -9 A ')n Brldln Ln • Spollosa 3BR 2 SBA. 6 ^ acres, hoiae commLinity. arch roof,_______________crown molding», clioir tall SJJJ.roo D a v ie D a te lin e DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - DS Fundraisers Thru June 30 Photo Fundraiser, by Center Vol- unleerFire Depl., forlnfo: 492-7649. Thursday, May 26 Special Olympics Davlc Port-A- Plf Chicken Dinner, al First United Methodist, in old fellowship hall. Plate: $7. Advance snles/carry-oul only. Cull 751-2325 or 492-2990 for tickct.i. Poor M an’s Supper, Cooleemee UM C, Mnin St,, Cooleemee, 5-6:30 p.m., donation, Dinc-in or take-out. Everyone welcome, Saturday, June 4 C om m unity Y ard Sale, by Sheffield-CalahtUn Ladle’s Auxil­ iary, 7 a,m, until, at Sheffield- Calahaln Fire Dept, Table rental $ 10, Contact; 492-7687 or 751 -2121. Ongoing Cooleemee Clvltnns BBQ Chicken, cach 3rd Sat. of monlh at Cooleemee Hardware Store. Serving 1/2 chicken, baked beans, BBQ slaw, roll, and dessert. Time; 11 a.m, until sold out. Come early, only prepare 120 halves cach month. Reunions Saturday, June 4 Mocksvllie High School Class of 19S0, will have a get-together at 6 p,m, at Prime Sirloin, Anyone inter­ ested is welcome. Info: 998-3211. 2nd Annual Smith Family Reunion, at Center UM C Community Bldg., 4 p.m, until. Bring picnic basket, soft drink, old pics, and share some old memories. Contact: 751 -3626 or 998- 7613. Reeves Family Reunion, at Sheffield- Calahaln Center, covered dish 4 p.m., info: 751-7567. Sunday, June 5 Drew & Jane Smithdeal Robertson Family Reunion, at Fork Civic Cen­ ter, covered dish lunch 1 p.m. For directions or info, 998-5163. Religion Saturday, June 4 “Light At The End of The Tun­ nel" Luncheon, at the fellowship hall at Green Meadows Bapt. Church, 11 a.m. til 1 p.m., by The W illing Hearts (ladies only) Sunday School Class. If you ate a single mom please attend by calling 998- 3022 by Juiie 2nd. Event is no-cost and childcare will be provided. Sun.-Thurs., June 5-9 VBS Serengeti Trek, at Eatons Bapt. Church, each evening from 6:30-9 p.m. For info: 998-6149. VBS, at Advance First Bapt., 6:30- 9 p.m. Babies-adults. Ongoing CnrcNet Counseling Centers, al First Baptist Church, 390 N. Main St., Mocksville. Offers inter-de- nomlnational counseling. Academi­ cally trained, certified counselors & mental health professionals. Info. & appt. 751-2041. A W om an’s Call To Prayer, ladie’s Bible study for all ages, Jericho Chureh of Christ, Mocksville, 7:30- 8:30 p.m. every Wed. thru Dec. 1st. Call 492-6006 for more info. Prcschool/Parents M orning Out, Bethlehem United Meth. Time; 9 a.m.-noon. Ages I & 2 - M ,W orT, Th, Age 3 - M ,T, Th, Age 4 & Pre- K - three or four days per week. Call 998-6820. Preschool, at Center United Meth. Church, Mon., Wed., & Thurs (4 yr. old class) 8:30-11 ;30 a.m. - Mon. & Wed. (3 yr. old class) 8:30-11:30 a.m. -Tues. & Thurs. (2 & 3 yr. olds) 8:30-11:30 a.m. Before School Program for Shady Grove Students, available Mon.- Fri. beginning 6 a.m. at Advance U M C Community Bldg. School bus arrives 8 a.m. to take children lo Shady Grove Elementary. Call 998- 0199 for fees and info. G rief Support Group, “Nobody’s Child But God’s”, 2nd Thurs. of each month, 6:30 p.m., Cooleemee Church of God, 7704 N.C. 801 S., Cooleemee. Info: 75305716 or 284- 2180. Awana & Bible Study, Wednes­ days at 7 p.m., Hope Baptist Taber­ nacle. Spedal Events Saturday, June 4 Rock W ith Cops, 6-9 p.m. Cool­ eemee Elementary Gym, music, food, fun. Have your bike inspected, re­ ceive free bike helmet. Free hotdogs provided by Cooleemee Civitans, games, raffle. Don’t miss it. Monday, June 6 C rulse-In, M ain St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Monday, June 20 C rulse-In, Main St. downtown Mocksville, 6-9 p.m. Sponsored by Piedmont CARS. Info: 751-3770 or 284-2079. Dates to Remember Thursday, May 26 Blood Drive,6:30-11 a.m.,atIngersoll Rand, 501 Sanford Avenue, Mocks­ ville. Meetings Thursday, May 26 Friends Group, 7 p.m., at Davie Co. Library in the community room, come and hear what Friends Group is all about. Ongoing Hum ane Society of Dnvie Co., monthly meetings 2nd Tues. of each month, at Davie County Library on Main Stteet. Call 751-5214 for hifo. Davie Partnership for Children board meeting, 4th Tues. of eveiy other month (began in Jan.) at Davie Library, 8:30 a.m. Questions: 751- 2113. Alzhelmers Support Group, 2nd Tuesday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at Autumn Caie, Mocksville. Davie CIvltan Club meets 4th Thurs. of each monlh, Feb.-Oct., 7 p.m., at Hillsdale Bapt. Church, Hwy. 158. All visitors welcome. Center ECA Club meets 3rd Tues­ day of each month, at Center Comm. Bldg., 7:30 p.m. Please join us. Disabled American Veterans Post 75 meels on tliird Monday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at 1958 Hwy. 601 S. Contact J. Renfro at 284-4664 for more mfo. Town O f Cooleemee Planning Board, meets 3rd Thurs. of each month at Cooleemee Town Hall, 7 p.m. .Autism Support Group 3rd Monday of each month, 6:30 p.m., at Shady Grove, Mocksville. Davie Bu.s. Women’s Association 1st Wed. of every month, 12 noon, at MocksvilleRotaiy on Salisbury Street. Speaker of interest and catered lunch, cost $6. Year membership $25. Con­ tact 998-1153 for more info. Davie County Diabetes Support Group, last Thuis. of every month, 7- 8:30p.m., at Davie Co. Public Library Small Conference Room. Info: 751- 8700. Davie Youth Council, meets 2nd & 4th Tuesdays each month, 6:30 p,m„ at Mocksville/Diwie Parks & Rec, meeting room. Info: Wendy Wliite 287-1292. Davie Co. Hospital Auxllary, every second Tues., in board room, 6 p.m. Davie Business Women's A.ssocla- tlon, first Wed. of each month, 12 noon, at CCB in Mocksville (880 Yadkinville Rd.), luncheon meeting, catered meal available. For info: 998- 1153 or 940-3600. DavleRepubllcanMenaClub,meets 4th Saturday of each month, 7:30 a.m., Prime Sirloin. Celebrate Recovery, weekly support group for those struggling wilh or in F a rm e rs M a rk e t — Located at— J u n k e r ’s M n x South Salisbury St., Mocksville T h u r s d a y — A l l D a y F r i d a y — A U D a y S a t u i d a y — ‘t i l N o o n Inquiries — CaU751-2259 recoveiy forbad habits - such as strciis, depression, addiction, abuse, etc. Meets Thurs. 7 p.m. nt Farmington Comm. Center, Farmington Rd. Call 408-8750or813-992l formore info. DavieCountyHorseEmergency Res­ cue Team, 7:30 p.m., dowrestnirs nl the Agricultural Building, Mocksvillo. Ev­ eiy 3rd Tuesday each month. Forlnfo: 940-2111. Dnvle Co. Band Boosters, mects2nd Tuesday of monlh, 7:30 p.m., Davie High Band Room. Family Services " W hat Every Par- entShould Know",parentingclasses to interested parents of teens in local areas, every Mon. 6-7:15 p.m., al Mocksville office Sanford Ave. Cost $15. For more info: 751-4510. Chri.sllan Buslnessmen'.s Commit­ tee of Mocksville, Tliumdays, 7 a.m. Mocksville Rotary Hut. -Gold Wing Touring Association, Red Pig Barbecue, Greasy Comer, N.C. 801 at U.S. 601, 6 p.m. 284- 4799. Davlc County Stamp Club, 2nd Thurs., Davie Senior Center, 7 p.m. 751-0611. CoolccmeeRccrentlonAs.saclatlon, Zachiuy House, 1st Tuc.sday, 7 p.m. Homeschool 4-H Club, 2nd & 4th Tliursday. Call 998-8925 for more info. The Artist Group, Davie County Li­ brary, 7 p.m. last Tues. Call Bonnie at 998-5274. Center Community Development, 3rd Mon., 7 p.m. Community Bldg. Cooleemee Town Board, 3rd Tues­ day, Town Hall, 7 p.m. unless ottier- wise noted. Cooleemee A A, behind Good Shep­ herd Episcopal, Tues. & Fri., 8 p.m. North Cooleemee and Clark Road Council, 2nd Wednesday, 7 p.m. Friendship Baptist Fellowship Hnll. Mocksville AA, closed non-smok­ ing meeting, at St. Francis of Assisi Church fellow ship hall, 862 Yadkinville Rd., Mocksville. Sat­ urdays 6 p.m. Info: Pat 751 -6228 or Jan 753-6863. Davie Domestic Violence Scrviccs and Rape Crisis Center. Offers weekly support group for domestic violence & sexual assault victims. The group meets eveiy Tues. evening from 6:30-8:30 p.m. Please call office for location, 751-3450. Concerned Bikers Association, Foothills Chapter, 2nd Wednesday, WestemSteer,U.S.601 atI-4Q.7p.m. Public welcome. Advance Garden Club, 1st Tues., 9 a.m.. Mocks UMC, 998-2111. MocksvilleGardenClub, IstTliurs., Jericho Church of Christ fellowship hall, 7 p.m. Visitors welcome. Sons of Confederate Veterans, 1st Monday, Cooleemee Historical Build­ ing, 7 p.m. 4-H b Iis & Bridle Club, every third Tues„6-7:30p,m.at Dixieland Farms. Call 492-6403 formore info. Mocksville Rotary Club, Tuesdays, 12:10 p.m.. Rotary Hut. Farmington Masonic Lodge No. 265, 2nd Monday, 7:30 p.m. at Ihc lodge. Mocksville Lions Club, 1st, 3rd Thursdays, 7 p.m., fellowship halt of St. Francis of Assisi, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville. Davie Co. United Way Board of Dircctor.s, 4th Monday, 5:30 p.m., Brock Center Annex, Conf. Room 208. Mocksville-Davie Homebuilders, 4th Thursday,7p.m.,CnptainStevcn's. Davie High Athletic Boosters, 3rd Mondny, 7 p.m., school cnfeteria. Farmington Ruritan Club, 2nd Thursday, 7:30 p.m., Farmington Methodist church. HELPS Ministries, Christian recov­ ery program for women sexunlly abused as children. Mondays, 7:30 p.m., 41 court Square, Room 210. Parents Resource Organization (PRO) support group for families of children with disabilities, 2nd Tues­ day, 7 p.m. Call Rosemaiy Kropfelder at 998-3311 for location. Jerlcho-Hardison Ruritan Club, 2nd Tuesday, 7 p.m., club building. Health Dept., clinic houra: Mon.-Fri., 8:30-11:30 a.m., 1-4:30 p.m. Davie County Board of Social Scr- vlccs,4thTucsday,5;30p.in.atDSS. Narcotic.^ Anonymous Against All Odds Group, First Bapt. Church, 390 N. Main Street (upstairs), Tliurs. 7 p.m.. Sun. 6 p.m. Drug Problem? Helpline, 336-785-7280. Mocksville American Legion Post 174, VFW Hut, Sanford Ave., 2nd Tliursday, 7 p.m. Mocksville CIvltan Club, 7 p.m., 2nd & 4lh Mondays, at CCB, 880 Yadkinville Rd.. Advancc Memorial Post 8719 Vet­ erans of Foreign Wars and Ladies Auxiliary, 4th Tues., 7:30 p.m., post home, Feed Mill Road. Dnvle County Right To Life, 7 p.m., 3rd Thursday, grand jury room, court­ house. 7S1-5235 or 492-5723. Davlc Co. MS Support Group, 2nd Mon. of each month, 6 p.m., Davie Co. Hospital. V FW Auxiliary Post 4024,1 p.m., 4th Thurs. each month in lower level of Brock Bldg., N. Main Street. Eli­ gible members welcome. Recreation Formore information on theseevents, call 751-2325. GoodTimersSquareDance Diuico Lessons $5 per month. Volun­ teers for different social events. Con­ tact Ethel at 998-3837. Senior Walking Program Senidrs, 50 and up, M -F, 6:30-9 a.m. No chiu'ge. Incentive breakfast held quarteriy. Register now at Rec. Dept, or Sr. Services. The Dance Company Mon., Tues., Wed., & Sat. Call Emily Robert.son, 998-5163. Competition Cheerleading $25 registration and $45 mo. for 2 tjmes per week. Call Wendy Shoe­ maker 284-6300. Tennis Leagues available formen, women, co-ed, jun­ iors. Call Sandra for info. Comm. Clean-Up Day At the RiverPark at Cooleemee Falls, 4th Sat. of each month, 8 a.m. until. Call Bill Gibson 284-4774 or Rcc. Dept, for more info. Shelter Rentals Available at Rich Park and RiverPark at Cool­ eemee Falls. Call 751-2325 to make reservations. Davie Youth Council Ages 13 to graduation, meet nt Rec. Dept. 2nd and 4th Tues. nights ench months. Call Emily 751 -2325 forlnfo. Special Olympics Fun Nite Wednesdays atRec. Dept.7-8:30p.m. Open to athletes, their families, mid volunteers. Special Friends Dance Van Monthly Fri. niglitdunce in Lewisville. Open to adults with developmental delays. Reservntions required for tnmsportntion, cnll Kalhie 751-2325 by Tliursdays. Van leaves Rec. Dcpl. 6:30 p.m. imd intersectionof N.C. 801 &U.S. 158 at 6:45 p.m. Church League Basketball Call Joe for more info. Wrestling Call Emily 751-2325 for more info. Horse Camp At Dixieland Fimn, choice of 6 wks, limit 10 campers per week. 7:30 a.m. til 5 p.m. Call Kalliic 751-2325 or 492-2990 lo re,serve space. Special ArtsDavieTalentShow May 14th at S. Davie Middle School, 7 p.m. Reception 6:30 p.m. Nondmis- sionbm donations accepted. For info: 751-2325 or 492-2990. YMCA For more information, call 751 -9622 or visit Davie Fiunily YMCA. Water Exercise Class S h a w Y o u r P a t r i a t i c C o l o r s ! TopW rnm T e l e s c o p in g F la g p o le s 20 ti. Telescoping MAboutgucir Telescopes from 7’ to 20' , IK to ffK lliB f ★ No Ropes to Snarl or Clang O a y 6 ft. Wall MountFlag Polo F « n » r» * Easy lo Insloll & Use * Bulli lo Lost, Coro-Frae N o w A vailable at; W e s t D a v ie P o w e r E q u ip m e n t Intersection olHivy. 901 & 64 W. MOCKSVILLE • (336) 492-5t02 For beginners mid die experienced. Ail ages. Cnll forclass types & times. Swim Lessons Choose from 4 wk.. Sat. moming or private lessons. Reg. begins 2 wks. prior lo class. Call for class times. Karate-Carucado Style Tuesdays, 7-8:45 p.m. Ages 7 & up. Tae Kwon Do Ages 6 & up. Meet Tues. & Thurs., 6:00 & 6:45 p.m. Parent’s Night Out 2nd Friday of each month, 6-10:30 p.m. Take the night off and allow YM CA to care for yoiir child. Activi­ ties include swimming, arts & crafts, giunes, and a movie. Dinner served around 6:30 p.m. Cost $7 members/ $10 non-members. DMA(formerlySunshineClub) For all older adults. Club is full of fun, fellowship, good food, new and old friends and lots of laughter. Monthly pot luck luncheon with speaker. Cost: $10 membere/$20 non-members. Seniors All Senior Activities take place at DavieCountySeniorServiceslocnted in tlie Brock Building on North Main Street, Mocksvillc unless otherwise noted. Call 751-0611. Ongoing Sr. Lunchbox, M ,T ,W , 11:30 a.m., Th. & Fri., II a.m., lunch served daily. Silver Health Exercises, Enst Room ofSenior Services, M, W ,F, 8:30 a.m. Tues. & Tliurs. 9 a.m. at Mock Placc, (open to any senior). Quilling Club, cveiy Mondny, 10 n.m.. East Room. Scrabble, eveiy Monday, 1 p.m.,Craft Room. Bridge, every Friday, 2 p.m., please call Sr. Services. SKIPBO, Wednesdays, 1 p.m.. East Room. Scrapbooking, once per month, call for dates & times 751-0611. Dr. Dunn, Podiatrist, al Sr. Services evciy tlirce weeks, please call fordatcs. Free Blood Pressure Checks, once n month, nt 10:30 a.m. in the Nutrition She. Tal Chi Classes, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.. Beach “N” Tans (formerly Nature’s Gifts). Next class dates (Sept. 6 thru Nov. 8). Discount for Srs. 60+. C all' Sr. Scrviccs to pre-register at 751- 0611. YogaForSenlors,Tues.2p.m.(Aug. 2-Oct. 11). You must call Sr. Services to register. Price $10 for 10 weeks. PalntlngClass,every Wed., 8:30 a.m. PACE Exercise Class, every other Wed., 10:30 a.m. SlnglngSenlors Chorus,Thursdays, 10 n.m. Cnnnsta, every Tliurs., 1 p.m. Crafty Ladlc.s, begins Thurs. at 10 a.rii. on Aug. 4th. Report Davie Dateline Items By Noon lUlonday Items for Davie Dateline should be reported by noon Monday of Uic pub­ lication week. Call 751-2120 or drop it by the office, at S. Main St. across from the courthouse. IN S U R E D L e t U s H e l p Add t h is Word t o y o u r B u s in e s s C a r d . If you're a contractor - carpenter, electrician, heating and air conditioning, or plumber - get a FREE second opinion. Call me... Stop by... Log on - It's your cholcel Jim Kelly, Jr. 281 North Main Street Mocksville 336-761-2937krty|2llnalMd<.can Keith Hlllor tilt Yadkinvllle Hwy., Mocksville \ЖжОвк>81»1>.Сп1г. 336-761-6131 №i1(19naloiwl<l«.a>m N atio n w id e ' Insurance & Financial Services Nationwide Is On \bur Side? д Nationwide Mutual Imuiance Company and Altitlaied Companlei, Home Otrici: Columbut, OH 43215-2220 C2-2 S/02 Wetmore Farms W O O D L E A F L O C A L STRAW BERRIES • G r e e n h o u s e T o m a t o e s • • O t h e r p r o d u c e a s i t b e c o m e s a v a i l a b l e • ^ Open Mond^-Saturday ^ 8:00 am-6:00 pm Closed on Sundays F n m M odavlH e taka 601 South to 801 tntm ecO on, tirni rIgM a t tig h t 4 m iles to eaoUon light In Woodleat. Follow slgoM to firnn. 704-278-2028 N o w E n ro llin g f o r S U M M E R C A M P a n d A F T E R S C H O O L C A R E C o r n a t z e r U M C C h r i s t K id s S c h o o l A g e C a r e Enroll before May 15 and pay HO registration fee! Rates are reasonable and include fees fo r trips. **PiscouM s for families w ith wiore Ilian one c h ild ** Sum m er Camp Rates are ¿85 per w eek and After School Care is ^145 per m onth. For more information or to sign up. please call Cornatzer United Methodist Church. 998-0687. <1 w г я Í *Tii ;Z - . D6 ■ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursdny, May 26,2005 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 ■ D7 f. ■r.’. fcrir i,i.V <M срг/ Г щL. NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE.Qf_B?.BECJ.05UBE SALE 0SSP65 Under and by virtue ol a Power ol Sale contained in lhal certain Deed ol Trust executed by Sherry D. Mixon ( single) and Ernest W. Mixon and wife, Sheila Mixon to Lawronce N. Smith and Charles D. Robison III, Both, Trustee(s), which was dated November 3,2000 and recorded on November 3, 2000 in Book 350 at Page 469, Davie County Registry, North Carolina. Delault having been made In the payment of the note thereby se­ cured by the said Deed ol Trust and the undersigned. Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substituted as Tnjstee In said Deed ol Trust by an instrument duly recorded In Ihe Oflloa ol the Register ol Deeds ol DavIe County, North Carolina, and the holder ol the note evidencing said Indebtedness having directed that the Deed ol Trust be lore- closed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will ofler lor sale at the courthouse where the property is located, or the usual and custom­ ary location at the county court­ house lor conducting the sale on June 1,2005 at 2:00PM, and will sell to the highest bidder lor cash . the lollowing described property situated in Davie County, North Carolina, to wit; BEQINNINQ at an Iron In the Northeast corner ot the within de­ scribed tract, said Iron lying South 26 deg 40 mln 55 sec East B7 SO teat Irom an Iron In the Southeast comer ol Robert C Gin, Deed Book 132, Page 183, said beginning point being the Southeastern most comer of Ihe above described 219 acre tract thence Irom the POINT AND PLACE OF BEGINNING wllh tha edge ol the right of way of Mumlord Road, South 26 deg 02 mln 36 sec East 75 92 leet to an Iron, thence South 78 deg 38 mln 09 SBC tVssf 113 39 feel to an Iron, Southwest comer of the within de­ scribed tract thence North 33 deg 30 mln 52 sec West 59 28 leet to an Iron, Northwest corner of the within described tract thence North 69 deg 35 mln 37 sec East 117 96 feet to an Iron, THE POINT AND PLACE OF BEQINNINQ contain­ ing 0 174 acres more or less, as surveyed May 5, 2000 by Qrady I Tutterow, Professional Land Sur­ veyor (Drawing No 13100-3, File name TC-MUfv!) Subject to easements and re­ strictions of record For back title, see Deed Book 337, Page 818, Dead Book 322, Page250Deed Book 71, page206, and Deed Book 64, Page 214, Davie County Registry See Plat Book 7, Page 125, Davla County Registry See also Tax Map 1-4-6, BIk B, Pci 16 02, located In Mocksville Township, Davie County, North Carolina Note This ivas part of Tax Map 1-4-6, BIk B, Pci 16 In 2000 Save and except any releases or deeds of release ol record. Said property is commonly known as 219 Mumlord Drive, Mocksvllle, NC 27028. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax, and the court costs ol Forty-Five Cents (45e) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursu­ ant to NCGS 7A-308(a)(1). Acash deposit (no personal checks) ol live percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fitly Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time ol the sale. Following the expiration ol the statutory upsel bid period, ali the remaining amounts ate Immedi­ ately due and owing. Said property to be oflered pur­ suant to this Notice ol Sale is be­ ing oHered lor sale, transler and conveyance “AS IS W HERE IS.” There are no representations ol warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or salety conditions existing In, on, at, or relating to the property being ol- fered lor sale. This sale Is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, ease­ ments, righls of way, deeds ol re­ lease, and any other encum ­ brances or exceptions ol record. To the best ol the knowledge and be- llel ol the undersigned, the current owner(s) of the property is/are Sherry D. Mixon and Ernest Mixon. Substitute Trustee Brock & Scott, PLLC By:__________:_____________________ (SEAL) James P. Bonner, NCSB No. 15788 5919 Oleander Drive Suita 115 Arboretum Cenler Bldg 2 Wilmington, NC 28403 PHONE: (910) 392-4988 FAX: (910) 392-8587 File No.; 05-02378 5-19-2tn P U B L I C N O T I C E S NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE OF FORECUOSUnE SALE 05SP28 Under and by virtue ol a Power ol Sale contained In that certain Deed ot Injsl executed by Timothy Eugene Mayo and Laura Renee Mayo to Fritz & Austin Fritz & Austin, Trustee, dated September23,1999, and recordodln Book 315, Page 186, Davie County Registry, North Carolina. Delault having been made in the payment ol the note secured by the said Deed ol Trust and the under­ signed, Priority Trustee Services ol NC, LI.C., having been substituted as Tnjstee in said Deed ol Tmst by an instrument duly recorded In the Office ol the Register ol Deeds of Davie County, North Carolina, and the holder ol the note evidencing said indebted­ ness having directed that the Deed ol Tmst be loreclosed, the undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale at the Courthouse Door, in the City ol Mocksvllle, Davie County, North Caro­ lina, at 1.00 P.M, on Wednesday, June 1.2005, and will sell to the highest bid­ der lor cash the following described property situated In Davie County, North Carolina, to wit; Being all of Lot 9 pi Oak Grove SubdMskxi as shown on plat rocorded In Plat Book 7 at Page 19, Davie County Registry. Said property is commonly known as 1190kl0akU ne, Mocksville, NC 27028. Third party purchasers must pay the excise tax; and the court costs ol Forty-five Cents (45c) per One Hun­ dred Dollars ($100.00). Acash deposit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) ol the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Fifty Dollars ($750.00), whtehever is greater, will be required at the time ol the sale. Following the expiration ol the statutoiy upset bid, all the remaining amounts are imme­ diately due and owing. Said properly to be olfered pursu­ ant to this Notice ol Sale is being ol­ fered (or sale, transler and convey­ ance “AS IS WHERE IS.: There are no representations ol warranty relat­ ing to the title or any physteal, envi­ ronmental, health or sale^ condHtons existing in, on. at, or relating to the property being offered lor sale. This sale is made subject to all prior liens, unpaki taxes, special assessments, land transfer taxes, II any. and encum­ brances ol record. To Ihe best of the knowledge and bellel of Ihe under­ signed, the current owiner(s) ot the property Is/are Timothy E. Mayor. ' Priority Tnistee Servtees of NC, I.LC. Substitute Tmstee P.O. Box 3868 Caiy.NC 27519 Our File No.: 066.0421042NC/ CGW 5-19-2tn NOPTTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDfTORS Having qualiliedasExecutorolthe Estate ol MADGE B. DAY, late ol Davie County, North Carolina, this Is to nolily ali persons, lirms and corpo­ rations having claims against the Es­ tate to exhibKthem to the undersigned at the offtee ol ingersoil & Associates, PUC, P.O. Box 25167, Winston-Sa­ lem, NC 27114, on or before August 15.2005, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recoveiy. All persons In­ debted to said Estate will please make Immediate payment. Tills the 26th day ol April, 2005. Chariotte F. Henry, Executor Marc W. ingersoil, Altomey: Ingersoil & Associates, PLLC 5-5-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDfTORS Having qualified as Executor ol the Eslate ol KURT W ILLIAM SCHNEIDER, this Is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ tate to present them to the under­ signed on or before the 5lh day ol August, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the lirst day of publteatten or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to saki estate will please make Immediate payment to Ihe undersigned. This the 5th day ol May, 2005. Chartene SchneWer, Executor 134 Pariway Court, Mocksville, NC 27028 5-5-4ln NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUfvfTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executorolthe Estate of EDW IN EDW ARD MIETLOWSKI, this Is to notify all per­ sons having clalnos against saW es­ tate to present them lo the under­ signed on or belore the 12th day ol August, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the llrst day ol publteatlon or this notice will bo pleaded In bar ol their recoveiy. All persons indebted to said 'estate will please make Immediate payment to Ihe undersigned. This the 12th day ol May, 2005, Karen Mietlowski, EXEC 226 Merry U na, Advance, NC 27006 5-12-4ln_~L NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE MOCKSVILLE TOWN BOARD FOR THE FOLLOWING ZONING AMENDMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO THE REQUIRE­ MENTS ol Chapter 160A-364 ol the General Statutes ol North Carolina and pursuant lo Secllon 8-3.9.7 of the Mocksvllle Zoning Ordinance, lhat Ihe Town Board ol Commis­ sioners will hold a PUBLIC HEAR­ ING In the Town Hall, Mocksville, NC, at 7:00 p.m. on Tuesday, June 7,2005 to hear the following items: to rezone 0.92 acres ol land Irom Open Space Residential (OSR) to Highway Commercial (HC). This property is located on the north side ol RIdgeview Drive, approximately 300 leet west ol Valley Road, and Is lurther described as Parcels A-3 and A-4 ol Davie County Tax Map i-4-14. posing a text amendment to Sec­ tion 8-3.5 Landscaping ot the Zon­ ing Ordinance. The amendment modules the number of shrubs and trees and Ihe required planting ar­ eas. A lull copy ol the text amend­ ment is on llle at the Mocksvllle Town Hali and the Davie County DevelopmenI Services Depart­ ment. posing a text amendment to Sec­ llon 8-3.7.14 ol the Zoning Ordi­ nance. The amendment will reduce the transitional setback for major and minor thoroughfares. A sign will be placed on the above listed property to advertise the public hearing. All parties and interested citi­ zens shall have an opportunity to be heard in favor of or In opposi­ tion to the foregoing changes. Prior to the hearing, all persons inter­ ested may obtain any additional Inlormallon on the proposal by vis­ iting Ihe Development Services Department, 172 Clement Street, Mocksvllle, N.C. between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336) 751-334Q. John S. Gallimore Planning Director 5-26-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING before the Davie County Zoning Board ol Adjustment at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, June 6, 2005, in the 2nd Floor Commissioners Room of Ihe Davie County Administration Build­ ing, Mocksvllle, N.C.The public Is invited to attend. The lolowlng items are scheduled to be heard: plied to amend a Special Use Per­ mit to accommodate 50 additional dog runs at an existing dog kennel pursuant lo §155.235 ol the Davie County Zoning Ordinance. This property Is located at 842 Farming­ ton Rd., Mocksvliie, NC, approxi­ mately 1.5 miles north ol Interstate 40, and is further descried as Par­ cel E00000028. for a Special Use Permit lo perform sand dredging pursuant to §155.235 ol the Davie County Zoning Ordi­ nance. This property is located at 299 Appiewood Rd., Mocksvllle, NC, approximately 0.4 miles southeast ol Hartley Rd., and Is further de­ scribed as Parcel M700000004. A sign will be placed on the prop­ erty to advertise the Public Hear­ ing. All parties and Interested citizens are invited to attend said hearing at which time they shalll have an op­ portunity lo present lacts and testi­ mony In support ol, or in opposition to, the request. Prior to the hearing, additional information on a request may be obtained by visiting the De­ velopment Services Department weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m, Monday through Friday, or by telephone al (336) 751-3340. Chris Nuckolls Assistant Director 5-26-2tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDfTORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of HUGH MffCHELL FROST, this Is to notify ail persons having claims against said estaie to present them to the undersigned on or before Ihe 12th day ol August, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the lirst day ot publication or this notice will be pleaded In bar of Iheir recovery. All persons Indebted to saW estaie will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day ol May, 2005. Willie Rebecca Frost, ADMN 2085 Hwy 64W Mocksvllle, N027028 5-12-4tn 1. ^ NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate ol OLIVIA STROUD FOSTER, this is to notify all per­ sons having claims against said es­ late to present them to the under­ signed on or belore the 5th day ol August, 2005, being Ihree (3) months Irom the lirst day ol publi­ cation orthls notice will be pleaded In bar ol their recovery. Ail persons Indebted lo said estaie will please make Immediate payment lo the undersigned. This the 5th day ol May, 2005. Dennis G. Foster, Co-Executor 983 Turkeyfoot Rd. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 Sandra Foster Vestal, Co--- Executor 1324 Hwy. 64 West Mocksvllle, NC 27028 5-5-41n NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE FILE NO. 01-CVD-906 FEDERATED CAPITAL CORPO­ RATION, PUINTlFF, vs. DOUGLAS J. VANGUNDY, DE­ FENDANT. NOTICE OF EXECUTION SALE OF REAL PROPERTY Under and by virtue ol an ex­ ecution issued on the 251h day ol the Clerk of the Superior Court of Davie County in the above entitled action, and di­ rected to the undersigned Sherllf, I will al 12:00 noon on the 6!h day ol June. 2005. at the door of the Davie County Courthouse In Mocksvllle, N.C. oiler lor sale to the highest bidder for cash, all the right, title and Interest which Ihe delendant now has or at anytime at or alter the docketing ol the judgment in said action had In and to the lol­ lowing described real estate, lying and being in Farmington Township, Davie County, N.C. Being known and desigrlated as lot No. 31. section (IB ) on a plat entitled "Pembrooke Ridge at Ber­ muda Run" recorded In plat book 5 at page 145, In the otilce ol Ihe Register ol Deeds in Davie County. 189 Pembrook Ridge Court, Advance NC 27006 The above described property Is sold subject to any and all prior liens, encumbrances, deeds of trust, righls of way, easements, assessm ents and Ad Valoren taxes, if any. TERMS OF SALE: The high bid­ der will be required lo deposit ten percent (10%) ol his bid in cash al the time of sale and the balance upon conlirmation ol sale and ten­ der ol deed. This the 12th day ol May, 2005. William A. Whitaker Sherllf ol Davie County by S.D. Moxley, Jr., Deputy Sheriff 5-26-2IP NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY PUBLIC NOTICE BUDGET HEARING FY 2005-2006 PROPOSED OAVIE COUNTY BUDGET The FY 2005-2006 proposed budget lor Davie County was pre­ sented to the Davie County Board ot Commissioners on Monday, May 16, 2005. The proposed budget totals $75,503,699.00: General Fund - $40,659,765.00 Revaluation- 190,672:00 E911 - . 255,150.00 Water Construction - 5,645,500.00 Capital Projects - 24,162,964.00 Water/Sewer Enterprise Fund - 4,117,148,00 Solid Waste Enterprise Fund - 472,500.00 The proposed budget calls lor a property tax rate ol sIxty-one cents ($.61) per $100 ol property valuation (Includes a $.04 fire tax). A copy ol the budget proposal Is available for public Inspection in the oHIce of County Manager during normal business hours ol 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, Room 250, Davie County Administration Building, 123 South Main Street, Mocksvllle, North Carolina. A public hearing will be held at 5:00 p.m., Monday, June 6,2005, In the Com m issioners' Room, Davis County Administration Build­ ing, 123 South Main Street, Mocks­ ville, North Carolina to receive pub­ lic comments, either oral or written. All citizens are welcome lo com­ ment bn the budget proposal at this time. Brenda B, Hunter Clerk to Ihe Board Davie County Commissioners 5-26-2ln NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE OF NORTH CAROUNA SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION DAVIE COUNTY 05SP74 IN THE MATTER OF THE FORE­ CLOSURE OF A DEED OFTRUST EXEC U TED BY TO N Y R. M CDANIEL AND BARBARA K. MCDANIEL DATED JANUARY 29, 2002 AND RECORDED IN BOOK 406 AT PAGE 970 ifg THE DAVIE C O UNTY PUBLIC REGISTRY, NORTH CAROLINA NOTICE OF SALE Pursuant lo an older of the Clerk ol Superior Court and under and by virtue ol the power and authority contained in the above-referenced deed ol Irust'and because ol de­ lault In Ihe payment ol Ihe Indebt­ edness thereby secured and lail- ure to carry out and perform the stipulation and agreements therein contained and, pursuant lo demand of Ihe owner and holder of Ihe In­ debtedness secured by said deed ol trust, the undersigned substitute trustee will expose for sale al pub­ lic auction to the highest bidder lor cash at the usual place ol sale at the county courthouse ol said county at 10:00 AM on June 8,2005 the following described real eslate and any olher Improvements which may be situated thereon, situated In Davie County, North Carolina, and being more particularly de­ scribed as loilows: That certain tract of land con­ taining 12 ,1 acres, more or less, (composed ol 4 contiguous par­ cels), located In Jerusalem Town­ ship, Davie County, North Carolina; and bounded, now or formerly, by natural boundaries and/or lands owned by and/or in the possession ot persons as loilows: North by Helen McDaniel, East by Joanne Davis and John A. Phelps, South by SR 1103 and West by R.W. Edwards, Henry Cook, Dennis Page and others; said tract lying approximately 6 miles South from the town ol Mocksvllle, North Caro­ lina and being more specillcaily described as loilows: . Being known and designated as Lots Nos. 21,22,23 and 123 of the Penny Brothers Land, Inc. as the same appear on a plat thereol re­ corded in Map Book 1, page 20, Davie County Registry to which relerence is made lor a more par­ ticular description as II lully set lorth herein. In addition to Ihe above de­ scribed property conveyed by this instrument Is one 1989 model. Fisher 26' X 64'' Mobile Home, Style, Gemini Model 2030 Serial No. NCFC4376A&B, affixed to Ihe real estate in a permanent manner. And Being more commonly known as; 710 Pine Ridge Road, Mocksville, NC 27028 The record owner(s) ol the prop­ erty, as rellected on Ihe records of the Register of Deeds, Is/are Tony R. M cDaniel and Barbara K. McDaniel. The property to be offered pur­ suant to this notice ol sale is being offered lor sale, transler and con­ veyance “AS IS, W HERE IS” Nei­ ther the Trustee nor the holder ol the note secured by the deed of trust/security agreement, or both, being loreclosed, nor Ihe officers, directors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either Trustee or the holder ol the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or salety conditions existing in, on, at or relating to the property being oHered lor sale, and any and ali re­ sponsibilities or liabilities arising out of or In any way relating lo any such condition expressly are disclaimed. This sale Is made subject to all prior liens and encumbrances, and un­ paid taxes and assessments in­ cluding but not limited to any trans­ ler lax associated with the foreclo- ■ sure, for paying, if any. A deposit ol live percent (5%) ol Ihe amount ol the bid or seven hundred lilly dollars ($750,00), whichever is greater. Is required and must be tendered In the lorm of certified lunds at the time of the sale. This sale will be held open ten days tor upset bids as required by law. Fol­ lowing Ihe expiration ol Ihe statu­ tory upset period, ali remaining amounts are immediately due and owing. The dale of this Notice Is May 18,2005. David W. Nelli, Elizabeth B. Ells, John Valenti or Cecelia Stemple Substitute Trustee 8520 СШ Catneron Drive Suite 300 Charlotte, NC 28269 (704) 333-8107 04-64516 5-26-2tn NORTH CAROLINA ■ DAVIE COUNTY 05 SP 75 NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Under and by virtue of a Power of Sale contained in lhat certain Deed ol Trust executed by David W. Howard (Legally Separated) and Maggie Lou Barney (unmar­ ried) lo NEW SALEM , IN C ., Trustee(s), which was dated Sep­ tember 14, 2001 and recorded on September 20, 2001 In Book 387 at Page 442, Davie County Regis­ try, North Carolina. Default having been made In the payment ot the note thereby se­ cured by the said Deed ofTrust and Ihe undersigned. Brock & Scott, PLLC, having been substHuted as Trustee in said Deed ol Trust by an Instrument duly recorded In the Office ol Ihe Register of Deeds of Davie County, North Carolina, and the holder of the note evidencing said indebtedness having directed lhat the Deed ol Trust be lore- closed, Ihe undersigned Substitute Trustee will offer lor sale al the courthouse door of the county courthouse where the property Is located, or the usual and custom­ ary location at the county court­ house for conducting the sale on June 6, 2005 at 1:00PM, and will sell to the highest bidder for cash Ihe lollowing described property situated In Davie County, North Carolina, to wit; BEGINNING at a post oak bush, John Beauchamp’s corner, North 88 degs. West 14 chains and 90 links to a stone. Northeast comer of Dower; thence South 6 chs. and 75 links to a stone in Dowell line; thence East 14 chains and 17 links to a stone In Beauchamp’s line; thence North 3 degs. East 7 chains and 12 links TO THE BEGINNING, containing 10-1/4 acres, more or less; being Lot No. 1 In the Divi­ sion ol Thomas G. Masssey among his heirs at law and was assigned lo S.E. Nail In the said division. Save and except any releases or deeds ol release of record. Said property Is commonly known as 177 Barney Road, Ika 189 Barney Road, Advance, NC 27006., Third party purchasers must pay the excise lax, and Ihe court costs of Forty-Five Cents (45e) per One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) pursii- anttoNCGS7A-308(a)(1). Acash deposit (no personal checks) of five percent (5%) of the purchase price, or Seven Hundred Filty Dollars ($750.00), whichever is greater, will be required at the time ol Ihe sale. Following Ihe expiration of the statutory upset bid period, all Ihe remaining amounts are Immedi­ ately due and owing. Said property to be offered pur­ suant lo this Notice of Sale Is be­ ing oHered for sale, trapsler and conveyance “AS IS W HERE IS.” There are no representations ol warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety/conditions existing in, on, al, or relating lo the property being ol­ fered for sale. This sale Is made subject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, ease­ ments, rights of way, deeds ol re­ lease, and any other encum - brances or exceptions of record. To the best of the knowledge and bellel ol the undersigned! the cur­ rent owner(s) of the property Is/are DAVID WAYNE HOWARD. Substitute Truslee Brook & Scott, PLLC By:_______________________________ (SEAL) James P. Bonner, NCSB No. 15788 5919 Oleander Drive Suite 115 Arboretum Center Bldg 2 Wilmington, NC 28403 PHONE: (910) 392-4988 FAX; (910) 392-8587 File No.: 05-02582 5-26-2ln NORTH CAROUNA i DAVIE COUNTY CREDITORS NOTICE Having qualilled as Executor о Ihe Eslate ol HENRY HOMEF HENDRIX, lale ol Davie County this is lo notify all persons havinf claim s against said estate tc present them to the undersigned or or belore August 26, 2005, belnj three (3) months Irom the llrsi daj of publicallon or Ihis nollce will b« pleaded in bar ol their recovery. Al persons Indebted to said estate wil please make immediate paymen to Ihe undersigned. This 17th day of May, 2005. Homer Eugene Hendrb 426 Comanche Driv« Advance, NC 2700e Martin & Van Hoy, LLF Attorneys al Law Ten Court Squart Mocksvllle, NC 2702f 5-26-41Г PUBLIC NOTICES n o r t h CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CREDITORS NOTICE Having qualilled as Executor ol Ihe Estate of MARY C. POPE, late of Davie County, this Is lo notify all persons having claims against said estaie to present them to the un­ dersigned on or belore August 19, 2005, being three (3) months Irom the lirst day ol publication or this notice will ba pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This 13th day ol May, 2005. Eugene L. Pope 259 Cedar Creek Road Mocksvllle, NC 27028 Martin & Van Hoy, LLP Attorneys at Law Ten Court Square Mocksvllle, NC 27028 5-19-4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualilled as Executor ol the Estate ol M ADISON FREE­ MAN, this Is lo notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or belore the 5th day of August, 2005, being three (3) months from the first day ol publication or this notice will be pleaded in bar ol Iheir recovery. All persons indebted to said estaie will please make Imme­ diate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day ol May, 2005. Phyllis F. Sells, Co-Executor 202 Sowers Ferry Rd. Salisbury, NC 28144 Francis Craig Freeman, Co- Executor 842 Sain Rd. Mocksvllle, NC 27028 5-5-41n NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CREDfTORS NOTICE Having quallffed as Executor ol Ihe Estate ol M ARY PATE HOWELL, late ol Davie County, this Is to notify ali persons having claims' against said estate lo present them to Ihe undersigned on or before August 26, 2005, being Ihree (3) months Irom the llrst day ol publi­ cation or this nollce will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said eslate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This 26th day ol May, 2005. T. Dan Womble P.O. Box 1698 Clemmons, NC 27012 5-26-4ln UlISSCORVgR M INI-STORAGE For all your storage needs, choose us! Come bv to inquire about free rental. 2975 Hwy. 64 E in Fork C o U to d o i)! (33G) 898-8810 I Driver J U S T D R IV E IT T H A T 'S A L L ! Experience the best driving Job ever. No touch Irelght, tarping or dealing w/lrallers. One ot Ihe nations largest DrlveAway Co. Is leasing Ind. contractors w/Class A & B CDL’s lo pick up & deliver vehicles to & Irom all points in the U.S. Must be 23yra of age. Driving school Grads & Retirees Welcome, Bennett Motor Express local 704-342-1532 800-367-2249 INEXPENSIVE PBOFTEAraJi Abortion Attemative DAVIE PREGNANCY CARE Center offers confidential & Iree pregnancy tests, support ser­ vices, and referrals. M ake a healthy ch o ice (o r you r llfel Call 753-HO PE lor appointment. Animals FREEl MAKE YOUR own hay on these 40 acres ol rolling fescue/ clover fields, l^ust be cut and cleared by June 20th. Excellent Potential for horse or cattle hay, arm inglon area, John McCashin, 336-998-5280 or 785- 6033_____________________________ Apartments BIG HOUSE MADE Into 2 apart­ m ents. Front apartm ent avail­ able, 2 br, large rooms with big Iront porch. 336-463-2692 LARGE 1 BR apartment, down­ town, no kids, no pets, 704-278- 1717 MOCKSVILLE SUNSET TER- RACE: All brick energy efficient apartment, 1 & 2 bedroom, pool, basketball court & sw ings. Kitchen appliances lurnished In­ cluding dishwasher. 1.5 baths, washer/dryer connections. High energy efficient heat pump pro­ vides central h eal and air. Prewired for cable TV & phones. Insulated windows & doors. No wax kitchen & bath floors. Lo­ cated in Mocl<svllle behind the old H endricks Furniture building (now Carolina Precision Machin­ ery) on Sunset Dr. off ol Hwy, 158, Office hours 1-6 M -F & Sat. 10- 12, Phone 751-0168. READY TO MOVE In 2br fur- nlshed upstairs apartm ent, all utilities Included, $500/m o. 751- 1218 or 704-872-3367__________ Art/Artist ART LESSONS FOR children, 1/ 2 hr. $6 ,1 hr. $10.751-5213 Building for Rent RETAIL SPACE DOWNTOWN Mocksvllle, 704-278-1717 . Business Opportunity BUYORSELL Avon! Shop Avon at home or office. Personal de­ livery and 10 0 % satisfaction guarantee. Start your own busi­ ness lor only $10 and earn 50% l W endi Miller, Avon Independent Sales Represenlallve, Call: 336- 4 9 2-6 480 or 1-866-350-2866, Email:wendlm®energyunited,net. Visit m y w ebslle; www.youravon.com/randallmlller GALVALUME 20 YEAR WARRANTY Longest Lasting 3’ Covefage / Many Colors Pole Buildings Metal Roofs & Siding f 1-888-278-6050 MID-STATE METALS A deccoLocal Fortune 500 manufacturing Co. seeKs P R O D U C T S P E C I A L I S T with experience In Sales or CSR with heavy equipment 4 year degree required, high energy, intense CSR experience, strong communication and computer skills. Will support Marketing Depl. in all as(i:cls of Customer Service for new and existing products. Email oil resumes to betsv.peggigiadeccona.cnm EOE JO B S STARTING W EEKLY • M A T E R I A L H A N D L E R S • O R D E R P R O C E S S O R S • A S S E M B L Y W O R K E R S • M A C H I N E O P E R A T O R S ALL SHIFTS AVAILABLE C A S H I E R S • $7.00 /HR. • Must be Available for Rotating Shifts F O R K L I F T O P E R A T O R S $7.50 - $9.00 • lyr. Exp. Required T e m p o r a r y R e s o u r c e s 751-5179 300 Main St. Child Care BABYSirriNQ AVAILABLE IN private home. Pinebrook, North b a v ie school area near Farmington Rd. exit, excellent relerences. 940-6664 CHILD CARE -GOOD Christian hom e. Ages 8mos. and older. 940-5281. Advance_____________ Commercial Property 1000 SQUARE FOOT office building available Cali Janice McDaniel lor details Pennington & Co. Really 336- 998-8900 or 336-909-0747 COMMERCIAL SPACE FOR lease. Approx. 1000 sq. It. G a­ rage witii potential office. Easy access to 1-40 on Hwy. 601.751- 0429 or 816-2779 VARIOUS COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES Warehouse & Office space Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Really 998-8900 WANTEDII 4,000 SQUARE FOOT office space lor long term lease. Call Janice McDaniel - Pennington & Co. Realty. 336- 998-8900 or 336-909-0747 Employment 21 YRS. OR older wilh valid driv­ ers license to take paralyzed per­ son out, m eals Included. 492- 7947 A LOCAL MANUFACTURING cor nance perlonce wilh: Electronic, electri­ cal m aintenance systems, hy­ draulics, labrlcatlon. Industrial equipment troubleshooting, pre­ ventive maintenance. Must have 4 years experience working in equipment m aintenance with a manufacturer, contractor ol in­ dustrial company. A 2 year de­ gree Irom a tech n ical/trad e school plus 2 years working ex­ perience will be considered. Must be willing to work any shift, drug screen and background required, compensation based on experi­ ence. Please send resume/quall- lioalions to: Cycle Group, PO Box 279,168 Industrial Blvd., Mocks­ ville, NC 27028. An equal Oppor­ tunity Employer. ompany is looking for a malnte- ance technician. Must have ex- MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL - SPRING IS HEBE! Bobcat, aeratot core plugger & more lor rent toUay! M rA w .iV '' ( » 7 5 1 - 2 3 0 4 Employment BERMUDA RUN COUNTRY Club is looking for part-time night and w eekend wait staff. Great pay. Apply in person. CASHIER POSITION AVAIL- ABLE: part-llme/full-time. Appli­ cant should have com puter knowledge and good customer relations, must be able to work every other Saturday. Apply In person at; Caudell Lumber Co., 162 Sheek St., Mocksville CLASS A CDL drivers needed. Preemployment dnjg screening required. Must have 2 years ex­ perience. Home weekends. Call 704-546-2277 CNA'S NEEDED CALL 336-372- 5125 or 336-386-8900 DAVIE DOMESTIC VIOLENCE Services and Rape Crisis Cen­ ter is seeking a full time Crisis Intervention Coordinator lo coor­ dinate direct services lor the vic­ tims ol dom estic violence and sexual assault In Davie county. Responsibilities Include coordi­ nation of volunteers, directing preventive education events, ad­ vocate counseling. Intake pro­ cessing, referrals court advocacy, crisis intervention and on-call cri­ sis line duly. Regular office hours are Monday through Friday, 8:00 to 5:00 witF) ffexlbllity to accom­ m odate crlsKs Intervention, and outreach prevention programs. Qualllications: BS degree in Busi­ ness or Human Sen/ice llled de­ sired. Graduation from a two- year college with business or human sen/ice degree wilh expe­ rience, or an equivalent combi­ nation ol educalion and experi­ ence is required.. Experience working with domestic violence and sexual assault issues and volunteer services desired. Sal­ ary range: $26,246-$38,690. Hir­ ing range: $ 2 6 ,2 4 6 -$ 2 8 ,6 0 8 . Send cover letter, resume and state applioatlon, P D 107 to Mrs. M artha L. M cQ ueen, Director, 123 South Main St., 3rd ffoor, Mocksvllle, NC 27028 (336-751- 3450). Open until lllled. EOE. MAMMOGRAPHER FULL-TIME MAMMOGRAPHER NEEDED AT HOOTS MEMORIAL HOSPITALHoots Memorial is an affiliate of North Carolina Baptist Hospital. Hoots Memorial has an Immediate opening for the following position: Full-time Mammographer. Experience preferred.Excellent benefits.Call (336) 679-2041, ext 6763 for more. Information. Athletic Program Supervisor Responsibilities Include: Plan, Organize & Supervise Athletic Programs for Children through Adults Degree in Parks & Recreation or related field preferred. Full-time with benefits. Salary Range: $24,000 to $32,000 depending on qualifications & experience. (Open until position filled) Contact:Michael Garner Mocksville/Davie Pari« & Rec.644 North Main St., Moci<sville, NC 27028 or call 336-751-2325 Statesville A uto Auction, a M an h eim owned company, has immediate positions available for the following: M ain Office Title Clerk ~ Part Tim e Clerics needed to assist customers by performing title functions on Sale Day 20 Sale Pav Drivers ~ Part Tim e Drivers needed to drive on TXiesday Sale Day. Maintenance Technician ~ Full Tim e Technician needed w ith a m inim um o f 2 years previous maintenance experience. M ust have i<nowiedge o f central pressure washer, vacuum systems and H V A C systems. A ll Candidates must possess a valid driver’s license and be at least 18 years of age. Please npply in person lo the M ain Office at the comers o f 1-77 and Highw ay 21 North, Statesville, on the following days: Thursdays, 9:00 A M to 4:00 P M and Fridays 9i00 A M to 12:00 Noon. ______ EO E, Drug Free Woritplaee. __Employment DRIVERS NEEDED. CLASS A- CDL, Local runs. Paid Holidays, benefits. Call 998-8700 for an appointment, EXPERIENCED SHORT OR-DER cook needed, 5 days a week, B J’s Country Food, Call 998-7290 FULL-TIME EXPERIENCED electrician. O sborne Electric. 751-3398 appointment only. MANUFACTURING POSITION FIRST and second shllts, high school education, basic carpentry skills, hand tools, apply In person: IC S , 32 3 Farm ington Rd. Mocksvllle, M -F between 7 and 4 ONE OPENING FOR someone to assist in cleaning houses, 20 plus hours per week, honest, de­ pendable, reliable, top pay. 998- 3675 PLUMBER OR PLUMBERS helper needed with some expe­ rience. Must be 18 or older, pref­ erably w ith drivers license. Shores Plum bing & Heating, 1485 N. Main SL, Mocksville REFER AN OLDER worker to Experience Works when: They are In need ot greater earnings, they are having trouble making ends meet, lor example, buying medicine and paying lor food and rent. They have barriers to em ­ ployment such as being isolated, nave a disability, or live In a re­ mote area. They are at least 55 years old and have expressed an Interest in ffnding a Job, They need basic com puter skills or other training. They need help in creating a resume, participating in a )ob Interview, or filling out an em ploym ent application. Does this sound like som eone you know? Call Martha Nichols, 336- 651-2540 Employment SEEKING EXPERIENCED MA­ SON. Must be able to lead crew. Also looking tor mason helpers. Call 751-9486 TRACTOR-TRAILER DRIVERS needed for local hauls. Seeking steady hard workers, (No over­ night), Class A CD L required, 3 yrs. mln. experience, current DOT medical, clean MVR a must; Drug/alcohol screening required, Benellts, To apply, call 336-492- 5651 behveen 9am and 5pm for an application, WILLING TO EDUCATE highly motivated Individual for a reward­ ing career in Financial Service, Call 926-4862 for Interview Furniture KING PILLOWTOP MATTRESS set, new w/warrantu, can deliver $225.00. 336-442-3506 LEATHER SOFA AND love seat -$1800., King O ak bed with m at­ tress -$1500, Maytag stainless steel stove -$450. All bought new only 9 months ago. Call 336-284- 2383 MATTRESS & BOX, qu een piliowtop m attress set, nam e brand, new in plastic $150.00 336-992-3930___________________ Homes For Rent MOCKSVILLE- 2/3br, Ib a on 1 ac, basement and 2 car garage $650/m o. Pennington & Company 751-9400 Reduce The Stress! W ant the challenge o f w orkin g in a 25 bed J C A H O accredited, C ritical Access Hospital?Needed: P/T Pharmacist M inim um 2 days per week Daytim e hours, no weekends Certified Pharmacy Tech on staff Requires a N C license and IV experience. H um an Resources Davie C ounty Hospital 223 Hospital St. M ocksville, N C 27028 or Fax Resume lo Hum an Resource 751-8402 I D e b W e J s A g Q .o p t i n a Applioatlon»Thursday, May 26 1:00pm-4:00pm at915 Baltimore Rd Advance, NC Besmiting isr;Material Handlers Production Pacl<ers 1st & 2nd Shllts Avallabis Advance Araa Groat Starting Pay Don't BSHSX, A b b IX T p ffa y ! Gail 776-1717for details No Fee EOE Autumn Care of Mocksvllle Is hiring the following positions: RN or LPN full time or part time on both 7-3 and 3-11 shift. Also hiring prn RN or LPN.CNA’s full time 3-11 shift. Autumn Care of Mocksvllle offers a wonderful beneffts package. Including free health care Insurance for nurses. W e also offer 401-k, Christmas club, 6 paid holidays & 1 paid personal day, sick days with option to cash In If not used, perfect attendance bonus, automatic deposit, and option tb take 5 days vacation alter 6 months of employment. Come Join our caring team of healthcare givers. Apply In person at Autumn Care of Mocksville, 1007 Howard St., Mocksville, N 0 27026 336-751-3535 or send resume to fax 336-751-0028. You may also email your resume lo donlO l @ autumncorp.com. MUTUMNCARE OF MOCKSVILLE EOE I M M E D I A T E O P E N I N G S Funder America, Inc. a leader in prodiiction of melamine & laminated fumiture is seeking a supervisor for our lamination plant. SMgiBVISfiil WITH MAINTENANCE EXPERIENCE • M U S T H A V E 5 YEA R S SUPER VISO RY EXP. IN F U R N ITU R E M A N U FA C TU R IN G , PR O V E N A B IL IT Y TO C O M M U N IC A T E W FTH A L L LE V E L S O F EM P. W IT H IN T H E C O M P A N Y A N D A B IL IT Y TO P O S ITIV E LY M O TIV A TE EM PLO YEES. M U S T A LS O H A V E A STRO NG M A IN T E N A N C E B A C K G R O U N D . • ffQBKMFT flEfEAIfiSS-MUSTHAVE 2 YEA R S EXPER IEN C E, H A V E A N E X C E L L E tW S A FE TY RECO RD, Must be quality oriented. match. Interested, resume and S ^ sled, qualified, candidates apply di ¡A LA R Y R E Q U IR E M E N TS to; F U N D E R A M E R IC A , IN C . Attention; Human Resources PO Box 729 Mocksville, N C 27028 Fax: 336-751-0504 E -M A IL ; H R @ FU N D E R A M E R 1C A .C O M EOE J RECORD. Thursday, May 26,2005 г. L IMEXPEWStVE FROFITABIíE Homes For Rent Homes For Sale Miscellaneous Mobile Homes/Rent Pets Service 2BR, 1-1/2BA, excellent condi­ tion, $600/m o. deposit 998-4925 or 751-1634 2br, Ib a - McCullough Rd. Oil tieat. $475/m o 2br, 2ba, condo In River W alk across from Tanglewood Park. $700/m o. 2br, Ib a home with oil heat and central air. $500/m o Call Century 21 Swicegood Wall & McDaniel 336-751-222aask (or Ext. 213 M on-Frl 8am -5pm or 336-751-5555 Ext. 213 nights & weekends. li3A IN C O O LE E M E E , big ^ ^ d . H UD accepted. 336-909- 3B B , 1-1/2B A , kitchen, dining room, heat and air, M ain St., Cooleemee, $550/m o. with $550 dep. or rent to own. 751-5925 ’3BR, 1-1/2B A , with 1 acre lot. Frost St. (Im lle from Snook’s BBQ on Hwy 158) $700/m o. 577- 2494 or 940-2099 3B R , 2-1/2B A , 2-story house (or rent. 2200 sq. ft. w/garage. Many extras, Creekwood subdivision. Advance, $950/m o. plus $500/ dep. 940-3643, leave message 3BR, 2BA, 2 car garage, 10 miles from Mocksvllle, newly remod­ eled, $750/m o„ $750/dep. 704- 546-2089 3BR, 2BA, REAL nice house for rent, Mocksvllle, fenced yard. $800/m o.plu3 deposit. Available in June. 940-3643, leave mes­ sage CLEAN 2BR, house. Call 704- 450-8616 or 704-657-3297 FOR RENT! AVAILABLE June 1stl Advance location, 2br, Iba, $750/m o. Cali Debbie at Premier Carolina Properties. 336-909- 1284 FOR RENT: LIKE naw 3BR, 2-1/ 2BA (1/2 bath In full finished day­ light basement), appliances, heat pump, (resh paint, new carpet, large deck,+/-1 acre lot, In town, no pets, $900/m o., $900 sec. dep. ly r lease. C all M ary Hendricks 336-940-7077, Pre­ mier Carolina Properties HOW ARD REALTY Gena Cline 751-8562 Ibr, Iba, Mocksville $400/mo. Mobile Home Lots: Gun Club Rd. $225.00 O yVNER F IN A N C E , $8 000 down, $650/m o., 3BR, brick, basement, country, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695 RANCH STYLE, 3BR , In Fork area, $625/m o. deposit and ref­ erences required. 336-998-9555 S E C TIO N 8/H U D 3B R , brick ranch, basement, remodeled. In country, near 1-40, $695/mo. 704- 630-0695________________________ Homes For Sale 3BR, 2B A HOM E , up to 100% financing with payments as low as $500 to $550 per month. Call 336-760-1209 l o r d y , L o r d y T o n y A l i e n is 4 0 ! Drivtn: M A K E $ 5 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 + 1ST YEAR O F EM PLO YM EN T! •NoHaimat •NoFontdOT •Good Home Tune •GooJ Miles NEW PAY PACKAGE NEWEQUIPMEOT Hin.Himi;Requlremeiils CUssACDL-iyr.OTKHp, l -8 0 0 -.3 7 4-8 .328 ГД Я О О ¡¡НАМШРОЯТШЯШ. 2BA, living room, dining room, large eat-ln kitchen, den w / fire­ place, office, on over 1 acre, $91,900. 336-712-0163 or 336- 575-2695 H O USE FOR SALET 108 High- land Rd. Dutchman Hills. 1-1/2 story, 2 car garage, 3br, 2-1/2ba, corner lot, ail appliances, outside storage. Seller to help with clos­ ing cost. $144,900. Cali 336-477- 4016 M O C K SVILLE, 172 H O LLO W Hill Ct. 3br, i.5ba, recent siding and roof, open floor plan, tax value $88K, price $84K. 336-748- 1390 NEW DOUBLEW IDE HOM E, big lot, 3BR, 2ВА, front porch, rear deck, heat pump, owners move- ln package- Z?'' color TV, DVD player, camcorder, big George Foreman grill. $76,000. reduced to $69,900. 998-5816 or 284- 2653. O W N E R F IN A N C E ; $ 8 0 0 0 down, $650/m o., 3B R , brick, basement, counlry, close to 1-40. 704-630-0695 TW O H O U S E S FO R sale by owner. 134 Winward Circle, 3br, 1-1/2ba. 373 Winward Circle, 2br, Iba. If Interested, call 909-0445 Land For Sale 4.6 ACRE TR A C T In beautiful Deacons Rldne subdivision. Gor­ geous wooded lot. No m obile hom es or m odular allow ed. $51,500. Call Kathi Wail at 909- 1726. Century 21 Sw icegood Wall & McDaniel A D V A N C E - 7 acres, private wooded restricted. 998-7824 M O C K S V ILLE , R E S TR IC TE D B U IL D IN G site lot in Southwood acres, established residential area, near shopping and Davie High School, direct sale, call 336-751-2000 or 248- 651-9179 STICK BUILT HO M ES or mobile hom e lots for sale. 998-5816, 284-2653 ZERO DOW N FOR land owners. Com plete turn key packages. Homes from 800 sq. ft. up to 4200 sq. ft. FHA, VA, First time buyers program . C ali for details. • Crossiand Homes. 336-767-9263 YADKIN CO ., NICE large lots, singlewides and doublewldes, owner financing. Brown Osbome, 336-838-4590___________________ Lawn Care G REEN SIDE UP Lawn Care mowing, edging, core aeration, fertilizing, seeding, new and ex­ isting lawns. Tractor work avaii- abie. Call 998-1914_____________ Lost & Found FO UND: BOX IN road (Hwy 158 In front of Bl-Lo) Marked Chase’s toys. Saturday m orning. Call Carolyn 998-5323 or 998-0200 Lots For Rent NICE W O O DED LO T in country, private, $175/mo. 336-961-2777 Hariis Pool & Supplies OpeA« ( OiNi« • Iter 1!е(1ктм^ Tommy llams/Ov.nct.Ovcr 2Ü Yrs. Exp. 277 PlcasiuH Лсп- Dr., Mock.svillc Home (336) 284-4817 ^ |^ п ю И З З № ) 9 ^ ^ F O R S A L E : Cars • Trucks Utility Buildings Carpoils; All Sizes, Ail Galvanized All S ize D og Lots 336-751-3442Mocksville, NC Driver - Run the DEDICATED LOOP HOME EVERY. WEEKENP Guaranteed & 1-2 NIghts/wkI •No Touch Freight •85% Preloaded /Pretarped •Avg. $888-$988/w eek Mocksvllle, NC Terminal Sunday Callers Welcomel CDL-A req’d. 8 7 7 -4 2 8 -5 6 2 7 wvifw.ctdrlver8.com Travel Trailer. Sleeps 6, fully self- contained, lots of storage, must see lo appreciate. $5900. 1970 Ford F350 1 ton dum p truck $2800.492-2264 6 M A N JA C U Z Z I -$ 500 you move. $600, we move. Needs maintenance. 940-5534 8’ A LU M IN U M C A P for truck. $75. 492-2415 APPROXIM ATELY 200 BOARD feet rough sewn walnut boards. $1.50 per foot. Cali alter 5pm 998-6475 DAVIDSON CO UNTY COMMlT- N ITY College is pursuing ap- firoval to offer licensed massage herapy. If you have interest In enrolling in this program or em ­ ploying a m assage therapist, please contact Louise Mitchum at 336-249-8186 ext. 718 or e-mail her at lmitchum@davldsonccc.edu FO R SALE-EVERYTHING must go-Reducedi 1988 Ford F350 'ump truck 460 C.I.D. -$7500, Dovetail trailer-car hauler -$1150, 1999 W ilderness cam per w/t slide-out room- $17,800; 1986 Corvette 5.7 tuned port injection, loaded, needs som e cosmetic and maintenance work -$9,800. All neg. Cali 336-940-5534 after 6:00 or anytime on week-ends. FOR SALE: UTILITY trailer 5x10 ft.- $450. Call Kenneth 998-3224 G O LDFISH FOR SALE. Baltfish and ornamental, delivery avail­ able. 336-624-2120 H O N D A EB 11000 generator with wheel kit, 2 yrs. old, like new condition, 68 hrs. $3200. Cali 336-886-3235 LADIES 14KT W HITE gold dla- mond solitaire weighing .50 ct. I.w. 3 channel set diamonds on each side of center stone, a 1 -1 / 2 mm 14 kt. white gold wedding band. 1 mens lOkt. yellow gold diam ond band, 5 diam onds weighing ,15ct. t,w, new. 492- 5719 LARG E DOG HO USE. M ake an offer. 492-5719 LE A R N TO M A S S A G E your body Improve bonding, sleep, relieve coilc. 5 week class form­ ing in June. Call Cappy Dean (336----------------- 3B R M O B ILE home , Shady Acres Mobile Home Park, John Crotts Rd. Hwy 64E. 998-8276 or 998-8222 3B R , 2B A O N shaded lot with storage shed, carport, front & back deck, maximum 2 adults and 2 children, $525/m o. $525/ dep. 492-5897 A D VA N C E-3B R, 2BA singlewide plus extra room, 1.5 ac fenced for 1 horse, outbldgs $700/mo. Janice McDaniel Pennington & Company Realty 998-8900 JU C T IO N RD^ D E L U X E singlew ide, 3br, 2ba, island kitchen, laundry room , lease agreement, background check. $550/m o., $350 deposit. 704- 892-1284 M O BILE HOM E FOR rent. $350/ mo. $200 security deposit, no pets. 492-5277 PRIVATE LOT, 2BR, 1 ba, central air, w asher/dryer, deposit re­ quired. 336-575-2101 or 828- 478-9416, leave message. READY TO M OVE In 2br, 1ba, private lot, $450/m o. 751-1218 or 704-872-3367 SAM LL 2BR, IB A on private lot, quiet neighborhood, (or couples or singles only 998-9100 Mobile Homes/Sale 1991 2BR, 2B A singlewide on 1/ 2 acre private lot. Advance area. Needs som e repairs. $25,000 OBO 998-3450 1992 M ANSIO N/PARK Ave. de­ luxe 14x80 mobile home, excel­ lent condition, 3br, 2ba, garden / carps crowave, side by side refrigera­ tor/freezer, underpinning and (336)407-7068 LIKE NEW , 220 Fedder air con­ ditioner. 12,000-18,000 BTU’s. Used oniy two seasons. Installed in window under roof, never ex­ posed to weather. Must see to appreciate. All manuals. $150. 336-492-5305, leave message. ROCKFORD FOSGATE PUNCH 800 watt amp comes with Bass Boost, delivers power very well and in good condition. Asking $100. 751-9190_________________ Mobile Honies/Rent 2BR, 2BA, ALL electric, beauti­ ful mobile home, AC. Located at Pines Mobile Home Park, 112 Dianna Ln., Smith Grove area. $450/m o. plus $450/dep. No pets. 336-751-7502 G E N E T R E X L E R R O O F I N G New & Old Roofs Small Repair Jobs Free Estimates 336-284-4571 ia, garc tub, fully carpeted, w/d, d/w, mi- 5id( rplideck Included. Asking $21,500. Call 336-998-1603 HURRY...THIS ONE W O N’T last . O W N ER FINANCE...m ove in NOW . ONLY $500 down. 3br, 2ba mobile home set up In nice com­ munity Call 769-0755 or pager 750-9081 M UST SELL 3BR, 2ba ranch true m oduiar, set on your land, $84,900, value at $110,000. Call 1-800-672-9223_________________ Motorcycles 1997 HD S P O R TS TE R 1200 custom, chrom ed out. $7300. 751-437 5 ____ _______Pets_______ BALL PYTHO N EN C LO SU R E and everything included, 4 yrs. old. Best offer. Call Jeff 492-7947 C A S K E T S FO R C R IT T E R S . 336-909-3790 CNA will care for elderly in-home care to private setting. Also, will do light housework. Call 336-998-2307 Immediate Openinjg for Administrative Assistant A dm inistrative AssistanI w ith good custom er service skills, Full-Tim e, Part-Tim e, M onday-Friday, l:00-5;30pm . Light shop w ork round out this perfect job opporiunity. M ust be enthusiastic and w illing to w ork. Excellent w ork environm ent in Clem m ons. M ust be High School graduate. N o Insurance. QC ENGRAVING, INC. 'u r^ o A l/iu n Enot«vlnaInPiMtIc»»nilMitali' N G fW V IN Q дрр,у 2626 Lewlsvllle-Clem m ons Road Behind Fralelghs . LAB PUPPIES FOR sale. Full- blooded black and chocolate. Ready now. $175.336-998-4161 RV/Motor Home 1994 DUTCHM AN 32FT. pull be­ hind camper. Sleeps 6. $6000 OBO. 336-751-0575 Service B & D DESIG N & CO N STRUC ­ TIO N YO UR CO M PLETE HOM E IM PRO VEM ENT CO M PANY W E W O R K T O M E E T YO U R BUDGET Specializing in additions, renova­ tions, baths, kitchens, windows, siding, decks, masonry, stone & tile work, light painting and small repairs. W e also do custom cabinetry. Call Brian Darcy 336-751-4212 for prompt, reliable, workm an­ ship. References available. Free Estimates. B. M Y E R S LA N D S C A P IN G , specializing in “Rubber Mulch” mowing, will take care of all your landscaping needs. Free esti­ mates, (336) 492-6385-hom e or (336) 399-4384-ceii BILL L. W YATT 336-998-7216 336-909-3616 Interior-Exterior painting, build decks, pressure washing, driveway sealing, free esti­ mates. 46 yrs. exp. CANO LPY TR EE SERVICE Professional service at reason­ able rates. Fully Insured. Call (or free estimates. References available. Also firewood for sale. 336-998-4374 E .J. LA W N C A R E , m ow ing, weedeating, trimming hedges. Free estimates. 336-284-6120 E L E M E N T A R Y T E A C H E R H ANN AH Harrelson offers rea­ sonably priced summer tutoring. 336-940-2180 G A R A G E D O O R R EPA IR S & A LL E L E C T R IC O P E N E R S . CALL MR. ED 336-998-2336 LAW N M O W ER SERVICE and repair. Pick-up and delivery. Will buy lawnmowers In need of re­ pair. 751-5474 LA W N M O W IN G , W EEDEATING , clean-up. Mark Parchment 492-7671 M A RG ARET'S HO M E C LEAN- ING Service, there's no Job too sm all or too large. Free esti­ mates, references If needed. 940- 2633 M A S O N R Y W O R K , B R IC K or block, foundations, garages, chim neys , porches, steps, etc. Built new or repaired, 33 yrs. experience, insured, rea­ s o n a b le ra te s . F re e e s ti­ m ates. 3 3 6 -4 6 2 -4 5 5 0 or 336- 99 8-4 765 O SBO RN E ELECTRIC for all your electrical needs Free Estimates 751-3398 SN ID ER'S LANDSCAPING & Lawn Sen/Ice, LLC W e Do ItAlll Mowing, trimming, bush­ hogging, plugging, tree & shrub planting & fertilizing, grass seeding & fertilizer application, soil preparation, micro-lrriga- tion, licensed pesticide applica­ tor, water garden installation, retaining walls Spring & Fall Vard Clean-Up Leaf Removal Gutter Cleaning Pine Needles Delivered & Spread $6.50/baie Sign 1 year contract and receive your birthday month freell Cali for Free Estimates Residential & Commercial Office (336) 492-2174 Cell (338) 409-0113 T O M B E R L IN 'S LA W N C A R E & H an d y m an S e rv ic e s . All types of iaw ncare and handy­ m an se rvice s, m ow ing and w eed eatin g , bushhogging & trim m ing trees and bushes, plugging, seeding, fertilizing, leaf rem oval, m ulching, pine needles. C all B rent fo r free e s tim a te ire s id e n tia l an d com m ercial services) H om e p h o n e 4 9 2 -5 4 2 4 M o b ile 3 9 1 -2 2 6 6 . M r s . J e a n e tte F o w le r J o h n s o n o f M o c k s v ille , N C . B a c h e lo r o f B u s in e s s A d m in is tr a tio n D e g r e e , S a tu rd a y , M a y 7 a t C a ta w b a C o lle g e . C o n g r a tu la tio n s o n ^ ^ ^ o u ^ r a d u a U o n ^ looking tor a Job that provlde$ meanlngtui work and compollllvo compensation? Consider a position In a State Farm Agent's offics. . Assist wllti agent's markellng elforts^• Provide quallly service to Slate Farm polteytiolders.• Conduct needs based sales Interviews In the agent’s ofllce. . Prepare forms, policies and endorsements. IWj omploymoni opportunity It with a Stato Farm agoni, nói with stalo FoirTì }n$uranco Companlo$ and roqultot tho luccosiful compMlon ot llcemlng roqulr9m9nt$ to sell and soivlea Stato Fatm producH. Please mall or (ax resume to; Darryl Bandy 5248 US Hwy IS 8 Advance, NC 27006 Fax: 336-940-2I69 W IN S T O N - S A L E M R E A L E S T A T E AUCTION S A T U R D A Y , J U N E 4 1 0 : 0 0 A . M . 3 B E D R O O M H O M E 7 ROOMS - BATH & HALF 1904 South Street Off 1800 block of Old Salisbury Road Call our office for inspection * * * H o u s e s e l l s f i r s t * * * TERMS; $ 3.000.00 down day of auction. Balance duo 30 days. 10% Buyer premium. Registering t)6gins 8;30/\M. Bring ad with you.’* “ * T H E N - • * Antiques, Guns & Fumlstilngs Cast iron wash pol High back Oak bed. Onion head clock. # 2 wash tub. Pldda crock. Old ckier press. Huge stainless steel pol. 68 year oW sowing machine Push pkw. Thompson 80 caliber black powder rifle. Bolt action Gemían ilile. American Eagle 20 gage shotgun. Model 77 Winchester. TVvo pistols. Pistol permits iBquiiBd,? fresh and salt water spinners. Fresh & salt water rods. Golf dubs. Tooterafl tools. Chain saw, skill saw. Table saw. Band saw. 2 wood chlppers. 2 rolo-lillers. Leaf btawer. Munay Riding mower. Clothes washer & dryer Whiripool electric range. 2 year old GE Freezer, WWripool eleclifc range self cleaning oven. 2 year oW refrigerator with Ice maker. Princes House avslal. And a great deal more. 10% Buyer premium. Tams; Cash, MasterCard - Visa A U C T I O N E E R - B R O K E R KEITH J. PIERCE, GRI(336) 73Í.2003 « NCAL # >54. NCRBL #99460 www.pierceauction. com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 - D9 ШПРСВЕИЗПДВ FBOFTEABLE Statewide Wanted Yard Sales Yard Sales Yard Sales Yard Sales M IIU U O rCIVIMI.CO, u u i^ u a i ievei (arm sale, Saturday, May 28, 2005, Noon, Vernon Hill, VA. 86 lots over 100 head sell, many cows w/calves. Phone: 434-349- 3779 H IG H S C H O O L E X C H A N ^ students arriving August need Host Fam ilies, fias own insur­ ance and spending m oney. P ro m o te s W o rld P e a c e l A m erican In tercu ltu ral S tu ­ dent Exchange. 1-800-sibllng. w w w .aise.com S TE E L B U ILD IN G S - Repos, dam aged, and le(t over farm show ljulldlngs. Ail must go - ASAPll M ake offer, bulid your- sei(, save thousands! Call to­ day. 1-800-222-6335. Y O U R C L A S S IF IE D C O U LD be reaching over 1.6 M illion hom es across North C arollnal Place an ad with our paper (or publication on the NC S tate­ w ide Classified Ad N etw ork- 117 NC N ew spapers fo ra low cost of $3 00 (or 25-w ord ad to app ear In each paperl A d­ ditional w ords are $ 10 each. Th e w hole state' at your (In- It's a sm art advertis- TIM BER W ANTED, pine or hard­ wood. W e select cut or clear cut. 8 acres or more. Shaver Wood Products, Inc. 70 4-278-9291. Night 704-278-4433 or 828-430- 8860 W A N T TO B U Y riding m owers that need repair. 99 8-2 627 Yard Sales 3 FA M ILY YA R D sale, 148 Charleston Ridge Dr. o(( 64 East, 1/2 miles from town on right. Sat. 8-untii 3 FA M ILY YA R D sale, Friday only, 7 a m -u n tll, 4 1 4 2 H w y 8 0 1 S , n e a r In te rse ctio n 6( Hwy 64 and 801. Baby Item s, c lo th e s , b o o k s , tire s , a ir hockey table, a little bit of ev­ erything. BÍG YARD SALE at back yard in- slde. May 28 8-until. Trash com- FIRST TIM E YARD sale Sat. 5/ 28 7am -12 noon. Lots of boys clothes and baby clothes, men's clothes, ladies clothes, toys and m iscellaneou s. O ft Juney B eaucham p Rd. 142 Pardue Loop FRIDAY AND SATURADY 8-un- tll. 151 Stonew ood Rd. (off Nolley Rd near Jockey). Multi- family, boys/girls clothes, toddler carseat, sm all breakfast table (table and 2 chairs), lots of toys, PS and PS2 games, misc.'otner items. Ing buy! Call us for m ore in­ fo rm atio n or visit the N .C . P ress A ssociation's w ebsite at w w w .ncpress.com __________ Vehicles 1997 PO N TIA C TR A N S P O R T Van, V-6, auto, $875 down, total $2,300. Dealer 63941 704-633- 5932 1996 D O D G E 1500 truck PW windows, brakes. Runs good, good condition, cold AC $3500. 336-998^0407 2 0 0 2 T O Y O T A C E L IC A G t. loaded 5-speed, biue, 54,000 miles, $15,500 negotiable. Call 336-692-7834 W ILL PAY CASH for junk cars! 336-407-8283___________________ Wanted PRIVATE C O LLEC TO R BUYS coins and collections. Call for ap­ pointment. 753-0986 pactor, ping pong table, too much to list. 611 Gladstone Rd. In front of Community Baptist ChUrch. Look (or big sign in front. Good prices. B IG Y A R D S A LE Friday and Saturday, 645 Chinquapin Rd. 7 a m -u n tli. T o o ls , kitc h e n Item s, g la s s w a re , clo th es, and m uch m ore. R ain ca n ­ cels. B IG Y A R D S A L E S at. (rom 7am -untli. Household Item s, clothes, (u rnlture, antiques and m ore. 2 5 2 2 H w y 64W , M ocksvllle, |ust betore Lake M yers CARO LYN’S CO LLECTIBLES 2076 Hwy 601 South Mocksville, NC 27028 (336-751-6252) Barbies, Beanies, Furniture and Gills G A R A G E S A LE : M E M O R IA L Day drop-ins $1 0.00 plus m is­ cellaneous floral Item s, 707 Country Ln. M ocksville, look for signs H U G E Y A R D S A L E , 1 9 8 7 H w y 8 0 1 S b es id e T u c k e r’s C afe. Friday and Saturday. Rain or shine. J U N E 4 T H , 2 0 0 5 - M oving S a le . In c lu d e s 1 s le e p e r couch, 2 living room chairs, dining table with leaf and six chairs (excellen t condition), m ultiple assorted other Item s. 4138 N C Hw y 801N , M ocks­ v ille . C all 9 9 8 -3 5 7 8 if you would like to see the (urnlture ahead o( the sale. LO TS O F N E A T item s, Fri. and Sat. 7-until, On the Hill Farm , 87 8 C hinquapin Rd., M ocksville M EM O R IAL DAY SALE discounts up to 50% o(fl Both locations. D EE'S ANTIQ UES 733 Greenhill Rd. & ' Dee's Tooll Antiques 296 Blaise Church Rd. Sale last thru Sat. May 28th C A S H PAID FOR At^TIQUES, PARTIAL OR V\/HOLE ESTATES, COLLECTABLES, OLD METAL TOYS, ANTIQUE FURNITURE CaimrHiur BosUtk 336-492-5992 Need To Place An Ad In The Classifieds? Here’s Som e H elpful Inform ation For You,.. The first 10 words are $6.50; each additional word Is 100. Yard Sale ads are payable in advance. Deadline for classified ads Is 10:30 a.m. Tuesday. Call The Enterprise-Record At 751-2129 W IN S T O N - S A L E M AUCTION 10:AM SAT. MAY 28 * Liquidation Sale * Salem Graphics Publishing Company 130 Stratford Court, Winston-Salem Business MO, Stratford Road exit Across from Thruway Shopping Ccinter 'MILLION DOLLAR’ A R T I N V E N T O R YLimited Edition Prints - Beautiful IVlirrors Framing Shop Equipmentand SuppBes, Office Desk, Computers, File cabinets, 20 Foot Trailer w/Aircondition 1993 Fonl C»;gD Van AircompressorWail to wall complete liquidation of the entire "Millfcin Dollar business operation. Registering t)egins 8:30AM Terms; Cash, MasterCard, Visa. Good check wilh your thumb print 10% Buyer premium added to all purchases A U C T I O N E E R - B R O K E R KEITH J. PIERCE, GRI(336) 731-2003 • NCAL # 1S4. NCRBL #99460 www.pierceauction. com for listing & color pictures, please visit A w w w . v o r k a u c t i o w . c o m ■ N O ■ u Y i i i 'a p m m u M ' ^ X X O T I O M T Saturday May 28, 2005 @10 am riir Sam & R uth Short (Mr. Si Mrs. Short nre moving imo Bupti.st Uctircincni Home)370 Sain Rd. * * * M ocksville, N.C. MockivHle, N.C., from 1*40 exU «170 tnko Hwy. 601 South lowaril Mocksviiic for ♦•/- 3 miles to Hwy, 138 Rnsi (N. Mitin St.). thei^ leU on Hwy. 19K Uant lor »-/>3 mijex io the Suln Road, thdn Right for _ milo lo the Shott« I lonyylncc. ^ ^ . _ . _ _ .jj_ j-_|_ j_,_ J . J I J J- J J- - J J- - J _r - ■ r - I I- - J J- - I jr J j-i J J rj J- - I r - jj- I ■ curly IHOO s Davic Co. Queen Ann Fool Work Tahle (rf.storcJ. <iro\ver reploccui. 3 0 x29 h) 9 pc. Miihog. Dining Room Snilc single Onk Dcd w/oW llnieh •• Ouk Serpentine Front Wtish Sinnd •• Mahog. Dres.ser ** old Rd. Cherry & Muhog, СоГГсо ТнЫо (rcfinishcd) ♦♦ 4 drawer Dep. Era Cheet of Dnwers •• Cedur niunkcl Chcsi •• rd. Wooden OHlelcg Brcakfiisl Table & Chair» •• Dep. Его Server Oak Desk *• Rnnmcl Top TnWc Mnhog. ilcpplcwhUe aiylo Lump Tnblo by Merson Ouk Arrow Dock Arm Desk,Chair •• Mohou, Tnll Hack Ann Rookcr Onk Л Uph. Rocker •• Spindle Back Onk Rocker •• carly Counlry Chair •• Chairs ** pr. Uph. Lady s Chairs •• Wicker Rocker •• Wickcr Pinmor •• Patio Sofa old Mend Porch Rockcr •• Hnudl contemporary Windsor Rtylc ScUlc •• 8 n.\2 Chineao atylo R\»g •• olii Chum Lomp Table •• old Coffee Grinder Lamp ** Hnl Tree *• O.G. Rcfrigeralor w/icc niukcr •• large Crosley Chesl Free/.cr small npr. O.G. Frcc/cr *• Washer & Dryer •• Mnrantz Stereo Sysicm old M ftuI D«K *>*»«»' ** *'l«wer Door Stop •* Cinl. Potlery Jug (hondle rcpnlred) 3 gni.Pottery Jar •• 2 uhI. PoUery Churn •* yellow Poucry MlKlng BowIh •• Wooilcn Dough Bowl •• Wooden Butter Paddle ** Blue Onnmcl Pol •• Blue Hnamel Derry Pnll Blue Бпате! Plalc •• Ornngcr Pipe Tobncco Tin •• ual Whito House Jtir •• pr. Flat Irons •• 6 Silver Goblels (Oorham) Sterling Creamer Л Sngnr (CJorhtun) •• Sierling bnae Olnss Bowl *• 5 serving Sterling Flnlwnro pcs. •* Silver Pea. •• FrunotBcim Pliucs (Ivey) •• old Btillei Shot Mold •• Prints & Mirrors •• pr. Hummel Qnnil Sah & Pepper •• Colion Curds •• 2 enrly QuiU.s •• 2 Country QuUts con»cmpt>rary Star QuiU Linens •• array of Book« *• Cook Books •• Cooleemce Plantation Book •• old 78 Albums Sewing Supplies •* old Match Book Covers (Las Vegas) *• 10 metal World Globe (USA) ** 1‘JOK White Sewing Mnch. Head •• 1951 Framed USA Mnp •• old Drink BoHJe. Rich Bros. (W.S.. NC) •• Stj. Trunk •• Radio Flyer Town & Counlry Wogon •• early Lionel Rail Roud Tnutsfonner & Track Troy-Uilt 7 hn 'ГШег •* Craftsman 25 Vac.-Shrcddcr-Bagger •• 2 Wheel Yard Carl •• Hogan Golf Cluhs •• Cn.llsmiin ncr'ch Cirlmlcr •• Mcl.il Vi»o •• Rol.ir. On» We«l Eutcr •• Sunbonm Aninml ChipperHand Л Yard'lools M a n y O th e r Ite m s L u n c h A v a iia b ie R e.stroom Y o í r É t '  i i i o i b ï c > Â Ä D 3 5 6 F o x H u n te r R o ih I H u rn io iiy , N .C . 2 8 6 3 4 7 0 4 -5 4 6 -2 6 9 6 o r 7 0 4 -9 2 9 -9 3 1 I c c U ■***■* чса1П74 * * * * .since 1935____ MULTI-FAMILY YARD sale Sat. M ay 28, 7 -1 2 . A dult and children's clothing, household items and furniture. 558 Davie A cadem y Rd. before double bridges. M U L T I-F A M ltY , SAT. 8:00-7, womens clothes 7-12, mens 2x, girls 6-8, boys 6-14, shoes, toys, 2 exercise m achines, fishing/ hunting stuff, household Items, much morel 601N to Jack Booe Rd. 1-1/2 miles on left, ioolt for signs. R E M O D E L IN G YA R D S A LE , Thursday and Friday 8am -un- tii, side by side refrigerator, w a s h e r an d d ry e r, D V D player. Teenies stereo sys­ tem , boys clothes 8-16, much, m uch m ore, 2585 Davie A cad­ em y R d., M ocksvllle I S T R E T C H W R I N K L E D C A R P E T S Wrinkled Carpet Man 336-998-8402 SAT. 8 -1 , 5 8 8 2 H w y 801 S. V C R , H /P C P U , stereo 3 Cd changer, Kenw ood K H C re ­ ceiver with 6 disc C D changer and two 6 .5 ” Infinity 2-w ay s p e a k e rs , e x e rc is e e q u ip ­ m ent, lull and twin bed com ­ forters with dust ruffles, for­ m al dresses sizes 4-8 SA T MAY 28TH, 7-3. Antiques, old glass bottles, baby items, clothes. Som ethinc' 730 Fork blxby Whetstone Dr. off 801 below Red Pig BBQ. CD's, LP’s, stereos, VCR's, lots more great stuff. SATURDAY MAY 28, 7am-1pm Oak Grove Church Rd. off Sain Rd. Children's clothes, bikes, household, tack and excercise equipment. SATURDAY O UT O F business fi- nal sale. M any flags, rocking chairs, concrete statues, cash register, little girls clothes, and other items. 5116 Hwy 158. B & B Greenhouse RANDY MILLER &SONS 295 Miller Roail* Mocksvllle ( 3 3 6 ) 2 8 4 - 2 8 2 6■ Now Pumping Septic Tanks • M a y BARGAm S o f the M OM TH 3 9 i97 и 3-Pc. Bistro SetFVrfcrt th«30'»»«WUtM an] tM> »VC п-л> liwt rw.« »«klnf■‘•«txrrwikifiwiofiUcWiM »*•»««•« 4-Pc. Watertna SetIW Ih01%/* tXu'* M to K* *TM Y cnvaxltv I 29-3-3 Weed & Feed Lawn FertilizerDiti/o a U'uort lunn.гтюго Ifvvi 200 broadkiaf wvwds trú proviOos oxiofxJod fooling lU}ai4l»W«M<MM 7 ñ u z ¡ / a £ m . Help Is Just Around The Com er. C a u d e ll L u m b e r B u ild in g S u p p lie s 162 Sheek Street • 751-2167 Open Dally Weekdays 7:30 - 5:00 Sat. 7:30 -12 noon O P E N I N G J U N E 1 s t Office: 336-940>4545 Fax: 336-998-5443 Location; 121 Webb Way Advance, NC 27006 W e b s ite : h ills d a le m in is to ra g e .c o m ^ e -m a il: g w e b b @ y a d te l.n e t • New Facility • Access Controlled Gate • Fenced • Lighted • Clim ate Controlled Storage • Boat & RV Storage • Clean & Secure • Sizes from 5x10 to 10x30 • Surveillance Cam eras • O versized Driveways y\sa & Master Card Accepted Dio - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26,2005 Ш . f J High school graduates Justin Blackburn, Kayla Snyder and Brittany Green at the Civitan party. Civitans IHonor 3 Graduates The students are treated to refreshments and goodie bags, compliments of the Mocks­ ville Civitan Club. The Mocicsviile Civitan Club hosted a graduation party for three m em bers o f the Excep­ tional Children’s Class on M ay 13 fo r Davi(^ High School gradu­ ates B rittn e y G reen , K ayla Snider and Justin Blackburn. T h e class enjoyed cake, snacks and goody bogs, The graduates were presented with graduation gifts. M o cksville C ivitan members attended the event. Civitan International created the C ivitan International R e­ search Center, a world class re­ search and teaching center that has become a leader in the fight against developmental disabili­ ties and provides a $ 1 m illion an­ nual grant ¡0 the center for stud­ ies o f developmental disabilities. Civitan International also sup­ ports Special Olym pics, helped build com m unity parks with fa­ cilities for people w ilh physical disabilities, and helped build group homes as well. The iViocksville Civilan Club is made up o f volunteers who are committed to support their com ­ m unity and those in need. Some of our projects include the Food for His Flock for the Storehouse for Jesus, Special Olym pics, the D avie Group Hom es, scholar­ ships for two high school stu­ dents, L ittle Lam bs, D av ie County D ay o f Caring', Y M C A , Big Brothers-Big Sisters, spon­ sor the D avie High and South Davie Junior Civitan Clubs, and aid local individuals and families in need. Members of the Mocksville Civitan Club get snacks ready for the students. Website Can IHeip Traveling i\/lotorists Save On Fuel Costs W ith motorists paying the highest gas prices ever for a M e­ m orial D ay holiday, A A A Caro­ linas has made available a new W eb site that w ill allow motor­ ists to fm d the cheapest gas near th eir hom e, on the road and when they reach their vacation destination. The free site, called Ihe A A A Fuel Price Finder, can be viewed by visiting aaa.com and enter­ ing your home zip code. Then click on the Fuel Price Finder link. The site is available to A A A Carolinas members and the pub­ lic nnd w ill continue after the holiday. The site is expected to ben­ efit the nearly 1.2 m illion Caro­ linians expected to hit the road for the M em orial D ay weekend, the same num ber as last year. T hey w ill find gas prices ’ roughly 13 cents per gallon higher than last year. Motorists w ill see an average of $2.08 in North Carolina and $ 1.99 in South Carolina. Nearly 786.000 North Carolinians and more than 386,000 South Caro­ linians are expected to drive this holiday weekend. A A A Fuel P rice F in d er shows local prices and station locations w ithin a three, five, or 10-m ile radius. The price data is d erived fro m m ore than 8 5 .0 0 0 in d iv id u a l stations throughout the U niled States based on recent credit card trans­ actions, and is the same infor- m ation A A A uses to track na­ tional, state and local gasoline price trends. "Fuel prices are keeping the number o f highway travelers this holiday Ihe same as last year,” said David E. Parsons, president and C E O o f A A A C arolinas. “A A A ’s Fuel Price Finder w ill allow anyone on the road - or at home - to find the cheapest gas closest to them.” To use the Fuel Price Finder site,'users enter a zip code or a city and state, then select a three- , five- or 10-m ile radius for the site to search. Tlie results arc provided in a map o f the area with stations indicated by fuel pumps, as w ell as a list o f the stations w ith their fuel prices, street address and availability of diesel fuel. “Unlike fuel price sites that depend on motorists randomly entering prices they m ay have seeii or paid at various places, A A A ’s site uses a steady stream o f reliable financial data,” said Parsons. M yrtle Beach has tho high­ est average price for gas in South Carolina at $2.08. Boone has the highest average in North Caro­ lina at $2.13. The least expensive gas in North Carolina is in High Point at $2 .0 1 per g allo n and in Spartanburg, S.C „ at $1.93. A irline travel is up 3.9 per­ cent this M em orial D ay week­ end. \ ; I ^ЮОлВвутекй Sales Event ’s Riaht When You Purchase Your Open •Ища Late! H’s Worth The Drive INSTERSTATE 8 5 Earn $10 Per Mile When You Buy Your Next Vehicle In Saliahury! W iUi P u n d ^ O tA a v N m u v e h i c l e ! g e f f y W o o d A U T O C E N T R E 525 Jake Alexander Blvd. S.» Salisbury • 704-637-9090