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02-FebruaryDAVIE C O U N T Y Single Issue ■ 35 cents THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 28 PAGHS (USPS 149-160) P.p. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Commissioners Consider Study Of County Water System The Davie County commissioners discussed Monday a four-mnntii study or tlie county’s water system to determine the condition of the Cooleemee plant, population growth and capital needs. The. study, estimated to cost between $15,000 and $22,000 would be conducted by Finkbeiner, Pettis & Stroud Ltd. of Greensboro, the county’s engineering consultants. Ray Hamilton, the company’s engineering director, told the commissioners that much of the county's growth may depend on its water system. ■ “ Developers are already building in Astern Davie, but demand will grow all over the county,” he said. “ If we’re not careful, development will outstrip the county and its water system.” The county water plant in Cooleemee was built in the 1930s, with parts of it upgraded in the late 1970s. County Manager Charles S. Mashburn said. It now pumps about 1.4 million gallons of water a day to some 4,000 homes in the county but has a capacity of 2.4 million gallons a day. Work has already begun to tie about 100 homes in the Sheffield community onto the water system by this summer. The water study, recommended by Mashburn last fall, has four phases: to determine the life ex­ pectancy of the Cooleemee plant, to look at future expansion, to evaluate ' expansion alternatives and to look at financing that expansion. The analysis of the present plant will include a review of operating records, equipment and hydraulic conditions, according to a proposal that Hamilton gave the com­ missioners. Determining population growth and its needs will involve combing Census Bureau information, preparing a county population map for the next 10, 20 and 50 years, and (.continued on page 2) January Presented A Variety Of Spring And Winter Weather Nature*s Ice Sculpture Sleet and freezing rain which began Tuesday, shortly after 5 a.m. forced the closing of county schools. Roads, itowever, remained in “ pretty good condition" throughout the daylight hours. By late afternoon the frozen mixture was collecting on trees and utility wires. Area residents experienced . a variety of weather during the month of January. The first month of 1985 started out like spring, plummeted to sub-zero temperature later, ended with a five inch snow .January 28th and a heavy rain on Thur­ sday, January 31st. The ti'mperature peaked in the mid 70s on Januarj l.sI.This was up from the 66-degree record in January 1984. A surge of arctic air moved into the area January 20-21, ac­ companied by sub-freezing tem­ peratures and brutally cold winds. Temperatures begani tl-opping on Sunday, Jan. 20, plunging to a low of minus-10 degrees early Monday, with a high of the day at 22 degrees during the mid-afternoon. The wind chilling factor on Sunday was 30 below zero. The deep freeze, which stalled cars, froze pipes, had no sooner lifted when a five-inch snow blanketed th area Monday, January 28th. Schools, offices and businesses were closed and driving was hazardous for night and early morning motorists.;----- Temperrtures rose, into the 40s on Wednesday, quickly melting the snow January began and ended with rain, totalling 3.45 inches in Davie .County. This included the 2.93 in­ ches of heavy rainfall of Thursday which flooded creeks in the county. Tills month’s total was slightly down, however, from the 3.89 inches recorded in January 1984. An inch of freezing rain fell early on the morning of January 17th, turning into rain and tapering into a slight mist at daylight. urderer And Accomplice Given Maximum Sentences The murderer of a Blue Bird cab river and]his accomplice were iven maximum sentences in Davie uperior Court Monday. Judge C, Preston Cornelius lentenced Lawrence Clinton leman of Winston-Salem to 100 ,ars in prison, and his accomplice, 'ilson Nelson Wommack also of ..'inston-Salem, to 30 years in prison [or the killing of Jeseph Gray Privetta, 34, a driver and dispatcher tor Blue Bird Cab Co. in Winston- ■ lalem. • Coleman must serve 38 years ^fore becoming eligible for parole, ind Wommack must serve 15 years, Jistrict Attorney H.W. “ Butch” Zimmerman Jr. said. The two men had been charged Jwith first-degree murder but en- Itered guilty pleas to lesser, charges Ion Friday after three days of jury selection. ; Zimmerman, who had planned to seek the death penalty, said Mon­ day, that he is pleased with the sentences. “ I’m very happy that justice was done, and the (Privetta) family is too,” he said. The court-appointed defense attorneys, Grady L. McQanirock and Wade Leonard Jr. of Mocksville, declined comment. “ It couldn’t have been any worse,” Mc- Clamrock said. In defense evidence presented in the sentencing hearing Monday, a picture emerged of Coleman and Wommack as boyhood friends who went astray because of drugs and alcohol. Both grew up without fathers and were in trouble by 15 or 16 years old, defense attorneys said. • Coleman, 20, of Granite Street, is a;former traveling gospel singer Who began to withdraw from his family at 16 when he started taking i-ugs and drinking alcohol, his mother, Mary Dowd, testified. • lie dropped out of school and began associating with people she disapproved of, Mrs. Dowd said. After a break-in charge in his late (eei)s, Coleman was sent (o a rehabilititation center in western Nprth Carolina. “ He’d be doing fme, then he'd come home and get with the same people and slide back­ wards,” his mother said. In 1977, Coleman .was in a motorcycle accident that paralyzed him from the waist down, she said. “ He hasn’t been able to find a job since the accident, and his drug and alcohol problems have gotten worse.” Wommack, 27, of Dew Street, grew up in a family of deaf-mutes and was shuffled from household to household until his grandmother took him in and raised him, ac­ cording to his mother, Rachel Wommack, and two aunts. All three sixike in sign language, which was translated to the court by June Ryan of the Winston-Salem Deaf Center. ■‘ Wilson had a lack of love,” his aunt, Bessie Williams of Winston- Salem, said. “ He was slow in school, was emotionally upset and restless. His parents didn’t pay him enough attention, and he ran with the wrong crowd.” The three women said that Wommack was virtually abandoned after his parents divorced when he was 9 years old. His father had custody but soon left for Indiana with his second wife, they said. A seventh-grade dropout with an I.Q. of 75, Wommack cared for his grandmother, 82-year-old Ruth Wommack, for the next 15 years, cooking all her meals and cleaning her house, they said. Both ixiys were loners, the women said, but struck up a friendship at 13. Frequent jail stays separated them from other friends, they said, but Wommack and Coleman stayed in touch with each oilier. Coleman’s Forsyth County record shows 12 convictions, including drug violations and assaults. He was sentenced to two years in prison for possession of drugs with intent to sell or deliver in 1982, according to court records. Wommack’s record in Forsyth County sliows 13 convictions, in­ cluding vandalism, assault on a female and assault on an officer He was sentenced to 24 inonths in lail for live larcenies in 1981. He was jailed for bad check charges in Bolivia in Brunswick County the week before the murder but was released after his grand­ mother got a second mortgage on her house to post the $5,000 bond. He was scheduled to appear in court on May 12. Coleman was awaiting trial in Winston-Salem on a charge of driving while impaired, but the two decided on the night of May 11 to go camping in Indiana instead, Wommack testified. After several beers each and one shared joint, they called a cab to take them as far as $20 would go, he said. As the cab neared the N.C. 801 exit ramp off 1-40, Coleman suddenly lurched forward from the back seat and slit Privetta’s throat, Wom­ mack testified. Privetta staggered from the cab, Wommack slid into the driver’s seat and di'ove the cab to Bland, Va., about 115 miles, to the northwest. "1 was just scared and just wanted to get away,” Wommack said. “ I’ve been arrested so many times, I just wanted to run.” Once Privetta left the cab, a trail of blood indicated that he walked 45’5” before collapsing, according to the testimony of Del. J.H. Stephens of the Davie County Sheriff’s Dept. William f{. Foster of the SBI said the fatal wound, a left of center to right cut (16 cm in length), severed Privetta’s jugular vein and caused extensive bleeding. Written statements of two truck drivers, Keith Hathcock and Gary Lackey, indicated that they were in transit from Kernersville to Asheville, in separate trucks when they approached the murder scene. They saw a stopped car on the side of the road and a man at- teinpting to walk to the rear of the cab. According to their written statement, it appeared to them as if (continued on page 2) Members of the Davie County Sheriff's Department and the State Bureau of Investigation escort Lawrence Clinton Coleman (with crutches) and Wilson Nelson Wommack to Davie County Superior Court Monday for sentencing. Coleman, who plead guilty to second degree murder in the death of Winston- Salem cabdriver Joseph G. Privetta, armed robbery and felonious larceny of a taxi cab, was sentenced to loO years In prison. Wommack, who pleaded gulltv as an accessory to these charges, was sentenced to 30 years. (Photo by John Ver- nelson). 2-DAVlE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD . THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 7, 1985 iWlC Supplemental Food Program Offered At Davie Health Department WIC, the special supplemental food program for women, infants, and children, began as a pilot project at a few selected sites around the country. Today, the program is operated by some 1,500 local agencies at more than 7,000 sites. WIC is the only food program that provides individually tailored food packages along with nutrition education in a health setting. Pregnant, breastfeeding or post­ partum women, infants and children up to age five may qualify for this porgram.\pplicants should reside in Davie County, be income eligible and be at medical or Wreck On U.S. 158 U.S. 158 was the scene of a rear- end collision Monday afternoon which resulted in a Clemmons man being charged with failure to reduce speed, according to a Highway Patrol report. James Curry Long, III, the operator of a 1974 Ford truck, was charged after his vehicle struck a 1977 Chevrolet driven by Peggy Forrest Smith of Rt. 1, Advance, the report indicated. According to the report. Long was accelerating after having pulled onto U.S. 158 from N.C. 801 and failed to realize Smith was slowing her vehicle to allow approaching traffic to clear before making a left turn into a private drive. Long was unable to stop in time to avoid the ■ collision. Damage to the Smith vehicle was $800, to the Long vehicle $550. Trooper A.C. Stokes investigated. Surplus Food To Be Distributed Feb. 1M 8 The Davie County Department oi Social Services will have a Surplus Food Distribution on February 21, ■ 1985 at the National Guard Armory . on Highway 64 in Mocksville. The ; distrit)ution is to begin at 8:30 a.m. • and will continue until the supply is ; out. : The department is scheduled to ■receive 4,170 lbs. of cheese; 1,260 ;ibs. of butter; 750 lbs. of flour; 750 Mbs. of com meal; 1,152 lbs. of rice; -.888 lbs. of milk and 972 lbs. of honey. ;■ Eligibility requirements remain ^.unchanged from the last .distribution. Those interested in receiving the commodities should come to the armory to apply on February 21st. nutritional risk. Proper nutrition is extremely important during periods of rapid growth such as pregnancy, infancy and early childhood. The WIC program provides nutritional counseling, medical evaluation as well as supplemental foods. Eligible women and children may receive milk, cheese, eggs, juice, cereal and dried peas or beans. Eligible infants may receive iron-fortified formula, infant juice and infant cereal. Formula for infants with special needs are also available. If you think that you or someone you know may qualify for the WIC program, contact the Davie County Health Department at (704 ) 634-5985 for an appointment. Office hours ar 8:30 a.m.-12:00 noon and 1:00 p.m.- 5:00 p.m. All WIC services are available without charge. The WIC program does not discriminate against any person on 4 the basis of race, color, national origin, creed, political belief, sex or handicap. New Window Hours For Post Office Mocksville Postmaster Walter Loveless announced that effective February 17, all Davie Post Offices will observe new window hours for customer service.. At present, customers may call at the window between 8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and 8:30 a.m. tlirough 12 noon each Saturday. However, on February 17, the service hours will change to 8:00 a.m. through 4:30 p.m. Saturday hours will remain the same. , Loveless said the change is being made so that mail, especially that mailed express for overnight delivery, can be processed and sent to the appropriate airline for transport. All Davie County Post Offices including- Mocksville, Ad­ vance and Cooleemee will observe the new hours. The new service hours also means a change in time as to when mail is picked up from depositories in and around Mocksville. Mail will be picked up from up­ town boxes 30 minutes prior to the 4:30 closing time. Mail will be picked up from boxes directly outside the Post Office at 4:30 p.m. Loveless said that all mail must leave the post office via truck for the distribution center in Green- sboro no later than 5 p.m. each day. Area Residents Suffer Through Flu Michael Driver Sheriff’s Department Robert Lee Pattillo of Rt. 4, Advance reported that someone damaged his mailbox Monday, according to a Sheriff's Dept, report. Traces of blood on the mailbox . suggest that someone struck it with his hand, the report indicated. ■ Damage was set at $10. : Pattillo reported that this is the third time his mailbox has been ■ damaged in the past year. Pastor Larry Allen reported that ! someone broke into the First Baptist Church in Cooleemee Thursday and took about $11. Damages were $40, according to a ; Sheriff’s Dept, report. Nathan Smith of Rt. 3, Mocksville reported that his mailbox and its support were destroyed Friday, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. The mailbox, apparently struck by a vehicle which ran off the road, was valued at $75, the report in­ dicated. Randy Wayne Edwards, 25, of Rt. . 2, Advance, was arrested Saturday and charged with three coimts of uttering worthless checks, ac­ cording to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Edwards’ trial date is February 26. Tliieves broke into both the old building and new building at Cooleemee School January 30 and took a camera valued at $500 in addition to about $50 in cash, ac­ cording to a Sheriff's Dept, report. Entry to the old building was gained after the thieves broke a window and unlocked a door. Entry ; to the new building was gained, according to the report, through a roof access door. The camera, a Nikon, was out­ fitted with a telephoto lens, the ; report indicated. A calculator was ’ also reported missing. Principal Vernon Thompson reported the incident. Joe Hendrix reported an at­ tempted breaking and entering at ; Baity’s Tire on Highway 6pi S. ■ Thursday, according to a Sheriff's Dept, report. The report indicated that although a piece of tin siding had been pried loose from the building, nothing was reported missing. An air driven impact wrench valued at $149 and an electric buffer valued at $159 were stolen from William!) & Son on Rt. 4, Mocksville, Thursday, according to a Sheriff's Dept, report. John Williams reported the in­ cident. Lisa Beachamp of Rt. 2, Advance reported the larceny of $5 worth o( kerosene from Debbie’s Con­ venience Store No. 1 on Cornatzer Road January 29, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Beverly Christian Smith, 26, of Rt. 4, Advance was arrested January 29' and charged with assault and battery, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. The woman, released on an un­ secured bond of $100, will be tried on the charges February 12. John Owens of Rt. 1, Mocksville, reported that someone entered his residence through a broken back window January 30. A Sheriff’s Dept, report indicated that nothing was reported missing when the report was filed. Later, a portable television, a knife, and a walkie-talkie were reported missing. Scotty Lynn Simpson, 19, of Ad­ vance was arrested January 29 and charged with driving while his license was revoked. According to a report, Simpson will face the charges February 12. Two stands of bees and honey were stolen from an Advance man and a third was thrown over a fence alongside 1-40 January 29, ac­ cording to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Thomas Ray Ayers of Rt. 4, the owner of the bee stands, reported the incident and estimated that the missing bees and honey are worth about ^50, the report indicated. In addition, the thieves stole two tires and wheels valued at $30 and scrap metal valued at $50. Other damages totaled $30, according to the report. A recorded alarm alerted the Sheriff’s Dept, to a breaking and entering at Spillman's Exxon on Highway 801 N in Cooleemee Thursd&y. A report indicated that five drink box keys and one cracker box key were reported missing. James Nelson Neely of Cooleemee was arrested January 30 and charged with failure to pay a fine, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Driver Nominated For Appointment To Naval Academy Michael Driver, a senior at Davie High School, has been nominated by Congressman Bill Hefner to represent the 8th Congressional District of North Carolina to compete for appointment to the United States Naval Academy. In his nomination. Congressman Hefner commended Driver on his many accomplishments and on his high standards of citizenship. He is also being considered for a vice presidential nomination based on his high academic achievements. As a Naval Academy nominee. Driver will be evaluated on the basis of high qualities of character, scholastic achievement, leadership potential and physical aptitude. Academy midshipmen gract^ate as commissioned officers with a Bachelor of Science degree. At Davie High, Driver is active in both academic and athletic organizations. He is president of the National' Honor Society, treasurer of the Beta Club, captain of the High I-Q team, served as a member of the Spanish and Social Studies Clubs and was a Junior Marshal. Driver attended the 1984 N.C. Governor’s School in the area of Social Science. He was a member of the varsity football team .for two years and varsity wrestling team for three years. He was an All-Conference wrestjer in the 155 lb. weight class. Driver was a Morehead Scholarsip nominee and is currently a National Merit and National Honor Society Scholarship semifinalist, tie has Ixjon recognized in “ Who’s Who Among American High School Students” for the past two years In 19B4, he was awarded the Out­ standing Proficiency in American History Award. Driver is employed by Mocksville Furniture and Applicance Company and is a member of Liberty Baptist Church. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Driver of Route 5, Mocksville. Fire Log Mocksville Fire Dept, rcsjxintlal lu an accident on South Main Street Saturday at 12:32 a.m. which resulted in damage. Smith Grove Fire Dept, responded to alarms at the Jewish Home in Forsyth County on two occasions Saturday. The first was at 3:39 a.m. and the second at 1:21 p.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, responded to a chimney fire at the Triplett residence in Southwood Acres Sunday at 3:55 p.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire at the Johnson residence on Highway 801 Monday at 2:19 p.m. ■ Smith Grove Fire Dept, backed up Clemmons at the Jewish Home January 30 at 8:58 a.m. Grove Fire Dept, to a trailer fire off Rainbow Road January 30 at 12:28 p.m. Farmington backed up. Advance Fire Dept, responded to a chimney fire at a residence off Highway 801 across from Mocks Church Road January 30 at 8:04 p.m. Farmington Fire Dept, responded to a structure fire at the intersection of Highway 801 and Yadkin Valley Road Thursday at 5:22 a.m. Smith Grove backed up. William R. Davie Fire Dept, responded to a chimney fire at the Speer residence off Bear Creek Church RoadThurdsay at 4:41 p.m. Smith responded The first all-talking feature film premiered in New York on July 6,1929. It was called, "Lights of New York." Although The Davie County Health Department has had no reported cases of influenza,doctors in the area are seeing patients with fiu-like illnesses on a regular basis. Dr. Joel Edwards reports treating at least two to three patients a day with symptoms ranging from muscle aches and pains to upper respiratory congestion diarrhea, nausea, vomiting- and headaches. Dr. Edwards, recommends rest, plenty of fluids and Tylenol as treatment. He says that if symp­ toms . persist more than 48-72 hours the patient should see a physician. Also any person who has a history of other.serious ailments such as heart disease or high bipod pressure should be chcoked sooner. With these individuals and with the elderly, complications could arise. The staff at Family Medical Center reports treating less than a dozen actual cases of the flu but also added that they have seen num­ erous cases of sore throats and respiratory problems According to the local physicians the symptoms to look for include: muscle aches, and pains, chills, fever, congestion, runny nose, diahrrea, nausea. Distracted Driver Striltes Veliicle A Cooleemee woman was charged with failure to reduce speed following a rear-end collision on Davie Academy Road January 30, according to a Highway Patrol report. Susan Depalma Lankford, 20, the operator of a 1981 Ford, apparently distracted by an approaching vehicle which made a left turn in front of her, didn’t realize the auto in front of her own, a 1979 Mazda driven by Arnold Franklin Gar­ wood, 55, of Cooleemee, also had stopped to allow approaching traffic to clear before making a left turn, the report indicated. The Lankford vehicle struck Garwood’s in the rear. Damage to Garwood’s truck Was $400, to Lank­ ford’s Ford $1500. Trooper A.C Stokes investigated. Man Runs Stop Sign, Strikes Car The Highway Patrol charged a Rl. I. Harmony man,with failure to yield right of way following a Friday afternoon collision on U.S. 64. . Steve Allen Gaither, 31, the driver of a 1978 Ford, failed to stop at a stop sign where Sheffield Road •meets U.S. 64 and struck a turning vehicle in the left rear, according to a report. The turning vehicle, a 1982 Toyota driven by Lillie Boger Culler, 18, of Rt. 1, Mocksville, was attempting to make a left turn onto Sheffield Road from U.S. 64 when the incident occurred, a report indicated. Damage to Culler’s vehcile was $800, to Gaither’s $25. Trooper R.D. Kni^t investigated. Unemployment Rate Is 7.6% For December Davie had a slight increase in­ unemployment for the month of December according to figures released last week by Glen Jer- nigan, chairman of the North Carolina Employment Commission (ESC). December unemployment was 7.6 percent; November 7.5 percent. Davie's rale was based on a labor force of 11,880, of which 10,980 were employed and 900 unemployed. Unemployment showed an in­ crease in 61 counties, a decrease in 30 counties, and no change in 9 counties. The national unadjusted rate was 7.0 percent (7,978,000 unemployed). Jernigan commented, “An ex­ pected seasonal low in agriculture during December was a major contributing factor to the slight rise in unemployment. Although North Carolina experienced a decline of 12.000 workers from November to December, over the year more than 77.000 North Carolina citizens gained employment." Counties with the highest unemployment rates in December were Swain, 21.4 percent (1,070 unemployed), up from IC.5 percent; Graham, 21.1 percent (810) up from 15.6; Tyrrell, 21.1 percent (340) up from 18.4; Cherokee, 20.1 percent (1,580) up from 14.6; and Hyde, 16.5 percent (420) up from 11.6. Counties with lowest unem­ ployment rates in December were Orange, 2.9 percent down from 3.0 percent in November; Durham, 3.1 percent down from 3.4; Wake, 3.2 percent down from 3.5; Gates, 3.6 percent down from 4.7; and Pamlico, unchanged at 4.3 percent. Unemployment for December in counties bordering Davie showed Davidson 7.8 percent; Rowan 6.6 percent; Iredell6.7 percent; Yadkin 7.3 percent; and Forsyth 5 percent. vomiting, fever and headaches. A combination of these symptoms could indicate that influenza is. a real possibility. The maiii warning signal is the muscle aches and pains which are almost always present with the virus, indicated the medical staff. Even though major newspaper are reporting deaths attributed to influenza across the nation reaching an alarming rate of five percent of all fatalities, a check with the local Register of Deeds Office shows no deaths in this country from the viral, infection this year. /The Davie County Health Department did report some cases of chicken pox, an acute contagious virus disease, within the school system just prior to the Christmas holidays with some cases also being reported in the weeks since. According to the Centers for Disease Control, the three strains of influenza most likely to hit the United States this winter are: -The Chile flu-Very much . resembles the Russian flu of the early 1950s and late 1970s. This means that adults affected by it in those years may now be immune to it. Children and the elderly are most at risk. -The Philippines flu-Closely akin to the Hong Kong fiu of the late 1960s. This flu will affect all groups. -The USSR fiu-Not to be con­ fused with the Russian fiu of a few years back. This virus has been around for a long time, so more people have been able to build up immunity. It does, however, con­ tinue to change, necessitating new vaccines. Influenza viruses travel the globe in pursuit of cold weather, ac­ cording- to a Fam ily Circle magazine articje. T h at’s why flu strains are often referred to by the areas they come from: Aslan flu, Hong Kong flu, Australian' flu. Winter in those areas precedes winter in the United States, so scientists can note the flu strains striking those regions and predict their arrival here. Here are some clues for detecting if you’re getting the flu, according to Dr. Robert Betts, a national authority on viral diseases and professor at the University of Rochester (N.Y.) School' of Medicine: -A ches and cough appear together, followed by a stuffy nose. (If a stuffy nose comes before-a cough, it’s more likely a cold.) -A temperature of over 100.5 degrees. -Fairly severe muscle pain, low- back pain, pain -behind the eyes when they’re moved from side- to side. Flu viruses, unlike cold viruses, L are primarily spread through the I air when the patient coughs or | sneezes, which makes the virus! harder to control. (Research in-1 dicates that hands may be the I prime instrument for spreading! colds.) Washers and Dryers A Maytag Co. survey revealed I that more than half of recent buyers I put their washers and dryers ini kitchens, bathrooms or even| bedrooms, out of the basement. County Water Study Planned (continued from page 1) interviewing major developers with Davie County interests to determine high growth areas. •' Hamilton said that the study may show several alternatives in future water needs: building a new water plant someplace else in the county, expanding the current plant, buying water from Forsyth County or a combination of the three. "This study gives us a chance to sit back and look at the present system and see where we need to go," he said. “ It’s as much a socio­ economic study as a water study. We will look at where growth is likely to come in Davie, and how a water system could speed up that growth." In response to a question con­ cerning the need to conduct a sewer study in conjunction with the water system study, Hamilton said, in his opinion, that it would not be necessary because the cost of a county-wide sewer system would be prohibitive. He said the most economical solution would be to establish sanitary sewage districts in high density areas. Each- district woul^ then provide service and establis! the cost of the service. Mashburn said some citizen| wanted the idea of a county-wid sewer system to be considere because some areas of the count] cannot accommodate septic tank which limits housing in thos| particular areas. In other business Commissionetj held a public hearing on applicant) Advance Microwave and Davi| County Cable Television who seek t establish a local cable televisio franchise in eastern Davie Countij The area sought by Advanq Microwave would begin at Fa mington and end at Markland Ro on Highway 801; the area sought I Davie County Cable Televisiol would begin at Spillman Road ani end at the West Ridge Subdivision i| Advance, according to Mashbu County Commissioners chairma| Bill Foster announced that plaqo were presented to longtime countl employees Osteen West and Luthel Ashley upon their retirements if recognition of their years of loy;^" service. Two Get Maximum Sentence (continued from page 1) the cab had just arrived. When the cab pulled onto the interstate, they saw a heavy-set white male wearing a blood covered white shirt wave his hand. At that time, according to the statement, the bleeding man was still standing. As the cab drove away they saw a frightened looking man in the back seat of the vehicle. The cab was found about 90 miles northwest of Davie County at 5:30 a.m. in the parking lot of Bland Sportswear Co. near Interstate 40. Sylvia Pauley was opening the plant when she spotted the cab in the lot. She hurried home and notified | Bland County Authorities. About the same time a Virginia! State Police Trooper saw two men I walking on 1-77 not far from the I plant. When he learned about the I cab, he doubled back, but the men | had vanished. The State Police and the Sheriff's I Department used bloodhounds froni I the State Department of Corrections to comb Brushy Mountain. Wom- mack and Coleman were found about 11 a.m. covered by brush and lying iti a wooded area about a mile from 1-77. The two were unarmed at | the time of their arrest. DAVIB COUNTY (USPS 149-160) 127 South Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Published every Thursday by the DAVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY MOCKSVILLI; UNTBRPRISU 1916-1958 DAVIE RECORD 1899-1958 COOLEEMEE JOURNAL 1901-1971 G ordon Tom linson..............................................................Edilor-Publlsher K alliy Tom linson...................Associate....................... hililo rs Dccky Snyder.................................................................A dvcilisinu Director Sccond Class I’osiage Paid in M ocksvillc, N.C. 27028 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Single Copy 35 Cents $1 S.OO per year in North Carolina $20.00 per year outside North Carolina Postmaster Send address changes to Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, 1-EliRUARY 7,1985-3 Manager Of Yadkin Valleu Telephone Corporation McDonald To Receive National Award The Stamp Album A. William McDonald, Manager of Yadkin Valley Telephone ' Membership Corporation in Yadkinville, North Carolina, has been selected to receive the National Telephone Cooperative Association's (NTCA) 1985 Management Achievement Award. A formal presentation of this , award will be made February 19, at the dinner banquet of the . Association's 31st Annual Meeting , in Dallas, Texas. •,. Mr. McDonald's contributions to .■ rural telephony, his service to the local community and leadership ■ within national and state telephone associations will be recognized. .Congressman Ed Jones lO-TN) will attend the dinner as the keynote . speaker. Mr. McDonald has served as General Manager of the Yadkin , Valley Telephone Corporation, with headquarters at Courtney, since ■ April 1, 1956. Prior to this he was General Manager of the Guilford Mutual Telephone Company for ■ five years at Guilford College, N.C. ' The NTCA Management Award is presented annually to an individual in recognition of outstanding and in n o v a tiv e m an agem en t achievement on the national, state and local level. The award is one of seven major award categories for which Association members may be chosen as part of the Annual Awards Program. Awards are traditionally featured at the NTCA Annual Meeting, where the mem­ bership has the opportunity to recognize the contributions of its many members who have served their communities and advanced the goals of rural telecom­ munications. The NTCA 1985 Annual Meeting, I to be held February 16-21, will unite I over 2500 member system directors, managers and employees in an I evaluation of current challenges llaced by^ the rural telecom- lihuhications industry and in Ideveloping new approaches to Ithem. The National Telephone ICooperative Association is the Iprim ary telephone ’ industry Ip'rganization dedicated entirely to Irepresenting and serving the in- Iterests of the nation's small, and |rural telephone systems. A nonprofit trade association, MTCA today represents more than cooperative and commercial ompanles. More than 5 million pon'sumers get their telephone ervice from NTCA member bystems. I NTCA provides its m em ber A. William McDonald - - - Manager since 1956 systems with legislative, legal and industry representation; education program; meetings; publications; and a variety of employee benefits programs. A. William McDonald was born December 20, 1919 in Hoffman, Richmond County, N.C. He attended Guilford College and graduated from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, with a degree in Economics. He has also attended' numerous seminars and workshops related to telecommunications and management over the past 28 years. Active in all phases of life and civic activities, Mr. McDonald is chairman and member of the local board of directors of Central Carolina Bank, Yadkinville. He is president and charter member of the Tar Heel Telephone Mem­ bership Corporation. He is a member of the board of directors of the Carolina-Virginia Telephone Membership Corporation and also chairman of the data processing committee of this corporation. He is a member of the board of directors of the N.C. Telephone Association ICooleemee Parents To Discuss Education Plans • -The Cooleemee Elementary PTA I will meet Monday, February 11,1 1985, at 7:30 p.m. in the Media Davie High All A's , The following students had all A's I for the first semester at Davie High ■ School: , ,I SENIORS-Laura Hildebrand,I Donna Knight and Patricia Ann I Steelman.JUNIORS-Suzonne Ijames. .Center. Margaret Plemmons, School r-oaril Member of Forsyth County will present the pros and cons of the pru|i()scd cducaliun plans for llie future. 'i'hp general public is invited to become more involved in the education system. Mushrooms Substitute the contents of a 6 to 8- ounce can of mushroom caps or ■ crowns, drained well, for one pound of mushrooms. and a member of the finance committee. Past activities include the presidency of the Carolina-Virginia T e le p h o n e M e m b e rs h ip Association; president and chair­ man of the board of directors of the Northwest North Carolina Development Assn.; member of executive committee and first vice president of the N.C. Council of Cooperatives. He has also served as member of the Yadkin County extension service advisory com­ mittee; chairman of special study and guidance committee of the Northwest N.C. Development Assn.; member of the board of adjustments for the town of Elkin. In 1979 he was appointed as Special Ambassador of Goodwill by the North Carolina Secretary of State to visit Santa Cruz, Boliva and establish and exchange of in­ formation and friendship with the telephone cooperative serving the Santa Cruz town and extensive rural areas.He is a veteran of World War II, serving with the 78th Infantry Sick at Home? Under Doctor^s Care? Division of the U.S. Army in the European Theater of Operation, receiving three 'combat ribbons. He and his wife, Hilda, reside at 305 Hillcrest Drive in Elkin. They have four children, three girls and one boy; three grandchildren. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church of Elkin, N.C. i By the time you read this, the now non-denominated “ D” stamps will be available, at your local post of­ fice, although the Jerome Kern issue is now on sale at the new 22- cent rate for first class postage. Remember, February 17 is the dale of the rate change-officially. To use either the "D ” stamps or the Kern stamp befoi e that time is a waste of money. The schedule for rates starting Feb. 17 are as follows: first class domestic letter rate is 22-cents; the post card is 14-cents. A non- denoniinated postal card will be released by the USPS for those who use this kind of postal stationery. There will also be regular and large size (No. 10) embossed envelopes available. The additional ounce rate on first class letters remains the same at 17-cents. The airmail rates are changed all down the line with 39-cents being the new charge for letters to Colombia, Venezuela, Central America, the Caribbean Islands, the Bahamas, Bermuda and St. Pierre and Miquelon. It will cost 44-cents for air mail to all other countries except Canada and Mexico. Of course, these last two are serviced with the standard first class rate (22-cents) and airmail need not be designated inasmuch as all mail of certain distances are sent via air anyway. International surface (non-airmail) for letters will be 37-cents and the postcard surface rate is going to be 25-cents and the airmail post card will cost 33-cents and the aerogramme will be 36-cents. The new issue of the Philatelic Catalog (for January-February) has now arrived. Besides listing all available stamps, it catalogs Stamp Collecting Kits (there are sixteen different kits); Souvenir Cards, Maximum Cards, Postal Service Guide to U.S. Stamps and a nice all­ purpose binder called Com­ memorative Collections Binder which sells for $11 and includes 20 acetate pages. You can’t touch this album at any dealer for this price, Get your copy of this fine catalog by writing to: U.S. Postal Service, Philatelic Sales Division, Washington, D.C. 20265-9997. The catalog is free. The USPS sends me reams of material about special can­ cellations, but it has been my practice to pass on only those of local interest. From February 23 through March 3 Charlotte is authorized to issue this can­ cellation, “ The South’s Annual Salute to Spring.” Send your self- addressed and stamped envelopes to the PM before those dales arc past and request for the can­ cellation al the Southern Spring Station. Use ZIP 28202. Sir Robert Hart, an Englishman will be recognized with a stamp by the Republic of China (Taiwan) on Feb. 15. Hant, at the age of 28 was given the title: Inspector General of Chinese Customs, a position he held for forty-five years. One of the proposals he made while in government service was the establishment of a modern postal service. In 1896 Hart was charged with the responsibility of founding the postal service. On Feb. 24 ROC will release a single stamp noting the 100th birthday of Lo Fu-Hsing, an early Chinese revolutionary (against the old emporer). Its format is that of a stamp-on-stamp. Austria released two stamps in February. One commemorating the 100th birthday of Alban Berg and the other recognizes the 25th an­ niversary of founding of the In­ stitute for Vocational Training. On the 25th of February Australia will issue a set of five 33-cent stamps which feature Colonial Military Uniforms. DAVIE NURSES HELP.. Call 634-5881 Help Us Celebrate Our 11th Anniversary With A FREE n x i 4 Family Portrait By Appointment Only! # Call today to schedule a sitting with our photographer for Friday, Feb. 8, or Saturday. Feb. 9 M o cksville Furniture & A ppliance Phone 634-5812 Mocksville, NC HOURS: Monday -Friday 9:00-6:00PM Saturday 9:00 5:00PM STORE HOURS MON.-SATURDAY 9:30— 5:30 FRIDAY 9:30— 8:30 MOCKSVILLE. N.C. H O IM Accenp HOME lASHION SALE ENTIRE STOCK BED PILLOWS STANDARD-QUEEN-KING 25%OFF SELECT GROUP •DRAPERIES •CURTAINS 25% „ BATH ACCESSORIES RUGS, LID COVERS PLUS OTHER ITEMS 25%0 OFF SELECT GROUP BED SHEETS ASSORTED FANCIES NOT ALL SIZES 25% TO 40% BATH TOWELS GOOD QUALITY '3.99 HAND TOWELS’2.99 WASH CLOTHS 4.99 SELECT GROUP BEDSPREADS NOT ALL SIZES 25% » 40%OOFF SELECT GROUP HOUSEWARES STONEWARE-FLATWARE PLUS OTHER ITEMS SAVINGS UP TO 4 0 %OFF 4-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 Special ID Cards Available To 11-Year-Olds And Above The’ Division of Motor Vehicles .(DM V) in the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has begun issuing special identification cards to individuals eleven years and older, tran­ sportation officials have announced. Previously special identification (ID) cards were available only to individuals 16 years and older who requested them. In order to obtain a special ID card, an applicant must go to a local drivers license office and present a certified birth certificate or any two of the following documents to the examiner. 1. School records. 2. Photo I.D. from company or agency. 3. A valid or expired photo drivers license. 4. Military discharge (a dated certificate from military) 5. Insurance policy at least one year old. 6. Service discharge DD-214 (dated record of military separation from service) 7. Copy of individual census report (contains name, place of birth, current age and address) 8. U.S. passport. 9. Driver Education certificate (dated and correct name) 10. Family Bible (with authentic Michael R. Browii, son of Jim and Kathie Brown of Cooleemee, N.C., graduated January 18, 1985, from Naval Training Center In Orlando, Florida. He reported to Meridian, Mississippi, January 23, 1985, for nine weeks of schooling, after which he will be granted a two week leave at his home. Mike is a 1983 graduate of Davie High School. family history). The cost of the special iden­ tification card is $5 and must be paid for in cash as drivers license officers are unable to accept checks or credit cards as payment. The card which is computerized expires in four years and is renewab e at that time for $5. The card itself is similar in size and appearance to a drivers license. On the card are a computer- assigned number, a colored photograph of the applicant, and the signature of the applicant. A dif­ ferent color background on the ID card reflects the age of the in­ dividual; yellow for the 11-18 group; blue for the 19-20 group; and red for the 21 and over group. DMV Commissioner Bill Hiatt said, "I am pleased that DMV can offer tills service to North Carolina citizens, and I ’m even more delisted to see us make this card available to our younger, as well as older, citizens. The special ID is a , most valuable asset in helping identify persons - young or old - who might be involved in an accident, become lost, or be visually or hearing impaired. It may also aid a person in cashing a check or being admitted to a restaurant or theater." Davie Students On Honor Roll At East Carolina Five Davie students earned academic honors at East Carolina University during the fall. , Those from Davie making the honor roll include; Judy Diane Everhart of Rt. 4, Advance. Stuart Lamar Teeter of Bermuda Run. Dana Gwyn Draughn of Rt. 1, Mocksville. Angella Jeanette Frye of Rt. 4, Mocksville. John Allen Wood of 196 Wandering Lane, Mocksville. G.O.P.ToMeet The Davie County Republican Party Executive Committee will meet Monday, Feb. 11, at 7:30 p.m. at the Davie County Courthouse. This is an open meeting and all Republicans are invited to attend. Ceramic Tile ' ' Ceramic tile can be installed by the do-it-yourselfer, but it requires an absolutely smooth surface for proper adhesion. A. M. Kiser with plaque Principals Honor Retired Educator Every Davie County Principal was present to honor A.M. Kiser at a special dinner at Jordan Steak House in Statesville January 31. Kiser retired the Iasi of December, 1984, after having worked in ' different educational positions for over thirty, years. He came to Davie County in 1960 from Columbus County where he was a teacher and coach at Acme-Delco High School. In Davie County he became a teaching principal at Farmington Elementary School. In June of 1966 he was named Supervisor of Education and moved to the Central Office. He remained in this position until July, 1982, when he became a Director in charge of testing along with the Community School concept, and special projects. Principals presented Kiser a bakers dozen golf balls along with a plaque describing his service to education. Kiser stated that many good changes have taken place since tiie early 1950’s. During the course of a super steak dinner, Kiser and other principals shared humorous experiences that have happened during the course of years. Mocksville-Davie Chamber of Commerce Chamber Chatter by Henrtf Shore, Executive Director Local Students On ASU Dean's List The following'students from Davie County made the Dean’s List for the Fall Semester at Ap­ palachian State University. To be eligible for the Dean’s List a student must earn a 3.25 grade point average on a 4.0 scale. John David Budd, Rt. 1 Riverside Farm, Advance. Lisa Lane Cochrane, Bermuda Run. Luwonna Winn Ellis, Rt. 5 Mocksville. Anne Elizabeth Jones, Rt. 3 Supper At Jerusalem Jerusalem Fire Department will sponsor a chicken pie supper, Friday, February 8, from 5 p.m. until all is sold out, at the depart­ ment.Hot dogs with ail the trimmings will also t)e available. The fire department is located on highway 801 and 601. Advance. Laticia Dianne Sain, 960 Hardison St. Mocksville. Mitchell Alan Termotto, Advance. Kim Elizabeth Wells, Mocksville. North Carolina - A Major Farm State Census data make it plain that by almost any measure of production, North Carolina is one of the major farm states. The $3.6 billion in farm products sold places it among the top dozen states in the nation. The figures represent almost 3 percent of total U.S. agricultural sales of $131.9 billion. Looking a little closer at North Carolina from the national per­ spective, comparing it with U.S. farm data, we see some interesting contrasts. For example, the average value of agricultural products sold per farm in the state was $48,093 and in the U.S. as a whole, $58,858. As we said, the average size farm in North Carolina was 142 acres, but nationwide, it was 440 acres. But, if we look at the total value of agricultural production divided by land in farms, North Carolina is ahead by a wide margin, $339 per acre, compared with $134 per acre for the U.S. And looking again at the value of land and buildings, another significant North Carolina figure appears, $1,314 per acre, compared to only $784 nationally.' The acreage and sales figures together indicate in­ tensive farming on small and valuable tracts. In fact, 41 percent of the 72,792 farms in North Carolina are under 50 acres. Looking at the state’s farms by size of sales, we see that 54 percent had agricultural product sales of less than $10,000 in 1982, with their total amounting to less than 4 percent of the state’s gross sales. Only 12 percent of the farms had sales of $100,000 or more, but they amounted to $2.5 billion, 71 percent of the state’s total. • Now for a look at the structural organization of 72,792 North Carolina farms. The family farm continually ranks high. Eighty-eight percent of the State’s farms were operated by individuals or families as sole proprietorships, up a bit from the 87 percent of 1978 and on par with the national average. Ten percent were partnerships, un­ changed from 1978 and equivalent to the U.S. percentage. The corporate farm, eyed with apprehension in many quarters for decades, remained slightly under 2 percent, through both censuses in North Carolina, a little below the national average of 3 percent. A high number of farm operators in the state own all or part of their places, 8« percent, up from 86 percent four years ago and on a par with the national average. Likewise, tenants in North Carolina at 12 percent of the total, down from 14 percent in 1978, are the same as the national average. Tenants in the state controlled only 8 percent of the land in farms. By contrast. North Carolina operators who fully owned their land con­ trolled 41 percent of the land in farms. The most important character in North Carolina agriculture is the farm operator. The farm operators are a stable group. Forty-six per­ cent had farmed 10 years or more on their present places. On average, they had been on their present farms 18.5 years, a little longer than the national average of 17 years. Only 5 percent had been on their farms two years or less. The Chamber thought for the week: Confidence is locking a door and then not trying the knob to be sure. Cooked rice Cooked rice may be frozen. To serve, thaw, cover with boiling water until hot through, drain and serve immediately. N O W W i ' R E O U T L E T P R I C E D ! OFFERING OUR CUSTOMERS SAVINGS OF 20% - 60% We've discounted our prices, not our service and quality. We still offer service departments for everything we sell. We also have 30-60 days same as cash and offer monthly financing up to 36 months! OPEN MON.-SAT. 9-6: FRI. NIGHTS 'TIL 8:30 This eosy'to-ossem bie cradle Is in dork mahog­ any finish. Includes foom mattress pad. OUTLET PRICE..*29” Reg. $64.95 BEDDING VALUES ThIt bedding it extra firm, has o' 912 coll count and Jt bocked by o 15 yeor proTOted worronly. OUTLET PRICE...M39’! QUILT RACK Mahogany finished quilt rack would ' be the perfect occent p bedroom. Easy to assemb ^ 2 4 ’ ® OUTLET PRICE.. R«g. $34.95 99.9% Odorless And Smokeless ROCKER RECLINER 8,000 BTU/HR This Action/Lone rocker recliner Is backed by o lifetime worronty on choir mechonlsm. Transitionally styled chair In rich dork brown corduroy. This Perfection Portable Kerosene Heater burns 14-18 hours on less than o gallon kerosene. Automatic shutoff and push button ignition. MICROWAVE OVENS All Quosor Microwave Ovens ore backed by a 5 year warranty on ports and labor. They also corry the Good Housekeeping seal of approvol. OUTLET PRICE...*229” ll»g . $4tf.fS OUTLET PRICE...*89” Reg. >209.95 OUTLET PRICED AS LOW AS. OUTLET PRICE $ 2 9 9 9 5 Reg. $499.95 4-PC. DEN SUITE This' ranch style group is perfect for den or great room. Solid pine frame with herculon covered cush­ ions. Built to last I A D V A LU E D n ig C e n te r For professional skill and personal concern, rely on your family pharmacist at the ADVALUE DrugCenter close to you. TYLENOL E»t^Stf»iiglh C«pwilt«, TYLENOL Extn-Strength W « t t , 30't Of I -------- TYLENOL C IM tn 'iB h ilr,2oz 1.99 BAND-AID . ^ 3 0 . “ Plittkor AI-WMcl FWM.COST KLEENEX Brand FidHTlM iwi, 175’i FA»RIC Fab FAB Detergent, 49oz CLOROX CLOROX2 Al Fabric Bleach 40 oz Liquid Bleach 1 Gallon dial; Bath Size Soap, 4-Pk. 5 02, HALSA D/iCOvtf/ of H u iiu fiai/ Shampoo or CondltloMf CHOKI 1.39 KERr LOTION6.5 02 2.99 CHLORASEPnC Sort ThroU Spray, 6 oi METAMUCIL Luitiv* InitMri Mb Picketi, 30'< Regular or Orange ALPHA KERi^ Shower tBtttiOa, 8 u NORWICH^ 25p+’ »0Frae New Extra Strength RIOPANPLUS^ Sueptndon 12 oi 3.49 ^ -1 .0 0 ™ "c- ’ 2 .4 9 BASIS SuperlM led S oip 3.3 ot. 2 (or the price o t 1 99 ORNEX OeconoMtint/Anilgeilc Cepeijiei, 24'i 2.99 Foiter-Raaeh Drug Center Wilkesboro street Mocksville, N.C.Phone:634-2141 ■■ > - , v f r .. ■ • \ m m Rex Hobson, guidance counselor at Davie High School looks over one of the financial aid applications that will be discussed with students and parents at the financial aid workshop to be held February 11. (Photo by James Barringer) Student Financial Aid Workshop Offered At Davie High Monday By Doris Short Students who are planning to attend college after high school graduation should plan to attend the Financial Aid Workshop at Davie High School Feb. 11. Rex Hobson Davie High Guidance Counselor suggests that parents accompany their children to the workshop which will begin at 7 p.m. and should last no longer than 1 to 1 'a hours. "Parents should start planning for their children’s education as early as kindergarten and should definitely begin looking at financial aid by the sophomore year,” says Hobson. Miriam Keen, Financial Aid Director at Rowan Technical In­ stitute and Hope Dodson from the College Foundation in Raleigh will be on hand to answer questions about what kinds of financial aid are available and how to obtain the different types. According to Hobson, students should put together a financial aid package which consists of a com­ bination of the different aid programs in order to meet their needs. Grants, scholarships, loans, and college work study are all possible avenues students can take in order to finance their education. Hobson stresses that students should be very careful in fillinKout forms to apply for aid and also to make sure that they are using the form that the college they are ap­ plying to requires . There are two types of forms. Financial Aid Form and Family Finance Statement. Some colleges require one or the other, says Hobson, while other colleges prefer one over the other but will accept either. If a student does not know which form to use he or she should contact a guidance . counselor for that information. Students should apply to at least two schools, added Hobson, and be sure that the forms are filled out correctly. An incorrect form could mean a big delay in the application. The forms should be completed no later than early February. Hobson also stresses that aid must be reapplyed for each year. Davie High Students receive $200,000 each year in scholarships alone, says Hobson. It is worth the effort to apply even if a student is not sure if he or she will qualify. Students or parents having any questions about the upcoming workshop or questions about financial aid can contact the guidance office at Davie County High School. N««tnOa»uhna FIN A N C IA U A ID FO R M O School Ycor 1985-86 NC : j> '; -ft : I ; M nwAWi FIRST C LA SS M / f; ACTSrUDfS7K,-.£D..-,r B l i i ® ® • t;-'i; Financial aid forms and literature about the correct procedure in filling out the forms will be discussed in detail at the workshop. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985-5 Emergency Food Depleted By John Vernelson Increased demands for emergency food brought on by the , adverse weather conditions of recent weeks have just about depleted the Department of Social Services supplies, according to social worker supervisor Karen Smith. She said the increased demand for food by the county’s needy can be traced to factors associated with plunging temperatures, snow, and excessive rainfall. As examples she cited the fact that children have spent more time at home because of snow; plumbing bills and fuel costs are up because of freezing temperatures; and the incomes of workers whose jobs are affected by the weather are down. “ Right now during this crisis, I don’t know that I could say there are no hungry people in the county," she said. “ We want people to come in. This is a generous community. Its people do a lot for us and a lot for the people who need help. We believe we’ll get some con­ tributions.” In addition to the Food Bank in Winston-Salem which provides the bulk of the department's emergency food, local churches and civic groups also make regular con­ tributions. Some private citizens make donations. Smith said, but these usually occur around Christmas. Normally, the department has enough food on hand to meet demand, she said, but because of increased need during the last two or three weeks, supplies are getting dangerously low. Since the Dept, of Social Services has no facilities to store either fresh or frozen foods, Ms. Smith requests that those who make donations limit them to non-perishable items such as canned goods or staples such as flour, sugar, dry milk, macaroni. sp:ighclli.aiHl other dry goods. Departmental policy requires that all canned donations be store bought rather than home-canned. The Dept, of Social Services at 807 Hospital Street is open Monday through Friday from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Those in need are en­ couraged to come by during the above limes, Ms. Smith said. In addition to the Dept, of Soc. Ser., two area churches provide food for the needy on a regular basis, according to Ms. Smith. They are tiie Jericho Church of Christ on Jcricho Church Road, Mocksville and the Agape Faith Church in Clemmons. Jericho Church of Christ minister Wayne Hendrix said Friday the Social work supervisor Karen Smith said the increased demand for food by the county's needy can be traced to factors associated with plunging temperatures, snow, and excessive rainfall. church has two programs. One, the Food Bank Program, utilizes food furnished by the Food Bank in Winston-Salem and the other, the Pantry Program, food furnished by church members. Every other Wednesday, he said, from 4-e p.m., the Food Bank Program operates. On other oc­ casions according to need, six times thus far this year, the Pantry Program provides the needy with food. On four occasions it has given away all its food, 25 bags. As of January 30, he said, the church has served 64 families (219 people) 123 bags of food. Jericho Church of Christ is located at the end of Jericho Church Road where it joins Davie Academy Road, Hendrix said. The Asjape Faith Church which also obtains much of its food from the Food Bank in Winston-Salem, fccd.s the needy in Forsyth, Yadkin, and Davie counties (particularly eastern Davie County), according to Gus Street, a Davie man who is a member of the church and assists with the program. Jim Howard, the assistant pastor of Agape Faith Church, is in charge of the program. He said at the present, the church locates the needy through word of mouth. If someone is hungry or knows of those who are, Howard said he could be reached at the church. The number to call is 766-9188.- Once contact is made, he said, a check is conducted to ascertain the needs of the caller or of those to whom the caller refers. Lone Hickory To Have All Day Benefit Lone Hickory Volunteer Fire Department and Lone Hickory Recreation Department will sponsor an all day benefit, Saturday, February 16,1985, at the community building for Bryan and Marilyn Renegar. Breakfast, lunch and dinner will be available. The breakfast will include country ham,eggs, grits, gravy, homemade biscuits and coffee. Country ham biscuits will be sold for lunch. The dinner will consist of baked ham, green beans and corn, potatoes, pinto beans, onions, slaw. cornbread, dessert, coffee, tea and drinks. Donations will be accepted. Entertainment will begin at 6 p.m. Featured gospel singers will be “The Signatures of Faith” , and •‘The Singing Servants.” Lone Hickory Sets Citizens Meeting Lone Hickory Fire Department citizens’ meeting will be held Monday, February 11, 1985, at 7:30 p.m. at the fire department. All interested persons are urged to attend. The board of directors will be elected at this meeting. F A M I L Y lD d U A n ■ BAG ELASTIC LEG DIAPERS Reg. 5.99. Medium Or Large ■ ^ Q T . TEXACO HD30 OR 10W40 Values To 1.19. Limit 5. ONE POUND ELMER’S CHOCOLATE HEART BOX wAinmiiV' ^ Q O COUNTER POINT ■ TOWELS HAND TOWELS..........1.50 WASHCLOTHS............*1 2FOR MARCAL PAPER TOWELS Regularly 63«. Limit 2 Rolls. STOREWIDE CLEARANCE save 35%o60% COM PARE AT 16 99 $ M S ! COM PARE AT 8.97 DECK SHOES MtJti b dM(3 IdlJie iiuoiJtf or y/ftyl lue UudI bfiueb Ailh ludthei t CANVAS SHOE SALE M e n b Id O ie b d/tO LhilUnfii b b i/ e c a b u a lb in [ju p u la t c o lu f b iPricat Oood At All Family Oollir Store* iThroujgh Thli WMktnd. Quintltl** LImllcd lOn Sum* lltnw. No SalM To OMitrt. 196 Wilkesboro Street Mocktville, N.C.Mon. ■ Sat. 9 to 9 I Sunday 1to6 | 6-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. FEBRUARV 7,1985 Charles Sofley, a rural route carrier for the past 38 years, made his last mail delivery last Thursday. He officially retired February 1st as Rural Route 5 carrier, and was honored for service by members of the Mocksville Post Office. Charles Sofley Retires As Mail Carrier Charles Sofley of Mocksville has spent the past 36 years delivering mail to persons living along Mocksville Rural Route 5. He began his career as a rural route carrier in 1953 when he joined the Cana Post Office. He served at Cana until 1955 when the office was officially closed. Sofley was then : assigned as Rural Route 5 carrier for the Mocksville Post Office, a position he has maintained ever since. Sofley retired Friday, and was honored by local postal employees for his 36 years of loyal service. Sofley said he has witnessed dramatic change and growth in the county during the past 36 years. "1 only had 38 stops when I began work with the Cana Post office in 1953," ■ Sofley said. His route increased to 58 miles and 250 boxes when he joined the Mocksville staff in 1955. At the time of his retirement Friday, Sofley said his current route included deliveries to about 600 residences. Sofley said he has grown to know the people along his route quite well, and will miss his daily mail run to Davie Library News ik Derrick Anthony Ijames, a 19H) graduate of Davie High School; and now a freshman at Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, N.C., has made the Dean's list for (he fall semester. He Is the sun of Mrs, Nettye Leach of Koute 8, Mocksville, N.C. The library has received a . gift subscription to the National Review from James Sheek. The Mocksville Lions Club made a donation to the library for the purchase of large print books. The Best Western Stories of Wayne Overholser has been placed in the library in memory of Lola Sofley Etchison by Frances West Tutterow; America: A Narrative History has been added in memory pf Mrs. Etchison by Annie Laurie Etchison. New Books Adult Fiction The Best Western Stories of Wayne D. Overholser, by Wayne Overholser The Merchants’ Ar, by Fredrik Pohl Mexico Set, by Len Deighton Gambler in Love, by Patricia Matthews Russian Spring, by Dennis Jones The State of Stony Lonesome by Jessamyn West Sound Evidence, by June Thomson Sherlock Holmes, my Life and Crimes, by Michael Hardwick Other Women, by Lisa Alther Moon of Thunder, by Don Cold- smith In God’s Name: An Investigation Into (he Murder of Pope John Paul I, by David Vallop Green Trigger Fingers, by John Sherwood Adult Non-Fiction Here’s to your Health and Beauty: The Best Hints for a Better Bring This Coupon in For A a t l 4 a r d e e ' s ^ ^ r - I I I I I I I I I I I I Ii-. Free Medium Drink with purchaM of Sandwich and Frvnch Fries or Biscuit and Hash Rounds. This coupon good only al the M ocksville Location wmritLO FOOD systems, inc I I I I I I I I I I I I I I -J 9-8:30 9-5:30 9-5:30 9-8:30 9-5:30 9-2:00 Library Hours ■Davie County School Lunch Menu residents on Route 5. However, the time comes to. retire,” he said. “ 1 am looking forward to enjoying my favorite hobby which is visiting area flea markets." Sofley said he is also planning a trip to Hawaii this spring. and Prettier You, by Mary Ellen Pinkham Guidelines lo Safe Drinking, by Nicholas Pace The Constitution: That Delicate Balance, by Fred Friendly The Common Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children and Adolescents, by Ruth Kempe American Indian Myths and Legends, by Richard Grdoes Enamels, by Susan Benjamin Children with Reading Problems, by Ruth Erickson My Child Is not Missing, by Child Safe Products, Inc. Happy Birthday: A Guide to Special Parties for Children, by Susan Smith A Dog for the Kids, Mordecal Siegal America: A Narrative History, by George Tindall Portrait of the Mexicans, by Alan Riding Junior Fiction Sea People, by Jorg Muller Where the Red Fern Grows, by Wilson Rawls Biography Stutterin’ Boy, by Mel Tillis Reference- NBC Handbook of Pronunciation 4th edition. Bookfinder: A Guide to Children's Literature About the Needs and Problems of Youth., by Sharon Dreyer The House of Collectibles: The Official 1985 Price Guide to An­ tiques and Flea Markets MacMlillan Dictionary for Students, by William Halsey Jr. Non-Fiction Saint George and the Dragon, by Margaret Hodges Everyday Life in (he Sixteenth Century, by Haydn Middleton Doll Houses: Life In Miniature, by Shirley Glubok Children's Easy Books Monster in (he Third Dresser Drawer and o(her Stories, by Janice Smith Raccoon Baby, by Berniece Freskcliet Gorman and (he Treasure Chest, John Stadler All Sleep, by Charlotte Pomerantz The film for the Tuesday, February 12 story-time is “ Caterpillar." Bookmobile Routes 2nd Tuesday-Cooleemee-W. Boone Road Wednesday-Advance Thursday-Farmington The Davie County School Lunch Menu for the week of Feb. 11-Feb. 15 is os follows; GRADES K-6 Monday, Feb. 11 Breakfast Cereal or Blueberry muffin Mixed fruit cup Milk Lunch Hamburger w-onions or Baked ham w-macaroni & cheese Lettuce & tomatoes French fries Green beans Baked apples Roll Milk Tuesday Feb. 12 Lincoln's Birthday Breakfast Cereal or Oatmeal Hot cinnamon apples Milk Lunch Pork chop or Chili & beans w-crackers Steamed cabbage Ambrosia Buttered corn Creamed potatoes Corn bread Milk' Wednesday, Feb. 13 Breakfast Cereal or Buttered biscuits w-honey or jelly Tangerine Milk Lunch Manager’s choice Thursday, Feb. 14 Valentine's Day Breakfast Cereal or Doughnuts Applesauce Milk Lunch Taco w-shredded cheese or Canadian cheese soup w-crackers Sausage biscuit Applesauce Shredded lettuce & diced tomato Carrot raisin salad Green beans Milk Bonus: St. Valentine's Surprise Friday, Feb. 15 Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuits Orange Juice Milk Lunch Pizza or Sloppy joe Tossed salad Cherry cobbler Tator tots Sweet peas Milk GRADES 7-12 Monday, Feb. 11 Breakfast Cereal or Blueberry muffin Mixed fruit cup Milk Sandwich Hamburger w-onions or Pizza Tossed salad Slaw French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Baked ham w-macaroni & cheese or Steak sandwich Lettuce & tomato Green beans Baked apples Pickled beets Roll Milk Tuesday. Feb. 12 Lincoln's Birthday Breakfast Cereal or Oatmeal Hot cinnamon apples Milk Sandwich Hamburger w-onions or Pizza Tossed salad Slaw French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Pork chop or Chili & beans w-crackers Steamed cabbage Ambrosia Buttered corn Creamed potatoes Corn bread Milk Wednesday, Feb. 13 Breakfast Cereal or Buttered biscuits w-honey or jelly Tangerine Milk Sandwich Hamburger w-onions or Pizza Tossed salad Slaw French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Manager's choice Thursday, Feb. 14 Valentine's Day Breakfast Cereal or Doughnuts Applesauce Milk Sandwich Hamubrger w-onions or Pizza Tossed salad Slaw French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Taco w-shredded cheese or Canadian cheese soup w-crackers Sausage biscuit Applesauce Shredded lettuce & diced tomato Cari-ot raisin salad Green beans Milk Bonus: St. Valentine's Surprise Friday, Feb. 15 Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuit Orange juice Milk Sandwich Hamburger w-onions or Pizza Tossed salad Slaw French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Chicken salad w-crackers on lettuce or Sloppy joe Pears w-chcese Cheery cobbler Sweet peas Cole slaw Milk Between 1801 and 1808, Joseph Marie Jacquard perfected a loon which could weave patterns au-l tomaticaily. Within four yearsj 11,000 were in use in France. _ Show them you care with fresh flower fig ^Vrangements, roses, balloons, cards, silks, novelties, etc. and they will know you mean it. Order early while selection is prime. Hwy. 801 Cooleemee, NC Phone 284-2705 i IW llb iir Financial FUTURE Our IRA is your best tax defense, too! Our Individual Retirement Account offers you: • High interest. • Tax-deferred earnings. • Reduced taxable income. • Deposits insured-safe. Build a financial cushion for a more secure future and protect yourself from taxes by opening your own Individual Retirement Account, Stop in soon for complete IRA details and quotes of current rates. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday MOCKSVILLE SWINGS & LOAN ASSOCIMION 213 SOUTH MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE, N. 0. 27028 P. 0. BOX 367 (704) 634-5936 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. FI-UKUARY 7. 1985-7 NCSU Nutrition Study Reveals Mixed Trends In Southern Diets By Ruth Hutchison Prompted by evidence that Southern households of the mid- 1960s were lagging in their intake of some nutrients, two economics researchers at North Carolina State '■University have analyzed newer information to find out whether that pattern has changed. Dr. Ronald A. Schrimper and doctoral candidate Christine Hager , found some significant changes in Southern nutritional patterns between 1965 and 1977, the year of the most recent U.S. Department of Agriculture survey of household food consumption. “ The trends are somewhat mixed,” Schrimper said, "in that we saw improvement in some categories, no change in some and a decrease in nutrients in others." The USDA surveys of household food consumption are made to find out how adequate diets are and what changes in nutritional patterns have occurred, Schrimper said. Comparing the national surveys to the Census, he said it will be another five to six years before updated information is available. In their study funded by the N.C. Agricultural Research Service, the NCSU researchers classified nutrients into three groups: total food energy, or calories, from protein, fat and carbohydrates; minerals, calcium and iron; and vitamins A,C, thiamine and riboflavin. Comparing changes that took place in the South with national trends, Schrimper and Hager cited these as among the most significant patterns: "Iron intake in the South in the 19- ■ and-under age group rose and for infants nearly doubled. -Calcium deficiencies, except for the elderly, were greater in the South than in the rest of the nation. , -Calorie intake for most groups decreased in the South more than in the rest of the nation. Increased iron for infants and children was the result of fortified infant formula and cereal, ac- . cording to the USDA. And said ' Hager, between 1965 and 1977 the number of participants in the food ; .stamp program also increased. Hager, a former Peace Corps volunteer who taught nutrition for ,. two years in Colombia to mothers of malnourished children, said the decrease in iron intake in women of child-bearing age was of "special concern.” Women in this group were ; getting less than two-thirdsof the : USDA’s Recommended Dietary -Allowance, she said. Southerners seemed to increase . their intake of vitamins, especially ' F. A and C, said Schrimper, a research ' specialist in food consumption and r; demand.’ However, he added that 1. people across the country increased ' their vitaihin C intake. . My name is Justin Mark Keaton, ; and I celebrated my 5th birthday, ; Wednesday, January 23, 1985. 1 had ; my lunch at Hardee's. Later I had a ; party at my home in Courtney. Thanks for the nice cards and gifts, !M y parents are Mr. and Mrs. ; Timmy Keaton. My grandparents ■ are CarJ and Virginia Keaton and . Inez Troutman. free Shade Trees For Spring Planting The National Arbor Day Foun­ dation is giving ten free shade trees ;to people who join the nonprofit 'Foundation during February, 1985. A Sugar Maple, Weeping Willow, ;Red Oak,, Green Ash, Thornless ■Honeylocust, Pin Oak, Silver Maple, iTuIipTree, European Mountainash, ;and Red Maple tree will be given as ■part of the Foundation’s campaign Ito encourage tree planting. ; These trees were selected ■because they provide flowers, ^berries and nuts, in addition to ;shade and beauty, according to •John Rosenow, the Foundation’s lexecutive director. ■ The Foundation will give the ten .‘free trees to members contributing ;|10 during February. The six-to- -twelve inch trees will be shipped '.this spring between February 1 and ;May 31 when conditions are right for ■planting. They will be sent with {enclosed planting instructions, and ;are guaranteed to grow or they will •be replaced free by the Foundation. ; To become a member of the ;Foundatiqn and to receive the free ‘trees, a $10 membership con- ;tribution should be sent to Shade •Trees, National Arbor Day Foun- '.dation, 100 Arbor Avenue, Nebraska •City, NE 68410, by February 28, ■1985. Compared with the rest of the nation, calorie intake from all sources decreased more in the South, he said. "It’s hard to tell whether this is good or bad since we don’t know how many calories people require." The researchers found the decrease surprising because, at the same time, incomes were risini faster in the South and participation in the food stamp program was growing, One possible cause, said Schrimper, may have been a rise in food prices. “ There is some evidence that food prices have risen faster in the South than in some other parts of the country,” Hager added that even as income increases, nutrition may not necessarily improve. "When people change their eating habits they sometimes lose elements that were nutritional,” she said. For example, vitamin A-rich sweet potatoes, a staple in the Southern diet, are giving way to casseroles and processed foods, she said. The economists agree on the need for further research that will determine why nutrient: con­ sumption in the South differs from other areas in the country and why people change the foods they eat to get the nutrients they consume. Vermont was the first state to be added to the original 13 colonies. USDA Choice Beef Chuck We mttit th« U right to limit • qaantities. USPA Choice Beef Round - BoHOm USP/I Chile* Eilri Iti* StewBitf..............................Ik. 1.98 Fresh Daily S e e d l e s s Graj?6Sr^ // w U.S. #1 White 20 Lb. Bag Potatoes T»>y V«lt«« Onions .......................... ........su.Bii .79 it Ounei Duke's Mayonnaise I ' M l i b r a r y 2 Ulir - Oi«l fiu Dlil Ctktl CiffilH F r» CtUI 8-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. TIIUKSI) \ i I I.BKl A K V 1985 District Court 'J’he following cases were disposed of'during the January 29 session of Davie County District Court with the honorable Lester P. Martin, presiding judge. Aaron David Pigman, driving 66 mph In a 55 mph zone, Improper equipment, $10 and costs. Michael Eugene Anderer, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Ronald Edward Chestnut, driving 68imph'ln a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Robert Zane West, drlvmg 65 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 arid costs. Keith Alan Neal, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Richard Floyd Burton, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, costs. Mary Lane Watts, driving 67 mph In a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Richard McCoy Best, failure to stop at a stop sign, costs. James Albert Wade, driving 70 mph In a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Glenn Edward DeBerry, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Christopher Karnbach, exceeding safe speed, costs. 'Jerry Don Sowers, driving 67 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Duane E. Chlbe, driving 74 mph in a 55 mph zone, $25 and costs. Ronald Kenneth Beutel, ex­ ceeding safe speed, costs. Arnold Ray Dalton, improper parking , costs. William E. Fair II, driving 72 mph in' a 55 mph zone, $25 and costs. Paul Clayton Fuller, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. .'Adam Gerald Baker, expired registration plate, costs. Michael John Keough, driving 70 m'ph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. ;Lawrence Samuel Tate, ex­ ceeding safe speed, costs. ■Robert Keith Wood, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Douglas Curtis Daniel Jr., no operators license, no current in­ spection sticker, $25 and costs. Larry Krumbholtz, failure to yield right of way at stop sign, costs. Susan Lee Trupp, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. :James Hllrey Grant, driving 59 mph in a 45 mph zone, $10 and costs. •Aedrian Marie Dula, driving 70 niph In a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. iColin Shaw McArthur Jr., driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. ;Davld Lyle Leonard, driving 70 niph In a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. ‘Sam William Casey, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. •Freddie L. Barbers, driving 70, niph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. . Walter Roy Mozingo, Jr., driving 70 mph In a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Wiseman Theoplus Johnson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Barry Lynn Sechrest, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, failure to stop at stop sign, $10 and costs. Jeffrey Allen Miller, exceeding safe speed, costs. David Mattlson Cater, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, no operators license, $25 and costs. Kenneth Earl Harris, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Richard Kevin Layton, driving 70 riiph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Michael Todd Hail, exceeding safe speed, costs. ;.Paul Douglas Pollard, make restitution and pay costs. "Noah Scott Towery, DWI, no probably cause found. Danny Lee Cartner, driving 66 mph in a 55 mph zone, 90-day failure. • Ernesto Navarro, no operators license, driving on wrong side of road, bond forfeiture. Kevin Robert Parham, DWI, sentenced to 6 months, suspended for 1 year, pay a fine of $300 and costs, perform 72 hours community service work, surrrender operators license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay f ^ for said school. ; Clyde Alonzo Bollinger, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, expired cli’affeurs license,’ $23 and costs. David Lee Whetzel, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, prayer for judgement continued on costs. Jeffrey Karl Phipps, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $20 and costs, Boyd Keith Johnson, exceeding safe speed, costs. Richard Dean Taylor, reckless driving, $91 and costs. James Dennis Caudle, exceeding safe speed, $16 and costs. James Frank Dobson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $l(iiind costs. Paul Morrow McAllister Jr., driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $15 and costs. Ricky Joel Boger, improper equipment, $25 and costs. Larry Breedlove, Injuring livestock, dismissed. Mehdi Behpooe driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave. Thomas David Neal nonsupport of spouse, dismissed. Robert Wadsworth, larceny, dismissed with leave. Garfield Covington, larceny, dismissed with leave. Mike Arthur Melton, larceny, dismissed with leave. Herbert C. Williams worthless check, dismissed, check made good. Herbert C. Williams, worthless check, dismissed, check made good. Cecilia K. Breeden, worthless check, dismissed, check made good. Mary Elizabeth Foster, larceny, dismissed. Marion Albert Hairston, breaking and entering sentenced to 6 months in the North Carolina Dept. »l Corrections. Newman D. Stroud, abandonment and nonsupport, dismissed on costs. Newman D. Stroud, assault, dismissed on costs. Kenneth Barnes, assault, sen­ tenced to 6 months. Kenneth Barnes, assault, sen­ tenced to 6 months, suspended for 1 year on condition that he not go about prosecuting witness at all, with or without permission of prosecuting witness. Christopher Travis Ward, damage to property, dismissed with leave. Kenneth Shanks, violation of terms and conditions of suspended sentence, continued on condition defendant not go about the premises of prosecuting witness or trespass upon premises. Lavern R.. Jones, violation of probation, continued on probation. Patrick Clearly, larceny, dismissed. . Marion Albert Hairston Jr., DWI no operators license, sentensed to 1 year in the N.C, Dept, of Correc­ tions. Marlon Albert Hairston Jr., DWI, sentenced to 1 year in the N.C. Department of Corrections. Elvin Ray Ferguson, consuming beer while operating motor vehicle, $25 and costs. Vets Corner How may I obtain copies of documents and records from my VA file? Requests for vopics of documents from your VA file must be made in writing and should Include your signature. Your request should be mailed to the nearest VA Regional Office for processing. A nominal fee may be charged, depending on the number of copies requested. Can anyone get Information from my VA records? The Freedom of Information Act allows the VA to release the amount of any benefits payments you receive. The Privacy Act of li)74 generally prevents the release of other information without your written consent. How may I obtain copies of my service records which are not a part of my VA file? Service records are generally kept at the National Personnel Records Center in St. Louis. You may contact the nearest VA Regional Office for the proper form and information on how to obtain these records. Gary E. Prillaman, D.D.S.,P.A. Announces Famfly Day At The Dentist Office Saturday, February 16,1985 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Provided as a service to the community —An opportunity to visit a modern dental office -A n opportunity to obtain a conipreliensivc dental healtli examination -A n op|H)rtuiiity to have your dental health evaluated —An opjHjrtunity to learn how to prevent dental disease - A take-home kit, to praetive precentive care at home All these valuable services are available FREE of charge to you you and to each memlMsr o f your family. Of course, if you would like to come and browse through a modern dental office, you are very welcome to do so.________^______________ DAVIE JEWELERS 25th ANNIVERSARY VALENTINE SALE! OUR ANNUAL VALENTINE’S DAY Sale is now in progress! But this year is extra special at DAVIE JEWELERS, because it marks our twenty-fifth year in business. To celebrate we re cleaning the valts, offering Quality Jewelry at lovely prices! SAVE On Diamonds, Precious stones, 14kt. Gold Jewelry, W atches & more. SAVE Now thru Valentines Day, but hurry for best selection. Classic Waterfall Antique Style Filligre 'A Ct. tw . Diamond Cluster 3 Diamonds White Gold $ 1 9 9 9 5 One Only Res. ’555.00 $OQ95 Reg‘189.95 Two Only Popular Onyx Rings Now *79^® Reg.’125.00 •Layaway up to 3 months Bands $ 9 9 9 ! I Only with this ad i 'lOkt. Gold Sizes 5&6 Only] ATTENTION! NEAR COST OR BELOW ON SPECIAL GROUP OF RINGS Genuine 7-Diamond Clusters i O K ti White.or Yellow ....................... *125.00........ 3 y _ Ladies I4kt. Diamond Band.......*149.95 . l ‘/2 Carat Ladies Waterfall so o nn 14 Kt. Yellow Gold 26 Diamonds......’2495.00- 8 8 8 Emerald & Diamond Ring 14 Kt. Yellow..................................•295.00 . . *149'’® Unique Pearl Cluster Contains 13 Cultured Pearls.................*200 00- • ■ • ’99® Ladies 10 kt. Ring Yellow Shaped Like A Star..................’59.95 . »12“® Ladies Cocktail Ring , 10 Diamonds Rectangular Shape.........'125.00..... 4*7 Na?rowWeddSiY''S^*'"^^ .. $^95Ranrlc nUTl ' Genuine Stone In 10 Kt. Yellow..........99.95....... ' Gents Birthstone Ring 10 Kt. White Cold................................*200.00.....^69®® Gents Masonic Ring 10 Kt. Yellow Gold..............................*225.00.......’99 Ladies 3 Diamond Band.........*126.50......^8 8 *^ 18 kt. Bridal Set......................*396.00. ...$ 1 4 9 9 5 Jade& Diamond Ring.............*188.00 .... ^79®* OVER 75 RINGSIN THIS GROUP 30DAYLAYAWAYAVAILABLE ON THESE RINGS ALL RINGS ON SALE Some 20% OFF Some 50% OFF Some 60% OFF Majority Except Closeouts V3 01^ GOING STEADY RINGS f e o m W 14kt. 3mm BEADS 19*" EACH With This Ad WATCHES 20 to50%off GOLD SALE Look for our other ad! ( ( downtown Mocksviile 25th ANNIVERSARY VALENTINE SALE IN PROGRESS! 634-5216 Many other unadvertised specials. Many items are one onlys. All items subject to prior sale. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985-9 Angell Farm Receives Statewide Rec(%nition 'Angell Farm of Mocksville recently received two stale level awards in N. C. statewide yield contests. I The farm is operated by father and son, Tilden G. and T. Madison Angell, and raises primarily corn, soybeans, and wheat. ; Angell Farm earned third place honors in the Western District of the N.C. Wheal Yield-Contest and was fourth high in the state with an officially recorded wheat yield of 9il.6 bushels per acre on a measured three acre plus area. Angell Farm also was recognized at the N.C. Soybean Producers Association where they took first place honors in District Four of the 1984 N.C. Soybean Yield Contest with an of­ ficially recorded yield of 53.8 bushels per acre on a three plus acre area. This was the third time Angell Farm lias taken lop honors in District Four of the N.C. Soybean Yield competition. The farm also captured Davie County Corn Yield Contest top honors for 1984. The N.C. Yield Contest for various crops are conducted by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service in cooperation with various agribusiness and producer associations in an effort to recognize those production prac­ tices necessary to obtain maximum economic yields. “ One Extension recommendation that has changed," according to Ronnie W. Thompson, Davie County Extension Chairman, "primarily due to in­ formation gained through the yield contests, is nitrogen fertilization of wheat. The nitrogen recom­ mendation for wheat grown under Madison Angell (left) of Angell Farm, Mocksville, is shown receiving the Western District third place plaque for the 1984 N.<f. Wheat Yield Contest. Also, pictured^ is Ronnie Thompson, Davie County Extension Chairman. The award was recently presented durino the Plant Food Association of N. C. annual meeting in Raleigh. maximum yield production prac­ tices is now 100-120 total units of N, up from the old recommendation of 60-80 total units.” The annual Davie County Soybean Production Meeting is scheduled for February 20 at Fisherman’s Quarters Restaurant in Mocksville. The major emphasis of the in­ formation to be presented will center on the use of post-emergence herbicides, such as, Poast, Fusilade, Blazer, Basagran, 2, 4D- B, Rescue, etc. Alan York, N.C. A gricultural Extension Service Weed Specialist, will be the guest speaker. The meeting sponsors are the Davie County Agricultural Extension Service, Farm Credit Service of Mocksville, and Northrup King Seed Company. The Davie County Agricultural Extension Service offers educational program s without regard to race, color, religion, sex, age, national origin, or handicap. Local Senior Nominated For ECU Scholarship Bruce Branan of Mocksville was one of 53 outstanding high school seniors from across the state and nation to have been nominated as Semifinalists for the selection of the first five University Scholars awards at East Carolina University. The Universi^ Scholars is a Senior Center Able To Serve More Due to being closed and having reduced attendance because of recent inclement weather, the Elderly Congregate Nutrition Center is able to expand its services to more Davie County Senior Citizens aged 60 years of age and over and their spouses. ■ The Center is located at the Brock Community Service Center on North Main Street in Mocksville. . Transportation services on Vans can be provided in coordination with the Section 18 Rural Transportation Program. : Davie Senior Citizens desiring to participate should telephone Karen Smyers or Delane Hendrix at the Davie Community Service Center at 704-634-2187. : Karen Smyers, Center Site Manager, encourages Davie Senior Citizens to join in the fellowship and activities at the Center. major new, privately-financed scholarship program designed to attract academ ically-gifted students with demonstrated leadership potential to ECU. Eventually the program will support at least 20 $3,000 University Scholars awards each year. The first five recipients will be chosen this spring and enter the university in the fall semester. ECU officials announced that regional screening committees will choose no more than 24 candidates G6odler Commissioned By U.S. Air Force Gene W. Goodier, son of Gordon W. and Delores M. Goodier of Rt. 7, Mocksville, N.C., has been com­ missioned a second lieutaiant in the U.S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas. The 12-week course trained selected college graduates to apply communicative skills, professional knowledge, leadership and management to take positions of responsibility. Goodier will now be assigned at Vance Air Force Base, Okla. He is a 1984 graduate of North Texas State University, Denton. COM ING FEBRUARY 9 -10 T O B en F ran k lin M OCKSVILLE, NC Saturday 10 AM . - 5 PM. Sunday l P.M. - 5 P.M. Color Portrait Package Special 3 — SxlO 's 3 — 5x7's 1 5 — Billfolds »1 2 ’ » $2.95 Down Day O f Sitting 110.00 Balance On Delivery ONLY • NO AGE LIM ITI • AD U LTS TOOl • D O N 'T MISS IT • F A M IL Y GROUPS ALSO All work Guaranteed by; Ben Franklin Route 601 Yadklnville Hoad Mocksville. North Carolina from the list ot semifinalists for interviews which are scheduled Feb. 16 in Greenville, Raleigh and Greensboro. Each committee will nominate two top choices and an alternate, according to ECU director of admissions Charles F. Seeley. A selection committee will meet on March 9 to interview finalists and choose five winners. Seeley said any one of the 53 semifinalists not selected for the University Scholars award autom atically will be “ highly considered” for another ECU merit scholarship including alumni honors scholarships which range in value from $750 to $1,500 a year. The list of 53 semifinalists was drawn by screening applications which were received by Dec. 15, Seeley said. The University Scholars program was established last fall and announced on Oct. 19. Holmes Completes CPA Examination Joseph Fraley Holmes of Tot Street, Mocksville, was one of 287 people to successfully complete the Uniform Certified Public Accountant Examination held last November in Charlotte. According to Chuck Bunn, Executive Director for the State Board of CPA Examiners, 1225 people sat for the exam last November, including 407 who sat for the first time and 818 who were returning to com plete the previously unpassed parts. Of the 407 who sat for the first time, 360 attempted all four parts of the examination and 49 passed all four parts. Successful exam ination can­ didates must complete experience requirements before being awarded the Certified Public Accountant Certificate by the State Board of CPA Examiners. Based upon preliminary review, Bunn feels that the percentage of people passing any given part and completing all parts of the examination appear to be com­ parable with previous examinations. North Carolina is a consistent honor role state. The top average North Carolina score on the November examination was received by James Lawrence Miller. Miller received his ac­ counting degree from UNC- Charlotte. He and hii wife Deborah reside in Matthews, N.C. Miller is currently employed by NONE as a Senior Cash Analyst. Bobby Gene Jenkins, scored the second higheit on the exam. Jenkins received his accounting degree from UNC-Chapel Hill and is em­ ployed as a Staff Accountant with Price W aterhouse in Atlanta, Georgia. James Everette Harris received the third highest scores. Harris received his accounting degree from Appalachian State, and is employed as a Staff Accountant with Ernst & Whinney in Winston- Salem, N.C. All are candidates for awards given by the North Carolina CPA Foundation. Th* f yitem of using (ingarprintf for identilication was ttartad by Will­ iam Htrchel of th« Indian Civil Sar- vie* In 1858, at Jungipur, India. CroMm'^ Drugs Special ways to say “I Love You” Surprise your Sweetheart with a card, candy, or gift from Crown Drugs on February 14. Tliese prices good February 7-8-9,1985 Only PRESTO FRYING PAN 11" e (ELECTRIC)C REGULAR $27.99 ITEM NO. 06612' ITEIVI NO. 1605 NORELCO TRIPLEHEADER SHAVER WITH 3 FLOATING HEADS REGULAR $49.99 $ 4 2 « EPRIS SPRAY COLOGNE 1.3 OUNCE r e g u l a r $li.8B $797 ^ //'/f SpH OLD SPICE AFTERSHAVE ,4 1/4 OUNCE REGUALR $3.47 $ | 9 7 BUBBLEYUM ASSORTED FLAVORS 5-99’ PUNTER’S CASHEW HALVES 11.5 OUNCE REGULAR $3.99 at tiM first Sign of a COM CORICIDIN OR CORICIDIN D YOUR CHOICE REGULAR $3.19 1724 TABLETS SAND AND S ITEM NO. US0022 iVIR. COFFEE ULTRONIC COFFEEMAKER WITH CLOCK REGULAR $47.88 99' 3 9 ’ AVIANCE NIGHT IVIUSK .65 OUNCE SPRAY COLOGNE REGULAR $7.43 1597 HERSHEY’S BRACK’STO MY VALENTINE” FOIL HEART X 1 POUND VHAPPY VALENTINE’S DAY STORYBOOK LIFESAVER’S CLEO VALENTINE CARDS ASSORTED PACKS REGULAR $1.29 SCHICK Trac II! DISPOSABLE SHAVING 1 RAZORS CARTRIDGE 9 COUNT 5 COUNT REGULAR $3.79 89‘$317 SPRAY COLOGNE VALENTINE'S DAY SPECIALS SELF- SELF- \ ____________ An.itlRTiwri ' N REPLINISHING MAKE-UP SHADES NGN'- COVER GIRL ADJUSTING CONDITIONER 15 oz $227 § DRY IDEA DRY ROLL-ON ANTI- PERSPIRANT DEODORANT 2.5 oz. -REGULAR $3.47 $ 0 2 7 r im ITEM NO.CU-100 CUUROL CUSTOM CARE TRIO THREE BARREL ATTACHM|T^£ REGULAR $22.87 ITEM NO. 2051 BISSELL CLASSIC SWEEPER . LIKE 2 SWEEPERS IN ONE REGULAR $34.99 FILIVI PROCESSING SPECIAL C -110 C -126 12 ExpoBureB 2 9 9 24 Exposures 5*» ^ "Crown Prints 3 5 "C u 8 to in Processing For 35 iiirn 12 Exposures 24 Exposures 36 ExpoBuiys 5 9 9 3 7 93 3 9 Disc Film Crown Prints 15 Exposures g j 3 ® ^ C-41 Processing 1. M ockivlllt, Willow Oak Shopplni Cinlr< 2. Cltm m oni, W Mlwood Vlllaai Shopplni o n ta r J, t a i M ia n Craak P«rkway, W-S 4, Raynolda Manor thopplna Cantar, W-S i. 107S Karnarivllla Rd., W-S 4. Arcadia Avanui, 7. Hanai Mall, W-S (. Oldtown, 371* Raynolda Rd., W-S *. u w livllla, (4 1 * Shallowford Rd., W-S 10. Slanlayvllla, Old Highway S2 North 11. KIni, colony cantrd W o Ini Walkarlown, Highway 6 fi, Vadklnvllla, N e w to n . TayloiivM Vlilt a Crown Optic Shop todiy Located In Crown Drug Stores tt the following locatlonc WInMon-Mwn, NC “ i f * ’ * Ltilnglon,NC CmMwI, NO fT P J ic l i S H O P *Klngion 10-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. FEBRUARN 7. 1985 Yadkin Valley Telephone Employees To Be Cited For 25 & 30 Years Of Service Rilla W. Fletcher, Harvey L. Gobble, Wade I. Groce, Bill R'lc- .Donald and Homer C. Myers, Jr., Avill be recognized by the National Telephone Cooperative Association for their 30 years of service to Yadkin Valley Telephone Mem­ bership Corporation in Yadkinville, N.C. Jean H. Adams, W.K. Crownfield, P.E., Violet C. Hauser, C.B. Holbrook, Clint C. Poindexter, Bobby L. Steclman and William D. Whitaker will be recognized by the National Telephone Cooperative Association for their 25 years of service to Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership Corporation in Yadkinville, North Carolina. The NTCA 1985 Annual Meeting, to be held in Dallas, Texas, February 16-21, will feature a special recognition dinner on February 19 in honor of all major award winners and service award recipients. Congressman Ed Jones (D-TN) will attend the dinner as its keynote speaker. Recognition awards have traditionally been distributed at the NTCA Annual Meeting as part of its Annual Awards Program. The NTCA 1985 Annual meeting will unite over 2500 member system directors, managers and employees in a five-day program to evaluate current challenges faced by the rural telecommunications industry and develop new approaches. The NTCA Awards are a vital way of I4 ,N ' Athena Gabrielle Mlneo celebrated her first birthday January 25, 1985. In honor of the occasion her grand­ mother and grandfather, Mr. and Mrs. D.C. Redmnnd of Mocksville, invited her friends to come and share cake and ice cream on Saturday the 26. Mrs. Belinda Garner, Kristin and Jacob, Mrs. Donna Williams and Stephen, Mrs. Cindy Anderson and Kara, Mrs. Stephanie Hudson, Mrs. Bobbie Jean Andrews, Mrs. Elizabeth Blackwelder, and Miss Aleta Redmond joined in the fun and helped make this first birthday very special. Gabrielle's parent's are Athena and Tony Mineo of Kaleigh, N.C. The Empire State Building in New York City was built in 1931. The first ballet tutu was designed for a performace of "La Sylphide" in Paris on IVIarch 12,1832. underlining the dedication and acheivements of the many par­ ticipants who have given service to their communities and to the ad­ vancement of the entire telecom­ munications industry. The National Telephone Cooperative Association is the primary telephone industry organization dedicated entirely to representing and serving the in­ terests of the nation’s small, and rural telephone systems. A nonprofit trade association, NTCA today represents more than 450 cooperative and commercial companies. More than 5 million consumers get their telephone service from NTCA member systems. NTCA provides its member systems with legislative, legal and industry representation: education programs; meetings; publications; and a variety of employee benefits programs. Folk-Ways And Folk-Lore By Roger Whitener If a philosopher by the name of Leibnitz were around today he would be chortling over the proof of his prized thesis; Everything works for the best in the best of all possible worlds. ' Disaster for some, in his eyes, simply meant good fortune for others. Take the case of Florida citrus growers, for instance. Though the fruit crop has ap­ parently taken a fearful beating, nurserymen have been cheered by the news that the destructive citrus canker may have been eliminated for the moment by the ex­ traordinarily low temperatures. And in the mountains the advent of snow, plus record-setting cold blasts may have brought misery to some by way of frozen pipes and impassable roads. On the other hand, ski resorts have rejoiced in the natural white cover and in temperatures sufficiently low to allow for several additional feet of base, thanks to artificial snow. Which brings to mind a bit of folklore concerning mountain roads in the Boone area. Word is that if you plan to live in a rural area you need to keep two things in mind: Where do highway officials and staff live and what roads lead to the ski resorts? The assumption is that these roads are the first to be scraped, salted, or slagged when the rough stuff falls. When the first ski slopes were open in Watauga and Avery Counties, for instance, an amusing story made the rounds (amusing to some at least) of a woman marooned by a heavy snow, a lady who had lacked the foresi^t or wherewithal to manage a residence in a maintenance-blessed area. For days she attempted to induce state highway crews to remove the heavy drifts: “ Look, I’ve simply got ■to get into town and buy groceries. My kids are screaming and I can't even get out of my driveway, let alone into town." Still no help. Finally came the light. Again she rang the maintenance office, and in an affected down-country voice she asked: “ Can you tell me whether the roads to Beech Mountain are clear';” “ Yes, Ma’am,” was the response. “ Good roads and good skiing today.” “ And how about 321 to Blowing Rock and Ski Mountain?” “ No problem, lady. Scrapers and salt trucks were out at, daybreak. You'll have no trouble at all in making it to the slopes.” “ You’re sure I can make it without chains?” “ Lady, I tell you we've worked these roads till you'd be safe even without treads on your tires." “ All right, mister, if you’re so damned efficient, get your lazy tail and your equipment out Roby Greene Road so I can get into town!” Sugar Mountain In a recent column we mentioned the source of the Seven Devils Ski Resort name (now Hawksnest): the folk expression, “ Cold as Seven -CLIP THIS AD- Foster-Rauch Drug Wilkiboro Street, I Mocktvllle, NC’ j I I Famous Min Made (COUNTERFEIT) ALL WITH LIFETIME WARRANTY DIAMOND SALE Friday, February 8,1985 10 A.M. til 5 P.M. Bring this certificate and $5.95 and rectlvt a LADIES I I Kt. Gold-Clad Ring with Vi Kt. Size M AN MADE DIAM DND REPRODUCTlONt FLASH ING WITH RAINBOW FIRE. So btautlfui and attract<«r« your frltnd i wKI ntirer never Know. Milllonalrei, Soclalitei and Movie Stars wear theie and keep their Genuine Olamondi In Safety Vaulti. Compare, lee If you can tell the difference! You have been reading about theie amaxing ringi which have been lold for $40.00 to $50.00 per carat. $C 9 55(WITH THIS COUPON COME SEE OUR LARGE SELECTION RINGS _5®5-21»5 AS ILLUSTRATED PRINCESS, CCKKTAIL & MEN'S RINGS Devils.” Neighboring Sugar Mountain also boasts its own bit of folklore regarding its name, growing out of the persistent questions of low country skiers. ‘■‘Were there sugar maples on the slopes which the mountain people tapped for syrup? Was it because sunlight on the mountain top made the snow look like sugar?” Employees, faced with such questions on a day-to-day basis, eventually came up with a tongue- in-cheek response that might vary with the individual. “ On no. That’s not how the name came about at all. Fact is it comes from what was once the finest sugar mine in these mountains. See that cleared section up the mountainside where the ski lift operates? Well, that used to be the route of a narrow gauge railway track that went clear to the top of the mountain where the mine shaft was located. “ Several times a week they’d run what they called the sugar cart up to the mine, fill it up, and then run it back down the mountain. People knew what days it operated, and they’d come from miles around with their pokes and buckets to pick up their short sweetening-saved them from having to boil down maple water or sorgam juice. “ Course, after a time the sugar was mostly mined out, and they closed the shaft when the country stores began to lay in supplies of the commercial stuff. “ But before the trees and un­ derbrush could grow up over the tracks, the ski folks came in and started installing that first lift you see up there. Next time you go to the top ask the lift attendant up there where the mouth to the sugar mine is. “ Who knows?-price of sugar being what it is, they may take a notion to start up that sugar cart again some of these days!” Readers are invited to send folk materials to Rogers Whitener, English Department, ASU, Boone, N.C. 28608. Democrat Women To Meet Feb. 19 Davie Democrat Women will meet Tuesday February 19th at 7 p.m. at the Mocksville Town Hall. President Tama OMara urges all Democrat Women to attend. Membership chairman Ann Wise, will conduct a two month mem­ bership drive. Neil Dillion plans to teach some Easter crafts at this meeting. March meeting will be dutch treat supper at Quincy's in Clemmons and attend the travelog at Salem College afterward. 4-H News On January 14, the Davie Academy 4-H club had their regular monthly meeting. Mary Winfery called the meeting to order and Regina Walker called the roll. Louise Allen had the program. She demonstrated formal and informal table settings. She also showed how to make a bunny rabbit cake. We drew names for the bunny rabbit cake. Michael Galliher won. Louise Cartner tiad refreshments. The meeting was adjourned. Income Toxes Experienced Public Accountant Acvouiiliiig Bookkeeping Services Iiicoiiic Taxes I'ayroll Taxes Sales Taxes Computer Service Available (919)998-8400 Advance, N.C. \ George Dayton, Jr., dealer,and James Dayton, Jr., sales representative, discuss their appointment to serve Mocksville and points north to Yadkinville with sales, service and genuine Chevrolet parts. Their firm, Dayton Motors, Inc., opened December 1 and is located on U.S. <01 north, across from the Yadkin Plaza Shopping Center. Dayton Motors To Serve Davie Area Dayton Motors, Inc., authorized Chevrolet dealership in Yadkin County, has been appointed to serve Mocksville and points north to Yadkinville and on up to Booneville with sales service and genuine Chevrolet parts. The announcements was made this week by George Dayton. Jr.. dealer. Dayton said that aievrolct Motor Division notified him of the appointment which was effective January 23. Concerning the appointment, Dayton said, “ I accept this responsibility with pleasure, and pledge courteous prompt attention to your transportation needs. Dayton Motors, Inc. is located on U.S. 601 north across from the Yadkin Plaza Shopping Center. The firm opened December 1, and is the first Chevrolet dealership to operate in the area in three years. Dayton said that the firm’s service departni^ent will honor . unexpired warranties on any Chevrolet products owned by persons in the Dayton Motors’ sales and service district. "Bob Demmilte, service manage, will service and repair you cars and trucks as needed,” Dayton said. He added that the firm plans to keep a wide inventory selection of cars and trucks for immediate delivery and will also special order cars and trucks as requested to' meet customers need and desires^ Thre present site which houses Dayton Motors, Inc. is undergoing extensive renovation which is 99 percent complete. The firm features nine service bays and eight! mechanics to handle service and repair work. Sales representatives include; Johnny Haynes, Leon Casstevens, James Dayton, Jr. and George Dayton, Jr., dealer. Grand opening festivities are planned for late March or Early April. Dayton Motors, Inc. is open from 8:00a.m.-6:00 p.m. Monday through Saturday. DAYTON MOTORS CHEVROLET AUTHORIZED DEALER 1984 Corvette Black w Charcoal Loaded, New, Big Savings 1984 Caprice Classic 4 Dr., A C, P.S., P.B., Cruise, Stereo, 1800 One Owner Miles Save 1983 Z-28 Camaro Cross Fire Iniection, T-Top's, Loaded, Low Miles, One Owner 1980 Chevy Citation, Auto., P.S., Stereo, Tilt, Cruise , One Owner, Clean 1974 Ford LTD, 2 Dr., HT, Good Transportation 1968 Corvette Convertible w Hard Top, Sidepipes, 4 Speed, 1984 Chevy Conversion Van, Loaded, New, Big Savings 1984 S-10 Maxi Cab, P.S., V6, Auto w OD, Stereo, A C, New, Big Savings 1983 Chevy Custom Deluxe, Low Miles, Sharp 1982 Chevy Scottsdale , 4X4, Very Clean, One Owner 1981 Chevy Custom Deluxe, '/? Ton, Clean, One Owner, Low Miles 1979 Ford F150, P.S.. P.B., Auto., Stereo, A C, Bedliner, One Owner, Save 1977 Chevy Silverado, T Tilt, Am FM, Cruise, P.S., P.B., A C, Very Clean 1977 Jeep, 4X4 , Mags, New Top, AM FM Stereo With Equalizer DAYTON MOTORS Small Enough To Know You, Large Enough To Serve You YADKINVILLE, N.C. (919)679 3135 atsntis,i HWY.421 □ See Johnny Haynes, Leon Casstevens, James Dayton, Or George Dayton AND HWV.601 s."K EEP THAT OREAT QM FEEUNQ WITH GENUINE QM PARTS" DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY l-KURUARY ,M 985-11 - <, « . > ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ .....— , — ,_ EVERYTHING 50% TO 75% OFF ALL DIAMONDS 5 0 T o 7 5 % o ff ALL LORUS WATCHES 1 / 2 PRICE ALL SEIKO WATCHES 1 / 2 PRICE Regular ^395.00 LADIES 7 DIAMOND V4Ct. CLUSTERS $ 1 2 9 9 5 ALL STERLING & GOLD FILLED CHAINS 75% OFF 1 4 K T . GOLD CHAINS and CHARMS Choose your length & style THE C ltY’SLARGEST SELECTION! ALL 14K GOLD EARRINGS 6 0 % OFF ALL KEY CHAINS, MONEY CLIPS, TIE TACS, & CUFF LINKS 70%'0 OFF 1 ALL 1 SCANNERS C p i i PRICE ALL CRAIG CAR STEREOS ^ PRICE ALL JENSEN SPEAKERS ^ PRICE ALL BILLFOLDS ^ PRICE ALL GUITAR STRINGS 7 5 % 0. ALL RECORDS, TAPES & ALBUMS ^ PRICE ALL RADIO SHACK MERCHANDISE ^ PRICE SX70 POLOROID FILM $ 4 9 5 ALL TELEPHONE ACCESSORIES ^ PRICE ALL DISPLAY & FIXTURES FOR SALE WE ARE SELLING TO BARE WALLS. BIGGEST SALE EVER! S H O P N O W FO R V A L E N T IN E S & S A V E , S A V E , S A V E All Sales Final NO RETURNS & NO EXCHANGES JEWELRYD O N 'S.RY and i M a in S tre e t PHONE 634-3822 MUSIC M d c k s v ille , N .C 12-DAVlE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 Morning Fire Guts Kountry Korner An electrical malfimctinn has been cited iislln;|X)sslblccauseol' a Thursday morning lire which gutted The Kountry Korner, a home decorating center, according to Det. P.C. Williams, one of the in­ vestigating officers. Williams said at this time it looks as if the origin of the fire is elec­ trical, but he and Det. J.H. Stephens will continue their investigation. Linda Zimmerman, who owns the decorating center located at the intersection of N.C. 801 and Yadkin Valley Road along with her husband James, said Tuesday morning hardware, paint, carpet, wall paper, vinyl floor coverings, and other home decorating supplies as well as gift items housed in a large downstairs room and three smaller upstairs rooms were completely destroyed by the blaze. The frame of the building was so charred by the fire, she said, that an insurance adjustor said the structure could not be “ built over.” According to records in the county dispatcher’s office, Farmington Fire Dept, responded to the fire at 5:22 a.m. and was backed-up by Smith Grove . An electrical malfunction has been cited as the possible cause of a Thursday morning fire which gutted the Kountry Korner. Scientist Gets Patent For New Drug Delivery Process By David Williamson A pharmaceutical scientist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill has beeh granted a ; patent on a new drug delivery technique that he believes could help millions of leprosy victims around the world control their disease better. . Dr. James Swarbrick, chairman of the division of pharmaceutics at the UNC School of Pharmacy, said the technique would allow patients to receive a single monthly injection of leprosy medication instead of having to remember to take a tablet Center Plans Development Projects ■ The ■ Center Community Development Association held their January meeting at the community building on January 29. There were 19 members present. President Robert Tutterow presided. Community projects for 1985 were discussed and the following dates set for annual events: February 23-Fireman’s Banquet March 30-Spring Cleanup April 12 and 13-Barbecue and Flea Market September 13 and 14-Barbecue and Fair The association will also sponsor a Garden Contest in the spring. Other projects under consideration by the organization include an outdoor picnic shelter, new draperies and a trophy case for the community building. Plans were also completed for the visit of the judges for the Northwest North Carolina Development Association. The Annual Fireman’s Banquet on Saturday, February 23, will honor members of the Center Volunteer Fire . Departmenl and their families. The supper will begin at 6:30 followed by a program and the presentation of the Fireman-of- the-Year Award. Members of the com m u n ity d ev elo p m e n t association will provide the meats, drink and table service. The banquet is sponsored by the association to show their ap­ preciation of the men who volun­ teer as firemen and everyone living in the Center Fire District is invited to attend. every day. “ One of the major problems in treating leprosy has been that people start taking their medicine religiously and then either forget to take it or run out,” Swarbrick said in an interview. “ Another problem has been that after six months or so, symptoms can begin to disappear, and some patients mistakenly believe that they have been cured;” If such patients had regularly scheduled monthly appointments for injections, however, they would be more likely to continue receiving treatment as long as necessary, he said. The scientist found a way to coat dapson^ the least expensive and most commonly used leprosy drug, with a chemically altered form of the drug itself. As the coating dissolves, dapsone is released into the tissues where it has been injected. By varying the thickenss of the coating on drug particles, the researchers can now ensure that the release takes place over an entire month or longer, rather than all at once. The University of Southern California, where Swarbrick began work on the technique in 1980, will own the patent. UNC will license the process if drug companies become interested in using it. One advantage of the new method is that it doesn’t leave any residue in the body. “ Obviously, if you need to con­ tinue therapy for five years or more, you don’t want to leave a residue in the muscles that breaks down slowly or not at all,” Swar­ brick said. The scientist said he and his colleagues were able to make the dapsone particles small enough to pass in suspension through a needle. He envisions the medication being distributed as a di-y pwoder to be mixed with sterile water at clinics in remote areas of underdeveloped countries. Another advantage of the technique is that the long-lasting drug doses could be given inex­ pensively by a minimum of health care workers who regularly travel from place to place. The World Health Organization has been interested in the method •and supported its development, Swarbrick said, in part b^ause dapsone has been used safely in humans since the 1940s. As a result, the prolonged trials required for screening new drugs will not be necessary. Acedapsone, the less soluable MIKE “Bolo" MARTIN Salesman of the Month Our Congratulations goes to Mike Martin as January's Salesman of tlie Montit for Bell & Howard. Mike appre­ ciates all lijs custom­ ers who helped him win this award, stop in and see Mike or any of the Bell & Howard sales staff about a new 1985 Chevy or a quality used car.Mike “ Bolo" Martin Bell & Howard Chcvixiiet.Irwf. form of the medication in the outer coating, also has been proven safe. Further research at UNC on extending the drug delivery technique to other illnesses is going well, Swarbrick said. “ I’m bullish about it,” the in­ ventor said, “ and I hope it will be applied in whatever ways it might be useful.” The fact that dapsone itself is no longer protected by a patent may work against drug company in­ terest, at least in the technique's application to leprosy, he said. Government laboratories in Third World countires, however, where most of the estimated 12-15 million cases of the disease are found, could produce the modified dapsone eaily. One day, the extended therapy now required to control leprosy may not be needed at all, Swarbrick said. Recent developments in im­ munological control of the ancient illness offer promise of ultimately eradicating it. Suzanne Says Did you forget to laugh today? Did you forget to smile and lighten someone’s troubles Even for a little while? Did,you forget to sing today? And let the whole world ring, With a deeply felt expression of your joy in everything? Did you forget to walk today In someone elses shoes? To revel in their happiness And understand their blues? Did you forget to walk today? To lend a helping hand? Cause someone else’s project Was much bigger than they planned? Well if you did forget these things (we all do now and then), There's always a tomorrow for remembering again. Author unknown . Recipes from the country kit­ chen: CORN PUDDING 1 can creamed corn '/.I cup milk 2 eggs 8 graham crackers (^!.i cup), crushed 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons sugar Mix all ingredients. Place in a buttered casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for one hour in a shallow pan of water. Great alone or with various meals and old family recipes. PICKLED MUSHROOMS ■'.I cup vegetable oil cup wine vinegar '/.i teaspoon pepper 1 garlic clove 2 cans button mushrooms (4 bz. can each) I tablespoon parsley flakes 1 tablespoon salt Mix all ingredients together in a jar. Cover and shake. Refrigerate at least 24 hours. This must be kept in refrigerator for 2 or 3 weeks. Longer it stands, better it tastes. After mushrooms are eaten, liquid may be kept for future pickling. BROCCOLI WITH RICE 3 cups cooked rice (1 cup before cooking) 1 10 oz. package frozen chopped broccoli '2 cup grated cheese 1 medium, diced onion '•2 stick butter (melted) 1 can cream of chicken soup cup milk '.4 cup water Mix all ingredients together and bake in oven for 30 minutes at 350 degrees. Add about i-: can of french fried onions to top of dish during the last five minutes of cooking. Happy cookin! Suzanne Union Chapel Methodist Men To Hold Breakfast Union Chapel United Methodist Church men will have their break­ fast meeting, Sunday, February 10, 1985, at 7:30 a.m. in the fellowship building. Early 19th century French loom: were controlled by punched card: that were the forerunners of those used In modern data storage sys­ tems. CHICKEN PIE SUPPER Friday, Feb. 8,1985 5:00 Till Jerusalem Fire Dept. Highway 801 & 601 Also Serving HotDogs "Reg. $2 0 .0 0 14kt. Serpentines Sfine 9 U ta / H y . > 9 i€ i4 ia n '€ A o 4 n & 16” *19*® 18” W Middleweiqhts Not Lightweights 14kt. Diamond Hearts small— ^9®® large—*19®* Nice Selection Of Heart Charms For Your Valentine! 14kt SANDDOLLAR CHARMS Starting at *§88 Ruby &Dianiond Sapphire & Diamond Reg. $200. 30DAYLAYAWAY 14^/. $ ^ 8 8 cAa£n& ot- A ’19.95 C. *39.95 B. *24.95 D. *59.95 FREE E. *99.95 WRAPPING! 7” Herringbone Rracelets *10®® 7” Herringbone Bracelets ^24®® 5 0 t o 6 0 % Special Selections OFF i 4 kt. Cents ID Bracelets NOW ONLY $ Q Q 9 S Ladies 14 kt. Bangle Reg. $300. I^OW ONLY $(T^Q s Ladies 14 kt.B angJT^^^-^^°°- NOW ONLY $ ^ 9 5 T ^ R e g . $115.00 y WE W ILL MATCH GOLD PMCES WITH ANYONE IN THE TRLy)! 'V / i W o u t d B e il (O n fl6 e a t& , We will sell it by the ji^am, inch, piece or dozen, whatever you’re satisfied with. downtown Mocksville 634-5216 25thAnniversary Valentine Sale” NOW IN PROGRESS Look For Our Other Ad! DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,198S-13 A ■ '- T - ’ Mrs. Kristopher Ray Bell .. . was Gina Renee Blackwood Blackwood ir Bell Are United Miss Gina Renee Biacltwood of Cooleemee, N.C., is a graduate of 65th Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Frank Godbey.of Route 1, Mocksville, N.C., will celebrate their 65th wedding anniversary, Sunday, February 17,1985, with a covered dish lunch in their honor at the County Line Volunteer Fire Department. All friends and relatives are invited to attend, to bring a covered dish and share in the fellowship. They request no gifts. Lunch will begin at 12:30, after which a fellowship will continue until 3 p.m. Mr. & Mrs. Todd Henry Sherill Raleigh, North Carolina and Kristopher Ray Bell, also of Raleigh, were united in marriage, Saturday, February 2, 1985, at 2 p.m. at the Cooleemee United Methodist Church. The Reverend Alton Fitzgerald officiated at the double ring ceremony. A program of wedding music was presented by Ms. Mariola Crawford, organist, and Mrs. Pat Campbell, soloist. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a formal while gown of organza over satin, featuring a wedding band neckline with a yoke of English netting with beaded embroidery, accented with Chantilly lace. Her leg o' mutton eeves of chantilly.lace were fitted it the elbow to the wrist that flowed [into a full cathedral length train. le chose a fingertip veil of white [bridal illusion, attached to a Juliet ;ap of Chantilly lace and seeded rls. Kirby R. Bell of Farmville, N.C. Iwas his son’s best man. Ushering were Kirby R. Bell, Jr., Ibridegroom’s brother, and Kennard |S. Trowkridge, both of Raleigh, N.C.; Kevin Blackwood, bride’s [brother of Cooleemee; and Robert |E. Jones of Farmville, N.C. Bridesmaids were the bride's cousins. Miss Sherry Glass of Cooleemee, N.C., and Mrs. Tammy Morgan of Locust, N.C.; and Miss Salynn Steele of Salisbury, N.C. Randy Blackwood, bride’s brother, of Cooleemee, N.C. was an acolyte. Child attendants were Heather Glass and Hillary Kepley, flower girls; and Tommy Foster, ring bearer. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Flake Blackwood of Davie High School, and is attending N.C. State University at Raleigh. She is employed by Best Products. The bridegroom’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Kirby R. Bell of Farm­ ville, N.C. He is a graduate of, Farmville Central High School and Campbell University. He is also employed by Best Products. . After a honeymoon cruise to Nassau, the couple will make their home in Raleigh, North Carolina. RECEPTION Immediately following the wedding ceremony, a reception was held in the couple's honor in the church fellowship building. Hosts were the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Blackwood. REHEARSAL DINNER The bridegooom’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bell hosted a rehearsal dinner, Friday evening, at the church fellowship hall, following the wedding rehearsal. Around & About HONORED ON 90TH BIRTHDAY Mrs. Lizzie J. Cranfill celebrated her 90th birthday, Tuesday, January 22, 1985, at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Cranfill in the Woodland Development in Mocksville. Co-hosting the special occasion were another son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cranfifi and honoree’s daughters, Mrs. Louise Allen and Mrs. Kathlyn Jones and her husband, Phillip. The beautiful birthday cake was made and decorated by ' Mrs. Ruth Hockaday of Advance, N.C. Mrs. Cranfill was 90 years old Saturday, January 19, 1985. TRAVELING FRIENDS ENJOY OPEN HOUSE A large group of people who had traveled together during the past year were entertained with an Open House by Connie Singleton on Sunday, February 3, 1985 at the Elbaville United Methodist Church Fellowship Building. The group enjoyed refreshments of punch, Russian Tea, cheese ball, sausage balls, and a variety of sweets. Everyone brought snapshots from the various trips and enjoyed reliving all the fun-filled trips they had taken. Mrs. Elaine Smith won the door prize of a discount on a future trip. Brown And Sherrill Are Married The wedding of Sonja Jean Brown to Todd Henry Sherrill was held Sunday, January 27, 1985, at 3 p.m. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Randy Call in Mocksville, N.C. The Reverend John David Jones of Kernersville, N.C. officiated at the double ring ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr.. and Mrs. Matthew Brown of Ad­ vance, N.C.; and is a 198) graduate of Davie High School. .She is em­ ployed by Chesapeake Packaging Company of Winston-Salem, N.C. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Sherrill of Mocksville, N.C. He is a 1981 paduate of Davie High School; and is employed by Ingersoll-Rand, Inc. of Mocksville, N.C. Immediately following the wedding ceremony, a reception was held in the couple’s honor. Rauch And Swindler Entertained At Lunch Miss Janis Rauch and Paul Swindler were entertained at lunch, Sunday, February 3, at Bermuda Run Country Club Restaurant. Hosts for the occasion were Mrs. Lester Martin, Sr., Judge and Mrs. Lester Martin, and Mr. and Mrs. George Martin. Guests included members of the Rauch, Swindler and Martin families. Following the luncheon, a wed­ ding gift' was presented to the couple. JanisRauch Shower Honoree YouKvow GENUINE LEATHER FLATS Miss Janis Rauch, February 16th bride-elect of Paul Swindler, was honored Sunday, January 27, 1985, with a floating miscellaneous bridal shower at the home of Mrs. Bill Dwiggins in Garden Valley, Mocksville, N.C. Co-hostess with Mrs. Dwiggins was Mrs. Ronald Gantt. Upon arrival, the honoree was presented a corsage. A color scheme of shades of pink was carried out in the decorations throughout the home. Approximately fifty guests called during the appointed hours from 3 p.m. until 5 p.m. Special guestsat- tending were the bridal mothers. Mrs. Bob Rauch and Mrs. Paul Swindler, the bride-elect’s grand­ mother, Mrs. Graham Madison and her sister, Mrs. Glenda Long. Refreshments served consisted of decorated cake squares, chicken salad puffs, fresh fruit and dip, mixed nuts and punch. The hostesses presented Ms. Rauch with a sugar bowl in her cliosen china pattern. Garlic If the garlic is burned when being sauted, it will give the dish a bitter flavor. Pasta You shouldn’t keep cooked pasta "waiting" for guests, but in an emergency pour the pasta back into the kettle of hot water, add bits of butter.to coat the striind.s and to keep them from sticking together. Half an hour is the longest it should wait. Birth Announcements TRAVEL With The Madison Tours, 1985 QUALITY TOURS PERSONALLY CONDUCTED Florlda-Dlsneyworld-Epcot............................................... Natchez-New Orleans-The Old South In Springtime........March 23-31 Hawaii-Four Islands..................................................... . 29’May 9 Holland Tulip Festival and Great Lakes.................................May ' '-JfGaspe’ Peninsula-Quebec-Cape Cod................................. .. California-Victoria-Canadian Rockies-..........................I a Alaska-Western Canada-Inside Passage...........................-luly ZO-Aug. Z1 Quebec-Nlagara Falls-New England Byways...........................Oct. b-l 5 Nova Scotia-New England.................................................:. . Oct. 6-20Caribbean Cruise-Jamica-Panama-Aruba-South America.... Nov. 9-16 (Jrient-Japan-Peking-Hong Kong-Bangkok-Manila.............. June 4-22 Write: Madison Tours, Inc. P.O. Box 528, Statesville, N.C. 28677 ■ ^^M M T e le p h o n e 704-873-2669^h w m MOCK Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Lee Mock, Jr. of Advance, North Carolina, proudly announce the birth of their first child, a daughter, Kasey Parker, born Tuesday, January 16, 1985' at Forsyth Memorial Hospital in Winston- Salem, N.C. The baby weighed 6 lbs. 11 ozs. and was 20 inches in length at birth. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kaylor of Marion, N.C. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Lee Mock,Sr. of Advance, N.C. Great-grandparents are Mrs. Ida S. Jones of Marion, N.C., and Mrs. Myra Xaylor, also of Marion. Mrs. Mock is the former Ida Kaylor of Marion, N.C. KNIGHT Mr. and Mrs. Jay F. Rnight of Cooleemee, N.C. announce the birth of their first child, a son Zachary Todd, born Friday, January 25, 1985, at Rowan'Memorial Hospital in Salisbury, N.C. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 11 ozs. and was 21 inches in length at birth. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. W.L. Knight of Advance, N.C. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. William Barbee, Jr. of Route 1, Mocksville, N.C. Great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Brady Bostian of China Grove, N.C.; and Mr. and Mrs. Brady Barbee of Woodleaf, N.C. OWENS BIRTH The Rev. and Mrs. R. Shane Owens of Advance, N.C. announce the birth of their second child, a daughter, Amy Elizabeth. She was born on January 24,1985, at Forsyth Memorial Hospital at 8:12 a.m. Amy weighed 7 pounds, 11 ounces, and measured 20 inches. The Owenses" first child, a son, Wesley David, is 22 months old. LADIES 5V2 ■ 10 Ass’t colors: red, white, natural, navy. All colors available, but not in every style. Shoe Show 196 Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. HOURS; Mon. ■ Sat. 10 to 9 Sunday 1 to 6 FIRST FEDERAL’S IRA A PLAN THAT HAS IT ALL ■ r First Federal has an IRA Plan that’s just right for you, whether you can afford to contribute $200 or $2,000. Consider the benefits: ■ TA X DEFERRED HIGH INTEREST Y our IR A earns high interest and every penny is tax deferred u n til withdraw al. • IMM EDIATE TA X SAVINGS A ll IR A contributions ore fu lly tax deductible. You pay less tax and • keep mure o f what you earn! Remember that your First Federal IRA is insured to |l00,000 separately from your other savings by the FSLIC, a U.S. Government Agency. See one of our IRA Specialists today, and let us set up a plan to meet your needs._________ • RETIREM ENT SECURITY C ontributions plus earned interest grow rapidly to help assure your future com fort. . NO FEES F irst Federal charges no fees to adm inister your account. FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Main Office; 230 North Chern' Street; Branch Offices: 4M Hanes Mall/3443 Robin Hood Road/ 130 S. Stratford Road/2815 Reynolda Road/3001 Waughtown Street; Mocksville Office; 142 Gaither Street; Clemmons Office: 2421 Lewisville-Clemmons Road 919-72.3-.%04 wimiTiittT 14-DAVm COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 Dropping Autos Over Sea Cliff Seems Practical In Gibraltar By Joy Aschenbach • National Geographic News Service , More than 10,000 motor vehicles are jammed onto the Rock of 'Gibraltar. For at least 15 years, they’ve had no place to go but up and down and around its 26 miles of road. All that should change on Feb. 5, when the large gates at Gibraltar's only border, closed since mid-1969, ate thrown open once again. Driving back and forth across the narrow, sandy isthmus to the Spanish mainland may seem like one of the smaller consequences of this political decision, but it should be significant in bringing tourists to Uie British colony, especially from Spain’s popular Costa del Sol, and in reviving its economy. One of the limestone peninsula’s little inconveniences that may be improved by the open frontier is the disposal of automobiles that cannot be repaired. After all, there is not enough room on “Gib,” as Gibraltar is called here, for a junkyard or “cemen- terio de coches” like those across the border in Spain. Gibraltar is only about three miles long and three quarters of a mile wide--a fortress of rock cliffs rising straight out of the sea. Even the airport runway is intersected by a road, on which cars have to stop and wait during takeoffs and landings. What do they do with the cars that l»cak down? Hiey, take them to the top of a cliff and drop them into the Mediterranean Sea. What else? It may seem a bit primitive, but “ it’s the only way to get rid to them,” explains Charles Rosado of the Gibraltar government. Each year, officials send atwut 300 cars over the edge. They drop 200 feet to the sea, down the Public Works Department’s car chute. A stone wall with a wide gate marks the spot. The stripped cars fall onto an underwater ledge at a depth of about 40 to 50 feet, later to be washed to the bottom by storms, Rosado says. They make a big splash, but no environmental impact, he insists. Their final resting'place is 3,000 to 4,000 feet down. If there is a ready market in Spain for old cars, the system will be abandoned. Otherwise, it will have to continue. At times in the past, some commercial contractors have boated the cars away for scrap, but such ventures didn’t prove profitable. Since Spain completely closed off Gibraltar’s only' landward link in . 1969 as part of its campaign to regain the strategic peninsula that Britain took in 1704, Gibraltar has led an island-like existence. Travelers from around the world have been forced to reach the Rock by roundabout air and sea routes, generally via Morocco or Britain, never directly from'Spain. The new Spanish Socialist government opened the gates a crack in late 1982, but not enough to help Gibraltar’s economy. Acccss was restricted to pedestrian traffic by residents of Spain or Gibraltar. And the Spaniards who set foot on the Rock cannot bring back Gibraltarian goods. Cut off from the European con­ tinent for more than 15 years, Gibraltar, despite its imposing position at the western entrance of the Mediterranean, lost most of the tourists who made up one of its two major industries. Without them, hotels and restaurants have gone into a decline. Gibraltar’s other big asset, the Royal Naval Dockyard has been shut down because of budget cuts in Britain. The Gibraltar government plans to convert it int8 a ship repair operation that it hopes will restore lost jobs by the end of 1985. More than 30,000 people live on the Rock. They suffer from shortages of water, and 'use any methods to get it: catching raindrops on 75 acres of corrugated iron sheets anchored to the Rock’s rainier side and chan­ neling them into huge reservoirs, making sea water potable at distillation plants,' and even im­ porting water from Britain and Holland on tankers. British and Spanish leaders meet every few months to continue talks about Gibraltar’s future. As part of their November 1^84 agreement, Spain said it would open the border by Feb. 15,1985, and Britain for the first time said it was willing to discuss the question of. “sovereignty” over the peninsula. The permanent solution may defy the legend that the Rock will remain British as long as the famed Bar- bary apes roam its heights. Actually tailless monkeys, the animals number about 40 today. Some lake candy from strangers and are mischievous around motorists, breaking off windshield wipers, radio antennas, and side-view mirrors. But they hardly do enough damage to be blamed for the deep- sixing of hundreds of cars in the Mediterranean, and they are likely to be around for some time. N.C. Thoroughbred Horse Breeders Association Meets At Bermuda Run O Royal Navy Dockyard Q Highest point*],398 ft Q Water c&tchments GIBRALTARsi (UNITED KINGDOM) Strait o f Gibraltar Europa Point Myrna Harris of Whip-O-Will Farm in Davie County was re­ elected secretary-treasurer of the North Carolina Thoroughbred Horse Breeders Association at the annual meeting held at Bermuda Run on January 26. Steppin Lively, 4-year-oId filly owned and bred by Ed Clark of Lone Oak Farm, Candler, was named ■ 1984 “ Horse of the Year” by the Association. Steppin Lively won the Wishing Well Stakes and ran a close second to Am Capable in the Correction Handicap and is a daughter of Crow out of the Dr. Fager broodmare Lively Welcome. Voted Best North Carolina-Bred 'Horse of the 'V'ear was Top Socialite (Topsider-Social Lesson, Forum), bred by Bill Tripp's Holly Ridge Farms, Greenville, and currently raced by owner Tjo Tek Tan in Europe.The 2-year-old filly, trained by Michael R Stoute and purchased for $75,000 at the 1983 Keeneland September yearling sale, won the Grade III Pritchard Services Cherry Hinton Stakes at Newmarket, England. ■ Holly Ridge Farms was also honored as owner of the 1984 North Carolina Broodmare of the V'ear- Social Lesson (Forum-Cherry Red, Eurasian), the dam of Top Socialite and producer of a filly by Xoda which is still running in the name of Holly Ridge. Social Lesson is currently,in foal to Irish Tower and is to be bred back to Explodent. • Elected President at the Annual Meeting was Ronald L . Dawe, D.V.M, a native of Allentown, Pa., and currently President and Senior Partner of the Apex, N.C., Veterinary Hospital. He is also Director of the Equine Program at Martin Junior College, Williamston, N.C., and is a partner in Apex Thoroughbreds, Ltd. The new Vice President is Dr. Rex Eatman of Raleigh, head of Eatman & Associates which- handles sales, racing syndicates and as a ■Thoroughbred bloodstock con­ sultant. Myrna Harris, Whip-O-Will Farm, Mocksville, was re-elected Secretary-Treasurer. Elected to three-year terms on the Board of Directors were: Fred B. McCashin, D.V.M, and head of the Carolina Equine Clinic, Southern Pines; Thomas L. Teal, Walnut Hill Farm, Oxford; and Joan Thiele, The Winter Farm and Master of the Weymouth Bassets, Southern Pines, a private pack. Tour Fees Reduced I Old Salem and the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts are reducing the fees for two of their tours by 50 percent during February. The lower fees apply to the tour of all seven Old Salem exhibit buildings as well as to the tour of those buildings and the Museum of Early Southern Decorative Arts (MESDA). Old Salem is open every day of the week; Sundays 1:30-4:30 p.m. and other days 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. For further information teleph­ one 723-3688. imoiis Wrangler Fit LADIES FASHION DENIMS Values To *39.50 JUNIOR TOPS Values To *24.00 99 UP5 ViSA (m o s ^q r ^ r j MIUSOOTUT 1-40 — Clemmons Exit Clemmons/ N.C. SALE HOURS: 10:00 - 9:00 Wed. - Sat. Lester Bowles 6- Kermit Cartner Retire T w o '"Pros" A tte st T o Q u a lity O f R o a d s ester Bowles, maintenance supervisor with the local epartment of Transportation, describes the widening of larmington Road as the most gratifying accomplishment r his career. He has spent all of his 38 years with the DOT I Davie, excluding a two year period in 1973 when he was lansferred to Rowan. Co-workers at the local depart­ ment of Transportation accuse Lester Bowles, maintenance supervisor, of sleeping with one foot out the window. So adept at the dispatching of trucks during inclement weather, they kid Bowles that this is the only possible way he could keep so in tuned to the wp/ilher. "He knows when the first llakc of snow falls,” Van Swicegood, fellow worker said in confirmation of the accusation. But Bowles laughs; adding that its simply a matter of good com- mynicatipns and 30 years e.\- pericnce. Bowles, who resides just outside Mocksville, retired as local DOT supervisor Thursday. He is proud of his years of service, and the many things which have been ac­ complished during his tenure. “ Davie County has some of the best roads in the state,” he said proudiy,” and I challenge anyone who doubts it to make an active comparison of roads in North Carolina.” Bowles joined the department in 1947 as a truck driver, a position he maintained until his appointment as maintenance supervisor in 1971. He has witnessed many changes in the local road system during the past 38 years, including an increase in the total number of miles of road his department maintains annually. "Back in '47 the department maintained about 350 to 400 miles of road which has increased to 500 miles in 1985,” he said. He also added that when he joined the force, a large portion were unpaved with the few paved primary roads gutted with holes and rough spots. However, he describes Davie County roads in 1985 as some of the best maintained anywhere with very few miles of unpaved roads remaining. The widening of the Farmington Koad (N.C. 801) in the early 1970’s is an accomplishment of which' Bowles is very proud. "I guess I enjoyed working on this road the best of any,” he said. "The road was very narrow, and if a car went one foot off the pavement it ended up in the ditch filled knee high with water. He supervised the widening and re-asphalting of this stretch which has since proven to be a highly traveled stretch of road. Kermit Cartner, maintenance crew leader for 22 years', also retired Thursday. He and Bowles shared some of the pitfalls of their jobs as Department of Tran­ sportation employees. "The most frustrating part is the public’s lack of understanding about the Department’s mission and the regulations under which we must abide to accomplish this,” Bowles and Cartner said. "No one seems to understand that their are priorities and guidelines that must be followed in each aspect of our job whether its widening a road, re-paving it, or scraping snow away,” Bowles said. "You wouldn’t believe the phone calls we get from really upset pople,” he said, “ especially when it snows.” Bowles explained that there is a strict schedule lor silting, sanding and scraping roads during inclement weather with trucks assigned to each road according to priority. "I- 40 has to come first,” he said. “There’s no way around it. The schedule then calls for salting, sanding and clearing off primary roads, paved secondary roads and last but not least, unpaved roads. But when the weather turns bad, people tend to forget the priority (continued to page 4-B) Kermit Cartner of Davie Academy, recalls his 22 years as maintenance crew leader with the N.C. Department of Transportation. He retired Thursday. (Photos by Robin Fcrgusson) Retirement isn't easy when you've devoted 38 years of your life to a job, Bowles said. As the retiring road maintenance supervisor in Davie, he described local roads as "some of the best in the state." J.M. Hall, DOT Highway Maintenance engineer, (left) said the department will sorely miss the 60 years of combined experience of Cartner and Bowles. Both retired Thursday. DAVIE COUNTY Feature 1~B fehrmry 7,1985 V e rn o n W h ita k e r H o n o re d B y H is R o u te 2 P o sta l P a tro ls Retires After 38 Years It isn’t everyday that a retiring rural route carrier has an entire community honor him with a retirement dinner. But in retrospect, Vernon Whitaker of Mocksville, isn't the typical mail carrier. Whitaker, who joined the Mocksville Postal Service in December, 1945, has made many friends during his career as Rural Route 2 mail carrier. Children were often recipients of his kindness, with those running to greet him rewarded with a sucker as a very special treat. ’ Whitaker officially retired Friday after 38 years and 2 months service. To show their appreciation. Patrons along Rui-al Route 2 will honor Whitaker with a covered disii supper at 7:00 p.m. Thursday at the Farmington Masonic I^dge. The dinner is staged to honor Whitaker for the many kindnesses he ex­ tended to patrons along his route during the past 38 years. Whitaker joined the Mocksville Postal Service in 1945 as a substitute carrier. He was appointed as a Mocksville City carrier in 19C0, a position he maintained until J902. He was assigned as Route 2 carrier that same year, continuing to serve them until his retirement Friday. Whitaker explained that his current route covers 02 miles and 575 residences in the Farmington aod Smith Grove Communities. “ I have become quite attached to the many patrons along my route, and will miss the day-to-day contact with them,” Whitaker said. “ It has really Iwen a difficult decision to make.” Whitaker explained that Friday, his last day, was especially hard. "The people have been so good to me,” he said. “ When they come out in weather like it was last Friday to wish me well, it really means a lot. These memories are very dear to me.” By the end of his route Friday, Whitaker had a carload of cakes and gifts from patrons wishing him well. A very special gift was a cake from the student body of North Davie Junior High School. It read “Special Delivery” to Mr. Vernon Whitaker with the address listed as Leisure Lane, Retirement City, U.S.A. Happy Returns Requested. Whitaker plans to stay active following retirement. He has been active as a local boy scout leader for 25 years and is currently servjjig as vice-president of the Davie County Little League Baseball Association. Vernon Whitaker, Rural Route 2 Carrier for the Mocksville Post Office, received a very special retirement gift Friday from the student body of North Davie Junior High. The farewell cake read "Special Delivery-Mr. Vernon Whitaker - Leisure Lane-Retirement City, USA-Many Happy returns requested." 2B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISH RECORD. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 Tony Tatum sails above West Rowan defenders for two more in Davie's easy win. Tracy Frost (far right) waits to rebound. ( Photo by John Vernelson). Point guard Michelle Deal moves the b«ll against West Rowan in Davie's upset win Friday night. Forward Julie Freshwater (12) waits for the play to develop. (Photo by John Vernelson). S. Davie Has Winning Season: By TORI EVANS ' The South Davie boys varsity basketball team has had a suc­ cessful season so far. They started off with a 74-43 victor.N over Erwin, Greg Anderson led the team with 22 points. Shane Fleming followed closely behind with 20 points. In their ni-xl gann*. l,cxinglon slipped by the 'I’igers 5U-4(>. Clifford Dulin led scoring with l(i points. Greg Anderson added 14. South Davie outplayed Asheboro and won 62-42. Greg Anderson had 22 points and Clifford Dulin had 18 points. The Tigers defeated China Grove in a close game. The final score was 31-30. Shane Fleming led scoring with 15 points. By the score of 48-45, South Davie defeated Southeast Stokes. Greg Anderson had 18 points and Chris Callison added 10. Against Chestnut Grove, Shane Fleming scored 18 points and Clifford Dulin scored 16. Despite their efforts, the Tigers lost 64-59. South Davie defeated North Davie 58-43. Clifford Dulin scored 18 points and Greg Anderson added 12 for the Tigers. Frank Ward led scoring for North Davie with. 13 points. Todd Gulledge and C. Lyons each added 12. • By the score of 56-55, South Davie beat Erwin. Shane Fleming and Clifford Dulin each had 14 points. David Rosser put up 12. Asheboro was defeated 59-49 by the Tigers. The top scorer for this North Davie Wildcats Add Two More Wins The North Davie Wildcats added two more wins?to their season total this week. By defeating North Davidson 69-12 and defeating South Davie 46-26 the Wildcats now stand 9-1 on the season with one match left. The Wildcats will host Asheboro on January 28 at 4 p.m. North vs. N. Davidson 69-12 RESULTS; 80 lbs. - Hayes (North) pin Young (ND) 2nd 90 lbs. Howard (North) pin Hollifield (ND) 2nd 100 lbs. - Reavis (North) pin Childers (ND) 2nd 107 lbs. - Merlin (North) pin Wilson (ND) 3rd 114 lbs. - Shore (North) pin Pruitt (ND) 2nd 121 lbs. - Greene (ND) pin Jones 3rd 128 lbs. - Moore (North) dec. Reicht (ND) 14-2 134 lbs. - Ross (North) pin Langford (ND) 2nd 140 lbs. - Collins (North) pin Hedgecock (ND) 2nd 147 lbs. - Wilson (ND) pin Ball 2nd 157 lbs. - Shipp (North) pin Sink (ND) 1st 169 lbs. - Simpson (North) won by Forfeit 177 lbs. - Dickens (North) dec. Foster (ND) 13-2 HWT - Evans (North) pin Tysinger (ND) 2nd PRELIMINARIES 78 lbs. - Darr (ND) pin Felts 2nd 126 lbs. - Blankenship (North) pin Lassiter 2nd 138 lbs. - Williams (North) dec. Smith (ND) 11-6 North vs. South 46-26 RESULTS: 81 lbs. - Foster (SD) pin Felts (ND) 2nd 91 lbs. - Page (SD) pin Howard (ND) 2nd 101 lbs. - Reavis (ND) pin Cregar (SD) 1st 108 lbs. - Merlin (ND) dec. J. Cregar (SD) 11-1 115 lbs. - Shore (ND) over Yonts (SD) disqualify 122 lbs. r Jones (ND) pin Draughn ISD) 1st 129 lbs. - Moore (ND) dec. Streit (SD) 8-3 135 lbs. - Ross (ND) pin Mashburn (SD) 3rd 141 lbs. - Collins (ND) dec. Arguello (SD) 13-9 148 lbs. - Ball (ND) pin Barker (SD) 2nd 158 lbs. - Jones (SD) pin Shipp (ND) 3rd 170 lbs. - Morgan (SD) pin Simp­ son (ND) 2nd 180 lbs. • Dickens (ND) pin Lumley (SD) 2nd HWT. - Kollins (SD) dee. Evans (ND) 4-3 PRELIMINARIES: lOO lbs. - Stovall (ND) pin Brown (SD) 1st St John’s Keep No. 1 Ranking; Duite Is Fifth St. John’s, which has.w on all three of its games since assunning the No. 1 ranking, rem ains atop • The Associated Press college basketball announced today. The Redmen, 18-1 and winners of their test 13 games, received 60 of 62 first-place votes and 1,238 points from the nationwide panel of sports w riters and broadcasters. St. John’s made up a 14-point deficit and beat Seton Hall 87-76 Monday night after beating Provi­ dence 77-60 and Connecticut 97-64 last week. • Georgetown, Memphis State and Southern Methodist remained sec­ ond thrduKh fourth, respectively. ’The Hoyas, 19-2, who held the top spot In the preseason poll and the first nine regular-season polls before losing two consecutive games last week, received one first-place vote and 1,153 points. Memphis State, 17-1, received the other first-place vote and 1,126 points, 93 more than Southern Methodist, 18-2. ' Duke Improved one spot In the poll, taking the fifth spot with 909 points. Syracuse, the only team besides .St. Jo h n ’s to . beat Georgetown, jumped from ninth to sixth with 899 points, while Okla­ homa remained seventh with 855. Michigan, eighth last week, Illinois, which fell from fifth after a 20-point loss to Purdue, and Georgia Tech, which fell from eighth after losing to North Caro­ lina State, rountled out the top Ten. Michigan had 769 points, Illinois 748 and Georgia Tech 704. Nevada-Las Vegas, which has the current longest winning streak In Division I — 16jgames — jumped from 16th last week to lead the Second Ten. The Top Twenty team s in the AssoclatecJ Press’ college basketball poll, with lirsl-place votes m parentheses, total points, record Ihrough M on- t.S t. Jchn’s (60)2.Q eorgetow n (1) 3.M em pnl8 St. (l) 4.80. M ethodist S.Duke e.Syracuse T.OKIahomaB.M ichigan g .lllin o li lO .G eorgiaTech • 11.N ev.'Las Vegas 12.I0W8 13.Kansas14.Louisiana Tech 15.North C arollria 16-Oregon St. l7.Tulsa IQ.OePaut 19.Vitlanova20.M aryland Record Pts PVB 18'1 1236 1 10-2 1153 2 17-1 1126 3 16'2 1033 4 16>3 900 6 15-3 899 9 17-4 65S 7 16-3 769 10 18*5 748 5 16*4 704 6 17-2 456 18 ie>4 419 «- 18-4 393 19 1B>2 380 15 16*6 365 11 16-4 295 14 17-3 277 12 14.&210 13 14-S 187 le 16-6 155 ■7 game was Greg Anderson with 24 points. 17 point .s were added by Shane Fleming. Once again, China Grove was outscored by , South Davie 69-44. Shano Fleming led the Tigers and scored 19 points. Greg Anderson put up 14. South Davie defeated Southeast Stokes 49-43. Clifford Dulin had 17) points and Greg Anderson added in. [ South Davie now stands witlvill wins and 2 losses. The Tigers! face I Chestnut Grove Tuesday, February I 5 and North Davie on Friday,! February 8. Both of these games| will be plumed at South Davie. Mocksville Recreation. Little League Basketball Mocksville Recreation Depart­ ment Little League basketball tournament results are as follows: Friday. Feb. I Panthers (14) Dyson-1 Grubb-4 Peacock-6 Snider-3 Blue Devils (19) Cash-3 Roberts-2 Hogue-8 Johnson-6 Tarheels (14) Chaffin-2 Garnett-4 CalIison.-2 Duckworth-6 Lady Monarchs (8) Fleming-2 Green-2 Mando-4 Wolfpack (13) Whitaker-11 Draughn-2 Cavaliers (i;i) Collins-8 Dillard-2 Freeman-1 T. Fortune-2 Heritage (99) Bobkats (34) I.L. Long Const. (82) Mocksville Builders Supply (55) MEN’S ADULT BASKETBALL STANDINGS ., W ....LI Heritage 5 o| I.L. Long Const. 4 11 Mocksville Bldrs. supply 4 l| T. AnderSon 2 James Barber Shop 2 Crown Wood 1 Bobkats 0 BOYS SEMI-FINALS Monday, February 4 GIRLS SEMI-FINALS Saturday, Feb. 2 Koadrunners (II) Panthers (5) Whitaker-3 Peacock-3 Kristy Kowalske-6 Snider-2 Nichols-2 Cougars(10) Minwalla-4 Ferguson-2 Marklin-2 Marion-2 Lady Raiders (9) Eaton-7 Pierce-2 Indians (28) Lanning-6 A. Chatman-4 Blalock-5 Brewer-2 Shelton-10 J. Spry-1 Deacons(19) Mayfield-10 Potts-3 Heiner-3 Williams-1 Ivey-2 Lakers(24I Renegar-f Howell-I Roberson-f Gregory-1 Hauser-I Rockets (T WallJ Bushl Correlll BOYS 2nd ROUND GAMES Saturday, Feb. 2 Lakers(22) Renager-4 Howell-13 Gregory-3 Hauser-2 Indians(10) A. Chatman-2 Shelton-4 Allen-4 J. Spry-4 B. Chatman-2 Kockcts (12) Walf-6 Correll-2 Page-2 D’Avino-2 Deacons(26) M ayfieId-12 Potts-6 Heiner-2 Williams-1 Greene-2 Mock-3 Wildcats (9) Crenshaw-7 Myers-2 Blue Devils (11) Cash-6 R. Scott-1 Hogue-2 Johnson-2 Tarheels (8) Chaffin-2 Welch-5 Duckworth-1 76'ers (II) Clark-2 Reavels-2 J. Dalton-2 Martin-5 Little League Finals will be held on Saturday, February 9: Girls at 1:30 and Boys at 2:30. JUNIOR HIGH BASKETBALL RESULTS Saturday, February 2 Nuggets CI6) Jones-2 Howard-10 Roberson-12 Chunn-12 Blazers(27) Rumple-7 Anderson-4 Clark-16 Bucks (35) C. Mayfield-15 J. Mayfield-4 Parker-2 Gagne-2 Peebles-12 Nets (22) Wilks-4 Howeil-3 Hancock-3 Allen-4 Clement-8 JR. HIGH STANDINGS W.. Nuggets 2 Bucks 2 Blazers 1 Nets 1 MEN’S ADULT BASKETBALL RESULTS Friday, February I James Barber Shop (64) Crown Wood (42) i Saturday. February 2 T. Anderson (65) James Barber Shop (61) Girl’s finals will be at 1:1 Saturday, February 9: Cougars Roadrunners. Boy’s Finals will be at 2:| Saturday, February 9: Indians Deacons. N. Davie Seconi In Wrestling Tournament .On Saturday Jan. 26, 1985 Nor| Davie hosted the first North-Sou Davie Invitational. Seven tead competed: North Davie, Soul Davie, Corriher-Lipe. Erwif Southeast Stokes, Concord. West Iredell. North DavIe had two wrestlers'! finish first in their respectif weight classes; Scott Beaucha (90) and Erik Blankenship (12 Blankenship was also voted as^tj MVP of the tournament by coaches. South Davie had ol wrestler to finish Ist-Potts (70).l RESULTS: 70-Potts (SD) Tilley (WI), Lofll (E), Brown (CL). 80-Holland (C), Sigmon (WI| Wheeler (Cl), Hedrick (E). 90-Beauchamp (ND), Cregd (SD), Shankel(C). Hyde (CL). 100-Priddy (SES), Tierney (C| Alexander (WI), Chambers (CLI 107-Bowman (SES), Chappel (WI), Staley (ND), Nixon (CL). 114-Williams (SES), Hanes (E l Eaton (ND), Fox (WI). 121-Clark (C). Lindsay (E)| Duggins (SES). Freeman (ND). 128-Blaknenship (ND), Jones (C)| Forte (C), Jordan (CL). 134-Opper (W I), Lynch (C)| McKenzie (E), Williams (NO. 147-Martin (CL), Jenkins (ND| England (WI), Reilly (C). 157-Rash (WI), Sechler (CL)^ Overbay (C). 169-Hoiland (WI). Edwards (O l 177-0'Keefe (WI). McGee (CDJ Edwards (C). Hwt.-Carter (CL), Partida (W I).I TEAM RESULTS: West Iredell 213 i/i Concord 173 Corriher-Lipe 131 •/.: North Davie 128 Southeast Stokes 116 Erwin 68 South Davie 50 Where more Americans find a bigger refund H*R BLOCK- Found Michael Monical W e c a n ’ l p r o n ils f e v e r y o n e t h is . I) u t In a rc L -c n l s u r v e y o f c u s to m e r s w h o U o t r e fu n d s . 3 G U I o f 4 b e lie v e llie y g o t b ig g e r - ■ ■ l li e lrr e fu n d s I lia n I f t h e y " d id o w n la x e .s . 3 o u t o f 4 ! $ 3 9 4 ! What can we find for you? 310 Lexington Rd. Cooleemee Shopping Center Mocksville, NC ^ . 704-634.3203 Cooleemee, NC 704-?84-?724O p e n : M o n d a y th ru F rid a y B :3 0 A .M . • 0 P .M . S a tu rd a y 8 t3 0 A .M . • S P .M . O p e n : M o n d a y th ru F rid a yB :3 0 A .M . ■ 1 P .M . 2 P .M . • S :3 0 P .M . S a tu rd a y 6 :3 0 A .M . • 1 P .M . M a tte r C a rd a n d V lia a cce p te d a t m o st area lo c a tio n !. Davie Enters Final Week Of NPC Regular Season Play DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE K WORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,198S-3B . The Davie High baskelball teams will ■ close out the roRiilar season play in the North Hciliixiiil Con­ ference next week playing Trinity here on Tuesday night and North Davidson there on Friday night. The. schedule for this week had Davie at Salisbury on Tuesday night and-North Rowan there on Wed­ nesday night. Coach Bill Peeler's girls dropped West Rowan from first to third with a 43-36 victory last Friday night. Coach Paul Dreschler’s boys made it a clean sweep with a 6:-15 victory in the nightcap. The win was significant to Davie’s girls because it moved them out of I the NPC cellar. The War Eagles are 4-8 in league play 4-14 overall. The top eight teams in the final stan­ dings qualify for the postseason tournament. West led 29-26 going into the fourth quarter, but were oulscored 17,-7 in the final eight minutes. The Falcons had trouble finding the basket as the War Eagles forged ahead. "We are in a terrible shooting slump," West Coach Gary Safrit said. “ It has hurt us the past three or four games.” Davie's Andria Rayle l^d all scorers with 13 points. Selena Fowler added 10 and Tammy Pulliam chipped in nine. Tlieresa Cress, with 10 points was the only Falcon to place in double figures. Davie held Nessie Holland, West's leading scorer, to two points. In the boys game, Davie took an early lead and coasted from there. The War Eagles led 30-17 at half- time and increased that margin to 44-27 at the end of the third quarter^ Davie Coach Paul Dreschsler played reserves much of the second half. ‘‘We played well at the start of the game," Drechsler said. ‘‘We hit a little bit of a lull at the start of the third quarter, but we played well again after that." The win pul Davie at 8-4 in the NPC play and 11-7 overall. The War Eagles moved into a third-place tie with North Davidson in the con­ ference standings. North Rowan leads the league with a 9-2 mark. “The standings right now are so close, we have In win the games we are favored in win." Drechsler said. “ We have a lough end-of-lhe-year schedule."- War Eagle forward Tony Frost scored 18 points to lead the winners. Doug Jacobs added 13 points and Tony Tatum scored 10. G irls WEST ROWAN (36) - Holland 2, Myers 9, Bogle 9, Cress 10, Reid 4, Knox 2, Steele, Lodin, Wilson. DAVIE COUNTY (43) - Rayle 13, Fowler 10, Pulliam 9, Presnell 7, Stroud 4, Deal, Freshwater. West Rowan « 7 16 7-36 Davie County 6 7 13 17 - 43 Boys WEST ROWAN (45) - Lowe 13, Hogue B, Cuthberlson B, Tabor 10, Wllllanns 2, Lytton 2, Payne 2, Rankin, Reid. D AVIE COUNTY (61) - Frost 18, Jacobs 13, Talum 10, Foster 8, Folmar 4, York 3, Gaddy 3, Barnette 2, Ijames, Nestor, GanIt, Naylor, Bohannon. West Rowan 7 10 10 IB - 45 Davie County 12 18 14 17 - 61 Tanglewood Lands Public Links Tourney The U.S. Amateur Public Links Championship, which has never been held in North Carolina in its 63- year existence, has been awarded to Tanglwood for 1986, members of the Tanglewood Park trustees announced. The Public Links is an amateur event for golfers who are members of courses that are open to the public. The tournament is popular in the West and Midwest and has been held in the south only once — Atlanta in 1948. “ We're just glad to have it here," Tanglewood golf professional Gordon Cox said. “ We feel we need to do something to become known to the country and to let everyone know we're interested in having other events here and that this is a facility that can handle them." Tanglewood was the site of the 1974 PGA Championship and is ranked among the top public golf courses in the country. Jayvees Lose To W. Rowan . West Rowan defeated Davie County 55-44 in a boys junior varsity basketball game F;-iday. DAVIE'(44) - Ebert 5, Jarvis, Tabor 11, Arnold, Potts, McGuire 6, Stockton, McClannon, Brown, Dyer 4, Jones 16. W EST ROWAN (55) - Lytton, Phlter, Allison 10, Sherrill 10, Clark 4, Redmond 2, Hudson, SokolowskI 10, Mlnler 15, Poleat 4. D avl* 9 9 15 11 - 44 W*St 16 16 14 9 - 55 Carla Presnell (30) gets good rebounding position as Tamnjy f^iliam (22) and Michelle Deal (33) double team inside. (Pnotoby John Vernelson). South Davie Girls Defeat S.E. Stokes By TJ Eanes Shawn Smoot led South Davie's, jayvee girls to a 46-19 victory over SE Stokes with 28 points Friday. The girls are now 10-0. After a slow first half with south leading 20-12, the Tigers came out to play tough defense and open up a 34-17 lead at the end of the 3rd quarter. South held SE Stokes to only 3 points in the fourth to win 46-19. Shawn Smoot had an outstanding game with 28 points, 5 steals and 5 blocks. Gail Bohannon came off the bench and had a fine game scoring 6 points with 3 steals. Shannon Jordon added 6 and Beth Mashburn, Janice Powell and Angie Henson had 2 points each. Leading Rebounders were Angie Potts with 13, and 4 steals and 2 blocks. Mashburn had 8 rebounds and 2 steals. South will play at Thomasville Tuesday and North Davie Friday before returning home to play Northeast Tuesday. South Davie-46 S.E. Stokes - i'J SOUTH DAVIE-Smoot 28, Jordan 6, Bohannon 6, Mashburn 2, Powell 2, Henson 2, Potts, Stevenson, Riggs, Cunningham, Foster. SE Stokes-Searcy 13, Paris 4, Williams 2, Boyd, Joyce, Rothrock, Shelton. Forward Tracy Frost (right) scored 18 "g l! Eagles'6l-45win over West Rowan Friday night. (Photo by John Vernelson). ________ Some people believed they could frighten off storms by shouting and waving weapons. • Davie American Basketball League Results The snow caused two games on Monday, January 28 and two games on Tuesday, January 29 to be postponed. Monday's Division I !games will be made up on Friday, "February 15, and Tuesday’s Girl's Division games will be made up on -Saturday, February 16 starting at 2:00 p.m. UPCOMING GAMES iThursday, February 7 "Blue Devils vs. Bullets - 6:30 Panthers vs. Stars - 7:30 Friday, February « Sixers vs. Celtics - 6:30 Tar Heels vs. Deacons -8:00 Blue Devils Bulls Eagles Girl’s Division Panthers Stars Blue Devils Bullets SCORES Thursday, January 31 Wulfpack (23) Duncan-11 Murphy-6 Bailey-4 Barney-2 W ....L Eagles (11) Hepler-7 Cooper-4 Saturday, February 9 Blue Devils vs. Stars - 11:00 Panthers vs. Bullets - 12:00 Wolfpack vs. Deacons - 1:00 Bulls vs. Eagles - 2:00 Blue Devils vs. Bruins - 3:00 Monday, February 11 Sixers vs. Deacons - 6:30 Tar Heels vs. Celtics - 8:00 Tuesday,'February 12 Blue Devils vs. Panthers - 6:30 Bullets vs. Stars - 7:30 STANDINGS AFTER WEEK 5: Division 1 Deacons Celtics ' Sixers Tar Heels Division II Wolfpack Bruins Tar Heels Deacons Deacons(41) Yandell-14 Clemo-2 Foster-22 Jones-3 Blue Devils (3U) Hutchens-5 Sloan-10 M. Tilley-4 Sheridan-11 Saturday, February 2 Tar Heels (34) Jon Myers-2 B. Myers-4 Sharpe-16 Carter-3 Laws-4 Jason Myers-2 Allen-3 Blue Devils (43) Sloan-20 M. Tilley-2 Hutchins-8 Sheridan-13 Bruins(32) Freuler-6 Pitts-14 Dunn-9 Bright-3 Eagles (10) Hepler-2 Cooper-4 Jordan-2 Freuier-2 Tar Heels (CO) Ry. Edwards-17 Rob. Edwards-16 Staley-2 Gobble-4 Sheridan-13 Marshall-8 W-...L 7 2 4 5 4 5 3 e 9 1 7 1 5 4 4 4 Bruins (2H) Freuler-4 Pilts-14 Dunn-4 Newsome-2 Bright-2 Darnell-2 Friday, February 1 Deacons(44) Carter-15 Smith-19 Pardue-5 Sweat-5 Tar Heels (US) Ry. Edwards-19 Marshall-10 Itobt. Edwards-16 Gobble-4 Pope-2 Sheridan-14 Bulls (13) Boger-6 Hansen-3 Griffin-4 Sixers(38) Hicks-14 Boger-2 Hall-16 Byers-4 Brewer-2 Celtics (G3) Jarvis-10 Losh-16 Mendenliall-20 R. Cline-11 S. Ciine-6 Slurs(26) Smith-8 Boger-1 Ellis-4 Duncan-13 Blue Devils (15) McClannon-2 R. Rhynehardt-1 T. Rhynehardt-2 Meadows-4 Freuler-6 Monday, February 4 Deacons (63) . Correll-1 Smith-19 Carter-2fi Sweat-4 Pardue-13 Wolfpack (32) Duncan-6 Murphy-18 Bailey-4 Mecham-4 Deacons (27) Yandell-15 Clemo-4 Foster-4 Smith-3 Jones-1 Bullets (19) Ebert-17 King-2 Panthers (14) Tucker-4 Smith-1 Clement-3 Payne-3 Hoots-3 Celtics (59) Losh-2 Mendenhall-49 Jarvis-6 R. Cline-2 Sixe rs(V S) Allen-5 Hicks-23 Boger-4 Hall-16 Byers-11 Brewer-6 Booie-3 Davie Wrestlers Trounce Lexington Davie High War Eagles trounced Lexington, 45-17, in a North Pied­ mont Conference high school wrestling match here Thifrsday night. . ,It was the fifth league wm against one loss for Davie County, now 7-1 overall. 101 - Mark Hardin (D C ) dec. Marvin Bush, 7-3,■ 108 — Steve Buchin (D C) pinned Ricky Ellison, second; 115 - Shawn Steele (D C ) won by forlelt; 122 - Tim m y Call (D C ) pinned Preston Dodd, second; 129 — Brent Snyder (D C) dec. Wes Caudle, 4-0; 135 - Tony Foster (D C ) pinned John Cuiiin, (IrsI; 141 - Mel Perej (D C) pinned Robbie Miller, second; 148 - Dale Barneycastle (D C ) pinned Holly Previs, second; 158 - John Jeffries (I.) pinned Michael Driver, second; 170 — Slacy Young (L ) dec. Chris Shrewsbury, 5-2; 188 — Cedric Ellison (L ) dec. Bruce Bullock, 15-3; 198 — Sieve Dunn (N D ) dec. Dennis V/atli, B-6; h eavyw eigh t — Scoll Belsecker (L ) dec. Mike Carlner, 4-1. The Greek national them has 158 verses. ACC INSIDE STUFF D ick DeVenzio The Mugsy Phenomenon The air still hasn't cleared on Tyrone “ Mugsy" Hogues’ awesome performance Saturday on national TV, leading the Wake Forest Deacons in a 91-64 slaughter over NC State, It was one of the most dominating performances in the history of ACC basketball. Across the nation now, people are writing about him. They are calling him the great hope of little men and they are replaying his film highlights. “ There’s a place in the game for the little man,” they are saying, “just look'at Mugsy Bogues.” But before you pick up the phone to call the coach of your favorite ACC team about some 5’2” superstar, you have to realize that Mugsy Bogues is not like any other little man in basketball today. Georgia Tech’s Mark Price isn’t very tall. He has great speed and quickness though, to offset his height disadvantage. Spud Webb, only 5’7” has great leaping ability, and dunks effortlessly just like bigger people. Name any little man you want and he II have some distinguishing, characteristics that help him compete with bigger ■ players. But, all of them play like bigger players-and compensate. Bogues, however, doesn’t compete with bigger players. He doesn’t play on the same wave length, you might say, so he doesn’t have to do any compensating. He plays in a whole different dimension and makes people compensate for him. The Mugsy phenomenon goes beyond a good shooting performance or a day with a lot of assists or steals. Don't be fooled by Mugsy’s 20 points on national TV. There will be many days to come when he will not shoot well. But Mugsy’s dimension doesn't depend on shooting nor even on his ability to dictate the tempo of the game. Up to now, basketball analysts and coaches only spoke of intimidating centers, big people like Patrick Ewing of Georgetown, as being a presence on the court. With a guy like Ewing on the court, capable of swatting away shots, people miss shots often because .of mere worry about where Ewing is. That is presence-making the opponent mess up even when you aren’t actually in position to mess them up. And that is the effect Mugsy Bogues is currently having on ACC players. Nearly everyone on the court against Wake Forest these days is playing tentatively, playing scared, looking around wondering where Bogues is, instead of flowing with the game, flowing with instinct and just letting things happen. People are playing poorly because their minds are on Bogues. Even tall, powerful Lorenzo Charles altered an outside shot and ended up passing the ball while in the air-because the mouse was underfoot and Lorenzo’s rhythm was interrupted. Bogues is both a confidence-buster on defense with his ball hawking, always-under-foot style of play, and he is a constant worry on offense because of how quickly he gets the ball down the court and how im­ possible he is to bother. There aren't any other players in the league who are constant worries on both ends of the court. And especially, there is no quick-fix method to counteract his weapons. Bogues has proven again and again that he can not be pressed, not by one man, not by two. Every team who double-teams him wastes two players and is immediately vic­ timized by a S-on-3 break. Bogues is too low to the ground, too sharp with his pivots, and too quick accelerating to trap. Ptice can be trapped, Amaker can be trapped, Webb can be trapped, but Bogues can not be. What else? Bogues gets away with three times as many fouls as any other player in the ACC because referees pity a little man? Of course not. Bogues doesn't-again-play like anyone else. He gets to the ball far more than anyone else, he gets underfoot, he reaches, he slaps, but he doesn’t look like he's fouling when he does these things because his body isn’t in the same positions as other players' bodies when they try the same things In other words, just as his being different bothers his opponents and upsets their rhythm, it also upsets the rhythm and ability of the referees. They simply are not ready to blow a whistle on Bogues because he doesn’t look “ about to foul" just before he makes contact. Everyone who plays against Bogues gets fouled by him and irritated, but all it does is upset their game, play on their minds, and break their concentration. This is the Mugsy Phenomenon. It's presence. It's keeping a lot of ACC coaches tossing and turning late at night-even though, presumably, Bogues isn't there stealing the sheets off their beds. Foster-Rauch D tv g C o m p a n y WILKESBOROSfKEEf MOCKSVILLE, NO ___________ PriOWE: 634-2141 I 4B-DAVIE COIINTN l.NTHRl’RISE RECORD. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 Bowles And Gartner Retire (continued from pngc 1B) list. "They want their road cleaned then, and to heck with the rest,” he said. “ The snow will really run you nuts,” Bowles laughed. “ When you go 30 to 40 hours without sleep, these phone calls begin to play on your nerves.” During their work with the local DOT, both Bowles and Cartner agree that they've learned the area well. "I use to know all the people, but the influx to East Davie has changed this somewhat," Bowles said. However, he never ceases to amaze employees with his memory and ability to draw maps to in­ dividuals homes across the county. "He never has to ask for direc­ tions when an individual calls,” Van Swicegood confirmed. “ He simply takes out a pencil and pad and begins drawing a map.” ’ Both Bowles and Cartner admit that it's hard to leave a job after putting so many years of your life into it. “ However, all things must end,” they said. "It’s time to retire." Bowles said he hopes to spend his time raising a garden and devoting more extensive par­ ticipation to church and civic ac­ tivities. Cartner. who has a farm on Poor Boy’s Roiid in Davie Academy, plans to occupy his time with farm- work. "His farewell gift is a goat,” Swicegood laughed. State Is Drumming Up Interest In North Carolina Seafood Industry North Carolina residents have known for years that seafood caught off our coast is someof the best to be found anywhere. Unfortunately, not enough people in other states know this fact. Robert Mahood, Director ■ of the stale's Division of Marine Fisheries, Department of Natural Resources and Community Development, said this is one of the reasons that the division’s seafood development program has been expanded recently. “ If we can educate people to the fact that North Carolina bay scallops, for example, are a better product than calico scallops from Florida, they will pay extra for that quality. The consumer will profit and so will the fishermen,” said Mahood. While the division is working on marketing North Carolina seafood, it is also working in conjunction with the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Fisheries Foundation and other southern states. Mahood said that even though there is com­ petition for seafood markets, cooperation is important, too. “Say we develop a market for flounder fillets in Cincinnati and they're selling like hotcakes,” he said. “ Then somebody from out there comes to a dealer and the dealer says, ‘Sorry, but we don’t _.hay_e any_to.sqll_to_i’Q U llW elU h e_ guy in Cincinnati loses momentum, and (to re-establish the market) it's like starting over. “ The benefit from working together is that there are different seasons in different states, so we can assure a constant, steady supply.” Mahood said the goal was not to do away with the old markets for North Carolina seafood, primarily Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York. “ There’s nothing wrong with those markets,” he said. “ But the dealers have just been selling to the same people their daddies and granddaddies sold to.” “ TWo members of the develop­ ment staff returned recently from the Midwestern Food Service and Equipment Expo in' St. Louis, Missouri, where they displayed seafood products and talked to people attending the Expo. The main purpose was to drum up business for North Carolina. They brought back 116 requests for North Carolina seafood and talked with another 500 people who stopped by the exhibit to ask questions,” Mahood stated. In coming months they will also display North Carolina seafood at shows in Los Angeles, Shreveport, Louisiana, and Charlotte. Coupled with the attempt to stimulate and develop new markets, fisheries division officers hope to create a clear Identity for North Carolina fish and shellfish. “ When a housewife goes to the store and picks up, say, some fresh crab meat and likes it, she'll want to go back and buy the same thing,” Mahood said. “ If that product has a North Carolina label on it, she can find it and our industry will benefit.” ____Mahood.said_iht.state._was_con-__ tinuing efforts it had always stressed in seafood development, which includes working with the industry to encourage construction of new processing plants. This extends to such things as helping design water disposal and waste treatment systems for processing plants, and helping members of the fishing industry acquire necessary state and federal permits.' The small grain planted in the field along Hwy. 601 North is already sticking its head out from the under the covering of soil. (Photo by James Barringer) Lending Your Car May Be Risky Business borrower nor lender be. Those ancient words about money ring with wisdom for today's automobile insurance consumer. protection of your insurance policy for which you paid the premiums and not the borrower, Ousley said. If the car you lend is involved in a serious accident, you may be sued of the amount of coverage requirea by state law,” Ousley said. "Many cars on the road cost well over $15,000. If your property damage liability coverage is only the $10,000 ‘When you lend your car to a and may have to pay damages even required by state law, a damaged _________ ________ -ffiendrbeware:,-' said Theodore-R.-...tffoughyou wefrri't rn'tne c — party -c’dTi-H ren-gel-a-jodgment.....b ^ f a b r s inv6lve"intoxicatibn.l liability for each accident.) -Whenever you lend your car, bel sure you know who is driving it, I where the driver is going and wheni he or she will return. Many timesl accidents by “ permissive” ! Ousley, spokesman for the In­ surance News Service. "If you lend your car out you may be legally liable for anything that that person does with it,” Ousley, Charlotte- based regional vice president of Allstate Insurance Company, ad­ ded. When you share your aulunxibile you’re offering more than tfie value of your car. You’re sharing the Farm Market Summary Corn prices were steady to two cents lower per bushel and soybeans were four cents higher per bushel through Thursday January 31 compared to the same period of the previous week, according to the Market News Service of the North Carolina Department of Agriculture. No. 2 yellow shelled corn ranged mostly $2.83 to $3.04 in the Eastern part of the state and $3.00 to $3.10 in the Piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans ranged mostly $5.87 to $6.23 in the East and $5.74 to $fi.03 in the Piedmont: No. 2 red winter wheat $3.20 to $3.57; No. 2 red oats $1.65 to $2.00. New crop prices quoted for harvest delivery corn $2.51 to $2.64, soybeans $5.72 to $6.04, wheat 2.93 to $3.14. 44 percent soybean meal was $151.60 to $163.60 per ton FOB the processing plant. Egg prices were about one half to one cent higher to those of the previous week. Supplies were' adequate. Demand was moderate to good. The North Carolina weighted average price quoted on January 31, 1985 for small lot sales of cartoned Grade A eggs delivered to stores was .7342 cents per dozen for large, medium .6251, and smalls .4551. Sweet potato prices were steady this past week. Supplies were adequate, and demand moderate. Fifty pound cartons of cured US No. Is on January 31 were quoted at $11.50 to $12.00, occastional $12.25- $12.50, and $11.00. Jumbos were $7.50 to $8.00, few lower. Prices paid to growers for No. Is packed out at the end of the grading belt iwere $9.00 to $9.50 per carton. A total of 5,226 feeder pigs were sold on 11 of the state graded sales during the week of January 28. Prices were $250 to $7.00 higher on 40 to 70 pound pigs. US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-50 pounds averaged $83.43 per hundi’ed pounds with No. 3s $71.51; 50-60 pound No. l-2s averaged $79.02, No. 3s $64.61; 60-70 pound l-2s$71.43, No. 3s $59.14; 70-80 pound l-2s $66.20 per hundred pounds with No. 3s $56.92. At 10 weekly livestock auctions held within the state the week of January 28, 5,274 cattle and 1,950 hogs were sold. Prices for slaughter cows were steady to $1.00 higher and feeder calves were steady to $4.00 higher. Breaking utility and commercial slaughter cows brought $38.00 to $45.50, cutter and boning utility $34.00 to $42.00, with canner and low cutter at $30.00 to $36.25. Choice slaughter calves 350-550 pounds sold from $54.50 to $60.75 with good grade at $47.00 to $56.50. A few choice slaughter steers above 800 pounds brought $62.00 to $63.50 with good at $56.00 to $61.00. Good slaughter heifers above 700 poqnds brought $44.50 to $49.00. Slaughter bulls, yield grade 1 & 2 above 1000 pounds sold from $42.00 to $52.00 per cwt. Medium frame No. 1 thickness 400-500 pound feeder steers brought $62.00 to $72.50 with small frame No. Is at $55.00 to $64.00, same weight Mr. Mgffler Highww M W«st (Pait Millar'i RMtagrjMit) MUFFLERS • BRAKES OPEN Monday • Friday 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. » SHOCKS Saturday 8 A.M. to 12 Noon Phone 634^366 medium frame in o. 1 heifers brought $51.00 to $58.00 with small frame No. Is at $50.00 to $56.50. Beef type feeder cows carrying average flesh brought $33.50 to $43.00 with thin flesh at $33.00 to $39.00 per hundred pounds. Baby calves under three weeks of age brought $25 to $50 per head. Market hogs 200-240 pounds sold from $49.00 to $49.50 with sows 450 pounds up at $42.00 to $47.34. The North Carolina FOB dock quoted price on broilers for January 28-February 6 is $47.50 with a preliminary weighted average of . $47.36. The market is about steady and the live supply is adequate for a moderate demand. Heavy type hens were steady this past week. Supplies were adequate and demand moderate. Heavy type hen prices 12 cents per pouid at the farm with buyers loading and too few cents delivered to the processing plants. Market hogs at daily cash buying stations about the state were steady to 25 cents higher and ranged from $48.75 to $49.50 during the week of January 28-February 1, 1985. Sows 500 pounds up ranged from $41.00 to $45.00. Private Applicator Pesticide School The Davie Agricultural Extension Service will hold a Private Ap­ plicator Pesticide Licensing School on Friday, February 8, from 10 a.m. till 3 p.m. in the Davie County Office Building Auditorium. Persons (usually farmers and ranchers) who buy and use pesticides bearing the words RESTRICTED USE PESTICIDE on the label, in producing agricultural commodities on their own or rented land, must be certified as private applicators. Persons who buy or use general use pesticides on their own property do not have to be certified. Examples of Itcstrlcted Use pesticides are: Furadan, Azodrin, Lannate, Methyl Bromide and Tordon. General use pesticide examples are: Sevin. Diazanon, and Malathion. Persons may pre-register for the school by calling B34-6297 and giving their name and address. The Davie County Agricultural Extension Service conducts educational programs without regard to race or color, religion, sex, national origin, age, or han­ dicap. time of the accident. That may seem unfair, but as the owner of the vehicle you are giving your consent to the other person to be a “permissive” operator. Under the law you could be responsible for any damages done to others with your car. “ Given today’s prices for luxury automobiles and s^rts cars, it’s not difficult to damage a car in excess against other assets, such as your savings account, in order to lie compensated.” Ousley recommended these safeguards for automobile owners: -Consider carrying more liability coverage than required by state law in order to protect your personal, assets from a law suit. (The law requires $25,000 bodily injury liability coverage on each person up to a toal of $50,000 for each accident and $10,000 property damage Insist that your friends operate your] car in the safe, responsible way yo drive it. -Make sure teenagers in yo family understand the responj sibility they place on you if they le the car to a peer. When your son oH daughter has a friend in your carl insist that your child be the driver| Ousley concluded, “ The safe! practice is to follow Shakespeare’d advice and neither lend noq borrow.” Kill morningglory incom. F o r t h e b e s t c o n t r o l o f m o r n in g g lo r y a n d o t h e r t o u g h b r o a d le a v e s in r e d u c e d -t illa g e c o r n , y o u n e e d B a n v e l' h e r b ic id e . Qanwl’ isategisioredirademaiKof '«%lsicol Ctiomtcal Corporation Road and lollow labol diroctioos carutully Banvel^ is tliehtrbicid*broadleaff lierbicide for reduced-tillage corn. DAVIE COUNTY l-NTURPKISt-. RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 198S-SB Good Eating Habits Can Prevent Overweight Problems For Everyone Being overweight affects not only adults, but children as well. And for children, it can lead to lifelong physical and social problems, ac­ cording to Josephine Cialone, a nutritionist with the N.C. Division of Health Services. “ Some children may have Cheri Cook Named Cycle Of Life Head ForCooleemee Area The Leukemia Society of America, North Carolina Chapter announced that the 1985 Cycle'for Life Chairman for Cooleemee will be Cheri Coolc. The Leukemia Society of America is dedicated towards the conquering of leukemia. Proceeds from the Bike-A-Thon will be used for research and patient-aid. At the present time, the Leukemia Society of America, North Carolina Chapter has $319,053 in research projects granted in the state of North Carolina. These research projects are being conducted at Duke University and the University of North Carollna-Chapel Hill. The Leukemia Society of America is also providing financial assistance to 550 patients in the state of North Carolina. In spite of remarkable medical advances in the last ten years, leukemia remains a Number 1 killer disease of children. Leukemia is no longer a hopeless disease. There is hope for children and adults with leukemia due to the research that has helped in treatment and diagnosis. When a boy or girl comes by your home asking you to sponsor them in the upcoming Bike-A-Thon, please consider that the funds will be used right here in North Carolina for research and patient-aid. Anyone wishing information should contact Ms. Cook at 284-4341 in Mocksville. Seed Catalog Lingo N.C. Botanical Garden medical problems which cause them to be overweight, but the vast majority simply don’t eat properly,” Cialone said. "They overeat, make improper choices about what to eat, or a combination of the two." She said there are a number of reasons why children have weight problems: -they are provided with poor food choices such as candy, cookies and soft drinks; “ food is prepared using too much oil, butter or fatback; -food is used as a reward by parents and others; -fam ilies are bombarded by advertising that makes less nutritious foods look appealing; -social life often revolves around eating rather than other activities. “ Children who are not taught proper eating habits may face a multitude of problems both as children and as adults,” Cialone said. "For example, they may be teased about their size and excluded by other children. These childi-en are also less likely to participate in play and physical activities.” She pointed out that children with weight problems sometimes become adults with the same problems. In adults, obesity can lead to chronic illnesses such as- diabetes and high blood pressure. A 1982 study, conducted by the state Division of Health Services and the University of North Carolina School of Public Health for the Center for Disease Control (CDC) in Atlanta, showed that approximately 26 percent of North Carolina’s adult population were obese (20 percent or more over a person’s ideal weight). Based on this study, North Carolina ranked fourth among the 30 states that participated in the CDC survey. Statistics on over­ weight children are not available. "With children, the real key is to get them on the road to good nutrition and good eating habits at an early age,” Cialone said. She recommended the following ways parents and others can help their children develop good eating habits: -monitor what children eat. Be sure they get a variety of foods; -monitor food portion sizes. Remember that children need children’s portions of food rather than adult helpings; -be sure that children get regular physical checkups. Weight is relative to height, especially for children; -offer children nutritious, iower- calorle snacks such as cereal, crackers or fruit rather than candy, cookies and soft drinks; While poring over' the seed catalogs this time of year it is sometimes easy to become frustrated by the technical terms used in some of them. To get the best results from seed purchases, it helps to order those selections most suited to one’s needs and to be clear as to what is being diosen. Staff members at the N.C. Botanical Garden of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill offer a few definitions to help avoid : misunderstanding. “ FI” refers to the first generation ; seeds from a cross of two known • parent plants yielding a new variety ■ that is stable and uniform in growth : and appearance in the first generation. If this new plant is liked, the seeds must be created ; anew from the same parents each • year to remain true-to-type. For more casual gardeners, the : seeds from the FI plants can be saved and planted the following year. They will be diverse in form : and color in that they contain many ■ strains of earlier generations. It : can, nonetheless, be interesting to ; see what some of these throwbacks are like. “ Open pollinated” is a term sometimes used in contrast to the term FI for seeds arising from natural pollination by wind, insects or casual flower movement and not by deliberate human intervention. Gardeners saving such seeds for planting next season are likely to produce plants more or less the same as the parents. “ Determinate” and “ in­ determinate” are often used to describe tomato seeds and refer to the plant’s growth habit. Deter­ minate plants have short stems ending in a flower cluster which tends to set fruit early. These bushy plants usually don’t need staking and don’t respond well to pruning. Indeterminate tomatoes are larger plants with long stems which start bearing later. Since they can become quite large, these plants do better with staking and pruning. ••VF,” “ VFN” and "VFNT” refer to tomato varieties bred for resistance to certain diseases. V is verticillium wilt, F is fusarium wilt, N is nematode and T is tobacco mosaic. It is useful to call your county agricultural agent or ex­ tension servicc to inquire what local diseases are prevalent. , “ All-America” selections, offered in some catalogs, are plants selected by experienced and non­ biased judges representing two non­ profit organizations. The new plants and varieties are chosen from trial plantings in gardens all over the United States. Some of the All-America plants catch on and remain favorites, e.g., the sugar snap pea of 1979. In­ terestingly, not all do though. Some turn out to be novelties with short appeal. It’s the gardeners that decide. Picking the right seeds depends on having a clear picture of what is wanted, the type of soil, water and sunlight availability, as well as personal style. It’s not a bad idea to stroll around the neighborhood and see what sorts of plants are doing well. And a little experimentation does no harm either. -cncourage activities such as sports, yard work and family outings; -prepare foods properly. Boil, broil or bake foods rather than frying them. Use less oil, butter and fatback in seasoning foods. "One thing people often forget to do is to praise their children for making the right choices,” Cialone said. A smile and praise can go a long way in helping children to develop good eating habits and become happier, healthier adults.” For more information about good nutrition and your children’s eating habits, contact your family physician or the nutritionist at your local health department. PRICES GOOD THRU SAT . FEB 9, 1985 QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED NONE SOLD TO DEALERS Boneless Whole Ribeyes USDA CHOICE 10-12 LB. AVERAGE LIMIT 1. I Q PLEASE L -D - CUT AND ViJRAPPED FREE Valley dale Sandwich Meat C 6 0Z. ' BOLOGNA, SPICED LUNCHMEAT, PICKLE LOAF, LIVER LOAF, OR SALAMI 6 9 White Potatoes U.S. NO. 1 ROUND 20 Lb. Bag J^lly Farms A O C 16 0 z. V alleydaleM ildorH ol i2 0z.AiiMeai/BooiWoinersOrThigh*...........L b W Sautage.............9 9 Bologna.............* 1 ® ® ^ e s h Pork Shoulder Fresh Pork Shoulder A M C Old Fashion Sliced SlabSteaR...................................Lb. X Picnic Roast. . . i b . 9 9 Bacon................................Lb. 1 2.5 O z.Land-O-Frost W ater 4* / « « Fresh Pork Boston 16 Oz. Tasty Bird Thin Meats.......Butt Roast .... Lb Chicken Liver. */*I BoneUss Full Cut Round SteakUSDA CHOICE Fresh Ground Chuck . ALL SIZE PACKAGES Celebrity Old FashionBacon SMOKED SLAB -3-4 LB. AVG. iC Fresh Broccoli CALIFORNIA 18CT.SIZE tc BUNCH U.S. No. 1 Carolina ^ — -Sweet Potatoes . s L b s . ^ X U.S. No. 1 Medium ^ _Yellow Onions SLb. B a g ^ X California Royal 113 Ct.Mandarin Oranges 6/ W ashington X-Fancy 138 Cl. Red Or Golden ^ a m C Delicious Apples • Each 15 U.S. Fancy Eastern Red Delicious Apples Del MonteVegetables 3 / ^ 1 HyTop Pie Shells or Whip Topping Citrus Hill Orange Juice STYLE CORN on 16 0Z CUT e O2. straw. Peach. Blueberry. Bart./Straw.. Fru)l Cup. Pineapple. Bik Cherry, fled Raspberry Light & Lively Yogurt. 8 Oz. SeaitestFrench Onion Dip. 64 Oz. Snow CropFive Alive .......... 3 0 0 z .S /M ,B /M 4 P a c k Ballard Biscuits 9.5 Oz. Pillsbury (With Iclno)Cinnamon Rolls I vf LD. uuvvco LMnoc nut-L ucuunMi a /^ X 2 /* X - ORM T. DEW. PEPSI FREE. DIET PEPSI. DIET PEPSI FREE 16 0z. ColesGarlic Bread............ 2 0 Oz. Banquet Apple. Cherry. Peach ^ ^ a aFruit Pies................®I®® 25 Oz. Rich's ^ ^ n nRoll Dougli.............*1®® 9 Oz. M orton ^Honey Bun...............* 26 Oz. Pel Apple, Blackberry, Cherry. Peach ^ Fruit Cobblers .... */«^®® 907 Mumford Drive - Mocksville, N.C.Sunday, Hours:10 A.M. to 7 P.M. 6B-DAVIE COUNTY liNTIiRI'UISli RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985 Cheering the 75th Anniversary... "PRIDE IN THE PAST... FOOTSTEPS TO THE FUTUREI f R o b e rt B a d e n -P o w e ll, E rn e s t T h o m p s o n S e to n , ..D a n ie l C a rte r_ B e a rd ,.W illia m D . B o yce , Ja m e s E . W e st w e re som e o£ th e e a rly p io n e e rs oE S c o u tin g . T h e y b u ilt u p o n a d re a m m o re th a n 75 y e a rs ago t o o rg a n ix e th e la rg e s t y o u t h m o v e m e n t in th e fre e w o r ld . T o d a y , th e id e a ls a n d tr a d itio n s o f th e se e a rly p io n e e rs h a v e b e c o m e th e c o r n e r s to n e s o t S c o u t in g . T h e b a s ic s u r v i v a l s k ills , S c o u t- c ra f t, e m e rg e n c y p re p a re d n e s s , g o a l s e ttin g ,u n > . s e lfis h s e rv ic e , a n d lo v e o f c o u n t r y a re a ll m a jo r e n d e a v o rs o f S c o u tin g a n d w i l l c o n tin u e to be in th e f u tu re . W e s a lu te th e B o y S c o u ts o f A m e r ic a as th e y c e le b ra te t h e ir 7 S th a n n iv e r s a ry th is F e b ru a r y 8, X98S, a n d t h a n k th e m f o r th e g re a t c o n trib u tio n s th e y h a v e m a d e to o u r n a tio n . BELK DEPARTMENT STORE North Main Street, Mocksville, N.C. 634-2124 DAVIE JEWELERS 135 North Main St., Mocksville, N.C. 634-5216 J.P. GREEN MILLING COMPANY 496 Depot Street, Mocksville, N.C. 634-2126 C.R. ANDERSON LUMBER CO. Salisbury, Road, Mocksville, N.C. 634-2501 CAROLINA TIRE CO. 962 Yadkinvillc Road, Mocksville, N.C. 634-6115 GARTNER'S SERVICE CENTER Highway 64 West and 901, Mocksvillc, N.C. 492-7242 CROWN DRUG Willow Oak Shopping Centr6 Hwy. 601 North, Mocksville, N.C. 634-6213 DAVIE TRACTOR t IMPLEMENT CO. Highway 601 South, Mocksville, N.C. 634-5969 EATON'S FUNERAL HOME 325 North Main Street, Mocksville, N.C. 634-2148 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG STORE Wilkesboro Street, Mocksvillc, N.C. 634-2141 INGERSOLL-RAND 501 Sanford Ave., Mocksville, N.C. 634-3561 WILLOW OAK HARDWARE STORE Hwy. 601 North, Mocksville, N.C. 634-3322 Woodmen of the World Insurance Co. 136 North Main Street, Mocksville, NC 634-6388 JOHN N. McDANIEL&SONS. IN Hwy. 601 South, Mocksville, N.C. 634-3215 HOWARD REALTY & INSURANCE AGENCY 330 S. Salisbury St., Mocksville, N.C 634-3538 MONLEIGH GARMENT CO., INC. Carolina Sportswear, Co., Inc. Blackwelder's Manufacturing Co., Inc. Piedmont Garment Co., Inc. Davie Chiropractic Health Center FURCHES MOTOR COMPANY 501 Wilkesboro Street, Mocksville, N.C. 634-2512 225 Depot Street, Mocksville, N.C, 634-5948 Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership Corp. Courtney, N.C. 998-9022 CENTRAL CAROLINA BANK 224 Water Street, Mocksville, N.C. 634-6261 CELEBRATING OUR 75TH ANNIVERSARY* 1910-1985 DAVIE COUNTY ENTl-RI’RISE R1;CURD,'T1IURSDAV, FEBRUARY 7, 198S-7B Still Trustworthy, Lx>yal, And Helpful Boy Scouts To Mark 75 Years Of Good Deeds By Boris Weinlraub National Geographic News Service Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden- Powell, Ernest Thompson Seton, and Daniel “Uncle Dan” Beard never heard of Tiger Cubs or Varsity Scouts. They probably would have disapproved of female F cplorers. And who knows what I ey would have said about merit badges in atomic energy, space exploration, or golf? On the other hand, those three pioneers of Scouting would have thoroughly understood the mission the Boy Scouts of America adopted in 1983: “ To serve others by helping to instill values in young people and, in other ways, prepare them to make ethical choices over their lifetime in achieving their full potential.” They would have been pleased to know that those values are based on those found in the Scout Oath: “ On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country and to obey the Scout Law; to help other people at all times; to keep myself physically strong, metally awake. Have 9 M o n e y I h e e . . . Ih y D u p s CUT YOUR MONTHLY PAYMENTS BY A BILL CONSOLIDATION LOAN! Just Think How Great It Will Be To Put All Those Small Payments Into One Convenient Monthly Payment. Fleet Financenter WiUowi n il Yadkinv Moduvaie, NC Center Phone 634-3596 and morally straight.” On Feb. 8, the Boy Scouts of America will mark its 75th an­ niversary, three quarters of a century in which more than 70 million Americans have vowed to be trustworth, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent-- the 12 tenets of the Scout Law. The culmination of the celebration will come in July with the National Scout Jamboree at Fort A.P. Hill, Va., with the end of ,the Heritage Campfire Caravan. Beginning in May, a Heritage Campfire will be lighted outside every state capitol. Ashes will be put into a wooden box the shape of each state and added to a caravan that will zigzag, capital-to-oapital, • 7,600 miles across the country in 55 days to the Jamboree. There, the boxes will be assem­ bled into a map of the United Slates and ceremonially burned, “ uniting the councils of the Boy Scouts of America in a pledge to continue providing a meaningful program for America's youth.” In that all sounds a little gran­ diose and abstruse, well, that’s the way it's been since the earliest days of Scouting, and it’s worked pretty well. There have been numerous changed in American society in the Boy Scouts’ 75 years, and they have had to adapt. They now seek out black, Hispanic, and handicapped youngsters. They welcome 7-year- olds into the Tiger Cub program and young women into co-educational, career-oriented Explorer posts. The “Official Boy Scout Handbook” now warns of drug abuse and teaches first aid for ratbites as well as for snakebites. Merit badge lists have been updated, to incorporate new fields of interest. But the handbook still shows how to build a campfire and tie knots, a return to traditional Scout concerns after a flirtation with “ relevance” in a previous edition. And mem­ bership rolls, after a precipitous decline from a “ baby boom" peak of 6.5 million in 1972, have begun to edge upward once more after dropping to 4.3 million by the end of 1979. Now, says a spokesman at Scout headquarters in Irving, Texas, memtiership is over 4.7 million, having about 40,000 in 1984. Of that number, 1.1 million are adult Scout leaders; the rest are Tiger Cubs, Cub Scouts, Boy Scouts, and Ex­ plorers. The father of Scouting was Baden- Powell, who had written a traok for soldiers on how to function in the field while serving the British Empire. When Baden-Powell returned to England a hero after holding off a siege in Mafeking, South Africa, during the Boer War, he discovered that his book was being used by British boys as a guide to life in the outdoors. Baden-Powell decided to rewrite the book especially for boys, and took 20 of them camping for two weeks on an island, where he trained them in tracking, first aid, woodcraft, and other outdoor skills. The result was "Scouting for Boys” , a combination of post- Victorian moral urgings and practical advice. It became the basic text of the British Boy Scouts when they were founded in 1908. The following year, a Chicago newspaper publisher, William D. Boyce, got lost in a thick London fog. A young boy appeared and helped Boyce find his way. When the publisher proffered a one-shilling tip, the boy-soon to become legend as the “ Unknown Scout”--replied, "No, sir, I am a Scout. Scouts do not accept tips for courtesies or good turns.” Intrigued, Boyce visited Scout headquarters to learn more. In 1910, he organized the Boy Scouts of America. . Other groups dedicated to helping young boys learn self-reliance ■ already existed, including the Woodcraft Indians, organized by Seton, a painter and naturalist, and the Sons of Daniel Boone, formed by Beard, an illustrator and out- doorsman. But most were soon folded into the Boy Scouts. The organization succeeded for 75 years in touching a special chord in millions of American boys. Perhaps the best explanation for this comes from William Hillcourt, retired national director of Scoutcraft and author of the most recent, back-to-basics. Scout Handbook. Hillcourt scorns the idea that Scouting has to be “ in tune with the times.” Even in. 1908, he told Robert W. Peterson, author of a new history of the Boy Scouts, Scouting was out of tune with the times: “The idea of cooking your meal over an open fire when your mother at home was perfectly willing to cook your meal over a coal fire, and this idea of sitting around a camp­ fire when you had a perfectly good kerosene lamp burning in your living room at home-it was exactly because it was idiotic and out of tune with the times that made Scouting appealing. It goes back to the atavistic thing that is supposed to be in every human being to play Tarzan and Robinson Crusoe and so CELEBRATING O UR 75TH ANNIVERSARY‘1910-1985 Davie Has 115 Boys In Scouting As of January 1, 1985, Davie County had 115 boys enrolled in the Boy Scouts of America organization. There are eight active troops as follows:. Troop 555, sponsored by Ingersoll- Rand, Don Bovender, Scoutmaster. Troop 525, sponsored by Holy Cross Lutheran Church, James C. Roberson, Scoutmaster. Troop 515, sponsored by North Davie Ruritan Club, Clarence G. Elmore, Scoutmaster. Troop 502, sponsored by Advance United Methodist Church, Jack M. Carter, Scoutmaster. Troop 575, sponsored by Mocksville Rotary Club, Denny W. Cartner, Scoutmaster. Troop 505, sponsored by Center United Methodist Church, Steve Vestal, Scoutmaster. Troop 503, sponsored by Twin Lakes Airport, Holli Nelson, Scoutmaster. Troop 502, sponsored by Smith Grove Ruritan Club, Carter P. Robertson, Scoutmaster. Henry P. “ Hank” Van Hoy is Chairman of the Davie District, Uwharrie Council, Boy Scouts of America. James McBride is District Commissioner. Ed Tkach is assistant. Derek Harpe is Membership Chairman. David McBride is assistant. Bryan Sell is Finance Chairman. Frank Bahnson is assistant. Buck Hall is Program Chairman. Benny Naylor is Training Chairman. Taylor Slye is Camp Promotion and Outdoor Program Chairman. Junior Williams is assistant. Lester P. Martin is advancement and Recognition Chairman. Coordinator of the Cub Scout Program is Bill Seabrook. Carter Robertson is chairman of the Scout Roundtable; Jane Carter is chairman of the Club Roundtable. Other members at large include; Charlie Sellers, Holland Chaffin, Albert Tkach, Chuck Nail, Wayne Russell, Garry Whitaker, Kenneth Potts, Terry E. Branch, Charlie Whaley, Ronald Hall Waller, Perce Musselman, Steve Barron and Vernon Whitaker. HISTORY Boy Scout Troop No. 50, the first Boy Scout Troop in Mocksville, was organized in 1932 by the First Methodist Church minister, Rev. R.C. Goforth. The troop planned to build a log-constructed hut behind the church on the present site of the Fellowship Building but when plans were made to build the Fellowship Building, the boys were persuaded to meet in the Men's Bible class which was later added to thcchurch. After the Rev. Goforth moved, Rev. Proctor, the Baptist minister became scoutmaster until he went to the Greensboro YMCA. At this time the Boy Scouts in Mocksville almost became defunct until Bryan Sell came to Mocksville from Cooleemee, where he also has a troop. In 1937 Rev. W.C. Cooper reorganized a Boy Scout troop at’the Presbyterian Hut. Twenty boys were present. The troop was later on officially reorganized by B.W. Hackney, of High Point, Boy Scout executive of the district. Officers of the troop that year were Bill Angell, scribe; patrol leaders: Joe Stroud, Holland Chaffin, C.F. Leach and W m bro^^heek,^Ir___________ IF YOU CAN’T GET CABLE TV.... Satellite! FROM $ 1 8 9 5 0 0 PLUS INSTALLATION We won't argue that cable TV Is good, when you con gat It. But if you can't, you might try look­ ing into something that’s even better—a C hannel Master earth station. Satellite TV comes direct from the studio to the satellite to you, with more choices than you ever dreamed possible—80 channels now with more on the woyl See all the best movies, the hottest sports, news In depth, special entertainment, religion, education, and children's shows. You can even get access to the latest form and financial quotes, like a stock broker. (Some programs require viewer fees.) Channel Master offers you true state-of-the-art elec­ tronics at a price you con live with (even coble costs up to $400.00 a year now) plus a full-systems guarantee that's backed by 35 years of world leadership In TV reception. CALL TODAY for more information about a live demonstration Up To 48 Months Financing Mocksville Furniture & Appliance Inc. Downtown Mocksville 634 5812 CREDIT TERMS 634 2250 8B-DAV1K COUNTY ENTERPRISE Rl-CORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985 B. C. Brock Senior Center News The following B. C. Brock Senior Center News has been submitted to ■ the paper by Eliznbeth Bracken and Karen Smyers: The Twilight Club is making plans to purchase a new stove for the senior center kitchen. This club meets the first Wednesday of each month at 12 noon. New members are welcome! RSVP will hold a Sewing Bee in the Craft Room every Wednesday at 12 noon. The Senior Center is now ac­ cepting donations of clean usable items for the planned yard and bake sale, which will be held at the Senior Center, Saturday, February 16. Please bring your donations to the Center between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Monday through Friday. Get well wishes go out to our friends; Zola Beck, Blanche Davis, Gertie McCrary, Bea Shore and Ruth Preston. "Congratulations” to Ida Jordan and Clyde H. Boger, who were married Saturday, January 26,1985. New members welcomed to the Center were Clyde Boger, James Ladd and Bruce McDaniels. Planned activities arc as follows: Thursday, Feb. 7, Vision test by the Davie County Health Department, Shopping Day Is Friday, Feb. 8. Monday, Feb. 11,1985: Lecture on Arthritis by Hazel Jo Johnson from Davie County Health Department. Tuesday, February 12, is Craft Day. VVednesday, February 13, is Bingo day. , The Nutrition Center serves lunch daily from 11:30 a.m. until all are served for lunch. This program is open to any Davie County resident, 60 years of age and older, and Is free of charge. If you need tran­ sportation call the Center at; 634- 2187. The menu for February 7, through February 13, is as follows; Thursday, Feb. 7, Beef liver with onions and potatoes, green beans, bread and an orange. Friday, Feb. 8, Meat loaf with tomato sauce, macaroni salad, green peas, bread, apricots, and tomato juice. Monday, Feb. 11, Barbecue beef, cole slaw, baked beans, rolls and plums. Tuesday, Feb. 12, Baked pork chop, tossed salad, squash casserole, bread, pineapple upside down cake. Wednesday, Feb. 13, Swiss steak, yams with pineapple, green beans, roll and orange sections. A choice of skim sweet milk or buttermilk is served with each meal. West Forsyth To Hold Barbecue February 16 The West Forsyth Cheerleaders and parents will have a barbecue on Saturday, February 16 at West Forsyth High School Cafeteria from 11:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. Tickets can be bought in advance from cheerleaders, parents, at the door the day of the barbecue or by calling 766-4103. Price of the tickets are plate dinners-$4.50, children (10 and under-$2.50, and "a pound to go” - $4.50. Proceeds will be used to send the cheerleaders to the National Championship Finals in Orlando, Florida._____________________ Yadkin Valley News Hi! My name is Aniunda Ji'iui Haynes. I cclcliratctl my first blrtli- day on Feb. (i, l!)8.i. Wc had a party at Capt. Stevens in I.exinglnn. i\Iy guests were niy mania anil daddy (Donna and Grant Haynes), and :ny Grandma and Grandpa Haynes. My grandparents are Steve and Kranifs Haynes of Welcome, and Llllard and Norma Sexton of Coolceniee. Special Program At Community Baptist The Reverend Bill Shoaf of Mocksville, N.C. will present a program a( Community Baptist Church, Gladstone Hoad, Mocksville, N,C„ Saturday, February 9, at 7:30 p.m. He will show Holy Land slides and discuss each picture. The public is welcome to attend. Yadkin Valley Chtirch and c-ommunity extends their sympathy to the family of the oldest member of the Church, Mrs. Maggie Sheek. She was 94 years old and it has not been very long since she attended the morning worship service. The Lord had blessed her with good health. Her Sunday School Class went to Lillians home and had a Sunday School lesson with her a few months ago and sang her favorite song "When I Have Gone The Last Mile." She w'ill be missed by all who knew her. Yadkin Valley extends their sympathy to Mildred King in the death of her Father, Mr. J. Conner, who passed away on Saturday. We have several sick at home that need to be remembered. Mr. A.G. Parker was not able to attend Church on Sunday, others are Gene Lee, Fletcher Lee, Geneva Howard, Mamie Godfrey, Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis and Mrs. Wyatt, who has moved in a trailer close to her daughter Joann. The Ladys Missionary Fellowship will meet next Tuesday February 12 at 7 p.m. guest speaker will be Thelma Moore. The Children will enjoy a Valentine party February 9 at 1:.W to 3; 00, then the Valentine Banquet at 7:00 p.m. Mr. Clint West came home last Thursday from Medical Park Hospital. He is doing fine. Henry and Ruby McBride and Pastor Leon Wood visited him on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Billy Hart are proud parents of a baby boy born early Sunday morning. He weighed 5 lbs. 10 oz. They live in a trailer behind the W.H. McBride house on 801. Mrs. Olma King received word last week of the death of her niece, Mrs, Virginia Howard Owens, who lived in Towson, Md. She attended Farmington School. Social Security Questions & Answers How soon after my husband’s death should I apply for Social Security for my baby and myself? It is normally best to apply for survivors benefits as soon as possible after a death. Since you must frequently use similar documents for other kinds of programs (such as life insurance claims and VA benefits) as for Social Security, those documents arc usually readily available close to the time of death. Don't forget your marriage certificate and your baby’s birth certificate as well as your own, your husband's, and the child's Social Security number. My husband and I are getting ready to retire at 65. He’s worked for nearly 50 years and I’ve been working for the last 15. I’m won­ dering whether I would get a larger check if I applied for wife’s benefits on his record or for benefits based on my own work record. Spouse's benefits arc one half of the worker's benefit amount. If your earnings qualify you for a benefit higher than that, you will receive the larger amount. The people at any Social Security office will be glad to help you figure which way is more advantageous to you and Ihey’il give you an estimate of what your benefits will be._______________ Hello! My name is Brandi Michelle Johnson. I celebrated my fourth birthday on Sunday, January 27th. My mother and daddy, Mike and Nanette Johnson, gave me a party at our home on Raymond Street. I received so many wonderful presents and I had a delicious Rainbow Brite birthday cake. I want to say a great big "Thank- you" to everyone for all my gifts and for helping to make my party turn out so nice. My grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. Benny Naylor of Mocksville, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Summers of Statesville, and Mr. Joe Johnson, also of Statesville. My maternal great-grandparents arc Mrs. L.S. Bowden, Sr. and Mrs. Floyd Naylor of Mocksville. My paternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. L.S. Parlier and Mrs. Selma Johnson of Boone, N.C. G O D'S FIVE MINUTES “ There is a time for everythinj^........." • E cclesiastes 3 : l, T h e L iv in g S lb le ASS E M B LY OP GOD NEW B E T H E L ASSEM BLY OP 0 0 0B09 N. M a in Street M ocksvtlle, N.C.Rev. M ike DrakeSurxlay School 10:00 a.m .M orn ln s W orship 11:00 a.m .Evening W orship . 7:00p.m .BAPTIST A D VAN C E B AP TIS T CHURCH H ighw ay 001 W esley Cook, Pastor Sunday Services:Bible Study 9:45 a.m .B Iblestudy 11:00a.m .Youth M eetings 4:30 p.m .Wednesday Services: S tart 6:30 p.m .B EA R C R E E K B AP TIS T CHURCH B ear Creek Church Rd. B LA ISE B AP TIS T CHURCH H ighw ay 601 N orth at )-40 Rev. D avid Hyde, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m .W orship 11:00a.m .E vening 7:00p.m .Wednesday 7:30 p.m . J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers of DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street IVIocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 COBLE LIME & FERTILIZER SERVICE Highway 801 Cooleemee, N.C. Business Home 284-4354 284-2782 U^NIER'RIDDLE General Contractors New Homes or Remodeling N .C . L ie . S 06 4 N .C . L ie . 1 5 5 5 2 492-5474 998-4708 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. Wllkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2141 B R E AD OF L IF E B A P T iS ! C H A P ELFour Corners C om m unity on H w y. BOlP hil K Itchin, PastorSunday School 10:00a.m .P reaching 11:00a.m . C A LA H A LN F R IE N D S H IP B A P liS TCHURCH Calahain RoadRev. G raham W ooten, PastorSunday School 10:00 a.m . W orship 11:00a.m .Sunday N ight W orship 7:00p.m .Wed. Bible StudyS. P rayer 7:00 p.m .C A LV A R Y B AP TIS T CHURCHHighw ay 601 South Route 7, Box n , M ocksville, N.C.Jim G ryder, Pastor Sunday School W orship Evening Wednesday CEDAR C R E E K BAPTtSTCedar Creek Church Road C H IN Q U A P IN G R O V E B A P T IS T CHURCHC O M M U N ITY B AP TIS T CHURCHG ladstone Rd.Sunday School W orshipC O O L E E M E E F IR S T CHURCHG uthrie Colvard. Pastor Sunday School W orship EveningC bR N A TZE R B AP TIS T CHURCHAdvance, N.C.D A V IE B AP TIS T TA B E R N A C LEFork, N.C.Sunday School W orship E ven in g W ednesdayD U T C H M A N C R E E K CHURCHH ighw ay 801 off 64 EATO N'S B AP TIS T CHURCH Eaton's Church Rd.Sunday School 10:00 a.m .W orship 11:00 a.m .EDG EW O OD B AP TIS T CHURCH H ighw ay aoi West Cooleemee, N.C.FA R M tN G TO N B AP TIS T CHURCHF arm ington Road.Sunday School W orshipYouth T raining Union FIR S T B AP TIS T CHURCH 309 N. M ain Street M ocksville. N.C.Sunday SchoolW orship ....................Evening 6:30 p.m .-O ct. thru M ay FIR S T B AP TIS T CHURCH M a rg in al Street Cooleemee. N.C.Rev. L a rry G. Allen Sunday School W orship Evening WednesdayFO RK B AP TIS T CHURCH 6 M iles East on H w y. 64 Sunday School ■Worship EveningG O SPEL B AP TIS T CHURCHR t. 6, MOKksville, N.C.Sunday School 10:00 a.m .W orship 11:00a.m .Evening- 7:00p.m .W ednesday 7:00p.m .G R A C E M IS S IO N A R Y B A P T IS T CHURCHRainbow Road, M ocksvitle N.C.Rev. H arold TuttleSunday School 10:00 a.m . W orship 11:00a.m .Evening 7:00p.m .Wed. P rayerM eetIng 7:00p.m .G R E E N H IL L B AP TIS T CHURCH G reen H ill Road Rev. Steve Hedgecock, Pastor Sunday School 9:30a.m .W orship 10:45 a.m .Evening 7:00 p.m .W ednesday 7:00 p.m .G R E E N M EADO W S B APTIST H ighw ay 801-Farm lngton Rev. D avid E. Roberts IS THERE A COOK IN THE KITCHEN? One o f the amazingly beautiful experiences o f life, com m on­ place though it may be, is a simple act o f sharing a meal w ith someone you care about. The Bible is filled w ith scores o f incidents o f men.and wom en eating together. A n d Jesus chose a supper scene as His last visit w ith fHls disciples. It took this anecdote fronx the life o f the famous crim inal lawyer, Lewis Nizer. to cast a new light on this pleasant, mundane act. Me said, In his book, Between ,.Y9u, and Mg. 'T h e best reply a believer can make to an atheist or a material­ ist Is to invite him to a choice and sum ptuous meal and after dinner ask him if he believes there was a cook in the kitchen who prepared the food." Spoiled, self-satisfied and undisciplined we gobble up life, one beautiful day after another, and nfiver stop to realize there has to be a “ cook in the kitchen.' The Psalmist put it'th is way, "This is a day that the Lord has made. Let us rejoice and be glad in itl" -f + -h + + + + + + + + + + 4 A TTEN D CHURCH THIS WEEK + + + + + + + + + + + + •»■ + + This column bclongt (o our readers. We w ill accept priniabk iicm t and pay SS.OO for each Item published. In caie of quotations, (he name of the author and the tide and publisher of the book m utt be given. Addrckk items to *'God'k l-'ivr M inutes,'’ P.O. Uoi 18012, Asheville, N.C. 28814. OCommunity Advartliing C E N T E R U N IT E D M E T H O D IS TCHURCHH ighw ay 64 West Rev. Claudia G. Harrelson, M iniste r 1st & 2nd SundayChurch School W orship 3rd Si 4th Sunday W orship Service Church School 5th Sun Church School d a y 9:45a,m . 11:00 a.m . 9:45a.m . 10:45 a.m . 9:45a,n- Sunday School >lpW orship Evening Wednesday HO PE B AP TIS T TA B E R N A C LE H ighw ay 156 East N orm an S. Frye, Pastor 10:00 a.m . 11:00a.m . 7:30 p.m . 7:30 p.m . CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 1238 Bingham Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2167 C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Road Mocktvllla, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Sunday School W orship E vangellsttc W ednesdayiJA M E S CRO SSRO ADS CHURCHKenneth Hyde. Pastor Sunday School W orship Evening WednesdayJE R U S A LE M B APTISTH ighw ay 601 South Sunday School W orship Evening WednesdayNO C R E E K P R IM tT iV E CHURCHNo Creek Rd. off 64 SM ITH G RO VE B AP TIS T CHURCH H ig o w e y u e E e«t T R IN IT Y B AP TIS T CHURCH Route 4, M ocksville, N.C,Gene B lackburn, Pastor Sunday School W orship Evening Wednesday 9:45 a.m . 10:45a.m . 7:30 p.m . 7:00p.m . ttA P T IS T 9:4Sa.m . 11:00 a.m . 6:00 p.m . 7:30 p.m . 10:00a.m . 11:00 a.m . 7:30 p.m . 7:30 p m . BAPTIST 10:00a.m.ll:0 0 a .m .7:00p.m .7:00p.m . TU R R E N T IN E B AP TIS T CHURCH R t. 7, M o c k s v ille Rev, Judge Johnson Sunday School 9:45 a.m .W orship 11:00a.mEvening 6:30p.m .Wed. P rayer M eeting 7:00 p.m . VIC TO RY B APTIST CHURCH Cooleemee Shopping Center Sunday School 10:00 a.m .W orship Service 11 ;00 a.m .Evening Servlet* 7:00p.m .W ednesday P r • je i 7 oo p.m . Y A D K IN V A L L l •* BAPTIST C H U R rw Y adkin Valley CATHO LIC ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Highway 601 North Sunday 10:00a.m.CHURCH OF CHRIST CO RINTH CHURCH OF CHRIST M iniste r: C harlie H arrison, Jr. W orship: Sun. 1):00a.m .Evening 7:00p.m . NORTH M A IN STR EET CHURCH OF CHRISTRobert D a rn all, M inisterSunday School ihlp 10:00a.m.ll:0 0 a .m .7:00p.m .7:30p.m . W orship Evening WednesdayCHURCH OP GOD CHURCH OF GOP Cooleemee, N.C.C LE M E N T GROVE CHURCH OF COD H ighw ay 64 West I.W . n a m e s. P astor Sunday School 10:00a.m.W orship *0 0 p m .Evening 6:00p.m .Wednesday 8:00p.m .M O C K S VILLE CHURCH OF COD H wy. 64 E i Depot ST.Sunday School 10:00a.m.W orship 11:00 a.m .Evening 7:00p.m .Wednesday 7:00 p.m . EPISCO PAL C O O LE E M E E E PISC O PAL CHURCH OF TH E GOOD SHEPHERD Rev, W illis M . Rosenthal, Priest Sermon 9:30a.m .Sunday School 10:50 a.m FORK EPISCO PAL CHURCH OF TH E ASCENSIONRev. Canon C. Nichols, Pastor SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Church School I0 :l5 a .m . Sunday W orship & Sermon ll :00a.m . Thursday P rayer M tg. 7;00 p.m . IN TE K D E N O M IN A TIO N A L MOCKSVILLE IN- TE R D E N O M IN A TIO N A L CHURCHPastor Rev. Lindsay W alters SundaySchool 9:45a,m .M orning W orship U ;0 0a .m . Radio P rogram (W DSL) 1:00 p.m . Youth Service 6:30 p.m .M id-W eek BIbly Study b y; M rs. Knox Johnston 7:00p.m . LU TH E R A N HO LY CROSS LU TH E R A N CHURCH C ary G llreath, Pastor Hwy. 601 S.M ocksville, N.C.SundaySchool 9:4Sa.m .W orship 11:00a.m. M ETH O D IST A .M .E . ZION M E TH O D IS T CHURCH A D V A N C E U N IT E D M E T H O D IS T CHURCH Advance, N.C.D A IL E Y 'S C H A P E L U N IT E D M E TH O D IS TDailey'S Chapel Rd.B E T H E L U N ITE D M E TH O D IS TBethel Church Rd. b e t h e l e h e m u n it e o m e t h o o is tCHURCHRedland Rd. off >58 East CHESTNUT G RO VE M E TH O D IS T Jam es Chip W ebb. P astor 2nd Si 4tn budnaySunday School 10:00 a.m .W orship 11:00 a.m ,CONCORD U N IT E D M E TH O D IS T C herry H ill Rd.C O O LE E M E E U N IT E D M E TH O D IS T CMUflCMRev, Aifoo P lt(0 tra ld , Psitor CO RNATZER U N IT E D M E TH O D IS T CHURCH Cornatzer Rd.D U LIN M E TH O D IS T CHURCHAdvance, N,C.E LB A V IL L E U N ITE D M E TH O D IS T CHURCHH wy. 601 Advance, N.C.FA R M IN G TO N M E TH O D IS T CHURCHSundaySchool (1 stSunday) 11:00a.m. (2nd, 3rd, 4th Sun.) 10:00 a.m .W orship lis t sun.) 10:00a,m .(3rd Sun,) 11:00a.m . F IR S T U N IT E D M E T H O D IS T CHURCHNorth M ain St. M ocksville N.C,Rev. Don D avis, Pastor SundaySchool 10:00a.m .W orship 11:00a.m .FU LTO N U N ITE D M E TH O D IS T Hwy. BOl at ForkHARDISO N U N IT E D M E TH O D IS TJericho Church Rd. H U N TS V ILLE M ETHO DIST W orship (2nd Sun.) 10:00 a.m ,(4thSun.) 11:00a.m .L IB E R T Y U N IT E D M E T H O D IS T CHURCH Gladstone Rd.M O C K S U N IT E D M E T H O D IS T CHURCHAdvance, N.C.M T. O LIV E M E TH O D IS T CHURCHRt. 5, M ocksville W orship (2nd Sun.) 11:00 a.m , (4th Sun.) 10:00a.m .SundaySchool (4thSun.) 11:00a.m. (lst,2nd,3rd,S un.) 10:00a.m .NEW UNIO N U N IT E D M E TH O D tS T Rev, K erm it Shoaf, Pastor SundaySchool 10:00a.m.W orship 11:00a.m.O AK GROVE U N IT E D M E TH O D IS T Highw ay 158 East SALEM U N ITE D M E TH O D IS T Davie Academ y Rd.SM ITH G RO VE U N IT E D M E TH O D IS T Hwy. 158 East. M ocksville Rev. J.C. Lane, Pastor W orship (ls t& 3rd) 10:00a.m,(2nd, 4th, & 5th Sun.) II :00 a.m .Sunday School (1st & 3rd) 11:00a.m. (? n d.4 th 4 5th ) 10:00a.m.Bible Study Wed. 7:30p.m . UNIO N C H A P E L M ETH O D IST James Chip W ebb, Pastor Is l, 3rd, & Str.SundaySchool t0:00p.m ,W orship 11:00a.m .W ESLEY C H A P EL M E TH O D IS T Advance, N.C.W orship (1st Sun.) 10:00 a.m .(3rd Sun.) 11:00a.m,Sur>day School(3rd Sun.) 11:00a.m. (2nd, 3rd, 4th Sun,) 10:00 a.m .ZION C H A P EL U N ITE D M E TH O D IS T Rev. K erm it Shoaf, Pastor M O R A V IA N M A C E D O N IA M O R A V IA N CHURCHRev. E. Ham pton M organ. Jr., Pastor Hwy. BOl & Farm ingtonSunday School 10:00 a.m .w orship 1 l:00a.m .Evening 7:30 p.m , SEVENTH D A Y A D V EN TIS T SEVENTH D A Y A D V EN TIS TM illin g Road*Sid M ills, Pastor Sabbath School 9:30a.m ,W orship n :0 0 a .m . PEN TEC O STAL HOLINESS C LA R K S V ILLE PENTECOSTALLibe rty Ch. Rd.Rev. A lbert Gentle W E S LE Y AN L IB E R T Y W E S LE Y AH CHURCHJeff Collins, Pastor M O C K S V ILLE W E S LE Y A N CHURCHHospital Street AAocksville, N.C.Rev. Doug Sm ith SundaySchool 9;45a.m , Sunday Evening W orship 6:00 p.m . W ednesday 7:00p,m . Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday W DSL SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. Route 6, Box 153 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 492-5565 EATON FUNERAL HOME 328 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Plione 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO. Ford Farming Sales and Strvic* New Holland ^qulpmttrt Highway 601 South , Mocksville, N.C. 27028 , Phone 634-5969 ED FISHER PLUMBING SERVK ■ ^ •■■•'if Cooleemee, N.C. 27014 M ^ Phone 284-2721 or 284-22321 Expert Repairs and New Installation FREE Estimates and Emergency Service SundaySchool W orship M O C K S V IL L E HOLINESS M illin g Road Rev, C urtis Wood Sunday School W orshipSunday night Services Evangelistic Wednesday 10:00a.m. 11:00a.m. P E N T E C O S T A L 10:00a.m. 11:00a.m. 6:00 p.m . 7:00p.m . 7:30p.m . P E N T E C O S T A LR E D L A N D HO LINESSDon Sigmon, Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m .W orship 11:00a.m.E va n g e lis tic 7;Qo p.n^ Wednesday F a m ily N ight ^OOn.nt.P R E SB Y TER IA N B IX B Y P R E S B Y TE R IA N CHURCH R. Shane Owens, Pastor SundaySchool 9:45a.m .W orship 11:00a.ni.W ednesdayCholr 7:00 p.m .D ibieStudy 8:00p.m . JEFFCOCO.JNC. In the Hillsdalo Community Route I Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8192 SUPPORT YOUR MERCHANTS WHO BRING YOU THIS INFORMATION - ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE - MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. Feeds, Dry Goods, Groceries and Fertilizer Depot Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2128 DAVIE (.ULNT. IMlkl’klSI iuauRIj TMliRSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985-9B Area Obituaries ENOCH CLYDE JARVIS Enoch Clyde Jarvis, 89, Rt. 2, Mocksville died Sunday at his home. The funeral was held Tuesday at Farmington Baptist Church by the Rev. Kenneth Barker, the Rev. J.C. Shore and the Rev. George Bowman. Bun'ai was in Farmington Community Cemetery. Seven grandsons served as pallbearers and included Robert Jarvis, Michael Jarvis, Wayne Jarvis, Gary Jarvis, Jerry Boger, David M. Jarvis and Barry Allen. The family requests that memorials be made to Farmington Baptist Church. Mr. Jarvis was born in Yadkin County to the late Enoch Luckett and Helena Tulbert Jarvis. He was employed with the Farmington Roller Mill in the 1920’s later joining the N.C. Highway Commission where he worked as a grader operator and office clerk. Jarvis retired in 1959 after 35 years service with the department. Jarvis and his wife, Mary Leagans Jarvis have made the Farmington community their home since their marriage in 1921. Jarvis and his family moved to a farm on Cedar Creek in 1950, making it their home for 27 years. Jarvis and his wife moved to north Farmington in 1977. Mr. Jarvis was a veteran of World War I and a member of Farmington Baptist Church. He was preceded in death by a daughter, Camilla Jarvis Allen. Surviving in addition to his wife are one daughter, Mrs. Lester (Helena) Boger, Mocksville; five' sons, Lester C. Jarvis, Covington, Va., Thomas T. and Paul F. Jarvis, both of Winston-Salem, James E. Jarvis, Burlington and 'David Z. Jarvis, Rt. 2; 21 grandchildren and 19 great-grandchildren; one niete, Mrs. J.C. Shore, Yadkinville. : LANGWARD TENOR Langward Tenor, 60, of Route 4, Mocksville died at 4:15 p.m. Friday in Rowan Memorial Hospital after bding in declining health for two years. ; Born Sept. 3, 1924, in Iredell County, a son of the late Thomas and Hattie Norman Tenor, he was educated in the Davie County Schools and was formerly employed by Chase-Brass and Copper Co., Waterbury, Conn., and Isenhour • Brick and Tile Co., Salisbury. ; Survivors include his wife, Barbara Tenor of Waterbury, Conn.; seven daughters, Anita L. Seldoh, Donna J. Kelly, Karen M. Kielty, and Daisy, Allison and Tonya Tenor, all of Waterbury, Conn. and Sp.4 Cheryl Ann Johnson of the U.S. Army; i A brother, Charlie Tenor of Cooleemec; seven sisters, Josie Tabor, Arizona Tinsley, Martha Lee ■Ross and Ollie Bell Scott, all of Salisbury, Nellie Davidson and Naomi Reid, both of Mocksville, and Carrie Ruth Graham of Brooklyn N.Y.; and eight grandchildren. ; The funeral was held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Noble and Kelsey memorial Chapel in Salisbury by the Rev. J.E. Chambers and the Rev. J.L. Stowe. Burial was in Boxwood Church cemetery. JASPER T. CONNER Jasper 'T. (J.T.) Conner, 71, Farmington Road, Rt. 2, Mocksville. died Saturday af­ ternoon in the emergency room at Davie Co. Hospital, Mocksville. The funeral was held Monday at Vogler’s Clemmons Chapel by the Rev. James Raines. Entombment followed in Westlawn Gardens of Memory Mausoleum, Clemmons. Mr. Conner was born in Iredell Co., to Joseph H. and Mary Childress Conner. His early childhood life was spent in Iredell Co. and he had made his home in the Farmington Community for the past 27 years. Mr. Conner was a member of Farmington United Methodist Church and was a member of Farmington Ruritan Club. He was also a fireman and board member of Farmington Fire Dept. Mr. Conner was Farmington's Man of the Year in 1974. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Lennie Anderson Conner, of the home; three daughters, Mrs. Tennyson (Shirley) Anderson and Mrs. Everette (Brenda) Glasscock, both of Rt. 1, Mocksville and Mrs. Wade (Mildred) King, Rt. 2, Mocksville; eight grandchildren; four sisters, Mrs. Virgie Myers, Rt. 1, Harmony, Mrs. Ivey Henderson, Statesville, Mrs. Stacy Reece, High Point and Mrs. Eula Harbin, Mocksville; one brother, Calvin Conner, Lincolnton. Memorials may be made to the charity of the donor’s choice. SHERIDAN BAITY Sheridan Baity, 83, Rt. 4, Yadkinville, died Thursday at Davie County Hospital. Mr. Baity was born in Yadkin County to Pleasent and Tina Shore Baity. He was a member of Turners Creek Baptist Church and a retired farmer. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Myrtle Plowman Baity; two daughters, Mrs. Denny (Dorothy) F5ollins, Mocksville and Mrs. Betty Pardue, Rt. 2; one son, Curtis Baity, Mocksville; seven grandchildren and one great-grandchild; two sisters, Mrs. Mattie Melton, Rt. 4 and Mrs. Daisy Gunter, Yadkin­ ville. The funeral was held Sunday at Turners Creek Baptist Church by the Rev. Allen Barker, the Rev. Eugene Gentry and the Rev. Jack Johnson. Burial was in the church cemetery. WALTER LEE CULLER Walter Lee Culler, 65, of Route 2, Advance, N.C. died Tuesday morning at his home. Funeral services will be con­ ducted Thursday, February 7 at 2 p.m. at Hope Baptist Tabernacle by the Reverend Norman Frye and Harold Tuttle. Burial will follow in the church cemetery. The family will receive friends at Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel from 7 until 9 p.m. Mr. Culler was born November 23, 1919 in Forsyth County to the late Charlie and Margaret George Culler. He was retired from R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Industries in Winston-Salem. He was a member of Hope Baptist Tabernacle; and a World War II veteran. ERNEST M. GREENE Ernest Morris Greene, 75, of 2303 ■ Granada Drive, Advance was dead on arrival late Thursday afternoon at Davie County Hospital. The body was moved from Eaton’s Funeral Home, Mocksville, to J. Markiewicz and Sons Funeral Home, New Haven, Conn.. for services. Burial was in Beaver Dale Cemetery there. Born October 1. 1909, in West Haven, Conn., he was a veteran of World War II and was retired from the U.S. Postal Service. His wife, Amelia Rakiec Greene, died In 1983. Survivors include two daughters, Arlene Affinito of East Haven, Conn., and Linda Cass of Advance; one sister, Viola DeErick of Florida; one brother, George Spraggof West Haven. Conn.; seven grandchildren; and one great­ grandchild. WILMER LEE PLOTT Wilmer Lee (Red) Plott. 68,125 S. Green Street, Winston-Salem died Saturday at Davie County Hospital after several years of declining health. He was the son of the late John and Lula Wood Plott and was retired from Tanglewood Park after 20 years of service. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Linda Wayne, De Land, Fla., Mrs. Cecelia Voss, Winston-Salem and Mrs. Debbie Mendenhall, Atlanta. Fa.; one son, Tommy Plott, Winston-Salem; seven grand­ children; two sisters, Mrs. Margaret Bowles, Winston-Salem and Mrs. Laura Beck, Mocksville. The funeral was held Tuesday at Hayworth-Miller Silas Creek Chapel by-the Rev. Jack Johnson. Burial followed in Bethlehem United Methodist Church cemetery. Davie County. Girl Scout CookieSale Underway MRS. MAnriMiFTS'AIL MUKl'HY Mrs. Margaret Nail Murphy, 75, 1123 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville, died Saturday at her home. A graveside service was held Monday at Center United Methodist Church cemetery by the Rev. Don Davis. The family requests that memorials be made to the Cancer Fund or to a charity of the donor’s choice. Mrs. Murphy was born in Davie County to the late William and Mary Call Nail and for 40 years she was co-manager of United Variety Store. She was a member of Mocksville First United Methodist Church. Mrs. Murphy was the widow of Ernest E. Murphy who was Davie County’s Maintenance Supervisor who prededed her in death October 4, 1972. Surviving are one son, Joe Murphy, 157 Greenwood Ave.; two grandsons, Steven Murphy, Cary and Lt. Michael Murphy. Columbus, Mo.; one sister, Mrs. Earl Rebecca) Lamb. Greensboro; one brother, William Nail, Mocksville and .one half-sister, Mrs. Mary Smith, Mocksville, LUCY FOOTE Lucy Dulin Foote, of Route 8, Mocksville died Friday morning in Davie County Hospital after a short illness. The funeral was held Sunday at 2 p.m. at St. John’s AME Zion Church in Mocksville with the Rev. L. B. Speas officiating. Burial was in the church cemetery. Mrs. Foote was born March 25, 1909. in Davie County to the late Alex and Julia Dulin. Survivors include a daughter. Josephine Foote; a son. William Eugene Foote, both of Route 8, eight grandchildren; one great-grand­ son; a brother, Leroy Dulin of Mocksville; three sisters, Annie VanEaton, Nannie B. Howell, both of Mocksville, and Rosa Harper of Winston-Salem. MRS. MAGGIE SHEEK Mrs. Maggie Griffith Sheek, 94, of Yadkin Valley Road, widow of John D. Sheek, died January 29th at Davie County Hospital in Mocksville. The funeral was held Tliursday at Yadkin Valley Baptist Church by the Rev. Leon Wood. Burial was in the church cemetery.Mrs. Sheek was born in Davie' County to William and Ada Miller. Griffith. She was a member of Yadkin Valley Baptist Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Lillian Sheek Hauser of Ad­ vance and Mrs. Mary Jane Sheek Barefoot of Castle Hayne, N.C.; four grandchildren; nine great­ grandchildren and five great-great- grandchildren. DELLA M. McDANIEL Della Elizabeth M. McDaniel, 95, of Route 1, Ridge Road, Mocksville, died at 9:15 p.m. Saturday at her home. The funeral was held Monday at Salem United Methodist Church in Davie County conducted by the Rev. Claudia Harrelson and the Rev. Kermit Shoaf. Burial followed in the church cemetery. Memorials may be made to Salem United Methodist Church, Route 1, Mocksville or to the charity of the donor's choice. Born Nov. 14, 1889, in Davie County, she was a daughter of the late Johnson Clayburn and Jennie Starrette McDaniel. She was a member of Salem United Methodist Church. Her husband, Jessie Monroe McDaniel, died in 1971, and a son. Wilburn McDaniel, died in 1976. Survivors include a daughter, Mary McDaniel of the home; a granddaughter, Mrs. Cedric (Hazel) Smoot of Mocksville; four great-grandchildren; and four great-great-grandchildren. SERyiCE FUMERAL DIRECTORS 722-6101 )20S.Miln St. 722-6106 , . 29SI Riynoldi Rd. .126 YufS Of MrVICC 766-4714 NA’nONALSELECT|^0RTICIANS MIddlebrook Drive Climmoni J W U ) CREMATORY SERVICE 246'2366 Clemmons, N. C. c . I . » MEMBER BY INVITATION 405 S. Miin St. Lexington 4 t.ocitions Davie County Phone Number 908-3428 MRS. DAISY TAYLOR SEAFORD Funeral services for Mrs. Daisy Taylor Seaford, 96. of Route 3. Mocksville, N.C., were held Sunday, January 27, 1985, at 2 p.m. at Fork Baptist Church in Davie County. Officiating were the Rev. Yates Wilkerson of High Point. N.C., and the pastor, the Rev. Gordon Joyner. Burial followed in the church ccmetery. Mrs. Seaford died Friday. January 25. 1985. at Golden Age Nursing Home in Lexington, N.C., after an illness of three years. She was born in Davidson County. N.C.. May 6, 1888. daughter of the late Albert and Minnie Owens Taylor. She was a member of Fork Baptist Church. She was the widow of Luther P. Seaford who died February 4. 1938. Surviving is a son, Robert Leo Seaford of Route 3, Mocksville, N.C.; 3 grandchildren and 4 great­ grandchildren; three brothers, Charlie T. Taylor, Zach Taylor and Joe W. Taylor, all of Lexington, \ (’ find nne sister, Mrs. Frankie Sliaipo '.if High Point, N.C. Alcohol Info Report by Bill Weant A drinking driver, especially one that has a blood alcohol content of at least .10 percent, will exhibit one or more of the following clues: -Driving at unreasonably slow or fast speeds. -Changing lanes frequently. -Drifting across the center line, and returning with a jerk. -Passing with insufficient clearance; slowing or excessive swerving when overtaking or passing. --A p p r o a c h in g s ig n a ls unreasonably fast or slow, and making jerky starts and stops. -Failing to dim lights to on­ coming traffic. -Driving at night without lights. -Driving loo close to shoulders or curbs; hugging the edge of the road or center line. -Driving with windows down in cold weather. -Turning with an usually wide radius. -Weaving, swerving. -Stopping without cause in traffic lane.- ^ -Braking and accelerating erratically: v > , ..,-rDriving into opposing or crossing traffic. -Signaling inconsistent with actions. Persons driving while impaired increase their chances of having an automobile : accident by seven times, and they are more likely to cause greater personal and property damage ,if such an ac­ cident should occur. (This series is prepared by Bill Weant, alcoholism education consultant with the Tri-County Mental Health Complex, 622 North Main Street, Mocksville. These articles are designed to create understanding about drinking, alcohol abuse, and alcoholism in our society. If you have a question concerning alcohol that you would like answered i-i a future column, phone 634-219L Tarheel Triad Girl Scout Council, a United Way Agency is preparing to begin the Annual Girl Scout Cookie Sale. This year marks the 51st year of the Girl Scout Cookie Sale in America. Local Girl Scouts began l.nking orders on January 11th. The Direcl Sale begins on March 2nd, 1985. The cookies will be $2.00 a box. The varieties available for this year are Tagalongs, Do-si-do’s, Thin Mints. Samoas, Trefoils Chocolate Chunks and our new cookie Juliettes. The Girl Scout Cookie Sale and the United Way are the two major sources of funding for Girl Scouts. Profits from the Cookie Sale help to provide camping facilit es, equipment, handbooks, filmstrips, tapes and books for troop use. staff services and special programs. The Cookie Sale provides an opportunity for girls, volunteers, and com­ munity to support the largest organization in the world for girls. The Cookie Sale is a great way for girls to learn how to market a product, work with the public, promote their own program, and handle finances. Girls can earn a Marketing Patch while in the process of selling cookies. The patch requirements have girls learn about the varieties of cookies they sell, what makes a good salesperson, how to keep accurate records, etc. The girls also learn why advertising is important. They set soles goals and make a plan for selling cookies. The sales theme for the 1985 Cookie Sale is “ Cookie Encounter". The incentives the girls receive follow this basic theme. Some of this year’s awards include a silver tote made of “ space age material” , a flight bag and a space animal named “ Fru Fru". Other incentives include a Girl Scout autograph Local Bull Named 1985 Trait Leader A Polled Hereford buli inviicd by Lucky Stryke Farm. Crossville, Tenn., and Whip-O-Will Farm, Mocksville, N.C, has been named a 1985 Trait Leader for maternal weight by the American Polled Hereford Association (APHA). Graystone Trustee was one of 15 sires recognized by the APHA for exceptional progeny performance in maternal weight among the 842 bulls listed in the 1985 Sire Sum­ mary. an annual listing of bulls and their expected progeny dilTcrciicc values. This is the roiirthycarol'ilic Al’HA has produced the Sire Summary program to give Polled Hereford breeders and commercial cow-calf producers guidlines on selecting bulls for use in their individual breeding programs. Performance data on birth weight, weaning weight, yearling weight, carcass characteristics and maternal productivity of the sire’s daughters is gathered by breeders across the U.S. and analyzed in APHA’s data center. “ The program is not designed to tell breeders which bull is best, but instead help breeders make selection decisions to fit the needs of their herd,” says Dr. Jim Gibb, APHA Director of Education and Research. Trait Leader recognition in the Sire Summary is based on ex­ cellence in single traits plus total performance. Bulls ranking on the list have outstanding progeny performance and a high degree of reliability. book, mug. ’I’-shirt. and charm. Top cookie sellers can qualify to receive a camcra. one week at Resident Camp, or a clock radio. Girls have fun selling Girl Scout Cookies. Manj; troops hold booth sales or group sales Saturdays in their neigh­ borhoods. Parents are encouraged to help girls get the most from their Cookie Sale learning experience, Many parents give girls a list of their friends so that girls might call for phone orders. Other parents take an order card to work and put the girls picture and personal sales pitch on the bulletin board. Parents often accompany younger girls and act as a Cookie Partner. Girls are encouraged to discover their own pntenlial as rnnkie sellers. Each troop has a Cookie Chair­ person that distributes cookie in­ formation and corrects all orders. Many local troops have Dads to fill the role of Cookie Chairperson. This volunteer position is a great short­ term role that lots of fathers share in his daughters Girl Scout ex­ perience. With the help of their troop Chairperson and leader troops set their own sales goals. These goals depend upon their plans for the year. If the girls had planned a day at the park or a trip to Juliette Low’s birthplace in Savannah,' Georgia, they can determine how much the activity will cost and how much they would like to earn on their own. The Troop Cookie Chairperson reviews a flip chart with the girls on their product, it’s cost, safety in selling, sales goals and future plans for their profits. Some Cookie Volunteers have cookie cupboards in their homes where troops and girls can pick up pxira cnnkics when they run out. : I'he girls also learn what they are contri’uuling lu the support of theiir' Girl Scout Program, (iirls know for example that you have to sell eight ■ boxes of cookies to buy one child’s . life jacket, or 450 boxes to buy one • platform tent or twenty-five boxes l to buy one troop program kit. The Girl Scout Cookie Sale is big • business. Girls, parents, troop' leaders, and cookie volunteers help', to make it a successful activity for girls. In 1984, the top cookie seller in Davie County, Tammy Revels of Junior Troop No. 473 wa? the highest cookie seller in 1984. She sold 476 boxes of cookies. Top cookie. selling troops were Brownie Troop No. 581 that sold 2,604 boxes of cookies, and Junior Troop No. 280 that sold 1,752 boxes of cookies. Local D.A.V. To Host Valentine Party The Disabled American Veterans'i Auxiliary, District 5, will host a Valentine party for the patients at the VA Medical Center in Salisbury, N.C., Sunday, February 10, from 2', p.m. until 4 p.m. in the lobby of the building. S p e c ia l P ro g ra m A t Cedar Creek Baptist Cedar Creek Missionary Baptist Church will present the Reverend John Heath of Winston-Salem. N.C. Sunday. February 17,1985, at 3 p.m. Appearing with the Reverend Heath will be the Clement Grove Gospel Choir. The public is invited to attend. Wild Klee Wild rice is a grain, not a true rice at all. I Your home is your equity. Fire can lay waste to what you’ve worked so hard for. Protect yourself. See our agent for complete fire coverage. WE OFFER: •Standard fire, wind & hail insurance •Home protection policy •Farm protector policy HOMEOWNER — We can provide a $40,000 HO-3 (or a cost as low as 8135.60 a year. AAA-momeowreis' Policy S 50,000-S156.00 S 60.000-S176.40 S 70,000-5196.60 S 80,000-8217.20 S 90.000-S237.60 S100.0a0-S2S8.00 AAA Standard Fite Policy S 50,000-S 93,50 S 60.000-S112.20 S 70,000-S130,90 S B0.000-S149.60 S 90.000-S168.30 S100,000-5187.00 While we have principally Insured rural property owners in the past, we welcome inquiries from any property owners in our three county area (Alexander, Iredell and Davie). ________________________ Our Rates Are Lower As we are a non-profit association and have no stocl<holders to pay, we can offer you lower rates. When losses are low, profits are passed bacl< to our policy­ holders in reduced rales. FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE ASSOC. 301 Harrill Street, Statesville, N.C. * Phone 873*7461 Collect ■ lOB-DAVlE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985 Bob Blackwood received a plaoue from Steve Beck for his service as a board member and as President of the board from 1978-1984. I-R Credit Union Presents Awards Directors of the Ingersoll-Rand Employees Federal Credit Union held a luncheon at Bermuda Run Golf and Country Club on January 18, 1985, to pay tribute to Charles Spear and Bob Blackwood. Spear retired from the Board of Directors after sixteen years of service. He is a charter member and one of the founders of the Credit Union. During his sixteen vears of service he has served as a board member and held the positions of President and Treasurer. Blackwood retired from the Board of Directors after seven years of service as a board member and as President of the board from 1978 through 1984. Spear and Blackwood were both presented a plaque commemorating their many years of loyal service. Charles Saear received a plaque from Bob Blackwood at a luncheonneldat Bermuda Run Country Club for Ms loyal service. Applicants Sought For Little Miss Pageant The Winston-Salem Jaycce Women are now taking applications for the Fifth Annual Little Miss Winston- Salem Pageant to be held March 30- 1985. The first twenty (20) ap­ plicants from Forsyth County and all adjoining counties will be taken. Girls must be five (5) to eight (8) years old. The entry fee is $50.00 Last year, we had twenty (20) eligible applicants who competed in talent, sportswear, and evening dress competitions. We had a variety of talent ranging from gymnastics and dancing to singing and playing the piano. Each child was outstanding in every phase of competition. Judges interviewed the children prior to the pageant. This was combined with the pageant competition to select a winner. We had over sixty (60) sponsors for last year’s pageant and hope to have more this year. Sponsors and advertisers were listed in our program. Among the prizes donated were skating and theater passes, free dinners, clothing certificates,, hair cuts, dental checkups, trophies and flowers. This year, again, we will award each contestant with a trophy; the winner, in addition, will receive a crown. Other prizes will also be awarded. Proceeds from the Little Miss Winston-Salem Pageant benefit the Rainbow House and Amos C^ottage. Rainbow House (Ronald McDonald) is a home away from home where families can stay while their children are receiving treatment at Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem for cronic illnesses. “ This year's pageant will 'take place Saturday, March 30, 1985 at Philo Junior High School Auditorium. The finals will begin at 7:00 p.m. The theme this year is “Soaring Dreams” . The emcee is Kathy Fleming, of Elkin, North Carolina, 1977 Miss North Carolina. Tickets will be on sale at the door. For additional information write the Winston-Salem Jaycee Women, P.O. Box 2256, Winston- Salem, North Carolina, 27102. Bell Peppers Bell peppers and sweet peppers are the same thing. Frostbite remedies W ith Winter upon us, bear in mind that frostbiteJ is fairly easy to prevent. Wearing earmuffs andl scarves serves as adequate protection for ears andl I, cheeks, I 1' Wet gloves and socks make for frostbitten fingers! |>' and toes. Change to dry clothing as needed. 1 Minor frost nips may be treated by covering cheeksi !or ears with a warm hand. Deeper frostbite may require] ■jmedical attention. Get the victim indoors and call a l ^doctor. Then, warm the frostbitten area by immersing iti ((in water heated ten degrees above body tem perature .| Take care of yourself. You’re Important to us! 9 ' HEALTHY SAVINGS Foster-Rauch Drugs We Appreciate Your BtuineH Variations In Sign Languages Vary Across America The authors discovered there are at least 22 different hand variations for the word, picnic, In American Sign Language-whlch is the fourth most used language in the United States behind English, Spanish and Hallaii. By Melinda Stovall In Florida, an up-and-down motion of the hands indicates the word, picnic, in sign language. Two hands brought to the mouth means picnic in Illinois. At least 22 different hand variations exist for the word, picnic, in American Sign Language-the fourth most used language in the United States behind English, Spanish and Italian. Reflecting regional variations, vacationers may talk of the beach in North Carolina, call it the shore in New Jersey or speak of the coast in Oregon. Likewise, users of sign language across America vary their hand movements for certain words, depending on where they live. A recently published book written by two Greensboro educators of the deaf focuses for the first time on r^ional variations in American Sign Language. “ Signs Across America: A look at Regional Differences in American Sign Language” was written by Dr. Edgar H. Shroyer, an associate professor of communication disorders at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and his wife, Susan P. Shroyer, an educator at both Guilford and Bennett colleges. The 304-page book was published by Gallaudet College Press of Washington, D.C., and contains 130 individual words for which at least three different signs currently are used. “ The recognition of different signs for the same word is something that, has been done time and timeagam lor anybody who has anything to do with deafness. But no one had ever come up with a process to record it,” said Dr. Shroyer. The Shroyers were playing “ What’s your sign for...?" with friends one night two years ago. Fascinated by the variations, they decided to expand their research to 25 states with sizable deaf populations and states that reflected different regions in the country. Thirty-eight persons across the country contributed signs for the book. “ Most of the people we asked we knew,” Dr. Shroyer said. “ In places that we didn’t know anyone, we contacted the community service centers for the deaf and sometimes the residential schools. “ We asked them to share some of their signs,” he continued. “ To record the signs, we sent them a videotape and a list of words and asked them to sign.” The Shroyers collaborated on the research for the book, viewing the videotapes and the 1,278 illustrations represented in the entire text. The book is targeted mainly toward those in interpreter training programs, educators who teach sign language, linguists and the general deaf population. “ Invariably what happens when you teach a sign language class is that a student will say that is not the sign he or she learned,” Dr. Shroyer said. “ With this book, a teacher now can show when sign language for a word Is not uniform. And sign language difinitely isn’t in­ ternational as thought by many. There is German sign language, Russian sign language, etc.” Besides being educational , the book. Dr. Shroyer noted, is one of the few works to preserve unique and traditional signs found across the country. "Peoplehave been very positive, saying that saving sign language heritage is a fantastic idea.” he said. "American Sign Language is based on French sign language. When French sign language was brought over in 1817, people used it. When they started school for the deaf, students also brought their own signs to the classroom: thus , you had American and French sign languages dovetailing. “ People who were taught by Thomas Gallaudet (recognized as one of the originators of the first permanent school for the deaf in the United States in 1817) branched out to start schools of their own, and they incorporated what the students brought in," Dr. Shroyer continued. “Always some signs vary, depen­ ding on where you live. “ In Hawaii, for instance, the sigris are quite different because it is so far away. They didn't send our teachers of the deaf as quickly to Hawaii as they did to the continental United States. The sign language in Hawaii is more primitive and doesn’t follow American Sign Umguage rules for usage as much." A native signer, Dr. Shroyer is the hearing son of deaf parents and the nephew of four deaf aunts and four deaf uncles. In 1978, he joined the division of communication disor­ ders in UNC-G’s Department of Communication and Theatre. Village Pantiy us 601 South 3 Miles Inside Rowan County Specials Grade A Large Eggs 79 cent dozen Bread 2/ 99 cent Cigarettes 6.55 Kings 6.80 lOO’s Schacfer 1.99 6pk. 12 oz Cans Old Milwaukee's Best 1.99 6pk. 12o/, Cans Old Milwaukee & Old Milwaukee Light 2.49 6pk. 12oz. Cans Open 7 Days A Week 6am To 10pm Fridays, Saturday llp n i We Sell Gas, kerosene, Beer, & Many Grocery Items Last Stop For Beer Between Salisbury & Mocksville A u c tt o n e e r: K E IT H J P I E P C E .C A I A s s o c ia t e A u c tio n e e r C r a ig G ilr e a th B roker: M ILD R ED Y PIERCE R e a l E state A g e n t: A n n e tte J. W e lb o rn AUCTION BANKRUPTCY AUCTION By Order of Bankruptcy Court The Honorable James B. Wolfe, Jr. Trustee: Bruce Magers, Atty. Property being Sold Subject to Confirmation^^ COMPLETE BUSINESS LIQUIDATION SAT. FEB. 16■ ■ ■ ■ w m m M A W ^ S ID IN G INVESTMENT SIDING « WINDOW COMMNY BEGINNING AT I 0AM,SATURDAY «E WILL. HAVE AN ABSOLUTE AUCTION TO LIQUIDATE THE INVENTORY Bt ASSETS OF INVESTMENT SIDING & WINDOW COMPANY. PARTIAL L IS T CONSIST OF; SO VINYL DOUBLE GLASS RE­ PLACEMENT WINDOWS. 30 NEW STORM DOORS,STOCK S IZE . 16 NEW STORM WINDOWS. 29 SETS OF VINYL WINDOW SHUTTERS. 2 ROOF ELEC. POWER VENT FANS. 6 ALUMINUM AWNINGS. 2 LARGE WOODSTOVES W/BLOWER. 1 TIME CLOCK. 40 USED STOim WINDOWS. 20 NICE-WOOD YARD BENCHES. 18 ROLLS MISC. ALUMINUM COIL. 50 REPLACEMENT WINDOW SAW>LES. 10 OFFICE DESK 2 TYPEWRITERS. 2 a 4 DRAWER FILE CABINETS. 10 DESK CHAIRS. CALCULATORS A ADDING MACHINES. OVER 20 TELEPH O NES CASH REGISTER (2) 32 FOOT ALUMINUM LADDERS. 4 STEP LADDERS TOOLS • HANDTRUCK - N A ILS . SKILSAW-DR ILLS-LADDER JACKS COCA-COLA BOX-TABLES-ETC. MORE - MUCH M ORE. BE SURE TO COME TO THE OPEN HOUSE SHOWINGS... SUNDAY • FEBRUARY - 10th 1:30 ■ TILL - 3:30 EACH DAY TERMS AND CONDITIONS WILL BE AVAILABLE AT TH AT TIME, ALSO SURVEY MAPS & OTHER INFORMATION................................ BEAUTIFUL 8 ROOM HOME FRONT VIEW 3400 80. FT. W/FLORIDA ROOM HOME W/APPROX. 6 Acres t PROPERTY ALSO HAS 40 X 100 HEATED BUILDING W/2 RESTROOMS ALSO: TWO ADJOINING TRACTS OF BEAUTIFUL LAYING LAND. EACH TRACT CONTAINS APPROXIMATELY 9 ACRES± DIRECTIONS FROM WINSTON- SALEM,GO 1-40 WEST TO HY-WAY 80 1,TURN RIGHT ONTO H Y - WAY SOI & GO WEST APPROXIMATELY 8 & 1/2 MILES,ABOUT 3 a 1/2 MILES WEST OF FARMINGTON DRAG STRIP TURN RIGHT ONTO S.R. I 4 2 4 . GO ABOUT 100 YARDS a CROSS FOUR CORNERS ROAD( S .R. I 4 2 5 ) . AFTER YOU CROSS FOUR CORNERS ROAD,CONTINUE ABOUT 25 0 YARDS... . PROPERTY ON LEFT. LOOK FOR ALL POSTED DIRECTION SIGNS......................................................... PIER C E A U C TIO N S E R VIC E & REAL ESTATE O F F IC E & A U C T IO N G A L L E R Y :!/BU W E S I M O U N TA IN b IH E t I W IN b TO N S A LEM N C i/IOl B t I W fcfcN V ^ IN S IO N S A l I M and r ^ t H N t H b V l l l l l4UlAKtllNVIllfcHU IaII A U L r lU N b A l tb U U H b U b IN t b S N O r A blUfc U N t 1 f YOU ARE URGED TO INSPECT BEFORE THE SALE A IL OESCR»PT»ONS AND mFORMMVON WEftE DERIVED FROM SOURCES BELIEVED TO BE TRUE AND ACCURATE. NO WARRANTV OR GUARANTEE IS EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED ANNOUNCEMENTS MADE DAY OF SALE WILL TAKE PRECEDENCE. PROPERTY BEING SOLO AS IS WHERE IS. ■ID YOUB PftlCCITHU PROPiBTY MAY SELl AT OR M LO W THE PRICE YOU WOULD •E WILLING TO PAVI DAVIE COUNTY I.'. Zoo’s Valentine Celebration To Feature Gorillas • IJ I HURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985-1 IB Who comes to mind when you think for famous couples? Homeo iind Juliet? At the slate zoo, the choice is . likely to be Ramar and Hope, the Soo’s popular pair of Lowland ■ gorillas. They’ve been drawing , crowds since they went on exhibit ,'^hcn the new African Pavilion open 'last October. . ' To celebrate Valentine's Day, the North Carolina Zoological Park is ■presenting "A Zoo Affair,” featuring gorilla lore, romantic music and free admission to children who bring a valentine to Hope or Ramar. Sponsored by the zoo and the N.C. Zoological Society, “A Zoo Affair" will begin Saturday, Feb. 9, and run through Sunday, Feb. 17. On weekends, volunteer guides will be 1 stationed at the gorilla habitat to I tell visitors everything they've always wanted to know about gorillas and hand'out printed in- 1 formation and photographs of Ramar. • On Sundays, classical music will be performed at the lower entrance to the African Pavilion.' Everyday visitors may pick up plastic “ I Love Zoo' tote bags at the ticket office. Depending on the weather, the gorillas will be at home in their quarter-acre indoor habitat or their half-acre outdoor habitat. They share the huge pavilion with about ISO other African animals and 3,300 exotic plants and trees. Among the other animals species on exhibit in the 55,00fl S(|uare-foot pavilion are Patas monkey, man­ drill, gerenuk. Black-backed duiker, Colobus monkey, dik-dik, serval, caracal, spririghaas, African hooded vulture and rock python. The African Pavilion and African Plains, a 40-acre habitat for .an­ telope and largo . ground-dwelling birds, are the zoo's newest exhibits. Visitors also see birds from nearly every continent living among tropical plants in the walk-through Phone 7.04-634-6111 Phone 704-634-6112 t Insurance REAL ESTATE- BONDS- IVhi.AN C E -ALL TYPES h o m e s DAVIE COUNTY-200A Dairy farm-fenced-well watered-bams-nlce farm house. 234 W. CHURCH ST.-Country atmosphere in the City. See to ap­ preciate this ’jeautiful 3BR. Brick Rancher. Full finished basement with it’s own Kitchen, Dining Area, Bath. Play'Room, sitting & sleeping area and fireplace. Ideal for apartment or entertaining: 922 YADKINVILLE RD.-5 room house, zoned business, detached garage, super location, good parking, central air. |3B,900. LITTLE JOHN DR.-Charniing, brick house with 3BR, 2B, basement playroom. Lots of closets and storage space. Central air, heat pump, central vacuum system pnd 2 fireplaces. Excellent neighborhood. 165,000. HWY. IS8-1982 3BR, 2B Commodore Mobile Home. 14 x 70 total elec­ tric, county water. Set up in Mobile Home Park. Excellent condition. $15,000. ____ BETHEL CHURCH RD.-l acre with spUt level'house - 1800 sq. ft. heated 2-car garage lower level, 12 x 46 covered deck and patio. Drapes, curtains, washer-dryer, refrigerator and fireplace enclosure, 3-bay separate garage and work area. Mobile home hook up on side lot. A lot of country living for )89,ono. HILLCREST CT.-3BR. l ‘AB, LR w-FP, DR. carport. »38,000. -^01S-3BR, J >iB, 1587 sq. ft. heated space, large lot. Excellent buy at $37,500. New home under construction-paved street-city water and sewer- energy efficient. Pick out your own colors and carpet. Onlv $45,500. SRI 192 OFF GLADSTONE RD. 1980 Tidwell Mobile home on A. 3BR, 2B, AC. total electric, county water. REDUCED TO $25,000.00 NEW LISTING- Milling Rd. 3BR. B. large living room, eat-in kitchen. 34.500. 519 WILKESBORO ST-Nice older home, approx. 1900 sq.ft. heated area. Recently renovated 3br. 2 B, LR w-fpl.. formal DR, den and screened porch. 2-zone heat pump, central air. Hardwood floors. Double carport, partial basement, storage building and gas pump. Close to bospilal. schools and shopping. Reasonably priced. SANDFORD RD.-Like new mobile home',, furnished, excellent con­ dition, 2BE, 2 full baths. On beautiful acre with trees, shrubs and garden space. Close in. $26,000 315 MORSE ST.-3BR. V/i B III I^OVVtl I rT ii llii bi back. Large back yard with room tor ga||(rt(^^Ivraient to schools and shopping. A good buy at $37,500. OCEAN DRIVE BEACH. SC-New town houses $75,900-New patio homes $59,900. OFF LEWISVILLE-CLEMMONS RD. Holly Hedge Drive Lot No. 17. New Farm-styie home. 1800 sq. ft. heated area. 2'/i B. LR-FP. kitchen with dishwasher, C. air. basement, double garage-$72,500. STROUD MILL RD.-Nice country home on 5.7A. All fenced, barn and outbuildings. Reduced to'$60,000. META BREEZE LANE-Wiliow 3 BR, Vk B, deck, front stobp, city watei^c#^^drrcarport, paved street and drive $40,900. RIVERDALE RD.-Like new 3TO home in rural setting. Excellent buy. $36,000. OFF GLADSTONE KD.-2BR solidly built home in IVt Acre. Com­ pletely furnished including freezer. $22,500. CO M M ERCIA L 601N near I-40-Prime business lot. 100' x 500'. FOR RENT-'/i Cinderella Beauty Shop-360 sq. ft. newiy decorated. Bathroom and closet. Elec. heat and A-C $150 per month. COUNTY HOME ROAD-Westside Mobile Home Park. 4 acres, chain link fence, 12 mobile homes. Monthly income $2,052 full rental. Price $135,000. Owner financing at 10 percent APR. Call us for info on Cedardaie- Log Homes, i A I i l L NICE HIDEAWAY but close in - 2.8A of some of the nicest hardwood to be found - Good road frontage.. FARMINGTON-We have the hard to find small tracts, close to For­ syth, reasonably priced. Have been perked. LIBERTY CHURCH RD.-24A mostly cleared. Woods and stream on back. May be sold as two approx. 12A tracts. $1950 per acre. APPROX 5A near Mocksville, wooded, stream, paved road, county water. Gladstone Rd.-l acre building lot. Creek on buck of property. $3700 FARMINGTON AREA-8A's and lOA’s-long paved road frontage. 998 no. Eaton St,-2iots and 7 acres. Ideal for development, Wilkes Co.-9.7A of beautiful mountain land-white pines and poplar timber-Within 5 miles of Parkway. Beautiful homesite, 4,52A wooded, stream, paved road, county water. Convenient to 1-40, DAVIE ACADEMY RD,-80 beautiful acres-50 under cultivation-rest wooded, Resonabiy priced, WILLOW RUN-Many lots, paved street, city water and sewer $3,950 each. SR 1821 OFF CHERRY HILL RD.-15A rolling land.„part open, part hardwood stream, paved rd„ part fenced, SANDFORD AVE,-lot 345' street frontage, 200' deep, Zoned business, WOODLAND DEV;-5.08 wooded acres edge of Woodland Dev. Resonabiy priced. Borders creek, ADVANCE-42A, part wooded, part fenced, stream, local No, to W-S, NEAR FARMINGTON-Hwy. 801, 9.387A open land, long rd. frontage, will divide. Mobile Home Lots, wooded, road frontage, $2300 Goodson ltd. (Rowan Co.) 18A rich bottom land-stream, CLOSE IN-Approx. 12A, 10 open, long road frontage, good building sites, HOWARD ST.-100X140 ft. lot. City water and sewer. Resonabiy priced. Eugene Bennett - 998-4727 .. Grace Cabe - 634-2272 Holland Chafin - 634-5186 Louise Frosi Daigle • 634-2846 Sam Howell - 634-2060 Graham Madison - 634-5176 Gwynn Meroney • 634-2208 Luther Potts. RHU • 998-8420 Henry Shore - 634-5846 Kathi Wall - 492-7631 634-6111or 6344112 aIQIKI HOUSINIi R.J. Reynolds Forest Aviary. Six outdoor habitats for exotic animals such as lions, elephants and chlmpanzccs complete the zoo's 300- acre African section. Restaurants, gift shops and a tram to move visitors around the two-mile trip through the park are also available. The North Carolina Zoological i’ark is open B a.m. to 5 p.m. everyday. ITie Pavilion and aviary open at 9;.30 a.m. and close at 4:30 p.m. Admission is $3 for adults, $1 for children ages 2-li> and senior citizcns. The tram ride is $1 a day per person. The zoo is located six miles southeast of Asheboro off U.S. 04, U.S. 220 and N.C. 159. For in­ formation, call (919) 879-5G06. LAREW-WOOD-JOHNSON,lnc. 135 South Salisbury Street Mocksville, N.C. ^ NEW LISTING NAYLOR STREET-2 bedroom, 1 bath, very neat brick starter home. Convenient to shopping, schools and churches, $29,500. BEAR CREEK CHURCH ROAD-3 bedrooms, 2 haUi brick veneer split foyer home with 2 fireplaces on 10 acres. Very picturesque setting wiUi large trees and pond, flowers and fruit trees. Full basement, rough finished. $85,000.00. FARMINGTON RD-16 acres prime land with frontage on Farmington Road. Fencing, stream, pasture, trees and borders Cedar Creek, $49,000.00. E. MAPLE AVE-One of Mocksvilie’s finest 2-story older homes. Six bedrooms, large entrance hall with fireplace, large porches and beauUful grounds. Separate garage and guest house. Quiet neigh­ borhood. Convenient to downtown. $89,500,00. E. MAPLE AVE,-2,43 acres and like new 3 bedroom brick veneer home with large den-dinlng combination, fireplace, paved drive, fenced yard, playhouse and large outbuilding. Convenient to schools, churches and downtown area. $69,500.00. 334 RAILROAD STREET-Industrial property available. $15,000. Call for details.SOUTHWOOD ACRES-For sale or rent with option to buy-spacious 4 bedroom. 2 bath home in excellent neighborhood near Davie High School. Features family room with fireplace, livhig room, dining room, carport and basement. See it today! Reduced from $82,000 to $79,000. CENTER COMMUNITY-41 acres bordering Interstate 40, $44,000.00. SOUTHWOOD ACRES-Choice Lots Available JACK BOOE ROAD-Small acreage tracts available Phone'634-6281 ffl Bm Johnson 284-2202 June Johnson 2^-2202 Don Wood 634-2826 Sarah Wood 634-2826 Winston Churchill slept so badly that he had tvyin beds, ' and would move from one to another.. O n lu n ^21 CLEMMOH VILLAGE REAL ESTATE mREALTOR-: i m s GET AWAY FROM IT ALL ON YOUR OWN 8 PRIVATE ACRES! Cozy 3 bedroom rancher with full basement plus carport. Outbuilding. Call for showing. RAINTREE ESTATES! Spacious 5 bedroom, 2 story home in con­ venient location. Family room has fireplace. 2 sundecks overlooking swimming pool. $139,900.00. MOCKSVILLE-Pretty ranch home with full finished basement. 3 bedrooms, den has fireplace. Excellent area. ONLY $69,900.00. MOCKSVILLE-Renovated older home on pretty lot, 3 bedrooms, fireplace in living room, A must to see. $46,900.00. OVER 1 acre surrounds this like new brick rancher. 2 bedrooms, fireplace in living room. Full basement. $59,900.00. BEST BUY IN MOCKSVILLE! Nice 3 bedroom split-level home hi convenient area. Family room on lower level has fireplace. REDUCED $36,900.00. PINEVILLE ROAD-Pretty 3 bedroom Tudor design home in Country, setting. Den and playroom. Pretty inground swimming pool. $74,900.00. NICE HOME SITE on over 3 acres. $8,500.00. PRETTY BUILDING LOT IN GARDEN Valley. $7,500.00. ■ Put Number 1 ■ ’ to work for you."' Marty Haynes 766-4014 Carolyn Johnson 766-4777 Jo Mackintosh 766-6936 Allen Martin 998-5294 Office 766-4777 or 766-9114 _ 330 Salisbury Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 704-634-3538 NEW OFFICE- (OUAl HOUSING 2601 Lewlsviile-Clemnions Road Clemmons, N.C. 27012 919-766-4580 AGENTS HOMEPHONES- Julia Howard 634-3754 Ann F. Wands 634-3229 Mike Hendrix 284-2366 Vicki 11. Fleming 634-3640 C.C. Chapman 634-2534 Myrtle Grimes 998-3990 Calvin Ijames 492-5198 Rickey Bailey 634-3621 Sarah Bailey 634-3621 Cecil Gartner 492-7112 Whit Honeycutt 873-7872 ConnieKowalske 634-«343 REALTOR' NEW LISTINGS NO. 586 - OFF DANIELS RD. - 3 bdrm. 2 full bath mobile home on 1 acre, fenced lot - flue and insulation installed, storm windows. Refrigerator, range, dinette, love seat and couch Included. $20,000.00. NO. 588 - OFF ANGELL RD. - Teaching & riding horse farm on 33 cleared acres, 11 stall barn, tack room w-complete bathroom, cross fenced pasture, lifte d riding ring, both county & well water - 2 yr. old energy efficient 2 bdrm. Berm (underground) house, 1532 s.f. - $165,000.00. NO 480 - SANFORD AVE. - 3 Mrm. brick rancher, iiv. rm., din. rm.. den. kitchen, outbuilding (wired). Interior & exterior freshly painted in the fall, 1659 s.f. $56,500.00. it level, ZVi baths, den e (built-in heatolator w- Tz car), smoke & fire alarms. 5 Bedrooms, dining room, living NO. 400 - CHESTNUT WAY (catiiedral ceiling w-ex| glass doors) cent, vac excellent cond. $91,000.' NO. 443 - COUNTRY ESTATES room, family room (fireplace & ceiling fan), kitchen, front porch, 2 baths and deck on back. Good Condition. 10 years old. Central air (upstairs). $90,000. NO. 584 - N. MAIN ST. - Acre lot plus large 4-5 bedroom 2-story with bonus office or craft space. Spacious foyer, formal dining and living room. Large kitchen with breakfast room, den, I'A baths downstairs. Hit baths unfinished upstairs. Double deUched carport with workshop, storage buildings and barn. $79,900.00, NO, 560-LEXINGTON ROAD-EnJoy country living ‘;^in charming two story frame farm house, 5 bedrooms, 3 batli^B, den with living area with skylfiJlfi»«n«<m P- IW.^OO, No. 555-COUNTRY LANE ESTATES- “ ca^■> bath, I.570 sq, ft., Williamsburg, formal dining room. deck. 2-car garage in basement. EES. No. 535-IIwy. (M East- 2 BR. Lj|rt«jC S ^rm , den. dining area, klt- .chcn. brick, patio, $55,^JJ|Jj^V^ No. 512-SOUTHERN DAVIE COUN'ire. 3000 heated sq. ft. includes 3 bedrooms. 3 full baths, living room with fireplace, den with fireplace, formal dining room, large eat-in kitchen, Ig. Florida room, beautifully decorated, freshly painted inside and out, new heat pump and gas- furnace, storage building and playhouse, wooded acre is beautifully landscaped, 12 miles to Salisbury, 8 miles to Mocksville, just reduced $10,000 to $89,900, Cali today to see Uiis beauty. No, 523-SANFORD AVENUE-3 bedroom. 2 baUis, large living room and dining room with pine floors, spacious kitchen, den, full bsmt,, glassed-in sunporch. patio, circular in-ground pool, burglar alarm system, new carpeting, 1,5 acres, excellent condition. $85,000,00, ,No. ,551-FORK CHURCH RD,-double wide mobile home, 3 bdrm, (w- waik-in closets), 1 bath, fam. rm„ din, rm,. kit,, utility rm„ central air. nice 1 acre lot. good cond,. $43,500,00, No. 537-m a in c h u r c h ROAD-3 bdrm, brick, approx, 1420 sq, ft,. 2 bath, living rm„ din. area, den w-firepiace, kitchen, full basement (drive-in door), 1.03 acre lot, 8 years old, excellent cond., central air, $65,000.00, Will rent No. 462 IN TOWN-quiet iiil| li‘ 1i y J W f T T l'" 2 bath, brick ran- Cher, featuring spacious l| M E W fl8 B ffiy e x tra large utility fw sewing or office, screened ■UUWfnnning area. 2 car garage, wooded, $56,500.00. No. 519-ilwy. 601 SOUTH 100 year old 2-story house. 4 bdrm., 1984 sq. ft., living room with rock fireplace, den, 2,06 acre lot, fenced pool- 16x31, good condition. $65,000.00. PossibUjlswle on smaller home. No. 508-LAKEWOOD brick, 1425 s.f, liv, rm„ den, din. area, basement, $41,900.00, No. 514-EATON DRIVE-3 bdrm, brick, 1250 plus or minus sq. ft., living rm. w-fireplace. din. rm., kitchen, basement, central air. garage. Reduced to $52,000.00. No. 47^FORREST LANE-Home on lovely landscaped corner lot with fencedTiackyard. Features 3 BR, 2 baths, LR with fU-epiace, kitchen- dining combination. Full basement paneled with fireplace, 3 cedar lined closets in utility room with built-in shelves and cabinets, double car carport, Price $66,300.00. No. 407-DAVIE ACADEMY RD.-3J^i»rt|iA'bath. electric ceiling heat, built-ins. patio in feBQ, elect, garage door. 1102 s.f., $45,500.0. NO. 585- B E T H E L ^ U V a ^ ^ Home Lot. well & septic tank on property, city ^jiUim LTiwtM ffflable $5,500. NO. 553-HlGHWAY 601 SOU'ni-27.535 acres with 1.357.5 ft. road frontage. County water available. Property mostly cleared with R-20 zoning. $145,000.00. NO. 589- MILLING RD.- 2 steel hidgs.. 2400 sq. ft. dwelling, city sewage and water. Industrial loning. No. 525-WOODLAND-3 s-f- basement, new patio in rear. .............I UllT rlM i II No. 560-TWINBROOK - Must see to appreciate Die quality and special features in this three bedroom, two bathroom, great room wi-f irepiace enclosed glass sun porch, ‘* * carport, beautiful corner lot well landsc||f^^^3i«Hn9ing, one of the better neigh­ borhoods in MocksviiitT' Mly water and sewage. Priced at only $63,400.00. No. 558-N. MAIN ST.-Great in-town location within walking distance of churches, shopping, 3 bdrm, bcick, liv. rm., din. rm., breakfast rm., with glassed sunporch, $53,500.00. No. 502-1517 WINSTON RD.-l,aiiW tC S j-2-3 bedroom, frame, den, kitchen, front and reuMJh^pMMRTooT l<o. 458-HISTORlC MB«IKT?!vrDEP01 STREET-oId Depot bldg.,- 244.0xl54.50x256.0*i:!ii.s,uejide Southern Railway. No. 556-CHURCH ST. Brick rancher, 2620 s.f., 4 bdrm.. 3 baths, liv. rm., din.’ rm., fam, rm„ utility rm„ kitchen w, d,w, and disposal, front porch and rear patio, 2 car garage, extras include built-in book shelves and cabinets, child's playhouse, 2,96 acre lot, good cond, $130,000,00. _ N0..563-SIIEFFIELD PAHK-3 IriM W gTlTS* ‘ 'O" si'f- brick w-siding, recently painted interioi|ffffiH>»rt<Tagarage-wired. $39,900.00. No. 386-WILLOW RUN-4*l5drnr, dining room-family room, combo, 2 story, front porch, reardeck, IVi yrs. old, 2 car garage, storage room off deck, $49,900,00. No. 469-601S-1759 s.f., 3 bdrm., 2 bath, great rm., central air, 3 acre lot, fireplace, ceiling fan, $39,900.00. No. 49K*IN TOWN-Beautifui 3 bdrm. brick rancher including iiuge muster suite formal living room, dining room, breakfast room, covered patio, gorgeous landscaping. $75,000,00. No. 544-HARDISON ST-Lovely 2-story frame farm house situated on 3,2 acres is surrounded by many hardwoods, magnolias, and fruit trees. House features 1 bath, 3 bdrms,, liv, rm„ 27 x 13 kitchen-den comb, with oil heat and central air. Great place for gardening, with barn for storage. See to appreciate. No. 496-MOUNTAIN CHALET-A-FRAME-2 bedrooms plus loft . sleeping area on large wooded lot only minutes from ski area and Grandfather Mt. Assumable loan possible. $32,500,u0. LAND NO, 553 - HWY, 601 SOUTH - 27.535 acres county water available, residential $145,000.00. NO. ClOOO CLEMMONS - Approx, 2 acres on Littiebrodk Drive, Owner financing at 10 percent, $11,400,00, No. 413-HICKORV HILL-Lakeside lot. $11,000. No. 495-20.22 acres plus excllent building lot (acre plus) in Country Estates. Man-made pond, fenced. Timber. No. 515-WOODLAND-4 lovely wooded lots, 200x200 $9,200.00. NU. 493-7 lots in Oakdale Subdivision off 801, Total price $18,000,00, Can be sold individually. No. 349-Lots In Garden Valley. We Now Have 24 hrs. Answering Service 12B-DAV1E COUNTY liNTliRPRISIl KLCORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1985 Doris Wall Haneline Honored By Endowment At Nursing School Of The University Of South Carolina Public Notices A former Mocksville resident has recently had an endowment named in her honor. Doris Wall Haneline who is dying of cancer is the in­ spiration of the Doris. Haneline . Nursing Endowment at the Mary Black School of Nursing at the University of South Carolina at Spartanburg. The idea came from Roy Charest, R.N., of Georgetown ■' and Anneslcy Briggs of Texas, friends of Doris. Charest is a former co-worker and Mrs. Briggs is the ’ daughter of a woman who Mrs. : haneline tended in ICU and who later became ,a best friend. The endowment will be for people who, like Mrs. Haneline, decide to enter the nursing later in life than usual. Doris Wall Haneline is the daughter of Mrs. Eula Wall of 305 ' Avon Street, Mocksville, and the late Robert L. Wall. She is married to Gene Haneline and they now -reside in Greer, S.C. Her sisters, Mrs. Pam Whitaker and Mrs. Carolyn Whitaker are both residents of Mocksville. . Mrs. Haneline attended ■Mocksville High School. The following excerpt was taken from an article written by Ijlrances Upchurch and printed in the December 23, 1984, Spartanburg ilerald-Journal. She has sat by many beds, held many hands, and cried, knowing that death was near. Today, she is the one in the bed. It is her hands that are held and her for whom the tears are ' shed. Death hovers, and she feels so frustrated. “ I think I really always wanted to be a nurse,” she says, propped against a pillow in her hospital bed. “ I know that when Linda (her daughter) was a baby. I’d think that if I was just a nurse. I’d know how to lake care of her better.” Although she worked for seven years as a buyer for Belk after her daughter and then her - son Lynn had started school,— she remained interested in nursing. “ I read every article I could ever find on medicine,” she admits. “ And when I saw an article about a practical nurse school in Greenville County, I d^ided that was it.” Her children were en­thusiastic about her prospective ^ enrollment but her husband Gene was dubious at first- more, she says, about how the family would manage finan­ cially than discouraging of her efforts. But she was determined to be what she wanted to be, and he stood by her, skimping when skimping was necessary and “making do on lieans and potatoes” without complaint. “ That year at Christmas, we had very little to give- something like dollar gifts-but we had a very sweet Christ­ mas,” she recalls, “ We never . minded the sacrifice.” Doris, who has lived in Greer for the past 31 years, was one of : 87 who took the LPN entrance exam and one of 20 who passed. She enrolled at Greenville . Technical College as a full-time student and studied very hard. She made the highest grades in her class and then scored highest on the State Board. “ I was very dedicated the whole year,” she says. “ Sometimes I got up at 4 in the morning to study, but it paid off.” She was 36 when she became a licensed practical nurse and • her first job in her new career was at Allen Bennett Hospital in Greer. “ I worked there from 1971 to 1978 as a staff nurse on ' general floor. I worked all three shifts at some time or another. ■ Then I came to Mary Black.” Her daughter, now Linda Hines, is a registered nurse at ■ Mary Black Memorial Hospital : and Doris admits that while her ; choice of careers probably. • influenced her daughter, Lin- ; da's praise for the Spartanburg hospital certainly influenced her choice of jobs. “ She had nothing but praise for Mary Black, and it certainly turned out to be everything I’d ever heard. It’s an ideal place to work.” Doris went to work on the second shift in the Intensive Care Unit at Mary Black. “ That was the job that was open, and I’ve always been glad I took it.” She admits that working the ICU is difficult. “ Sometimes you feel like, ‘Gee! Let me get out of here and take a deep breath!' But you see so many wonderful things. People come back from the grave, prac- tically-literally!” Although she had been taught in school not to let her emotions show with her patients, she couldn’t help herself. And she believes that her caring in­ volvement made her a better nurse. She also points out that teaching methods have changed; that prospective nurses now are being told that it’s OK to show their feelings Doris Wall Haneline once in a while. "I couldn't turn it off when I walked out the door,” she says ' of her job. "I couldn’t always leave it at the hospital door. And ‘ on my days off. I’d call in to see how people were doing.” Sometimes she did feel helpless. Her one-on-one in­ volvement with ICU patients and their families led to situations where sometimes all she could do to comfort was to sit, hold hands, and cry with them. “ For sure, for sure, for sure,” she emphasizes. “ It’s been awfully hard to see some of those folks die.” In September 1982, Doris found a lump in her breast. She went to her doctor. Surgery was scheduled. “ I was on the operating table when he told ine I had cancer,” she tells. “ I thought ‘Oh, le^me go back to sleep!' But the doctors knew that I didn’t want fairy tales; I wanted to know ___theJruthZ!____________ Chemotherapy and cobalt treatments followed. “ I did fairly well for a little while,” Doris says. “ I went back to work in August 1983 and worked full-time till August 1984, but it • wasn't easy; it took everything I had.” Doris kept suffering pain. After tests, including a bone scan, were performed in August, doctors told her thai the cancer had recurred and spread. “ I started chetnotherapy and cobalt again. I was here (in the hospital) about a week. Then around the first of September, I had a low white count-a blood infection-and was here nine days. I kept complaining of leg pains and went home for two days before I came back with a pathological fracture of the left hip. I had a hip replacement and was here the whole month of September.” \ She did well after that operation and notes, “ If that— the hip replacement-were my only problem, I wouldn’t have any problems.” She was able to get back up, to walk around, but adds, "I've never been able to get back out to the grocery store, to drive or to shop. No, I take that back. One day my daughter wheeled me around in a wheelchair at Waccamaw for 30 minutes and I loved it.” Doris recuperated at home, necessarily spending much of her time alone while her family worked. In November, she had #nother bone scan; the cancer had spread even more. “That's when the doctor admitted that there was no need to go on with further treatment. He told me I was dying.” And even then, Doris felt compassion for the other per­ son. “ It’s hard when doctors have to be confronted with their own, especially a nurse, I think it’s been very hard for all the doctors I've worked with (to accept their helplessness in the face of her disease).” Doris has been back in the hospital for a week. “ The pain got so bad I had to come back,” she-says,'softly. “ I'm probably on the most powerful narcotic there is; that only thing I don't like about it is that it makes me drowsy. I feel myself getting weaker and weaker. There's nothing else they can do for me except give me palliatives, ease the pain.” Doris, who has always prided herself on the control of situatlons-even to her patients' environment in ICU-is in a situation where her control is limited. She hates not being able to get up and down. She hates the false cheerfulness, the well-meaning “ you'll soon be better” from people who don’t know how to deal with the fact of her imminent death. “ I feel like I’m a strong person,’’ she says, hands moving restlessly across the top ofher bedcover. “ I feel like I’ve got to go out fightini>. but I realize you can’t fight against all the odds. So, it's just a matter of taking one day at a time, trying to love and enjoy your family as long as you can, being a friend as long as you can be a friend. ” 1 have been a Christian and I feel like my faith in God has helped. I have asked God why this has happened but I don’t feel like He’s ' punishing me. This has happened because it's human nature. I feel like I will go to heaven, that God will keep' His promises. I just don’t know why it’s happened so young in life. I do fee young.” Doris, 48, has been blessed with family and friends. She appreciates their support and realizes that they must have problems dealing with her condition, too. Her biggest grief, she says, is knowing that she will not live to see her grandchildren, Emme, 7, and Erik, 5, grow up. “ That’s the hardest part,” she says, choking back tears. “ I keep thinking there's going to be some more time, that I can get out, be better. But this past week, I’ve known that it’s not going to be, that better days aren’t coming.” “You know, in a way, I think people who know they are dying have a special privilege: they have a chance to make things right; better than if it (life) were stripped away suddenly in an accident. At least I will have some control.” Although she speaks candidly of her life and approaching death, she is not and does not want to be an object of pity. She makes no mention of the soft down that covers her head in­ stead of the dark curls that used to frame her face. She does not apologize for the tears that sometimes spill down her cheeks. She is a woman. Her voice is strong. Her eyes are bright. She is facing what she must. Andieven now, she thinks of others. ; !‘The nursing endowment might help somebody who really and truly wants to be a nurse and who might have a real financial hardship as a result of trying to go back to school,” she says. “ It’ll be like my legacy, living on and in­spiring somebody to be the kind of nurse I still wish I could be.” “ Nursing was a vital part of my life,” Doris says. “ It was so wonderful to be able to do what I wanted to do and do a good job at it-and I felt that I was good at it-to be able to enjoy doing something that you do every day. Anybody who has a real desire-not somebody who just wants to be able to wear that cute little white uniform-should be able to fulfill their dream. It really was a dream of mine.” Doris is glad her, friends suggested the endowment. “ It's such a nice gesture and they made the first contributions. The chaplain here. The Rev. Margaret Shealey, will be in charge of it at this end of the line. She'll help write the criteria arid all and Dr. Jan Yost at uses will do the rest.” If enough funds are collected to generate enough interest to award a scholarship every year, the endowment will become permanent. Charest notes that $1,000 in the fund ^earning 10 percent interest would allow a $100 annual scholarship. “ If we collect more, we'll give more,” he says. Anyone wishing to make a tax-deductible contribution should make checks payable to uses and mail them to USCS, Highway 585, Spartanburg, S.C. 29303, notated for the Doris Haneline Nursing Endowment. The endowment will be ad­ ministered through the Carolina Piedmont Foundation and applicants will be screened and selected by the scholarship committee at USCS. “ I am happy about the en­ dowment,” Doris says. “ I had thought about some kind of memorials, but this is better. I'd rather have this than flowers on my grave." Mrs. Wall recently spoke of her daughter's condition and life. "She was very close to her work and very close to her patients," she said. ’’Though she is currently un­ dergoing cobalt treatments to control the pain she is gradually getting worse, and is not able to come home at all. Unless the Lord works a miracle....” Mrs. Wall feels that the en­ dowment is a wonderful tribute to her daughter who loved helping others. NO RTH C A R O LIN A D A V IE CO UNTYIN TH E G E N E R A L CO URT OF JUSTICE Superior Court D ivision Before the C lerk B4 SP 89 In the M a tte r of the Foreclosure of the Deed of T rust of H arrison B eniam in M organ,. Jr.« and w ife, Laulle C. M organ to George W. M a rtin , Trustee fo r M ocksville Savings and Loan Association N O TIC E OF R E S ALE - FO RECLO SURE U N D ER D E E D OF TRUST AS REC O R D ED IN D E E D OF TRUST BOOK 100, PAG E 1B9UN D ER A N D B Y V IR T U E of an O rder the Clerk of S uperior Court of D avie County, North C arolina entered In the above e ntitled action authorizing the undersigned to proceed w ith the foreclosure of the above referenced deed of trust and under and by virtu e of the power of sale contained In the above referenced deed o l tru st and under an ord er of second resale entered In the m a tter on January 30,1985, the undersigned trustee w ill offe r fo r sale at public auction to ttie highest bidder fo r cash at 10:00 o'clock a.m . on the 15th day of F ebruary, 1985. :hose lands constituting a portion of lot num ber nine and all of loi num ber ten, plat book 4, Davie County R egistry at pages 105-107 a'nd being m ore p a r­tic u la rly described In tha t deed of tru st dated June 28, 1977, fro m H arrison B eniam in M organ, J r , e tu x recorded Indeed of tru st book 100, page 189.The above property w ill be sold subject to all outstanding D avie County ad valorem taxes. The highest bidder at the sale w ill be required to m ake a cash deposit of ten <10) percent of the firs t thousand and five (5) percent of the balance ol the bid and the balance upon confirm ation of the sale. The beginning bid w ill be $45,000.00.The sale w ill be reported to the court and w ill rem ain open fo r advance o r upset bids fo r a period of ten days. If no advance o r upset bids are filed w ith the C lerk of S uperior Court the sale w ill be confirm ed.This 30th day ol January, 1985. George W. M a rtin Trustee M a rtin & Van Hoy A tto rn e ysa tL a w M ocksville, N.C. 2-72tnp NORTH C A R O LIN A D A V IE COUNTY EXEC U TO R NOTICE H aving qualified as E xecutor of the Estate of Clara M ae P. A llen, deceased, late of Davie County, N orth C arolina, this Is to notify all persons having claim s against said estate to present them to the undersigned on o r before the 1st day of August. 1985. said date being a t least six m onths fro m the date of firs t publication ol this notice, o r this notice w ill be pleaded in b a r of the ir recovery. A ll persons Indebted to said estate w ill please m ake Im m ediate paym ent to the undersigned at P.O. Box 347, M ocksville, N orth C arolina 27028. This the 1st day of February, 1985. the same being the firs t publication date.Paul H. R ichardson. E xecutor of the Estate of C lara M ae P. A llen. BROCKS. M cC LAM RO CK A tto rn e ysa tL a w P.O. Box 347 M ocksville. NC 27028 Telephone (704 ) 634-3518 1-314tnp Leonard Realty 801 - 3BR rancher, recently remodeled. Stove, ref., W & D included. EE-135,000. KOI N. - 2 Story WORKSHOP on 2 wooded acres plus :IBR Brick rancher. $89,800. DAVIE CO. - 3BR, 2B brick rancher, bsnit. EXCELLENT Condition. RESTRICTED ilomesites with woods and stream - $8900- 119,900. B u ild in g L o t - 110,500. 7n4-6:i4-:iH7!> Linda Leonard 634-36.'>0 Eliiabeth Bohl ______919;998JiJgJ The apple originated In Af­ ghanistan. Health Watch Chain Saw Sense Drive down any North Carolina highway this time of year and you're apt to see someone hauling firewood. Typically they've cut it themselves. The North Carolina Medical Society urges all chain saw users to read their owners' manuals and follow the safety instructions when they cut wood. Your dealer or service representative should be able to answer any other questions you may have about the safe operation of a saw. Here are some important tips: -W ear non-slip gloves while operating the saw and always cut wood at high speeds. -Don't wear jewelry or loose- fitting clothing that might catch in the machinery. -Use the saw in a well-ventilated area. The exhaust gasses from any internal combustion engine can be poisonous. -Keep a fire extinguisher handy when you fill the saw with fuel. -Don't use a chain saw for anything but cutting wood. -Keep children away from the work area. A chain saw is no plaything. And if you're working in an isolated area, it’s a very good idea to have someone with you. Social Security Q &A Do I have to have a lawyer to get disability benefits? You have the right to choose anyone you like to represent you before Social Security. There is no requirement, however, that you have a representative or attorney. The people at any Social Security office will always be glad to help you complete any forms you need for benefits. I receive Social Security checks for my 13 year old son. Do I have to keep records of what I do with the checks'? Every representative payee is obligated to keep track of how they spend tlie money they receive for someone else. Remember although your name appears on the check, your son's Social Security check is still for his use on his food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and spen- iiing. NORTH C A R O LIN A D A V IE COUNTYIN TH E G E N E R A L rn ■P’' '■ 'f • c^rm r rrs’tr* D ivision F IL t N U M BE R 76 CVS 118 C harlie M illa rd Latham and w ife . M ildred W. Pl.ntimvs. Newm an Dudley Stroud ^ ^ .Defendant NO TICE OF E XE C U TIO N SALE An E xecution having been IssueH to the Sheriff of D avie County by the C lerk ct D avie County. N orth Carolina fo r a Judgm ent In favor of C harlie M illa rd Latham and w ife , M ildred W. L a th a m , a g a in st N ew m an D u dley S troud, docketed In D avie County on M arch 13,1978, at 10:15 a.m .. In Book 2, page 267, the undersigned S heriff of D avie County. N orth C arolina, w ill offe r fo r sale to the highest bidder fo r cash, a one-third .Interest as tenant In com m on In the follow ing described real property located In C alahan T o w n s h ip .. D a vie C o un ty. N o rth BE G IN N IN G on a ra ilroa d spike In the West edge of SR '.338. the Southeast corner of T ra ct 2, M a ttie M . Stroud E state; thence South 42 degs. 37 m in. W est 288.94 feet to a ra ilro a d spike in the N orth edge of N.C. 901; thence N orth 63 degs. 28 m in. West 176.57 feel to a ra ilroa d spike in the North edge of N.C.901; thence N orth 57 degs. 13 m in. West 282.94 feet to a ra ilroa d spike In the ■ N orth edge of N.C. 901; thence N orth 34 degs. 30 m in. East 253.30 feet to an Iron stake In the Southwest corner of T ra ct 2; thence South 62 degs. 59 m in. East 502.80 feet TO T H E PO INT OF B E G IN N IN G , containing 3.00 acres, D.M .D. on the 8th day of F ebruary, 1985, at 12:00 Noon at the courthouse door In M ocksville, Davie County. N orth Carolina.This sale w ill be sub|ect to higher liens w hich became effective p rio r to the Men on the. Judgm ent pursuant to w hich this sale Is held, restrictions and encum brances of record, and any u np aid p ro p e rty taxe s and sp ecia l assessments. , .This the 28 day of Decem ber 1984.George Sm ith S heriff of Davie County M 7-4tnp NORTH C A R O LIN A D A V IE CO UNTY A D M IN IS TR A TO R 'S NO TICE H aving qualified as A dm inistrato r of the estate of Samuel Dean Parks, Sr., deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify a ll persons having claim s against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the /th day of August, 1985, o r this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of th e ir recovery. A ll persons Indebted to saM estate w ill please m ake Im m ediate paym ent to the undersigned.This the 7th day of F ebruary. 1985.Samuel Dean P arks, Jr.. R t. 13, Box 164. S tatesville, N.C. 28677, A dm inistrato r of the estate of Sam uel Dean Parks. Sr. deceased. 2-7 4tnp NO RTH C A R O LIN A D A V IE CO UNTYN O TICE O F P U B LIC H E A R IN G B E FO R E TH E BO ARD OF CO UNTY CO M M ISSIONERS FOR TH E FO LLO W IN G ZO NING A M E N D M E N T NO TICE IS H E R E B Y G IV E N . P ursuant to the requirem ents of A rticle 20-B of C hapter 153 of the G eneral statutes of N orth C arolina and A rticle X III of the Davie County Zoning O rdinance that the Board of County C o m m lu lo n e rt of. Davie County w ill hold a public hearing In the Com­m issioner's Room of the D avie County Cour­thouse. M ocksville, N.C., on M onday, February 18, 1985, at 8:00 p.m . The follow ing proposed zoning am endm ent to the o fficia l xonlng m ap of D avie County w ill be considered:A) Cletus A. and C orrlne Potts subm itted a request to reione property fro m Residential- A gricultu re (R -A) to R esidential-M obile Home (R -M ). This p roperty Is located on the N orth side of the How ardtow n Road (SR 1637) and is shown as a portion of parcel 10 of tax m ap G-7. A sign w ill be posted on the above listed location to advertise the public hearing. A ll parties and Interested citizens are Invited to attend said public hearing a t w hich tim e they shall have an o pportunity to be heard In favo r of o r In opposition to the foregoing change. P rio r to the public hearing, a ll persons interested m ay obtain any additional inform ation on this proposal w hich Is In the possession of the Davie County Zoning E nforcem ent O ffice In the Davie CouHty O ffice B uilding. M ocksville. N.C.. on weekdays between the hours of 8:30 a.m . and 5:00 p.m . o r by telephone at 634-3340.Jesse A. Boyce. Jr.Davie Co. Zoning O fficer2-7 2tnp F C o n t r o M RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIALI VA & FHA Insoection I 1-800^82-5901 DAY OR NIGHT E LD E R L Y TRANSPO R TATIO N SER VICES A V A ILA B LE For: Davie County Senior C itiien s aged 60 years and over who are unable to provide o r secure th e ir own transportation for needed M edical and N u tritio na l (Food Buying and Congregate Center) Services Modes: -O em and-Response Sedan o r G roup Van "R e g u la r scheduled Routes Vans P rogram s; O lder A m ericans A ct T itle tl l-B In coordination w ith Section 18 L im ita tion s; -Services authorized as provided pursuant to funds allocated in budgets -N u tritio n a l Transportation lim ite d to In-County vendors Contact for A pplication and A uthorization:Davie C om m unity Service Center Delane H endricks o r Susan Cline . Brock co m m u nity Service Center N. M ain St.M o cktville . N.C. 27038 T«l«p h one .' 704-634-71t7 EQ U AL O P PO R TU N ITY SER VICES P RO VIDER Carolina E E X E E H Homes, Inc. For Ail Your Building and Remodeling Needs Home Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Real Estate Needs Low Interest On Housing If you have not owned a home in the last three yean, and earn $29,600.00 or less per year you could qualify for a very special low interest fixed rate mortgage loan, with a down payment of only 5 percent! - We have pre-approved building lots available in many areas of the county - some with water and sewer. Or we will build on your land. LISTINGS STATESVILLE-Kingswood - New Cape Cod under construction 4BR, 2 Baths, Large corner lot. _ MOCKSVILLE-li/^ story under untry Farm House looli - within city limits - VjHOtR CUW SANFORD RD, MoclisviUe- Split Level on basement, 3 or 4 BR, 3 baths, fpl w-custom built insert, 1718 healed sq, ft., attached carport, house and grounds in excellent condition. tSt.MO. MOCKSVILLE - Assumable FHA-23S Loan Available (low monthly payment), 3BR, 2 full baths, passive solar ranch-style home with built- in flue for woodstove. M2,IW0. IREDELL CO- New 3 Br, 2 full baths, split foyer home with FP and drive-in garage. $54,900, RURAL HALL AREA-1>^ story CQLO ^“11 basement, iq>stairs unfinished with plumbing and eLW icai woric roughed in, $49,900, HARMONY - New 3 BR 1>^ B'"»nl^Q cher. FmHA Approved. Low monthly payment. " LAND BERMUDA RUN-Excellent buildhig lot. Will build to suit owner. HWY. 64W-TWO adjoining lots $3,000 each to sell or will build to suit buyer. DAVIE COUNTV-f’hfrry Hill §QLD cres with well$6250.00. RURAL IIALL*Eiccellen( building loti and acreage for sale. STATESVILLE-Lots for sale from $4,200. HARMONY-FmHA Approved lots, ADVANCE-Nlce wooded lots from $4,500. HICKORY HILL-Two nice building iota • $5,900 each. WILLBOONE ROAD-Large wooded building lot • $4,500. BEAR CREEK CHURCH RD.- 40-plus acres • ^ cleared, ^ Umber. BEACH PROPERTY — NORTH MYRTLE BEACII-1, 2, & 3 Bedroom condominiums at ex- cellent locations in N. Myrtle Beach from $49,900.00. _________ We build Conventional, F'ariners Home Administration (FmHA), Federal Housing AdiDinlstration (FHA), and Veterans AdmioUtraUon (VA) Homes. 19 Depot Street Mocksville, NC Bob Shelton, Broker Shelby Walker, Sales PHONE 704-634-2252 919-998-2969 Von Shelton, Broker' Frank Payne, Broker DAVIE COUNTY ENTBRPRlSh RtCORU, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,198S-13B AfiORTlON ABO RTIO N —F re e Pregnancy TesHng. For an appolnlm ent. call coH ect-W lnslon.S olcm (9W ) 72M620. A rcadia W om en's M edical Clinic,• , • 9-6-HnAWC CLEANING PAINTING & REPAIRS IfU R N IT U R E REFIN ISH IN O ...The antique ■workshop furnlfure re-flnishlne and resforafton. ■ q u a lity w o rk . Rolcrences. Call; 998 2918 or I (919) 7M 0M9. Ask lor Dianne. ^ MUSIC I PIAN O T U N IN G : R epairing and R ebuilding. 72 ye ars e xpe rie n ce. A ll w o rk gua ra nte ed . PIANO T E C H N IC IA N S G U ILD CRAFTSWLAN. Call W allace B arford at 384-2447. 7.7.H npB I p ia NO a n d VO ICE UESSONS. Experienced teacher. Degree In n>uslc. Teaches a ll levels • beginners to advanced, and all ages, Including adults. M ocksvllle. 634-2305.2-7 8 tp M D SERVICES I cA L L : OSBORNE E LE C TR IC a t; 634 3398 for A LL of your e lectrical needs. FR E E estim ates. No lob too large o r too sm all. U nlim ited license. K arl O sborne. Owner.l-3 t(n O E ■f o r a l l OP YO UR E LE C TR IC A L N E E D -S...Cali Jim West E le ctric Com pany at 284- 2797. R esidential. M obile Homes and Service Changes. Reasonable Rates. State Licensed._________________3-7 ttP -JWI INCO M E T A X PR E PA R E D by an Experienced ■ Tax P reparer at Reasonable R a ttt. For an appointm ent, ca ll: Gene H endrix a t: 99I-5I45 1.241J,p IlN C O M E T A X P R E P A R A T IO N ...F o r Fast E fficient, confidential service, ca ll; _Pt«9Y Joyner, 4n-S5S9. G reenhlll-Sanford Avenue 1-J4tfnPJ C O M P U T E R S IT 1 9 9 /4 A ............................... $ 7 5 .0 0 I C o m m o d o re 6 4 ................$ 195 .00 I C o tn m o d o rcD lsk D rive. .$ 2 2 5 .0 0 I A ta ri 800X 1______ . . . $ 1 3 7 .5 0 1 A ta ri Disl< D r iv e .............$ 1 9 0 .0 0 Printers, M oniters, A ll Types O f Sottware, A ll Types O f Hardware John Rennix 704/ 634-5842 Ray's TV Now offering service to O avle County residents. We service all m a jo r brands. We o ffe r pick-up and d elivery service, plus Inhome servicing. Residents on (704) ex* change m ay ca ll at no extra cost. Ptione: 998* 3403 fo r service o r appointm ents. Shop No. Is (919) 765-6284. Located at 1337 Jonestown Road, W inston-Salem , N.C. 37103, beside L ittle League ball park. 998-3403 or 765-6284 WANTED UA^ESTOCK A.L Beck & Sons W ln sto n *S a le m Whosale Meat W e B u y C ow s & B ulls 6 D ays A W eek W e W ill K ill & Process Y o u r L o c k e r B eef C O N T A C T : A.L Beck Jr. R o u te 1 T h o m a iv llle C all C o lle c t A n y tim e W inston-S alem 9 1 9 -7 8 8 -9 0 0 8 o r 7 8 8 -7 5 2 4 P hone A fte r 6 P .M . o r E a rly A -M . 9 1 9 -4 7 6 -6 8 9 5 CLASSIFIED ADS NATIONAL I Children’s Dental Health M O N TH BO OBR'S K AR K L E E N . Rt. 3. M ocksvllle. 25 years of experience In auto reconditioning. ■ We clean: Engines, Interiors, W ax o r Polish ‘ and dye vin yl lops. Call,W0.3IB9 o r 998 3159 for an appointm ent. Ann a/id Jack Boger. Owners and O perators. 7-7MnBK WANTED-TO BUY W A N TE D : G O LD COINS, S ILV E R COINS, Gold ' and S ilv e r J e w e lry and D iam onds.B U Y ...S E LL...TR A D E . S ilver Shop II. 133 * Oakwood D rive. W inston-Salem , N.C. Cali 724- 7687.12-30 tfnSS ■ e m p l o y m e n t . H E LP W A N TE D ; Now acceptlno .pptlcatl^oni fo rc o o k ia n d w a ltre iie i at W allle Home, M il ' L e w H v llle -C le m m o n i R oad. E « p trle n c e tie lplul, hut not n e ce ita ry. Appiv weetidays between 7 a.m . and J p.m.- M u it be 1« or over. Nopt,onec.lls,pIe..e. pPF P A R T -T IM E E M P L O Y M E N T ...E m e rg e n c y R oom R e ce p tio n is t...D u tie s in c lu d e : A n ­sw e rin g S w itch b o a rd , fy p in g , 145 w -p e r m inute). W illin g to w ork firs t and second shifts, and weekends. A pply at Personnel O ffice at D avie County Hospital in M ocksvllle.2-7 Itnp-DCH H E L P W A N T E D ; E xp e rie n ce d W aitresses needed. A pply In person at: H orn's Country K itchen, fro m 2 p.m . u ntil 4 p.m . No Phone Calls.2-7 Itn p W M H E LP W A N TE D : "L iv e -In N anny” ...A m ature lady, non-sm oker preferred. In a n'rw home In the Advance area. Salary Negotiable. Lots of p riva cy. C all: 634-3168 a fte r 6 p.m .'1-24-tfnTS H E LP W A N TE D : E X P E R IE N C E D Free Lance Real Estate Legal Assistant fo r Davie and surrounding areas and counties. C all: Renee at 1-800-432-6117. I'3 t? fn p R D CHILD CARE ^OfViEOW NERS INSURANCE Is expensive. Get yo u r m o n ey's w o rth . C a ll Larew *W ood* Johnson fo r a com puter quote fro m eight different Insurance com panies. 634-6284 or 1- I 800-255-7777.' 1-24-tfnLWJ a. L ROOFING & G U TTE R IN G ...W ork fully ; G U A R A N T E E D . F R E E _ B s t|m a te . C a ll: ' Rodney a f; 634 0093._2'7 Itp FRUIT TREES BROW YO UR own fru it. Free copy 48page IP ia n tln g Guide-Cataiog in color. One of the m ost com plete lines of plant m a terial offered Including F ru it Trees. N ut Trees. B erry I PIsnfs, Crape Vines, Landscaping Plant M a te ria l. W A Y N E S B O R O N U R S E R IE S • W aynesboro, VA 229B0.' 2-7 4tnp-IA Instruction TractoirTrailer Driving Careers CHARLOTTE TRUCK DRIVER SCHOOL H w y . 1 6 N . C h a rlo tte , N .C . Toll Free 1-800-222-4161 or 1-704-393-3000 INSTRUCTION LEAHN TO DRIVE ^ NOW TRAINING ON DOUBLE'THAILERS NO CXMMCNCE NCEOCOI We lr«n MKN •nd WOMEN No nMd k) QU)t prtMnI |ot> FmiO<P*M«meifain.ng OCT Cwlrhcabon Call Toll Free Anytime 800-438-1032 Buy now and be ready for the cold weather lust around the corner! PHONE 284-2226 early a.m. or after 6 p.m. APARTMENT - FOR RENT HOMES FOR SALE SENIO R C ITIZE N S : Fin a l appllpatlons are being taken fo r 1 bedroom apartm ents In S enior C ltixe n s H ousing C om plex in M ocksvllle. Rent based on Incom e. For in ­ form ation call 634 7005 or w rite ; M ock Place. P.O. Box 690, M ocksvllle N.C. 27028. Equal Housing O pportunity. 11-29-tfn-MP AP A R TM E N TS : A pp llratlo ns are being taken tor a } bedroom apartm ent designed fo r a handicapped Individual. Rent based on in come. For Inrorm atlon c a ll: 634-2005 o r w rite : M ock Place. P.O. Box 690. M ocksvllle, N.C. tl-29-tfn-M P MOBILE HOME FOR RENT M O B ILE HO M E FOR R E N T: 2 Bedroom . Dogwood spring P ark. H w y. 158 and 1-40. Respectable O nly. Reasonable. C all; (704) 284 2964. 11-22tfn-JM D E P E N D A B LE C H ILD CARR...Ten years of experience. Registered by the State of North C arolina O ffice of Child D aycare Licensing. Openings fo r two children. Infants to age 3. Three openings fo r three children, ages 3 to 5 years old. Convenient to M illin g Road and Highw ay 158. C ali: 998-4053.1-31 2tp-H CARD OF THANKS A KE R^> am hanging up m y cap.I am turning In m y badge, and re tirin g from the Postal Service February 1, 1985.I w ill alw ays cherish the m em ories of delivering your m a ll.And I thank you fo r the m any kindnesses shown over the past 35 years.In g ra te fu l appreciation.Y our m all ca rrie r, Vernon W hitaker 2-7 Itnp-VW M O C K S V ILLE PO LICE D E P A R T M E N T The F a m ily of the late Joe W. Foster w ish to express th e ir grateful appreciation to the M ocksvllle Police D epartm ctit fo r the m any acts of kindness shown them during the long months of Illness and death of the ir beloved husband and father. Y our com passion and concern w ill never be forgottenlThe Joe W. Foster F am ily_____________________________________2-71tnoCP G ILB E R TThe fa m ily of the late Staff Sergeant John R. G ilbert wish to express the ir thanks and grateful appreciation for every act of kindness shown them during the untim ely death of their toved one. A special thanks for the flowers, food, visits, prayers and calls. E very thoughtful expression of sym pathy w ill always be rem em bered. M ay God ric h ly bless each one of you Is our prayer.________ The F am ily■ 2'7]fnp-WOG - E LLISI w ish to thank each and everyone fo r every kind thought, the lovely g ifts, and the m any beautiful C hristm as cards sent me during the' holidays. M ay God alw ays bless you fo r your kindness.Adelaide E llis 113 Foster Street M ocksvllle. N.C.2-7 Up Am erican Heort Association WE'RE FIGHTING FOR YOUR LIFE ' FOR R E N T: 3 M obile Hom es...In the Jerusalem area. S165.00. S185.00, and S225.00 per month. Deposit and References required. C all: 284- 2686 o r 284-2433. 2-71tnp-CW T HOMES FOR RENT FOR R EN T OR R E N T W ITH 0PT10N ...2 B edroom hom e in M o c k s v llle . D eposit- re q u ire d . $220.00 p e r m o n th . R E A L T Y RANCH. 634 3113.2-7tfn-RR FOR S A LE -Fm H A approved b rick home In nice neighborhood. Easy access to 1-40, No down­ paym ent and low m onthly paym ents to qualified buyer. Call R E A LT Y RANCH at 634- 3113. 10-18-tfnRR HOUSE FOR SALE...2 B edroom t, 1 Batt). Livin g room w ith fire p lace , p a rtia l b a u m tn t w ith o il heat and m ore attractions. L oca ttd on H ar­ dison Street In M ocksvllle. near Soutt> D«vla Jr. High School. Call a t a nytim e: «)4-3456. S36.500.00___________________________________________ l-243tp HiC KO R Y H IL L HO M E FOR SALE : Lovely, spacious. 4 bedroom home w ith baths, form a l living and dining room s. large den w ith b rick fireplace, exposed beam s, and sliding glass doors w hich overlook the rolling greens of the golf course. F am ily can w alk to pool and tennis courts. Ideal for loggers and sports enthusiast. Grounds contain apple, peach, plum , pear and black M iln u t trees. E x c e lle n t neighborhood. O w ner m oving because of business. W ill sacrifice at 187,500. C all: 998-5570.1*24-9tpVC MOBILE HOMES FOR SALE FOR S A LE ...LE E 'S M O B ILE H 0 M E 5 ...fiM d 1923. Norwood, N.C. 14x70 M obile Home. $10,999.00 o r 24X60. *17.999.00. 7 days till Sun- down. Call 704-474-3741, ---------------------------------------------------------------fl^ -tfn L M H MISCELLANEOUS V kE IO H T LOSS B H 1 A K T H R 0 U 0 H I TheG rapefruit D iet Plan w ith D ladax. M edically pro ven re s u lts a v a ila b le a t: D A V IE » DISCOUNT DRIG S In Cooleemee. N.C.1-24-3tpCD FO R S A L E : E X IA C IS t B Q U IP M IN T ... P ackage D eal U n ive rsa l G ym , w e ig hts, m irro rs, bikes, various m achines. C all: (919) 838-3282 afte r 5 p.m . _______________________________________l^ - 5 t pRP N E E D A R (D E...N O W to N orth P oint from Clem m ons, fo r five days per week. For more Inform ation, ca ll: 1-9I9-766-6445.1-17-41 pMA C RAFTS...Punch E m broidery Supplies fo r S«!e. Needle K its, thread and patterns. For m ore Inform ation ca ll: 998-3201. M rs. Jam es W ard, P retty Punch D ealer, Rt. 2. Box 540. M ocksvllle.2-7 Itp-JW FOR S A L t: Treated Wooden Deck. Nice for house o r tra ile r. E xcellent condition. S250.00. C all: 998-8287. ____________________________________^Itnp-KC FOR S ALE : Three Prom Dresses: sixes 7 to 11. W orn only once. Reasonably priced. C all: 998- 6246. 2-7 Up FOR S ALE ; P arrot w ith large w ire cage. G re at' House B ird fo r O N LY S185.00; ALSO 3'-0 X 6'- 8 " w hite a lum inum storm door fram e w ith nylon screen and door closer s till Inbox (New). W ill sell for S30.00. C all: (704) 634-5647.2-7 1tp-EH AM ERICAN HEART M ONTH This person thought he could drive as well after a few drlni(s as before. He was dead wrong. Don’t make the same mistake. FOR SAl E: ‘ b rn i Huuse In Davie County w ith 1 to 10 at res. C all: 4V2-7519.^ ____________________________2-7 2tp-FB WANTED TO RENT S IN G LE , M A L E Engineer w ith Ingersoii-Rand seeks p riva te room -apt.-hom e FOR RENT near or in M ocksvllle. Non-sm oker and Cleen. Call.' Stefan a t: (704) 634-3561. E xt. 2608, fi a.m . - 5 p.m .2-7 1tp-S BEST PRICES ON M O B ILE H0M ES...14 X 70...- 3 bedroom s, 2 baths, 110,995. 24 X 40 M obile Home *13,995. GOOD S ELE C TIO N OF USED HOMES. D AVID S M O B ILE HO M ES. HW Y. 52. Norwood, N.C. C all: (704) 474.5512. 8.9-ttnDM H FOR S ALE : 1980 T ld w ^fM o b lfe Home 14 X 64, 2 bedroom s, large fa m ily room , large kitchen, 1 bath, central a ir, fu lly furnished, under­pinned. 14 X 14 back sun deck and a 5 X 7 front porch. C all: 998-2543. 2-7 2tp LAND FOR SALE ^R^SICRRESOVN wnH VEHICLES FOR S ALE : Land In Davie C ounty...9.75 acres o ff H w y. 158. between Boger Road and 158. Cali: (919) 765-8857. 2-7 2IPDCS FOR S ALE : 1981 Toyota S tarlet Hatch back...5 Speed...38 m iles per gal. C ali: 284-4230.2-7 Up FOR S A LE : 1984 Honda. Black and S ilver, Under W a rran ty. Show room condition. C all: 284-2085 a fte r 5 p.m .f________________________________ 2-7 tfn FOR S ALE : 1973 O idsm oblic Cutlass...New V inyl top and upholstery, in E X C E LLE N T m echanical shape. New tire s and A m erican M ags. *1400.00. C all: 284-27.97. ATTENTION Anyone, that had consignment items in the Kountry Korner and has not <M^en contacted, I'LKASli CALL 998-8287 THANK YOU! A u l f i . Technician For new Chevrolet Dealership in Yadklnville. Must be experienced. See Bobby Dimmette, Sereice Manager. At 679-3135 AUTO SALES W e have th e best p ro d u c t, so w e need th e best Sales P eople! If y o u are an e n th u sia stic, a m ­ b itio u s , h a rd w o rk in g in d iv id u a l w ith e xp erie nce a p p ly in person to :Dayton Motors In Y a d k in v ille Y o u r A u th o riz e d C h e vro le t D ealer in Y a d k in and D avie C o u n tie s. .________________ CEDAR RIDGE APARTMENTS ■ Hardison Street, Mocksville, NC NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS *1 A n d 2 B edroom s * F u lly C arpeted * A ir C o n d itio n in g ♦ K itch e n A p p lia n ce s F u rnish e d For Information Or Application Contact 634-2070 or 300 Milling Road, Mocksville, N.C. Between the hours o f 2:00 - 5:00 Monday - Friday. Managed by Phoenix Mana;;emcnt Services WANTED SEWING MACHINE OPERATORS SKILLED OR WILL TRAIN IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Applications Accepted Any Day WONDERKNIT/ SCOREBOARD Milling Road Mocksville, N.C. LO.E.M/F 704-634-5991 LOOKI WINDOW PERFECTION IS HERE! CUSTOM MADE WEST PRIME THERMAL WINDOWS The West Prime Thermal Window Is Superior Because: • II fiab cl thermal break which virtually stops heat and cfild tr.msTnission. • ll tills Into the room for easy cleaning. • It requires no maintenance except cfeaning. • It uses 7/H" thick, hermetically sealed insulated glass with a 11/10" dead air space. • It is custom made and installed to your window size and style spi'cifications • It is available in holh white and bronze finish. • It keeps your house warmer in winter, coolcr in summer. • it is double hung and is available with full screen. • It replaces old wood or metal windows. CONTACT: Ben Childers 704-634-2548 Rt. 2, Box 67-A Mocksville, N.C. 27028 -NOTICE- MEN AND WOMEN 17-62 TRAIN NOW FOR CIVIL SERVICE EXAMS NO HIGH SCHOOL NECESSARY POSITIONS START AS HIGH AS $ 1 0 - 6 2 h o u r • POST O FFICE •C L E R IC A L • M EC HA N IC S • INSPECTO RS KEEP PRESENT JOB WHILE PREPARING AT HOME FOR GOVERNMENT EXAMS NATIONAL TRAINING SVC., INC. Meetings will be held at: Winston Square in Winston-Salem 1-40 at Cherry Street FrI. Feb. 8,1985 11:00 A.M. or 7:00 P.M. Only sto re F ront - A uto G lass Installed - S torm D oors 4 W indow s - C anopies B & B GLASS & MIRROR R oute 1 B ox 25-3 U ocitsvllle, N orth C arolina 27028 FREDDIE BREW ER O w ner Telephone - 634-3966 HOURS: 8:011 a .m .-5 ;0 0 p.m. Mi)nd;iy-I'riclay Closed Suliirday REBUILT STARTERS & ALTERNATORS F o r A m e ric a n C a n ‘24.95 W ith T ra d e In $ 3 4 .9 5 W Jtft in te rn a l R e g u la to r Boger Texaco Service 18S N . M a in S tre e t M o c k s v llle , N .C . NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE ^ Safes ^ Files ^ Fire Proof Files Rowan Office Furniture n 6 N . M a in S tre e t S a lis b u ry , N .C . P ho n e 6 3 6 » 8 0 2 2 NOTICE Ads appearing in tlie classified columns of tills newspaper are p.OO for just 25 words if paid for in advance by 11 a.m.Thursday mornings. All sucii classified ads not paid for by 11 a.m. Thursday at wiiich tinie Uiey will be transferred to an account to be billed, wili be ctiarged at the rale of $4.00 for just 25 words. All ads not paid for within 30 days will have 10 percent service vhar|>e added to the total. All ads in excess of 25 words, will be charged at the rat* of 10 cents * Deadline for accepting classified ads in 2 p.m. Tuesday of the week (o be run. SUBSCRIBE to the Davie County Enterprise Record Just fill in and mail to; Clrculstlon Department P.O. Boy. 525 ft'otHcsville, M.C. 2702P (Chedt applicable boi:) HNorth Carolina........$15.00 MOut of State............$20.00 MSchool Sub. in North Carolina..........$10.00 MSchoolSub. out of state...............$15.00 rUJsubcnptiqns_must be Jl^djMad^nce. r i T v STATE 7 IP TELEPHONE BAVIB e e U N T V Cmmm <k Nh M AU^m m m MOCKSVILLE. N. C. 27028 I I II II IIIII II III I IIIII 14B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1985 FEBRUARY No Money Down Take Up To 24 Months To Pciy|!! FREE DELIVERY •fr eeIffSTALLATION MAGNAVOX 19” REMOTE CONTROL COLOR • 17 button infrartd mnpM ooiKtol. H u g e c a p a c ity .. . o n ly 28^' w ld a l Model TA.14SC • 13.9 cu. n. manual defrost refrigerator. • Energy-saving urethane foam Insulation • Two Ice 'n Ea^ tra^. • Door shelves for egga, butter, half-gallon mUk cartons and tall bottles. el •CopperBottoms 7£0UALITY COOKWARE NEW STORE HOURS Phone 634-6115 Doug Moye, Manager SINCE ^ k a n a DAVIE C O U N T V Single Issue - 35 ccnts THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985 24 PAGES (USPS 149-160) P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, NX. 27028 Federal Government Spent $44-Million In Davie During '83 The federal government directly spent $44,026,000, in Davie County during the fiscal 1983 according to a report recently issued by the United States Department of Commerce. The Federal government’s fiscal 1983 began on October 1, 1982 and ended on September 30,1983. During this period, direct federal ex­ penditures amounted to $1,790, for every man, woman, and child in Davie County. Direct per capita federal expenditures in North Carolina were $2,202 during fiscal 1983 while direct per capita federal expenditures nationally were $3,049 during the fiscal year. Direct payments in individuals were the largest single source of federal spending in Davie County during fiscal 1983. These amounted to $20,150,000 during that year. Of this total $21,129,000 consisted of retirement and disability benefits for individuals. These include Social Sercurity retirement and disability pension payments, retired civil service and military pensions, veterans’ benefits and allowances, expenditures for medicare, as well as most of the other forms of federal assistance for individuals which are usually termed “ transfer a Town employees/ John Owens (left) and David Dalton (right), prepare no ' I area in front of steps on South Main Street Friday afternoon. (Photo by John Vernelson) Commission Makes Recommendations To Enhance The Town's Appearance By John Vernelson : The Appearance Commission put on a show for the Town Board at a special meeting of the two February Following the show, a slide presentation of Mocksville which highlighted both its assets and liabilities, the Board listened as the commission made six recom­ mendations designed to enhance the town’s appearance and to make it a safer, more accessible place for its citizens. Recommendations are; 1. On South Main Street, designate NO PARKING in the parking spaces in front of the two sets of steps. This will allow pedestrians to step up from the street onto the sidewalk. 2. Remove all extraneous con­ crete from the four plots and re-seed them. 3. Replace the sidewalks and curbs where needed on both sides of North Main Street. Replace the asphalt strip between the sidewalk and the curb with concrete. 4. Replace street signs. All signs that identify streets should be green with white letters. Stop signs and others in disrepair should be replaced. 5. Remove privately placcd signs in the right-of-way that are in disrepair. 6. Collect garbage from the rear of businesses whenever it is feasible. All six of the commission’s recommendations were approved, although Board members decided to delay sidewalk and curb work on North Main Street until the economic feasibiiitv of such an pli W( undertaking has been determined. Town manager Terry Bralley said Friday if the price'is reasonable, he sees no reason why the North Main sidewalk project cannot be com­ pleted this year. “ At the worst,” he said, "it will be budgeted for next year.” The Town acted quickly to im- ilement the wishes of the Board. 'orkmen were busy Friday af­ ternoon designating the no parking areas on South Main and Thursday afternoon 12-15 privately owned signs in the right-of-way were removed, according to Bralley. Some signs in the right-of-way are community watch signs and were left intact by workmen, Bralley said. Later, he will suggest to Community Watch block captains that their organization assume the responsibility for the upkeep of these signs. Sanitation workers have been asked to compile a list of businesses which, at the present, require frontal garbage pick-up. Once the list has been completed, the Town will mail these businesses a letter to see if it would be feasible for them to relocate garbage pick-up to the rear of their Buildings, Bralley said. A list of downtown street signs which need to be replaced has been completed and, according to Bralley, the order for their replacements has been made out. Work on the four plots will commence as soon as the weather is favorable for re-seeding in the early spring. The Town will not remove any extraneous concrete from the plots until about a week prior to the re-seeding. Bralley reasons that such a schedule will lessen' the probability of erosion problems that might occur when the now protected topsoil is exposed to the elements. SOUTH MAIN STREET AREA IS TOP PRIORITY Although none of the Appearance Commission’s recommendations deal with the multitude of problems posed by the oak trees which line the west side of South Main Street, the commission said it has determined that this area should receive top priority.Mayor Mando agreed. He said that while the Square is a good starting place for the Town to begin its work to improve the appearance and accessibility of Mocksville, problems associated with the trees on South Main make it the top priority. And, the Board seemed to agree. When member Bob Hall said it had to make a decision concerning the fate of the trees, no disagreement was voiced by the body’s four other members. Town manager Bralley recom­ mended that the Town bring in a landscaping expert to examine the trees who, after completing his study, would advise the Appearance Commission of his findings so that it could return to the Board with recommendations. Board member Julia Howard said because of the Board’s budget planning schedule, it would need the A ppearan ce C om m ission ’ s recommendations by April. Friday afternoon Bralley said he had already contacted Herman Terry, the Director of Urban Forestry for the Department of Natural Resources, “ to take a look at the trees on South Main.” County Jail Adds New Security Measure By John Vernelson "We’re getting a different breed muiiuu/ aa lie cuiiotuui^u tiiw «<ii portanceof the County Jail’s newest sercurity measure, a metal grate that stretches across the jail’s front entrance. Citing the need of the jailor to have more control over the flow of traffic in and out of the jail. Smith had.nothing but praise for the metal grate whose door may be opened electronically with the flick of a switch or with a key. Since no one but authorized personnel have access to keys. Smith said the on-duty jailor has complete control of a|I jail traffic. payments” or "entitlements”. Another-major source of federal spending in Davie County during funds in Davie County during fiscal 1983. Other federal spending in Davie fiscal 1983 was the Defense Department. Total defense spen­ ding in the county during this period was $17,247,000. However, this figure is misleadingly high since a very substantial portion of it con­ sists of military pensions and veterans’ benefits which were also reported as direct payments to individuals. $119,000 of defense spending in Davie County during fiscal 1983 was for military and other Defense Department salaries. A further $16,171,000 was disbursed by the Defense. Department in Davie County in the form of military procurement contracts. Other departments and agencies of the federal government including the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, Interior, and Transportation and the En- viromental Protection Agency disbursed $234,000 iirDavie County during fiscal 1983. While the federal government does not provide a breakdown of these figures in Davie County, other sources indicate that the Department of Agriculture was one of the largest source of these County during the fiscal year in­ cluded $327,000 in grant awards. Specific details on all local grants were not provided. However, besides general revenue sharing grants, the largest sources for grant funds in most counties are the Departments of Agriculture, Education, Health and Human Services, Housing and Urban Development, Labor and Tran­ sportation. While the total of direct federal spending in Davie County is sub­ stantial, as noted, it does not include another extremely important source of federal money in the county: federal loans and federally guaranteed loans. These are not included in direct federal spending figures because, as loans, it is presumed that these funds will eventually be repaid to the federal government. Federal loans and federally guaranteed loans encompass a variety of programs. These include emergency farm disaster loans, rural electric loans and loan guarantees. Small Business Ad­ ministration loans, student loans for higher education, community development loans, many of the various housing loan programs, as well as others. Direct federal loans in Davie County were $11,000 during fiscal 1983 while federally guaranteed loans in the county amounted to $5,685,000. The Department of Agriculture’s loan programs were among the largest sources of federally guaranteed loans in Davie County during that year. The Department of Agriculture’s loan programs include a number of low and moderate income housing loan programs as well as various farm loan programs. None of the federal spending totals in Davie County include expenditures made through the United States Postal Service in Davie County. The Postal Service’s expenditures are no longer con­ sidered a Separate corporation. Postal Service expenditures in Davie County for fiscal 1983 are not presently available. The total of direct and indirect federal spending in Davie County was $49,722,000 during fiscal 1983. It is apparent that federal spending provided one of the largest sources of funds for the economy of Davie County during that period. Naylor Elected United Way Chairman Benny Naylor, Mocksville businessman, has been elected to serve as Davie County United Way chairman during the 1985-86 fun­ draising drive. Naylor was elected' Thursday night during the United Way’s annual membership meeting at Fisherman’s Quarters located on U.S. 601 north. Other officers elected include Ruth Foster, co.-chairman of Budget and outgoing president; Gary Whitaker, co-chairman of Appeals; and Carmen Walker, secretary. Naylor has been associated with the United Way for ten years, serving in various capacities on the local board including chairman of the budget committee. He served twelve years on the Davie County Board of Education, seven of which he acted as board chairman. Naylor has been active in scouting since 1958, having served as cub- master, assistant scoutmaster and scoutmaster. He is a member of the Uwharrie Council and has served ten years as the Mocksville Rotary Club’s scouting coordinator. Naylor, president of J.P. Green Milling Co. in Mocksville, is an active member of the First Baptist Church of Mocksville where he has served in various capacities in­ cluding a Deacon, Sunday School teacher, training director and choir member. He is an active member of the Mocksville Rotary Club and was previously named Young Man of the Year by the Mocksville Jaycees. He has served as president of the Western North Carolina Corn Millers As.sociation and is active in numerous other civic organizations. During the Davie County United Way’s annual membership meeting last week, outgoing president, Ruth G. Foster, thanked the industries, agencies, individuals and directors whose contributions and work helped make the 1985 campaign goal of $123,000 a reality. James Bailey, co-chairman of peals, recognized each individual 85 drive are as follows: industry participating in the fun­ draising drive. Dianne Snipes, co- chairm an of appeals, extended thanks to the campaign’s five Benny Naylor pacesetters. B aker' Furniture, Crown Wood Products, Ingersoll- Rand, Hanes, and R.J. Reynolds with appreciation plaques for their contributions and sup^rt. Mrs. Foster also presented ap­ preciation plaques to outgoing of­ ficers for their work during the past year. Persons receiving plaques included Benny Naylor, Dianne Snipes, Jim Bailey, Carmen Walker, secretary, and Darlena Cockerham, Forsyth represen­tative. The Davie County United Way will officially kick off its 1985-86 campaign drive in September. During the 1984-85 drive, over $123,000 was raised with 36 local and state human services agencies receiving funding this year. Davie County United Way allocations resulting from the 1984- American Red Cross-$6,050 Association for Retarded Citizens- $6.3(W Battered Women’s Services-$1.650 Boy Scouts-$18,549 Camp opportunity-$550 Child Guidance Clinic-$1,100 Children’s Center for the Physically Handicapped-$550 Consumer Credit Counseling-$734 C o o lee m e e R e c re a tio n Association-$5,000 Council on Drug Abuse-$990 Davie American Little League $2,880 Davie Arts Council-$2,750 Davie County 4-H Clubs-$3,300 Davie Group Home-$5,000 Davie National Little League- $2,880 Family Services-$1,650 Farm ington Com m unity Association-$1,650 Forsyth Cancer Service-$1,100 Girl Scouts-$18,150 Hospice of Davie County-$9,557 N.C. United Way-$7,425 RSVP (Retired Senior Volunteer Program) $1,200 Salvation Army-$2,750 Tri-County Mental Health Association-$1,150 Wm. R. Davie Community Activity 0rganization-$l,150. YMCA-Tangled Y Camp-$1,100 Agencies funded through the N.C. United Way are: Advocacy Center for Children’s Education and Parent Training; Children’s Home Society of N.C.; Epilepsy Association of N.C.; Florence Crittenton Services; Hospice of N.C.; North Carolina Society for Autistic Adults and Children; Research Fund of N.C. United Way (basic medical research); United Health Services for Alcohol and Drug Abuse; American Social Health Association; International Social Services; National Council on Aging; N.C. United Way. Consultant To Review Local Cable Applications Installed about a month ago, the metal grate is located just inside swinging glass doors that open to the outside. Prior to the installation of the grate. Smith said the jail was wide open. "During the niglit shift,” he said, •'Ihe glass doors were so quiet, (continued on page 2) Two cable television companies vying for a franchise allowing the set up of cable in eastern Davie face a delay after commissioners voted to refer the applications to an outside consultant. The five members of the Davie County Board of Commissioners voted unanimously Monday to refer applications submitted by Advance Microwave and Davie County Cable T.V. to an outside consultant for recommendation on technical merit. Commissioners told representatives of the two firms that the board felt an independent analysis of the proposals was in order due to the “ competitive nature of the applications.” Law stipulated that Ihe county hold at least two public licariiiKs prior to granting cable television franchises. Monday’s meeting was the second' concerning the two competing firms. Bill Foster, board chairman, said Davie County is lucky to have two good companies applying for the franchise, out said the final decision would be made on a technical basis and not personalities. During the meeting, a petition with about 150 names favoring Advance Microwave was submitted to the board fo;' consideration. However, the board indicated that it would rely heavily on the recom­ mendations of an independent cable television consultant in making its final decision. Phillip Bolton, the owner of Ad­ vance Microwave, asked the commissioners last month for a franchise to serve 250 homes along N.C. 801 by this spring. The board tentatively agreed to grant the franchise, but several weeks ago Davie County Cable submitted its application.Davie County Cable wants to serve 931 residents along N.C. 801 and N.C. 158 within seven months, according to the application. Service would be expanded to Ad­ vance and Farmington by 1986. After Davie County Cable’s ap­ plication was submitted, Bolton (conUiiiied on puf'c 2) 2-DAVlE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985 Man Charged With Assault After Hitting Son Installed about a month ago, the County Jail's newest security measure is a metal grate which stretches across the fall's front entrance. (Photo by John Vernelson) County Jail Adds New Security ii/leasure (continued from p i| e 1) someone could have been in the jail before the jailor would l<now it.” > Many times, he continued, when the jailor is in the cell area, the only people up front are those in the communications office. Because of the proximity of 1-40, Smith said the jail houses out-of- state fugiti vies quite often. Not all of these people or their friends are the types who frequented Andy Taylor’s jai! in Mayberry, he said. Some potentially dangerous prisoners spend months in the county jail. The recently convicted murderers of the Winston-Salem cab driver spent about eight months in the Davie jail, according to Smith. It’s bothersome at times for the , jailer to have to let all but authorized personnel in and out. Smith said, but the benefits of the new system easily out wei^this minor irritation. In addition, a second metal ^rate separates the magistrate’s jail office (located just inside the front entrance) from the booking area (located to the left of the magistrate’s office). This, in con-, junction with the new front entrance grate, allows the jailor more freedom and more options as he deals with Sunday visitors and prisoners who arc waiting to make bond. Smith said. The erection of the metal grate not only improves the overall security of the jail, but according to Smith, is in compliance with recommendations made by the ’ State Jail Inspector in November. By John Vernelson A Cooleemee man who struck hii 12-yenr-oId son in the head with i drinking glass Saturday morning ai the two watched television wai arrested later the same day and charged with simple assault by the Davie County Sheriff's Department. Jerry Wesley Jacobs, 40, of 1 Grove Street was arrested in his home at 1:45 p.m. several hours after his son described the incident to Martha Phipps, an LPN on duty in Davie County Hospital’s emergency room where the boy was admitted at 10:41 a.m. for treat­ ment of a head wound, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Statements made by the injured boy to LPN Phipps indicated that the elder Jacobs became enraged and threw the glass at his son when the youth did not switch television stations as asked to by the father. The boy said he was watching cartoons, but his father wanted to watch a western instead. After listening to the boy’s story as she treated his head wound, a laceration approximately 4 cm long and I'/j cm deep, Phipps notified the Sheriff’s Dept, and the Dept, of Social Services of the assault, ac­ cording to the report. The victim and his mother Mary Jacobs said, according to the report, that Jacobs had been drinking prior to the incident and, in fact, had been drinking heavily since the preceding Thursday. Later, when investigating of­ ficers, Det. P.C. Williams and deputy Holt Howell, entered the Jacobs residence to make the arrest, they saw a fifth bottle of liquor more than three-fourths empty sitting atop the kitchen table and another fifth bottle totally G.O.P. Schedules Precinct Meetings Davie County Republican Precinct meetings are as follows: Clarksville, February 25 at 7:30 p.m. at William R. Davie fire department. Cooleemee, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. at the Cooleemee fire depart­ ment. Farmington, February 26, 7:30 p.m. at the voting place. East Shady Grove, February 25 at Advance fire department at 7:30 p.m. Fulton, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. at Fork Fire department. Jerusalem, February 27, at 7:30 p.m. at Jerusalem fire department. North Calahain, February 25 at 7 p.m. at Center community building. North Mocksville, February, 26, at Davie County Courthouse at 7:30 p.m. South Calahain, February 25, at 7 p.m. at Davie Academy Community building. South Mocksville, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. at Davie County Cour­ thouse. Smith Grove, March 1, at 7:30 p.m. at Smith Grove fire depart­ ment. Shady Grove, February 26, at 7:30 p.m. at Cornatzer-Dulin fire department. Davie Hospital Gets *4,084 Duke Grant The Davie County Hospital has been awarded an operating grant of $4,084 by the Duke Endowment. According to Ashley H. Gale, Jr., director of the Endowment’s Hospital and Child Care Divisions, the recent grants “ are annual awards to help cover costs of in­ digent care and data-gathering services in hospitals, and to defray operating expenses in child-care institutions. This year’s con­ tribution represents an increase of nearly 6 percent over last year’s grants for the same purposes.” When James Buchanan Duke established the Duke Endowment in 1924, he directed that all qualifying nonprofit hospitals in the two Carolinas receive one dollar per day for each day of free care given to charity patients. The percentage of “ free bed” days fell dramatically with the advent of Medicare- Medicaid programs, but now ex­ ceeds the pre-Medicare-Medicaid to the En- that per- fro level. Hospitals reporting dowment indicated centages of “ free days” rose from 16.5 percent in 1983 to 18.4 percent in 1984. “ There has been a steady escalation in the number of free bed days,” said Mr. Gale. “ The unin­ sured poor, the elderly, and those with catastrophic illnesses account for most of the increase.___________ Cable Applications To Be Reviewed United Way Applicants Sought Hum^in service non-profit agencies interested in applying for funding through Davie County's United Way are en­ couraged to submit an ap- piicalion by April 12. Applications received by that date will be considered for admission to United Way and may participate in this year’s budget process to receive funding in 1986. Agencies interested in ap­ plying should contact Ruth Foster at 284-2542, Carmen Walker at 998-5555 or Darlena Cockerham at 723-3601. Davie Fire Log (continued from page 1) revised his application, Charles Mashburn, the county manager, said. Bolton now proposes serving . 700 homes in the Advance area ■ within a year. Only Mocksville residents and • county residents served by Central ; Telephone Co« have cable service now. Advance Microwave now provides cable service to Riverview : Townhouses on N.C. 801, but also ' handles 24 commercial buildings : across the state, Bolton told the commissioners in December. Advance Microwave customers ■ would pay $8 a month for 11 basic channels, Bolton said initially. For $4.50 more a month, customers ' would get 19 more channels, in­ cluding Cable News Network, : Nickelodeon, the Nashville Network Music Television and C-Span. > The Movie channel Home Box iOffice costs $10.95, but Bolton’s :-application shows that additional • channels, such as Slwwtime, the ;Disney Channel and Cinemax, might be available later at a lower cost. ' Davie County Cable was formed !expressly for the franchise • in eastern Davie County,according to its application. The co-managers are Thbinas R. Orrell ol‘ Winston- Salem and Lester Hilton of Ad­ vance. Campbell Road Bridge To Be Replaced The Division of Highways of the North Carolina Department of Transportation will close Campbell Road (Secondary Road 1400) in Davie County to general traffic for ap­ proximately four weeks. The road, locat^ near Mocksville, will close on February 18. It is expected to reopen in mid- March. The temporary closing will allow NCDOT bridge main­ tenance crews to replace an existing bridge with pipe. During construction, traffic will lie detoured from Campbell Road to US-158, back to Camp­ bell Road. The detour route is 4 miles long. For additional information, contact B.D. Martin, bridge maintenance supervisor, (701) U33-3001. William R. Davie Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire off High­ way 601 N. February 15 at 4:24 p.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a possible woods fire off Cedar Grove Church Rd. February 15 at 5:52 p.m. Jerusalem Fire Dept, responded to a chimney fire at Bill Reavis' residence off Highway 801 February 15 at 6:09 p..m. Cornatzer Fire Dept, responded to a fire off Milling Rd. February 16 at 1:21 a.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, respnded to a grass fire at the IJarker residence off Sain Rd. February 16 at 12:48 a.m. Jerusalem Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire at the Lenard residence off Riverdale Rd. February 16 at 2:26 p.m. Farmington Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire off Cedar Grove Rd. February 16 at 2:51 p.m. Farmington Fire Dept, responded to a veiiicle and woods fire off 1-40’s east bound lane February 17 at 1:17 p.m. Sheffield-Calahaln Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire off Turkey Font Rd. in Iredell County February 17 at 2:18 p.m. h'ork h'ire Dept, responded to a grass fire off Merrill Lake Rd. February 18 at 1:13 p.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, responded to a brush fire off Prison Camp Rd. across from the Dept, of Tran­ sportation February 18 at 11:17 p.m. County Line Fire Dept, responded to a trash fire off Ridge Rd. February 19 at 6:50 a.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, responded to a structure fire on Railroad St. February 12 at 6:47 a.m. Advance Fire Dept, responded to a chimney fire on Beauchamp Rd. February 12 at 2:43 p.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Hwy 801 February 14 at 2:07 p.m. Jerusalem Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Cherryhill Rd. off 601 S Friday at 1:56 p.m. ! Fire ^Cooleemee as a backup. Dept, responded empty in the living room, the report indicated.* When Williams and Howell en­ tered the Jacobs residence, the report indicated that Jacobs was on a couch in the living room watching television and offered no resistance when the two officers placed him under arrest. Once Jacobs reached the County Jail, his mood apparently changed because he became very loud, uncooperative, and, according to the report, struck jailor Bob Lemmons in the back with his fist as Lemmons prepared to place him in a cell. Magistrate Robert Cook set Jacobs’ secured bond at $100 and ordered that the arrested man not; be released for at least four hours so • he would have time to sober up, the ; report indicated. ' - According to the arrest report, th e ' case was referred to the Depart­ ment of Social Services because of,, the “ rem ote” possibility that- Jacobs might eventually be charged., with child abuse in addition to simple assault. Social work supervisor Karen' Smith said Tuesday afternoon th e . Dept, of Social Services routinely' works with the Sheriff's Dept, and. the district attorney on cases of this ' type, but because of their con­ fidential nature, she is not at liberty to discuss specific cases: Melvin Mock of Rt. 1, Mocksville; reported damage to his mailbox on Godby Road Sunday. Damage was $15. Mary Chambers Feamster, 33, of Rt. 4, Mocksville, was arrested Monday and charged with uttering a worthless check. Released on an unsecured $200 bond, Feamster will be tried on the charge in a Davidson County court March 4, according to a Sheriff's Dept, report. Jerry Lynn Trull of Rt. 8, Mocksville, reported damage to his mailbox Friday. Damage was $15. Bob Brandson reported that someone broke into a Cheerwine machine at the Cooleemee Super Market in the Cooleemee Shopping Center Saturday and took $50 in change, according to a Sheriff’s , Dept, report. The report indicated no drinks were missing. Donald Wayne Stanley of Rt.5, Mocksville reported damage to his mailbox Saturday. A report in­ dicated that someone had broken off the mailbox's 4 x 4 support. Faith S. Goodin, 29, of Rt. 7 Mocksville was arrested Friday and charged with a worthless check, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Sandra B. Whitley, 23, of Milling Road was arrest^ Friday and charged with uttering a worthless check. Released on a $300 secured bond, Whitley will face the charge in court March 12, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report Barry Keith Hendrix, 20, of Rt. 4, Advance, was arrested Saturday and charged with uttering a wor- tiiless check, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Arrested nn a $200 secured bond, Hendrix will be tried on the charge March 5. Tommy Eugene Cope of Rt. 3, Mocksville, was arrested Sunday and charged with uttering a wor­ thless check. Arrested on a $300 unsecured bond. Cope will be tried on the charge in a Rowan County court March 12, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Terry Lynn Kimmer, 25, of Rt. 2, Mocksville,' was arrested Sunday and charged with failure to comply according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Arrested on a cash bond of $575.33, Kimmer will be tried on the charge March 12. Noel Watson of Rt. 2, Mocksville, reported that some dogs fought underneath his mobile home January 17 and damaged the trailer’s insulation, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. The report indicated that Watson said damage to the insulation was . $800-1,000. Ervin Lee Draughn of Mocksville reported that his auto, a 1969 Chevrolet, was vandalized while parked at Davie High Friday. According to a Sheriff’s IDept report, someone apparently used a . sharp instrument to damage the' vehicle. The report indicated that this was the second time Draughn’s car has been vandalized. Walter Daniel Brock, 25, of Rt. 7 Mocksville, was arrested Saturday , and charged with failure to appear, according to a Sheriff’s Sept. report. ■ Arrested on a $300 secured bond,. Brock will be tried on the charge in a Forsyth County court March 5. , Frances Mason of Rt. 2, Advance,, reported February 14 the theft or loss of his lisence tag between Davie. Cbunty and Forsyth County on; I Interstate 40. Tom Van Winkle of Advance' I reported the larceny of wood from | his residence February 14. Mary Harris of Cooleemee reported February 14 that an unknown person or persons tried, to pry the chrome off of her car and I took the center piece out of the I spoke wheels, according to a report.' [ The incident occurred on Midway, I Street. Vickie Cranfill WiUiams, 19, of Rt. I 7, Mocksville, was arrested I February 14 and charged with one l count of domestic tresspassing and| one count of assault. According to the report, Williams I will be tried February 26. Wallace Tuttle of Rt. 9, Winston-1 Salem, reported the recovery of his I red 1974 Suzi on February 12. Ac-1 cording to the report, the vehicle, I stolen July 8,1982, was found in the I possession of Michael Gray Caudle I of Rt. 5, Mocksville. Alice Eliis of Rt. 4, Advance, ! reported the fire at Kountry Komer I on Hwy 801 and Yadkinville Rd. I January 31. According to the report, I J.H. Stephens investigated the fire. I J.W. O'Neil of Rt. 7, Mocksville I reported damage to his mailbox on I Willboone Rd. February 13. Damage to the mailbox and post was estimated at $25.00, the report | indicated. James Christopher Nettles of I Route 4, Mocksville, was arrested February 12 and charged with one • count of tresspassing, the report indicated. Nettles was jailed on a $100 secured bond. His trial date is set • for February 26. Dwight Sammons of Greasy' Ck)rner, Cooleemee, reported the; breaking and entering of a coin operated Cheerwine drink machine, at Discount Tires, also located at • Greasy Comer. According to the report, made- February 14, $50.00 in change was taken from the machine. Wayne Shanks, 27, of Jerusalem Ave., (^leem ee, was arrested February 14 and charged with tvyb ; counts of worthless checks, a report • indicated. ' Shanks, who was jailed under a ■ $100 unsecured bond, will be tried for the charges February 28. 127 South Main Street Mocksville. N.C. 27028 Advance Fire Dept, responded to a vehicle fire on Underpass Rd. in front of the Fire Station February 14 at 7:55 a.m. Fork Fire Dept, assisted. Published eve DSVIEPUBLI; by the NG COMPANY MOCKSVILLE ENTERPRISE 1916-1958 DAVIE RECORD 1899-1958 COOLEEMEE JOURNAL 1901-1971 Gordon Tomlinson.........................................Edilor-Publisher Kathy Tomlinson............AsMciale...............Robin Fcrgussontdilors Becky Snyder...........................................Advertising Director Second Class Postage Paid in Mocksville, N.C. 27028 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Single Copy 35 Cents $15.00 per year In North Carolina $20.00 par year outside North Carolina Postmaster Send address changes to Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985-3 Report From Raleigh by Rep. Betsy Cochrane Anita Harding Holds Residence Post At Methodist College The 1985 session of the General Assembly started with a coronation in the House and a discipline lesson in the Senate. A resolution affecting when the Governor would speak to the General Assmebly was the first order of business in the Senate. It was to see if the party troops would line-up like they are supposed to. The suggested date in the resolution was not the one originally agreed to by the Governor and Lt. Governor. Tliere was a scction of the resolution which told the Governor what to say. That move was without precedent. A session law dating from 1925 says an incoming governor may present his budget after his biennium address. Since a resolution is not binding and only I requests, the whole episode was “ much ado about nothing.” I’m glad I we’re moving on to more sub- I stantive issues. One substantive issue is a change in Day Care Law. We’ve had about a dozen bills introduced affecting changes in child-staff ratio, space in square feet per child, training of child care providers, definition of a provider, changes in assistance standards, etc. We obviously need to up-grade in some areas, like child- staff ratio for babies, but we must move very cautiously so that we do not price families right out of the I day care market. I am on the I committee that will evaluate these I proposed la'X's, so I am studying the I issues very carefully. I have co-sponsored legislation to ■ repeal the direct deposit for ■ teachers and the centralized pay [system. I believe in local control I where the employer, which is the I school board, pays the employee. I The interest earned by the money on I deposit is also needed by local I systems in funding their budgets. We have had two bills introduced ■ to raise the drinking age to 21. One I bill raises the age for purchase, ■consumption and possession of beer land wine to 21 effective July 2, 1985. The other bill raises the age over a two year period. Although the prevention of highway deaths and accidents is the primary reason for the age change, the availability of additional highway funds makes it a more acceptable and possible move at this particular time. This may not have made headlines, but we have had a bill introduced to put a sales tax on ice. Ice is presently exempt from the retail and use tax. This same representative in­ troduced a bill to provide a refun­ dable income tax credit' to low- income individuals for the estimated amount of sales and use taxes paid by them on food. I cer­ tainly do not oppose helping folks in need, but these low-ihcome in­ dividuals may have to hire a Cer­ tified Public Account to fill out the forms to qualify for the refund. Bills such as this one can be modified as amended in committee so that a feasible idea has a workable for­ mat. We have had legislation in­ troduced to conform state depen­ dent care credit to the federal credit regarding care for a disabled dependent or spouse. This includes expenses for care outside the home for a mentally or physically disabled child who is 15 years of age or older, or a mentally or physically disabled spouse. It increases the credit for two or more qualifying individuals from $4,000 to $4,800, and increases one qualifying in­ dividual’s credit from $2,000 to $2,400. One especially pleasant event for me in this first ten days of session was having Kathy Tomlinson and her husband at a reception and dinner honoring First Amendment Day. I am grateful to all of you for the opportunity for service you have provided me. I hope you will visit me when you are in Raleigh and will write me to share your views on any subject. I am in Room 1106 of the Legislative Building. My phone number is 919-733-5822. Davie Libranr News The public is cordially invited to I attend a concert featuring Darryl ■Eaton on piano. The concert will be ■Sunday, February 24, at 3:00 p.m., lih the library’s multipurpose room. I ' Trouble in Timberline has been ■placed in the library’s collection in nemory of J. T. Conner by Helen " hart. NEW BOOKS Adult Fiction: The Curse of the Giant Hogweed, ly'Charlotte MacLeod Planet of Whispers, by James telly The Whisper of the River, by iFerrol Sams Dune Messiah, by Frank Herbert •A Loveiy Way to Die and Other Istories, by Celia Fremlin I Heart's Blood, by Jane Yolen I Adult Non-Fiction:I Electrical Motor Controls, by ■Gary RockisI 'Small Engines: Operation and IService, by Jay Webster I 1985 Guiness Book of World I Records Restoring Old Houses, by Arthur ll^ndry I Folding Table Napkins, by I Marianne Bornstedt Handbook of Doormaking, I Windowmaking, and Stair Casing, I by Anthony Talbot I Salvaging Old Barns and Houses,I by Lowrence Abrahms I The Conservation and Restoration I of Antique Furniture, by Stan I Learoyd The Complete Book of Stenciling,' Darryl Eaton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Odell Eaton of Route S, Mocksville, N.C. will perform in concert, Sunday, February 24, 1985, at 3 p.m. in the Multi-Purpose Room at Davie County Public Library ' in Mocksville, He is a 1983 graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a BA degree in music, having studied with Francis Whang. He has also worked with the North Carolina Black Repertory Theater under the direction of tarry Leon Hamlin. ' Darryl is presently a music director for the Cedar Creek Baptist Church of Mocksville, Gallilee Baptist Church and Wentz Memorial United Church of Christ, both of Winston-Salem, N.C. He makes his home in Raleigh, North Carolina. The public is invited to attend this spet'iul concert that is sponsored by the "Friends of the Library." Constance Anita Harding, a junior at Methodist College is serving as a resident advisor n Weaver Dor­ mitory for the 1984-85 school year. Uesident advisors at Methodist College arc chosen on the basis of leadership traits, personality, faculty recommenclation, and campus involvement. “ RA” responsibilities include freshman orientation, counseling, explaining and enforcing campus policies and regulations, and planning dormi­ tory activities with dorm officers. After application for the position, resident advisors are selected by the Dean of Students and the Dean of Women. Harding, a management- psychology major, participates in intramural volleyball and works on campus as a student assistant in the computer room. She recently has been selected to the Ladies' Tennis Team for Spring 1985. Harding is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ray Harding of Mocksville. Methodist College is a four-year college of liberal arts and sciences located on a COO-acre campus bordering the Cape Fear River in Fayetteville, N.C. Tha first jukebox was installed at the Palais Royal Saloon, San Fran- clico, In 1889. It consisted of an electrically-operated phonograph with four listening tubes. by Pat Midkiff The Oxford Book of War Poetry, by Jon Stallworthy Children's Literature From A To Z: A Guide for Parents and Teachers, by Jon Stott The Wendy Dilemma: When Women Stop Mothering Their Men, by Dan Kiley Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful, by Alice Walker The Archeaoiogy of the New Testament rev. ed., by E. M. Blaiklock The Biggest Mistakes Taxpayers Make and How to Avoid Them, by Edward Mendlowitz Biography: Surely Your Joking, Mr. Feyn­ man, by Richard Feynman Marshall Ney: The Romance and The Real, by Horricks Raymond Story Collection: The Universe 14, by Terry Carr Junior Fiction: Bagthorpes Abroad, by Helen Cresswell Junior Non-Fiction: Tales From the Roof of the World, Folktales From Tibet, by Gioia Timanelli TV and Video, by Mat Irvune Computers in the Home, by Nigel Hawkes Making Metric Measuring, by Neil Ardiey ■ Air and Flight, by Neil Ardiey Exploring Magnetism, by Neil Ardiey Trallbikes, by David Jefferis The St. Lawrence, by Trudy Hammer The Amazon, by Gleen Cheney Castles, by Jenny Vaughn Write Your Own Story, by Vivian Dubronin , The Space Shuttle, by Michael Jay All Kinds of Money, by David Adlen Jackie Itobinson, by Harvey Frommer Making Things Move, by Neil Ardiey Radio and Radar, by Frank Young Word Processing, by Memvin Berger Ancient Robinson Children’s Easy Books: Baby Animals Christmas Moon, by Denys Cazet The film for Tuesday, February 26 storytime is "Happy the Bunny’ . Bookmobile Routes: Feb. 2G (4th Tuesday) Cooleemee - Story time Feb. 27 (4th Wednesday) • Ad­ vance - Story time LIBRARY HOURS Monday 9:00-8:30 p.m. Tuesday 9:00-5:30 p.m. Wednesday 9:00-5:30 p.m. Thursday 9:00-8:30p.m. Friday 9:00-5:30 p.m. Saturday ^:00 - 2:00 p.m. W.O.W. To Meet Woodman of the World Lodge 323 will meet at the Davie Academy Community building, Monday, February 25,7:30 p.m. Program for the evening will be presented by the youth drill team. As the January meeting had to be canci^lled due to snow, award nominees will be made this month, as well as delegate selection for the State Juditional meeting. Etypt, by Charles OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTTIL8:30 MOCKSVILU, N.C. RUMMAGE SALE NOW IN PROGRESS THIS IS IT — lAST CALL FOR WINTER MERCHANDISE — ODD LOTS — BROKEN SIZES AND SOME JUST PLAIN OLE DOGS SORRY NO'lAY-A-WAYS • MISSES DRESSES • MISSES SWEATERS • MISSES SKIRTS • MISSES BLOUSES • JUNIOR DRESSES • LADIES COATS • JUNIOR SLACKS • LADIES WINTER SLEEPWEAR • CHILDRENS SHOES • LADIES SHOES • GIRLS SWEATERS • GIRLS SLACKS • MEN’SSLACKS • MEN’S SWEATERS • MEN’S JACKETS • BOYS JACKETS • BOYS FLANNEL SHI RTS • BOYS SWEATERS • BOYS WEAR • TODDLER DRESSES • TODDLERS SLEEPWEAR • BED SHEETS • PILLOWCASES • PLUS OTHER ITEMS ONLY 1 and 2 OF SOME ITEMS OFF THRIFT STORE LADIES SHOES ASSORTED STYLES $E96 SELECT GROUP • BEDSPREADS • DRAPERIES • CURTAINS 3 3 V 3 t o 5 0 % o " MEN’S DRESS SHIRTS ARROW • ANDHURST NOT ALL SIZES VALUES TO’24.Q0 50%OFF ONEGROUP MEN’S SHOES NOT ALL SIZES ORIGINAL PRICE *35.00 to’42.00 to * 1 4 ” 4-DAVlE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985 H e ’s So Ugly, He*s Cute light brown puppy with a cut off tail. Kay Johnson of Mocksville spent afternoon placing signs concerning her lost puppy along Country Lane, the dog, a stray whicn wandered to her home, disappeared this weeicend Lost„.a light brown Monday Town To Charge Fee To Cut Off Water B^inning April 1, the Town will charge a fee to cut on or cut off water for Mocksville residents, according to town manager Terry Bralley. A fee of $20 will be charged during business hours (8 a.m. - 5 p.m., Monday - Friday). A fee of $40 will be charged for such services after business hours, Bralley said. Fees will be charged when residents have their water cut off because of frozen pipes, leaks, and other plumbing repairs, he said, but no fee will be charged when residents move into a new residence. According to Bralley, the state plumbing code requires that houses have a master water cut-off. Planetesimals When Earth was small, some flying chunks called planetesimals were probably large enough to break our growing planet apart, says National Geographic. However, each time this happened. Earth reassembled somewhat bigger than before. *- Mocksville-Davie Chamber of Commerce — Chamber Chatter by Henry Shore, Executive Director Disaster Assistance: A Proud American Tradition Chamber Cahtter The American people have a proud tradition of responding generously when disaster strikes. Since the early days of our republic, Americans have consistently provided relief supplies and emergency food aid to victims of earthquakes, famines, floods, fires, hurricanes, and civil strife the .world over. This proud tradition continues today with America's generous assistance to the millions of famine victims suffering from the current drought and food shortages in Africa. The U.S. Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance marked the 20th anniversary of its coordinated foreign disaster relief efforts in 1984. Since 1964, the United States has assisted victims of 772 disasters in 128 countries. These disasters killed more than 2 million people and affected another 751 million. N O W W E ' R E ' O U T L E T P R I C E D ! SAVING YOU 20% • 60%l W e Haven't Lowered Our Quality Or Service — Jusf Prices. 30-60 Days Same As Cash • Monthly Financing Available Mon. - Sat. 9-6 Fri. Nlte 'til 8:30 SINK INTO CONTEiyAPORARY COMFOii Plump piltowarms and backs make this group a dream SOFA to sit on. Reversible seat cushions for longer Doirc‘ “X tAjAM p A ll in n m m iU A U o lu A f. O U r i B l ^ K I t t Reg. $549.95 SAVE $210 The United States has proved $2.4 billion to assist victims recover from these tragedies. The U.S. Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) within the Agency for International Development (AID ) coordinates U.S. government aid to countries hit by disasters. Its responsibilities include emergency relief and rehabilitation as well as disaster preparedness, early warning, and contingency planning. Disaster relief and preparedness are vital to developing countries. With less developed com­ munications systems, unreliable transport, and weaker economies, these nations often don’t have the resources to initiate massive relief efforts when disasters strike. And disasters are more crippling to fragile economies. AID Administrator M. Peter Mc­ Pherson calls the disaster assistance program a crucial part of AID ’S over-all development strategy. "Development is a dif­ ficult, fragile process, and I have seen natural and man-made disasters play havoc on this process,” he says. “ Apart from immediate relief,” McPherson explains, “our program is designed to help developing countries cope more effectively with disasters by using their own resources. This is done through training and public awareness projects, and by integrating these countries into international early warning systems.” Making A Difference Already, some of the disaster ■ preparednras efforts of the OFDA hadhad an effect in the African food emergency. For example, improved forecasting of grain harvests has helped mobilize relief efforts in advance of a crisis. OFDA-launched forecasting methods helped develop an emergency food program in the East African nations of Rwanda and Kenya this year which should save many lives. AID’S efforts in famine relief represent “ an enormous immediate response,” according to Ad­ ministrator McPherson. However, he cautions, “ it is clear that there is going to have to be a great deal more” done before the emergency abates. OFDA’s role in this emergency is one every American can be proud of. SALISBURV 637-OMO CO»NtRFUtTON»INNES KANNAPOLIS 932-3111 l3tO AK AVE . CONCORD 7M-0111 M7 CHURCH ST., N. F u r n it u r e Your Outlet Store Carrying Over 300 Major Lines Of Furniture A Appliances Rezoning Denial Sparks Dispute A request to poll the Davie County Board of Commissioners on tape as to why each voted against a rezoning petition led to a heated exchange Monday between com­ mission chairman Bill Foster and petitioner, Cletus Potts. Foster ruled a request by Potts of Clemmons to mil each member as to his reasons for. voting against the rezoning of 3.1 acres on Howard- town Road for a mobile home park as out of order. Potts, who taped the hour long hearing, asked that the records show that his request was denied. Foster acknowledged that each side of the rezoning issue, including the opposition represented by Mocksville attorney Hank VanHoy, would be reflected in the minutes. Potts also threatened to appeal the commissioners' decision in court. Potts’ request was denied previously on Jan. 7 because of a technical error in notifying ad­ joining property owners of a public hearing. Tiie Davie County Plan­ ning Board approved the request at a meeting on Nov. 19 and again on Jan. 31. In his request to the commission, Potts proposed opening a 10-unit mobile home park with recreational facilities.on the 3.1 acres of land up for rezoning. About 25 neighbors opposed the rezoning, saying a mobile home park would change the rural character of their community and lower property values. Potts, in a presentation to the commissioners, said that 33 of the 70 visible occupied dwellings on Howardtown Road are mobile homes on private lots. As for the property values, Potts referred to a slide presentation he had made to the board earlier showing dilapidated buildings and dump sites along the road. “ It seems logical that they might be concerned ’ about this matter if they’re really concerned over property yalue,” he said. The commissioners have not approved a rezoning request for mobile home rental property in the past eight years, despite the county’s need for more housing, Potts said. Despite objections by County , Attorney John Brock that previous delays were irrelevant, Potts said he had been treated differently from other petitioners because of the delays. Brock ruled at the Jan. 8 meeting to present the request to the planning board a second time and hold another public hearing, giving proper notincation to ad­ joining property owners. Potts ended his presentation by quoting from four Supreme Court cases concerning rezoning, which he interpreted to mean that public interest alone is not enough reasdn to deny a rezonIng request. “ You have an obligation to approve’tlfls request, and I urge you to do so,”- he said. - Van Hoy was adamant in his contention that commissioners have no legal obligation to grant >t)ie request. " ’This is not the law, and I’m sure Mr. Brock can so advise | you,” he said. Van Hoy, represented some 25 I citizens who attended their third board meeting to oppose the rezoning request. In other business, a franchise was awarded to River Cable Inc.- for I continued service to Bermuda Run I and Bermuda Village. Also at the meeting, com-1 missioners appointed Shirley I Bethea, Marie Miller, Catherine I Young, Wilma Hayes and Richard I Carson to the county’s nursing home | advisory committee. From 2-CentsTo 22-Cents ..The recent postal rate In­ crease is the 13th time that first- class postage has been adjusted since stamps were made compulsory in 1885. They cost two cents at the time. ..In 1917, the first-class stamp went up to three cents. ..In 1919, they returned to two cents. . .On July 6,1932 they went back to three cents. ..August 1, 1958, four cents. ..January 7, 1963, five cents. . .January 7, 1968, six cents. ..May 16, 1971, eight cents. ..March 2, 1974, 10 cents. ..December 31, 1975, 13 cents. ..May 29, 1978, 15 cents. ..March 22, 1981, 18 cents. ..November 1, 1981, 20 cents. ..February 17, 1985, 22 cents. ..Between 1775 and 1885, postage was charged by the page, usually C.O.D. with the lowest rate 6 cents a sheet for deliveries under 30 miles, and 25 cents for letters going more than 400 mites. ..In 1815, the rate skyrocketed to 50 cents a sheet for long­ distance deliveries, a tariff Congress overturned the next year, fixtag the charge at 8 cents a page. Angie Cope has been named UECA Student of the month by UE teacher Lynn McKnIght. Angie works at Trim Inc. in the office. She said the local distributive education program has taught her many things including the ability to communicate with her employer. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Cope of Advance; Angie is a junior at Davie High School. The I)E program is designed to give students on the job experience coordinated with classroom work concerning employment skills. AOVAUIEDnigCepr The family pharmacist: V ADVALUE DrugCenterinyourJrugC neighborhood. NEUTROGENA' Hand Crtam, 2oz7Ubt 2.99 “• .75 MFB. REBATE 2.24 FINAL COST NEUTROGENA*T/GELV TiMrapautie _____Shampoo, 4.401 ^ 2.99 TYLENOL Regular Strength Tablets, o T/Gel BARBASOL Shaving Crum, 11 oz Regular, Menthol. Lemoo4Jm«, or Skin CondWoner SEA BREEZE' Antiuptic For The Skin, 4 oz -f 2 oz Free 1.47 'em e iw is flicr ^ ttim «S ia tp Aid Tablets. 4.39 SHARP Electronic CALCULATOR el-230 X B K3.99 NEW TIDE LIQUID Laundry Detergent, ^ 64 oz 3.59 2.19 or Powder, 49 oz Valentine Candy 50 % OFF WESTCLOX Travette II IhmlAlarm Clock Lumlnoui Dial No. 44222 Red DRIXORAL Suitalned-Actlon Tableta, 2.29 BUFFERIN' AmrWa Strength W e lt, EFFERDENT’ Eitra Strength Denture naerlMU 1.59 TIMEX Digital Snooz-Alarm MWMS212-S12 7.95 Fbiter-Raaeh Dru) Center Wilkesboro street Mocksville, NX.Phone:634-2141 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985-5 $18 - Million Alienation Of Affection Suit Dropped Walt Boyle, Jr. Walt Boyle, Jr. 1$ President-Elect Of Carolina Union UNC Chapel Hill, junior, Walt Boyle, Jr., Bermuda Run, is Bresident-elect of the Carolina nion for 1985-86. He is past chairman of the Union Activities Board and is the co-founder of UNC Student Television. He has received the Order of the Old Well at Chapel Hill in recognition of high at­ tainment in scholarship and leadership. While at Davie High School Walt was awarded the WDSL Radio Summer UNC RTVMP Institute Scholarship. He also received the Ingersoll-Rand Declamation Scholarship, and was president of his senior class. While serving a 4-year tour of duty in the United States Coast Guard he received the Best Ship­ mate Award, and as a Coxswain he earned the Surfman Designation for : heavy surf in 52 ft. boats and below. As a Federal Boarding Officer he c^lified expert with both pistol and rifle. He served as Maalaea Harbor, Maui, Hawaii and in Coos Bay, Oregon. Walt is a qualified Emergency Medical Technician, and received Coast Guard Com­ mendations for both fire and search and res.cue performance. He ^aduated with distinction from Boatswain’s Mate Class “ A " School, and is currently a Coast Guard Reserve pfficer Candidate. Local Student Selected For Scholarship F Interviewed At ECU Five high school students have been selected as alternates to be interviewed Feb. 16 for places as finalists for East Carolina University’s University Scholar awards. A total of 26 students will be in­ terviewed by regional screening committees Saturday, according to Charles F. Seeley, director of ad­ missions. Finalists will be invited to visit the campus prior to selection of the five University Scholar award winners next month. The University Scholars program was established at ECU last fall. It offers full, $3,000 a year scholar- ■ ships to students with superior academic records and leadership potential. Seeley identified the five alter­ nates selected for interviews as: Brude M. Branon, Mocksville; Alan E. Jones, Rutherfordton; Sherry L. Campbell, Charlotte, all to be interviewed in Greensboro: The $18 million alienation of af­ fection suit naming Fred C. Lovette o f’ Wilkesboro and his nephew’s estranged wife has been dropped. Davie court records show that R. Lane Lovette of Mocksville has voluntarily dropped the suit and agreed not to bring it back to court. No monetary settlement was mentioned in the dismissal papers. Lane Lovette sued in November accusing his uncle of using promises of wealth to steal the affections of his 23-year-old wife, Diane Taylor Lovette. Lovette also accused his uncle and ex-wife of stealing the affection of the Lovettes’ 4-year-old son. The suit contended that Fred Lovette, 59, and Diane Lovette began an affair in 1983, while she posed as his housekeeper. The elder Lovette encouraged his nephew to seek a divorce later that ear, the suit alleged, then moved liane Lovette into his mountaintop estate in Wilkesboro the day the couple were legally separate Lane Lovette said that his uncle spent extraordinary amounts of money on his wife for trips, cars, expensive jewelry and clothes. The younger Lovette. a former research supervisor at Holly Farms, sought $3 million in actual damages and $15 million in punitive damages from his uncle for adultery and alienation of affection from his wife and son. He also sought $1 million in actual damages and $5 million in punitive damages from Diane Lovette for alienation of the affection of his son. Fred Lovette, whose estate has been valued at $20 million, founded Holly Farms when he was 17, after taking over his father’s egg and chicken business. Holly Farms is now the largest chicken-processing company in the world. Although neither side would say why the suit was dropped, a N.C. Court of Appeals ruling in December may have applied to the case. , The court ruled that, since a man or woman commits adultery or gives affection of his or her own free will, adultery and alienation of affection can no longer be grounds for lawfeuits by spouses seeking retribution. Lane Lovette’s attorney said at the time that the ruling might affect his client’s case. Census Bureau To Survey Selected Households Of Area Local representatives of the U.S. Census Bureau will visit selected area households beginning March 1 to conduct its Survey of Income and Program Participation (S IPP), Joseph S. Harris, Director of the Bureau’s Charlotte Regional Office, has announced. SIPP is a major continuing survey that was introduced to many areas in the fall of 1983. It began with 20,000 households nationwide and now approaches 38,000. It will be among the nation’s largest when the full complement of about 55,000 Staff Sgt. Patricia A. Finney, daughter of Mrs. Virginia Long Finney of Mocksvll\p, N.C., recently graduated from the 23rd Air Force NCO Leadership School Class 85-D. At a special dining out given to the class January 30, Ms. Finney received the "Communication Skills Award,’; the “ Academic Achievement Award," and the "Distinguished Graduate Award.” She is presently stationed at Hurlbert Field, Fort Walton Beach, Florida. f. A Mocksville Builders Supply EXTRA ___ self-sealing A s p h a lt R o o f i n g 'Designed to stay^ down during / high winds and rain. Rugged enough to last many years. Roofing - Special Price ONLY *2 3 95 per square The Combined Buying Power of Over 1200 Builder Mart Dealers BEATIHE FIRST Q E .M a r c h PRICE INCREASE Mocksville Builders Supply South Main SttuulSttuul Mocksville, NC Phone: 634 5915 or 634 5916 Houts; Monday Friday 7 30 5:00 Saturday 8:00 12:00 NOW LOCAL OWNED AND OPERATED Rex Hobson, chance of in the Pie _______________________________ to house exchange students during their visit. of getting one ^ the five German exchange students scheduled to arrive ledmont in mid-September. He is currently seeking host families wishing households is reached in April 1986. Expanding the sample means that participating households contribute to a more accurate picture of economic conditions among American families. The Census Bureau publishes periodic reports that provide information on the survey's results, covering subjects such as jobs and earnings; the economic effects of unemployment, disability, and retirement; how taxes affect personal spending; and participation in programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and food stamps. This information helps policy malters and administrators determine whether government programs are aiding those they are designed to help and how program and policy changes will affect segments of the population. Here are some facts from the first SIPP interviews (the sample size limits accurate reportingto national figures only): -The average monthly income for the nation’s 83.1 million nonfarm households in 1983’s second quarter was $1,670. For white households it was $1,750 and for biacl< households, $1,080. “ The average monthly income for married-couple households was $2,160. For those maintained by someone age 65 or older it was $950 and for households maintained by women with children and no husband present, $800. -SIPP also revealed these totals of households receiving public assistance; Medicaid, 7.5 million; food stamps, about 6.3 million; Aid to Families With Dependent Children, 3.8 million; and public housing assistance, 3.5 million. Information collected in SIPP is confidential by law. Census in­ terviewers will ask for detailed information which will lie made lublic in statistical summaries Tom which no individual can be identified. Interviewers have credentials identifying them as U.S. Census Bureau employees. Davie High School Seeking Hosts For German Exchange Students A Davie High guidance counselor is seelting host families for five German teenagers slated to spend ten weelts in the area beginning in mid-September. Rex Hobson, local guidance counselor, said the Cultural Relations Fellowship is sponsored by the Koerber Foundation of Germany and R. J. Reynolds of Winston-Salem. The exchange is identical to the one which has allowed approximately 8 Davie High students tp spend six weelts in Germany, living with host families and working in German industries. Hobson explained that host families will be selected from a seven county area. “ I feel that Davie, stands a good chance of having at least one visit the area during the tour," he said. “ We are currently recruiting prospective host families willing to open their homes to one of the youths if Davie is indeed selected as a host county.” Families wishing to participate in the exchange must have a child enrolled in the eleventh or twelfth grade at Davie High, and possess a sincere desire in having a foreign exchange student in their home for ten weeks. Applications and brochures about the program may be secured at the Davie High Guidance Office with the official application cut off date set for March 1. Applications will be screened and forwarded to R. J. Reynolds in Winston-Salem for final approval. “ I would like to have three to four families willine to house a foreign exchange student in case Davie is indeed named a host county,” he said. “ I truly feel confident that we stand a good chance of having at least one in the county during the ten week tour.” He added that all five of the ex­ change students speak fluent English. The exchange students will return to Germany just before Thanksgiving. During their tour they will visit Washington, D.C., New York and Florida. While living in the county, ex­ change students will attend classes at Davie County High School where they will be enrolled in two to three vocational courses. They will also visit area schools and civic groups to give lectures on Germany’s customs, beliefs and life styles. n u a ssa r TV NOW ONLY SALE $49895 WT. Here Is Quasar's best value In a console color TV. Bright, sharp picture with lirollke colors locked In automatically with Dynacolor" System. 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HiKti ConlrasI Systtm auKh room • CusloniMatic TuniT NumIJt'rs ■ I'iclurc Adjust- ment control ■ Sliarpiiess control ■ ProvUlon lur calile TV hook-up ■ Casters ■ Simulated Rica it o n ijrain finish ■ M odel W L9438XP. • on.uMu /ujuiu rfUKiaiii lui nruducdMb ■ 47%* wide Credeiidza cabinet ■ Dynacolor Plus l<i)j rnatically locks in lifelike color even in a liriglitly lit rooi with Sell-Cleaiiinu Action ■ Illuminated Cliannel Nui m u a s a r . 19" TABLE COLOR TV diagonal Only $299” wr. 100% Solid state Mocksville Furniture & Appliance Phone 634 5812 Mocksville, NC HOURS: Monday Friday 9:00 6:00PM Saturday 9:00 5:00PM i 6-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985 Anthropologists Take Innovative MeasuresOf American Health (In today's unprecedented quest for guod health, Americans are changing their diets, trying to reduce stress and exercising, exercising, exercising. But are we any healthier than our ancestors were? "Anthropologists Take In­ novative Measures of American Health'* provides some sclenUHc insights into America’s health history and debunks a long-held myth about colonial Americans.) By William G. Schulz Smithsonian .News Service "Wellness," low cholesterol diets, reduced sodium diets, stress elimination and exercise, exercise, exercise are the buzz-words of the Health-conscious '80s. Americans are Jogging, cycling and swimming their way toward unprecedented fitness. . Health professionals are exhilarated. Their warnings about iiow to prevent such ailments as . diabetes, cardiovascular disease - and hypertension (high blood pressure) have received robust response. But while well-worn tennis shoes and home exercise equipment might be evidence of current quests for chic, sleek physiques, some scientists must dig deeper for clues about the health status of past generations of Americans. Ironically perhaps, phsycial anthropologists such as the Smithsonian Institution’s Dr. J. Lawrence Angel and his research associate, Jennifer Kelley, examine the skeletons of our ancestors to pinpoint the stresses and t)enefits of their lifestyles that determined overall i^ysicai fitness.- Although the body’s structure has not changed mucii over the past 25,000 years, not surprisingly "people now are much healthier than past generations of Americans,” Angel says. In part, he says, that progress can be credited to advances in medicine that curbed many deadly childhood diseases, to public health policies that have made such ailments as tuberculosis little more than gruesome memories and to dietary changes and improvements that have given Americans better, more consistent nutrition. These conclusions may seem a matter of common sense, but Angel's study of skeletal remains Dr. J. Lawrence Angel and his research associate, Jennifer Kelley, measure skulls, pelvic bones and other long bones for information on the nutritional from five generations of Americans between 1984 and 1965 provides innovative evidence of general health status in each generation as well as health trends that have prevailed over the entire period. Large storage drawers of skeletons line the walls of part of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. They were donated to the Smithsonian from the dissecting room collections of the Washington University Medical School in St. Louis. Other skeletons used by Angel and Kelley in their research either were willed to the Smithsonian or were forensic skeletons-remains of the victims of violent crimes. When Angel and Kelley began their study four years ago, they first grouped the skeletons into 25-year generational time soans. From previous work, Anget had deter­ mined that increases in measurements of the height of the skull base and the front-to-back depth of the pelvis could be used as indicators of overall health status. While genetics play a significant role in determining physical development, Angel ana Kelley contend that, over time, their nieasurements can be used to infer certain aspects of-the health and nutrition of past generations. “ No one has ever worked with skull-base height t)efore,’’ Angel says of this measure of the area that forms the support structure for the skull on the spinal column. Bone growth, for example, depends in part on vitamin D and the individual’s protein intake. If these or other nutrients are lacking, bone in the skull base is inhibited from growing upward against Globe Watch - The State Senate By Dr. James Leutze (Editor’s Note: Dr. Leutze, chairman of the Curriculum tn Peace, War and Defense a t. the U D iv e n lt y .of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, hosts the public affairs program "Globe Watch," which appears on Thursdays at 8 p.m. on UNC Center for Public Television stations. In this article, he discusses topics that wilt be explored in the third segment of that series, which will air on Feb. 21. TTie Senate this year differs from the House o f Representatives in several significant ways. For one thing, the Republicans control the Senate; for another, the Senate has the responsibility to advise and consent on treaties. . What this means is that the Senate will be the main focus of attention concerning any possible arms control treaty with the Soviets. But the practical issue relating to any treaty effort is the defense budget and the Democratically controlled House will have a lot to say about that. The argument goes this way, according to the Republicans: tlie Russians are only back in Geneva negotiating because the Reagan administration has been strong on defense. Therefore, it would be an inappropriate time to cut back on defense because you’d hazard the arms talk process. Not so, say some Republicans and many Democrats. Now that we’ve • brou^t tlie Soviets to the table, they argiie, we can afford to moderate our military spending. Interestingly, no one is calling for slashing the defense budget. In fact, there is no concentrated sentiment for holding defense much below a 4 percent increase from last year, although there is irritation, even among Republicans in the Senate, at Secretary Weinberger’s un­ compromising argument for every gun and every dollar. So it looks at the moment as though Reagan has made a con­ vincing connection between a strong defense and the progress on arms control Democrats and moderate Republicans so badly want. But consider for a moment what may happen if there is no progress at Geneva-and Mr. Reagan’s own negotiators have been very carefiJ to caution the public not to gel their hopes up. What then happens to the argument that the arms buildup has had a positive effect on the Soviets? And what is to stop the ^viets from blaming the Reagan Ad­ ministration and its buildup for poisoning the international at­ mosphere thus making agreement impossible? By this simple tactic, they could not only dash treaty hopes but also divert world attention from the Soviet buildup and focus it on America’s own highly advertised rush for military muscle. From this perspective, thereiore, Mr. Reagan has made the success of his military program and his diplomatic program hostage to Soviet willingness to be reasonable. This cannot have escaped the at­ tention of the Soviets or of those senators who sit back and grind their teeth as events seem at the moment to put the defense budget just beyond their grasp. Alice Hiatt Named Cycle For Life Head For Advance The Leukemia Society of America, North Carolina Chapter announced that the 1985 Cycle for Life Chairman for Advance will be Alice Hiatt. The Leukemia Society of America is dedicated towards the conquering of leukemia. Proceeds from the Bike-A- •Thon will be used for research and patient-aid. At the present time, the Leukemia WINTER GOLDil ii With these Home winterizing SPECIALS... i For Februaiy and Marchi SWIE 10tolj5%»ff \iOur everyday low prices on Storm Windows and Doors ALLBINNINGSand MOSS SUPPLY DOORS and WINDOWS ARE ON SALE Aluminum i Aluminum Storm/ Scrotn Doors• Tamparad 'XStau ■ • Prs-hung and pra- drillad • Fully waothar- •trlppad • Hgrdwar* Includad Storm/Screen J CombinationWindows Fully waolhar- ttrlppad for yaor- round protaction. Sglosi, 1 (craan Interl. REPLACEMENT WINDOWS-SPECIALLY PRICED S E R W t} LUMBER CO. PHONE 634-2167 162 Sheek Street Mockwille, N.C. Society of America, North Carolina CJiapter has $319,053 in research projects granted in the state of North Carolina. These research projects are being conducted at Duke University and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. , The Leukemia Society of America is also providing financial assistance to 550 patients in the state of North Carolina. In spite of remarkable medical advances in the last ten years, leukemia remains a Number 1 killer disease of children. Leukemia is no longer a hopeless disease. There is hope for children and adults with leukemia due to the research that has helped in treatment and diagnosis. When a boy or giri comes by your onsor them in please be used right here in North Carolina for research and patient-aid. Anyone wishing information should contact Ms. Hiatt at 998-5431 in Advance. Donald E. Speer Is Promoted By Air Force Donald E. Speer, son of Roy E. and Minnie E. Speer of Rural Route 8, Mocksviile, N.C., has been promoted in the U.S. Air Force to the rank of senior airman. Speer is a jet engine mechanic with the 52nd Tactical Fighter Wing at Spangdahlem Air Base, West Germany. He is a 1981 graduate of Davie County' High School, Mocksviile. neaith of our American ancestors. They have studied skeletons of black slaves, colonial people and five more recent generations. gravity. Decreases measured in pelvic depth, too, can be blamed on nutritional deficiencies. In severe cases, lack of ultraviolet light- sunli^t-necessary for the body's production of vitamin D can cause a bone deformation known as rickets. In the five-generation study, the Smithsonian scientists have documented an increase in these measurements and an increase in bone growth as calculated for overall stature. “All three"-skull- base height, pelvic depth and stature-” improve with better nutrition,” Angel says. Over this 125-year period, he notes, technological developments such as refrigeration made fresh fruit and vegetables available to more people year-round; vitamin supplements became more attainable, and the American passion for suntans— which helped prevent rickets, among other benefits--em bedded itself in the national culture, t>ecoming closely associated with ideas atiout sex appeal and healthful appearance. “It hasn’t been until recently in recorded history that we’ve been getting an adequate diet," Angel says.. Healthful diets with less meat and more vegetable or other plant material-now popular with many Americans-haven't been followed with such regularity, Angel believes, since paleolithic times when humans roamed about in search of food. Presumably, those ancestors gathered and ate more plant material than they suc­ cessfully hunted meat. When the Smithsonian team examines skeletons for evidence of health-a term they use to mean “ the ability to overcome illness’’— teeth also provide telltale clues. Childhood oiseases or nutritional deficiencies halt the growth of enamel in developing teeth; the This portrait of a towering George W ashington helps dispel the myth that our forebears were short. result is "hypoplastic,” or darkened lines on the tooth surface each time illness occurs. A separate Angel-Kelley study on the nutrition and health of early black Americans ijecame possible after highway construction unearthed skeletons from un­ marked graves near a slave- operated iron forge called Catoctin Furnace in Frederick County, Md. All of the skeletons dated from the late 18th to the early 19th century. From written sources of the day, the scientists knew that slaves who worked the forges were better fed than other slaves. Nonetheless, these siteletons confirm the life of hard labor shared by all slaves in this era. For Angel and Keliey, bones with “ crests”-the growth of extra bone material to ac­ commodate new muscle tissue developed by backbreaking iabor— provide corroborating evidence. Rickets was suspected in 10 out of 31 skeletons, although Kelly and Angel have no solid clues as to why rickets would have afflicted these people. Stress fractures and other sorts of wear and tear on bone attest to their hard lives. Thus, the an- group of Cher hascupational' skills of a Americans one researcl dubbed “ the invisible people. Results from the Catoctin study showed that males from the sample lived an average of six and a half years longer than the women. Kelley suspects the women had shorter lives because of deaths in childbirth and perhaps because of the higher female incidence of anemia. At some point in the early 19th. centiu-y, Angel says, life spans for both black and white women began catching up with those charted for men, probably because of a trend toward smaller families, hence less childbirth str^s. But as Angel notes, “ women from the beginnmg are phsyiologically tougher than men, while males are more ■ ■■ than 3ater igth, greater food needs and higher blood pressures than women. Modem statistics show that' Western women live longer than men. The brand of physical an­ thropology practiced by Angel and Kelley has also helped to debunk a long-held myth that colonial Americans were much shorter in stature. Angel thinks this misconception mieht stem from portraits ot the day that were painted in a style that makes the subjects appear shorter or from ar­ chitectural trends that featured low ceilings and doorways. In fact, according to Angel, colonial people would not be noticeably shorter than ■ most modern Americans even though skeletal features show in­ creased stature over time. The obstacles to good health faced by today’s Americans are different from those of our I'orclxars. “Being overweight is the major health problem in the United States,” Dr. Artemis Simopolous, chairman of the nutrition coordination com­ mittee of the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., says. People today, she says, not only eat the wrong, things but eat too much because of h^it, stress and boredom. Last year, the NIH supported nutrition research to the tune of more than $164 million. Simopolous and others recommend a well-balanced diet composed of the familiar four basic food groups- meats and poultry, vegetables and fruits, grains and cereals, dairy ' products-alertness toward family health problems and something' many earlier Americans in the' Smithsonian studies never had to worry about: exercise, exercise,- exercise. I ^ Y b a r Rnancial FUTUIffi O u r IR A is your best tax defense, too! Our ln(Jivi(Jual Retirement ^co u n t offers you: • High interest. • Tax-deferred earnings. • Reduced taxable income. • Deposits insured-safe. Build a financial cushion for a more secure future and protect yourself from taxes by opening your ovyn Individual Retirement Account. Stop in soon for complete IRA details and quotes of current rates; t took astronauts about three days to get to the moon; at that rate, it would take 878,000 y«ar« to reach the closest star, Proxitna Cantauri. MOCKSVIILE SWINGS & LOAN ASSOCIKTION. p. O. BOX 367 (704) 634-5936 213 SOUTH MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE, N. 0. 27028 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985-7 ‘ The first successful electric typewri­ ter was the Blickensderfer Electric In 1902. It would have been more successful if more offices had elec­ tricity. Twins Foundation Seel(s Members What do Jane Pauley, Debby Boone, Mario Andretti, and Dr. Elisabeth Kubler Ross have in common? They're parents of twins or twins themselves and they’re part of a contingent of thirteen celebrities who’ve become Charter Members of The Twins Foundation, the organization's premiere publication announced recently. Other VIP Charter Members include Ed Asner, Phil and Steve Mahre, Aldo Andretti, Lily Tomlin, Maurice and Robin Gibb and Isabella Rossellini. They, along with Board Members John MacR Carter, EdItor-in-Chief of Good Housekeeping and Richard B. btolley. Managing Editor of Life- all twins, parents of pairs or people mt^ested in twin research-are leading the search for twins in every state In the Union. “ There are an estimated 4.5 million twin individuals in . the Unit^ States and never ijefore has such a wide-ranging effort been launched to locate them,” Kay Cassili, the Foundation's President and author of Twins: Nature’s Amazing lUystery dcclarcd. . “ If you were born a twin, a part of a larger group of multiples, or if you have twins, you now have some unique opportunities to help yourself and others,” she stressed. Tlie Foundation is building the country’s first, comprehensive twin registry. Already 6,000 have been located arid this number is in­ creasing daily. One of the benefits is the chance to have your name permanently registered, alongTvith those luminaries, as a Charter Member in The Twins Hall of Fame. Cassili encouraged people who are twins or know of them to write The Twins Foundation at P.O. Box 9487, Providence, R.l. 02940-9487 or call (401) 274-6910, just as soon as' possible. “ If you are a twin or know of one,' The Twins Foundation wants to hear from you.” _ iHello! My name is Crystal Peacock. ■I celebrated by eighth birthday ■Saturday, February 9th, with a Iparty at my grandmother’s house, I lhad about 30 guests and received liots of nice gifts. My mother and ■daddy arc Gary and Rose Peacock |of Mocksville. My grandmothers Mrs. Marie Richardson and . Lizzie Turner, both of locksville. Pfc. Robert Allen With U.S. Marine Corps Marine Pfc. Robert Q. Allen, son lo f Rol>ert S. Allen of Route 3, IPeoples Creek Road Advance, N.C., Ihas completed the Administrative Icierk’s Course. During the four-week course at ■Marine Corps Service Support ISchoois, Marine Corps Base, Camp iLejeune, N.C., Allen was provided |with the basic skills and knowledge r form as an administrative He received instruction on typing preparati.o n of naval orrespondence, and was in­ duced to the basic officers func- s performed by all Marine Corps ninistrative sections. L1983 graduate of Davie County jh School, Mocksville, he joined he Marine Corps in May 1984. iFire Prevention Ican Save Lives Two Charlotte deaths occurred |within one year because smoke ■ !tectors in the home were not operly maintained. “A smoke detector should be in j home and should be checked ilarly, but we must remember at the detector helps only after a ! has started,” said William W. e, spokesman for the Insurance vs Service (N.C.I.N.S.). “Fire ition should come first,” said e. Greensboro-based resident rice president of Iowa National tiutual Insurance Company. Careless smoking is the cause of about 30 percent of all fire deaths at ne, Tice said, citing a recent ■article in Family Safety magazine Ipublished by the National Safety ■Council. According to the article, I many people die in fires because I they were smoking in bed or I smoking while overly tired.I A second major cause of I residential fire deaths, Tice said, is I faulty heating or electrical I equipment. Tice offered these fire I prevention suggestions to con- I sumers; -Routinely check heating and J exhaust systems in your home. ■'Make sure these systems are 1 working properly. Keep com­ bustible material away from vents and; electrical wires. ■■Clean and maintain chimneys properly. Tar and soot build-ups from burned wood can ignite, causing a chimney fire. Bricks and mortar in the chimney need to be kept in good condition to prevent mortar from chipping, falling in between bricks, and eventually allowing sparks to escape and start a fire. -Make certain space heaters, whether they bum wood, coal, gas, kerosene, or some other fuel, are installed correctly. If heaters or their vents are installed too close to walls, ceilings, or other building material, a fire can break out. -Use electrical appliances bearing the Underwriters Laboratories (UL) label, whenever possible. This label signifies that the product meets certain accepted standards of safety. -:Don't overload electrical cir­ cuits by using too many extension, oor'ds. “ Keep collections of newspapers, boxes, magazines, clothing, and furniture away from heat sources like light bulbs and furnaces. "Store matches and lighters out of the reach of small children. Teach them the danger of playing with matches. Smoke detectors should be used and checked regularly in case prevention measures fail and a fire starts in the home Tice said. Fire prevention material may be obtained by sending a stamped self- addressed envelope to Fire Prevention, N.C.I.N.S., Post Office Box 11526, Charlotte, N.C. 28220. USDA Choice Beef Round R o u n d - $ These prices good thru Sunday, February 24, 198S Lb. USDA dlhoiee Family Pack Cube Steak USDA Chtiei Round - Rump Roast............................ ib. 2.28 Crisp Iceberg USPA Choice Beef Round - To|> & Bottom Round R oast O r S teaks We reserve the 11 right to limit ^ Y I L lb . quantities. ▼ Regular & Beef Plek Of Thi Chin Jumbo Pack ...............................Lb. .99 L e t t u c e 1 1 / M ” California "Seedless" Navel Oranges Wathlnjlon Stale R«d Or Golden Apples i.SOi.-W iii Rijulir «0i.-«(iiiBBQ 38 Ounce Wesson Oil 5 Oz. - LIbb/s 2 IlUr - Pill Cold/esffilni Frii Olil Coki/ Caffilfli Frit CtUI p I f y 2 / M ^ Stilhi ■ Frith Orii* Celery I lb. B i| • Crlif Crunchy Carrots U. • Frith Picklint 11 Cucumbers ^ 16 Oiinee All » 64 Oz. • M.OO Off t *■<■< l i l ^ l ^ Uaaid 6800 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES Vehicles Collide in Wreck On 601 A 2b-year-old Statesville man was charged with failure to reduce speed following a collision on U.S. 601 February 12, according to a Highway Patrol report. Willard Donel Moupe, 20, the operator of a 1979 Chevrolet, was charged after his vehicle struck a 1975 Ford driven by Clarence Morgan Potts, 58, of Rt. 5, MocRsville, in the rear. A report i^idicated that Houpe was 8-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985 coming traffic to clear before making a left turn onto Liberty Church Road. Damage to Potts’ vehicle was $200, to Houpe’s $2200. Trooper J.L. Payne investigated. Wildlife IMeeting Set For March 13 Sportsmen in Wildlife District Seven are invited to comment on fi Advance News Mr. and Mrs. Albert Poole, Charlie Allen, Terry Allen and Mrs. Patsy Kiger have returned from a two week trip to Panama. They accompanied the Rev. and Mrs. Marion Fulk on a Mission Building Team. Flying to Panama City on Tuesday January 29 they tran­ sferred to a small plane to Bocas High School Auditorium on March 13 at 7:00 p.m. Representatives of the Wildlife Resources Commission will explain the proposed changes. T^ey will also record public comments for use by the Wildlife Comm. Wildlife District Seven Includes Iredell, Davie, Yadkin, Wilkes, Alexander, Watauga, Ashe, Alleghany, Surry, Stokes, and Forsyth counties. Davie Pro-Lifers Are On The Move By Amy M^win Members of the Davie County Right to Life have been very active since the new year began. In January, the anniversary of court decisions legalizing abortion on demand through the ninth month was met by many forms of protest. Members attended marches In Washington D.C. and Winston- Salem, and shared the good news of alternatives to abortion in churches around the area. Chairman Amy Medwin joined “ Birthright” director Phyllis McDuffee in addressing students at the N.C. School of the Arts.The topic was teenage sexuality and it’s consequnces. Janice Schooler recently com­ pleted a special training workshop sponsored by the newly formed Salem Pregnancy Support” In Winston-Salem. This is a crisis pregnancy center designed to meet the needs of anyone who has a crisis pregnancy. Free pregnancy testing and counseling will be available to anyone who needs it. It is our desire that all this ac­ tivity will make us more responsive to the needs to those in our com­ munities. Please join us when we meet, Thursday, Feb. 21 at 7:30 p.m. in the Grand Jury room of the courthouse. We will be sharing on these and other issues and events. Some people once believed that the magic power of witches resided In their hair and that they would be . powerless if shorn. Salvage ir Overhaul Ckiss Two firefighters from Davie County practice throwing a sa vage cover over furniture. This practice was part <3 a ^Ivage and overhaul class this past week at Center Fire Department. This class is part of the 130 hour Firefighter I course being offered in the county. Seventy-three firefighters received credit for the Salvage and Overhaul section. Lenten Liturgies Scheduled City. ....... there they worked on the Manse, They painted the house Inside and out and built'a utility house. They worked twelve hours dally five days a week. During their free time they took a boat ana an open train trip, of one and one-half hours, mto Changnolia on the mainland for a tour of a Chiquita banana farm, consisting of thousands of acres, probably 90,000. They observed the fruit being washed, graded and made ready for shipping. On anothec sight-seeing tour they went across the island byboat to a coco bean farm. Monday February 11 the group had an enjoyable tour of the Panama Canal. They arrived home late Tuesday night Feb. 12. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Zimmerman spent Sunday afternoon in Mooresville visiting their children and grandchildren Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Hendrix, Andrea, Melissa, Amanda and Meredith. Our community was saddened last week by the death of one of our former pastors, the Rev. Preston L. Smith of Mooresville. While serving the Advance-Mocks charge for several years the Rev. Smith performed the marriage ceremony for six or more couples. The Rev. Smith, 87, died at the Wesley Long Nursing Center in Charlotte Feb. 6. Several from the community attended the Gospel Singing at Smith Grove United Methodist Church Sunday night to hear the Bob Lamar Singers, the Smith Grove Quartet and the Church Choir. Those from here were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Zimmerman,. Mrs. Polly Bailey, Mrs. Lucille Cor- natzer, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor Howard, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Markland. Mrs. Edith Zimmerman was admitted to Baptist Hospital Tuesday for heart catheterization and other tests. Joe Foster was admitted to Forsyth Hospital Sunday morning as an emergency. Mrs. Lois Cornatzer was able to, .come home from Medical Park Hospital last week. She is making satisfactory recovery. Our community expresses sympathy to Frank Bailey in the death of his wife Katherine who died last Wednesday. Episcopal Church of The Good Shepherd, Cooleemee; Holy Cross Evangelical and Lutheran Church, Mocksville, will conduct their an­ nual Lenten Liturgies in the following order. Any Episcopalians and Lutherans living In Davie and West Rowan • communities are extended an in­ vitation to participate. The public is also invited to attend. February 27-Liturgy at Good Shephard, Pastor Gilreath will preach and assist. March 6-Llturgy at Holy Cross, Father Rosenthal will preach and assist. March 13-Llturgy at Good Shephard with a celebration of the Eucharist (Holy Communion) with Father Itosenthal presiding, Pastor Gilreath will preach. Good Shephard will host a fellowship after the liturgy. March 20-Llturgy at Holy Cross Airman John Christopher York (Chris) of the 14th Original Main­ tenance Squadron, Columbia Air Force Base, Mississippi, with the Inspection Branch, has been made Technician of the Quarter. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. John York of Advance, N.C.; and he Is married to the former Malinda Wright of Harmony, N.C. He is a graduate of Davie High School. Their present address is 1301 Beverly Lane, Columbus, Mississippi 38701. Announcing DR. DARYL L. WE A VIL Bermuda Quay Eye Care Optometry Family Eye Care- Glasses, Contact Lenses and treatment of Eye Disease Five Professional Plaza Bermuda Quay, Advance (979)998-5297 Hours: Mon. & Tu. 10-8 p.m. Wed. & Th. 9-6 p.m. Fri. 9-2 p.m. Saturday Hours Available HifhiinV« D M ' (ftMt MIlMr'i • MUFFLERS • BRAKES • SHOCKS OPEN Monday-Friday Saturday 8A.M. to 5 P.M. 8 A.M. to 12 Noon with a celebration of the Eucharist with Pastoi Gilreath presiding. Father Rosenthal will preach. Holy Cross will host a fellowship after the liturgy. March 27-Flnal Liturgy at Good Shephard, Pastor Gilreath will preach and assist. Ash Wednesday Liturgy will be conducted at both Good Shephard and Holy Cross. Good Shephard’s Luturiy will begin at 7 p.m. Holy Cross’ Liturgy will begin at 7:30 p.m. Both congregations will have Imposition of Asiies and Celebration of The Eucharist. Fflur Cornere Woman’s Day was observed in Courtney Baptist Church last Sunday starting with a breakfast and continued through worship services. The ladies did a good job in all the different things they did. A large crowd attended. Mr. and Mrs. Grady. Beck, Mr. and Mrs. Joe White attended the Wake Forest Ball game in Winston- Salem Saturday night. Several In this community have been on the sick list, Mr. Orville Miller, Mr. Baity Lowery. We are wishing them a speedy recovery. Mrs. Earl Fleming, Mrs. Jim Ratledge and children, Batry Smith and Kathleen Filler visited A.C. Ratledge Sr. and Edna Mae Ratledge during the weekend. Elementary Kids Join The Circus 50 kindergarteners from and expectations. oaraded through the schooOver 50 kindergarteners from and expectations. Mocksville Elementary school will ~ .......... travel to Greensboro on Thursday, February 21st, to “ join the circus.” Five and six-year-olds in Suite 8 have been looking forward to the trip for almost two months. Ringling Brothers-Barnum & Bailey Circus is billed as the "Greatest Show on Earth.” Three rings will overflow with excitement as children from schools in a two- state area fill . the Greensboro Coliseum with their own dreams To get into the circus moo'd, many of the kindergarteners ' had a chance to be a clown for an afternoon. Professional make-up artists from Holy Cross Lutheran Church came in to apply the magic touch.-These adults, led by Pastor Gary Gilreath, have been part of the church’s Clown Ministry for some time. He was assisted by Mrs. Jane An­ derson, an aide at Mocksville Elementary, and her sister, Mrs. Alderson. The children then paraded through the school ac­ companied by c ircus parade music. The temptation to join the circus on Thursday will be great for children and adults alike, but' memories can be rich for years to come. Eva Everett and Bill Seabrook - teachers, and Linda Giles and Jan Allen - aides in Suite 8, share the anticipation of the children that going to the circus will be the learning highlight In this Kin­ dergarten year. Kindergarteners at Mocksville Elementary School act into the circus mood recently by getting nwde-up as clOMms. Over fiffy children from the school will attend Ringling Brothers Barnum ft Bailey Circus in Greensboro, Feb. 21. Phone 634-6366 Is it Koing t(X) far to suggest that, in today’s complex financial world, your bank’s attitiide could |X)ssjbly nuiite a difference? Wfe don't thinii so.In fact, at BB&T, we think attitude is all-iniiwrtant. We don’t mean a supeificial cheer- fuhiess, a smile worn like a suit and as easily removed.All iltitk', for us, goes mucii deeper tlian tiiat. It takes in the ability, and even more imixMtant, the willingness to commit our talents to meet your future goals as well as your current needs.It rests on the integrity of a company that still believes it is driven by the needs of its customers, rather than its own corporate oi)jec1ives. A com­pany that realizes that tlieiquality of its sen'ice is mseparable from the attitude of its people.Come discover.what a ^difference the light attitude irakes. At BB&T, it's the D lJ IX l- veiy thing that makes us ItkMore'Ilvin A liank. more than a bank. life An Attitude. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985-9 Davie County Sales Guide Now In Publication The Davie County Board of ' Realtors has announced the first edition of the Davie County Sales Guide. The publication, distributed to area real estate agents for the first time this month, contains property listings across the county. Each participating agent will receive a new guide monthly. ■ The first edition contains 141 listings with only 4 located outside of Davie County. At the present time 35 agents are subscribing to the publication. Connie Kowalske,. local board secretary feels that sellers will get much better coverage for their property by getting the information to more agents in the area. The books has been a lot of work, she adds, but all the companies have pulled together to try to make things better for the whole industry. Mrs.. Kowalske says Board of Realtors members seem pleased with the first edition. The book also contains statistics on properties sold and under contract. Frank Short, Jr., president of the Davie County Board of Realtors, feels that this is only the first step in improving the marketing process for buyers and sellers alike In the Davie County area. The local board also has more plans in the making for giving area residents the best possible coverage in the quest to sell their property or in the big step of buying a home, according to Short. Companies subscribing to the new sales guide are: Betty Potts Realty, Carolina Energy Efficient Homes, Century 21-Clemmons Village, Davie Realty, Howard Realty, Larew-Wood-Johnson, Leonard Realty, Potts Realty and Realty Ranch. Local financial institutions have also joined the board and will be receiving a copy of the sales guide. Frank Short, Jr. and Connie Kowalske, officers of the Davie County Board of Realtors look over the newly published county real estate guide. They are: Branch Banking & Trust Company, Farm Credit Scrvice, First Federal Savings & Loan, Mocksville Savings & Loan and Central Carolina Bank. Members of the local board of realtors recommend that homeowners list their properties with local real estate companies to get the best possible market coverage. They feel that agents within the area can service customers better than agents who must travel 20 to 30 miles to show a house each time. Davie Hospital Staff To Offer Courses in Many Life - Saving Techniques Almost anyone in good health can learn the life-saving technique of Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation, or CPR, so that he or she can deal effectively with emergency situations and save a human life. That life might be your neighbor's, your husband or wife’s, or your child’s. Your life could also be saved by a trained family memtier. Each year hundreds of thousands of people die who might have lived if '^people around them...people just like you...knew how to recognize heart attacks and give immediate life-saving assistance. It is estimated that over 650,000 people die from heart attacks each year. About half of these deaths occur outside the hospital, usually within the first two hours after onset of ■symptoms. Many of these deaths could have been prevented if bystanders or family members had known wthat to do to be of effective assistance. ' CPR is not a skill given by in­ stinct; it must be learned and practiced on a manikin under the guidance of a trained instructor. It is also important to learn about the things in our lives that increase our risk of having a heart attack or stroke. Many of the risks can be reduced by maintaining a sensible weight, reducing cholesterol Intake, regular exercise, watching your blood pressure, and avoiding tal is here to lavie County. That service includes not only taking care of you when you’re sick, but also teaching you about health concerns. We would like to teach you how to assist the victim of a heart attack, how to properly ad­ minister CPR, and how to reduce your own risk. We know, all too well, how important this knowledge can be,” John Frank, Davie Hospital Administrator said. Members of the nursing staff of the hospital, trained instructors in CPR through the American Heart Association, look forward to helping Civic Clubs or other organized groups learn the skills of CPR. Sixteen hours of classtime are needed for instruction and practice. Class meeting times can be arranged to suit the needs of your group. Organized groups who are interested in this service through Davie County Hospital should have their President or Secretary call the hospital for more information. Contact persons at the hospital (634- 3546) are John Frank, Ad­ ministrator, and Lynne Doss, Education Coordinator. Letters To Editor Dear Editor: On Friday, February 15, school children came home with ad­ vertising circulars inviting them to come to Hardees of Mocksville on Saturday and Sunday to see Mickey Mouse, Magic Dragon, and clowns. There was also a promise of “ free suckers and balloons to all children.” I made special arrangements for my children to “ see Mickey Mouse” Saturday evening, only to be told that the characters had already removed their costumes. There were approximately fifteen other ciiildren present at that time, all with the same expectations. We kept thinking at least one character nr ba Western Carolina University Inspirational Choir In Concert Sunday, March 3,1985 3:00 p.m. B.C. Brock Auditorium Contribution: $3.00 This Sunday Could Be A LIFESAVER Have Your Blood Pressure Checked F R E E This Sunday from 1-5 p.m.Sunday fn . 24,1985Feb Crown Drugs Willow Oak Shopping Centr* Vadkinville Road'Mocksville, N.C. Current estimates suggest that there are at least 23 million Americans witti high blood pressure or hypertension. Inumerabie symptoms are often attributed to biood prpssure elevation, but the oondlllon Is, In fact, frequently sym- ptomiess; therefore, blood pressure checks can discover this condition which otherwise could go undetected. would don his costume so as not to disappoint the children. We were wrong. Not only were there no characters ■esent, the “ free suckers and lalloons” were nowhere to be seen. 1 called on Sunday around 5:30 p.m. and was told the characters were already gone again. Since there was no specific time stated on the advertising circular, I feel that Hardee’s misrepresented their advertising claims. Although adults understand that this was an advertising gimmick which only lasted for a short time, children merely consider this a broken promise and a disap­ pointment. 1 hope that in the future, Hardee’s will be more sensitive to children’s feelings. June H. Johnson Route 4, Box 189-3 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Dear Editor: Some time last year your paper featured an article about a gen­ tleman who collected National Geographic magazines. If someone can furnish me his name, address and phone number, 1 would be most grateful.’ Also, I have some old, weathered buildings in Davie County and would like to get in touch with a craftsman or someonewho could use this material. Thank you. Charles R. Lemley 400 E. Jackin Street Mebane. N.C. 27302 Phone (919 ) 563-1340 Davie Nursing Student Receives Award At ECU Carol Wall Poston, a sophomore in the East Carolina University School of Nursing, is the recipient of a $250 Ruth Glass Bunting scholarship for spring semester at ECU. Since beginning her studies at ECU last year, she has maintained a perfect'4.0 academic grade point average. Ms. Poston is a 1980 alumna of St. Andrew’s College, Where she ranked third in her class, and a 1976 graduate of Davie High School, MocKsville. She received the BA degree in biology from St. An­ drew’s. Ms. Poston is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Janies W. Wall of 181 West Church St., Mocksville. Upon graduation, she plans to pursue a nursing career, and ultimately resume studies at the master's degree level. Fresh Uroccoll Fresh broccoli has compact buds and a rich, dark sreen color. Crown'^ Drugs These Prices Good February 21-22-23,1985 ONLY SWEATSUITS SILVER S»pjil pounrii (itl In •* htirryl Thi* ti1vf>r plaittc lull yo<tr lin<ly tweAt wlih >*vpn mild «*«piTl»r. Comr* Inmorfiiim ,»n<t l.irRP MEN'S OR LADIES ASSORTED SIZES ITEM NO. 21321 oin 99 NEW!Su»s/fme- B m CREMERS 12 0Z.PK G . 5 FLAVORS TO CHOOSE FROM 87' ITEM NO. EL-335 SHARP SOLAR SEM IDES CALCULATOR DYNAMIC CURVED PICTURE FRAMES 5"X7" $299 8"X10" $499 GK BASKET STYLE COFFEE FILTERS PKG. OF 200 99* ROBITUSSIN DM, PE.orCF 4 OZ. BOTTLE Your Choice $J»7 VITALIS SUPERHOLD PUMP or AEROSOL 5 0Z. SIZE AEROSOL 8 0Z . SIZE PAMPERS EXTRA ABSORBENT DAYTIME ITEM NO. MB-2 JAMESON M IGHTY BRITE II RECHARGEABLE LIGHT REG. $18.87 $ 1 2 9 9 OXWALL tlPt. COMBINATION WRnCH M TS REG. $15.99 ITEM NO. 327-207 and 326-207 NEVCO SKIRT OR TROUSER HANGERS PHILLIPS UxOvs 48 COUNT REG. $3.87 $ £ 5 9 Summer’s Eve. SINGLE REG. $1.04 63' Sufe&Natuial Maxishiefcis S u r e fi^ t u n l Sure&Natural 26 COUNT or 30 COUNT $ 3 5 7 Carefree WNTYSHIELDS«30fe 26 COUNT ALL TYPES $2 67 CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE $J17 6.4 OZ. TUBE ANACIN TABLETS 100 COUNT BOTTLE $ 3 1 9 ANACIN Lathering^Gel for a Closer Shave 7 0Z . C SIZE * REG. $2.19 49 CROWN DISC FILM 24 EXPOSURES $ 3 6 7 FILM PROCESSING SPECIAL C -110 C -126 12 Exposures 2 9 9 Exposures 5 2 9 " C r o w n P r i n t s 3 5 "C u B tom Processing For 35 mm 12 Exposures 3 3 9 24 Exposures 5 9 9 36 Exposures 8 7 9 Disc Film 15 Exposures C -4 1 ^ Crown Prints at Crown Drugs Processinj 1. M ockivillt, VWIlow O tk Shopping Ctnlrtf 2. CItm m ont, W M twood V lila i« Shopplni C «n ttr i . f91 P »t«n C fM k Parkway, W*S 4. Raynolda Manor Shoppins C onltr, W*S t . >07ft Kfrnarivlilt Rd., W-S •. 901 Arcadia Avanut, W « 7. H anti Mall. W*S I . oidtow n. 371f Raynolda Rd., W-S t . L«w }«W Ut, « 4 » l S h iU o w fo m Rd., W>S 10. Stanlayvilla, Old Hlshway 12 North I I . Kins, colony Cantrd Vilit a Crown Optic Shop today Locatfd. (n Crown Drug Storas at tha fotlowlDQ locations: • ■•M iM aN Wkitlen-Mtm,NC 7M N22^ . .I Plaia Cwriari,NC • Im M iM lUilnsion, NC m r«SHOP A lto Ini W .lk .rlo w n , Hl*hw »y « f , V idk ln vllli, N tw to n, TtylBrfDl iKlniion ,10-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985 Shelia Annette Duce Weds Benjatnin Eugene Keel In a beautiful solemnized ceremony, Saturday, January 19, 1985, Miss Sheila Annette Duce became the bride of Benjamin Eugene Keel. The candlelight service was officiated' by Paul Brooks, Pastor, at the First Baptist Church in Marianna, Florida. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Annette Lefler Duce of Chat­ tahoochee and Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Duce of Graceville, and the grand­ daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Lefler of Mocksville, North Carolina and Mrs. Grace Duce and the late J. B. Duce of Chattahoochee. She is also the great granddaughter, of .Mrs. Beatrice Frye of Mocksville, North Carolina. Parents of the im are Mrs. Betty Corbin of anna and Mr. Hubert Keel of Blountstown. As guests were seated, prenuptial musical selections were rendered by Mrs. Scott Paramore, organist, including “ Prelude and Fugue" and "Trumpet Tune.” The mothers were escorted m during the playing of “ O Perfect Love,^’ after which Miss Renee Green sang “ God, A Woman and A Man.” “ Bridal Chorus from Lohengrin by Wagner was played for the processional as the bride was escorted to the altar by her father and the recessional from “ A Mid­ summer Night’s Dream" by Mendelsohn was played as the bridal party and guests left the church. Other vocal selections during the ceremony were “ One Hand, One Heart” sung by Mrs. Tony Buczek, and a duet by Mrs. Buczek and Mr. Jim Killman en­ titled “ What Love Is.” As the bridal couple knelt at the prie-dieu, Mr. Killman sang “The Lord’s Prayer” accompanied by Mrs. Tony Buczek at the piano. The sanctuary of the church was illuminated by myriads of burning white tapers with a 15 branched brass fan candelabrum, centering the choir loft adorned with a nine branched tree on either side. The candlebras were adorned with white and lavender pompons and baby’s breath. A massive bouquet of lavender and white gladioluses, carnations, fugi mums, and lavender pompons was centered in the foreground of the burning tapers as the focal point. Individual white wrought-iron candle holders with lavender candle globes embedded in arrangements of various shades of silk lavender flowers were used in each window of the sanctuary. Family pews were marked with tall brass candelabras containing hurricane globes with white lighted tapers accented with white and lavender pompons and baby’s breath.The bride, given in marriage by her parents, ascended the aisle in a formal wedding gown of bridal satin covered with georgette chiffon.and. Venice lace. The fitted bodice featured a stand-up collar and sheer yoke accented with clipped Venice Mrs. Benjamin Eugene Keel . .. was Shelia Annette Duce lace motifs. The uniquely styled leg- o-mutton sleeves were finished with a double row of lace and covered buttons. The full skirt extended into an eight and one half foot train covered from waist to end with georgette chiffon ruffles and ac- centad with heavy lace, seeded pearls and sequins. Her wedding hat was a white seed pearl trimmed schiffli lace derby with turned up side featuring a silk flower accent. The rolled edge blusher, pouff at the back crown, and veil were of silk illusion. The bridal gown was designed by the bride and her mother and was made by Mrs. Bettie Glover of Dothan. Pearls and sequins were sewn on by the bride’s mother and sister. ; The bride’s bouquet was a ' crescent cascade featuring scotch broom, spring rye, lavenaer ana white roses, white miniature car­nations, fugi pompons, stephanotis, lavender pompons and baby's breath with streamers of white and french lavender satin ribbon. Her only jewelry belonging to :Mrs. Beulah Byerly, a lifelong friend, was a pair of pearl earrings from Japan. Miss Sherry Duce, only sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Her bouquet was a small crescent cascade identical to the bride’s. Bridesmaids were the Misses Renee Green of Marianna, Monica Lewis of Tallahassee and Mrs. Denise Duce, aunt of the bride from Auburn, Alabama. They wore floor length gowns of deep purple irridescent embossed taffeta. A narrow ruffle edged the sweetheart neckline of the fitted bodice and 'extended across the front to the double bow at the waistline. Full puffed sleeves were designed with narrow ruffles over the shoulder. A wide ruffle at the hemline swept up to the bow at the waist creating an overlap of the shirt to inter-metzo length in front. Each carrlcd a crescent nosegay of scotch broom, lavender and white pompons, baby’s breath tied with white and french lavender satin ribbons. Serving as best man for the groom was Mr. Mike Andler of Chat­ tahoochee, cousin of the bride. Groomsmen were Scott Mulcahy of Cottondale, F arris Kirkland of Grand Ridge and A. N. “Pete” Jones of Winston-Salem, North Carolina. All were attired in black short coat tuxedos except the groom who wore a formal black tuxedo with tails. Boutonniers were lavender tipped white carnations, baby’s breath and freesia. The bride’s mother chose a floor length gown of teal blue with an attached back drape that buttoned at the shoulder for her daughter’s wedding. She wore a white royal boka orchid corsage. The groom’s mother was attired in a floor length silver gown and wore a shoulder three bloom white rose corsage with miniature white carnations. Mrs. Beatrice Frye, great-grand­ mother of the bride, wore a heather blue gown with a chiffon cape effect. Her corsage was a white royal boka orchid. Mrs. T. A. Lefler, grand­ mother wore a floor length gown of baby blue with an accordion pleated bodice. The bride’s other grand­ mother wore a floor length gown of mauve knit. All wore corsages of white roses with lavender pompons. The wedding was directed by Mrs. Bill Peacock. RECEPTION Following the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Duce hosted a recep­ tion in the fellowship hall of the church. Guests entered the hall via double doors centered with large lavender bows with streamers. The bride’s book was attended by Mrs. Patsy Cleary of Mocksville, North Carolina. ’The registry table was draped with a floor length white lace cloth topped with a crystal budvase holding lavender pompons and roses. Silver trays with lavender rice bags also accented the table. ^ Focal point of the reception area was the bride’s cake table covered with a floor length white cloth with a ruffle at the top. The wedding cake embossed in white was composed of three tiers. Arched stairways connected the side cakes to the central cake which was placed on a tall arched stand above a sparkling lighted fountain. The cake itself was separated twice with cupids. The bride’s tier ornament was a bride and groom encircled with a heart shaped filigree. All tiers were ef­ fectively decorated with cascading arrangements of various shades of lavender icing rosebuds and green leaves. The wedding cake was served by Misses Nancy Griffith and Shanna Shelby of Tallahassee. The punch table was overlaid with a white floor length cloth and was centered with a silver punch bowl and tray from which purple punch was served; Misses I^ra Shouppe and Lee Ann Kimrey of Chat­ tahoochee attended the punch table. Party foods were served from an identical table (o the punch table. Silver trays held party sandwiches, sausage balls, cheese balls with assorted crackers, nuts, and lavender and white wedding mints. Bouquets belonging to the bride and her attendants were used to adorn the tables in the reception hall. The couple will reside in Marianna where the groom is employed by Chipola Junior College. REHEARSAL DINNER A rehearsal dinner was hosted by Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Lefler, Mrs. Beulah Byerly and Mrs. Annette Duce immediately following the wedding rehearsal Friday, January 18 in the Fellowship Hall of First Baptist Church. The hall was ijeautifully decorated in the bride’s chosen colors of lavender and purple. . The tables were overlaid with white cloths and centered with a white wrought iron, globed candle holder with burning lavender tapers. Silk flowers in shades of lavender and purple encircled the globes. The buffet table was covered with a floor length lavender cloth with matching candle holders. A meal of swedish meatballs, green beans, whole potatoes, congealed salad, relish tray and rolls was served. Dessert was the groom’s all chocolate cake which was a square cake topped with fresh fruit. The invocation was given by Rev. Jim Killman. The prospective bride and groom presented gifts to their attendants. Around 6- About MAKES HONOR ROLL FOR FALL SEMESTER Sabra Smoot, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Baxter C. Smoot, formerly of Mocksville; and now living in Charlotte, N.C., has made the honor roll at Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, N.C., for the fall semester. FRESHMAN MAKES HONOR BOLL AT UNC-CHAPEL HILL Esther Bliss Bonardi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bonardi of Route 2, Mocksville, N.C., a freshman at UNC-Chapel Hill, N.C., has made the Honor Roll at UNC, Chapel Hill, N.C., for the fall semester. She is a high school graduate of Davie High School. Redland Homemakers Meet The Redland Homemakers met on February 12 with president, Marian Funderburk, presiding. A timely devotion on “ Love” was given by Kay Fisher. Love seeks more giving and seek others welfare before self. The members answered the roll call with. Love is....among definitions were happiness, others, caring, compassion and many others. Announcements were made covering upcoming events. The club voted t» continue with a craft sale before Christmas rather than Tree Deter-Woolworth Mrs. Foster Deter of Charlottesville, Virginia announces the engagement - of her daughter, Lori to Norman Jeffrey Woolworth, son of Mrs. Norman ' Stanbury Woolworth of New Canaan, Connecticut, and Norman Stanbury Woolworth of Southport, Connecticut. A June wedding is planned. Miss Deter was graduated from Sophie Newcomb College. Mr. Woolworth was graduated from Tulane University and received his Masters in English Literature from the University of Virginia. Miss Deter is the daughter also of James Wright Deter of Syria, Virginia. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Fred Lafayette Foster of Mocksville, N.C. Suzanne Says... participate in the Christmas Lane. Berma Foster read one of her original articles entitled “ One More For Opec.” Lois Stephens presented the program “ Fire Safety” . A questionnaire was given to each member on fire safety and was answered individually and collectively and discussion was entered into about safety rules as practiced by members. Members shared their experiences with fires. Refreshments were served to 13 members by Kay Fisher and Lois Stephens. Canadian Bacon Canadian bacon is really the boned loin, cured and smoked. Touring Clearwater, Florida; Chances are the first stop in Clearwater after checking in will be the beach. Clearwater Beach is a startlingly white stretch of sand facing the Gulf of Mexico. The folks here boast that their beach is the softest, whitest beach in the world. And 1 agree. Perhaps surprising in this area of hyperbole, there seems to be a scientiAc basis to that claim (something about the composition of the sand arid the way it was formed by the gentle action of Gulf waves), but the why is coin­ cidental. What is important is that you’ll be able to relax, on powdery while sand under clear blue skies and have the Gulf of Mexico lapping at your feet. Still as long as you confine your activities just to the beach, you will be missing much of the exciting vibrant life which abounds along the coast. Excellent shopping, great restaurants, fascinating at­ tractions, historic locales and scenic beauty are all there waiting for you. Though most visitors come to Clearwater for the sand and surf, these auxiliary benefits can make your trip extra special. To begin, you’ll need a car. Rental companies thrive here, and rates are sur­ prisingly competitive. You can also rent older, well maintained autos for smaller prices. They may not look good, but the cars are mechanically sound and rental money you save can be substantial. With transportation, things should be a snap. The system of highways and interstates is excellent, but your main thoroughfares for ex­ ploration probably will be U.S. Highway 19, and its sister 19A, running north and south. They connect Clearwater and many cities along the sun coast. The majority of the attractions you'll wish to see lie just a few miles east or west of them. Recipes from the area; CAVIAR PIE 10 hardcooked eggs, chopped ‘A cup butter, softened Vi teaspoon celery salt Vi teaspoon dry mustard Salt and pepper 1 tablespoon onion, minced 1 cup sour cream Caviar, red or black Snipped parsley First, peel and chop hard cooked eggs' while hot. Mash and blend together with butter, celery salt, mustard; salt and pepper. Next, press mixture into 8-inch pie pan that has been rinsed in cold, water and chilled. Combine onion and sour cream and place on top of mixture in pie. pan. Garnish with caviar (red or black) and snipped parsley for a colorful treat. HOT BACON ROLLUPS Bacon slices Olives Oysters Pecan halves Roquefort cheese spread Burgundy wine First, preheat broiler unit of range. Next, cut each bacon slice into four pieces. Wrap each piece of bacon around olives, oysters or- pecan halves (Place together with Roquefort cheese spread). Dip each in burgundy wine, broil and serve hot on individual picks. SPRING BRREZE Strawberries 1 Vi cups heavy cream l '/2 tablespoons strawberry juice. Red food coloring Candied violets . First, frost six crystal compotes in freezer. Next, place halved, strawberries, sweetened to taste, in­ bottom of frosted compotes. Whip cream and flavor with strawberry juice and small amounts of red coloring. Swirl whipped cream on top of strawberries and top with candied violets. Happy cookin! . Suzanne ' Correction In last week’s issue in the single column cutline picture of James Christopher McCullough, his parents should have read; Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. McCullough, Route 4, Mocksville, N.C. FIRST FEDERAL’S IRA A PLAN THAT HAS IT ALL First Federal has ah IRA Plan that’s just right for you, whether you can afford to contribute $200 or $2,000. Consider the benefits: • IMM EDIATE TA X SAVINGS A ll IR A contributions are fully tax deductible. You (lay jess tax and keeii more o f w hat you cnrnl • T A X DEFERRED HIGH INTEREST Y our IR A earns high interest and every penny is tax deferred u n til withdraw al. • RETIREM ENT SECURITY C ontributions plus earned interest grow rapidly to help assure your future com fort. • NO FEES F irst Federal charges no fees to adm inister your account. If you can’t afford an IRA this year, First Federal will loan you the money! Wouldn’t you rather pay yourself instead of IRS? FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Main Office; 230 North Cheny Street; Branch Offices; 490 Hanes Mall/3443 Robin Hood Road/ 130 S. Stratford Road/2815 Reynolda Road/3001 Waughlown Street; Mocksville Office; 142 Gaither Street; Clemmons Office; 2421 Lewisville-Clemmbns Road 91ft-72.S-3fi04 ^ tmmmvtnUMI i DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985-11 / ' m Mrs. Paul Harrison Swindler . . . was Janis Barbara Rauch \Bauch ir Swindler Vows Spoken The wedding of Miss Janis Bar­ bara Rauch of 8220 Cedar Drive, Charlotte, North Carolina, to Paul Harrison Swindler, also of Charlotte, N.C. was held Saturday, 'February 16, in a seven o’clock evening candlelight ceremony at the First Baptist Church in Moclcsville. The Reverend Charles Bullocic of Raleigh, N.C. officiated at the double ring ceremony. A program of wedding music was wesented by organist, Dr. Max Smith, professor of Music at Ap­ palachian State University, Boone, N.C.; and Miss Lou Ann Eaton of Wilson, N.C., soloist. The bride, given in marriage by her father, Robert K. Rauch, wore a formal gown of Alencon and Venice lace on lush satin designed with an embroidered bodice with scooped necic and inset sleeves, basque waist, full sicirt, and an applique’d cathedral train. Her headpiece was a lace caplet attached to a chapel length veil of silic illusion. She carried a cascade bouquet of silk Rubrium Lillies, Iris, Jewel weed and Azaleas. Her only jewelry was a strand of pearls, gift of the bridegroom. Miss Ginny Dunn of Mocksville was maid of honor. She wore a formal gown of cranberry satin, designed with a fitted bodice, spaghetti straps, and a matching jacket with ruffle trim. She carried a bouquet similar to that of the bride. Bridesmaids were Miss Marie Swindler, bridegroom’s sister of Winston-Salem, N.C.; Miss Karen Long, bride’s cousin of Newnan, Georgia; Miss Miriam Spainhour of Louisville, N.C.; and Jean Nichols of Mocksville, N.C. They wore gowns identical to that of the honor attendant’s, and carried silk flowers in a cascade bouquet. Robert H. Swindler of Far­ mington, N.C. was his son’s best man. Ushering were Paul Raucli, bride’s brother of Mocksville; Scott Ward also of Mocksville; Larry Mock of Farmington; and Kevin Hegel of Charlotte, N.C. Mrs, Glenda Long, bride’s aunt of Salisbury, N.C. directed the wed­ ding. Presiding at the guest register was Miss Debbie Graham and Brent Ward, both of Mocksville. The bride’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Rauch of Magnolia Avenue, Mocksville, N.C. She at­ tended UNC, Chapel Hill, N.C,; and is a graduate of Leon’s College of Beauty Culture, Greensboro, N.C. She is a hair sytlist with Directive’s HairSalon, at Ivey's, Eastland Mall, Charlotte, N.C. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Swindler of Route 2, Mocksville, N.C. He is a graduate of Western Carolina University with a Master’s degree in Physical Education. He is em­ ployed by Union County School System. After a Carribean cruise, the couple will make their home at 8220 Ceder Drive, Charlotte, N.C. RECEPTION Immediately following the, wedding ceremony, guests were invited to a reception in the couple's honor, at the Tanglewood Park Ball Room in Clemmons, N.C. Hosts were the bride’s parents. Assisting were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Long, Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Sam Nichols. REHEARSAL DINNER Mr, and Mrs. Robert H. Swindler hosted a rehearsal dinner, Friday' evening, February 15, following the wedding rehearsal of Paul Swindler and Janis Rauch, at the church fellowship building. ■ s. Na event. Mrs. Nancy Shanks catered the Approximately fifty guests at­ tended, which included the wedding. party, family and out of town guests. Republicans To Meet The Davie County Republican •’arty Convention will be held Monday night, March 11 at7:30 p.m. at the Davie County Courthouse. The Davie County Republican Party Leaders for 1985-87 will be elected at this meeting. Also to be selected will be delegates and alternate delegates to attend the North Carolina Eighth District Convention and the North Carolina State Republican Convention. Featuring Marie’s Baked Goodies Every Friday and Saturday 8 miles East of Mocksville on Highway 158 (across from the old S n iilli Grove School) I I ( \u tiu 3 a iiijiii iiii; u iu a illllll u i u v u a ^ liu u i; . ^^998-3894 Open Tues.-Sat 1 0 ^ J JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Routt 7, Jtrlcho Roid Mockivllli, N.C. 27026 Phone 492-5291 FREE FOOD PACKAGES PICK-UP DATE Wad., Feb. 27,1985 TIME 4:00 p.m. until 6:0B^p.m. Thara will ba fraa food givan away every two weeks. It can be picked up at the church building between the hours of 4:00 and 6:00 every other Wednesday evening. Or by calling 492-5291 Wayne Hendrix, Minister P.O. Box 345 Mocksville. N.C. 27028__________________ McCuUougli-Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Larry E. McCullough of Route 4, Mocksville, N.C,, announce the engagement of their daughter, Stella Deane, to McDaniel B, (Jack) Jackson, Jr,, son of Mr. and Mrs, McDaniel B, Jackson, Sr. of 2247 Red Fox Trail, Charlotte, N.C. The wedding is planned for Saturday, April 6, 1985, at Omwake-Dearbon Chapel, Catawba College, Salisbury, N.C., at 5 p.m. The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate of Davie H i^ School. She was a Jones Scholar at Peace College in Raleigh, where she graduated with an Associate of Arts degree in 1981. She completed her studies at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill in 1983 with a Bachelor’s degree in International Studies. She is employed by Pinehali Brick, Inc., Winston-Salem, as a Customer Service representative. Davie Art Guild To Meet The Davie County Art Guild will meet Thursday, February 21 at 7 p.m. at The Art Connection on Yadkinville Rd. in Mocksville. The Guild is presently conducting a membership drive and would iiite to invite anyone interested in art to attend. . The Guild is also planning some interesting trips and workshops this year. For more information, call secretary Phyllis Swanson at 634- 5213, MocksviUe Woman's Club News Laura Hildebrand The Mocksville Woman’s Club met at Bermuda Run Country Club Wednesday, February 13, with Mrs. Jack Shanks presiding. Mrs. Archer Livengood gave a moving devotion using Acts 20:32. Hostesses for the meeting were Mrs. Glenn Hammer, Mrs. A. T. Grant, Jr., Mrs. James Boger, Mrs. W. T, Spencer and Mrs, George Jordan, Mr, John Stevens, Deputy Sheriff Do your part for heart health The'American Heart Month Campaign informs i ^us that heart disease is killing us faster Ih'an | cancer and accidents combined. But, hope eKisls. t L Death rates have been declining slowly, primarily r J due to three factors; Improved treatment devices; i better medication; and increased awareness of' 1 lifestyle changes that help ward off heart dise^ise. j ' By now you should know the lifestyle: Nol I smoking; weight control; reduced fat; avoid aiixi-1 lety; eliminate alcohol; and exercise regularly. So r Ldo your part, and let your pharmacy provide you | pthe latest medications and advice. You arc im> Lportant to us. IV lim ii'M A'inig Foster-Rauch Drugs We Appreciate Your Businet^ i BaUey-Shore Mr. and Mrs. Garland Oehman of Route 1, Advance, N.C. announce the engagement of her daughter, Cynthia Lee Bailey, to Kenneth Scott Shore son of Thomas R. Shore of Cooleemee and the late Berlie L. Shore, Miss Bailey is also the daughter of the late James H, Bailey. The bride-elect is a 1979 graduate of Davie High School; and a graduate of Barbizon Beauty College in Winston-Salem. She is curroitly employed by Designers Loft in Mocksville, Mr. Shore is a 1974 graduate of Davie High School; and is employed by Celanese Fiber Operations. An April 27, 1985 wedding is planned at Hope Baptist Tabernacle in Mocksville. - of Davie County was introduced by Mrs. Charles Bunch. He will be speaker for the March meeting. Valentines placed on tables were signed by members and sent to Teddy Johnson, Western Carolina Center. Miss Laura Hildebrand, a senior at Davie High School, was student guest. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hildebrand, Ber­ muda Run, She plans to attend William and Mary College and major in law, Mrs, Ted Junker reported that cards or flowers had been sent to the sick and bereaved members. Club women brought canned goods to be taken to Department of Social Services. Due to cold weather supplies have been depleted. Mrs. Norman Smith, Sr., in­ troduced club woman, Mrs. Joel Edwards. She spoke on the subject of Law Related Education. Mrs. Edwards has written two books, the first one published in 1982 is ad­ dressed to people who work with juvenile problems. In 1983 she published Learning the Law, financed by Mary Babcox Reynolds Foundation and Department of Justice. Thirty-nine thousand free copies were placed in public schools. Mrs. Archer Livengood gave a brief blessing after which the meeting was adjourned for lunch. Around Ahoiit AWARDED THE ARMY ACHIEVEMENT MEDAL Specialist Four Paul Bandurraga of Ft. Bragg, N.C. has been awarded the Army Achievement Medal from the Department of the Army, for meritorious achievement. He is married to the former Anita Potts of Mocksville; and his parents are Mr. and Mrs, Michael Bandurraga of Oceana, California, MAKES DEAN’S LIST AT WCU Ms, Jill Carter made the Dean’s list at Western Carolina University for the 1984 fall semester at Western Carolina University at Cullowhee, N.C, Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Carter of Advance, N.C. MAKES DEAN’S LIST AT UNC-CH Cheryle Marcell Woodward, junior at the University d North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C., has made the dean’s list for the 1984 fall semester. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Woodward, Country Lane, Mocksville. a B E A T CLEPM-ny S M S . SAVE«20to*40 Hoover® Convertible Upright THiUCim ONAL WAMUNTV WITHOUTncmioN. FMOneYMfWorrofVyonAII Nrli Mor. (v«i Comt) Boot, B«n.BnnrmoodBui»I HmtmWmftirfOmmtm. $ 6 9 * * Reg. *99” •159” SST* • ‘Quodrofl«x'oelki1oroctlon • Two motor* • Dool futhHrn* cl«onlr>g Mctlon.«lui 9^99 bruihtrt Cormnim4 ‘ctmk bog' fignol • Ll9hM9Mond«gfyloilQ(* • lullHn tool toek * F u rn itu re G u a rd* S teel A g ita to r* N O 'ShocK H o o d* H a n d y o n *o ff S w itc h HOOVER Convertible Cleaner with Headlight • 6leet tk«nai« flip• Puneilwi to tnxfi motai * 4 Position nu9 Adjuttm tnt * ISV^ Quart Difposabte Bag • 9 9 ’ ’ Reg.’129.99 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 162 Sheek street PHONE 634-2167 Mocksville, N.C. 12--DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY,FEBRUARY 21,1985 New Owner Takes Over The Hardware Store The Hardware Store located In Willow Oaks Shopping Center has a new owner. Ellis Hayes who has been managing the store for the last three years and his wife Kathryn have purchased the business from Pleasants Hardware. Hayes came to Mocksville with the B.C. Moores chain, serving in the capacity of manager for 14 years. He began his career with them in Bishopville, S.C. The only change according to Hayes will be the name. The name will be dianged to Willow Oaks Hardware but the store will be operated on the same level. The 5000 sq. ft. store carries a full liije of hardware, fishing and out­ door equipment, paint, garden seed and fertilizer and a line of houseware items. "The opportunity came” to buy out the store, said Hayes, “ and I grabbed it." He also added that he would like to thank all the people of Davie County for their support. Also available to assist customers with their needs will be Kenny Strickland, Carl Green, Tommy Gordy and Joe Meola. Store hours are Monday through Saturday.8 a.m. until 9 p.m.; and ^unda2j;6^jn. ^ Ellis Hayes, new owner of Willow Oaks Hardware, said the firm will continue the same quality service and store policies in force when operated by Pleasants Hardware. The store is located in the Willow Oak Shopping Center and was formerly The Wardware Store. Agrandopeningwiiibeannounced later. Congressman Broyhill To Speak; At BBB Annual Meeting Tenth District Congressman James T. Broyhill, senior Republican on the House.Energy and Commerce Committee w ill' speak at the annual luncheon meeting of the Better Business Bureau in Winston-Salem on February 25 at noon. This is Congressman Broyhill’s 23rd year in Washington. Legislative responsibilities of the Committee include interstate commerce and communications. Federal agencies under the Committee’s jurisdiction and the BBB are jointly invovled in medical quackery advertising and investor alert programs. A major concern of Congressman Broyhill is textile imports. The BBB, which serves 13 nor­ thwest North Carolina counties, will elect officers and members to the Board of Directors. Officer nominees are Marvin Ferrell, 1st Home Federal Saving’s & Loan, Chairman; William Harris, Bill Harris Buick, Vice-Chairman; Marie Roseboro, Winston Mutual Life, Treasurer; Vonnie Pryor, Secretary; Richard Tvndall. Hutchins, Tyndall, Doughton & Moore, Counsel. Board Nominees are Edwin' Brenegar, McLean Trucking Company; Edgar Broyhill 111, Edgar B Furniture Plantation; V.A. Flow, Jr., Flow Motors; Rabron Gentry, Crown Dugs; E.A. Golding, Mrs. Cambell’s Canning Company; William Hohman, Energy Economizers; Ben Lanier, Mt. Tabor Food Market; T.L. Meadows, Jr. Salem Steel Company; John Stack, Jr., Belk of ffanes Mall; Thomas TroIIinger, Contract Of­ ficer Furnishings; Richard Tyndall, Hutchins, Tyndall, Doughton & Moore attorneys. The public is invited to attend the luncheon meeting. Reservations should be made by calling the BBB office (919) 725-8348 V noon, February 22. Tickets are $S.OO each. Bread Crumbs To make fine, dry bread crumbs, dry out slices of stale bread in a 250. degree oven, then roll into crumbs with a rolling pin, grate on a grater,. put through a grinder or grate in the electric blender. X Birthday ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ Friday, Februaiy 22 thru Monday, February 25 ★ Limited Quanities G o n 32 Gallon Unbreakable PLASTIC TRASH CANS Reg.’15.99 S.LE » 8 * * No. 576 Skil CIRCULAR SAWS 21/8H.P. 7V4 Ball Bearing Construction SALE Router and Saber SAW TABLE Reg.‘34.99 SALE 51999 GLIDDON PAINTS Spread Satin Latex Flat Reg. 45.99 Spread latex Enamel Semi-gloss BLACK AND DECKER 3/8” DRILL V4H.P. Reversing, Variable Speed Reg.’40.89 S . U * 3 6 “ $ 4 2 8 8 ^ Reg. *49.99 Old Timer and Uncle Henry KNIVES SALE Reg. 49.99 * 1 6 * ® All Echo CHAIN SAWS 15% Off Men's 4-Buckle ARTIC BOOTS Reg.‘23.99 SALE J I 799 Plastic PLANT CUPS Reg.49‘ SALE 3 3 < t PLANT FLATS Reg. 69* SALE 58‘ Men’s Rubber KNEE BOOTS Reg.‘14.49 SALE AIIMcCulloch CHAIN SAWS 4Cu.Ft. PEATMOSS Reg.‘9.79 SALE 6Cu.Ft. PEATMOSS Reg.‘14.19 All Judd CURTAIN RODS OFF One Group HOUSEWEARS 25 to 50% “ff SALE * 1 2 “ Black & Decker DUST BUSTER Reg.‘32.99 SALE *27“ One Group Ladies and Men’s WATCHES SALE ALL SHOVELS, SPADES, HOSES, LAWN AND LEAF RAKES, HOLE DIGGERS, PITCHFORKS AND SEED FORKS OFF Jackson Cadet 78 WHEELBARROW Reg.‘51.99 *38“SALE W i l l o w O a k H a r d w a r e S t o r e WillowOak Shopping Centre' •— Yadkinvilie Highway ~ Mocksville, N.C. Phone 634-3322 Hours: Mon.-Sat. — 8 a.m. - 9 p.m. Sunday — 1 - 6 p.m. Phone 634-3322 Sleet and freezing rain transformed the area into an icy wonder February 7, forcing the closing of schools. Relax For1,000 Years I No More Erotic Weather Winter 1985 has proven unpredictable with both extreme higte and lows reported. A spring like warming trend in late December and early March causM some area trees to bloom premahirely. Unseasonably warm weather in early January confused these Canadian geese who normally fly south for the winter. They were spotted taking a leisurely swim at the Tangfewood Park lake. Davie County has experienced a variety of weather during the first two months of 1985, with tem­ peratures ranging from the un­ seasonably warm to record brealcing lows. And since the ground hog saw its shadow February 2, the area is assured of more cold weather, at least until the official arrival of spring March 20. But Davie County isn’t alone in its plight. Scientists admit that they can’t explain the abnormal weather of past winters, but optimistically predict that it should be at least a thousand years before it happens again. During the past decade, the nation as a whole has experienced a climate scenario unprecedented in the 20th century, according to Thomas Karl, a meteorologist at the National Climatic Data Center in Asiieville. Karl is one of three men to con­ duct a recent study of weather changes in the last 80 years, con­ cluding that the period from 1975 to 1984 was the most erratic. Three winters in that period were abnormally warm and three were unususally cold, Karl said. Given certain assumptions, he said, his analysis indicated it would be another 1,047 years before the nation experiences a similar recurrence. Karl said his findings were even more interesting because tem­ peratures in the winters from 1955 to 1975 were average. What makes this so unusual is that we had a moderate period followed by a decade of unusual weather, he said. • Karl said researchers aren’t sure what the numbers {wrtend. We’re not sure if it’s just chance or we’ve got a climate change. The question is why these unusual weather pattern; have arisen, he said. Karl said the variations could be blamed on fluctuations or a weakening in the jet streams, in- . DAVIE COUNTY S M M M w i^ K 9 9 M i Feature IB February 21,1985 creased volcanic activity, increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, changes in ocean temperatures or variations in solar activity. Area residents have experienced the extreme impacts of weather this winter, with the first day of 1985 rolling in with a spring like high of 74 degrees. However, Old Man Winter made a strong comeback 20 days later with the low January 21 at a record 10 degrees below zero. The deep freeze, which stalled cars and froze pipes, had no sooner lifted when a five-inch snow blanketed the area January 28th. Another snow storm which dumped as much as eight inches of snow on some sections of the state February 12, dropped enough locally to free students from school. However, the storm promised more than it actually delivered with temperatures rising to 35 degrees by 1 p.m. The snow that only a few hours 'earlier had covered cars. sidewalks and parking lots sub­ sided, and the slight accumulation quickly melted. With 28 more days until the of­ ficial arrival of spring, the un­ predictable weather patterns could bring more cold, snow, sleet and freezing rain to the area. According to local records, a freak snow ushered in spring, 1983 followed by an April freeze which wiped out 90 percent of the local peach crop. March was also a snowy month in 1982 with two inches of ac­ cumulation blanketing the area March 4, followed by an April cold snap which again damaged area fruit trees. March, 1981 was no exception with a snow fall of 6 inches blanketing the county March 26. So while spring appears to be just around the corner, history proves that there’s still plenty of time for cold, snowy weather. Five inches of snow blanketed the area January 28, turning the county into a winter wonderland.Yellowbelis burst mto bloom prematw’tly January, thinking that spring had arrivad. Hi arctic blast later in the month dropped temper record 10 degrees below zero. in early ____Jowever, an temperatures to a 2B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985 South Davie To Host Invitational Basketball Tournament This Week South Davie Junior High.will host an invitational baslcetball tour­ nament at the South Davie Gym on Friday, February 22 and Saturday, February 23. Junior Varsity (Vlh & Bth grade) teams from Southeastern Stokes, Troutman, Mooresville and South Davie will participate. There will be two girls games and two boys games each day. Games will begin at 3:30 p.m. Friday and at 3:00 p.m. Saturday. The public is invited to attend. Admission will be $.50 for students and $1.00 for adults. Concessions will be available. No passes will be accepted for this event. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22 3:30 • Mooresville vs. Southeastern Stokes (Girls) 5:00 - Mooresville vs. Southeastern Stokes (Boys) 6:30 - Troutman vs. South Davie (Girls) 8:00 - Troutman vs. South Davie (Boys) SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23 3:00 - Third Place Game (Girls) 4:30 - Third Place Game (Boys) 6:00 • Championship (Girls) 7:30 - Championship (Boys) I rr -Davie American- asketball League Results The Davie American Basketball League completed its regular season on Saturday, Feb. 16. The division winners were as follows: Girls Givision, Panthers; Division II, Wolfpack; and Division I, Deacons. Tournament play started Monday night with two Division I games, and on Tuesday night three first round Division II games were played., Upcoming tournament games..... Thursday, February 21-Division II 2nd round, 2 and 7 winners vs. 3 and 6 winner 6:30. Wolfpack vs. 4 and 5 winner 7:30. Friday, February 22-Girls Division 1st. round No. 1 (Panthers) vs. No. 4 (Bullets) 6:30; Blue Devils vs. Stars (teams tied for 2nd) 7:30. Saturday, February 23 Girls Chapmionship-2:00 Division II Championship-3:15 Division I Championship-4:30- Tar IIecls-28 B. Myers-8 Sharpe-9 Laws-5 Carter-2 Jon Myers-2 Jason Myers-2 Deacons-2!t Smith-2 Foster-5 Yandell-12 Ballew-2 Clemo-6 Nail-2 Friday, February IS Cclllcs-14 Mendcnhall-24 Jarvis-4 Losh-7 'niompson-5 R. Cline-4 Bruins-26 Frueier-B Pitts-13 Dunn-5 BulIs-17 (3riffin-3 Carter-10 Boger-2 Hansen-2 Deacons vs. Celtics FINAL STANDINGS GIRLS DIVISION W ....I, Panthers 11 1 Blue Devils 6 6 Stars 6 8 Bullets 1 11 DIVISION II W I, Wolfpack 11 1 Bruins 9 3 Tar Heels 8 4 Blue Devils 6 6 Deacons 6 6 Bulls 2 10 Eagles 0 12 DIVISION I Deacons 9 3 Celtics 7 5 Sixers 5 7 Tar Heels 3 9 SCORES Tuesday, February 12.. Panthers-15 Blue Devils-IO Nail-4 McClannon-2 Smith-7 K. Khynehardt-2 Tucker-4 C. Rhynehardt-4 Fruelcr-2 Stars-2U Bullets-ll Smith-2 Caudle-2 Boger-2 Ebert-9 Habegger-2 Ellis-3 Duncan-11 Thursday, February 14 Blue Devlls-IH Eagles-11 Drane-4 Hepler-4 Sloan-6 Smith-1 M. Tilley-4 Frueler-2 D. Tilley-2 Campbell-2 SaEraves-2 Deacons-55 J. Bright-2 Carter-30 Sweat-2 Pardue-3 Smith-18 Sixcrs-4;i Allen-6 Hicks-1 Hall-12 Byers-20 Brewer-4 Tar Hcels-45 Ry. Edwards-11 Sheridan-7 Rob. Edwards-12 Staley-4 Pope-4 Gobble-7 Members of ttK 1984-85 South Davie Tigers are (front row/1 I? V. Phifer, manger, Matt Vaugtiter, Douglas Peebles, Andre Frost, Kendall Chaffin, Brad Jones, (2nd roM/) James Marshall, Anslo Fowler, Davin Brown, David Stevenson, Matt Marion, Marc Holcomb,' and Charles Crenshaw, coach. Not pictured: Steve Parker, Atatt Webb, Jimmy Green, Clyde Scott and Frankie O'Neal, manager. South Davie Boys Win N.P.C. Junior Championship Saturday, February l(i, Deaeans-2R Clemo-7 Yandell-9 Nail-2 Foster-8 Woldpack-2» Duncan-4 Murphy-16 Bailey-3 Mecham-6 Tar Hcels-2» Sharpe-11 Jon Mycrs-7 Laws-8 Carter-3 IJhic Dcvils-7 McClannon-1 R. Rhynehardt-2 Frueler-4 Panitlicrs-2:i Moore-2 Nail-6 Clement-2 Smllh-13 Monday, February 18..., DIVISION I TOURNAMENT Eagles-14 Frueler-2 Hepler-I2 Bruins-I!) Frueler-4 Pitts-13 Dunn-2 Bulls-IO Carter-2 Hansen-2 Boger-6 Stars-1 Ellls-l Duncan-3 Bullets-!) Ebert-9 The .South Davie junior varsity, boys \W)ii the North Piedmont Junior High Conference basketball championship with a record of 13-1. Only one starter returned from last years team, but the Tigers were able to find a winning combination with teamwork and defense. Every player on the team contributed and each game often produced a new star. Anslo Fowler played center and led llic team in blockcd shots. Fowler was also a good scorer and rebounder. James Marshall was the teams leading scorer and did an excellent job on the offensive and defensive boards. Marc Holcomb was an excellent passer often setting up teammates for easy baskets. Holcomb always got good rebounding position and contributed at both the guard and forward positions. Brad Jones had great jumping ability and quickness. He usually made things happen when he en­ tered the game. Davin Brown shot well from the outside and was the team’s best free throw shooter. He made several clutch foulshots during the season. Andre Frost played the point guard position, calling plays and setting defense. He did a good job of handling the ball under pressure and getting it to the open men. He scored well from the outside. Kendall Chaffin, a good outside shooter, often was called upon against zone defenses. Matt Marion, a seventh-grader filled in well at the forward and center positions. David Stevenson was a great jumper and filled in well at center when needed. Matt Webb played ■ forward and showed much im­ provement over the season. Doug Peebles filled in at point guard and handled the ball well. Clyde Scott added good hustle to the guard position. Steve Parker and Matt Vaughters, both seventh graders played well in several games and will be counted on next year. Jimmy Green who suffered a broken leg early in the season was playing well at guard before his injury. Season results: S Davie-M Knox-18 • South Davie- Jones 2, Marshall 6, Frost 8, Fowler 4, Brown 4, Holcomb 2, Chaffin 3. S. Davie-43 Lexington-25 South Davie- Jones 2, Marshall 9, Fowler 8, Brown 8, Frost 10, Chaffin 4, Stevenson 2. •S. Davie-43 Asheboro-22 South Davie-Jones 4, Marshall 10, Fowler 5, Brown 4, Frost 4, Holcomb 6, Parker 1, Webb 4, Stevenson 3, Scott 2. 5. Davie-52 Trinity-35 Jones 3, Holcomb 7, Stevenson 2, Brown 6, Frost 15, Fowler 10, Chaffin 4, Marion 1, Parker 1, Peebles 3. S.Davie-28 S.E. Stokes-27 Holcomb 4, Marshall 8, Fowler 8, Brown 2, Frost 2, Jones 2, Chaffin 2. 5. Davie-34 Thomasville-26 South Davie-Holcomb-5, Marshall 6, Fowler 6, Brown 5, Frost 10, Jones 2. S. Davie-44 N. Davie-30 South Davie-Marshall 14, Fowler 10, Brown 2, Frost 8, Jones 6, Chaffin 1. Marion 2. Vauehters 1. 5. Davie-40 Knox-21 South Davie-Marshall 9, Holcomb 6, Fowler 5, Brown 6, Frost 8, Jones 4, Peebles 1, Vaughters, I. 5. Davie-35 Lexington-25 South Davie-Marshall 10, Holcomb 6, Fowler 7, Brown 7, Frost 3, Jones 2. S. Davie-46 Asheboro-31 South Davie-Marshall 13, Holcomb 7, Fowler 10, Brown 8, Frost 4, Marion 2, Webb 2. S. Davie-53 Trinity-34 South Davie-Marshall 11, Fowler 13, Brown 5, Frost 4, Jones 12, Marion 2, Chaffin 2, Stevenson 2, Vaughters 2. S. Davie-35 S.E. Stokes-27 South Davie-Marshall 9, Holcomb 2, Fowler 10, Brown 6, Frost 7, Jones 5. Davie-41 Thomasville-46 South Davie-Marshall 16, Fowler 6, Brown 2, Frost 7, Jones 10. S. Davie-56 N. Davie-23 South Davie-Marshall 10, Holcomb 2, Fowler 6, Brown 12, Frost 5, Jones 8, Chaffin 4, Stevenson 1, Vaughters 2, Scott 3, Peebles 3. Dcacons-.'i2 Carter-30 Sinith-10 Pardue-2 Sweat-6 Correll-3 R. Bright-1 Ccllics-5:i Mendcnhall-14 S. Cline-10 Griffin-2 Jarvis-14 Thompson-7 Losh-6 Tar lleels-16 Ry Edwards-25 Sheridan-10 Gobble-4 Staley-2 Marshall-3 Pope-2 Sixers-42 Allen-5 Hicks-14 Hall-8 Byei-s-7 Brewer-1 Booie-3 Matthews-2 331- -ir—: ~ . t r Mocksville Recreation Little League Basketball V V >■ .3 . r The Mocksville Recreation Department Mens basketball' results are as follows: MONDAY, Feb. 11 ; Mocksville Builders Supply-90 Bobkats-52 T. Anderson-78 • Heritage-71 • James Barber Shop-68 : Crown Wood-64 WEDNESDAY, Feb. 13 T. Anderson-61 ! Crown Wood-59 : I.L. Long Const.-86 ; Herltage-85 (in overtime) SATURDAY, Feb. 16 Mocksville Builders Supply-83 ; James Barber Shop-66 ADULT STANDINGS I.L. Long Const. Heritage Mocksville Bldg. Supply T. Anderson James Barber Shop Crown Wood Bobkats The results for the Mocksville Recreation Dept. Jr. High Basketball are as follows: WEDNESDAY, Feb. 13 Bucks-17 C. Mayfield-23 J. Mayfield-9 Peebles-12 McDaniel-2 SATURDAY Feb. 16 Blazers-24 ' Rumple-1 Cook-2 Anderson-7 Clark-6 Melton-2 Lyons-6 Bucks-42 C. Mayfield-19 J. Mayfield-2 Peebles-19 McDaniel-3 Blazers-34 Junker-6 Cook-2 Anderson-2 Tuck-2 Melton-2 Lyons-20 W..L 8 1 7 2 7 2 5 5 Bucks 4 6 Blazers 2 8 Nets 0 9 Nuggets Ncls-22 Wilks-2 Allen-2 Welch-7 Clement-11 Nuggets-27 Howard-2 Ijames-6 Forrest-1 Carter-10 Williams-4 Peterson-4 The South Davie yirls' basketball team has had an out­ standing season with the final game set for Tuesday. Team members are (front row, I to r) Jennifer Clark, manager, Angie Hinson, Shannon Jordon, Shawn Smoot, Paula Foster, Richelle Bailey, A^nager, (2nd row) Ricky Hen­ dricks, as^stant coach, Gail Bohannon, Jenny Stevenson, Angie P o ^ , Beth Mashburn, Tina Riggs, Tammy Cun­ ningham, Tern Eanes, assistant coach and Donna Ireland, Not pictured: Janice Powell, Mollie Jackson, Jill Osborne and Laura Cartner, score keeper. South Davie Jr. Varsity Girls Have Perfecj Season JR. STANDINGS W ..L 4 2 3 3 3 3 2 4 Western Red or Golden DeliciousAPPLES 49«. Mexican Vine Ripe TOMATOES 49* ^ Large Firm Heads LEHUCE 2-99* Freib GreenCAWAOE Golden Ripe BANANAS39*. a SR^ProduceM arket 755 Yadkinville Road Mocksville, N.C. Phone Hours; Monday thru Saturday B a.m. thru Vp.m. The South Davie Jr. Varsity girl’s basketball team has had a suc­ cessful season and are undefeated .with a record of 13-0. Their last conference game was at home on Tuesday, February 19th. against Northeast Jr. High from High Point. Scores were not available as of press time. Eiglith graders on the team are Shawn Smoot, Shannon Jordan, Beth Mashburn, Jenny Stevenson, Janice Powell, Gail Bohannon, and Mollie Jackson. Seventh graders are Angie Potts, Angie Henson,- Paula Foster, Tina Riggs, Tammy Cunningham and Jill Osborne. Jennifer Clark and Richelle Bailey were managers and Laura Cartner, score keeper. Leading scorers have been Shawn Smoot, averaging 14.7 points a game and Shannon Jordan with lo:8. The team averages 41 points a game. Leading rebounders are Angie Potts averaging 14 a game and Beth Mashburn, 10. Jenny Stevenson has also been doing a good job rebounding. As a team they are averaging 44 rebounds a game. Donna Ireland, head coach, said that this Is the best girls’ team that South Davie has had. Assisting with the coaching is Ricky Hendricks and Terri Eanes. YMCA Road Race Is Saturday The Central YMCA-Reebok Frosty 5 K Road Race will lie run at Davie American Signups Uavie-American Liltiv League will hold sigii-ups for all girls and boys between the ages of 5-15 a( North Oavle Jr. High School on Friday, Feb. 22nd from 6 to 8 p.m. and on Saturday, February 23 from 10 a.m. lo 2 p.m. These will be the only dates for sigii-ups, therefore, everyone Is urged to sign up on one of these dales. 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, The Race, spon sored by the Central YMCA, Southern Sport- shoes and Reebok, will start in ront of the Central YMCA. Age groupings are 19 years and under, 20 to 29,30 to 39, 40 to 49, 50 to 59 and 60 and over for both men and women. Applications for registration which will continue to 10 a.m. on Race Day are available at the Central YMCA, Kernersville Family YMCA, Patterson Avenue YMCA and at Southern Sjwrtshoes. For additional information and a race application, call Whit East at the V.M.C.A., 722-1163. Unbeaten Shawn Steele Wins Midwest Regional Davie High’s unbeaten Sliawn Steele won his weight class championship in the North Carolina High School Athletic Association Midwest Regional wrestling tournament in Kannapolis last Saturday. It was the 24th con­ secutive win for Steele who also qualified for the state championship meet at Winston-Salem Parkland this Friday. Davie’s Tony Foster also qualified for the state championship meet. Steele triumphed at 112 pounds last Saturday beating Barry Hopper of Shelby in the finals. In earlier matches Steele pinned Dennis Boyd of West Mecklenburg in the first round and outscored Carlos Westmoreland of South Iredell 10-2. Steele was one of two champions of the North Piedmont Conference. In addition to Steele, Trinity’s David Lindsey (26-2) won the 185- pound title with three straight pins. Trinity won the team title with 51'A points. Davie tied with Thomasville for fifth place with 36'/ii points. Tony Foster Qualifier For State Meet \ Shawn Steele . . . Undefeated DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985.-3B Davie Girls In Tourney Semi-Finals The surprising Davie High girls basketball team (7-16) face third seeded West Rowan (15-9) at 6:30 p.m. Thursday night in the quarter finals of the North Piedmont Con­ ference Tournament being played at the Catawba College gymnasium in Salisbury. Coach Bill Peeler's girls, who got off to a 0-10 start, are 7-6 for the rest of the season after upsetting second- seeded Thomasville on Monday. The winner Thursday night between Davie and West Rowan will face the winner of the North Davidson and Lexington game in the finals Friday night at 6:30 p.m. Carla Presnell scored a career high of 25 points to lead the Davie girls to a 53-48 victory Monday night. The senior hit on seven out of ten field goals and 11 out of 12 foul shots to account for almost half of Carla Presnell her team’s points. Freshman Andrea Rayle added 13 points and teamed with Tammy Pulliam to control the backboards. "It’s the first time we’ve played this good for four quarters,, said Peeler. “Presnell had her best game of the season.” Davie, still in the running for a District Five tournament berth, faces third-seeded West Rowan at 6^:30 p.m. in the semifinals at Catawba College’s Goodman Gymnasium. West beat North Rowan last night. “West Rowan is coming along pretty well. We have got to play a tremendous game to beat them,” said Peeler, whose team is 1-2. against the Falcons this season. Davie was up by 13 points in the third quarter and by the same Davie Teams Close Out Season Play fnt* tVio tl>in ^ The Davie High boys closed out regular season play in the North Piedmont Conference last week with a 9-7 conference record and 12- 10 overall and a fourth place finish in the conference. The Davie girls were 6-10 in regular season conference play, tied with North Rowan for the sixth spot, and 6-16 overall. The Davie teams swept a doubleheader from Trinity last Wednesday night with the boys winning 94-47 and the girls 43-41. After racing to a 43-27 lead in the first half, Davie's boys outscored Trinity 34-9 in the third quarter. Drechsler played reserves most of the second half. “ It seemed like everything'fell into place for us right from the start,” Drechsler said. “ It was one of our better games of the season.” Tony Tatum led the War Eagles with 19 points. Ronald Foster added 18 points and Tracy Frost followed with 17. Trinity played without starter Kevin Wright, who is sidelined with a broken ankle. Mike Armstrong scored 12 to lead the Bulldogs and Brvan Kelly had 10. " Davie’s girls got a 16-point game from Carla Presnell and 13 points from Tammy Pulliam in their win. Michelle Deal made three free throws in the final 15 seconds to ice the victory. Kenny Smith Emerges As UNC Backcourt Star By Rick Brewer In a year which has seen plenty of standout backcourt play in the Atlantic Coast Conference, Kenny Smith has emerged as one of the league’s biggest young stars. Smith, the University of North Carolina’s 6-3 playmaker, turned in another brilliant performance on Sunday, sparking the Tar Heels to a 75-70 victory at LSU. Smith scored 15* points and handed out seven assists in leading Carolina to a second-half come-from-behind victory. Howev.er, performances like that have tieen common for Smith this season. He currently leads the ACC in assists with 179 and has been one of the, national leaders in that department all year. He is also scoring 12.7 points a game, shooting 52.3 percent from the field and 86.8 percent from the free throw line. But, Smith’s emergence as a great all-around player has come as a result of his play on the other end of the court. The sophomore from Queens, N.Y., has made rapid progress on defense in his second year at Carolina. “ Kenny is much improved defensively,” says his coach, Dean Smith. “ His defensive play last year was not even close to what it is now. We know we can count on him consistently on the defensive end. “ In addition, he’s more confident offensively and his judgment has improved considerably in our half­ court offense. He's a very unselfish player and a tremendous com­ petitor." That competitive fire ate at Kenny a great deal last year when he was forced to miss eight games after breakins his left wrist in a game against LSU. Smith had gotten off to a great start as a fresh­ man, but the injury put a damper on his season. Although he came back late in the year and played with a rubber protective device on his wrist, he never regained the form he had shown earliei;. In. fact. Smith says he is only now beginning to feel as he did last season. "M y offensive play came to a standstill last summer," says Smith, “ because I couldn't play against high-level competition. I had a new cast put on my arm at the end of the school year and I just couldn't play with it. "Early in the season I'd feel awk­ ward making certain moves that I had made fluidly before I got hurt. I was probably thinking too much. NowJ'm just playing instinctively and that’s made me a better player." What’s the biggest difference between Smith's freshman and sophomore years? “ Maturity,” he says. “ I think that maturity and growing have helped me in specillc areas on both offense and defense. “ Offensively, I’m able to create my shot a little bit more. Last year I depended almost solely on the other guys to get me open-defenses would collapse around Michael (Jordan) and Sam (Perkins) and they would pitch it back out to me for an open jumper. I’m still getting shots that way with our big people, but I’m also more capable of getting a shot for myself. "1 also think I'm doing a better job of one-on-one defense. I un­ derstood our team defensive con­ cepts last year, but sometimes I couldn’t stop my man from getting by me. But, I’ve improved in that phase of play." But, those are not the only areas in which Smith has made im­ provement. "The biggest difference between Kenny last year and this year is that he has learned to bridle his talent," says Steve Hale, Carolina's other starting guard. "He’s learned to make the easy play on the break. He knows now when he should go all the way and when to stop and lake the easy jumper. Michael went through that same learning process so it’s certainly nothing unusual. It’s a matter of Kenny maturing and growing." Smith's improvement this year has been a major factor in Carolina's 18-5 season. With 179 assists, he has a shot at the school single-season record of 217 set by Phil Ford in 1977. But, the only record Smith is concerned about is his team’s. His unselfishness and team play got him rave reviews in Baton Rouge on Sunday. “ He's such a team player that you don't compliment him enough,” said Al McGuire, the former Marquette coach. “ He does so many' things so well that you can’t talk about all the things he does or you Vi'ouldn't talk about anyone but hi Duke ranked 6th TIKE ASSOCIATED PRESS ■ St. John's, which registered three victories last week by a total of 43 points, remained atop The Associated Press Top Twenty today as the first three teams in the college baslcetball poll held their places from last week. . The Redmen, 22-1 and currently pn the nation’s longest winning streak 17 games — received 59 first-place votes and 1,199 points from the nationwide panel of iiiportswriters and broadcasters. Eit. John’s downed Columbia 68-49, Pittsburgh 84-63 and DePaul 93-80 to remain atop the poll, ; Georgetown, 23-2, which is sec­ ond to St. John’s in the Big East (Conference standings, held the tiecond spot in the poll as it i.-eceived the only other first-place vote and 1,141 points. Michigan, 20-3 and the leader in the Big Ten standings, remained third with 1,044 poinU. Th» Top Twenty tMmi In itie At»ocltt«d PreM' cotl*0« bMkitbtU pbll. wHh flrt!-pltc« vot»i In 1.8t. John's (69) 2.Qeof0iitown(1) a.Mlchlgtn 4.M»rDphl« St. S.Oklthoma e.Oukt 7.8yracuM e.Qeorgla T*ch 9.80. Mfthodlit lO.Louliltni T«ch v«g«B12.TulMId.North Carolina 14.lowa IS.Kantas le.llllnolt 17.Va. Commonwelth IS.Qaorgla ‘ 19.0ragon 8t. 20.Bo9ton Coll. wMk'f rtnking: RKord Ptf Pvt 22-1 1190 • 1 23-2 1141 2 20-3 1044 3 20-2 975 5 21-4 •58 4 16-4 ' 913 7 10-4 873 8 ia-s 720 6 20-6 675 . 9 22-2 622 12 20-3 549 14 ie-4 496 15 19*6 375 13 19-6 360 11 20-6 353 -10 20-7 311 17 20-4 161 ' — 17-6 159 — 18-5 84 16 18-6 73 — Randall Ward Randall Ward Joins Howard Realty And Ins. Howard Realty & Ins. announces that Randall Ward has joined their staff effective February 15, 1985. .Randall is a native of Davie County. He is a graduate of Wake Forest University where he received a BS degree in Physical Education. He is presently teaching and coaching at West Rowan High School. Randall is m arried to the form er Vicki Michael. They have two children. Randall has been a real estate broker since 1974 and is pleased to be affiliated with Howard Realty & .Insurance Agency, Inc. We feel very honored to have Randall on our staff. We are continuing to strive to improve our service to the people of Davie and Forsyth Counties with a full and complele staff. OlrltTRINITY (41) — Kennsdy 18, Sikes 13, Smith 4, Andrevys 4, While 2, Brown, Taylor, Hobbs.DAVIE (43) — Presnell 16, Pulliam 13, Deal 9, Fowler 4, Rayle 1, Stroud, Freshwater. Trinity • 10 11 « - 41 Oavie 7 14 7 15 — « TRINITY (47) — Kelly 10; Mike Armstrong 12, Hllburn 6, Parrish 4, Norlleet 4, Royals 3, Patterson 3, Dean 3, Campbell 2, Allen, Fausnet. _ . DAVIE (94) — Tatum 19, Foster IB, Frost 17, Jacobs 7, Folmar 6, Gantt 6, Nestor 5, Naylor 4, Gaddy 7, SarnBtte 4, York 1, l|ame», Bohannon. Trinity 12 15 9 11 - 47 Davie 21 22 34 17 - »4 Last Friday night the uavie teams lost a doubleheader to North Davidson. North's girls captured the con­ ference regular season race with a 53-33 victory. The boys topped Davie, 60-57. Davie’s boys led 35-28 at the half but a strong fourth quarter showing by the Black Knights spelled the difference. “ We played the first half exactly like we wanted to play,” said Davie Coach Paul Drechsler. “ In the fourth quarter we got in a scoring slump and they used their defensive pressure well.” North Davidson rallied to tie the game near the five-minute mark of the final quarter, then opened a five- point lead with a minute remaining. Davie hit one more shot to pi3l within three, but the Knights held on for the win. Scott Wallace led North Davidson with 19 points. Davie was paced by Tony Tatum, Tracy Frost and Ronald Foster. Each scored 14 points. Girls DAVIE COUNTY (33) — Pulliam S, Presnell 8, Rayle 7, Fowler 6, Deal 2, West 2, Stroud, Reamis, Freshwater, Young. Hildebrand. NORTH DAVIDSON (53) - Keller 16. Swicegood 18. Jacobs 6. Slabach 5, Murphy 2. Seams 2. Tuttle 2, Butler, Baugess. Klein, Cecil. Martin. Koontz. Davie County 12 6 7 0 — 33 Noritt Davidson 15 11 10 17 ~ 53 Boys DAVIE COUNTY (67) - Tatum 14, Frost 14, Foster 14, Qaddy 7, Jacobs 4, Barnette 2, Folmar 2, Gantt. NORTH DAVIDSON (60) - Wallace 19. B. Rhodes 13. K. Tuttle 12, Glllard 4. B. Tuttle 2, D. Rhodes. Je. Leonard. Jo. Leonard. Dtvie County 16 19 14 6 - 57 North Davidson 6 20 15 17 — 60 margin with two minutes gone In : the fourth quarter, but had to hold off Thomasville by making 10 free throws in the final period.Presnell, hit five of six and Rayle hit three of six to protect the lead. DAVIK CbUNTV (S3) — PrHnall 25, Riyle 13, D «tl 6, Stroud 4, Pulliam 3, Fowler 2, FrethwaHr. . ' ■' TH O M AIVtU e (4 «) - Pool# 14, OawKIni 10. OrMn 7, A. Young Pitre* S, DtLtpp* 2, Alston 2, T. Young 1. F r»«ti»o 1- : a a y 'ia ’iius War Eagles Have Chance For District Tourney Berth The Davie High boys basket--: ball team (12-10) was scheduled to face Salisbury Hornets (10-12) in a first round tournament game at Mocksville, Tuesday night, with the winner having a chance to qualify for the District Five tour­ nament next week. If top-seeded North Rowan, No. 2 Asheboro, No. 3 North Davidson all win Tuesday night, the Davie- Salisbury winner would qualify for the District Five tournament. The winner of the Davie-Salisbury game would advance to the semi­ finals of the North Piedmont Con­ ference tournament and meet the North Rowan-West Rowan winner on Thursday night,8 p.m., in the Catawba College gymnasium. NPC tournament finals are set for 8 p.m. Friday night. Davie, coached by Paul Drechsler, is 1-2 against the Hor­ nets. The War Eagles lost a 61-59 overtime decision to Salisbury in the Catawba College Christmas Tournament, beat the Hornets by 59-49 the following week, then lost again by 71-52 in the most recent outing. Tony Tatum, Tracy Frost and 6-8 Doug Jacobs pace the Eagles’ offensive attack. Basltetball Standinp Final Regular Season NORTH PIEDMONT CONFERENCE BOYS Conf.Overall W-L W-L North Rowan 14- 2 18- 4 Asheboro 13- 3 17- 6 North Davidson 11- 5 17- 5 Oavie County 9- 7 12-10 Salisbury 8- 8 10-12 Thomasville 7- 9 11-12 Lexington 5-11 11-12 West Rowan 5-11 8-15 Trinity _0-16 3-19 GIRLS Conf.Overall W-L W-L North Davidson , 13- 3 16- 5 Thomasville 12- 4 18- 5 West RoVvan 11- 5 14- 9 Lexington ^ 8' 8 10-12 Asheboro 7- 9 10-10 North Rowan ,6-10 7-15 Davie County 8-10 6-16 Trinity 5-11 6-16 Salisbury 4-12 5-18 SOUTH PIEDMONT CONFERENCE BOYS Conf. Overall W-L W-L Central Cabarrus 13- 3 17- 4 NW Cabarrus 12- 4 17- 5 Anson County 11- 5 14- 9. South Rowan-10- 6 15- 7 East Rowan 8- a 11-12 Concord 6-10 11-.12 Sun Valley 6-10 9-13 Kannapolis 4-12 4-16 Monroe 2-14 3-19 GIRLS .Conf.Overall W-L W-L Kannapolis East Rowan South Rowan Concord Monroe*. Sun Valley Central Cabarrus NW Cabarrus Anson County 16-0 11- S to- 6 9- 7 ' 8- fi 6-10 6-10 5-11 - 1-15 19- 1 16- 6 16- 6 n- 8 tt-to 9-14 7-11 6-11 2-18 Pony Club Has Meeting In Advance The Sedgefield-Salem Pony Club, an organization of young people from Piedmont North Carolina interested in English riding and proper horse care and training, met for their regular January meeting at Stone Crop Farm, Advance, N.C. on January 27. A business meeting was conducted and the movie “ Modern Jumping Training" was shown. The next meeting of the Sedgefield-Salem Ponv Club will be February 24, at the North Carolina Equestrian Clenter, Winston-Salem. Interested persons should contact Robert E. Price, Jr., Route 2, Mocksville. N.C..2702B, (998-3921) for more details. It has been estimated that about 2.5 billion copies of the Bible have been sold in the world since 1816. AGC INSIDE STUFF DickDeVenzio An Autographed Photo of Mugsy Bogues No, I’m not partial to Wake Forest. But it’s true that I have admired Carl Tacy’s effort this year. I’m fascinated by Mugsy Bogues-like everyone-and I go to all the Wake games. There are good reasons. Winston is the ACC city closest to my home, I get picked up in a leisure vfan, I sit there, watch TV on the way, and my best friend has season tickets mid-court, front row, so I don’t even have to apply for a press pass. Why do I explain all this? To get to the call I got this week-from John Justice, the Sports Information Director at Wake Forest. When he identified himself, I awaited some words like, "Dick, I know you went with the Wake team to the NIT two years ago, and I know you went to see them in St. Louis in the NCAA’s last year, but you better be careful, you’re writing too many good things about Wake." I figured he’d add something like "Thanks a lot though, we really do appreciate it.” Is that what you think he said? No, you’re wrong. He called to voice his concern over an advertisement I wrote for a car dealer below one of my columns. It was that same -concerned-voice-of-scolding- authority that I remember well from the time I got called into the principal’s office in kindergarten for shooting a cap gun in the boy's bathroom. The ad, which I admitted writing, said that anyone who bought a car from this particular car dealer would be given an autograph^ ^oto of Mugsy Bogues. John Justice, the SID, called this "exploitation," and he said it was against NCAA rules and he wanted to know what was going on. I have to admit, garbage like that always catches me oft guard. But I did what is always wise, I apologized and said it would not happen again. .. , He asked if I had permission from Mugsy to give away his pcutre. Permission? To give away an autographed photo? Aren't those a dime a dozen like they used to be? I said, “ Hey, look. I’m sorry. I just did it to grab some attention." How could THAT possibly be against any NCAA rule? Can any Duke graduate-or ANYONE- actually get a star player from another team in trouble with the NCAA just by jotting down something like “Get an autographed photo??’’ I tol d Mr. Justice I just figured if anyone really did buy a car and request a photo of Mugsy, I would merely ask Mugsy for one at the next game, and I added, "and if he said no. I’d just tell the guy I couldn't get it, and I’d get the guy something else." “ So then he’s mad at Mugsy," Justice says. “You're putting the kid in a no-win situation." A no-win'situation? That got me out of my apologetic attidue. "No I'm not," I said, “ all Mugsy would have to do is sign a photo for me, I ttDuld dve ti lo tlie fan, and everyone would be happier than nine larks." •. What's the big deal? The point of it all is PARANOIA. The climate surrounding college sports gets ugly these days at the drop of a ban­ dana. Everyone is so uptight. I told Mr. Justice I was sorry to have caused any concern but that, when I played, I gave out hundreds of autographed photos. They were provided for all the players, and it was a thorough joy to be asked for one. I wrote back to everyone who ever sent me a fan letter. A girl named Faye Thomas and I corresponded regularly for four years even though I never saw her during my entire college career. What are they doing at Wake in the sports information office- embroidering their photos in gold? C^n you imagine anyone buying a car just to get a photo of Mugsy Bogues? “ I thought it just took a stamp,’ ’ I told Justice. But anyway, so much for that. To set the record straight, you can NOT get a photo of Mugsy Borues by buying a new car. You might try writing John Justice though, and simply ask for an autographed photo-and include a notarized promise that the photo will not be included in any deal should you decide to sell your car. You can write Mr. Justice at the Sports Information Office, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109. You won’t even be breaking one of those things that LSU Coach Dale Brown recently called "foolish and insane"-an NCAA rule. Foster-Rauch Drvg Company WiLKESBORO STREET MOCKSVILLE, NC PHONE; 634-2141 ' 4 4B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21,1985 District Court Food Industry Backs Easter Seals The food Industry In Carolina, including most North The following cases were disposed of during the February 12 session of Davie County District Court with ipos iion the honorable Lester P. Marlin, presiding Betty - judge. Ruth Overton, expired registration plate, costs. ; Rigdon Gary Brown, expired / license plate, costs. ; • Betty Ruth Overton, improper ‘ .equipment, costs. ; Randy Lee Hanes, expired in- : spection, costs. , : Jimmy Batson Smith, driving 70 ;mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Donald Ray Anthony, failure to comply with provisions of special ; permit, costs. ,7 Caleb Frost, .Jr., driving 68 mph in :' a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Kenneth Darrell Noland, Jr., driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. ■ Timmy Dewayne Payne, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. : David James Estes, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Jo Ellen Dressier, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Robert William Hayden, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. : Cynda Ciaridge Tardell, expired inspection, costs. Jane Pope Smith, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Norman Theodore Keener, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Danny Tyronne White, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Hiawatha Waiiter, Jr., safe movement violation, costs. : Angela Lee Anderson, safe movement violation, costs. : Rodney Andrew Cornatzer, safe movement violation, costs. : Lawrence Wayne Jacltson, ex­ ceeding posted speed, costs. James Russell McBride, traveling wrong way on one-way street, costs. Carl Richard Reeves, Jr., driving on wrong side of road, costs. Jill Blehar Orcutt, driving 79 mph in a 55 mph zone, $35 and costs. Kenneth Lee; Kiser, failure to comply with provisions of special permit, costs. Richard Larry Morgan, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, improper passing, $10 and costs. James Ray Allen, e.xpired in­ spection, costs. Harlan L. Jones, driving 68 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. JoAnne Martin, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Amit L. Glenn, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Kenneth E. Glenn, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Billy Renegar, worthless check, make restitution and pay costs. Darrell Woodrow Barker, shooting into occupied dwelling, dismissed. Christopher Wayne Snider, reckless driving, $25 and costs. Michael Joseph Lewis, exceeding posted speed, costs. Kimberly Diann Brown, reckless driving, costs. Michael Keith James, improper equipment, costs. Gary Allen Finley, carrying a concealed weapon, dismissed. James Curry Long, failure to reduce speed to avoid an accident, costs. Mark Nathaniel Doby, failure to give proper turn signal, prayer for judgment continued on costs. . Timothy , Wayne Simmons, operating motor vehicle while license revoked, $200 and costs. Jimmy Arnold, abandonment and nonsupport, prayer for judgment on condition defendant pay $30 per week. : Darrell D. Baker, misdemeanor breaking, entering and larceny, making harassing telephone calls, sentenced to 6 months, sentence stayed as long as defendant does not call, go about premises, or harass or threaten prosecuting witness, pay . $121 and costs. John Eric Whitehead, giving false fire alarms (4 counts), sentenced to 6 months, suspended for 2 years, pay $100 and costs, perform 72 hours community service work. Deborah Lee Freedle, drunk and disruptive, prayer for judgment on condition attend mental health clinic. Peggy Rhoades Grose, unsafe movement, prayer for judgment continued. Robert Frank Whaley, exceeding safe speed, costs. Reginald David Carson, DWl, driving without a license, sentenced to 60 days, suspended for one year, pay $100 and costs, perform 24 hours community service work, surrender driver’s license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. Brenda Smith Rivers, improper equipment, costs. Ricky Cleveland, larceny, sen­ tenced to 6 months, suspended for 2 years, pay costs. Gary Ray Creason, DWl, sen­ tenced to 120 days, suspended for one year, pay a fine of $200 and costs, perform 48 hours community service work, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. RoMrt Lee Hosch, sentenced to one year, suspended for one year, 7 days to be served active, pay a fine of $400 and costs, surrender driver’s license, obtain substance abuse assessment, participate in any treatment recommended by assessing agency. Joe Calvin Hellard, DWl, sen­ tenced to 60 days, suspended for one year, pay a fine of $100 and costs, perform 24 hours community ser­ vice work, surrender driver’s license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for. said school. Eva Lewis Payne, DWl, sen­ tenced to 2 years, suspended for 3 years, serve 14 days active, pay a fine of $500 and costs, obtain sub­ stance abuse assessment, par­ ticipate in any treatment program recommended. Darrell Woodrow Barker, DWl, sentenced to 6 months, suspended for one year, 7 days to be served active, pay a fine of $400 and costs, not operate motor vehicle on high­ ways of N.C., surrender driver’s license, obtain substance abuse assessment, participate in any treatment recommended. Terry Lawrence While, DWl, sentenced to 6 months, suspended for one year, pay a fine of $300 and costs, perform 72 hours community service work, surrender driver’s license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. ------ super­ markets, will kick off a “ Baclt a Fighter” program this week, which could mean thousands of dollars for the North Carolina Easter Seal Society, provider of direct services to the physically disabled. Initiated by Atlas Marketing food broker, the program to help Easter Seals has the enthusiastic 12 major grocery outlets ani nufacf Catawba Nuclear Station, located near Rock Hill, S.C., has two 1,145-megawatt reactors. Unit 1 on the left, is scheduled for full-power operation this spring. Duke Power Files For 19.6 % Rate Increase Duke Power Co. last week filed a request with the North Carolina Utilities Commission to increase electric revenues by $340 million, or approximately 19.6 percent. In the full amount of the increase is granted, the cost of electricity for a typical North Carolina residential customer using 1,000 kilowatt-hours will increase from $66.10 to $79.15, excluding sales tax. ■ Approximately 80 percent of the request covers costs associated with Unit 1 of the Catawba Nuclear Station, William H. Grigg,- executive vice president-finance and administration, said. The reactor, located near Rock Hill S.C., began producing elec­ tricity last month and is expected to read) full power operation this spring, Grigg said. ‘/The Catawba unit was con­ structed at a lower cost than any other comparable U.S. nuclear unit to be completed this year,” Grigg said. “ As a result, Catawba will play a large role in keeping our rates lower than the national average for the rest of the century.” The remaining 20 percent of the request includes costs' associated with increased operating expenses and the cost of capital. “ The commission’s final order is not expected until mid-September,” Grigg said. “ Customers’ bills will not be affected until October 1985.” fiSfM dmanufacturers. From February 28 through March 29, grocers will feature certain products at special prices. A portion of the purchase price will be given to Easter Seals. Contributing products can be identified by-the Easter Seal Lily logo near the product display and in weekly grocers’ ads. These grocers are participating in the “ Back a Fighter” program for Easter Seals; A & P, Associated Grocers, Colonial-Big Star, Family Mart, Food Lion, Galaxy, Karris Teeter-Food World, Kroger Sav-On, Lowes, Merchants Distributors, Inc., Thomas & Howard and Winn Dixie. Spearheading the planning and coordinating the Easter Seal benefit are Gynn Eller, President and Don Sellars, Account Executive of Atlas Marketing. Food manufacturers participaing include; Bordon Foods; Cadillac Pet Foods, Inc.; Creamette Co.; d- Con; El Charrito; Gagliardi Foods; Golden Valley Foods; Hartz Mountain Corporation; In­ ternational Multifobds; Jeno’s; Libby, McNeill, & Libby; Ocean Spray Cranberries, Inc.; Salulo; Sanwa Foods; Stinson Canning; Tropic Isle; Uncle Ben’s Inc.; and United Foods. Proceeds from the promotion will be used for Easter Seal programs for handicapped North Carolinians ot all ages, all year round including, equipment provision, physical therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, stroke club net­ work, support groups, camping, adapted swim programs, respite, care, telephone reassurance,, and public health education. Easter Seals is ' the oldest and largest voluntary health agency providing direct services to people with disabilities in the world. For more information call Easter Seats at 1-800-722-06S2. . Cooleemee Senior Citizens Meet The Cooleemee Senior citizens met Monday, February 11, 1985, for their regular monthly meeting at the First Baptist Church, with thirty members and one visitor attending. The assistant chaplain, Noah Plott gave the devotions; and read from the Book of Ruth. He talked of love and devotion, and said, “ that we should love everyone.” During business, it was decided that the March 11 meeting will be lunch at the K & W Restaurant in Winston-Salem, and then a shopping trip to Hamrick’s there. The next meeting Is scheduled for Monday, February 25. Don’t Cut Revenue Sharing, Counties Tell Federal Government Faced with proposed elimination of general revenue sharing, the National Association of Counties called on Congress and the Reagan Administration to maintain full funding for this vital program. The Association also called for a freeze in federal spending, except for programs that serve the needy, and released the results of a nationwide survey on how county governments use revenue sharing funds. “ General revenue sharing is a unique program,” said Earl M. Baker, chairman of the Board of County Commissioners of Chester County, Pa., at an Association press conference. Baker, who also chairs the Association’s policy-m aking committee on taxation and finance, added; “ It is the keystone of the new federalism. It has, since its inception, had a bipartisan appeal:” General revenue sharing sends nearly $4.6 billion annually ' to counties and other local govern­ ments across the United States. Some $1.9 billion of this total goes to counties, where it is spent to meet a variety of needs, from road repairs to social services, from law en­ forcement to health care for the poor. It Is the only federal money counties receive that can be spent as a local government chooses. In his opening remarks, Matthew B. Coffey, executive director of the Association, told the reporters that county officials around the country support efforts to trim the federal deficit. But he added that many of the proposed cuts in domestic spending could have serious effects on county government. The Association, he said, calls for a freeze in federal spending, as opposed to cuts in specific programs. However, federal fun­ ding for means-tested entitlement programs-such as Medicaid, food stamps and other services for the poor, the disadvantaged or the elderly-should be exempt from the funding freeze. The exemption would enable local governments to take care of increasing numbers of clients for these programs. If cuts in the federal budget are still necessary after a freeze, revenue sharing is the highest priority for counties. An Association survey of counties across the country found that revenue sharing is a vital portion of budgets and that counties would have to reduce services or raise taxes or both if the federal program were discontinued. Other top county priorities are; Medicaid, community development, block grants, rural programs and mass transit. Speaking on proposed cuts in Medicaid was Jim Rout, chairman of the Shelby County, Tenn., Board of Commissioners and chairman of the Association’s subcommittee on health care cost containment. “ Counties spend over $25 billion on health care,” Rout said, much of it in services to the ^or. “ It’s the fastest growing portion of county budgets.” Cuts in federal health care spending would merely shift the cost of providing services to counties, jeopardizing other county services or forcing local tax hikes. “ The trickle-down effect takes place,” Rout said, “ and when it gets down to us, there’s no place to trickle. The buck stops with us.” Senator Paul S. Smith, (R- Davle, Davidson) will be among N.C. legislators representing the state at the Leader-To- Leader program February 20-22 in Washington, D.C. During the three day meeting, legislative leaders will meet with President Ronald Reagan to discuss the federal FY 88 budget, federal tax reform, highway funds and other Icey issues. During the meeting, legislators will also meet with John Block, secretary of the U.S. Dept, of Agriculture; Sen. Jesse Helms. Senate Agriculture Committee, Don Wilkenson, governor Farm Credit System; Robert Dole, Senate Majority Leader and Lee Verstandig, assistant to the President for intergovernmen­ tal atlalrs. Numerous receptions and luncheons are planned for legislators attending the Leader-To-Leader program. Astro Dome in Houston is kept at a constant 74 degrees F. by an air-conditioning system. If on a humid day this system were turned off and warm air were allowed to enter, it would rain in the stadium. ‘Thrifti'^Mart J M o r a ' l ^ n h i s.i Savings ^ TFrom Our I Community Volunteers Offer Tax Assistance Free assistance with the preparation of income tax returns is olfered by community volunteers in almost half of North Carolina’s lOO counties, ranging from Cherokee in the west to Perquimans in the east, the Internal Revenue Service has announced. The IRS sponsors community, church, college and civic groups and trains the volunteers In the preparation of simple 1040, 1040A and 1040 EZ returns. In most cases, an appointment is not necessary taxpayers are assisted on a flrst- come-first-served basis. The locations, dates and times of in­ dividual sites can be obtained by calling the IRS toll-free at 1-800-424- 1040. Taxpayers needing this free assistance should bring a copy of last year’s tax return, W-2 forms and other documents necessary for the preparation of this year’s return, the IRS said. The volunteers will also review taxpayer-prepared returns, answer questions and provide forms if the taxpayer did not receive a forms package in the mail. Where more Americans find a bigger reftmd HftR BLOCK- Found Mabel and Howard Hajek $2447! What can we find for you? 310 Lexington Rd. Cooleemee Shopping Center Mocksville. N t lur We can’t promise everyone this, but In a recent survey of customers who got refunds, 3 out of 4 believe they got bigger refunds than If they did tnclr own taxes. 3 out of 41 Cooleemee, NC 704-284-2724 O p e n i M o n d iy th ru F r id iy ____■ i^O A.M . • I P.M. 2 P.M. • 5s30 P.M. S a tu rd iy ii3 0 A.M . • I P.M. M M tir C«rd and V ln accepUd it moH «tt» locillont._________ 704-634-3203 Opent Monday thru Friday • <30 A.M . >8 P.M. Saturday •i30 A.M . * 5 P.M. Health Watch Urinary Tract Infections Some diseases affect one sex more than the other. The North Carolina Medical Society says urinary tract infection is one example. Urinary tract infection is common among women, but it is almost unknown among young men. Bacteria can enter a woman’s • urinary system more easily than a man’s. Once there; the bacteria need to travel only a short distance to reach the pain-sensitive bladder. The bladder is the organ where urine collects before it is flushed out of the body. When infected, the bladder walls can become painfully inflamed. The tubes that lead to and from it can also become inflamed, and in severe cases, even the kid­ neys may be affected., Symptoms of urinary tract in­ fection may include abnormally frequent urges to urinate or a burning sensation during or after urinating. Someone who suspects that they have a urinary tract in­ fection should see a physician promptly. Medical treatment for urinary tract infections is a must. Here are a few tips from the North Carolina Medical Society on avoiding urinary tract infections. Urinate as soon as you I'cel the need; don't wait. Drink plenty of water. Always wipe from the front to the back after you’ve used the bathroom. Drawn Butter Drawn butter is simply melted butter. Classic Cooked Ham German Bologna Or Pickle LoaC ---------- presn BaKea QoiaenNacho Chips .. 12 oz. 9 9 Dinner Rolls.. New Yorker Yellow or White t Baked Cheese ^American Cheete. Crumb Calces.. 16 OZ. Fresh Baked Butter Split Top a16 OZ. Fresh Baked Butter Split T o p * ^ , White Bread..... .o 9 i 6 Oz. Fresh Baked ^ Wheat Bread........7 9 Frmsh Madm Pizzas I 8 OZ. ALL VARIETIES PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY FEB. 23.1985 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985-5B Home Accessibility Is Major Problem For Those With Arthritis Surry, Yadkin Home. For most of us it is tlie one place we can escape our problems, relax and be completely com­ fortable. But for the disable, home can be just another set of barriers that rob them of independence, according to the Arthritis Foun­ dation. "For many of the 36 million Americans with arthritis, stairs restrict movement, cabinets are out of reach and bathrooms pose a maze of obstacles,” said Mrs. Barbara Carley, a volunteer with the North Patrick Promoted To District 7 Wildlife Captain Lieutenant Robert Patrick of Stanfiald was recently promoted to the rank of Captain of Wildlife District 7, reports officials of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Com­ mission. In his new position, Cap­ tain Patrick will supervise all wildlife enforcement activities in Alexander, Alleghany, Ashe, Davie, Forsyth, Iredell, Stokes, Watauga, Wilkes and counties. Patrick previously served as safety lieutenant in Wildlife District 6, which encompasses the south central Piedmont, where he was responsible for hunter boating safely, youth and outdoor ethics programs. He began his career with theWiidiife Commission in 1969. “We’re sure that Captain Robert Patrick will do an excellent job in his new position,” said Colonel Winfield Rhyne, chief of the Division of Enforcement of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission. “He is a fine officer, and has many years of field experience.” Local Students Are On Dean’s List At Gardner-Webb The dean’s list for the Gardner- Webb College 1984 fall semester has been announced. Included on the list are 129 students from throughout North Carolina as well as several out-of-state students. To be eligible for this academic honor, students enrolled for the minimum of 12 semester hours and fewer than 15 semester hours must have a 4.0 quality point ratio. Students enrolled for 15 hours or more must have a 3.7 or better quality point ratio with no grade below C. Gardner-Webb is a liberal arts college affiliated with the Baptist State Convention of N.C., offering associate, bachelor and m aster’s degrees. The college is noted for its independence of federal funding. Local students named to dean^s list are: Cindy Darlene Speer, daughter of .Mr. and Mrs. John Speer of Rt. 6, Mocksville. Judy Adams White of Rt. 8, Mocksville. Hugh Mitchell Frost, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rufus Frost, Rt. 1, Mocksville. Christian Singles To Meet Saturday Night The Salisbury Christian Singles Fellowship Club will meet Saturday February 23rd at the Western Sirloin Family Steakhouse, 1005 East Innes St. Salisbury (Hwy 52 and 1-85). It’s a time for food, fun, and Christian fellowship for all singles. This month's program will feature Miss Eva Whittington of Concord with a message and testimony. Dinner at 6:30 p.m., program at 7:30 p.m. Contact Ernie Smith at 636-5901 or 636-7555 if you have questions. Help With Tax Returns Available For Elderly North Carolina taxpayers 60 ears of age or older can have their 'ederal and state income tax returns prepared free of charge, the Internal Revenue Service says. Through a program called Tax Counseling for the Elderly (TCE), ■ by the Internal Revenue rsons ___ 1040- r., ai.u with such schedules as A and B, R and RP, and 1040-ES estimated tax. Assistance sites are set up in communities throughout the state. Individuals who need help should bring their 1984 tax package they received in the mail, their wage and earnings statements (W-2s); itatements for recipients of periodic annuities, pensions retirement pay or IRA payments; interest on dividends statements; and other relevant information on income and expenses. Recipients of Social Security benefits in 1984 should also bring in the 1099 form received from the Social Security Ad­ ministration as benefits could be partially taxable for 1984, the IRS said. Taxpayers should call the IRS toll-free number 1-800-424-1040 for information concerning the TCE site nearest them. Freezing Foods Foods that do not freeze well include: bananas, cream fillings and puddings, custards, gelatin dishes, hard-cooked eggs and cooked potatoes. Carolina Chapter of the Arthritis Foundation. “Their house is not truely hom e-it’s a hostile en­ vironment.” With a few simple' and inex­ pensive modifications, however, people with disabilities, can be more self-sufficient at home. She offered the following suggestions: Doors -Doors are a problem if you are in a wheelchair or your hands are crippled. To open doors more easily replace present hinges with fold- back hinges which allow a door to swing flush with the hinge side of the jamb. Or use double-action hinges to allow a door to be pushed open from either direction. -If you have difficulty grasping doorknobs, you can purchase rubber or metal levers to slip over conventional knobs. For a more permanent solution, replace knobs with lever handles.- Kitchen "M any special devices are available to simplify chores in the kitchen, including two-handled cookware, special jar openers and storage aids such as lazy susans. -Pull out shelves or lap boards at several work stations can provide convenient work space if you are in a wheelchair or if you cannot stand for long periods of time. Bathroom -If the existing toilet is too low, a' rais^ toilet seat can help. They are available with armrest units. -Towel bars are not designed to support a person's weight, so do not lean on them. Install safety grab bars directly into the tile or wall. -Special bath seats allow you to set comfortably in the tub, and to enter it more safely. -Organize all bathing and grooming items close at hand with a special bath shelf or caddie. -Many bathrooms are not large enough to accomm odate a wheelchair. You may have to transfer' from the wheelchair to a rolling chair at the bathroom door. Grab bars can be installed on the wall to help you propel yourself. Furniture “ Perhaps the easiest part of a home to make accessible is your furniture. Chairs, sofas and beds which are too low can be elevated simply by placing wooden blocks under each furniture leg. "Hard foam rubber cushions can be used to build up chair seats to a comfortable height. -Rolling carts can be built or purchased to help you move items with case.“If you have a disability such as arthritis, you may want to ask your physician to arrange for an oc­ cupational therapist to visit your home and give you specific suggestions for adapting it to your particular needs,” said Carley. “The Arthritis Foundation’s patient groups are another way to find out how others have adapted their lives.” For further information the Ar­ thritis Foundation also has available a special "Self-Help Manual,” at a cost of $3.00, which contains hundreds of suggestions that make everyday tasks' easier. This publication, along with other free-of-charge pamphlets, may be obtained by writing to the Arthritis Foundation, Dept. A, P.O. Box 2505, Durham, N.C. 27705. Concludes Mrs. Carley, “ Answers are available, so let your house be a home-not a barrier.” Natural Santorini “ Silk” Cosmetic And Bath Sponges MERLE NORMAN Mocksville N.C. 634-3222 ^T hrifti^art PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY FEB 23.1985 OUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED NONE SOLD TO DEALERS We Treat You Special! LB.< L B . Fresh Fryer Leg Quarters c5 LB. OR MORE PACKAGE LB. Whole or Shank Portion Smoked Ham LB. m k 5 0 « Idaho Potatoes U.S. NO. 1 GENUINE IS Lb. Bag USDA Choice Boneless TopRound Steak .. ib * 1 ’ ’ Butt Portion M O CSmoked Ham.. ib Center Slices Smoked Ham.. ib.* Fresti ■Ground Chuck Lb.*X*^ USDA Choice Boneless ^ ^Cube Steak.... 16 Oz. Jamestown Mild or HotSausage............ O V 16 Oz. Valteydate Mild or Hot 6 ^ X 9 Sausage............. X 12 Oz. Valleydale SlicedBaconJL 8 Oz. Celebrity Imported • Sliced Ham........ 12 Oz. Lykes Reg. Or BeetBologna......... X 15 Oz. Mrs. Paul’s Crisp & Crunchy ^ ^ a a Fish Fillets...... . B.7S Oz. Mrs. Paul's Light Batter ^ ^ .Fish Sticks........ , USDAL ICHOICEJ I Frank* Bonmlmss Top Round Roast USDA CHOICE LB. toneless London Broil f r e s h USDA CHOICE LB. SJ99 Swift Premium Franks c12 0Z . PACKAGE FloridaPascal Celery 30 CT. SIZE39* WashingtonExtraFancy 138C(.SIzeRedOrQotdsn ^Delicious Apples.. EachXS'’ Florida Jumbo 27 Ct. Size Red O r W hite ^ A A oGirapeCruit..........2/88 California Seedless 113 Ct. SizeNavel Oranges......6/^8^ California 24 Ct. SizeHead Lettuce.... • • Head^^CP California 18 Ct. SizeFresh Broccoli.... sunch88'^ ruwowbi. io<•S8«S?S •I** HyTop Medium Eggs GRADE 'A' DOZEN Gallon Flavorich Milk LOWFAT 49 PetIce Cream ’/2 GAL. ALL FLAVORS SJ59 From Our Dairy Cast,**Froxon Food Favorites. FUIV-O.IIICH* ^CUTOMA 8 Oz. Pillsbury Crescent Rolls . ............. le O z .K ra tt Squeeze Parkay............. aO z.S ealtestSour Cream................... 1 6 0 z . 'Seaitest Sour Cream .... 3 Lb. Mrs. Filbert's Family Spread. Pint FlavorichFlavorich Half Half 2 Liter Pepsi OR DIET PEPSI, MT, DEW, DIET PEPSI FREE, l im it 2 PLEASE Van Camps Pork & Beans 1 6 0 Z Sandwich Bread 1 LB LOWES mCnistSlidlsJ 16 0z.Hanover Cut O kra...........Z / * l 12 Oz. Harrison / f i *Sausage Patties................Z/*X 9 9 * 7.2 Oz. Gold Valley Butter Popcorn ... 2 Ct Pet RitzPieSliells .................. 0^9 12 Oz Snow CropFive A liv e .........................7 9 12 Oz W holesun A Orange Juice......................O V 6B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985 Davie County School Lunch Menu llie Davie County School Lunch menu for the week of February 25- March I, 1985 is as follows: GRADES K-6 Monday, Feb. 25 Breakfast Cereal or Cheese toast Grape juice Milk Lunch Cheeseburger w-onions or Chicken nuggets w-sauce Lettuce & tomato Limas French fries Peaches Itoll Milk Tuesday, Feb. 26 Breukfusl Cereal or Williamsburg muffin Applesauce Milk Lunch Manager’s choice Wednesday, Feb. 27 Breakfast Cereal or Cinnamon bun Orange smiles Milk Lunch Hot dog w-roll, chili, onions, or Chicken noodle soup w-crackers w- peanut butter & jelly sandwich Cole slaw Mixed fruit Fried okra Buttered corn Milk Thursday, Feb. 28 Breakfast Cereal or Waffle w-cherries & whipped top- P'neOrange juice Milk Lunch Turkey rider w-ltalian dressing or mustard or mayonnaise or Spaghetti Tossed salad Orange Broccoli W aldorf salad French bread Milk Friday, March 1 Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuit Apple juice Milk Lunch Pizza or Roast beef sandwich Creamed potatoes Green beans Crowder peas Pears w-cheese Biscuit Milk G RAD ES 7-12 Monday, Feb. 25 Breakfast Cereal or Cheese toast Grape juice Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad Fruit French iries Milk Lunch Combo sandwich or Chicken nuggets w-sauce Lettuce & tomato Lim as Potato salad Peaches Roll Milk Tuesday, Feb. 2G Breakfast Cereal or W illiam sburg muffin Applesauce Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad Fruit French fries Milk Lunch M anager’s choice Wednesday, Feb. 27 Breakfast Cereal or Cinnamon bun Orange smiles Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad Fruit French fries Milk Lunch Hot dog w-roll, chili, onion, or Chicken noodle soup w-crackers w- peanut butter & jelly sandwich Cole slaw Mixed fruit Fried okra Buttered corn Milk Tliursday, Feb. 28 Breakfast Cereal or W aflle w-cherries & whipped top- P'"e . .Orange juice Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad Fruit French fries Milk Lunch Turkey rider w-Italian dressing or mustard or mayonnaise or Spaghetti Tossed salad Orange ‘ Broccoli Waldorf salad French bread Milk Friday, March 1 Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuit Apple juice Sandwich Pizza or Hambruger Cole slaw Tossed salad Fruit French fries Milk Lunch Country style steak nr Roast beef sandwich Creamed potatoes Green beans Crowder peas Pear w-cheese Biscuit Milk Compassionate Friends To l\Aeet Thursday The Yadkin Valley Chapter of The Compassionate Friends will hold their regular monthly meeting Thursday, Feb. 28, 7:30 p.m. at the Rotary Hut in Mocksville. Calvin Ijames, chapter leader, will give a report on the district meeting of the Funeral Home Directors in Salisbury where he was the featured speaker. A short program on personal safety will also be presented by Deputy Ruth Richardson of the Davie County Sheriff’s Dept. The Compassionate Friends is a self-help group for parents who have lost children. All interested persons are invited to attend. Bed Cabbage Red cabbage must be cooked with something acid (apples, red wine, vinegar) to retain the color. Rev. Grover C. Graham Dies 1MS8 722-6101 722-6106 ^ , j £ 2951 Reynolda Rd. ,lZb TSarS Of oefVICe SERVICE HAL DIRECilRECTORS 766-4714 NATIONAL SELECTED MORTICIANS MIddlebrook Drive Clemmons < s CREM ATORY SERVICEI246-2366 Clemmons, N. C, i’- - . . . O. . , . MEMBER BY INVITATION 405 S. Main St. Lexington '4 L o c a tio n s Davie County Phone Number 998-3428 (Dear Editor: The Kev. Grover Graham spent some of his most effective years at Farmington in Davie County. He was a remarkable and memorable personality. I hope you may be able to use the following item. Hundreds of older residents will recall him vividly. Sincerely, John A. Duvall Pastor, Harrison United Methodist Church Pineville, N.C.) Last week’s North Carolina Christian Advocate brought news of the death of the Rev. Grover Cleveland Graham, beloved retired United Methodist minister. At age 97, he was the oldest member of the Western North Carolina Con­ ference. I knew him well. He lived a long and valuable life, and more than any other I’ve known, he exemplified the Wesleyan experience of the warmed heart, vital piety, evangelical zeal, and a keen social consciousness. Grover Graham grew to maturity at Potato Creek, Virginia, where his parents were pioneer residents and stalwart citizens. His father was a H.. .the tribulations of tax time! Don't let them take their toll. If you find yourself in a financial pinch, it's time to see us. Our loans are designed to help wage earners like yourself who find themselves caught unexpectedly with a large debt to the government. It's the easy way to take care of your worries at this rough time of year. Come talk to us today. ^_______________ Fleet Financenter llllYadkinville Rd. Willow Oak Shopping Centre' Mocksville, N.C. Phone:634-3596 merchant. Once 1 went with him, walking a winding trail, to stand for some reverent moments before the decaying ruins of his boyliood home which included the building where his father operated his general store. We quenched our thirst from tlie refreshing coolness of the old spring and we prayed together at the altar of the nearby Potato Creek United Methodist Church. I remember he stood afterwards in the pulpit and sang the "Doxology” in his characteristically beautiful mellow tenor voice. He spoke 'touchingly that day of beginnings; of his own profession of faith; of early and positive influences on his life; and he lingered lovingly at the graves of loved ones in the historic cemetery across the way. We kept holy silence for a time. Precious and tender memories! During World War I, Mr. Graham was in Europe on assignment where he met and courted Olive, an English girl, whom he soon made his bride. A remarkable and memorable team they were-he from Potato Creek and she from London-well-matched, dedicated home builders; extraordinary parents to a fine family; and spiritual leaders in a dozen far-flung Methodist appointmentS“ Helton, Clemmons-Hanes, Watauga, Marion Mills, Lewisville, Jonesville, Harmony, Statesville Circuit, Coleridge, Farmington, Kona, and Spruce Pine. Olive Graham ran the house in her wholesome and inimitable fashion, while Grover ranged ever-outward seeking all those wtio had wandered "away from the tender Shepherd’s care.” The imprisoned, the lonely, the down and out, the poor, the outcast, the troubled, the lost, and lots of other folks as well-they were all his business, and in such work he excelled as few others have. For years Grover Graham was an effective pamphleteer. He wrote and handed out printed tracts on many subjects. Newspapers frequently carried his letters and his sermons; editors over a wide area respected the power of his pen. He hated liquor like he hated sin, so use and abuse of alcohol were of- times topics of his editorial venom. He was regularly ahead of his time. Fully thirty years before integration he was boldly proclaiming an inclusive church and racial equality. A cut of the I7B4 ordination of Bishop Asbury hung on his study wall, and he often pointed out the presence of black preachers in that sacred service. In I'JIiO, the Upper Boom carried one of his devotionals. Mentioning .some words that stand out in the scriptures, he wrote, “ The word ■come’ looms large in Holy Writ- 'come' and see, 'come' unto me, wliosoever will may 'come,’ I will ‘come’ again." "Come home," must have held a welcome ring for Grover Graham. After nearly a century of labor, gentle in his surrendered life; gracious of manner; neat in py- sonal attire; everything on the altar, there was winsome l>eauty about his consecration. Thousands are better persons because of liim. Now, heaven holds another at­ traction since he is tliere; and Methodism in Western North Carolina has lost one of her most valiant soldiers of the Cross. John A. Duvall United Methodist Minister Pineville, N.C. WHATYOURE LOOKING FOR IN HOUR HRST VCR Records one chanriel while you watch another! 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Terms To Fit Any Budget. IS^CAROLIMA TIRE CO. Retail Division of Brad Ragan, Inc- Phone; 634-6115962 Yadkinviiie Road Len Barrier, Manager STORE HOURS 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Sat. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985-71) The Poppy Proves Itself As Force For Good And Evil Grown legally, it provides coolting oil and tasty seeds, helps condition the soil for growing food crops, and is the source of the modern world’s standard against which all pain medicines are measured. Grown illegally, it is a source of misery, the plant whose milky, alkaloid-rich sap becomes, with chemical processing, a shortcut to euphoria but, long-term, a downhill road to addiction, horror, crime, and death. It is the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, a pretty little flower whose petals may be white or red or mauve or purple, but which is "unique in its profound and far- rcacliing effects on humanity, both good and evil.” So writes Peter T. White in the February National Geographic after a globe-circling study of the poppy in which he witnessed those effects everywhere. White's 23-country investigation led him: -To the harvest of illicit poppy fields in Pakistan’s mountainous border region near Afghanistan, where opium was banned in 1979 but continues to be grown. -To legal poppy plots in India, where the plant is grown to produce opium for export-much of it to the United States, where phar­ maceutical factories turn it into codeine (the prime ingredient in the now most widely prescribed cough syrups and pain killers). “ To aiTo an addict-treatment center in Iran, where treatment consists of heavy doses of revolutionary rhetoric and the threat of jail for failure. -To Australia, where growing poppies is a high-technology process. -T o Mexico, where U.S. helicopters and Mexican pilots and navigators are waging an incessant battle to destroy illicit poppy fields with herbicide spray. -To a London hospice, where morphine, the poppy’s most beneficial product, is used to provide as full and pain-free a life as possible for the terminally ill. -T o a Washington, D.C., “ shooting gallery,” where addicts can inject themselves with the poppy's most ill-used product, heroin, as soon as they buy it. The effects of the opium |»ppy have been known for millennia. A Tondon museum contains ceramic jugs shaped like poppy capsules that come from Cyprus and dale to 1500 B.C.; presumably they held dissolved opium on its way to Egypt. Scholars speculate that a potion described in the “ Odyssey,” mixed by Helen of Troy, and the “ vinegar mingled with gall” offered to Christ on the Cross t)oth con­ tained opium. Nature's chemistry gives the opium poppy its power for good or Mosses N.C. Botanical Garden For the braver, more encrgetic, souls who like a stroll in the winter woods or on the N.C. Botanical Garden trails on a sunny day, the bright green patches of moss on the rocks and logs are a rewarding sight. Amid the generally brown un­ derbrush, the mosses-like all green plants-are taking carbon dioxide from the air, water from the soil and using the chlorophyll in the plant and the sunlight overhead, producing carbohydrates, oxygen and energy. While the process of photosynthesis is always remarkable, it seems especially so in the cold, when many other plants have quit for the winter. Staff members at the Botanical Garden-located at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill-says the mosses prefer this season when there is an abundance of moisture that is vital for their growth. Equally important is that plenty of the sunlight needed to manufacture food can reach them now that the deciduous trees have shed their shading leaves. Mosses have worked out various mechanisms for coping with their need for moisture. For example, the reason mosses tend to grow on the north side of trees is that the direct rays of the sun and its dehydrating effects during summer dry spells are thereby avoided. Some mosses close up shop during summer droughts when water is not available. Their metai)olism slows down, and dormancy sets in. In this condtion, the cell contents of the plant are transformed from the usual liquid slate to a gel-like form until a good rain makes water again available. There have been reports of mosses being completely revived after being stored dry on a shelf for 20 years!. Gardeners may find mosses an attractive plant for decorative use in moist, shade areas. They cannot . be expected to flourish in dry, open places, but they are drought resistant, given a bit of watering on occasion. They are easily main­ tained and need no fussing with fertilizer; they are found naturally on compacted, poorly drained, infertile soil. A simple way to start gardening with mosses is with a moss-covered log or rock in the shade garden, much as the Japanese have used in their beautiful garden designs for centuries. The poet ’I'homas Hardy was also a moss enthusiast: "Variety u[)on variety,-Dark green and pale green;- Mosses like little fir trees,- Like plush, like malachite stars,- Like nothing on earth except moss!” the U.N.’s International Narcotics Control Board and U.S. government agencies, unlawful production worldwide may be double that amount, with most of it converted to heroin. The largest grower of illicit poppies is Burma, which supposedly produced 600 metric tons of opium on 60,000 hectares of land. In Afghanistan, about 20,000 hectares were devoted to poppies in 1983 and, though the government of Iran claims it has eliminated poppy cultivation, U.S. officials estimate that the plant is grown on 30,000 hectares in Iran. The Golden Crescent-Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Iran-is now believed to be the greatest source oi the world's illegal heroin, sur­ passing the Golden Triangle of Burma, Laos, and Thailand. But suppressing smuggling routes is a frustrating business; as soon as one closes, another opens. "1 call it squeeze and effect,” White writes. "Take a pillow or a half-inflated balloon, squeeze it here, and it pops out there.” White’s investigation led him to reilect aboufgood and evil and how the fight between them is an endless part of existence. "When seen in that light,” he writes, "isn’t Papaver somniferum, bringing both good and evil, another symbol of life?” Alcohol Info Report by Bill Weant Blessing and curse, the opium poppy offers freedom from pain but can enslave. Opium gum and poppy-straw con­ centrate hold morphine, unsurpassed in treating violent pain. Codeine relieves moderate pain and coughs. Heroin, chemically treated morphine, wrecks lives and deals death worldwide. ill. White writes: “ Day and night, certain nitrogen- containing compounds, or alkaloids, are produced by the plant and stored in its cells. After the petals fall, the seed capsule swells; if the capsule is shallowly incised while still green and unripe, a milky, alkaloid-rich sap seeps from tiny tubes in the capsule wall. It dries, darkens, turn gummy-that’s opium.” But it is man that decides how tlie poppy’s power is used. Opium's usefulness as a pain reliever has been recognized since the fourth century B.C., and morphine is still unequaled for the worst sort of acute pain. Still, it also is known that too much opium, taken too long, can bring misery, even kill. The in­ vention of the hypodermic needle in 1853 increased morphine's potential for misery. And after the marketing of heroin-morphine to which chemicals related to acetic acid have been added-in 1898, the situation became worse. Introduced in Germany, heroin was first used as a remedy for cough and diarrhea, and it was proposed as a morphine substitute, less likely to lead to addiction. The opposite proved true, White notes sadly. Today, legitimate poppy production is monitored by a United Nations treaty, signed by UK countries, that acknowledges the poppy's medicinal benefits while requiring the elimination of illicit poppy production. India, the largest legal producer of opium, harvested 997 metric tons in 1983. According to estimates by Increasing abuse of cocaine may be creating a new set of problems for alcoholism treatment programs. 'Hie number of people using alcohol and cocaine simultaneously has increased substantially in the past few years. In addition, persons who abuse cocaine are at high risk for becoming dependent on alcohol. Alcohol plays a very important ,.^role in the life of the cocaine- dependent individual. As the dependence on cocaine increases, alcoliol is used more and more as a means of depressing the central nervous system so that cocaine consumption can continue. It is quite common i'or cocaine users to consumer large amounts of alcohol, since they say it diminishes the anxiety and the depression associated with the temporary cessation of heavy cocaine use. There are four distinct progressive levels of toxicity that accompany cocaine use: euphoria, disphoria, cocaine hallucinosis, and cocaine psychosis. In the I'irst, there is a feeling of lieightened pleasure and the user is very verbal, lucid, and confident. In the disphoric phase, anxiety and depression lx;gin to set in, and the user consumes increasing quan­ tities of the drug in an attempt to maintain the original euphoria. The third stage is accompanied by tactile, auditory, and visual hallucinations due to central ner­ vous system overstimulation. And the final stage brings symp­ toms similar to those that ac­ company true psychoses-paranoia, acute frustration, anxiety and depression, and the threat of suicide. Most cocaine and alcohol abusers think they are very knowledgeable about drugs. In reality, they are often dangerously uninformed. A major goal in treatment is to get the client's life back in order. (Tills series is prepared by Bill Weant, alcoholism education consultatnt with the Tri-County Mental Health Complex, 622 North Main Street, Mocksville. Tliese articles are designed to create understanding about drinking, alcohol abuse, and alcoholism in our Society. If you have a question concerning alcohol that you would like answered in a future column, phone G:M-2195.) P iitr ic ia L y n n Itriiu c h u m p c e le b ra te d h e r 13th b irth d a y W ednesday, I'e liru a ry 211. She is the d a iig lile r o f M s. A la rg a re t E lli.s H va iu 'h a n ip o f U t. I. A dvan ce . P a tric ia live s w ith h er m o th e r, h ro th e r. D ean and s is te r, E liz a b e th . She is the g ra n d d a u g h te r o f M rs. U osa E llis o f U t. I, A dvan ce (.M acedonia C o n in iu n ity ). F o r her b irth d a y I'a tric ia hopes to v is it a h is to ry o r a rt m useum in the n ea r fu tu re lie c a iisc o f her in te re s t in both o f these fie ld s. D oth she and lie r m o th e r lo ve a rt am i liis to ry and both iia v e ta ke n courses in a rt. P a tric ia re c e n tly re c e iv e d h o n o ra b le re c o g n itio n in a m a ga zin e fo r som e o f h er dress designs. L o ri D aw n G reene o f iM o eksville has been accepted to stu d y a t P fe iffe r C ollege fo r th e 1985-8G a ca d e m ic y e a r. A I!I83 g ra d u a te o f D a vie C o un ty nigh S chool, she is the d a u g lite r o f M r. and M rs . B obby G reene o f R oute 7, iM o eksville. She h a s a tte n d e d K o w a n T e c h n ic a l C ollege. Advance Couple Are Elected To American Angus Association S.S. and Bonnie Watkins, Ad­ vance, North Caoiina, has been elected to membership in the American Angus Association, reports Dick Spader, executive vice-president of the national organization with head-quarters in St. .loseph, Missouri. The American Angus Association, with some 38,000 active life and junior members, is the largest i>eef cattle registry association in the world. Its computerized records include detailed information on nearly 10 million registered Angus. The Association records ancestral information and keeps records of production on individual animals for its members. These permanent records help members select and mate the best animals in their herds to produce high quality, efficient breeding cattle which are then recorded with the American Angus Association. Most of these registered Angus are used by the U.S. farmers and ranchers who raise high quailty beef for con­ sumption. T h e firs t re c o rd e d d e n ta l d rill w a s d e s crib e d in 1728 b y a P a risia n d e n ­ ta l s u rg e o n n a m e d P ie rre F a u ch ard in h is b o o k o n d e n tis try . Five Smart IRA Choices.One Great Bonus. All EromC® CCB offers five smart ways to invest for your retirement. Ajid save on taxes, now. Our customer service representa - tives will help you choose from our 30- month IRA, 18-month 11^, 12-month IRA, orourMoneyMarket or Trust IIMs. But no matter which choice Special bonus rate on new 1984 and 1985 contributions to our 12-month IRA. you make, you’ll be making a very smart move. Now here’s our bonus pro^'am. If you open a 12-month IRA with CCB before April L5, SuhsliiiilKil FDIC ntuUh’S tiiU tt si fu tuillyjm t iitly u illuhuunl. we’O pay you a bonus rate on all new 1984 and 1985 contributions to your 12-month IRA, And we’ll pay you this bonus rate .compound­ ed daily, for the full twelve months of your investment. So come in and see us before April 15. To save on 1984 taxes. To build for your retire­ ment security. And to get our bonus rate if you monthIRA,* CentralCarolina Bank 8B-DAVIE COUNTY HNTERPRISU Rl-CORD, THURSDAY,!-HUKUAUY 21, 1985 Methodist Churches Helping To Alleviate World Hunger News is coming to us daily from Ethiopia and other parts of Africa concerning the tragic food sliorlago there that is causing deaths by starvation for thousands of people. That news comes to us as a call from our Lord who says to us, "Feed my sheep" (John 21:17) and "I was hungry and you gave me food...lor...as you did it lo one of the least of these, you did it to m e." (M atthew 2,'i:35,40). In response to this urgent cry for help the children, youth and adults of First United Methodist Church of Mocksville have joined together with special class projects to fill the “ Hunger Pot." The projects include an auction, donut sales, special donations and individual donations. A monthly calendar was received by all church families as a guide to daily giving. All money collected will be placed in the "Hunger Pot" during worship service Feb. 24lh. Imm ediately following worship service all members of the church and everyone in the community is invited to join in the Fellowship Hall for the annual soup lunchc-on. Tlie donations from the luncheon will also be placed in the Hunger Pot. Other Methodist Churches in the county are s|X)nsorinR projects lo Youngsters shown above helping to feed the "Hunger Pot" are Amanda Dwiggins, Molly Se and Holly Hendricks.jins, Molly Seabrook, Tiffany Fleming raise money lor the Hunger Fund. The Sub-district vouth will have Iheir annual World Hunger Banquet at Liberty United Methodist Church in Mocksville in M arch when each group will lirlng Iheir offerings together llial Ihev have raised in individual IIMV|. groups and collectively through their basket­ ball touniainenls, etc. Green Meadows News Yadkin Valley Gene Lee who had bypass surgery last week is reported to be slowly improving. Ho rem ains a patient at Baptist Hospital. The Seekers Class at Green Meadows enjoyed a Sweetheart Banquet at the fellowship center on Saturday night. Entertainm ent was provided by the M inisters of Music and Youth from King B aptist Church. Green Meadows youth will meet at the church Friday evening at 6:15 to go to the Ice Hockey games at Winston-Salem. David Howell who was recently hospitalized with kidney stones was able to be in church on Sunday. Joe Langston suffered a heart attack on Monday, February 4. He was transferred from Davie to Forsyth Hospital in the afternoon. He was able to return home on Valentine Day. He is presently recuperating satisfacto rily . The Langstons wish to thank everyone for all the help and all other kind­ ness shown at this time. The many cards, flowers visits, but most of all for your prayers. A baptismal service was con­ ducted at Green Meadows following the morning worship service. Those receiving the ordinance of baptism were Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Keaton, Iheir two daughters and a son and Maggie Winters. Grades one through six enjoyed a Pizza Lunch in the Green Meadows fellow ship center on Sunday following the morning worship hour. Mr. Sam Johnson is back home following read m ittan ce to the hospital last week. His wife, Myrtle, is presently ill with tlie flu. Many others in the vicinity are victims of the flu including Mr. and Mrs. Joe Johnson. Phillip Boyer, grandson of the Norris Boyer’s, received a broken leg in an accident while playing on a skate board Saturday. Ho was visiting his gran d p aren ts here. Upon returning to his home on Sunday, his parents decided to have it x-rayed and a broken bone showed on the X-ray. The Green Meadows Y.B.W, will meet on Thursday evening with Mrs. Dean Clawson on Yadkin Valley Road. Mr. and Mrs. Tim Austin and baby daug h ter, Allison, of Columbia, S.C., spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Austin. Mocks News The Joy Sunday School class gave the Senior Citizens a Valentine p arty S aturday night in the fellowship'hall. Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hartm an spent the past week in Florida. Mrs. M ary Potts who has been seriously ill in Forsyth Hospital returned to her home on Wed­ nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim m y Myers and friends spent several days last week in Daytona, Florida to attend the races. Mrs. Nan Minor and Mrs. John Roper of Charlotte were Thursday supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Carter. Tim Myers is improving at her home. Mrs. Travisene Boger, the mail carrier on Advance, Route 2 who had the accident during snow in January, returned to her home from Forsyth Hospital W ednesday and is slowly improving. A film will be shown at Piedmont Bible College at 7:00 p.m. on Saturday, February 16. Prepare to attend this presentation. Mr. Joe Langston has been a patient at Forsyth M em orial Hospital for several days. His condition has improved since he was taken. Mr. Gene Lee was adm itted to Baptist Hospital on Sunday to have open heart surgery some tim e this week. We all wish for him the best in his surgery and a quick recovery. Fred Broadway will enter the Veterans Hospital at Durham this W ednesday for surgery on his back. Hope you get along fine, Fred, and will soon be able to work. Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Smith will be showing slides on Sunday, February 17 at 7:00 p.m. at Bethlehem Church of their trip to Acapulco, Mexico, on the building project. Tim Dunn alsp enjoyed the trip w ith them . Everyone is invited to come out and enjoy the slides with them. Sallie Carter, Mr. and Mrs. Henry McBride visited Jack Griffith at Forsyth Manor Care in W'inston- Salem on Saturday night. His condition is some better. There are a lot of people at home with different kinds of illnesses. A. G. Parker has missed two Sundays with something he might have caught by helping others that were sick. Also, Clint West, Geneva Howard, M ammie Godfrey, Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis and Dulcie Hauser and Reba Myers. All these are not able to be out. Chocolate A one-ounce square of un­ sw eetened chocolate is - the equivalent of the sam e size envelope of no-melt chocnlatp GOD’S FIVE MINUTES “There is a lime for everything........" • Eccieiiastes 3:i, The uw ing eibie ASSEMBLY OP GOD NEW BETHEL ASSEMBLY OP 000 809 N. Main street Mocksvillft, N.C.Rev. Mike BrakeSunday School 10:00a.m. Mornlno Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.BAPTIST ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway BO)Wesley Cook, Pastor Sunday Services:BIbleStudy 9:45a.m.BibleStudy 11:00a.m.YoulhMeetings 4:30p.m.Wednesday Services:Stan 4:30 p.m.BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH Bear Creek Church Rd.BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 North at 1-40 Rev. David Hyde, Pastor Sunday School 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m. I Wednesday 7;30p.m. J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers of DAISY FLOUR Wg Custom Blend Depot Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 COBLE LIME& FERTILIZER SERVICE Highway 801 Cooleemee, N.C. Business 284-4354 Phone Home 284-2782 LANIER-RIDDLE General Contractors New Homes or Remodeling N.C. Lie. 5064 N.C. Lie. 1 SSS2 492-5474 998-4708 FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. Wilkesboro Street . Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO 1238 Bingham Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2167 BREAD OF LIPE 8APTIS1 CHAPEL Four Corners Community on Hwy. 801 Phil KItchln. Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Preaching 11:00 a.m. CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPllST CHURCH Caiahain Road Rev. Graham Wooten. Pastor Sunday Sct^oo^ \0-.00a.m.Worship n:00a.m.Sunday Night Worship 7;00p,m.Wed. Bible Studyi Prayer 7:00 p.m. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 South Route 7, Box 92. Mocksville. N.C.Jim Gryder, Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 1t:00a.m.Evening 7;00p,m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST Cedar Creek Church Road CHINQUAPIN OROVE BAPTIST CHURCHCOMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Rd.Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.COOLEEMEE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHGuthrie Colvard, Pastor Sunday School 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7;00p.m.CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLEFork, N.C.Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7:0C p.m.Wednesday 7;j0p.n<.DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCHHighway B01 off 64 EATON'S BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton’S Church Rd.Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 West Cooleemee, N.C.FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCHFarmington Road .Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Youth Training Union 7:00p.m.FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 309 N. Main Street Mocksville, N.C.Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship n:00a.m.Evening 6:30 p.m. Oct. thru May FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHMarginal Street Cooleemee, N.C.Rev. Larry G. AlienSunday School 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7;l5p.m. FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 Miles East on Hwy. 64SundaySchool 9:45a.m.Worship n:00a,m.Evening 7;20p.m. GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 6, Moxksviite, N.C.SundaySchool 10:00 a,m,Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7;00p.m.Wednesday 7:00 p.m. GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCHGreen HUl Road Rev. Steve Hedgecock, Pastor Sunday School 9:30a.m.Worship 10:45 a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7 00pm. GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST Highway SOI Farmington J. Keith Money, Pastor aunoay bchooi 10:00 a.m. Worship 11:00a.mEvening 7;30p.m.Wednesday 7; 30 p.m.HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Highway 158 East Norman S. Frye, Pastor SundaySchool 9:45a.m.worship 10:45a.m.Evangelistic 7:30p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. THE CROSS AND EMPTY TOMB ARE FOR YOU All the immensity of the utiivorsc is (ocusucl on the cross of Christ. The crucifixion of Christ, ijnd His resurrecti(jn, .irn the central facts of all of history, for God cast this entire universe iilotiq redeniptivo lin»?s. "A nil I, if I be lifted up from the earth,will draw all men unto me." When we feel dwarfed hy our soUir system, wtien insignificance overwhelms us to the point where we heyin to think or feel thiit t*itlier God doesn't know or he doesn't care, read the 19, 20 and 21st chapters of John. The cross iind the empty tornl) are for you! + + + + + -l- + -l- + + -*-4 + + -t- + + + ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK + + + + -*--f + -f + -f-f-*+ + + -f + -f ©Community AdvtrlitingThii column belongs tn our rcailtTs Wc will acicpt printubic items and pay SS.OO for each iiem pubiishtrd. in ease of quoiationv. tlio name of the author and the lilie and publisher of the book mu\l l>c Kivcn. Addresj iii-ms ('ivf Minutes." P.O. Bui 18012. Asheville. N.C. 26814._______________________ C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Road Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 IJAMES CROSSROADS BAPTIST CHURCHKenneth H^de, Pastor SundaySchool 9:45a.m.Worship ll:00a.m.Evening 6:00 p.m.Wednesday ;:30p.m.JERUSALEM BAPTIST Highway 601 South Surxlay School 10:00a mWorship 11;00a.m.Evening 7:30p.m.Wednesday 7:30 pmNO CREEK PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCHNo Creek Rd. oil 64 SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 158 East TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Route 4, Mocksville, N.C.Gene Blackburn. Pastor SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship ItiOOa.m.Evening • 7;00p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCHRt. 7, Mocksville Rev. Judge Johnson SundaySchool 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00a.mEvening 6:30 p.m.Wed. Prayer Meeting 7:00p.m. VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee Shopping Center Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship Servicc 11:00 a.m.Evening Service 7 :00p.m.Wednesday Prnyc'- Service 7 00 p m. YADKIN VALLE Y BAPTIST CHURCH Yadkin Valley Ii/o i CATHOLIC ST. FRANLIS OF ASSISI CHURCHHighway 601 NorthSunday 10:00a.m.CHURCH OF CHRIST CORINTH CHURCH OF CHRIST Minister: Charlie Harrison, Jr. Worship; Sun. 11:00a.m. Evening 7:00p.m. NORTH MAIN STREET CHURCH OF CHRISTRobert Darnali, Minister Sunday School 10:00 a m. Worship n;00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:30pm.CHURCH OF GOO CHURCH OF GOD Cooleemee, N C,CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD Highway 64 West I W. Names, Pastor SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship too pm.Evening S:00p.m.Wednesday 8:00 p.m. MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 E & Depot ST.SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. EPISCOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OP THE GOOD SHEPHERD Rev. Willis M. Rosenthal, Priest Sermon 9:30a.m. Sunday School 10:50 a.m PORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSION Rev. Canon C. Nichols, Pastor SundaySchool 10:0 0a.m.Church School 10:15a.m,Sunday Worships Sermon 11:00a.m. Thursday Prayer Mtg. 7:00 p.m. INTERDENOMINATIONAL MOCKSVILLE IN- TERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH Pastor Rev. Lindsay Wallers SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.Morning Worship l!:00a.m.Radio Program (WDSLJ 1:00 p.m. Youth Service 6:30p,m.Mid Week Bibly Study by: Mrs. Knox Johnston 7:00p.m. LUTHERAN HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH Gary Glireath, Pastor Hwy. 601 S.■Mocksville, N.C.SundaySchool 9:45a.m,Worship 11:00a.m. METHODIST A.M.E. 2I0N METHODIST CHURCH ^ ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.BAILEY'S CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTBailey'S Chapel Rd.BETHEL UNITED METHODIST Bethel Church Rd. BETHELEHEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCHRediand Rd. off 158 East CENTER UNITED METHODISTCHURCHHighway 64 WestRev. Claudia G. Harreison, Minister 1st B. 2nd SundayChurch School 9;4Sa.m.Worship 11:00a.m.3rd 8. 4th Sunday Worship Service 9:45 a.m.Church School ^0:45 a.m.5 t h Sunday Church School 9:45a.m. CHESTNUT GROVE METHODIST James Chip Wibb, Pattor 2nd & 4th budnaySunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.CONCORD UNITED METHODIST Cherry HIM Rd. COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHRev. Alton Fitzgerald, Pastor CORNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Cornatzer Rd.DULIN METHODIST CHURCH Advance. N.C.ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHwy. 801 Advance, N.C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH Sunday School (1st Sunday) 11:00 a.m. (2nd, 3rd, 4th Sun.) 10:00a.m.Worship (1st Sun.) 10:00a.m.(3rd Sun.) )l:00a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCHNorth Main St. Mocksville N.C.Rev. Don Davis, Pastor Sunday School 10:00a.m.Worship 11:00a.m. FULTON UNITED METHODIST Hwy. 801 at Fork HARDISON UNITED METHODISTJericho Church Rd.HUNTSVILLE METHODIST Worship (2nd Sun.) 10:00 a.m.(4th Sun.) 11:00a.m.LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Gladstone Rd.MOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCHAdvance, N.C.MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHURCHRt. 5, MocksvilleWorship (2nd Sun.) 11;00a.m. (4thSun.) 10:00a.m.SundaySchool (4thSun.) 11:00a.m. Ost,2nd,3rd,Sun.) 10:00 a.m. NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST Rev. Kermil Shoaf. Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m. OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST Highway isa East SALEM UNITED METHODIST Davie Academy Rd. SMITH OROVE UNITED METHODIST Hwy. 15B East. Mocksville Rev. J.C. Lane. Pastor Worship (1st & 3rd) 10:00 a.m.(2nd, 4th, 8. 5th Sun.) 11:00 a.m.Sunday School (1st A. 3rd) 11:00 a.m. (2nd.4th45th) 10:00a.m.BibleStudy Wed. 7:30p.m. UNION CHAPEL METHODIST ja n^s Chip Webb. Pastor 1st. 3rd, 8. 5thSunday School 10:00p.m.Worship ll:00fl.m .WESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST Advance, N.C.Worship (1st Sun.) 10:00a.m.(3rdSun.) 11:00a.m. Sunday School (3rd Sun.) 11:00 a.m. (2nd, 3rd,4thSun.) 10:00a.m.HON CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST Rev. Kermit Shoaf, Pastor MORAVIAN MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. E. Hampton Morgan, Jr., Pastor Hwy. 801 & FarmingtonSunday School 10:00 a-m.Worship 11:00a.m. Evening 7:30 p.m. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST ADVENTISTMilling Road Sid Mills, Pastor Sabbath School 9:30a.m.Worship 1l:00a.m. PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTALLiberty Ch. Rd.Rev. Albert GentleSunday School I0:00a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.M O C K S V IL LE P EN TEC O S TA LHOLINESSMilling RoadRev. Curtis WoodSundaySchool 10:00 am.worship H :0 0a-m.Sunday night Services 6:00 p.m.Evangelistic 7:00 p.m.Wednesday 7:30p.m. H(fLINESS^° P E N T E C O S T A L Don Sigmon, Pastor Sunday School 10:00a.m.Worship tt.'OOa.m.Evangelistic 7:00 p.m Wednesday Family Nigni 7;00p,m.PRESBYTERIAN BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH R. Shane Owens, Pastor Sunday School 9:45a m.Worship 11:00a.m.Wednesday Choir 7-OOp mBibleStudy 8:00p.m. SUPPORT YOUR MERCHANTS WHO BRING YOU THIS INFORMATION - ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE - WESLEYAN LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH Jeff Collins, Pastor MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCHHospital Street Mocksville, N.C.Rev. Doug SmithSundaySchool 9:45a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00p.m. Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday thru Saturday WDSL SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. Route 6, Box 1 53 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 492-5565 EATON FUNERAL HOME 328 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO. Ford Farming Sales and Service Nev^ Holland Equipment Highway 601 South Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5969 ED FISHER PLUMBING SERVICE Cooleemee, N.C. 27014 Phone 284-2721 or 284-2232 Expert Repairs and New Installation FREE Estimates and Emergency Servicd JEFFCOCO..INC. In the Hillsdale Community Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8192 MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. Feeds, Dry Goods, Groceries and Fertilizer Depot Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2128 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1985-9B Area Obituaries MRS. FLOSSIE BEAUCHAMP M rs, Flossie Smith Bcauchamp, 89, Rt. 4, Advance, died Thursday at Vienna Village Rest Home, Pfaff- town. She was l»rn in Davie County to the late Charles H. and Ada Et- chison Smith. Mrs. Beauchamp was the widow ot Sam Beauchamp. She was a m em ber of Bethlehem United Methodist Church. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. ■Mary Carter, Supply; one son, Elm er Beauchamp, Rt. 4, Advance; one brother, Otis H. Smith, Rt. 1, Advance; six grandchildren and ten great-grandchildren. The funeral was held Saturday at Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. Donald Funderburke and the Rev. Taylor Loflin. Burial was in the Bethlehem United Methodist Church cem etery. MRS. VERA McBRIDE Mrs. Vera Viola McBride, 57, Rt. 5, Mocksville, died Friday at her home. Surviving are her husband, Charles Ray McBride; two sons, Kenneth Joe and Roger Dale Brock, both of Rt. 5; two daughters, Mrs. Patricia Gail Tliomas, Gastonia and Miss Janice Meadows, Beckley, W. Va.; one sister, Mrs. M arie Bolen, Winston-Salem. The funeral was held Monday at M ackie-G entry F uneral Home Chapel. B urial w as in G aston Memorial Park, Gastonia. MRS. HASSIE WADE Mrs. Hassle Joyner Wade, 87, form erly of Black Mountain, died F rid ay at A utum n C are Con­ valescent Center where she was a resident. A graveside service was held Sunday at Mountain View Memorial Park in Black Mountain by the Rev. Edgar Ferrell. Mrs. Wade was born July 14,1897, in Cabarrus County to the late David and M attie Owens Joyner and w as a re tired dietician. Her husband, H arry Wade, preceded her in death in 1977. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. H arry (M ary Ella) M urray, Ber­ muda Run; one son. Jack Wade, Miami, Fla.; two grandchildren and one great-grandchild. MISS BESSIE LEE FOSTER Miss Bessie Lee Foster, 97, of Advance died Sunday at Knollwood Hall, Winston-Salem where she had lived for the past 11 years. The funeral was held Tuesday at Eaton’s Funeral Chapel by the Rev. Gordon Joyner. Burial was in Fork Baptist Church cem etery. Miss Foster was born December 0, 1887, in Davie County to the late P leasan t and S arah E lizabeth Stewart Foster. She was a m em ber of Fork Baptist Church. Surviving are one sister, Mrs. Fred (Daisy) Trivette, Winston- Salem and a num ber of nieces and nephews. Cornatzer News Mrs. Ruth Nance returned to her hom e recently from F orsyth H ospital w here she received treatm ent for a broken hip. Clyde Jones has been a patient in Davie County Hospital for the past week and prior to that he was a patient in B aptist H ospital in Winston-Salem. Dottie and Sharon Potts visited Travisene Boger at her home on McClamrock Road Saturday af­ ternoon. She returned to her home last W ednesday from F orsyth Hospital where she had undergone treatm ent for three weeks for wounds received in an automobile accident. H er siste r, A thalene Daniels, of South Fork, Colorado spent several days with her. The Florence Starr family and the family of the late Tildon C arter enjoyed a dinner Sunday at the home of Florence Starr. Bessie Jones and son. Gray Jones, and family were recent visitors of her daughter, Mozell Nichols in Rock Hill, S.C. Mozell has been undergoing treatm ent at Charlotte Memorial Hospital for a kidney ailment. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts and Sharon were recent dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Billy Carter. MRS. ROSSIE F. BAILEY Mrs. Rossie Foster Bailey, 89, of R oute 3, R eeds C om m unity, Lexington, N.C. died Sunday, F eb ru ary 17, at Lexington Memorial Hospital after being in declining health for six years and seriously ill for six weeks. She was born in Davie County November 6,1895 to the late Zebulon Vance and Molly Sidden Tucker. She was a hom em aker and a m em ber of Reeds Baptist Church. Her first husband, Stephen L. Foster died in 1932, and her second husband, Glenn B ailey also preceded her in death. Survivors include two sons, Robert T. Foster of W inston-Salem; and Bruce L. Foster of Rt. 3 L exington; 2 daughters, M rs. Harold (Sarah) Beeker and Mrs. B.L. (D eane) Koontz, both of Lexington; 6 grandchildren; 7 great grandchildren and a sister, Mrs. Josie M errell of Mocksville. Funeral services were conducted Tuesday at II a.m . at the Voglers- Piedmont Funeral Home Chapel, Lexington. The R everend John Pace and the Reverend Wade Wright conducted the service. In­ term ent followed in Fork Baptist Church cem etery in Davie county. MAUDE P. NICHOLS M aude Phelps Nichols, 89, of Route 1, Woodleaf died Sunday evening in Row an M em orial Hospital. The funeral was held Tuesday at Woodleaf United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Shirley Jones of­ ficiating. Burial was in Liberty United Methodist Church cem etery. Born Feb. 15, 189G, in Davie County, a daughter of the late A.W. and Sarah Safley Phelps, she was retired from Erwin Mills. She was a m em ber of W oodleaf U nited Methodist Church. Her husband, A.M. Nichols, died in 1938. Survivors include two other daughters, Ruth Rich of Wall, N.J., and G race Allen of Port Chester, N.Y., a son, McKinely Nichols of Jacksonville, Fla.; three sisters, Stella McClamrock; G race Wooten and Ruth Burton, all of Route 4, Mocksville. Two brothers, Raymond and Lee Phelps, both of Route 4, Mocksville; 20 g randchildren; 29 g re a t­ grandchildren; and four great- great-grandchildren. MRS. LOTTIE CARSON Funeral services for Mrs. Lottie Mae Rose Carson, 48, of Route 1, H am ptonville, N.C. w ere held Tuesday, February 19, 1985, at 2:30 p.m . at P leasan t Hill B aptist Church in Hamptonville, with the R everend Alphonzo H arvey of­ ficiating. Burial IbUowcd in the church cem etery. Mrs. Carson died Saturday at N.C. Baptist Hospital in Winston- Salem, N.C. after a short Illness. She was born in Davie County to the late Will (Bud) Rose and Mrs. Willie L. Turner Rose. She is survived by her husband, Thad Carson, Sr. of the home; two sons, 'ITiad Carson Jr. and Tyrone Shane Carson, both of the home; her mother, Mrs. Willie L. Turner Rose of Mocksville; a sister, Mrs. Rufus (Kopelia) Frost of Rt. 1, Mocksville; four brothers, Martin Luther and Elm ore Rose, both of Harmony, Charlie and Artis Lee Rose, both of Winston-Salem; and three grandchildren. EDGAR CLARENCE BOGER Edgar Clarence Boger, 90, died Tliursday at N.C. Baptist Home. He was born in Cana, N.C., to Franklin and Mary M arkland Boger. Mr. Boger spent his early life and was educated in Davie County. He was an E state P lanner for Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. retiring in 1963 after 37 years of service. Mr. Boger was a m em ber ol College Park Baptist Church. Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Augusta M atilda Brown Boger, of N.C. Baptist Home; one daughter, Mrs. Frieda Boger Lane, New York City; one son, Harold C. Boger, Columbia, S.C.; four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. The funeral was held Saturday at Vogler’s Reynolda Road Chapel by Dr. Charles Edw ards and the Rev. Foy M artin. Burial was in Forsyth Memorial Park. Kappa Homemakers Kappa Extension Homemakers met at the home oT Louise Cartner, Monday, February 4 at 7 p.m. for their regular monthly meeting. M argaret Ann Shew served as co­ hostess. For opening devotional thoughts, M argaret Ann used a reading, "M easure By M easure", As we are confronted daily by m easurem ents - size, distance, tem perature etc., do we stop to consider how our lives are m easuring up? While no one can choose the length of life, they can choose the depth. A special w elcom e and in­ troduction was given to Janet Blair, and Karen Kahr, of the Davie County Health D epartment. Janet presented tlie educational program for the month on the Hospice program in Davie County and the Health Care services available to all county citizens. In the February The Film’It's Friday, But Sunday’s Coming’ Will Be Shown At Bixby " I t’s F riday, But Sunday’s C om ing,” a film by Anthony Campolo will be shown on Wed­ nesday, February 27, 1985, at Bixby Presbyterian Church. This film will kick off the first W onderful W ednesday at the church. Dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. The meal will include barbeque sandwiches, slaw, potato chips, and iced tea. A dollar donation is suggested, but not required, to defer meal costs. Following dinner, classes will be held for all ages - nursery through adults. Adults will view the film. Other ages will m eet for other study and activities. Future plans for the last Wed­ nesday of each month will include other films, studies, and guest speakers, Bixby Presbyterian Church is located on Fork Church Road in the Bixby Community. Please call 998- 4919 for information tradition, cherry cheese cake and red fruit punch was served the group as they asked questions of Jan et and K aren before they departed. D uring the business session mem bers answered the roll call with, "Love Is". Lena Souther, former m em ber, was welcomed, and Jolette Daywalt and Darlene Hepler were welcomed into the club membership. Report was given on the reception that had been held in honor of Ostine West the previous day. Plans were m ade for the group to go to Autumn Care Nursing Home for a party at a convenient tim e in March. Mem­ bers were reminded that Kappa would be hostess for the area meeting to be held at the Davie County Library, Tuesday, M arch 26, at 7 p.m. The meeting closed with the club collect. Joshua Moody celebrated his third birthday Wednesday, February 20, 1985, at the home of his grand­ parents, Mr. and Mrs, Roy Swan­ son, with a birthday supper in his honor. Other guests included his parents, Mr, and Mrs, Donald Moody, his aunts, Christine and Jennifer, and Uncle David. He had a Bert and Ernie birthday cake. r ...........------------------1 1 Phone i7Q4-654-6111 ■ 1 * l|iiur*nc«1 1 REAL ESTATE-BONDS-INSURANCE-ALL TYPES | DavAcad. Rd. -HOMK 200A d airy farm -fenced-w eil watered - barns - nice farm house $330,000 234 W. Church St. - Brick rancher ;tBR - full bsmt w ith own kitchen-B ath and plavrooni-BR-FP.65,000 922 Yadkinville Rd. -5 room hse, zoned business- detached Barace-central air :19,900 Powell Rd. -3BR brick on lAA. :i8,ooo Little John Dr. - 3BR l>rick. 2B, bsm t playroom. Central air, heat pump, vac system - 2FP 65,000 Bethel Ch. Rd. - 1800 sqft heated split level hse - 2 car garage - 3 bay sep. garage and work area. 89,000 Meta Breeze Ln. -New hse under const, - EE - pick own colors and carpet 45,500 SRI 192 off Gladstone 1980 Tidwell mobile home - 3BR, 2B total dec, county water. Stove and Refr.25,000 Milline Rd, -3BR, l>/.iB, LR, eat in kitchen 34,500 Sanford Rd, -2BR, 2b mobile home furnished. lA lot 26,000 315 Morse St, -3BR-1'/,.B brick rancher-patio- garden sp.37,500 Ocean Drive Beach, .sr . New town hses $75,900. Patio homes 59,!)00 O ff L e w is v ille - Clemmons Rd. - Lot 17 Holly Hedge Dr. 1800 sqft heated area new Farm style home. 2V2B, LR-FP dishwasher, central air. bsmt. dbl earaiie 72,500 519 Wilkesboro St. - Recently renovated 3BR,2B,LR- fpi, DR, den screened porch, 2 zone HP. Dbl CP-partial bsmt. storage bidi> and i>as pumu. (il.500 Stroud Mill Rd. -Country home on 5,7A, Fenced, barn, bidi>s.60,000 Meta Breeze Ln, -EE 3BR, I'/jB, deck, car port, paved drive 40,900 Riverdale Rd, -3BR home, rural setting, ex­ cellent buv 36,000 _O ff Gladstone Rd, - 601N near 1-40 - 2BR home on l>/jA, Furnished,22,500 COMMERCIAL Prim e business lot 100 x 500 50,000 FOR RENT ■A Cinderella Beauty snop m ug, $150 per month County Home Rd, -Mobile home Park, 4A 12 mobile homes 135,000 ■ Call for info on Cedardale Log ■ 1 Homes. 1 Daniel Rd, - LAND 2.8A Nice hardwood - good road frontage. FarminKtoii Small tracts. Have been perked Liberty Ch, Rd, -24A, cleared, woods & stream , can split l,950A Near Mocksville -Approx 5A. woo<led, stream , countv water. Gladstone Rd, -lA building lot. Creek at back.$3700 Farm ington Area - 8 & lOA long paved rd, frontage. 998 No. Eaton St, -2 lots and 7 A. Ideal for development. Wilkes Co. -9.7A Mtn. land-white pines & poplar. Near Pkwv.______________ DavAcad, ltd. -80A. 50 under cultivation rest wooded. Willow Hun -Many lots, paved St. city w ater & sewer.3.900 Woodland Dev. -5,8A wooded. Reasonably priced. Borders creek. Oakland His. •Mobile home lot. Wooded. Rd. frontage 2,3U0 Eugene Bennett - 998-4727 Graham Madison - 634-5176 G race Cabe - 634-2272 Gwynn Meroney - 634-2208 Holland Chafin - 834-5186 Luther Potts, RHU - 998-8420 Louise Frost Daigle - 634-2816 Henry Shore - 634-5846 Sam Howell - 634-2060 Kathi Wail - 49 2 -7 6 3 ^^^. 1 634-6111or634-6112 IEJ\lQU«t HDUSIKIi I 330 Salisbury Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 704-634-3538 NEW OFFICE- (OUIL HOUSIKG 2601 Lewisville-Clemmons Road Clemmons, N.C. 27012 919-766-4580 m I 'liiU i. ’i i ' i ’' J liis n r a iu T A m 'iini, 3liir. AGENTS HOME PHONES Julia Howard 634-3754 Ann F. Wands 634-3229 Mike Hendrix 284-2366 Vicki H. Flem ing 634-3640 C.C. Chapman 634-2534 M yrtle Grimes 998-3990 Calvin Ijam es 492-5198 Rickey Bailey 634-3621 Sarah Bailey 634-3621 Cecil Cartner 492-7112 Whit Honeycutt 873-7872 Connie Kowalske 634-6343 NEW LISTINGS i REALTOR' pncher, Uv. rm „ din, rm „ I exterior freshly painted t level, 2Mt baths, den ^ e (built-in heatolator w- (2 ear), smoke & fire alarm s, NO. 569 HILLCREST rT ,-3 bdrm ., baths, kit., fam . rm . fireplace, back patio, 1 ear carport, brick-m asonlte sld. $39,500.00. NO. S77-WILL BOONE RD.- 60 X 12 Fleetwood Mobile home - 2 bdrm ., liv. rm ., large kit., w-bay window, underpinned w-block - concrete porch. Situated on 4.2 acres - $19,000.00. NO. 579-RIDGEMONT SUBD.-3 bdrm . houses - FmHA loans available - low monthly pay. NO. 575-KLUENIE RD.-2 mobile homes situated on 12.01 acres -(1 )3 bdrm., 2 bath, back screened porch underpinned, (2) 2 bdrm . 12 x 60 mobile home. 2 stall horse barn, natural spring on property, fencing - w u.'m b’^COUNTY LINE RD. - 3 bdrm ., 2 bath. fuU basem ent (part finish.), liv. rm ., (fireplace w-glass doors & m antle), din. rm ., kit., central air, fenced in pool, dishwasher, trash comp., good cond. $88,500.00.NO. 480 - SANFORD AVE. den, kitchen, outbuildi in the fall. 1659 s.f. $56j NO. 400 - CHESTNUT WAY - (cathedral ceiling w-ex| glass doors) cent, vac excellent cond. $91,000.1 NO. 443 - COUNTRY ESTATES - 5 Bedrooms, dining room, living room, family room (fireplace & ceiling fan), kitchen, front porch, 2 baths and deck on back. Good Condition. 10 years old. Central air (upstairs). $90,000. NO. 584 - N. MAIN ST. • Acre lot plus large 4-5 bedroom 2-story with bonus office or craft space. Spacious foyer, form al dining and living room. Large kitchen with breakfast room, den, baths downstairs, . l¥ i baths unfinished upstairs. Double detached carport with workshop, storage buildings and barn. $79,900.00. NO. 566-LEXINGTON ROAD-Enjoy country living "in town" in this charm ing two story fram e farm iiouse. 5 tiedrooms, 3 baths, den with 25 ft. cathedral beam ed ceiling with cozy loft overlooking den. Lots of wallpaper, custom made drapes and much more. See to appreciate. $138,500.00. NO. 594 SOUTHWOOD A C RES-A M r|l|iiJ«|plit level. 1525 sq. ft. plus basem ent and i| '' H liH ' ^ baths, large living area with skylC C fiU ST lium p. $M,400. No. 555-COUNTRV LANE ESTATES- Under construction, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1570 sq. ft., W illiamsburg, form al dining room, deck, 2-car garage in basem ent, EES. ^ No. 535-Ilwy. 64 East- 2 1 b " m f f B l irm . den, dining area, kit­ chen. brick, patio, l~~ No. 512-SOUTIIERN DAVIE C oilN 'hi', 3000 heated sq. ft. includes 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, living room with fireplace, den with fireplace, formal dining room, large eat-in kitchen, Ig. Florida room, beautifully decorated, freshly painted inside and out, new heat pump and gas furnace, storage building and playhouse, wooded acre Is beautifully landscaped, 12 miles to Salisbury, 8 miles to Mocksville, just reduced $10,000 to $89,900, Cali today to see this beauty. No. 523-SANFOHD AVENUE-3 bedroom, 2 baths, large living room and dining room with pine floors, spacious kitchen, den, full bsmt., glassed-in sunporch, patio, circular in-ground pool, burglar alarm system, new carpeting, 1.5 acres, excellent condition, $85,000.00. No. 551-FORK CHURCH RD,-double wide mobile home, 3 bdrm . (w- walk-in closets), 1 bath, fam. rm ., din. rm ., kit., utility rm „ central air, nice 1 acre lot, good cond., $39,900.00. No, 537-MAIN CHURCH ROAD-3 bdrm, brick, approx. 1420 sq. ft., 2 bath, living rm ., din. area, den w-flrepiace, kitchen, full basement (drive-in door). 1.03 acre lot, 8 years old, excellent cond., central air, $65,000.00. Will rent No. 402 IN TOWN-quiet neighborhoM ^UM fJ%im, 2 bath, brick ran­ cher, featuring spacious l l u r t l ^ K r Q i i i ^ e x t r B large utility for sewing or office, screened yilW W m nlnir area, 2 car garage, w o^ed. No.'S%-LAKEWOOD V II^ ii|iffiffd £ Q |< a th , brick, 1425 s.f. liv. rm ., den, din. area, k lti( |^ B a T p l n ! ir p ^ ia l basement, $41,900.00. COMMERCIAL NO. 565 • IIWY. 601 • Pre-fab. alum. sid. build, w-brick front, siiowroom has suspend, ceiling, panel, carpet, built-in shelves, bathrooms, paved park. 2026 heated sf. - 6 yrs. old ■ X-tra 938 s.f. of storage - $75,000. iii> Ha,e 24 hrs. Answering Service A NEW LISTINGS ' NO. 586 - O FF DANIELS RD. - 3 bdrm . 2 full bath mobile home on 1 acre, fenced lot - flue and insulation installed, storm windows. Refrigerator, range, dinette, love seat and couch included. $20,000.00. NO. 588 - O FF ANGELL RD. - Teaching & riding horse farm on 33 cieared'acres, 11 stall barn, tack room w-complete bathroom, cross fenced pasture, lighted riding ring, Iwth county & well w ater - 2 yr. old energy efficient 2 bdrm . Berm (underground) house, 1532 s,f. - $165,000.00. - No. 525-WOODLAND-3 s.f. basem ent, n patio in rear. $65,900.60.\IIjI I I* ‘ NO. 576 - HICKORY HILL I - Lovely tri-level brick home on corner lot in walking distance of Hickory Hill Tennis Court, pool and golf course. House features form al living room and dining room, den, breakfast room, family or playroom, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 21 x WA screened porch, double car garage and central air. See to appreciate. $91,000^ No. 514-EATON DRIVE-;i bdrm, brick, 1250 plus or nilnus sq. ft., living rm . w-fireplace, din. rm ., kitchen, basem ent, central air, garage. Reduced to $52,000.00. No. 467-DAVIE ACADEMY RD.-a^ r m .. H i bath, electric celling heat, built-ins, patio in rear BBQ, elect, garage door, 1102 s.f., $45,500.0. NO. 589- MILLING RD.- 2 steel bidgs., 2400 sq. ft. dwelling, city sewage and water. Industrial zoning^__ No. 560-TWINBRbOK- Must see to appreciate the quality and special features in this three bedroom, two bathroom, great room wi-flreplace enclosed glass sun porch, totally energy efficient, carport, beautiful corner lot well landscaped, rustic siding, one of the better neigh­ borhoods in Mocksville, city w afer and sewage. Priced at only $63,400.00. No. 558-N. MAIN ST.-Great in-town location within walking distance of churches, shopping, 3 bdrm, brick, liv. rm ., din. rm ., breakfast rm ., with glassed sunporch. isa.sno.nn. ^ No. 562-1517 WINSTON R IX J ^ iM ^ ffl|-2 -3 l>edroom, fram e, den, kitchen, front and reuM jK ^^pH lM fm ir No. 458-IHSTORIC lySMCTRTDEPOT STREET-old Depot bldg.,- 244.0X154..50X256.0X120.8. beside Southern Railway. No. 556-CIIURCH ST.-BrIck rancher, 2620 s.f., 4 bdrm.. 3 baths, liv. rm ., din. rm ., fam. rm ., utility rm ., kitchen w. d.w. and disposal, front porch and rear patio, 2 car garage, extras include built-in book slielves and cabinets, child's playhouse, 2.96 acre lot, good cond. $130,000.00. No. 563-SIIEFFIELD PARK-3 bdcn^>/!t bath, 1100 S|.f. brick w-slding, recently painted interior, cai^P S f^x24 garage-wired, $39,900.00. No. 386-WILLOW RUN-4 bdrm., dining room-family room, combo, 2 story, front porch, rear deck, V/i yrs. old, 2 car garage, storage room off deck. $49,900.00. No. 469-601S-1759 s.f., 3 b d n |- J M J f |Q n j0 f c ., central air, 3 acre lot, fireplace, ceiling fan. No, 498-IN TOW N-Beaunnn 3 Ddrm. brick rancher including iiuge m aster suite form al living room, dining room, breakfast room, covered patio, gorgeous landscaping, $75,000.00. No, S44-IIARDISON ST-Loveiy 2-story fram e farm house situated on 3,2 acres is surrounded by m any hardwoods, magnolias, and fruit trees. House features 1 bath, 3 bdrms., liv. rm ., 27 x 13 kitchen-den comb, with oil heat and central air. G reat place for gardening, with . barn fur storage. See to appreciate. No. 496-MOUNTAIN CHALET-A-FRAME-2 bedrooms plus loft sleeping area on large wooded lot only minutes from ski area and G randfather Mt. Assumable loan possible. $32,500.00. LAND NO. 553 - IIWY. 601 .SOU’n L ^ J V n Q ^ s county w ater available, residential $145,000.00|«!ftH B ii***^_^ NO. C1000CLEM M ON»rSS S |j |i m ^ m ill........ Drive. Owner financing at 10 percen|< I!v^aM l. No. 413-HICKORY HILL-Lakeside lot. $U,ooo. No, 495-20.22 acres plus excllent building lot (acre plus) In Country Estates. M an-made pond, fenced. Timber. No. 5IS-WOODLA\D-t lovely wooded lots, 200x200 $9,200.00. NO. 493-7 lots in Oakdale Subdivision off 801. Total price $18 000 00 Can be sold individually. No. 349-Lots in Garden Valiev, NO, 585 - BETHEL CU. RD.- Nice mobile home lot w-septic tank system - County water-sewer also available.________________________ lOB-DAVII- COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEliRUARY 21,1985 Whatta We Do I Tomboy Is 221 P-8B83 000 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSIONNotice of Application Filed with the Com­mission (February B, 19B5) TaKe notice that the followlno hydroelectric application has been filed with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and Is available for public Inspection:a. Type of Application: Preliminary Permitb. Prolect No.: 6683 000c. Date Filed: January 1G. 1985d. Applicant: Cooieemee Hydro Associatese. Name of Prolect: Cooieemee Hydropower f. Location: In Davie County. North Carolina, on the South Yadltin Riverg. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. SS 791(a) • 825(r)h. Contact Per»on: Casey A. Cummings, Synergies, Inc.. 410 Severn Avenue, Suite i09, Annapolis, Maryland 31403 I. Comment Date: April 15, 1985I. Description of Prolect: The proposed prolect would consist of: (1) a lO foot hIgh end 57i foot- long existing dam Including spillway at elevation 650 feet m.s.l. to b& refurbished; (2) an existing reservoir with a surface area of 14 acres and a storage capacity of approximately 100 acre feet at a surface elevation of 842 feet m.s.l.; (3) an existing power canal approximately 2,400 feet long, 40 feet wide and 10 feet deep; (4) an existing penstocit 6 feet In diameter and ap­proximately 40 feet long; (5) an existing rein­forced concrete powerhouse to be refurbished. 100 feet wide and 180 feet long containing 2 proposed turblne-generators w ith a rated capacity of 1,500 kW; (6) an existing tallrace 40 feet wide and 150 feet long; (7) a new 12.5 kV transmission line 100 feet long; and (8) ap­purtenant facilities. The estimated average annual energy produced by the project would be 4.75 Gwh operator under a net hydraulic head of 25 feet. Prolect power would be sold to the Duke Power Company. The dam Is owned by Davie County.k. This notice also consists of the following standard paragraphs: A5, A7. A9, B, C, D2I. Proposed Scope of Studies under Permit: A preliminary permit, if issued, docs not authorize construction. The term of the proposed preliminary permit is 18 months. The work proposed under the preliminary permit would include economic analysis, oreparatlon of preliminary engineering plans, and a stuoy of environmental Impacts. Based on results of these studies Applicant would decide whether to proceed with more detailed studies, and the preparation of an application for license to construct and operate the prolect. Applicant estimates that the cost of the work to be per­ formed under the preliminary permit would be $30,000.A5. Preliminary Permit: Existing Dam or Natural Water Feature Prolect-Anyone desiring to file a competing application fol preliminary permit for a proposed prolect at an existing dam or natural water feature prolect. must submit the competing application to the Commission on or before 30 days after the specified comment date (or the particular application (see 18 CFR 4.30 to 4.33 (19(Sn. A notice of intent to file a competing application for preliminary permit will not be accepted for filing.A competing preliminary permit application must conform with 18 CFR 4.33(a) and (d).A7. Preliminary Permlt-Except as provided In the following paragraph, any qualified license, conduit exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption applicant desiring to file a competing application must submit to the Commission, on or before the specified comment date for the particular application, either a competing llccnse, conduit exemption, or smell hydroelectric exemption application or a notice of intent to file such an application. Submission of a timely notice of Intent to file a license, conduit exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption application allows an Interested person to file the competing application no later than 120 days after the specified comment date for the particular application.In addition, any qualified license or conduit exemption applicant desiring to file a competing application may file the sublect application until: (1) a preliminary permit with which the sublect license or conduit exemption application wouM compete Is issued, or (2) the earliest specified comment date for any license, conduit exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption application with which the sublect license or conduit exemption application would compete; whichever occurs first.A competing license application must conform with 18 CFR 4.33(a) and (d).A9. Notice of Intent-A notice of Intent must spccKy the exact name, business address, and telephone number of the prospective applicant. Include an unequivocal statement of Intent to submit, if such an application may be filed, either (I) a preliminary permit application of (2) a license, small hydroelectric exemption, or conduit exemption application, and be served on the appllc8nt(5) named in this public notice.B. Comments, Prottsts, or Motions to In­tervene ■ Anyone may submit comments, a protest, or a motion to Intervene In accordance with the requirements of the Rules of Practice and Procedure. 18 C.F.R. SS385.210, .211, .214. In determining the appropriate action to take, the Commission will consider all protests or other comments filed, but only those who file a motion to Intervene In accordanc«*wlththeCommlssion's Leonard Realty RESTRICTED Wooded lots, stream - 2'.~i to 5>/j acrcs tH'JUn- 801 - 3BU rancher remodeled, sluve, ref., W&I) included. EGS - J35,000. GOI - 2 WOODED acres with :IBR brick rancher, 2300 sq. ft. plus large workshop. DAVIE CO. - 3BK, 2B, brick ran ch er hsm l. Ex. Cond. $82,500. 1.0T ON LAKE - »10,.'i00. Office - 704-fi34-;i87.'i Linda Leonard 634-3650 Elizabeth Bohl_________919-99)t-6lH7 Rules may become a parly lo Ihe proceeding. Any comments, protests, or motions to Intervene must be received on or before Ihe specified comment date for the particular application. C. Filing and Service of Responsive Documents • Any filings must bear In all capital letters the title "COMMENTS", "NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE COMPETING AP­PLICATIO N". "COM PETING AP­ PLICATION". "PROTEST", or "MOTION TO INTERVENE", as applicable, and the Prolect Number of the particular application to which the filing is in response. Any of the above named documents must be filed by providing the original and those copies required by the Commission's regulations to: Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary. Federal Energy Regulatory commission, 825 North Capitol Street, N.E.. Washington. D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be sent to: Fred E. Springer. Director. Division of Prolect Management Branch, Office of Hydropower Licensing, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Room 208 RB at the above address. A copy of any notice of Intent, competing application or motion to Intervene must also be served upon each representative of the Applicant specified In the particular ap­plication.D2. Agency Comments • Federal, State, and local agencies are Invited to file comments on the described application. (A copy of the ap­ plication may be obtained by agencies directly from the Applicant.) if an agency does not file comments within the time specified for filing comments. It w ill be presumed to have no comments. One copy of an agency's comments must also be sent to the Applicant's represen­ tatives. Kenneth F. Plumb Secretary 2-21 4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX NOTICEHAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the estate of Jasper Tony Conner, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­dersigned on or before the 21st day of August, 1985, being six months from the first day of publication or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 15th day of February, 1985. Dorothy Anderson Conner, Route 2, Box 157-A. Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028.Martin and Van Hoy. Attorneys Box 606Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 2-21 4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX NOTICE HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the estate of Maggie Mac Sheek, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­dersigned on or before the l4th day of August. 1985, being six months from the first day of publication or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 8th day of February. 1985. Lillian Sheek Hauser, Route 1. Box 426, Ad­vance. N.C. 27006, Executrix of the estate of Maggie Mae Sheek, deceased.Martin and Van Hoy.Attorneys Box 606Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 2-l44tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYCO EXECUTOR’S NOTICE Having qualified as Co-Executors of the estate of W. S. Spillman, deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 21st day of August. 1985. or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the un­ dersigned. This the 21st day of February, 1985. W. W. Spillman, Sr.. and Anita W. Harding, Rt. 2, Mocksvilie, N.C. 27028, Co-Executors of the estate of W. S. Spillman, deceased.2-21 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR NOTICE'Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Clara Mac P. Allen, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this Is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 1st day of August, 1985. said date being at least six months from the date of first publication of this notice, 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 at P.O. Box 347, Mocksvllle. North Carolina 27028.This the 1st day of February, 1985, the same being the first publication date. Paul H. Richardson. Executor of the Estate of Clara Mae P. Allen. BROCK & McCLAMROCK AttorneysatLaw P.O. Box 347 Mocksvllle, NC 27028 Telephone (704 ) 634-3518 1-31 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVie COUNTYADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Samuel Dean Parks. Sr., deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against s.ild estate to present them lo the undersigned on or before the 7th day of August. 1985, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to saw estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 7th day of February. 1985.Samuel Dean Parks, Jr., Rt. 13, Box 184. Statesville, N.C. 28677, Administrator of the estate of Samuel Dean Parks, Sr. deceased.2*7 4tnp LAREW-WOOD-JOHNSON,lnc. 135 South Sallsbuty Street Mocksvllle, N.C. NEW LISTING WANDERING LANE-4 bedroom, 2 bath, brick veneer home, 2 fireplaces, all appliances, 16x32 fenced pool with all equipment. Ex- cellent nelBhborhood. $75,000 NAYLOR STREET-2 bedroom, 1 bath, very neat brick starter home. Convenient to shopping, schools and churchM, $29,500. BEAR CREEK CHURCH ROAD-3 bath brick veneer >pUt foyer home with 2 fireplaces ofO^fTO & lW fkilctiireBque setting w i^ large trees and pond, n o rtg ^ B lP lfu lt trees. Full basement, rough finished. |85,000.00. ^ .FARMINGTON R D -16 acres prim e land with frontage on Farm ington Road. Fencing, stream , pasture, trees and borders Cedar Creek. $49,000.00. ^ E. MAPLE AVE-One of Mocksvllle's finest 2-story older homes. Six bedrooms, large entrance hall with fireplace, large porches and beautiful grounds. Separate garage and guest house. Quiet neigh­ borhood. Convenient to downtown. |89,500.00. ___ E. MAPLE AVE.-2.43 acres and like new 3 bedroom brick veneer home with large den-dlnlng combination, fireplace, paved drive, fenced yard, playhouse and large outbuilding. Convenient to schools, churches and downtown area. $69,500.00. 334 RAILROAD STREET-lndustrlal property available, $15,000. Call for details.SOUTHWOOD ACRES-For sale or rent with option to buy-spaclous 4 bedroom, 2 bath home In excellent neighborhood near Davie High School. Features family room with fireplace, living room, dining room, carport and basement. See It today! R ^uced from $82,000 to $79,000. CENTER COMMUNITY-41 acres bordering Interstate 40, $44,000.00. SOUTHWOOD ACRES-Cholce Lots Available JACK BOOEJIOAD-Small acreage tracts available Phone 634-6281 CB. Bai Johnson 284-2202 June Jolingon 284-2202 Don Wood 634-2826 Saraii Wood 634-2826 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified a^ Executrix of the estate of Dalton Boger. deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of August, 1985, 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 14th day of February, 1985.Lois Boger Renegar, Rt. 2, Box 195, Harmony, N.C. 28634, Executrix of the estate.of Dalton Boger, deceased.2-144tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE ' Superior Court DivisionIN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED OF TRUST OF Tommy R. Anthony and wife, Mary J. ^thony GRANTOR, TO;Richard E. Stover TRUSTEE.As recorded in B ookll5at Page 235 of the Davie Public Registry NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE Of the power of sale, contained In a deed of trust executed by Tommy R. Anthony and wife, Mary J. Anthony, dated March 3rd, l98l,and recorded in Book 115, Page 235. Public Registry of Davie County, North Carolina, and by virtue of FINDINGS AND ORDER entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, on February 7. 1985, default having been made In the payment of the Indebtedness hereby secured and the said deed of trust being by the terms thereof sublect to foreclosure and the holder of the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said indebtedness, the undersigned Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of thn Davie County Courthouse Mocksvllle, North Carolina,at 2:00 o'clock p.m., February 2e, 1985, all the property conveyed In said deed of trust which property as of the 7th day of February, 1985, was owned by Thomas D. Neal and wife, Margie H. Neal, the same lying and being In Davie County. North Carolina, and more par­ticularly described as follows;BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lot No, 2 as Shown on Ihe Map of Cedar Forest as recorded In Plat Book 5, Page 6, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Davie County, North Carolina, reference to which is hereby made for a more particular description.This property Is sold sublect to any County Taxes and any special assessments that are a lien against ttie premises.The Trustee reserves the right to require of the highest bidder a deposit of five (5) percent of his bid as evidence of good faith.This notice of foreclosure is pursuant to N.• C.G.S. Chapter 45 as amended, and pursuant to terms of security instrument. This 7th day of February, 1965.Richard E. Stover, Trustee Attorney at Law P.O. Box785 King, North Carolina 27CCI (919-983-3177) 2-21 2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ^ , EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Samuel M. Howard, deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on cr before the 21st day of August. 1985. or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of tneir recovery. All persons indebted to said estat&Wlll pieaw make Immediate payment to the un- aerslgned.This the 21st day of February, 1985. w •*' Mocksvllle.N.C. 27028, Executrix of the estate of Samuel M Howard, deceased. 2-21 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Baxter Howard, deceased, late of Davie County, this istonotify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 21 day of August 1985 or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. Alt persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to Ihe un­ dersigned. This the 21 day of February, 1985. Clifford w. Howard, Administrator of the estate of Baxter Howard deceased. Clifford W. Howard P.O. Box 901 Mocksvllle, N.C. 2-21-4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Enoch W. Smith, deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 21st day of August, 1985. or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate w ill please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 3rd day of December. 1984.George E. Smith. Rt. 6. Mocksvllle, Executor of the estate of Enoch W. Smith, deceased. ____________________________________ 2-21 4tn PUBLIC NOTICE A Public Hearing will be held to discuss Region I's FY'66 Amendments to the FY 1985 • 1986 AREA PLAN ON AGING for Title III funding under the Older Americans Act of 1965, as amended. This plan establishes goals and ob- lectlves for the counties of Davie, Forsyth. Stokes, Surry, and Yadkin. Written and oral comments may be presented at the Hearing to be held Friday, March 8. 1985, at 1:30 p.m. In the Northwest Piedmont Council of Governments conference room, 280 South Liberty Street. Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Copies of the Plan and amendments are available free of charge by contacting Rodessa Mitchell at the Northwest Piedmont Council of Governments Area Agency on Aging, 280 South Liberty Street. Winston-Salem, North Carolina, 27101, or by calling (919) 722-9346. 2-21 Itn Happy Birthday We Love You Daddy Mama And Rita Paid For By Mrs. John W hile Little Teddy Hill of Sugarlake Farm will be celebrating his birthday on Feb. 25.... he has spent the last six weeks learning to JUGGLE nd DO MAGIC... Paid fo r by Bert and Susan Bahnton Dwij'ht IMycrs of the Lake Myers Campground, Mocksvillc, lit. I, has been ducted to the board of directors of the North Carolina Campground Owners Association. The 14th annual convention and trade show of the association was held recently at the Ilyatt Hotel in Winston-Salem. The N.C. Cam­ pground Owners Association is a non-profit organization organized in I!I7I for owners and operators of private camping facilities in North Carolina. Private campgrounds are owned by individuals and arc not subsidized by any state and federal funds as state and federal parks receive. The slogan “Go Camping Amcricu in North Carolina” has been adopted by our state association. Realty Ranch 634-3113 GWYN ST. 3 Br. Rancher vinyl siding S43.500 M UMFOR D DR. 2 BR Cottage S32.500 POWELLRD.-3BR(FmHA» Brick $»,' WHITNEY RD.. 3 BR with basement 137,500 C00LEEMEE.2 BR.partially remodeled»s.OOO COOLEEMEE- 3 BR,2-Story, 5 fpl. S28.500 LAND.}7,sAcwlthstr«am 13300perac, LAN D -tl Ac.prlvate S2aooperac. LOT • .55 Ac. D. Acad. Rd. near Hwy. 64 14.950. LOT • 1 AC. Twin Cedars (will divide) ttaoo. Me subscribe to the Davie County Real Estate Sales Guide O n h J K 2 1 CLEMMONS VILLAGE REAL ESTATE m . REALTOR' UULtlPll llSJlNGUf^ViCl LOVELY CUSTOM BUILT CONTEMPORARY home on 38 acres. Living room has stone fireplace. Florida room. Large m aster suite has sitting room, bath-dressing room. Barn and pasture. Call for details. PRIVATES ACRES on People's Creek Road! Cute 3 bedroom Cottage home. 3 full baths. Carport. 2 outbuildings. )70,000.00. RAINTREE ESTATES-Spacious 2 story home with swimming pool. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, family room with fireplace. Convenient location GARDEN VALLEY, MOCKSVILLE-Neat rancher with 4 bedrooms, living room, den and playroom with fireplaces, |69,B00.00. ADVANCE-Beautlful I acre setting surrotmds this spacious brick rancher. 4 bedrooms, living room and den have fireplaces. Large playroom. Many custom features. RENOVATED OLDER HOME IN MOCKSVILLEI 3 bedrooms, fireplace in living room. Storm doors and windows. )46,900.00. CRAFTWOOD-BEST BUY! 3 bedroom split-level home. Fam ily room on lower level has fireplace. BARGAIN 136,900.00. NINE WOODED ACRES with a spacious Mobile home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace In living room. ONLY $59,900.00. OVER 3 ACRES in good area, $8,500.00. THINKING OF BUILDING YOUR OWN HOME? Look at this lot In Garden Valley. ONLY »7,500.00. PERFECT HOME FOR THE 1ST TIME HOME BUYERS! Brick rancher on over I acre. 3 bedrooms, fireplace in living room. Full basement. tS9,U0U.00. • Put Number 1 ■ to work for you. ' M arty Haynes 766-4014 Carolyn Johnson 768-4777 Jo Mackintosh 766-6>36 Allen M artin 998-52tM _____________Office 766-4777 or 766-9JI1 Among tlie Pines in beautiful Davie County is a new lifestyle ttiat you can afford ... L ^ M O C K PLACE New one bedroom apartments designed for Senior Citizens and tnandicapped individuais featuring: — Central Heat & Air Conditioning — Wall to Wall Carpeting — Modern Appliances — Master TV Antenna & Telephone Hookup — Centralized Laundry — Community/Recreation Building — Organized Social Activities For more information, come by, write or call: EOUtL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Mock Place Apartments North Main Street P.O. Box 690 Mocltsville, NC 27028 f704) 634-2005____________ CEDAR RIDGE APARTMENTS Hardison Str/^t, Mocksvilie, NC NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS *1 And 2 Bedrooms *Fully Carpeted *Air Conditioning ‘ Kitchen Appliances Furnished For Information Or Application Contact 634-2070 or 300 Milling Road, Mocksvilie, N.C. Between the hours of 2:00 - 5:00 Monday - Friday. _____Managed by Phoenix Manajieincnt Services SUPPORT YOUR FFA ^C H A P TE R S CEE Carolina E E Homes, Inc. For All Your Building arid Remodeling N’eeds' Home Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Real Estate Needs Qn Houaing.. If you iiave not owned a home in tiie last three years, and earn $29,600.00 or less per year you could qualify for a very special low Interest fixed rate mortgage loan, with a down payment of only 5 percent! -W ehavepre-approved building lots available in many areas of the county - some with w ater and sewer. Or we will build on your land. LISTINGS New Cape Cod under construction 4BR, 2STATESVILLE-Kingswood Baths, Large corner lot. _ MOCKSVILLE-H-ii story under .n » i-rn |^C l Hintry Farm House looit - withln_clty limits - VjHOtK SANFORD RD, Mocltsville- Split Level on basement, 3 or 4 BR, 3 baths, fpl w-custom built insert, 1718 heated sq. ft., attached carport, house and grounds in excellent condiUon. $59,900. MOCKSVILLE - Assumable FHA-235 Loan Available (low monthly paym ent), 3BR, 2 full baths, passive solar ranch-style home with built- in flue for woodstove. $42,900. IREDELL CO- New 3 Br, 2 full baths, split foyer home with FP and drive-in garage. $54,900. _ RURAL HALL A R EA -l4 story cQVD *>«th, full basem ent, upstairs unfinished with plumbing elw..b rical work roughed In, |4I,M0. HARMONY - New 3 BR P/4 Br,!QY()icher. Fm llA Approved. Low monthly paym ent. ^ LAND BERMUDA RUN-Exceiient building lot. Will build to suit owner. HWY. 64W-TWO adjoining lots $3,000 each to sell or will build to suit buyer. DAVIK COUNTY-Cherry lllll SOLD cres with well $6250.00. RURAL IIALL-Excellent building lots and acreage for sale. STATESVILLE-Lots for sale from $4,200. HARMONY-FmllA Approved lots. ADVANCE-Nlce w ood^ lots from $4,500. HICKORY HILL-Two nice building loU - $5,900 each. WILLBOONE ROAD-Large wooded building lot - $4,500. BEAR CREEK CHURCH JID .- 40 plus acres - Vt cleared, Umber. BEACH PROPERTY NORTH MYRTLE BEACII-I, 2, & 3 Bedroom condominiums at ex- cellent locations in N. M yrtle Beach from $49,900.00._______________ ^ r^ n lH lM ? o n v e n tIo n a r^ a rm e r^ Io ra r^ d m !n istn in o I^ F n lH A ^ Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and Veterans Admlnbtratlon (VA) Homes. ___________________________________________________ 119 Depot Street Mocksvllle, NC Bob Shelton, Broker Shelby W alker, Sales PHONE 704-634-2252 919-998-2969 Von Slielton, Broker Frank Payne, Broker DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21. 1985-11B { Understanding MONTH FEB « . ABORTION ABORTION -F ree Pregnancy .".'Jappolnlmcnl.MlUollecl-W lnston.Sslcm » lf) 731.\430. Arcadia Womin's McdlcaJ ^n n lc^^ A BO R TIO N A L T E R rT A T IV E S ...F R E E PREGNANCY TESTING. "We Cdre About You; and Your Baby? and We can HELP.” Call: "Rloht to Life" at: 492-5723 or 634-5235. 2-217tpJB WANTED TO BUY WANTED: GOLD COINS, SILVER COINS, Gold and Silver Jewelry and Diamonds. 6UY...SELL...TRADE. Silver Shop II. 123 Oakwood Drive, Winston-Salem. N.c. Call 72i- D.tfnSS PAINTING & REPAIRS FURNITURE REFINISHINO...The antique workstlop furniture re flnlshing and restoration. QUALITY WORK. References. Call; 998 2918 or (919) 7M 0O69. Ask for Dianne. ___________________________________12-27-tfnD ROOF REPAIRS...Metal or Asphalt for Mobile Homes, Houses, etc. Call weekdays after 3:30 p.m. 434-3653.2-2) Itp-LA MUSIC R 8. L ROOFING & GUTTERING...Work fully GUARANTEED. FREE Estim ate. Call: Rodney at: 634-0093.2-21 Itp FOR ELECTRICAL WIRING A REPAIR...for ■ residential and commercial, call: 2842765. Electric Control Service, Cooleemee. N.C. Buck Smltherman, mgr.2-212tpBS FENCES - Offered, Repaired or Removed...AL50 Firewood for sale at *35.00 per pick-up load in Mocksvllle area only. Call after 3:30 p.m. 634-3653.2-21 Itp-LA CLEANING ANIMALS WANTED irVESTO CK A.L Beck & Sons yvinston*Salem Whosale Meat We Buy Cows & Bulls 6 Days A Week We Will Kill & Process Vour Locker Beef CONTACT: A.L ^ckJr. R oute 1 Thom asvllte Call Collect Anytime Winston-Salem 91 9-788-900B or 788-7524 Phone A fter 6 P.M. or Early A.tifl. 919-476-6895 CLASSIFIED ADS PIANO TUNING: Repairing and Rebuilding, 22 years experience. All work guaranteed. PIANO TECHNICIANS GUILD CRAFTSMAN. Calf Wallace Barford at 784-2447. .________________________________^7,tin p B 'p ia n o AND VOICE LESSONS. Experienced teacher. Degree In music. Teaches all levels ■ beginners to advanced, and all ages. Including ' adults. Mocksvllle, 634-2305.2-7 8tpMD PIANO FOR SALE...WANTED: Responsible party to assume small monthly payments on splnet-console ptano. Can be seen locally. W rite: (Include phone number) Credit Manager. P.O. Box So, Deckemeyer, Illinois. 62219. 2-21 3tnp-MP SERVICES ________________.'EreCTRIC at: 634-3390 for'ALL of your electrical needs. FREE estimates. No |ob too large or too small. Unlimited license. Karl Osborne, Owner.1-3 tfn-OE EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED: "LIve-ln Nanny"...A mature lady, non-smoker preferred, In a new home In the Advance area. Salary Negotiable. Lots of privacy. Call: 634-3168 after 6 p.m.l-24-tfnTS HELP WANTED) Now •ceepling ippllcalloni tor cM ki and w .ltre iio i al Low livllle-C lem m oni Road. Exparlonca nelplul. but nol necotjary. APPIV between 7 a.m. and 3 p.m. M oil be H or over. NO phone calli, pleaie. HELP WANTED: TODAY'S TE M ­ PORARIES...Long and short term |ob assignments In the clerical field. We need experienced secretaries. Word Processors, typists and receptionists. Also, place In per­ manent job positions. Call Dee Hudspeth or B. J. Whltebeart at (919) 722-5054.2-211tnp DH NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS...Some immediate openings. No experience necessary. Apply In person only to: P. K. Foods. Inc.. Rt. 3, Peoples Creek Road (OH 601 South), Advance, N.C. 27006.2-212tnp-PKF Business Manager Bookkeeper For New Chevrolet Dealership In Yadkinviile Must Have Had Experience With Auto motive Bookkeeping -------------Call------------- George Dayton, Jr. 919-679-3135 Highway 421 & 601 S. INCOME TAX PREPARED by an Exporlenctd Tax Preparer at Reasonablt R itn . For an appointment, call: G tnt Htndrix at: 9ft-5l45 aher 6 p.m.l-34-12tp Tn COME TAX PREPARATION...For Fast Efficient, Confidential service, call: Pt90V - Joyner, 4T2-5999. Greenhlll-Sanford Avenue l*24tlnPJ N O W ACCEPTING - $ E E E B f i ! 5 H r Part Time Cashiers, Bag Boys, Stockers and Deli Clerks. Apply at Thrifty IMari Cjemmons Village chopping Center EOE____________ HOMEOWNERS INSURANCE Isexpenslve. Get youf money's worth. Call Larew-Wood- Johnson for a computer quote from eight different Insurance companies. 634-6384 or 1- 800-255-7777.1-24tfnLWJ NEW HOME BUILT ON YOUR ' LOT...- Completely finished quality homes. Prices start under $30,000 Low down payment. Ex­cellent financing. No points or closing costs. Cali NOW...1-800-722-7000. Ext. 1797.2-14-tfnAFH FOR YOUR ROOFING JOBS...Contact Gene Trexler at 384-2098. Work GUARANTEED, FREE ESTIMATES. Call: 284-2098.2-21 4tp-GT AUTO SALES We tiave the best product, so we need the best Sales People! If you are an enthusiastic, am­ bitious, hardworking individual with experience apply in person to; Dayton Motors In Yadkinviile Your Authorized Chevrolet Dealer in Yadkin and Davie Counties. BOOER'S KAR KLEEN, Rt. 2, Mocksvllle,25 ye^rs of experience In auto reconditioning. • We clean: Engines, Interiors, Wax or Polish and dye vinyl tops. Call 998-3189 or 998-3159 for an appointment. Ann and Jack Boger, Owners and Operators. 7-7tfnBK Jnstruction TraetorTrailer Driving Careers CHARLOTTE TRUCK DRIVER SCHOOL Hwy. I6N . Charlotte, N.C. Toll Free 1-800-222-4161 or 1-704-393-3000 FOR SALE: AKC Cocker Spaniel puppies. Buff and parti colors. S125.00 each. Call: 284-2858.2-21 ItpCB INSTRUCTION LEARN TO DRIVE % Buy now and be ready for the cold weather just around the corner! PHONE 284-2226 SHEEK a® ^ ^ low P.O. Box 903 Highvi/ay 158 Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 at ISicvoH C 3II Jim Sheek, Auctioneer L ie. & BONDED hNCAL 924*NCRL 40328 APARTMENT - FOR RENT SENIOR CITIZENS: Final appllpatlons are being taken for t bedroom apartments In Senior Citizens Housing Complex In Mocksvllle. Rent based on Income. For In­formation call 634-3005 or write; Mock Place, P.O. Box 690, Mocksvllle N.C. 27020. Equal Housing Opportunity. 11-29tfn-MP APARTMENTS: Applications are being taken for a 1 bedroom apartment designed for a handicapped individual. Rent based on in­ come. For Information call: 634-2005 or write: Mock Place, P.O. Box 690, Mocksvllle, N.C. 11-29tfn-MP MOBILE HOME FOR RENT MOBILE HOME FOR RENT: 2 Bedroom. Dogwood Spring Park. Hwy. 158 and l-40. Respectable Only. Reasonable. Call: (704) 384- 2964. 11-22 tfn-JM FOR RENT: 2 Mobile Homes In the Jerusalem area. J165.00 per month and J225.00 per month. References and deposit required. Call: 284-2688 or 284-2433.2-21 ItnpET HOMES FOR RENT FOR RENT: 3 Bedroom Brick Home with Carport. Call: 634-2105 or 634-3344. 2-31 Itnp-ME rtESORT PROPERTY FOR RENT FOR RENT: 2 bedroom condominium, beach front. North M ynie Beach. Available weekly or weekends. Rent locally and save. Call Bill Foster at 634-2141.3-14-tfn WANTED VEHICLES FRUIT TREES NOTICE GROW YOUR own fruit. Free copy 48-page Planting Gulde-Catalog In color. One of the most complete lines of plant material offered including Fruit Trees, Nut Trees, Berry Plants, Grape Vines, Landscaping Plant M aterial. WAYNESBORO NURSERIES • Waynesboro, VA 33980._______2-7 4tnp-IA LOST & FOUND LOST...IN Vicinity ot Country Lane Rd. In Mocksvlllc.,.11 male llgtit tan puppy with a cut- oil tall, please call 11 seen: i?2-7567 CHILD CARE Wlli keep children of all ages In my home from 3 p.m. until 8 p.m. Experienced. Call: 998-5024. 3-21 ItnpCH HOMES FOR SALE HOUSE FOR SALE...InAAocksville.2 Bedrooms, I Bath, living room with partial basement and MOREI Hardison Street Near South Davie Jr. High School. 136.500.00. Call: 634-3456. 2-21 3tpLM Ray's TV Now offering service to Davie County residents. We service all major brands. We offer pick-up and delivery service, plus Inhome servicing. Residents on (704) ex­change may call at no extra cost. Phone: 998- 3403 for service or appointments. Shop No. is (919) 765 6284. Located at 1337 Jonestown Road, Wlnston-Saiem. N.C. 27103. beside Little League ball park. 998-3403 or 765-6284 CORRECTION RESTAURANT 1 /c» Cr—ffi CrmMtJoos Ad in paper dated 2-14-85 should have read..................... UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP AND MANAGEMENT BE FIRE SAFE nivHfiioN Become a 4-H VOLUNTEER LEADER CONTACT YOUR COUNTY EXTENSION OFFICE MOtV TRAINING ON DOUBLE-TRAILERS NO CXPCMCMCe NCEOeOI Wt KMR MCN•nd WOMCN No nMd to Qu<t (vtMnt ft) FuM«(>*rimmttrt<n>rtg DOT C«<tifc«lKin OspI C Call Toll Free Anytime I 1-800-438-1032 J LOOKI WINDOW PERFECTION IS HERE! CUSTOM MADE WEST PRIME THERMAL WINDOWS The Prime Thermal Window Is Superior Because: • ll has fl ihcrmal break which virtually stops heat and cold liansmission, • It tills inio tht? room for easy cleaning. • n rotjuirfs no mainlenance excepi cJeaning. • [| uses 7/K" thick, hermetically sealed insulated glass with a 11/16" dead air space. • It is custom made and installed to your window size and style s[)ecificiili0ns. • It is i>vaii.»bk> in both while and bronze finish. • It keeps your house warmer in winter, corjlei in summer. • It is double huny and is available w-ith full screen. • It replaces (j|d wood or metal windows. CONTACT: Ben Childers 704-634-2548 Rt. 2, Box 67-A Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 REBUILT STARTERS & ALTERNATORS ‘24.95For Am erican Cars W ith Trade in $34.95 W ith Internal Regulator Boger Texaco Service 165 N. Main Street M ocksvllle, N.C. NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE if Safes it Files ★ Fire Proof Files .R9yYflfl.QlliKFufnitnr? 118 N. Main Street Salisbury, N.C. Phone 636*8022 ______ NOTICE Ads appearing in tlie classified columns of this newspaper are $3.00 for just 25 words If paid for in advance by 11 a.m . Thursday mornings. All such classified ads not paid for by 11 a.m . Thursday at which time Uiey will be transferred to an account to be billed, will be charged al the rate of »4.«0 for just 25 words. All ads not paid for within 30 days will have 10 percent service charge added to the total. All ads in excess of 25 words will be charged at the rate of 10 cents uer word. , , Deadline for accepting classified ads in 2 p.m. Tuesday of the week to be run. NATIONAL I Children’s Dental Health MONTH MISCELLANEOUS WICKS...WICKS...WICKS...Por all brands of Kerosene Heaters. Complete Heater Service alsol WESTERN AUTO. Inc., MocksvfKe Store. Phone: 634-2371.2-l43tPWA M a b iL rH O M E s T FOR SALE WANTED; To Buy or Lease...Tobacco pcund allotments. Call: 996-3163. 3-l4-3tp FOR SALE: 81 Olds Cutlass Brougham. V-6, power steering, brakes, Air. Tilt, Cruise. Rear Detr., power locks, trunk release, AM-FM cassette. Digital Clock, vinyl top, ^,000 miles, still under warranty. Great condition. Call 634- 6»4.____________________________^4-2tpDH FOR SALE: 1980 Ford Thundcrblrd...White with red Interior. EXCELLENT condition. For more Intormatlon call: 492-730I. ALSO a 3 piece bedroom suite. Like New. $700.00 or BEST OFPERI Call after 4:10 p.m.2-21 Itnp-MN PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR PRIV*T^NV«TTo*TloNS^Vn^ Confidential, License No. 320. Telephone: Salisbury (704 ) 636-7533.7.21-tfnJL FOR SALE: EXERCISE E Q U IP M IN T... Package Deal Universal Gym, weights, mirrors, bikes, various machines. Call: (919) S38-32B2 after 5 p.m.1-24St pRP FOR SALE: 2 Prom Dresses,..Sizes 7 and 7-8. Worn only once. In excellent condition. Reasonably priced. Call after 4 p.m. 996-4064.2-21 Itp FOR SALE: Fescue Hay...Pleld gr^n...N ot pastured. 11,25 per bale at Barn In Davie. Call: (704 ) 636-2197.2-142tp COMBINE FOR SALE~ JohVo'eire 6600 Diesel Corn and Soybean combine, cab. air condition, with 444 corn head and 13 ft.platform with pick up reel and love cutterbar. il2,500.00. Dwayne Myers, Jonesville, N.C. (919) 835-3156. 2-14-2tnpMD To f t w a rE C0NCEPfs“ ‘^ re you Interested In learning word processing? Our company, Software Concepts offers 15 hours Intensive "hands-on" Instruction. Morning, afternoon and evening classes are available. Very reasonable. Call: Dee Hudspeth at (919) 722- 7054. 2-21 Itnp-DH FOR SALE...LEE'S MOBILE HOMES;..Road tf2j, Norwood, N.C Moblfe Home, ■ 110,999.00 or 24x60, t17,9»9>00. 7 days till Sun-, down. Call 704-474-3741.-_____,.>-«-MnLMH BEST PRICES ON MOBILE HOMES...U X 70T..- 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. tlO.995. 24 X 40 Mobile Home $13,995. GOOD SELECTION OF USED HOMES. DAVIDS MOBILE HOMES, HWY. 52. Norwood. N.C. Call: (704) 474-5512. I 8-9-ffnDMH YARD SALES GARAGE SALES _________'FLEA MARKETS fifG. BIG YARD SALE...Sponsored by SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH. Depot Street, Mocksvllle. Support the church with your patronage. Saturday, February 23. from 9 a.m. until ??? In the fellowship hall. Donations of any type wlli be gratefully accepted. Proceeds will be used for ttie building fund. "A LITTLE BIT OF EVERYTHING." REGISTERED NURSE * Available for Home Health Care. Hour flexible. Call: 634-2530. 2-21 ItnpDP Hi, My nam e is Jessica Denise G rant. I was one year old February 7 .1 celebrated on February a at my home. My mommy and daddy are Ilhonda and Dwayne Grant. I had 23 guests at my party. They were served straw b erry shortcake, cupcake, punch and ice cream . We had lots of fun and I received many nice gifts. My m aternal grand­ parents are Ronald and B eatrice Smoot. My paternal grandparents are Henery and Ernestine Grant. This person thought he could drive as well after a few drinlts as before. He was dead wrong. Don’t mal(e the same mistake. Jennell Lynn M cClam rock celebrated her 7th birthday, February .'i. Jennell is the daughter of Jerry \V. and Jennifer M c­ Clam rock of S alisbury St., M ock.sville. Jennell shared her birthday with her classm ates at school. Cupcakes were shared with her Ilrownie Troop. Jennell had a parly at her home. She received many wonderful gifts that she is enjoying very much from friends and relatives. JenncH’s paternal grandparents, Kuby and Calvin McClamrock, attended the party. Jennell received gifts from her m aternal grandparents, Alice arid Koger Gabbert of Sauk Rapids, Minnesota. Jennell would like to thank all of her guests and especially her brother, Justin, for helping to make this birthday a very special one. CUSTOM ' SLAUGHTERING ^ and IWEAT PROCESSING 6 DAYS A WEEK Wc also have fresh meats available Thurs., Tri. & Sat. Also sugar cured coun' irv hams for sale. --------- JOHNSON MEAT PROCESSING Ray L Johnson Hwy. 901, Harmony, 28634 Phone 704-546-7453 store Front - Auto Glass Inslalled - Storm Doors 4 Windows - Canopies B & B GLASS & MIRROR Route 1 Box 25-3 Mocksvllle, North Carolina Z7028 FREDDIE BREWER Owner Talephone - 634-3966 HOURS:8:0U a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday-I’riday Closed Salurday Circulation Department P.O. Box 525 IWoid<sville, M.C. 2702P (Check applicable box) H N orth Carolina. '... .$15.00 M Out Ot S tate...............$20.00 n sch o o l Sub. In North Carolina...........$10X)0 M SchoolSub. o u to f ita te '...................$15.00 ju f a c n t/o n s m u ^ b e _B ^d jn a d m w x ^ NAME- ADDRESS- CITY---------.ST A T E .-Z IP . TELEPHONE- BAVIB C O U N T Y UOCKBVILUt. V. a 27028 I2B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTBRPRISG RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY : I. 1985 Farm Market Summary Corn prices were two to three cents lower per bushel and soybeans were 10 to 20 cents lower per bushel ■ Ihrougti Thursday, February 14 Compared to the sam e period of the previous week, according to the M arket News Service of the North C arolina D epartm ent of Agriculture. No. 2 yellow shelled corn ranged mostly $2.79 to $3.01 in the Eastern part of the stale and $2.95 to $3.10 in th(i Piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans ranged mostly $5.73 to $0.12 in the East and $5.G7 to $5.92 in the Piedmont; No. 2 red winter wheat $3.27 to $3.65; No. 2 red oats $1.65 to $2.25. New crop prices quoted for harvest delivery corn $2.53 to $2.65, soybeans $5.61 to $6.00, wheat $2.93 to $3.19. Soybean meal was $139.40 to $148.40 per ton FOB the processing plant for 44 percent. Egg prices were 4.75 cents lower to one cent higher, com pared to those of the previous week. Supplies were adequate and demanti was m oderate. The N orth C arolina weighted average price quoted on February 14,1985, for sm all lot sales of cartoned Grade A eggs delivered to stores was .6178 cents per dozen for large, medium .,5602, and smalls .4551. Sweet potato prices were about steady this week. Supplies were adequate and demand moderate, fifty pound cartons of cured US No. Is on February 14 were quoted at $11.,50 to $12.00, occasional $12.25 to $12.50, few $11.00. Jum bos were $7.50 to $8,00, few lower. Prices paid to growers for No. Is packed out at the end of the grading belt were $9.00 to $9.50 per carton. A total of 4,147 feeder pigs were sold on 11 of the state graded sales during the week of February 11. Prices were $3.25 to $4.00 higher per cwt. US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-50 pounds averaged $91.77 per hundred pounds with No. 3s $77.83; 50-60 pound l-2s averaged $82.05, No. 3s $70.85 ; 60-70 pound l-2s $72.23, No. 3s $65.62; 70-80 pound l-2s $66.44 per hundred pounds with No. 3s $59.82. At 10 weekly livestock auctions held within the state the week of February 11, 7,942 cattle and 1,851 hogs were sold. Prices for slaughter cows were steady to $2.25 lower and feeder calves were about steady. Breaking utility and commercial slaughter cows brought $38.75 to $47.00. Cutter and boning utility brought $35.00 to $43.75, and canner and low cuttcr brought $28.00 to $35.00. Choice slaughter calves 350- 550 pounds sold from $52.00 to $61.50. A few choice slaughter steers above 800 pounds brought $62.50 to $63.25 with good at $55.00 to $61.00. A few choice slaughter heifers above 700 pounds brought $59.50 to $59.75 with good at $51.50 to $.57.50. Slaughter bulls, yield grade, 1 and 2 above 1000 pounds sold from $44.00 to $53.00 per cwt. Medium and large fram e No. 1 thickness 400-500 pound feeder steers brought $60.00 to $72.50, with small fram e No. Is at $54.00 to $66.50, sam e weight medium and large No. 1 heifers brought $50.00 to $60.00 with small fram e No. Is at $43.00 to $55.50. Beef type feeder cows carry in g av erag e flesh brought $38.00 to $41.00 with thin flesh at $34.00 to $39.00 per hundred pounds. Baby calves under three weeks of age brought $25.00 to $57.50 per head. M arket hogs, 200-240 pounds sold from $50.00 to $50.80 with sows 450 pounds up at $44.75 to $53.00. The North Carolina FOB dock g^uoted price on broilers for February 14-20 is 50 cents with a prelim inary weighted average of 50.11 cents. The m arket is higher and the live supply is mostly adequate for a good demand. Heavy type hens were higher this past week. Supplies were barely adequate and demand moderate. Heavy type hen prices were 16 cents per pound at the farm with buyers loading. M arket hogs at daily cash buying stations about the state were 50 cents to $1.00 higher and ranged from $49,50 to $51.00 during the week of February 11-15, 1985. Sows 500 pounds up ranged from $43.00 to $47.50. Jerusalem VFD To Hold Fish Fry Jerusalem Fire D epartm ent will sponsor a "Fish Fry". Friday, February 22 at the fire departm ent. The menu will include trout, flounder, with all the trimmings, and hot dogs. Serving will begin at 5 p.m. and continue until all is sold oul. The fire departm ent is located on highway 801 and 601. O n e . . . Can Replace The Loss... When Fire Destroys Your Home... No policy covers the value of the things that are precious to you. No policy can replace a child’s favorite toy, a family photo album — or a life... WE OFFER: •Standard fire, wind & hail insurance • Home protection policy • Farm protector policy Serving Iredell, Alexander and Davie County Rural Property Owners For The Past 77 Years! A LOCAL, NON PROFIT COMPANY OWNED BY ITS POLICY HOLDERS HOMEOWNER — We can provide a $40,000 HO-3 for a cost as low as $135.60 a year. AAA Standard Fire Policy $ 50,000-S 93.50 $ 60,000-$112.Z0 AAA+Homeowners’ Policy S 50,000-S156.00 S 60.000-S176.40 S 70,000-8196.80 S 80,000-3217.20 S 90,000-5237.60 S100,000-$258.00 S 70.000-S130.90 S 80.000-8149.60 8 90,000-8168.30 8100.000-8187.00 DIRECTORY IREDELL JOHNG.BLACKWELDER RICHARD A. GARTNER HUGH A. CRAWFORD ALEXANDER W. SOLON MITCHELL J. WOODROW PAYNE WILLIAIvIM.PRESSLY A.Y. NEEL KENNETH GOODMAN DAVIE ROBERTO. ALLEN R.L. SEAFORD JAMES A. EATON FARMERS MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE ASSOCIATION 301 Harrill Street, Statesville, N.C. Tel. 873-7461 Collect I ' -' ■. t iV ^ i^ T O C K SHOW Standards Division Of NCDA Checks All Weights And Measures Old Holler Farm, Rural Hall, N.C. and WhIp-O-WIII Farm, Mocksvllle, won the reserve junior bull calf champion Polled Hereford honors at the Dixie National Livestock Show on OH Titan 37S. The 182-head Standard of Perfection Show was held Feb. 11 in Jackson, Miss., and was judged by John McKnight Jr., Searcy, Ark. Mitchell Community College To Offer Off-Campus Courses Here Three courses will be ofrei'eii through Ihe Mitchell Community College off-campus program during the Spring Quarter. Classes begin Wednesday, M arch G and end Tuesday, May 28. Classes will not be held during the week of Easier. Introduction to Psychology (PSY IS l) will be taught hy Dwaine Phifer on Tuesday and Thursday evenings trom 6-8;45 p.m. It is a five quarter hour course. North Carolina History (MIS IGl) will meet on Monday and W ednesday evenings from G-8:45 p.m. The instructor for history is still pending. It is also a five quarter hour course. Beginning Tennis (PED KiO) will be taught by John Frank on Saturday mornings from 3 a.m . -12 noon. This one quarter hour course will begin on M arch 30 and meet through May 18. Tuition is $4.25 per quarter hour. Psychology and History classes will meet at South Davie Junior High. Tennis class will meet at Rich Park. For further information, or to register for either course contact Lynne Doss, Educational Coor­ dinator at Davie County Hospital, 6:i4-;i5'10, extension 339. Did you ever wonder when you bought a pound of m eat whether It w as w eighed accurately? How about that last fillup at the gas station - how do you know the pump dispensed the right amount of fuel at the right price? How do truckers know the scales are correct at state weigh stations? Good questions and there are equally good answeres. In an effort to let citizens know who tests these weigliing and measuring devices, the Standards Division of the North Carolina D epartm ent of Agriculture will celebrate National Weights and M easures Week M arch 1-7. “ The W eights and M easures Section of the Standards Division of the NCDA is responsible for testing all com m ercial w eighing and measuring devices in the state,” said N. David Smith, director. "No one thinks a lot about how much scales affect their life but accurate w ei^its and m easures are vital to business, consumers, and industry, especially high tech. Several exam ples of scales tested by the division are those used in grocery stores, by wrestling teams, all fuel dispensers, pharm acies, and taxi m eters. State Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham noted that scales are absolutely necessary to agriculture and agribusiness. "W eighing bulk com m odities such as grain and tobacco must be accurate if farm ers are to get the correct price for their crops," Graham said. “ It is also imperative that livestock producers and dealers get exact weights. “These are all responsibilities of the d ep artm en t's w eights and m easures sectio n ,” the com ­ missioner said. "W e believe it is a service invaluable to the taxpayers and it only cost our citizens about 20 cents per person annually.” Center To Hold Annual Fireman’s Banquet Saturday The Annual Firem an’s Banquet at the Center Community Building will be held Saturday night, February 23, beginning at G:30 p.m. The banquet is sponsored annually by the Center Community Develop­ ment Association; and all residents of the Center Fire District are in­ vited and encouraged to attend. The meal will consist of chicken pies and hotdogs furnished by m em bers of the association. All drinks and table service will also be provided. Those attending should bring a dessert or vegetable dish. The program , following the meal, will be a brief film on community projects, a report from the fire departm ent and the presentation of the Fireman-of-the-Year Award. There will also be drawings for door prizes. $ 1 9 9 9 5 Model RB525F’- I I o lipLcrLnjtr 2-SPEED WASHER, SPECIALLY PRICED! DRirERmDE S O L ID L Y B U IL T , P R IC E D T O S E L L -O U T Model DLB6B50B FREE DELIVERY & NORMAL INSTALLATION! W/T Choice ot Matching Dtycrs: Electric Model DLB2650B $000 Electric Model DLB1550B$000 DANIEL FURNITURE & ELECTRIC CO., INC. South Main Sireet At The Overhead Sridge PHONE 634-2492 DAVIE C O U N T V ^ Single Issue - 35 cents THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 28 PAGES (USPS 149-160) P.O. Box 525, Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Condition Of Downtown Trees Is Topic Of Special Meeting Springis Just Around The Comer Recent spring like weather inspired many county residents including Roscoe Mabe, shown pruning a large fruit tree, to enjoy the sunshine and get a head start on spring chores. National Guard Has Large Impact On Local Economy The N orlh C arolina N ational Guard with an operating budget of nearly $100 million a year is one of the larger employers in the state a recently released eeononiic impact statem ent reveals. About two-third of the operating budget goes to salaries for the more than 13,000 Guard mem bers for weekend ilrill and annual training. These salaries provide additional income to the Guard m em bers' full­ tim e jobs and get spent in eom- munit es throughout the state the statencnt indicates. In Mocksvllle the National Guard with its 50 m em bers has a total local financial impact of $1G0,1S3.00. The total for Mix'kivjlle includes m ilitary pay for Guard members, operating expense for the local arm ory, local purchases and pay for full-time personnel. In releasing the financial in­ formation Maj. Gen. Hubert M. Leonard, North Carolina Adjutant General, |X)ints out “The North Carolina National Guard is indeed big business and the financial im ­ pact on our state irjjubstantial. The National Guard is more than a group of citizen-soldiers ready to respond to state and federal emergencies. We are viable asset to our state's economy." The Guard operated on a state budget of $5.5 million in lUIM. This allocation generated $93 million in federal funding during the fiscal year. Local support for units across the state amounted to $291,.553. Total capital assets amount to $74.7 million and equipment is valued at teontinued to page 2) Arrests Made In Abuse Cases A rrests were m ade last week by the D avie County S heriff's Department in connection with unrelated cases and types of abuse involving u 22-month-old child and an 81-year-old man. In the first case, the child's mother, Jessie Lee Cuthrell, 20, of Kt. 7, Advance, and Perry Quienton Simmons, 21, of Ut. 3, Advance, were arrested and charged with felonious child abuse Kehruary 20th and 21st, respectively, according to investigating officer Del. I’, C. Williams. "'I'he extent of the child's in­ ju rie s ,” he said, " a re m arks, lacerations, and scarring on its back and chest that appear to have been caused by a switch. The child's face had also been hit with what appeared to (je fists." W illiam s said the m other, released on u $500 unsecured Iwnd, and the man, released on a $2,000 secured bond, are scheduled to m ake their first appearance in District Court M arch 2(i. In the second case, according to Del. John Stephens, the in- (ciintinued to page 2) By John Vernelson The Appearance Commission met with the director of the North C arolina D epartm ent of U rban Forestry Tuesday afternoon in the Town Hall and talked about downtown trees. Director Herman Terry, who has worked with the urban forestry assistance program for about seven years, said he has worked to some degree with 50-G0 towns with tree problems sim ilar to Mocksville. “ Infact," he said “most towns in the state I have been in, have basically the sam e problems with trees." Problem s are caused as a tree grows and as long as it is healthy, problems associated with spreading root systems, height increases, and expanding crowns will continue, he said. At somewhere along the line. Terry said, a decision must be made. "You have to decide to live with the conditions and make repairs as needed as long as the tree grows, or you have to decide to remove the tree and get rid of the problem once and for a ll,” he said. U nhealthy trees on public properly, he continued, pose a threat to property and pedestrians alike. For exam ple, he said, the tree that stands in front of Hall and Vogler's law office near the corner of South Main and W ater streets is fast becoining a ha/.ard. According to ferry, tiiis par­ ticular tree has suffered extensive dam age due to decay. “Once decay sets in. it moves up.and down which means that the roofs decay well as the trunk and lim bs,” he said. “ Decay of the root system increases the chances of a tree falling because o f wind.'' Some towns live with the constant need to rep air sidew alks, to periodically unplug w ater lines and storm drains while others, he said, decide to remove the trees. “ Unfortunately, there is no real black and white area in the situ atio n ,” T erry added. "T he ix'onie who planted the trees had gixxl intentions. but before planting any tree, they should have taken into consideration the locations of the w ater lines, the storm drains, and the eventual size of the tree.' The tree located in front of the vacant lot where the Old Masonic Building stood, according to Terry, has some internal decay, but the rem ainder of the trees which line South Main Street appear to be fairly healthy. "To rem ove the two worst trees," he continued, “would be a safety pre-caution, but the problem s (cracked sidewalks, the possibility of a dam aged w ater line and a plugged storm drain) would rem ain." . .In response to com m ission m em ber Wanda Edw ards' concern regarding corrective action that could be taken to m ake downtown trees less hazardous, Terry said pruning would be one solution if an experienced prunner “ who knows what he’s doing" does the job. "Pruning, if done incorrectly." he said, "creates continuing m ain­ tenance problems. In regard to the trees on the Square, Terry said they looked fairly healthy, were very attractive, and added to the town. Since there is no question concerning their removal, he suggested that soil samples be analyzed to determ ine the best ferterlizer to use as food for the trees. Since the Town Board, on the recommendation of the Appearance Commission, decided to remove all extraneous concrete stru ctu res from the plots, commission m em ber Barry McBride asked Terry if removal of the concrete collar which surrounds one of the trees would affect its health. Terry said feeder roots usually grow 1-2 feet underneath the top soil, and that roots located near the base of the tree are used for support and have nothing to do with a tree's food supply, so removal of the collar would not endanger the tree. When this particular tree is fed, he said, fertilizer would be spread ■ over an area beginning at the outer edge of the concrete collar's pre.sent location and ending at the curb line. Ideally, he continued, fertilizer should be spread on across the street towards the vacant lot because the tree's feeder roots grow in length relative to the height of the tree. Next week, according to com­ mission m embers, they will meet, consider all options, and decide what recommendations they will make to the Town Board concerning the trees that line South Main Street. Dottie Sigmon Is Named N.C. Youth Conservationist By Kathy Tomlinson With binoculars in hand, pretty Dottie Sigmon seeks the solitude of the rural farm land surrounding her Davie County home. She feels the warm th of the sun on her face and a soft breeze in her hair as she surveys the immense beauty of the countryside before her. Finding a secluded s|x)t, she quietly nestles among the Ijrush and undergrow th, soon oblivious to anything but tlie chirping birds above her. And through a lense, she eagerly views and records the habits olhabits of a species most take for granted. At 14-years-of-age, Dottie is a veteran bird watcher. Since taking up the hobl)y at age 9, she has identified 91 different species, recording individual characteristics and the natu ral environm ental habitats of each. Her hobby, which began as a m em ber of the Davie Academy 4-H Club, has recently brought her statew ide recognition. The shy South Davie Junior High student was named this month as the Governor’s Youth Conservationist of the Year. The aw ard is soonsored annually by the N.C. W ildlife Federation and the Sears-Roebuck Company in cooperation with the National Wildlife Federation. Dottie adm its still being “ in shock" aijout the slate aw ard which was presented February 16 at the 23rd annual G overnor’s Con­ servation A chievem ent A w ards Banquet in Greenville, N.C. ” 1 am th rilled ,” she said modestly, Dottie has never been the type of iwrsoti to sing her own praises, (continued to page 2) (Photos by Robin Fergu$ton) Dottle Sigmon, l4-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sigmon of Rt. 7, Mocksville, has been a bird watcher since age 9. With binnoculars in hand she observes birds in their natura habitat, a hobby which won her the title of State Youth Conservationist of the Year. 2-DA VIE COUNTY ENTEIU’RISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 (contimied from page 1) according to tier mollier, Mrs. Cecil Sigmon. But she doesn't mind sharing her love of birds and bird watching with other people. As part of a 4-H demonstration project, she has spoken on birds and birdwatching before 5,000 people during the past 5 years. She has also Sigmon Is N.C. Youth Conservationist compiled an impressive cumulative record about wildlife in Davie County. She was nominated for State Youth C onservationist by Loon H arkins, N.C. S tate U niversity extension Wildlife specialist. Dottie does not limit her love of wildlife to just birds and bird w atching. She has attended numerous fish and gam e camps, forestry and wildlife camp, 4-H wildlife cam p and a fur, fish and gam e cam p sponsored by the N.C. Wildlife Federation. Dottie has also identified 38 w ildflow er species, entered numerous archery and rifle con­ tests, and won photography awards at the Center Kair for her wildlife photographs. She also helps her Dad, Cecil, skin deers during hunting season. Dottie is eager to share her en­ thusiasm for the outdoors with others, and has taught numerous fellow 4-H m em bers to m ake inexpensive bird feeders. She is an active m em ber of the Davie Academy 4-H Club, the county 4-H Junior Leaders and serves as county 4-H Council reporter. As state Youth Conservationist of the Year, Dottie is eligible for competition for the national award which is presented at the National C o n s e rv a tio n A c h ie v e m e n t Banquet. The N orth C arolina W ildlife Federation first presented a limited number of conservation awards in 1958 but it was in 19B1, when financial aid granted by Sears- Roebuck Foundation perm itted expansion of that annual project, that the current North Carolina : C o n s e rv a tio n A c h ie v e m e n t Program was established on its present scale. In 1972, the North Carolina retail stores of the Sears- Roebuck Company in lieu of the Sears-Roebuck Foundation elected to continue financial aid for the program . By giving recognition to the contributions m ade in the public interest by outstanding community and state conservation leaders, it is felt that a new public aw areness of the need to conserve and wisely use our natural resources will en­ courage their renewed dedication and action by others as we strive to achieve "environm ental quality.” Nominations are subm itted by individuals, local conservation clubs, private organizations and by the agencies and departm ents of government. Nominees, which may be either professionals or non- :professionals, m ust be justly deserving of recognition for out­ standing accomplishments, and in the case of professionals such effort must be that given above and beyond their regularly assigned duties. An "Awards Committee,” com posed of qualified con­ serv atio n ists who a re not necessarily Federation mem bers, judge all nominations and select state winners which are honored at the Awards Banquet. Dottie Sigmon of Rt. 7, Mocksville, received this tiandsome trophy as winner of the Governor's Youth Conservationist of the Year. The presentation was made last weel< during the 23rd annual Governor's Conservation Achievement Awards of the N.C. Wildlife Federation. Dottie is an avid bird watcher and does not limit her hobby to the outdoors. She has an impressive collection of porcelain birds in tier room. Dottie is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Sigmon of Rt. 7, Mocksville. National Guard (conlinucd from page I) : $598.1. In Mocksville the full and part- tim e Guard payroll amounted to $140,003.00 during 1984. An ad- : ditional $1,736.00 was spent for local purchases. R eplacem ent value for M ocksville arm ory facility is : $411,840.00 The National Guard is best known for its assistance to state and local ■authorities during em ergencies In 1984 North Carolina Guard per­ sonnel put in 4,6G5 m andays following the M arch tornadoes and. : ;an estim ated 3,500 m andays during : and after Hurricane Diana. ; Less well known is the increasing roll assigned to the National Guard !in recent years for its federal •wartime mission. Every National : Guard unit now has a specific w artim e assignm ent. In N orth Carolina several are included in the • Tlapid Deployment Force which ! would be employed in t he early days ; of any future conflict. Blackwelder Road ^ y Lilliam M cM ahon of Rt. 8, Q r o n o M T Mocksville, reported Sunday that : O u C I I C w l r t u U I U C l I l someone broke a padlock off an Davie Sheriffs Department David Boggs of Rt. 5, Mocksville reported F rid ay th at som eone removed a bumper and other parts from his old M ercedes while it was parked in his yard, according to a Sheriff’s Dept report. The report indicated that Boggs was restoring the car. No estim ate of dam age appeared on the report. Ricky Keith Gaither of Rt. 4, Mocksville and 512 Garden Street, Lexington, was arrested Monday and charged with non-support and failure to pay support as ordered, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Jam es Bowles of Rt. 1, Advance, reported the larceny of a woo^; splitter valued at $1200 from aV outbuilding on his property Saturday, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Charlie Minor of Rt. 2, Advance, reported the larceny of money from his residence Sunday, according to a Slieriff’s Dept, report. I Unpaved Blackwelder Road was • the scene of a one-car-accident ! early Sunday afternoon. According to Highway Patrol i report Sonya Darlene Crews, 17, of ; Rt. 8 Mocksville, the operator of a . 1982 Chevrolet, had just driven from ; the paved portion of R alph Ratledge Road onto the gravel • covered Blackwelder Road when (lie accident occured. ; Crews’ vehicle liegan to slide, ■ causing her to lose control. The vehicle then spun a round in the .. road, w ent off the roadway on (he riglit, and struck a ditchbank before coming to a stop, the report in- : dicated. : Dam age to he vehicle was $1,500. Trooper R.D, Kniglit in\«iligated. Ili'auty ilutli Beautify the balb by adding ■ plants. Choose those that adjust well ' to m oisture and do not need lots of ; direct liglit. Fish FiUet Allof a fish fillet, about 85 [)ercent : of fish steaks, and only 45 percent of dressed fish are edible. outside door, entered her residence, and took $10 and a fireplace shovel, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. The report indicated that the shovel is worth $5. The thief at­ tempted to replace the Jock upon leaving, according to the report. Melvin Mock of Ht. 1, Mocksville, reported dam age to his maillMX on Godby Road Saturday. Damage was $30. Bill Sealey of Clemmons reported that someone dam aged a Wmston- Salem Journal paper rack located at the Bi-Lo station near the in­ tersection of highways 801 and 158, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, reixirt. Sealey reported the incident Sunday. Jeffery Phillip Long of Rt. 2, Advance, was arrested Saturday and charged with obstruction and delay, |x)ssessing beer and the simple (Possession of a controlled substance, according to a Sheriff’s Dent remirl The report indicated that Long claimed to lie a juvenile at the time he was taken into custody. Arrested on a $300 unsecured bond. Long is scheduled to face the charges in court April 9, according to the report. Davis Elliott, 30, of Kernersville, was arrested Monday and charged with driving with license revoked, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. A rrested on a $200 secured bond, Elliott will face the charge in court April 2. A sm all bag containing a white substance believed to be cocaine was discovered in the mouth of a Virginia man who was confined in the county jail on a DWI charge Sunday, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, re p rl. Bond lor the man, Bryan Keith McMillon, 28, of Claudville, was set at $500 secured, the report in­ dicated. Anita Sue Horne, 17, of Rt. 8, Mocksville, was arrested Friday and charged with injury to personal property, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. M arsha Howell of Rt. 3, Mocksville, reported the breaking and entering of her residence on Turentine Church Rd. Monday, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, rejxjrt. Apparently, an unknown person kicked open the back door to gain entry. Twenty-five dollars worth of dam age was done, but nothing was re|X)rted missing, the report in­ dicated. Andrew Clay Jones of Rt. fi, Mocksville reported the larceny of a G o-Cart w orth $150.00 Sunday, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. The Go-Cart was taken from Jones’ m other’s property, which is approxim ately 200 yards from his residence on Bear Creek Cliurch Rd, Buddy McClarnrock of Rt. 3, Mocksville, reported February 20 that an unknown person shot his cow in the head while it was in the pasture, according to the re|iorl. Inuc ‘CMWI lUI Keith Monroe Wharton, 18, of Rt. 1, Mocksville, was arrested Friday and charged with simple possession of a controlled substance and possession of beer by a minor, according to a Sheriff’s Dept, report. Bond was set at $200. Wharton will face the charge in court April 9, the report indicated. An unknown person used a key to open a Pepsi drink machine at Spillman’s Exxon on HWY 801, Cooleemee, according to a report m ade February 17, Twenty dollars in change was taken, Michael Wayne Shoffner, 23, of Rt, G, Mocksville, was arrested February 20 and charged with one count of failure to appear, Julie Smith Gaddy, 21, of Rt, 2, Advance, was arrested February 20 and charged with one count of ut­ tering a worthless check, a report indicated, Ms, Gaddy’s trial date is set for March 25, Animal Protection Society Receives $1,000 Grant The M argaret C, W oodson Foundation has made a $1,000 grant to the D avie County A nim al Protection Society, The grant was announced this wet!k by Freddie Hammer, local APS officer. Mrs. Hammer said the $1,000 will Ix! used to cover expenses incurred by the society’s two anim al cruelty investigators, John McCashin and Earl Hammer during official in­ vestigations. "These two men have volunteered their tim e to act as county animal cruelty investigators for the past six years without any type of reim ­ bursement for travel,” she said. “The funds will be used to cover the out-of-pocket expenses incurred by them while investigating various reports of anim al cruelty and neglect.” She added that the society is most grateful to the Woodson Foundation for its generous donation. Arrests Made In Abuse Cases (continued from page I) • vestigating officer, 18-year-old Bill Lee Wyatt, Jr., of the Lakewood Motel in Mocksville, was arrested February 20 and charged with 10 counts of false pretenses and one count of extortion in connection with what m ay be term ed as the mental h arrassm en t and-or abuse of F letch er S trid er after W yatt reportedly attem pted to extort $2,000 from the elderly man. W yatt reportedly took thousands from Strider over a three year period by telling him at various times that he needed money for serious illnesses and emergencies such as cancer and a gun shot Wound, according to Del. Stephens. After obtaining the money, Wyatt allegedly bought other items with it for himself and friends, Stephens said. In the latest episode, according to Stephens, S trid er said W yatt showed him a note which threatened both men with death unless Wyatt could come up with $2,000 in cash by 1 p.m., February 20. As a result of the note, Strider drove to the Northwestern Bank in Clemmons to get the money, but an alert teller, Lisa West, called the S heriff’s D ept, and told Det. Stephens Strider wanted to with­ draw $2,000, Stephens said. S trider then, said Stephens, returned to his residence without the money and locked himself in­ side. Stephens drove to Strider’s house, but said the elderly man refused to answer the door. Concerned that he might be afraid or hurt, Stephens called for a uniform car and a few minutes later, deputies Mike Smith and Teresa Piner arrived. "Finallv.” .Sfeohens said, “wp broke in through the front door because we d idn't know w hat physical condition he might be In. We were afraid he m ight have been beaten up or was hurt.” Once Strider was convinced they were the law, he told them about the note and the three left for W yatt’s residence, but as they were leaving saw W yatt’s vehicle as it ap­ proached Strider’s house, Stephens said. Wyatt, according to Stephens, attem pted to turn around and leave the scene, but deputy Smith stopped him with his police car. Detectives W illiams and Stephens said Friday that such cases as the two involving the physical abuse of the child and the m ental harrassm ent and-or abuse of the elderly m an are common. “If anyone has information or knows of cases of this type, they should contact the Davie County D epartm ent of Social Services or a detective with the Davie CoUnty Sheriff’s D epartm ent,” Williams said. Such cases will be investigated, the two said, and callers "don’t necessarily have to have their names revealed.” Chief Deputy Tom Foster said more cases of this type had come to the attention of law enforcement officers during the last two years because of m edia publicity | surrounding cases of abuse. "If peoplewould let us know about these kinds of cases, we could do , more to help in these areas,” he; said. ,1 The Sheriff’s Departm ent has! made 18 child abuse arrests over the I past year, a significant increase! over previous years. Nine-Year-Old Is Struck By Car A 9-year-old boy who was struck by a car on U.S. 601 S. Thursday afternoon was discharged from Duvie County Hospital the next day, ac­ cording to a hospital spokesman. The boy, Joel Lane Surrette, of Mocksville, was struck at about 4:25 p.m. by a 1977 Lincoln driven by Dorothy Steele Archer, 57, of Center Street, Cooleemee, when he ran onto! the road from the left into the path of I the vehicle, a Highway P atrol! report indicated. According to the report, Mrs. I Archer could not avoid striking thel boy and no charges were filed byl T rooper J.L . P ayne, the in-f vestigating officer. Man Sentenced For Assault An 18-year-old man charged with assault and carrying a weapon on school property was found not guilty of the weapons charge but was given a 30 days suspended sentence for assault in Davie County District Court Tuesday. The man, Meade Atkinson, of 501 Salisbury Street, Mocksville, was charged after an incident involving a fight at South Davie Junior High School February 19. According to arresting officer Greg Bagshaw, Atkinson went to South Davie to fight a 16-year-old student and had a replica gun in his possession at the time. The assaulted youth testified in court, said Bagshaw, that he didn’t fight back because he was afraid he would be shot. A ccording to Bagshaw, the boy covered his head when assaulted by Atkinson. Judge R obert W. Johnson suspended Atkinson’s sentence but placed him on supervised probation for two years and on unsupervised probation for three years. He was also ordered to pay a $50 fine and costs. As a special condition of his probation, he was ordered to per­ form 50 hours of community or reparition service. Other special conditions are: (1) Not enter upon prem ises of South Davie Junior High School w ithout the ex p ressed w ritten consent of the school principal. (2) Not have in his possession any firearm during the period of suspension. (3) Not have any replica firearm outside his home. (4) Not threaten, harass, or assault the youth in question during the period of suspension. (5) The defendant is to complete his high school education. (6) Not violate any State or Federal laws, and rem ain of general gooJ behavior. I (7) Report to Mental Health CliniJ for evaluation and counseling. I\^eeting Date Is Changed The Davie County Board of C o m m issio n e r’s m e e tin g scheduled for 1:00 p.m ., Monday, M arch 4, 1985, has been postponed until 1:00 p.m., Monday, M arch II, 1985, in the Commissioner’s Kooin of the Courthouse. of a Cooleemee To HoJ( World Prayer Day Cooleemee Presbyterian is host to I World Day of Prayer for the com-1 munity, Friday M arch 1, at 7:30 p.m. All mem bers of Cooleemee churches are invited to this church for special services. This 1985 service, takes as its theme “ Peace Through Prayer and A ction.” W ritten by C hristian women of India, it calls people the world over to gather for the 98th consecutive year to circle the globe in prayer for peace and to be ac­ tively become peacemakers. The service seeks to motivate a commitment on the part of par­ ticipants to becom e personally involved in the peacem aking p ro c e ss-a s individulas and as families within their communities, their nation and the world. D A V I B C O U N T Y (USPS 149-160) 127 South Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Published every Tliursday by the DAVIE PUBLISHING COMPANY MOCKSVILLE ENTERI’RISE I9I6-1958 DAVIE RECORD 1899-1958 COOLEEMEE JOURNAL 1901-I97I Cordon Tomlinson....................................................Editor-Publlshi;r Kathy Tomlinson....................................................‘''■’'Busson Becky Snyder.......................................................Advertising Director Sccond Class Poslatie I’aid in MocksviUe, N.C. 27028 SUBSCRIPTION RATES Single Copy 35 Cents f l 5.00 per year In North Carolina $20.00 per year outside North Carolina Postmaster Send address changes to Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Tonya Turner Awarded Full Scholarship By Duke Power DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985-3 Tonya Lynn Turner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Tommy C. Turner of Mocksville, is one of six higli school students selected to get full scholarships In Duke Power Co.’s Scholastic E xcellence A w ards Program . Duke Power President Douglas W. Booth said. Tonya is a student at Davie High School. The other five winners are: -Jeffrey Gordon C rater, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry G. C rater of Tryon, Tryon High School. --Katherine Earhardt “ Kappy" Griffith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve C. Griffith, Jr., of Charlotte, Charlotte Country Day School. -W illiam Todd Porter, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Larry Porter of Charlotte, West Charlotte High School. "Neil Alvin Riemann, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jam es M. Riemann of M isenheimer, North Stanly High School. -M a rg a re t Lynne W eaver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sterline Abernathy W eaver of Eden, John Motley M orehead High School. The six winners were selected from 20 finalists by an interview com m ittee of business, professional and educational leaders from the Carolinas. Each finalist was rated on the basis of m erit, academ ic record and awareness of career goals. The 20 were chosen by a review committee from nearly 900 students nominated by their prin­ cipals and h ead m asters w ithin Duke Pow er’s service area. None of the m em bers of the interview committee or the separate review committee were employees of Duke Power. U nder the guidelines of the program , half of the scholarships were awarded to children of Duke Power employees. They are Kappy, Todd and Tonya. The scholarships fully provide for tuition, fees, books and room and Ixiard at any accredited college or university in North Carolina or South Carolina, Booth said. Scholarship funds will come from shareholders, not custom ers, he said. In addition to the full scholar­ ships, Duke Power will present 14 honorary one-time $1,000 grants to the other finalists. They are: Susan Paige Baker, Kelly Leanne Jackson, Jerry Michael Stephen Telford, all of Charlotte; Paula Renee E aker of Lawndale, N.C.; K risten Dawn G ardner of Wilkesboro; Todd Allen Moore of Reidsville; Carol Ashley Moss of Shelby; Ethan Gregory Shenkman of Chapel Hill; Victor Blaine Sitton of R utherforclton; M elinda C atherine T aylor of H ickory; Jam es Erskine Mitchell of Stanley; Jill Catherine Wright of Raleigh, Woman Shot Following Argument A Davie County woman was shot in the chest and abdominal area Friday night following an argum ent over a bonfire at her residence. Shelly M arie Renner, 20, of Davie Academy Road was in satisfactory condition T uesday m orning at Davie County Hospital, where she is being treated for the wound. Ms. Renner underwent surgery early Saturday, and was listed in critical condition at that time, according to Chief Deputy Tom Foster of the Davie County Sheriff’s D epartment. W illie H ow ard Thom as Leonard, a suspect in the shooting, was also treated at Davie County Tonya Turner who attends the N.C. School of Science and M athem atics in D urham ; and Stephen M aline Roddey of Rock Hill. “The scholarship program is intended to recognize and reward individual m erit and high achievement, to play a significant role in improving the quality of education in our area and to dem onstrate Duke Pow er’s con­ tinued com m itm ent to higher education,” Booth said. “We are proud of all these youngsters and wish them well as ihey pur.sue their educational and career goals,” he said. Center Fire Dept, responded to a m obile hom e fire on D avie Academy Rd. Friday at 10:03 p.m. Cooleemee Fire Dept, assisted. Jerusalem Fire Dept, responded I to a grass fire on Cherryhill Rd. off I Hwy 801 Saturday at 9:45 a.m . Cooleemee Fire Dept, responded I to a woods fire on Needmore Rd. off ] Hwy 801 in Rowan County Saturday I at 11:11 a.m . Scotch-Irish Fire Dept, [also responded to this fire. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a I trash fire on No Creek Rd. off U.S. |64 Saturday at 11:15 a.m. Jerusalem Fire Dept, responded Ito a woods fire on Gladstone Rd. lacross from the ball park Saturday |a t 11:32 a.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a Iwoods fire on Hwy 64 above Hen­ dricks BBQ Saturday at 11:53 a.m. I Farmington Fire Dept, responded Ito a grass fire on Farm ington Rd. pcross from the telephone office Saturday at 12:49 p.m. Sm ith G rove F ire D ept. Iresponded to a grass fire on iRivcrbcnd Drive in Bermuda Run [Saturday at 5:07 p.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, responded I to a grass fire on Avon St. Sunday at 111:58 a.m. Advance Fire Dept, responded to I a fire on Mt. Zion Church Rd. at the Zimmerman residence Sunday at I 12:59 p.m. Sm ith G rove F ire D ept, responded to a grass fire on Boger Rd. at the M organ R esidence Sunday at 1:18 p.m. County Line Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Davie Academy Rd. at the Koontz residence Sunday at 2:09 p.m. Cooleemee Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Jerusalem Ave. Sunday at 3:54 p.m. Davie Fire Log Farm ington Fire Dept, responded to a truck on fire on Farmington Rd. Tuesday at 11:58 a.m. Center Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on U.S. B4 February 19 at 4:07 p.m. Mocksville I^ire Dept, responded to a structure fire on Sanford Ave. Feljruary 20 at 12:39 a.m. Advance Fire Dept, responded to a g rass fire behind A dvance Discount Store February 20 at 12:21 p.m. William R. Davie Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Hwy 601 at Buster Phillips Trailer Park February 20 at 2:50 p.m. Center Fire Dept, assisted. County Line Fire Dept, responded to a woods lire on U.S. 64 near Hunting Creek bridge February 20 at 3:48 p.m. Farm ington Fire Dept, resjwnded to an accident which resulted in a personal injury on 1-40 east of Farm ington Rd. February 21 at 2:29 a.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Hwy 801 February 21 at 1:14 p.m. Cooleemee Fire Dept, responded lo a grass fire on Hwy 801 near the shopping center February 21 at 3:14 p.m. Mocksville Fire Dept, responded to a Held fire on Main Church Rd. off 158 February 21 at 4:59 p.m. Smith Grove Fire Dept, assisted Clemmons Fire Dept. February 21 at 7:29 p.m. at the Jewish Home, William R. Davie Fire Depl. responded to a vehicle fire on 001 N Friday at 8:40 a.m. Fork Fire Dept, responded to a grass fire on Riverdale Rd. Friday at 1:30 p.m. F R E E S T E A K K N IF E . Something extra with our “Eadra-thkk" Steaks. If you love our extra-thick steaks, now you'!! love them even more. Because every time you order one of our four juicy, delicious Extra-thick Steaks we'll give you a beautiful wood- handled, stainless-steel steak knife — free. Come in soon and start building a set. OHer flood »vIhIb supplms lasl rjol gooO in cui«iuncliun /.ilH couponi, or otl>or otiotft Jerusalem Fire Uept. responded to a grass fire on Willboone Rd. at the Burgess residence Sunday at 4:00 p.m. Hospital. He was treated lot* in­ juries received when he was beaten by Ms. Renner’s boyfriend and another man after the shooting, lie said. Leonard was released Tuesday in the custody of the’Sheriff’s lip l., according to a hospital spokesman. A w arrant for assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injuries was to. be served on Leonard upon his release, Foster said. Ms. Renner was shot after an argum ent broke out over who had called the local fire departm ent to put out a bonfire at her residence. "The boyfriend of the victim had Mando Named To Committee Mayor D.J. "N ick” Mando has been named as a m em ber of the Energy, Environment and Natural Resources Policy Committee of the National League of Cities. Nominated for the position by the state m unicipal league. M ayor Mando’s term will conclude at the adjournm ent of the A nnual Congress of Cities, December 11, 1985. As a m em ber of the committee, Mando will be expected to attend an NLC Congressional-City Conference in Washington, D.C. M arch 24 and the Congress of Cities in Seattle, W ashington, according to George V. Voinovich, president of the NLC. The March 24th morning meeting will consist of a plenary session for all NLC policy committees on the national political and fiscal content for NLC's 1985 policy development work. The C om m ittee’s afternoon session will focus on setting the policy work agenda for the year. NLC will also sponsor a sem inar on the new hazardous w aste law and its im pact on cities M arch 26 in Washington. The sem inar will focus Mayor D.J. Mando on the three requirem ents which most directly affect cities: the small quant ity generator rules; the leaking underground storage tank regulations; and the solid waste disposal facility regulations._______ accused Leonard of calling the fire departm ent,” Foster said. Leonard went to his trailer across the street and returned with a shotgun, lie said. They wert; all reportedly drinking at the time. The sheriff’s departm ent received a call at 11:37 p.m. that shots had been fired at the residence, and upon arrival, found Ms. Renner lying in her driveway, he said. Tlie case is being investigated by D eputy J e rry W illiam s and D etectives John Stephens and Buddy Williams. Five Tornado Workshops Are Scheduled The North Carolina Department of C rim e C ontrol and Public Safety's Division of Em ergency M anagem ent and the Nationa’l W eather Service and the D epart­ ment of Public Instruction will hold five Tornado Awareness Workshops across the state later this month. In announcing the workshops, Secretary Joseph W. Dean of the Depaitm ent of Crime Control and Public Safety said, “ N orth Carolinians know full well the destruction that was caused last March by the tornadoes that swept through eastern North Carolina. Tlie workshops are being held in A sheville, Salisbury, R aleigh, Williamston, and Kenansville. Square Dance Farmington Fire departm ent will sponsor a "S q u are D ance” Saturday, March 2, 1985, at the fire departm ent, beginning at 8 p.m. Proceeds will be used for the fire departm ent. It's a c u t a b o v e ! MOCKSVILLE, N.C. e ig n in g B e a u M Save 25% on our own Reigning Beauty* dress shoe Perk up your feet in fashion-and quality-conscious shoes. Styled with the latest toe and heel shapes. Reigning Beauty offers you a handsome and affordable selection of shoes that will update all of your spring v\/ardrobe. A. Spring dress sandal in bone. B. Comfortable mid heel, nappa dress sandal in v^hite C. Black leather low wedge skimmer. H Q Q Each Reg. 24.00 I f T H R IF T S T O R E LADIES COTTON SWEATERS NEW FOR SPRING SHORTAND LONG SLEEVE 100% conoN SIZES S -M -L S E L E C T G R O U P • BEDSPREADS • DRAPERIES • CURTAINS Values To 75.00 To33V 3% 5 0 % o« E N T IR E S T O C K ATHLETIC SHOES MEN’S WOMENS-CHILDRENS ASSORTED STYLES Usually ‘20'” To ’53“ 2 5 % Off 4-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985 Jerry Supple Aircraft Sales Locates In Davie Jerry Supple Aircraft Sales, Inc. announces the opening of their new office at the Salem Center in liist Davie The officc is locatcd at Interstate 40 and Highway 801 and they are the first of m any to occupy space in the newly constucted Salem Center Office Complex, llie Salem Centers are being Duilt and developed by Salem Construction, a partnership, builders of Bermuda Village, Bermuda Uun. Jerry Supple Aircraft Sales, Inc. was formerly located at 1409-G Plaza West Road in Winston-Salem. Tlie new office mailing address is: P.O. Box 310, Advance, N.C. 27006 and the telephone number is, (B19) 998-2222. J e rry Supple, Owner and President of the Company and Chuck Cooper, Vice P resident together have over 40 years of ex­ perience in aircraft sales and the Company specializes in aircraft for corporate operators. Both are commerical pilots and have extensive experience as flight instructors. Cooper w as form erly Sales M anager of the Company and prior to this he served as M anager of the Used A ircraft D epartm ent for Cessna Citation Program until 1978, when he moved to Kansas City in full-line sales w ith E xecutive Beechcraft, Inc. He and his wife, Susi and their two daughters, Cecily and Courtney reside in Bermuda Chuck Cooper Kun. Judy C. Carter has joined the staff as A dm inistrative A ssistant- M arketing. Ms. C arter formerly served as M arketing Officer for various m ajor banks in the Win­ ston-Salem and surrounding area counties. Judy resides in Clem­ mons, N.C. with her two sons, Chip Judy Carter and Chad. The Advance firm specializes in "locating” and “reselling” cor­ porate aircraft. They have recently been appointed the Mooney dealer for North Carolina and Western Virginia. A grand opening will be held at a later date. Mitchell College Offers Local Course ■ ' Three courses will be offered through the Mitchell Community ;• College off-campus program during ; the Spring Quarter. Classes begin ' Wednesday, M arch 6 and end . Tuestjay, May 28. Classes will not be • held during the week of Easter. : Introduction to Psychology (PSY ■ 151) will be taught by Dwaine Phifer : on Tuesday and Thursday evenings - from fi-R:45 p.m. II is a five quarter hour course.’North Carolina History (HIS 161) will meet on Monday and Wednesday evenings from 0-8:45 p.m. n ie instructor for history is still pending. It is also a five quarter hour course. Beginning Tennis (PED 160) will be taught by John Frank on Saturday mornings from 9 a.m .-12 noon. Tliis one quarter hour course will begin on M arch 30 and • • •ONLY ONE STORE IN MVIE COUNTY... OFFERS eOMPlETE PHARMACY SERVICE .. 24 Hour Emergeney PreseripHon Service Qualified Charge Aecouiris . Complete Tax and insurance Records Open Seven (7) Days A Week and Holidays Discount Prices • • • • • t • • • BILL FOSTER Rsglstered Pharmacist BOB RAUCH Registered Pharmacist THAT STORE IS A rt Guild Elects Officers '(Photo by Robin Ferguison) The Davie County ArtGuildrecently elected officers to serve during the 1985-86 year. Officers include Nancy Davie, president; Fletcher Queen, vice-president; Phyllis Swanson, secretary; and Gloria Marion, treasurer. The purpose of the local Art Guild is to promoteart in Davie. All new/members are welcome. meet through May 18. Tuition is $4.25 per quarter hour. Psychology and History classes will meet at South Davie Junior High. Tennis class will meet at Rich Park. For further information, or to register for either course contact Lynne Doss, Educational Coor­ dinator at Davie County Hospital., 634-3546, extension 339. Report From Raleigh by Rep. Betsy Cochrane Special m terest groups that like to meet with l(^>islators often entertain the General Assembly with evening receptions. In the past, some groups have met with legislators at break­ fast. Tliis session, we have had far m ore breakfast invitations than ever before. One that I accepted last week with great pleasure was breakfast with the Governor at the Mansion. The invited guests were the leaders in the House and Senate, including the Appropriation and Finance Chairman. Tliat m ade a total of 15 men and me. We had a tasty ham and egg breakfast and interesting conversation with the G overnor, Lt. G overnor and Speaker. Recent bill introductions have included the B asic E ducation Program and the Teacher Career Plan. Both bills will receive lengthy discussion. The Basic Education Program is basically very good. It presents a curriculum plan that attem pts to equalize educational opportunities state-wide. • W hereas the plan is very good, it does need some modification. We want the m ath and science in­ struction to be m ore basic rather than concentrating on relevancy. Students will have great difficulty understanding the effects of acid rain if they do not understand about acid. The price tag for this blue print is $619 million. The C^arccr Ladder Program is still .struggling with the evaluation tool. Thai is essential to its success, along with a commitment on the part of teachers and principals to m ake it work. With some seriousness and some longue in cheek, two legislators introduced bills to raise the minimum SAT scores for athletes to 700. We were told athletes received 400 just for signing their names. A nother bill introduced in the House would limit the governor to one four year term . A Senate bill lim its the governor to one six year term . Although it does not affect Governor M arlin, these bills will bear watching, so they are not am m ended to affect him. The voters m ay decide this one through referendum. A second bill was introduced this week tochipaway at the Governor’s power. This one instructed the Governor to choose State Election Board m em bers from a specific list. This limited the Governor’s ap­ pointive powers. We tried to amend it to death. It passed the House after providing us with our first real ■skirmish and, certainly, the only lloor excitement this session. I have introduced legislation to allow the County School Board to transfer some property adjacent to the old C ooleem ee E lem entary School to the C ooleem ee F ire Department. It will be before Local G overnm ent II on W ednesday, E. Davie Homemakers Meet With Ms. Smith The E ast D avie E vtension Homemakers Club met at the home of Shirley Smith on Feb. 19, The Pres. Polly Hailey, called the meeting lo ordei-. C harlotte Sm ith gave the devotions, taken from Luke 10. Shirley Sm ith presented the program on fire, titled, "Be Alert To Be Alive” . The club welcomed back their treasurer, Grace Parrish, who had Iwen visiting her daughter, in Mexico. Old and new business was taken care of, after which, the meeting adjourned and rem ained with Shirley for a delightful lunch, consisting of chicken pie, tossed green salad and congealed straw berry salad. February 27. I have attended two public hearings this week. One very lenghty session conccrned the Day Care Bills and one concerning the University System Comments by President Friday led to the in­ troduction of the proposed 700 SAT requirem ents for athletes entering college. My Ju d iciary C om m ittee is considering legislation to remove a closed pocet knife from a deadly weapon category. It was a pleasure to be visited this week by Ruth Hoyle, Davie County Librarian. I was pleasantly sur­ prised in the House Cham ber by Rufus Urock, Dean Myers, W alter White, and Luther Potts. When vou are in Raleigh, do come by and see m e at the Legislative Building, Room 1106. My phone num ber is 919-733-5822. Democrat Precinct Meetings, March 7th All Davie County Democratic I P recin cts will m eet at th eir respective polling places at 7:30 | p.m. Thursday M arch 7, 1985. The purpose of this meeting is to elect new officers for the next two years and to elect delegates to the I County Convention which will be I held at 1:00 p.m. on April 13, 1985. [ Republicans To Hold Party Convention Tlie Davie County Republicanl Party Convention will be heldl Monday, M arch 11, at 7:30 p.m. a tl the Davie County Courthouse. I The Parly officers for 1985-87 w illl be elected. This includes th e l c h a irm a n , v ic e - c h a ir m a n ,! secretary, and the treasurer. I The m em bers of the S ta te l Republican Party Executive will liel nominated, and the delegates aridi alternate delegates will be elected! to attend the North Carolina Statel Republican Convention and th el N orth C arolina E ighth D istrict I Convention. We're Outlet Priced OFFERING DISCOUNTS OF 20%-60% 30-60 DAYS Same As Cash FINANCING AVAILABLE Up to 36 Months OUTLET PRICE ’16995 RFCLINER VALUE ACTION/LANE as I low □ s. . I I Choose From Over/ 50 Choirs. All Action roclinors oro backod by a lifotimo war* ranty on tho choir mochonism. BAR STOOL All wood group In- ouTlfTPm ri eludes ovolloblo with joo/4 6mafeschoir5. < A A AMaple finish. 2 # # BEDDING VALUESI •15 U ar Warranty •312 Coll Queen Ring ’1 9 9 '' 5249” ^329®' Full Krng MONDAY-SATURDAY 9-6; FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 6:30 SALISBURY 637-0660 CORNER FULTON ft INNES KANNAPOLtS932-3Ml 136 0AK AVE. . CONCORD 786-01M 617 CHURCH ST..N. tow n Furniture YOUR OUTLET STORE CARF. f ING OVER 300 m a jo r LINES OF FURNITURE & APPLIANCES.- Canvasbacks Subject Of State Duck Stamp DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISI- RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985-5 Representative Joe H. Hege, Jr., Republican of Davidson County announces the appointm ent of Miss Kristin Kay Stew art (K ris), as a House Page to the North Carolina General Assembly. Miss Stew art was recom m ended highly by her peers and teachers. She will be serving in the House of R epresentatives the w eek of February 25-March 1, 1985. She Is the daughter of Gordon and Gail Stew art of Southmont. She is a sophomore at Sheets M emorial Christian School and is a m em ber of the National Honor Society. Kris has served as a Candy Striper at Lexington M emorial Hospital, and is the present secretary for the Davidson County Chapter of Teen- Age Republicans. Along with her mother. Kris has participated twice In the M arch F o r Life in W ashington, D.C. She is the grand­ daughter of M rs. Camilla Shaw of Mocksvllie, and of M rs. Ruby Stewart of Portland, Maine. A paintinfi of a pair of canvasback ducks will 1)0 featured on the 1985 North Carolina W aterfowl Con­ servation stam p and art prints. The painting, by Tom M lrala of R utherford, New Jersey , w as recently selected In a compelltion sponsored by the N.C. Wildlife R esources C om m ission. The publishing and national m arketing of art prints of this stam p will be handled by Sport’en Art-Midwest m arketinfi of Sullivan, Illinois Revenues from waterfowl stam p sales-and royalties from print sales- will be used to fund waterfowl conservation program s in North Carolina. “We’re sure that sportsmen and wildlife art collectors will be very pleased with the new state w ater­ fowl stam p and art prints,” said Vernon Bevill, executive director of the N.C. Wildlife Resources Com­ mission. “The new design featuring a pair of canvasbacks m akes an especially attractive art print, and funds from this program will make a great contribution to waterfowl m anagem ent and research in North Carolina. Over the past two years, over $825,000 has been raised for waterfowl conservation in the slate through the stam p and print program s. This money is being used for hab itat im provem ent and research for waterfowl, and will also be used for habitat acquisition and m anagem ent in the future.” Hirata is a nationally known wildlife artist. His painting of canvasbacks was selected for the First of State New Jersey W ater­ fowl Stam p in 198*1. In 1982, he won the Best of Show aw ard at the Ducks Folk-Ways And Folk-Lore By ftoKer Whitener A recent letter from R. V. Whitney of Maiden with reference to a moon superstition piece we did sometime back reminds us that Hailey’s Comet is not only on the way but that it will bring a deluge of non-celestial m aterial as well. "I look for some very bizarre tales about the ‘doomsday’ effect on m ankind,’’ says M r. W hitney. "There were lots of new myths in 1910 (last appearance), and I am sure there will be some new ones in 1986 that will take people’s money and make them nail down the windows!” Problem is, Mr. Whitney, that the TV will probably not be nailed down and thus there will be no escape. Arlen J. Large, in a recent Wall Street Journal article, calls it ‘Hailey Hype’, and suggests that we will be inundated by all m anner of commercial items, from T-shirts to bumper stickers. Sam ple printing: “ R epent! Hailey’s Comet Is Coming!” And on a bronze medallion: “ Libera Nos a Malo Cometae”-sav e us from the evil of the comet. The evil pictured in the 1910 ap­ pearance was supposedly lethal cyanide gas from the tail of the comet, giving rise to the sale of comet pills as a special protection. According to Large, the 1980 appearance of the comet will usher in yogurt-covered sunflower seeds as a spoof of the original comet pills. Most of the other commercial items will also i^e of a spoofing nature, particularly the Hailey T- shirts, the exceptions being those designed to be sold in science m useum s and observatories. These will carry such slogans as “ Once in a Lifetime Experience,” and for the very young, “ I’ll see it in the year 2061, too!’’^And there will apparently be books on top of books, some seriously scientific, others of the pseudo-scientific variety. L arge notes that the Library of Congress has already reported a dozen English-language books headed for. the Comet m arket, with others on the way. Some of these should prove very valuable, p articu larly those bolstered by data collected through close-up observation of the comet from sp acecraft and from planetarium s w ith high-pow ered For the individual there will also be observation and picture-taking equipment, including binoculars, telescopes, and cam eras. Large mentions that “ stashed in a New Jersey warehouse are hundreds of ‘H alleyscopes,’ sm all Japanese- m ade re frac to rs ‘especiallv designed for first-time telescope users.' ” These will apparently retail for about $200 each. All this over a year before the expected public viewing of the comet in M arch and April of 1986. For readers old enough to m ake comparisons, the '86 edition of Hailey’s is expected to be dim m er than that of 1910, and with a shorter tail. In addition it is not expected to be seen scooting across tlie sky witii flaming tail as has often been depicted. Instead, say experts, the average observer will see what appears to be a motionless briglit object above the dark morning or evening liorizon. And city folks may have difficulty in seeing the comet at all as it fights street lights and advertising illumination for attention. But, tlien, (here is always TV-and T-shirts. Iteaders are invited to send folk m aterials to R ogers W hitener, English D epartment, ASU, Boone, N.C. 28608. Local Students On Deans List At WFU Three Davie County students have qualified for the fall sem ester d ean ’s list at W ake F orest University. Students from Mocksvllie are John Davis Kimberly, son of Dr. and Mrs. George D. Kimberly of 242 Magnolia Ave. and Karen Reaves Richardson, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Leland Richardson. Also qualifying is Mary Elizabeth Kontos, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Vlasios Kontos of Advance. Kimberly is a junior m ajoring in economics. Miss Richardson, a junior m ajoring in English, is a Hankins Scholar. Miss Kontos is a senior majoring in biology. Hugh A. Lagielll Promoted To Captain Hugh A. Lagle III, son of Hugh A. and Gienna C. Lagle of 135 E. Maple Ave., Mocksvllie, N.C., has been promoted in the U.S. Air Force to tlie rank of captain.Lagle is a weapon system s officer at RAF Lakenheath, England, with the 48th Tactical Fighter Wing. He is a 1980 graduate of North Carolina State University, Raleigh. M r. Mufflor' Hidiww 64 West (Past Milltr'i Rnta^r,ant) MUFFLERS • BRAKES • SHOCKS OPEN Monday-Friday Saturday 8 A.M. to 5 P.M. 8 A.M. to 12 Noon Phone 634-6366 Unlimited National Wildlife Art Show. He has also been a Gold Room Exhibitor at the Easton W aterfow l F estival in E aston, M aryland. The 1985 North Carolina W ater­ fowl Conservation stam p art prints are not yet available. These prints will not be sold by the Wildlife Commission, but will be available from art dealers. Literature on the program will be sent to art dealers in the near future. The 1985 North Carolina program will, for the first time, include a medallion series in addition to the reg u lar and rem arqued print seripi. The new medallion series will add another dimension to the program and should prove very popular. Art dealers will take orders for these tim e limited-edition prints through August 31, 1985. Stamps will not go on sale until July 1, 1985, and will be available through license agents. “These slate waterfowl stam p art prints are not only beautiful pieces of artwork, but should also ap­ preciate in value in the future,” said Sid Baynes, chief of the Com­ m ission's Division of addition, a royalty from the sale of each print is used for waterfowl conservation. Buying one of these prints is not only a good investment and a great way to beautify your liome or office, but it helps waterfowl as well.” SP?"" of canvasback ducks was selected as the design for the 1985 North Carohna Waterfowl Conservation stamp. Three types of art prints of the stamp, which are not being sold by the Wildlife Commission, may be ordered from art dealers through August 31. Proceeds from the sale of stamps and art prints wi I be used for waterfowl management and conservation in North Carolina (N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission) ^ T - ^ U M G C O U - W of O t h e r RCA Super Values! r.P 9 A,^ A C K TV RCA 19 diagonal black & white CO M PACT 19 TV RCA C OM PACT black & white TV makes the perlect "second sot" lor any room in the house. • Low power consum ption—averages only 45 watts. • H igh-perlorm ance VHF and UHF tuners provide excellent reception, even in many weak or fringe signal areas, • One-set VHF tine tuning "rem em bers" your initial setting: seldom needs read|usting. • D unl-lunction VHF/UHF antenna swivels lor best reception • C ontem porary-styled durable plastic cabinet with w alnut linish. R G il 19 aiago«i<ii 1 9 9 9 5 i RCA 13'Jiiaflonai Color TV Brilliant small-screen color performance in a handsome Contemporary cabinet. Deluxe features. ItCil 2 4 9 95 EJR330 diagonal ! [x5S8o S B d k Your Choice 6 3 9 ’* G el UCA Perform ance and A ffordability this C hristm as. '1’hi‘sc 25" iliajidiuil iiHuli'ls feiuuri' 17-hut(()n C’haniu'Ljick ri'iuntc ru m m l. C’hotisf com cm porarv GKK681I<, lia rlv .XnitTK-an C;KK()85I< «ir i-lassu- G K U 6 K ‘;K . ’ D A N IE L Furniture and Electric Co.inc. South Main Street At The Overhead Bridge Mocksville, N.C. Phone: 634-2492 ncii RCA 12'cliagonal blSCk & WhltG CO M PACT 12 TV 7 9 9 s 6-DAVIE c o u n t y ENTERPRISli KECORD, THURSDAY, I'EBKUARY 28. 1985 Davie Soil And Water Holds 12th Annual Speech And Poster Contest 'The Davie Soil and W ater Con­ servation District s|)onsored Its twelfth annual speech contest on Monday, February 25, 1985, al 7:00 p.m. In the theater of South Davie Junior High School. Topic of speeches was "Soli and Water, 'o u rs for Life.’’ County winners in the speech contest on the eighth grade level were; Jenny Jones, South Davie, first place, awarded $25.00; David Fisher, North Davie, second place, aw arded $15.00; and Eric Eaton, North Davie, third place, awarded $10.00; and Ricity Younts, South Davie, fourth place, awarded $5.00, County winners In the speech contest on the seventh grade level w ere: Patricia Beauchamp, North . Davie, first place, awarded $25.00; Chris Tuck, South Davie, second place, aw arded $15.00; and Chris Snapp, North Davie, third place, aw arded $10.00; and Brent Foster, South Davie, fourth place, awarded $5.00. Awards were also presented to winners of tlie conservation essay contest which was sponsored In the sixth grade. Topic for the essay contest was the sam e as the speeches. County winners In this division were: Amy Ledbetter, Shady Grove School, first place, awarded $25.00; Deena Mlnwalla, Mocksville Middle School, second place, aw arded $15.00; Patrick Murnhv. Pinel)rook School, third place, aw arded $10.00; Donna M cD aniel, Cooleem ee .School, fourth place, aw arded $5.00; and Laura Smyers, William R. Davie School, fifth place, awarded $5.(K). School winners in this division and receiving ribbons were: CO O LEEM EE: 1st - Donna McDaniel, 2nd - Courtney Deadmon, 3rd - Joanna Dyson; SHADY GROVE: 1st - Amy Ledbetter, 2nd - Rhonda Campbell, Urd - Jam ie Frve; PIN E B R O O k: 1st ■ P atrick Murphy, 2nd ■ Amy W eatherman, Hid - Joy Howard; WM. H. DAVIE: 1st • Laura Smyers, 2nd - Brian Dyson, 3rd - Shane Dayson; MOCKSVILLE MIDDLE: 1st - D eena M inw alla, 2nd - Molly Seabrook, and 3rd - Brennan Jam es. \yinners in the conservation ix)ster contest sponsored In the fourth, fifth and sixth grades were also recognized. County winners on the fourth grade level were Tonya Allison, first place; Tina Linville, second place; and Casey Jenkins, third place. County winners on the fifth grade level were Kendall Walker, first place; R achel H arden, second place; and Holly Covington, third place. Sixth grade county winners were 4th Grade Level Poster Contest Fourth grade winners in the county poster contest were Tina Linville, second place, and Casey Jenkins, third place. Tonya Allison, first place winner is not pictured. Angie Money, first place; Kelly Kowalske, second place; and Brent Campbell, third place. Each county winner received an engraved plaque. School winners in the i)oster contest were also aw arded riblwns. School winners on the fourtii grade level are as follows: COOLEEMEE: 1st - Tina Lin­ ville, 2nd - April Daywalt, 3rd - Barbara Jo Gulledge; SHADY GROVE: 1st - Ryan Enner. 2nd - Adam Dor.sett, 3rd • John Male, HM - Matt Wilson; PIN EBRO O K : l.st - Casey Jenkins, 2nd - Anna Sharpe, 3rd - Joy M arkland; WM. R. DAVIE: l.sl - Jenay Keaton, 2nd - Dianna Ijam es, 3rd - Crissv Plott; M O C K S V IL L E M ID D L E SCHOOL: 1st - Tonya Allison, 2nd • Kristi Walker, 3rd - Angle Price, and HM - Megan Sipprell. School |X)Ster contest winners on the fifth grade level are: CO O LEEM EE: 1st - Rachel Harden, 2nd - Amy Harbour, 3rd - Keri D raughn; SHADY GROVE: 1st - Holly Covington, 2nd - Christine Sebosky, 3rd ■ April Tuttle; PIN EBRO O K : 1st - C hristy Kenny. 2nd - Wendy Hoots, 3rd - Cassie Leitch; WM, R, DAVIE: 1st - Tonya Stroud, 2nd - Kip Nichols, 3rd - Chasity Reavis, HM - Sliannon Brown; MOCKSVILLE MIDDLE: 1st - K endall W alker, 2nd - David Church, 3rd - Kelly Howell, HM - Wyashia Rose, and HM - Adam Jones, School winners on the sixth grade level are: CO O LEEM EE: 1st - B rent Campbell. 2nd - Charles Page, 3rd - Michelle Jones; SHADY GROVE: 1st ■ Brad Cox, 2nd - Phillip Carter, 3rd - Owen Freuler, HM - Brian Carter; PINEBROOK: 1st - Angie Money, 2nd - Traci Tucker, 3rd - Erica Triplett, HM - Kelly Church; WM, R, DAVIE: 1st - Melissa Bracken. 2nd - Mary Ann Clearv. 3rd - Anthony W hitaker, H M ' - Coleen Shore; M O C K S V IL L E M ID D L E SCHOOL: 1st - Kelly Kowalske, 2nd - Jim m y Pruett, 3rd - Anthony Tilley, and HM - Rachelle Dillard. All first place county winners in each division will be entered in the area competition which includes 10 other counties. Winning posters will be on display at the Davie Counly Public Library beginning February 28, 1985, for two weeks, Cokie Jones. Chairman of the 6th Grade Level Poster Contest Sixth grade poster contest winners were (I to r) Angie Money, first place; Kelly Kowalske, second place, and Brent Campbell, third place. 6th Grade Level Essay County winners in the Soil and Water Conservation Essay Contest are (I to r) Amy Ledbetter, first place; Denna Mlnwalla, second place; Patrick Murphy, third place; and Donna McDaniel, fourth place. Not pctured: Laura Smyers, flHh place winner. Davie Soil and W ater Conservation District, commented; “We really appreciate the Interest and par­ ticipation that has been shown in the contests by tlie students, teachers, and parents this year as well as in previous years. The soeech contest has been sponsored in the Davie District since 1974. It has been a state-wide contest since 1977. Since then there have been G first place state winners from Davie District. We are proud to have this kind of showing on the state level and arc proud of Davie Counly and all the citizens who support us in our en­ deavors to conserve our natural re.sources.” Other District Supervisors in­ clude: Brady Angell, Sylvia Mc- Clamrock, Johnny Allen and E. C. Tatum. 5th Grade Level Poster Contest Three fifth grade winners were named in the Davie Soil and Water Conservation sy are (I to r) Kendall Walker, first place, Rachel Holly Covington, third place. I gPoster Contest Monday. The Harden, second place, and ‘ 7th—8th Grade Level Speech Contest El^ht local seventh and eighth araders were named county winners in the annual Soil and Water Conservafion Speech contest. They are (I to r) Chris Tuck, 7th grade, South Davie; Patricia Beauchamp, 7th grade, N.pavie; Brent Foster, 7th grade, S, Davie; Jenny Jones, 8th grade, S. Davie; and Eric Eaton, 8th grade, N. Davie Not pictured:David Fisher, 8th grade, N. Davie; Ricky Younts, 8rh grade, S. Davie; and Chris Snapp,7thgrade, KI. Davie. (Photos by Robin Fergusson) For Your Financial FU TU R E Our IRA is your best tax defense, too! Our Individual Retirement Account offers you: • High interest. • Tax-deferred earnings, • Reduced taxable income. • Deposits insured-safe. Build a financial cushion for a more secure future and protect yourself from taxes by opening your own Individual Retirement Account. Stop in soon for complete IRA details and quotes of current rates. MOCKSVILLE SPRINGS & LOAN ASSOCIMION 213 SOUTH MAIN STREET MOCKSVILLE, N. C, 27028 P. O. BOX 367 (704) 634-5936 Child Guidance Counselors To Attend Clinic On Serious Eating Disorders C ounselors and oilier professionals who work with children in the 10-counly area in­ cluding Davie and served by (lie Child Guidance Clinic in Winston- Salem will have a chance to learn m ore about two potentially life- threatening eating disorders at a sem inar M arch fi at the Clinic. The disorders are anorexia nervosa, or self-starvation; and overeating, which causes obesity. Deborea Winfrey, psychologist at , the Child Guidance Clinic, 1200 j Glade St., will conduct the sem inar I from 10:30 a.m . until noon on IVlarch I 6. Ironically, Dr. Winfrey noted, anorexia occurs largely in people I who could afford to eat what they like, while obesity afflicts lower-1 income people as well as the af-1 fluent. And anorexia is on the in-1 crease, she said. “There are no cases of anorexia repo rted in underdeveloped countries; there are very few cases reported in lower-income stratas,” Dr. Winfrey said. "Self-starvation is observed only under conditions of abundant food supply,” Dr. Winfrey emphasized that anorexia and oiiesity touch everywhere, damaging the health, personal happiness and the livelihoods of those afflicted-our friends, neighbors and co-workers. "There has been a conservative | estim ate th at there a re a p ­ proxim ately 1 million anorexics and bulimics (victim s of a related disorder) in the U.S.," she com­ mented. “ In patients with severe eating disorder," Dr. Winfrey said, "a basic disturbance has been recognized in the way the sensation of hunger is experienced. Anorexics are commonly heard to say, 'I do not need to eat,’ and literally mean it." Fam ily problems can trigger anorexia. “ F or in stan ce," Dr. W infrey noted, “a m other expects perfection from a child, and she complains if the child puls on the least amount of weight.” Some of the signs to look for in detecting a potential problem with anorexia include: a preoccupation with food; a refusal to eat anything but very small portions; a preoc­ cupation with school; and excessive exercising. The problem often ' begins with the viclim ’s being on a I diet. In adolescent females, who make I up a group commonly associated with anorexia. Dr. Winfrey noted that m enstruation stops, depression I sets in and the young females, no [m atter how thin they are, see I themselves as being fat. A n o rex ia-o r self-starv atio n —I became well known in 1983 when I singer Karen C arpenter died from lit. “Kidney failure, cardiac arrest land liver dysfunction can result Ifrom self-starvation," Dr. Winfrey I said. Of the million who suffer from I anorexia and a related disorder [known as bulimia, she added, "Six percent die from the illness, and 90 I to 95 percent are women." D r. W infrey, who graduated I m agna cum laude from Ohio University in Athens and earned her Ph.D. in Psychology at Ohio’s Kent State University, joined the Child Guidance Clinic last year. Her position as a Clinical Psychologist there involves both psychological evaluation and therapy. The Clinic -frequently sees p atients with problems stem m ing from eating : disorders. The Clinic serves a prim ary 10-county area of: Forsyth, Guilford, Davidson, Rowan, Surry, Stokes, Davie, Iredell, Wilkes and ; Yadkin. Before she cam e to the Child G uidance C linic, D r. W infrey worked as Psychology Program M anager at the North Carolina D epartm ent of C orrections’ Women’s Prison in Ualeigh. Prior to that, she worked as Department Chief for Psychological Services of the K ansas R eception and Diagnostic Center in Topeka, Kan., where she dealt with male felons; and held other clinical, teaching and adm inistrative positions. Professionals who treat eating disorders usually try to involve the family in therapy. At the Child Guidance Clinic, families normally are included in treatm en t of youngsters w ith eating disor­ ders. But while group or family therapy is common. Dr. Winfrey said, therapists have several dif­ ferent methods to control these problems, which result in emotional stress that dam ages personal as well as school or job relationships. Like anorexia, obesity is on the increase and also is rooted in family problems. “ I’m running into m ore obese kids than I have in the past," slid the slender pyschologist. "S tatistics Executive Mansion Begins Spring Tours It’s spring again and time for spring tours at North Carolina’s E xecutive M ansion on Blount Street. Tours begin on Tuesday, March 12, and continue through Friday, May 24. Tours may be arranged on Tuesday, Thursday and Friday at 10, 10:3Uand II a.m . and 1:30, 2 and 2:30 p.m. Tours are by reservation only. Spring reservations are filled for large groups. However, there is still am ple room for individuals and groups of IS or less. For details and reservations, write or call Elizal)cth Wall at Capital Area Visitor Center, 109 E. Jones St., Raleigh, 27011; telephone 9ia-733-345U. sliow that m ore than one-third of the general population suffers from being overw eight..." "For oiiesity, there’s a suggestion tliat kids don't learn very early how to differentiate between the sen­ sation of liunger and other feelings of discomfort. “There is the interaction of the ciiild with mother. For example, a depressed m other stuffs food in the child's mouth whenever the child cries. Mother feeds the child instead of checking for a wel diaper or a problem with a pin." The child then comes to look upon food as the answ er to almost every type of problem, she said. "Overweight people will often say, ‘My stom ach doesn’t want it. but my mouth does,' ’’ said Dr. Winfrey. “Or they feel compelled to eat in spite of a strong desire not to gain weight and will even eat food they don I hke." The ob,ese have to beware of potential problems with heart at­ tacks, strokes, diabetes, high blood pressure, cardiac arrest and liver ailments. Barbecue Supper At Smith Grove Ruritan Smith Grove Ruritan Club will sponsor a Benefit Barbecue supper, Saturday, M arch 2, 1985, for the benefit of Danny Hartm an. Serving will begin at 4 p.m. and continue until 8 p.m. The public is invited to attend this special supper. Proceeds will apply for health care for Danny Hartman. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985-7 In addition to getting therapy, said D r. W infrey, victim s of anorexia or obesity can get help from support formed by otherswho have suffered from the disorders. "The support group for anorexics is Anorexia Nervosa and Associated Disorders or ANAD,” she said. “ F o r obese people, there is O vereaters Anonymous." T h e s e p r i c e s g o o d t h r u S u n d a y i M a r c h 3 , 1 9 8 5 ' U 6 8 ■ L b . USDA Choice Round - Whole 10“12 Lbs. Avg. - Sliced FREE! Sirloin t ip s W h o le R i l ) 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ U S D A C h o ic e B e e f R i b - S l i c e d F R E E ! n Q 1 0 - 1 2 L b s . A v e r a g e $ 2 9 8 lb. USDA Choice Beef Rib Rib Eye Steak lb 3.98 $ 2 1 8 W L b . U S D A C h o ic e B e e f R o u n d Sirloin Ti|> Roast We reserve the right to limit quantities. $ 2 2 8 U S D A C h o ic e F a m ily P a c k Cube Steak 2 0 L b . B a g P o t a t o e s : ^ 1 9 9 8-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 DCCC To Offer Four Math And Science Courses (Photo by Robin Ferguilon) The North Davie Math team was named Mathcounts champion Saturday during competition at Wake Forest University. The team will advance to state finals in late April. Team members are (front row, I to r) Susan Barnhardt, coach, Ken Fergusson, Robert Ligon, Charles Markland, coach (2nd row, I to r) Jeff Jarvis, Allan Newsom and Cnris Krause. North Davie Junior High Mathcount Team Advances to State Competition D avidson County C om m unity College’s M alhematics and Scicncc Division is offering four courscs that m ay be of special interest to individuals v/ho want to earn college credit this spring. ‘‘These beginning m ath and science courses are being offered this spring to provide greater scheduling flexibility for new and returning students,” explains Dr. H obert Cole, chairm an of the division. Students can lake these courses to fulfill program requirem ents, as electives, or for general interest.” ■‘'nvlroniciital Awareness (SCI 2011) is an interdisciplinary ap­ proach to problems of using the envirom ent w ith em phasis on population dynamics, pollution, and resource depletion. Current events, case studies, field trips, and laboratory experim ents will be used In In.struction. This four credit class will meet from 10 to 10:!)0 a.m . on Mondays, W ednesdays, and Fridays beginning February 27. Students will also have a 1-2:50 p.m. lab on Wednesdays. Evening students needing a beginning science course can tal<e General Hiulogy (BIO KM) from G to 8;5,'j p.m. on Tuesdays and Thur­ sdays beginning February 28. This lour-credit course, which Is also taught during the day, Introduces the student to the molecular and cellular basis of biology and acquaints the student with the m ajor principles of ecology, genetics, and evolution. O ther courses In the general biology sequence will be offered in the evening this sum m er and next fall. K onndaliuns and Topics In M athcniiitlcs (MAT lOli), which is one of the courses that can be used to m eet the m athem atics requirem ent in college transfer program s, will begin February 27. This five-credit class will meet from 1 to 1:50 p.m. Monday through Friday. The development of the real num ber system and system s of numeration, as well as various topics selected from sets, logic, geometry, consum er m athem atics, and probability will be discu.ssed. High school algebra or the equvalent is required as a prerequisite. A nother college tran sfer m athem atics sequence will begin this spring with College Algebra (MAV 111), which will be offered from G to 8:05 p.m. on Mondays and W ednesdays beelnning February 27. This five-credit class, which Is also offered during the day, involves a review of basic algebra, equations, inequalities, functions, polynom ials, m atrices, d eter­ m inants, bionomlal theorem , and m athem atical proof. Prerequisites for enrolling In this course are two years of high school algebra or the equivalent. The tuition for each of these courses Is $■1.25 per credit for North Carolina residents. For more information, contact Dr. Cole at DCCC (telephone: (704)240-8186 or (919)475-7181. J.-H. Breakfast Jericho-Hardlson Ruritan Club will sponsor a ‘‘Country Style” break fast, S aturday, M arch 2 beginning at 5:30 a.m . and con­ tinuing until 11 a.m. The menu will include sausage, eggs, pancakes and coffee. The Ruritan club is located on the Green Hill Road. Proceeds will be used for Center Volunteer Fire D epartment. A team from North Davie Junior High w as nam ed M athcounts champion Saturday following three hours of grueling com petition Letter To Editor Dear Editor: There is another request for a sewage package plant In Davie County. Tliere are already a large num ber of these perm its issued for our county. I’m wondering just how m any a county of this size can support before we are completely saturated'.' The people who depend on wells for their w ater should be alarm ed and start looking for a better way of sewage disposal for the county. I understand that the Shady Grove school had to hook to the county w ater system because their w ater supply was contaminated. Is county w ater available in your area? There is a sewage plant in Cooleemee that is not operating efficently for the lack of domestic w aste water. This plant Is capable of handlingquite a lot more sewage than is being pumped into it. The plant would operate more efficently and need less repairs, if more domestic w aste was pumped into it. We need to think seriously about these problems and try for better ways to solve these problems not add to them. Sincerely, Eva K. Jurgensen RH N o.:! Box 238 Advance, N.C. 2700G against 30 schools from a 10 county area. The win will allow the North Davie team to advance to state competition scheduled for late April in Raleigh. Susan Barhnardt, coach of the North Davie team , said the M ath­ count competition is sponsored by the Professional Engineers of North Carolina and held yearly at Wake Forest University. Competition included three hours of constant testing including a 40 question timed individual written test, a 10 question tim es individual test, and a 10 question team solutions test. All problems were based on high school level m athem atlc principles Including Algebra, geom etry, probability and word problems. North Davie's team was com­ prised of four eighth grade students, Ken F ergusson, C hris K rause, Robert Ligon and Allan Newsom, with Jeff Jarvis, a seventh grader, Correction In Court Calendar D arrell D. Baker was not charged with breaking, entering and larceny as listed In the February 21 District Court calendar. However, Baker was convicted of trespassing and making harassing phone calls. He was sentenced to G months suspended on the condition that the defendant does not call, go about prem ises, or h arass or th reaten prosescuting w itness. Baker was also ordered to pay $121 and costs. 3 to 1 - 8x10,2-5x7's, 10 WALLETS REG. 58.95 NOW ONLY.. $7.95 Plus95C por subject when photographed WITH COUPON R E G A LG i u D tn y C O U PO N ----- I $1 OFF! OURREGULAR $8 95 PORTRAIT PACKAGE W ITHTHISCOUPON nnpSENT THtf^ r.ni IPON t q Oun PMOTOUriAJ'MtHFUn IMlbbPfcCIALOFFER ONE SPECIAL PER SUBJECT. PLEASE OFFER VALID ONLY FOR DATES AND LOCATION LISTEDBELOW COUPON MAY NOT BE COWBINEOWITH ANY OTHER SPECIAL OFFER USUALSITTINGFEEREOUIHED POSES OLJRSELECTION SUPERDOLLAR I Thrift! - Mart Shopping Center Fri., March 1 & Sat, March 2 1 0 - 6 serving as alternate. Mrs. Barnhardt said 20 students went out for the team with preparation beginning before Christmas. Students spent at least one afternoon per week and some Saturday’s preparing for the event. The team will step up its practice schedule during the coming weeks to prepare for state competition in late April. The North Davie team also placed third in the M athcounts ciphering contest held Saturday afternoon. Two mem bers, Allen Newsom and Ken Ferguson, received respective individual aw ards of third and fifth place in this phase of competition. Only the 15 best team s competed in the ciphering contest with each team m em ber solving six problems shown separately on a screen. Students had one m inute to solve each problem. This is the second year North Davie has competed in the M ath­ counts contest. The team placed third last year. Mrs. Barnhardt and Charles M arkland serve as coaclies. South Davie Junior High also made a good showing at the M ath­ counts competition placing eleventh out of thirty team s. TV To Air Speech Of Governor Martin ..T he U niversity of N orth C arolina C enter for Public Television will originate statewide coverage of Gov. Jam es M artin's 1985 "State of the State" address on February 28 at noon. ..The governor’s address will be aired live and in its entirety over the nine channels of the Center, and will pre-empt the instructional program m ing originally scheduled for that time. ..It is anticipated that the address will last approximately ;tO minutes. ..D uring the speech, which will be delivered in the State Legislative Building in Italeigh before a joint session of the General Assembly, Gov. M artin i.s expected to touch upon highlights of his budget proiKjsais. . .The Center will make Its coverage av ailab le to all com m ercial networks. Hospital Gets New Flag Davie County Hospital recently accepted a new donated I flag from the Smith Grove Ruritan Club. Davie County Hospital's Russ Payne gratefully accepts "OLD GLORY''] from Lawrence West and Charles Sellers, Club I representatives. The hospital wishes to thank the Smith I Grove Ruritans for their generosity and support. Davie Library News ’________________________) I’amilv Guide to the Bible and The Living Planet; A Portrait of the Karth has been placed in the library’s collection in m em ory of Lola S. Etchison by Annie Laurie Etchison. How To lie Vour Pet's Best Friend lias been placed in the library’s collection by the Davie County Animal Protection Society. NEW BOOKS Adult Fiction; Do Lord Henieniher Me, by Julius Lester The Searcher, by 1’. M. Parker S tately H om icide, by S. T. Haymon' Drums of a Different War, by Joseph Poiselli A House Like a Lotus, Ijy Madeleine L’Engle Adult Non-Fiction: U nderstanding A rthritis, by Arthritis Foundation The New Cat Handbook, by Ulrike Muller I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings, i)y Maya Angelou Preserving the Constitution; The Autobiography of Sam ICrvin, by Sam Ervin Albert Spear, The Knd of a iMytli, by M atthias Schmid! The Book of Fees; What You'll Pay the Pros To l)o What You Can't, Won't, in- I);ire Not I)o Yourself, by Lois Cunniff Japanese Mythology, by Juliet PiggotICgyptian .Mythology, by Vernica Ions (ireek Mythology, by John Pin- sent Homan .Mythology, by Stewart Perowne Indian Mythology, by Veronica Ions History Room Collection: •More D escendants of Israel Boone, l)y Alice Boone Reference Books: The Biographical Dictionary of Scientists; Astronomers, Biologists, Chemists, Physicists N.C. Collection: North Carolina: lleflections of 100 Years Junior Non-Fiction: .Mare’s ICgg, by Carole Spray Ea.sy Books: Home B efore .Midnight, l)y Mother Goose Now Records: "L.A. Is My Lady," by F r’ini' Sinalra "P riv a te D an cer," by Tini' Turner "MendeUisohn Violin Concerto in E M inor,” by Cho-Liang Lin "Sonalas Nos. 9 and 11," by Schuberl "Symphony No. 1 in D ,” l)y Mahler ‘'T he S Piano C oncertos by Beethoven "Brazilian Tangos and W altzes" "T hai's The Way I Feel Now,” by Monk Thelonious The film for Tuesday, M arch 5 story hour will be “Arrow to the Sun." Bookmobile Routes: 1st Tuesday, M arch .1 - Cooleemee 2nd W ednesday, M arch (i - CJreenwood Lakes arul Creekwood LIBRARY HOURS Monday 9:00-«::i0 Tuesday 9:00-,'5:30 Wednesday 9:00-,■5:30 Thursday 9:00-8:30 Friday ’ 9:00-5:30 Saturday 9:00-2:00 ♦ I I I ^^998-3894 Open Tues.-Sat 1C Featuring Marie’s Baked Goodies Every Friday and Saturday 8 miles East of Mocksville on Highway 158 (across I'rnrn the old Smith Grove School) II.. .the tribulations of tax time! Don’t let them take their toll. If you find yourself in a financial pinch, it’s time to see us. Our loans are designed to help wage earners like yourself who find themselves caught unexpectedly with a large debt to the government. It’s the easy way to take care of your worries at this rough time of year. Come talk to us today. J iL — Fleet Financenter llllYadkinville Rd. Willow Oak Shopping Centre' Mocksville, N.C. Phone:634-3596 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPKISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 8 ,1 9 8 5 -9 District Court Kathy Broiulwiiy, ii Diivit- Ili|>li Student, liiis bfPi) iiiinivil ICT (Industriiil Cooperative Training) stiiilent or llie mnntli l>y instructors Monte Tavlor and Joey Kennedy. ICT allows students to gain valuable un the job trainin;; and classroom crcdits through jobs witli local in­ d ustries and businesses. Miss Broadway is employed by the Davie County Schools as a bus driver. Kollowiiig hit'll ■si'liool fjrailuation, she hopes to secure a job workiny with children or elderly persons. David Webb Wharton Awarded Scholarship David Wubb Wharloii of Advance, N.C. has been notified that he has received a Scotl-Ellis Scholarship I from Campbell University in the I amount of $800.00 for four years. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs. I Thomas \V. W harton of Advance, W hile attending D avie High I School, he was involved with the Student Government and the Junior Civitans, He also played football for I the school. David is a m em ber of the I Clem m ons U nited M ethodist 1 Church in Clemmons, ^ooleemee Senior Citizens Club Meet Cooleemee Senior Citizens Club Im et Monday, February 2.i, at the iF’irst Baptist Church for their ■regular m eeting with thirty-three ■m em bers and seven visitors Iprcsent. Noah Plott gave the devotions, Ireading from Psalm s 14G, He talked bf giving God the praise for all ^hings. George Ezzard entertained the Inem bers with old folk songs and gospel music on his harmonica. Bessie Nail was elected to be in 1,‘harge of the welcoming com- Inittee. The next meeting will be held /larch 11 for a business meeting brior to leaving for the K & W Restaurant in Winston-Salem for :i and shopping at H am rick’s. The following cases were disposed of during the February 25 session of Davie County District Court with the honorable Lester P. M artin, presiding judge. Janice Pittm an Dalton, failure to stop at stop sign, 90-day failure. Uonnie Dean Hellard, expired driver's license, 90-day failure. David Lynn Guy, driving 69 mph in a 55 mph zone, 90-day failure. Charles Ernest Lance, driving 6G mph in a 55 mph zone, 90-day failure. Kex Allen Campbell, no proper registration plate, 80-day failure. T erri Quick R edden, expired operator's license, failure to yield right of way, 90-day failure. Timothy Wayne Simmons, ex­ ceeding safe speed, dismissed. Barry D. Fortune, no operator’s license, dismissed. Scott D. Tim m erm an, driving 75 mph in a 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave. Debbie Cornelis Gentry, larceny, dismissed. JoA nn Stroud, com m unicating threats, dismissed. Aid and Abet in Abduction of a child, dismissed. JoA nn Stroud, com m unicating threats, dismissed. Mary Allen, assault, dismissed. G erald H enry P ark s, com ­ municating threats, dismissed. Gerald Henry Parks, assault, dismissed. Eugenia Burton, worthless check, dismissed. Gerald Henry Parks, first degree burglary, dismissed. W ayne M elton, assault, dismissed. Melvin Key, Jr., worthless check, dismissed. JoAmi Stroud, assault, dismissed. Ricky D. Cleveland, worthless check, dismissed. A nnie R. L arkey, w orthless check, dismissed with leave. Kenneth George Downing, fishing without a license, dismissed with leave. Dennis R. Kinzek, fishing without a license, dismissed with leave. Donald Eugene Kipfinger, fishing without a license, dismissed with leave. Judy Sweat Robertson, exceeding posted speed, costs. Jim ius Salman Greenwood, Jr., driving 09 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. M ichael Thom as F affigan, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Gary K. Inoff, failure to stop at slop sign, costs. Kenneth Levi Link, exceeding safe speed, costs. Charles Andrew Caputo, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Steve Allen Gaither, failure to yield right of way, costs. Patrick Henry Ryan, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. David Wayne Beeson, expired SAVE*2 0 to *40 Hoover® Convertible Upright THE EXCIPTIONAL WARRANTY WITHOUT EXCIPTION.FutI One Year Wwtonry on Ail ^ Port* oM Ubw. [ven Co»#fi Bog$ B«n. BfutfHrt ond Bult«IFN VMf Woffonfy onOwrwlose $69** Reg. *99” Reg.‘199.99 • ‘Quodraflvx* ogltcrtor action • Two motors • Dual full-time edg» cleaning Mictlon...plui »dgo bruit>«r • ConvenlenI 'ctieck bog' ilgnol • Llghtwslgtit and #aiy to itor« • Built-In tool rock ■ F urniture Guard ' Steel A gitator ' N o'stiock Hood ' Handy on*off Switch H O O V E R Convertible Cleaner with Headlight • biffi h*nat» fiOh gi>()• puncilul kU *111^ 4 P etition Rus Adjustm ent 1S'/7 Q uart D ispoiable Bag $ 9 9 9 9 Reg. 429.99 CAUDELL LUMBER CO. 162 Sheek Street PHONE 634-2167 Mocksvllle, N.C. registration plate, costs. C ynthia Robinson Steelm an, expired registration plate, costs. Judy King Dilday, driving 50 mph in a 35 mph zone, $10 and costs. Tommy Lynn W alker, failure to yield right of way, costs. Norman Eugene Charles, failure to reduce speed to avoid an ac­ cident, costs. Ashley Jo Harding, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. W illie Joe G adson, im proper equipment, costs. Jeannie Beth Howard, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. Jeffrey F ranklin Thom pson, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. B rent D avid H eninger, no operators license, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $25 and costs. Donald I Gronauer, driving 75 mph in a 55 mph zone, $25 and costs. Larry Dean Ensley, driving 09 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs. E lizabeth H edric, w orthless check, m ake restitution and pay costs. Zana Chaffin Potts, improper equipment, costs. Robert Eugene Ball, driving G5 mph in a .55 mph zone, $15 and costs, Richard Dallas Paschal Jr. un­ safe movement, costs. Eddy Lee Snow Jr., improper equipment, costs. Jennifer Beth Dohvick, driving 70 mph in a 55 mph zone, $10 and costs, Herherimalo Zamora, entering intersection w hile stop light emitting red, costs, H erherim alo Z am ora, no operators license, costs. Wayne Bell, communicating a th reat, p ray er for judgem ent continued for 12 months, not go about prosecuting witness, have no contact w ith h er, not h arass, threaten or communicate with her. M ary R eich, u ttering forged check, dismissed. Leroy Easley McKnight, larceny, sentenced to 2 years. William D arrell Dyson, violation of probation, continued under probation. B ryan R andall Hoots, DWI, sentenced to 60 days, suspended for 1 year, pay a fine of $100 and costs, perform 24 hours community ser­ vice work, surrender drivers license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. Timothy Wayne Simmons, DWI, sentenced to 12 months, suspended for 1 year, 7 days to be served ac­ tive, pay a fine of $■100 and costs, surrender drivers license, obtain substance abuse assessm ent, p articip ate in any treatm en t program recommended. Barry D. Fortune, DWI, sen­ tenced to GO days, suspended for 1 year, pay a fine of $100 and costs, perform 24 hours community ser­ vice w ork, su rren d er drivers license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. G erald H enry P arks, DWI, sentenced to GO days, suspended for 1 year, pay a fine of $100 and costs, perform 24 hours community ser­ vice w ork, su rren d er drivers license, complete alcohol and drug traffic school within 90 days and pay fee for said school. Hanes Knitwear Facility Honored For Safety The Narrow Fabrics facility of Hanes Knitwear, Inc., located near Mocksvllle, N.C, has been honored for six years-7«0,000 man hours worked without a lost tim e accident. Aetna Casualty has recognized the facility for its outstanding ac­ cident prevention efforts and promotion of safe working con­ ditions. Hanes Knitwear president. Jack Ward (far right), presents the Aetna Safety Award to the Narrow Fabrics facility safety committee (left to right) Ronnie Smith, Jack Brown, Debra London and Max Key. H anes K nitw ear, a leading m anufacturer of m en’s and boys’ underwear, is headquartered in W inston-Salem , N.C. and is a division of Hanes Group. Group Enjoys Daytona Trip A group of 47 people from Davie and surrounding counties enjoyed a five day trip to Daytona Beach, February 14-lB, 1985, The race fans in the group en­ joyed attending the qualifing races on Thursday, the races on Friday and Saturday and then the Daytona 500 on Sunday. The others in the group enjoyed trips to Disney and Epcot and other attractions in the area. The tran­ sportation for the trip was provided by Piedmont Coach Lines and the trip w as escorted by Connie Singleton. Center Community Watch To Meet Monday The Center Community Watch will meet Monday, M arch 4, at 7:00 p.m. for its regular meeting at the Community Building. This is a very important meeting since it will be tim e to elect officers for the next year. The Community Watch m eets four tim es a year, on the first Monday in M arch, May, October and December. Please come out and help to keep our organization strong and effective in our community. A program is planned. CroMm'^ Drugs Ask Your Doctor About Generics... These Prices Good February 28, March 1-2,1985 ONLY Item No. 10386 AMERICAN WICKER HANGING WICKER BASKET $547 CLING FREE FABRIC SOFTENER $ 2 57 3 6 C o u n t JOHNSON and JOHNSON DENTAL FLOSS ‘7 A ( p50 Yards * Y O U R CHO ICE REACH $ TO O TH B R U S H ^ Y O U R CHOICE ACT MOUTH fASH $ 99 ” SAVE $5.25 w ith CASH Refund _and Coupons......Details In store DURACELL BATTERIES □ CELL 2 Pack $ J 4 3 AA or AAA 2 Pack 09 ^ ALMAY. HTPO A l. lt H C IN IC MOISTURIZING LOTION 4 Oz. Size or CREAM Item No. 47121 and 47221 SUN TERRACE LEISURE MATES LAWN FURNITURE t^32!L 2 Chairs and 1 Chaiie Lounge AlAWr f s j ■4H'nrrl -I.;;’'""..'!!'’ 2 Oz. Size YOUR CHOICE ...BocauM Every Woman Can Havo Sensllivo Skin $357 S.C. JOHNSON'S-^ CUREL J CREAM 6 0 z. $ 1 9 9 Size 1 HALSA SHAMPOO 15 Oz. Size $ 1 2 7 Ends )ry Skin Item No. 8104 SUNBEAM PICNIC GRILL PORTABLE SQUARE SMOKER$1999 BAND-AID Adhesive fondages HANDYMAN 20's or KITCHEN ASSORTMENT 20's BMMD g a s KAOPECTATE t $ 1 6 7 mm m 8 Oz. Size Reg. $2.59 J189 OLD SPICEANTI-PERSPIRANT 2 Oz. Size Reg. $2.54 SOUDIANnPERSPfMNT'oEODonwr 2 Oz. Size Reg. $2.57 $ p 7 Goes on dry lelp keep you dry CROWN FILM Cl 10-24 exp. C135- 24 exp 400 Item No. 841 and 842 FREM "CLEARTAINERS” 1 QUART or 1% QUART YOUR CHOICE $J99 CORTAID CREAM Reg. $2.83 SUMMER’S EVE TWIN CHOICE OF SCENTS (Medicated Not Included) $ 1 2 7 Cover Girl SHADOWS 3 Shades Rit or 2 Shadow Rit YOUR CHOICE $217 ssrssrM0KTU6B MPCTimaaCVESHADQj/ a u m " c s =2 z s :? n B a th O il B e a d s 15 Oz. Size Reg. $2.39 $J47 ANACIN TABLETS MAXIMUM STRENGTH 75 Count $334 MAXIMUM STRENGTH M CREST TOOTHPASTE SPECIAL 2 Pack with FREE 9 0z. IVORY SOAP ^ 8.2 Oz. ^ Size FILM PROCESSING SPECIAL C-lIO C-I26 12 Exposures 2 9 9 24 Kxposures ” 5 2 9 “Crown Prints 35" Custom I’rocessin}; For 35 inm 12 Exposures 24 Exposures 36 Exposures 3 3 9 599 8 ^ 9 Disc Film Crown Prints 15 Exposures 3t Ctown Drugs394C-41 Processing 1. M o ckivllle, W illow Oak Shopping Cantrtf 2. Ciamm ons, W aitw ood VHlag* Shopping Cantar 9. €31 Patart Craak Parkway, W*S 4. Raynotda M anor Shopping C 9nt»r, W'S 9. 3075 K arnarivllla Rd., W*S C. 301 Arcadia Avanua, W 4 7. Hanai M all.W *S I . O ldtow n. 3716 Rcynoida Rd.. W>S9. uaw ltvllla , 6499 Shallow ford Rd., W*S 10. S tanlayvllla, O ld Highway 92 N orthI I . King, colony centra Alko int Walkartown, Highway 66, Yadklnvllla, Nawto Visit a Crown Optic Shop today L ocittd In Crown Drug Stores at the following locations: • Bm m MiIIWln(ton-a«l«m, WiMi hj Cwrtcr NC NC7M-9322 ta4-l216 • N vMiaii flaiaLexington, NCI4lt733n, T a ylo riyilla and Lfexlngton u. .PTIC liiSHOP 10-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985 Around 6- About CELEBRATES ANNIVERSARY Mrs. Inez R enegar of Rt. 6, Mocksville, and her children celebrated her 44th wedding anniversary, Sunday, February 24, with a steak dinner in memory of her late husband, Odell Renegar, at W estern Steer Steakhouse in Statesville, N.C. Attending this special occasion w ere Brenda and Jim M artin, Kevin and Brent M artin, Krisi Key, L arry Renegar, Beverly Davis, Tina and David W hitaker, Alice and Carl Dwiggins and Amy and Michelle' Dwiggins. FRIENDS HELP PATIENT CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY Friends and relatives of M rs. Dorothy Horn traveled to Mosses Cone Hospital in Greensboro, N.C. recently to help her celebrate her 44th bir­ thday. The party w as held in a conference room of the hospital. R efresh­ ments served were birthday cake, soft drinks and peanuts. A lot of group singing and alotof picture taking took place during the day. Party hats and favors w ere distributed am ong those attending, who w ere; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Studevent, Ethel Eckles, Her Rucker, Edna Allen, M arcella Lewis, Dorothy G raham , Mrs. Viola Davidson and five people from the Group Home in Mocksville. M rs. Horn has been in declining health for a long time, and this surprise party did much for her m orale. She was a most thankful and grateful recipient. MUSIC JUD G E FOR JUNIOR FESTIVAL Miss Louise Stroud spent Saturday in Winston-Salem, where she was one of the judges for the N.C. Federation of Music Clubs Junior festival. Jud^ng for the Piedm ont District (Winston-Salem area) took place at Salem College and at the Wolff Music Studio. SON AND FAMILY HOME FOR VISIT Staff Sgt. and Mrs. Joel K. Sain and son, Joshua spent a few days recently with his m other Juanita W ard of Mock Place. Sgt. Sain and family left the Slates Tuesday, Feb. 19 for Germany, where they will be making their home for the next three years. He will be working as an Air Traffic Controller. Sgt. Sain entered the arm y Feb. 1974. Suzanne Says... Mrs. Jimmy Hinson, Jr. . Susan Lynette Tynerwas. Tyner And Hinson Are Married Susan Lynette Tyner of Winston- Salem, N.C., and Jim m y Darrell Hinson, Jr. of Mocksville, N.C. were united in m arriag e, Saturday, February IG, 19B5 in a 3 p.m. cerem ony at Jewell Baptist Church in High Point, N.C. The Reverend Jim m y D. Hinson, Ijridegroom's father officiated at the exchange of vows. Democrats Meet The Davie Dem ocratic Parly will hold its regular monthly meeting Tuesday, M arch 17. 191)5, at 7:30 in the Conference room of the Town Hall. All Democrats are invited to attend. Hello. My nam e is Jushua Adam Spry and I had my !ith birthday on Feb. 21, l!)85.1 had a Care Bear cake and ice-cream at home with a few friends and my m other and daddy, C hris and K honda Spry. IVIy grandparents were there also, they are Dean and Linda Nichols and Grady and Dot Spry, Jr. I want to tell everybody thank-you for all my ({real presents. A program of wedding music was presented i)y M arie B urnette, organist; and Ronnie Prevatte, vocalist. Given in m arriage by her father, R obert M. T yner of O rlando, Florida, the bride chose Phelecia Corpening, bridegroom ’s sister, for her m atron of honor. Child attendants were Kimberly Farlow, flower girl; and Jason Corpening, ring bearer. Tlie bridegroom ’s grandfather, Frnest D. Hinson was his best man. Ushering were Todd Tyner, bride's brother; Brian Teal, Terry Baker and Jim m y Corpening. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Georgia C. Tyner of Winston-Salem, and Robert H. Tyner of Orlando, Florida. She attended the Winston- Salem —Forsyth County schools; and is employed by Toddle Inn Nursery in Winston-Salem. The bridegroom ’a parents are the Reverend and Mrs. Jim m y D. Hinson of Mocksville. He is a graduate of Sanderson High School, Italeigli, N.C.; and is employed by Caraway Furniture Company. He is also a professional musician. Out of town guests included friends and relativ es from W ashington, D.C., South Carolina, Kaleigli, Florida, Winston-Salem, and Laurinburg. Following their honeymoon, the couple will m ake their home in High Point. RECEPTION Im m ediately following the wedding ceremony, a reception in the couple’s honor was held in the church fellowship building. REHEARSAL DINNER The Reverend and Mrs. Hinson hosted a rehearsal dinner at their hom e T hursday evening in Mocksville. Places were set for the wedding p arty , fam ily m em bers, close friends and out-of-town guests. Southw est Colum bus, New Mexico: Come "step back” into American history by visiting a historic village of Columbus! Columbus, population 450, is the home of the Pancho Villa Museum and also offers the tourist postal, banking, motel, automotive, and food services. Thirty miles south of Deming and only three miles north of old Mexico, it is new Mexico’s 24-hour port of entry into Old Mexico. Here on M arch 9th, 1916, Pancho Villas began their historic raid on Columbus and the adjacent Camp Furlong. Here at 4:30 in the moonless, black, early hours of M arch 9, 1916, a shot shattered the silence of Camp Furlong dropping Private Fred Griffin, the sentinel at Troop K-S headquarters. “Viva Villa" rang out in all parts of the cam p and in adjacen t C olum bus as Pancho Villas villistas began their historic raid on this border outpost. The first operational m ilitary air base was established at Columbus and there m echanized tra n ­ sportation was first used in a punitive expedition. Because of its rich historical past, Columbus has been designated a national historic landm ark by the National Park Service. Many of its old buildings still rem ain, the most photogenic one being the Southern Pacific Depot. The 38-acre Pancho Villa Stale P ark has an excellent desert botanical garden and offers one a panoram ic view of northern Mexico from Villa Hill. Some of Camp Furlong’s original buildings, other relics of Pershing’s expedition into Mexico, an out­ standing desert botanical garden, and wide view of southern New Mexico and northern Mexico from Villa Hill, are features of the park. Modernistic m etal picnic shelters, rest rooms with shower facilities, and elevated barbecue pits are available to visitors. Slone-lined driveways and foot trails lead through the desert plant garden up into Villa Hill, and to the rem nants of the m ilitary habitation. Recipes from the Southwest: MEXICAN BAKED POTATOES 6 large potatoes, pulp removed and mashed 1 can (4 oz.) chopped green chili 3 hard cooked eggs, chopped I cup sour cream ',2 cup butter, softened Shredded Longhorn cheese Salt & pepper Mix m ashed potatoes, chili, chopped eggs, butter, sour cream , and salt to taste. Fill potato shells with m ixture. Top each potato with shredded cheese and heat in oven 15 minutes. MEXICAN HOT CHEESE DIP 1 cup sharp Cheddar cheese, grated 1 cup mayonnaise 1 dash hot sauce cup onions, grated Mix together and bake at 350 degrees until crispy and hot. MEXICAN CHILI BEER CHICKEN 1 broiler-fryer chicken, cut into parts 's cup flour teaspoon salt '2 teaspoon pepper 6 tablespoons butter 2 onions, sliced I Ijotlle 112 oz.) beer 1 cup chili sauce In shallow dish, mix together flour, salt and pepper. Add chicken, one piece at a time, dredging to coal. In fry pan, place butter and m elt over m edium heat. Add chicken and one of the sliced onions and cook, turning, about 10 minutes, or until chicken is brown on all sides. Place chicken and cooked onion in large baking pan. In lx)wl, mix beer and chili sauce. Pour over chicken. Place rem aining sliced onion on top of chicken. Bake uncovered in 325 degree oven for about 45 minutes or until fork can be inserted in chicken with ease. Happy cookin! Suzanne Tkach-Trivitte Mr. and Mrs. Edw ard M. Tkach of Mocksville, North Carolina announce! the engagem ent of their daughter, Frances Althea, to Gerald Watson I Triv i tte, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Triv i tte of Route 5, Mocksville, N.C. I The wedding is planned for Friday, M arch 8, 1985, at 7 p.m. at the F irst! Presbyterian Church in Mocksville. I The bride-elect is a 1984 graduate of Davie High School; and is employed! by Hanes Knitw ear Division m Advance, N.C. I M r. Triv itte is attending Rowan Technical School in Salisbury, N.C. He is I employed by Hanes K nitwear Division at Advance, N.C. B i r t h A n n o u n c e m e n t s BECK BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Nathan C. (Buddy) Beck, Jr., and Jennifer proudly announce the birth of a daughter and sister. Jessica Nichole. She was torn on February 7, 1985, at 11:53 a.m . at Rowan Memorial Hospital. At birth, Jessica weighed 7 lbs. 5 ozs. and was 20';^ inches long. The proud grandparents arc Mr. and Mrs. W alter C. Phipps of M ocksville and M r. and M rs. Nathan C. Beck of Rt. I, Harmony. SEAMON BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Steven Carl Seamon of 1(16 East W hitaker Mill Hoad, Ualeigh, N.C., announce the birth of their first child, a son, Christopher Carl, born February 18, 1985, at Wake County Medical Center in Raleigli, N.C. The baby weighed 8 lbs. 3 ozs. and was 20 inches in lenglli at birth. M aternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Caldwell, Hickory, N.C. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Seamon, Country Lane, Mocksville, N.C. Paternal great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Carl Baker of Rt. 2, Mocksville, N.C. HOLMES BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Holmes of Route 5, Mocksville, N.C., proudly announce the birth of a daughter. Kathryne Elizabeth, lx)rn W ed-| nesday, February 20, 1985, at thel Carolina Birth Center In High Point,! N.C. The baby weighed 7 lbs. 3 ozs. atl birth. G randparents are Mrs. Julianl Holmes of Statesville, N.C., and Mrs. D. S. Hammond of NewtonJ N.C. IllCAVIS BIRTH Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth G. KeavifI of llaniptonville, N.C.. announce thcl liirth of a (laughter. Amie Lynn.l Iwrn Monday. I'cbruary 11. 19851 weighing 7 lbs, 7 ozs. M aternal grandm other is Mrs^l Dorothy King of Hamptonvillc, N.CI Paternal grandparents are Mr I and Mrs. Jerry Reavis of Route Mocksville. N.C, LEAGANS , Mr. and Mrs. Gt><)rge II. Leaganl of Versailles, Ky, announce th(| birth of (heir firsi child, a son, Jo e l Chandler, Ijorn Tuesday. I'’el)ruarjl 19, 1985. at Central Baptist llospitall in Lexinglon. Ky, I The baby weighed 8 lbs. 2 ozs, al| birih, I Paternal grandparents are .\lr,| and Mrs, Cecil E. Leagans of H(, 5.1 Mocksville. N.C. SPORTS WORLi M e n ’s 7 V2 - 1 2 B ig B o y ’s 2 V2 - C h i l d ’s 1 1 - 2 Y o u t h s ' 6 -IOV2 A s s o r t e d c o i o r s n y l o n a n d s u e d e . Shoe Show \C X )T T O N b ras from No Body ’s Perfect b y P la y te x P e r f e c t F i t . . . p l u s C o t t o n C o m f o r t ! Now, the No Body’s Perfect" "custom lil" brn is avnibbli' in liglnweiyht, comfortable cotton, Palenled frame adjusts to each side of a woman’s figure , , , for perfect fit. Plus, cotton comfort for ideal shaping and support. Available in soft cup and undeiwire styles. Save $2.50 S P E C I A L I N T R O D U C T O R Y O F F E R 196 Wilkesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 HOURS:Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m Sunday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Plus, Money Back Guaranleu from Playlex “ (See package (lti|) for'deiails. Offer ends July 'A). 1‘Jff).) < U]>s, briiui l(U’ii)(} DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985-11 Piper And McMillan Vows Spoken M artha Lenore Piper and Michael Claude McMillan II, were united in m arriage Saturday, February 23, I98S, at B laise Baptist Church of Mocksville, N.C. The Rev. David Hyde officiated a t' the 2 p.m. ceremony. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Piper of Mocksville. She is a graduate of Davie County High School and Lenoir-R hyne College of Hickory, N.C. She is employed by Piedmont Airlines of Dayton, Ohio. The bridegroom is the son .of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Claude McMillan I of Galax, Va. He graduated from Davie County High School and at­ tended Wake Forest University. He is em ployed by Bob E vans R estaurants of Dayton, Ohio. A program of wedding music was p resented by M ike H endricks, organist-pianist of M ocksville; violinist Kurt Coble of Winston- Salem ; and vocalists John and Regina Chandler of Cooleemee who sang “Savior Like A Shepherd Lead U s,” "Ble.ss This House,” and “W hither Thou Go’est.” The altar was decorated with magnolia branches, palms, ferns and ivy, two spiral candelabras and two white wicKer baskets of mixed spring flowers. The bride, given in m arriage by her father, designed her own gown, which was m ade of two layers of white angel chiffon over taffeta, w ith a low scooped neckline, overlayed with Venetian motifs and appliqued with seed pearls. Her hat was appliqued with Venetian lace m otifs and seed pearls. The fingertip illusion was formed in rosettes attached to the. base of the crown of her hat in back. She carried a bouquet of pink rosebuds and old rose colored statice entwined with baby’s breath, stephanotis and ivy. The bride was attended by Miss Em ily Mauney of Chapel Hill, as her maid of honor. She wore an antique rose colored tea length dress of silk taffeta, accented with white lace with mid-length puffed sleeves. The bridesm aids, dressed iden­ tical to the honor attendant, were Miss Diane Koch of Silver Springs, Md.; Mrs. M arcia Powell, Miss Kathy Roberts, and Mrs. Andrea C ornatzer of M ocksville. They carried nosegays of pink rosebuds, pink and white mums, stephanotis, baby’s breath and ivy, tied with white stream ers. Child a tten d an ts w ere Julia Angell, flower girl; and Scottie McMillan, ring bearer, brother of the bridegroom. Michael Claude McMillan I was his son's best man. Groomsmen were the groom 's brother, G reg M cM illan of Greensboro, N.C.; M ark Jones of L exington; D avid Brownlow of F ay etteville, N .C.; and R obert Brownlow of Winston-Salem. Attending the guest register was M iss M ary Susan F lah erty of W inston-Salem . M iss Jen n ifer Anderson of Mocksville presented program s. Mrs. Gwen Angell of Mocksville directed the wedding. For her daughter’s wedding Mrs. Ruby Piper chose a turquoise silk dress and wore a purple throated white orchid corsage. ■ The bridegroom ’s mother, Mrs. Ann McMillan, chose a royal blue silk dress and wore a pink throated white orchid. Following a wedding trip, the couple will m ake their home in Dayton, Ohio. RECEPTION Im m ediately following the Mrs. Michael Claude McMillan II was . . . Martha Lenore Piper weading, a reception was held in the fellowship hall of the church. The bride’s table was covered with a floor length white taffeta cloth, overlayed with pink taffeta and white lace. An arrangem ent of pink and white mums, carnations and gladiolas centered the table. The three tiered wedding cake, made by Mrs. M arcia Powell, was decorated with pink and old rose colored roses accented with white wedding bells and love birds. Refreshm ents served were finger sandwiches, nuts, mints, cheeiie wafers and fruit punch. Assisting with serving were Mrs. Jan ie A nderson, M rs. M arty Broadway, Mrs. Lisa Dixon, Mrs. Ju lia Koch and M rs. E rlene Roberts. REHEARSAL DINNER Follow ing the re h e arsa l, the bridegroom ’s parents entertained the wedding party and guests with a dinner in the dining room of the Ram ada Inn in Clemmons, N.C. The menu consisted of roast beef, potatoes au gratin, tossed salad, broccoli, rolls, tea and coffee. A cham pagne toast was offered. PRE-NUPTIAL PARTIES Miss M artha Piper was honored w ith a m iscellaneous floating shower at the fellowship hall of Blaise Baptist Church, given by the W.M.U. of the church. A Valentine motif was carried out. The guests were served cake squares, pickles, nuts and straw berry punch. BRIDESMAIDS LUNCHEON The bride’s cousin, Mrs. M arcia Angell, hosted a luncheon for the bride and bridesm aids and other m em bers of the wedding party including the bride's mother, Mrs. Ruby P ip er, and bridegroom ’s mother, Mrs. Ann McMillan. G uests w ere served chicken salad, potato salad, fruit medley, bread sticks, chocolate torte, iced tea and coffee. The bride was presented a platter in her chosen china pattern and a knitted afghan. She chose this oc­ casion to present gifts to the at­ tendants. Miss M artha Piper was honored on Thursday, February 14, 1985, with a salad luncheon at the home of Mrs. George M artin. Attending were m em bers of the Bible study, a division of the Christian W oman’s League, which met preceding the luncheon.Miss Piper was presented gifts by the m embers. Suzanne Says ... More about Clearwater, Florida: The Gulf coast of the Clearwater-St. Petersburg area offers eye-catching attractions. If you’ve ever wanted to journey to a South Sea Island, the enchanting Sea Island, the Tiki Gardens will wisk you away for a few hours, as you wandei through over 12 acres of lush Polynesian paradise. Just south of the gardens in another kind of heaven, the Sun Coast sanctuary has been saving injured birds from death for years. The sprawling compound began ■casually in 1971 headed by Richard Heath. Since then. Heath and his .‘devoted llock of colleagues have saved and released over 10,000 birds back into the skies. Hundreds more m ake themselves at home at the sanctuary. Some will never fly again, but can successfully m ate ^and help propagate their species. The sanctuary is a fascinating and heartening look at one m an's dedication to helping Nature. It's ■free and open daily from 9 until dark. Recipes from the area: EGG CECJLE fi pieces ham , grilled 1 cup cecile de vin sauce G poached eggs G buttered Holland Rusk Sprig of parsley Place ham on top of buttered Holland Rusk and top with cecile de vin sauce. Place poached eggs next on the combination and top with Hollan- daise sauce. Garnish with a sprig of parsley. CECILE DE VIN SAUCE 2 tablespoons butter, melted 2 tablespoons flour '•‘,'■1 cup heavy cream '/i cup chicken broth Vi cup Swiss G ruyere cheese. grated 2 tablespoons Sherry Salt Melt butter and add flour, cooking until bubbly. Add cream and broth slowly and cook until thickened. Add cheese and blend thoroughly. Add Sherry and season to taste. BLENDER HOLLANDAISE SAUCE 3 eggs 2 tablespoons lemon juice V-i teaspoon salt Dash pepper '/j cup butter, melted ' Place egg yolks, lemon juice and seasoning in blender and blend briefly. Pour melted butter very slowly into egg yolk m ixture while blending at top speed. (Do not pour in salt residue of butter.) This may bd stored in re frig erato r and reheated at a later'date. Happy cookin!Su^i^anne Tarheel Kitchen By B arbara A. M inter The peanut, also known as the goober here in the South, has been around for centuries. By the tim e Columbus discovered America, the peanut had made a nam e for itself as a food item from Mexico down through most of South America. Early explorers and traders carried the peanut with them to Africa and Asia where it becam e a popular com m odity. From A frica, the peanut cam e to America and slowly became the hot item it is today. Today, peanuts are a part of our . national heritage. From visiting the circus, attending the fair, to w at­ ching a baseball gam e or a favorite movie, peanuts are a part of our life. One can buythe peanut in a variety of w ays-shelled,roasted, salted, boiled, unsalted, and in the shell. Besides being a great tasting snack,'peanuts are filled with plenty of nutrition. Known as one of “ N ature's M asterpieces,” one will find thiamin, riboflavin, niacin, calcium, phosphorus, potassium, iron and m agnesium in these legumes. For those who are health­ conscious. it's nice to know that there is no cholesterol found in peanuts and they are rich in polyunsaturated fats. Peanuts are a multimillion dollar com m odity in N orth C arolina. During M arch, National Peanut Month, we at the N.C. D epartm ent of Agriculture salute the fine job our Peanut Industry is doing. Bacon Cheese Logs 1 (1 lb.) package bacon 1 (3 oz.) package cream cheese, softened 'l' cup finely chopped peanuts V.i teaspoon garlic salt Vj teaspoon W orcesterhire sauce few drops hot pepper sauce chilie pov/der Cook bacon until crisp; drain and crumble. Combine with remaining ingredients except chili powder. Chill ',■! hour, then shape m ixture into three logs about one inch in diam eter. Sprinkle chili powder on waxed paper; roll thoroughly. (As an alternate, mix 'a cup finely chopped peanuts with chili powder.) Cut into inch slices and serve on crackers. Makes alxiut 5 dozen. Peanuts and Pasta 1 lb. spaghetti 1 cup peanut oil 1 cup raw peanuts I clove garlic, minced 1 onion, sliced 1 cup parsley, chopped one-third cup olives (pimento sluffed)-chopped ■'.I cup fresh grated Parm esan cheese salt and pepper Have onion, parsley, olives and cheese ready. Set aside. Cook spaghetti until just done according to package directions. Set aside. Heat oil in a large (10") skillet or heatproof serving dish until hot. Add peanuts and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Remove from pan. Lower heat to p asta and rem aining ingredients except for cheese. Season with salt and pepper. Stir to blend. Sprinkle with cheese and serve im m ediately. Serve with green slilad and French bread. If desired, 1 cup diced ham or cooked chicken m ay be added for another version. Peanut Angel Pie cup sugar ■'.I teaspoon baking powder 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 egg whites, stiffly beaten 12 finely crushed graham crackers I cup roasted peanuts, finely chopped 1 cup whipping topping In large mixing bowl add sugar, baking powder and vanilla to egg whites. Mix thoroughly. Stir in graham crackers and peanuts. Pour into ungreased 9” pie pan. Bake at 350 degrees F for 30 minutes. Cool and spread cool whip on pie. Chill thoroughly before serving. Serves G to H. , B O O K L O V E R S ^ Old or New Books< W HY SPEND MORE W HEN YO U Z CAN R E A D FO R LESS i 2 W hy N ot Try "R E N T *A *B O O K ’' • < For a small membership (w hich * u Is returnable in most cases) and • ^ a 1/3 b6ok rental you can read * by the day o r week. ‘ - Read A pproxim ately 3 Books f • For The Price Of One (1) For Info rm a tio n Call: Claudette Sm itherm an 704-284-2785 Cooleemeee, N.C. 1885 Dairy Recipe Contest Why not enter the 1985 Dairy Recipe Contest? The Grand Prize is a round-trip for two to Orlando, Florida, with four days and three nights at the O rlando H yatt Regency Resort. First runner up receives $150.00; second place $100.00; and honorable mentions receive $50.00 each. Just select your favorite main dish recipe or create one of your own. Then use the following guidelines to enter your award winning recipe. 1. Make sure that your main dish contains some type of dairy food (cheese, cottage cheese, cream cheese, yogurt, milk, etc.) as a m ajor ingredient. 2. Make sure your recipe contains only real dairy products. (Check your products for the real seal to be sure.) 3. Make sure your recipe is in- tered on the correct form. This contest is sponsored by the American D airy Association of N orth C arolina, the N.C. A griculture E xtension Service, Piedm ont A irlines, and H yatt- Winston-Salem. For m ore detailed information on contest dates and entry forms, contact your local County A griculture E xtension Service. POULTRY PIECES Menu suggestions for Winter are as follows: Turkey Chowder Carrot Strips Frosted Orange Salad Easy Bran Muffins Tea Take the chill off these cold winter days by serving a hearty, flavorful “Turkey Chowder” as your main course. The soup is rib-sticking and the “Easy Bran Muffins” will be especially tasty served hot or cold. For the heartier appetites, whip up the colorful “ Frosted Orange Salad” filled with fruits. TURKEY CHOWDER '.1 cup m argarine or butler l',a cups cooked turkey or chicken, chopped 2 tablespoons onion, finely chopped 2 cups raw potatoes, diced 1 cup celery, diced 2 cups turkey or chicken broth 2 cups (IG oz, can) cream -slyle corn 1 (13 oz,) can evaporated milk 1 teaspoon salt ' I teaspoon paprika ' I teaspoon ginger ‘h teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons parsley, chopped Melt butter over low heat. Add turkey and onion; cook until onion is transparent. Add broth, potatoes and celery. Stir and cook until m ixture is well blended and slightly thick. Sim mer until vegetables are tender. Add corn, m ilk and seasonings. H eat thoroughly, stirring occasionally. Season to ta ste with additional salt and pepper. Serve hot. Garnish with parsley and serve with crackers, hard rolls or muffins. Makes a thick soup. Serves 4-6. FROSTED ORANGE SALAD (15Vjoz.) can pineapple chunks 1 (IG oz.) can sliced peaches 1 (G-oz.) package orange-flavored gelatin l>/i cups boiling water ■\a cup ginger ale or Mountain Dew 1 cup whipping cream or 2 cups Cool Whip '/2 cup salad dressing or mayonnaise 1 cup m iniature marshmallows, optional 3 tablespoons toasted coconut, optional Drain fruit, reserving juice; add enough w ater to juice to make l“,!i cups. Set fruit aside. Dissolve gelatin in boiling water; stir in reserved juice and ginger ale. Chill until consistency of unbeaten egg white. Fold in fruit, and spoon into a lightly oiled 12 x 8 x 2-inch dish. Chill until firm. The topping is optional. Beat whipping cream until soft peaks form; fold in salad dressing and marshmallows. Spread topping over salad; sprinkle with coconut, if desired. Chill well. Yield: 12 ser­ vings. Course In Ballroom Dancing To Begin March 1st A social (ballroom ) dancing course for adult beginners has been scheduled liy the Winston-Salem Central VMCA starting Friday, March 1, at 7:30 p.m. The course will run for eiglit consecutive Fridays and the lessons will be 45 minute sessions. Basic steps of all types of social dancing will be taught. Missed lessons may be m ade up in following courses. A fee of $25.00 per person or $40.00 per couple will be charged for the course. Pre-registration is not required. Call the C entral VMCA for details, telephone: 722-11G3. Classes will be held in the West End Room (upper level entrance). Davie Historical And Genelogical Society To Meet The Davie County Historical and G enelogical Society will m eet Thursday, February 28 at 7 p.m. in the multipurpose room of the Davie County Public L ibrary. K irk M ohney, Survey S pecialist and Coordinator for the Davie County A rchitectural and Historical Survey will be guest speaker. All interested persons are invited to attend. aH ^ V N j i n t e * ’ Swe®*® Now n o . s w e a te d^ th in g s 157 N. Main Street Mocksville, N.C. PHONE 634-2044 HOURS: M-T-T F S 9:30-5:30 W ednndiy 9:30 , 1:00 FIRST FEDERAL’S IRA A PLAN THAT H A S IT ALL Fi«t Federal has an IRA Plan that’s just right for you, whether you can afford to contribute $200 or $2,000. Consider the beneflts; . IMMEDIATE TAX SAVINGS All IRA contributions are fully tai deductible. You pay less ta> and keep more of what you earn! .TAX DEFERRED HIGH INTEREST Your IRA earns high interest and every penny is ta< deferred until withdrawal. • RETIREMENT SECURITY Contributions plus earned interest grow rapidly to help assure your future comfort. • NO FEES First Federal charges no fees to administer your account. If you can’t afford an IRA this year, First Federal will loan you the money! Wouldn’t you rather pay yourself instead of IRS? FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS Main Office; 230 North Chcny Street; Branch Offices; 490 Hanes Mall/3443 tobin Hood Road/ 130 S, Stratford Road/2815 Reynolda Road/3001 Waughtown Street; Mocksville Office: 142 Gaither Street; Clemmons Office; 2421 Lewisville-Clemmdns Roaa 919-723-3fi04 12-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985 Concord United Methodist Church Dedicates New Addition On Sunday, February 17, an overnowing crowd of worshipers filled the newly remodeled sanc­ tuary of Concord United Methodist Church to participate in the Service of Dedication at the eleven o'clock worship hour. Special guests, form er pastors, m em bers, visitors, and some of those responsible for the actual construction of the new addition, blended their voices in hymns of praise and thanksgiving. Taking part in the service were Bishop L. Bevel Jones of the W estern North Carolina Conference, the Rev. Cecil H. M arcellus, J r., T hom asville District Superintendent, and the Rev. Phillip B. Cole, m inister of Concord United Methodist Church. Bishop L. Bevel Jones presented the sermon that asked the question, “ Who A re W e?” . W ithin his rem arks ho stated that United Methodist Church m em bers were a challenged the m em bers of Concord United Methodist Church to con­ tinue building character within its community and to set the pacc for United Methodism in Davie County. Following the sermon, Ed Welch, Chairman of the Trustees, and Lester “ Pete" Dwigyins, Chairman of the , B uilding C om m ittee presented the new facilities to be dedicated to the glory of God and to the service of man. The new facilities include a sanctuary, three classrooms, a choir room, and a large meeting room. Bishop Jones led the congregation in a liturgy to dedicate the facilities toward proper and sacred uses. The Rev. Cecil H. M arcellus, Jr., gave the Prayer of Dedication. Following the symbolic burning of the m ortgage and the benediction by the Rev. Phillip B. Cole, lunch was served in the fellowship hall. The noon meal was thoroughly enjoyed by all of those attending. More than two hundred and fifty guests, visitors, and m em bers at­ tended the morning worship ser­ vice. Among the special guests and visitors attending were the Rev. J. C. Lane, Rev. and Mrs. George Sherrill, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Corriher. This is the third building to ac­ com m odate Concord Church mem bers. The first one was built during the years of 1859-61 on land donated by Mrs. Mary C. Hodges and when finished it was dedicated by the Rev. W. H. Bobbitt, presiding Elder at that time. In 194G the Rev. G W. fink ap­ pointed a building com m ittee for the purpose of building a structure to replace the form er historic building. Under the leadership of Rev. J. B. Fitzgerald, the actual construction of the new church look place. M embers of the building committee for this project were Samuel Berrier, Frank Crotts, S. D. Daniel, W. R. Davis, Boone C. Foster, Janies B. Garwood, and Vann Swicegood. In 197G, under the direction of Rev. Kenneth Eller, a building committee was appointed to study the feasibility of making some changes to the existing church facilities. At this tim e the services of M r. D ennis N icholson, of Nicholson Associates Architects in Durham, N.C., were secured to aid w ith the study. The designs presented were part of a three- phase building program . In August of 1978 a ground­ breaking cerem ony w as held. Constriction of "Phase I” began in the Fall of 1978 with Hendrix and Corriher Construction Company of Mocksville, N.C., as contractor. Church school classes met for the first tim e in the new classrooms on E a ste r Sunday of 1979. The dedication service for this new addition to Concord Church was held on August 3, 1980. "Phase I" construction consisted of four new classroom s, four bathrooms, a Narthex, and some remodeling in the sanctuary and the education building. Total cost of this . construction was $121,000.00, To assist the congregation with this indebtedness, the Davie County Sub-D istrict M ission Society donated $1,000.00 and $29,625.00 was received from Duke Endowment. M embers of the building committee for "Phase I” were Lester “ Pete" D w iggins-C hairm an, Belle D. Boger, Jam es D. Boger, Bob Crotts, Henry Crotts, Homer Crotts, Judy F. Pratt, and Sid Smith. After the dedication of "Phase I”, members of the building committee expressed their desire 'o beain The new church dedicated on Sunday, February 17. construction on "Phases II and III” to their new minister. Rev. Phillip B. Cole. M embers of the building committee for “ Phases II and III" w ere L ester “ P e te " Dwiggins- Chairman, Belle D. Boger, Bob Crotts, Henry Crotts, Homer Crotts, Jane Crotts, Judy F. Pratt, Joe F. Sham el, and Sid Sm ith. They deciced that the sam e arthitect and building contractor would be used for the construction of "Phases II and HI” . In August of 1982 a ground­ breaking cerem ony w as held. Construction began in the Fall of 1982 and a Service of Consecration was held in July of 1983. “Phases II and HI” consisted of three new classrooms, a choir room and a large meeting room. The sanctuary was completely remodeled and expanded by the addition of eight new pews and a new altar area. Total cost of this construction was $285,000.00. The church received $7,000.00 from the Davie County Sub-D istrict M ission Society, $2,832.00 Irom the M ethodist Builders Club, and $54,000.00 from Duke Endowment. Due to the great- love and dedication that the current rnembership has for its church, the final payment on the m ortgage was made during December of 1984. The members of Concord United M ethodist C hurch greatly ap ­ preciate all of those who served on the building com m ittees for the three-phase building program . Without their faithful service and loyal concern, the church facilities would not be what they are today. M embers are especially thankful for the "watchful eyes” of Lesler “P ete” Dwiggins-Chairman of the two building committees. All of his hard work will be cherished for a long time. M embers of Concord Church also value the spiritual guidance of the Rev. Phillip B. Cole during the building program . He now joins a long list of m inisters who have faithfully served Concord Church in its spritual growth. The dedicated efforts of all the church m em bers cannot be overlooked. Without their great love and support for th eir church, Concord’s debt would not have been paid. The present church m em ­ bership is 167. Though small in number, there continues to be a spirit of Christian goodwill and fellowship that should help the church to continue its growth for many years to come. M any gifts of m oney, tim e, prayer, patience, and love went into the building of Concord Church. The following is a list of special gifts given to the church during the three- phase building program : Stained G lass W indows in m em ory of E arl Smith and Kelly Call by Cicero “Sid” and Frances Smith A Communion Rail in honor of Henry and Katherine Crotts by their children A Communion Rail in honor of Hemer and Jane Crotts by the Ed Welch Fam ily A Communion Rail in memory of W. R. Davis and in honor of Otta Davis by the Joe Shamel Family A Pew in m em ory of Van A. Swicegood and in honor of Annie Swicegood, in in m em ory of Hubert L. Foster and in honor of Haze) S. Foster by their families - : A Pew in m em ory of Daniel (Buddy) Crotts and in honor of Lucy Crotts by their children A Pew is m em ory of Frank Crotts and in honor of Nettie Crotts by their children A Pew in m em ory of S. D. and Annie M arlin Daniel by John and Dot Walker A Pew in honor of Wade and Alice Nail by Mildred Seamon A Pew in memory of I. C. Berrier and Annie Cope Berrier by tlieir children A Pew in m em ory of Larry Foster and in honor of Boone and Lydia Foster by their family A Pew by the United Methodist Women A Screen in m em ory of W. R. Davis by Otta Davis A Screen in m em ory of Cora Foster Dwire The Cross and Retable by the United Methodist Men A W urlitzer Chapel Piano in honor of J. N. and Peggy Tutterow by the Joe Shamel Fam ily and an Allen Ditital Computer Organ in m em ory of Jam es D. Boger by Belle D. Boger Anollier great event in the history of Concord Ciiurch has taken place due to the very special m em bers of the church. They now have a special “house” to worship in and an even m ore im portant reason to help and serve others. (The m em bers of Concord Church truly appreciate the fine work that Mrs. Otta Davis and Mrs. Mildred Seamon have done in compiling the history of the church. Special thanks is extended to them for furnishing the afore-m entioned pertinent historical facts relating to the history of Concord United Methodist Church.) The 1946 church that served the congregation until 1982. A view of the completion of the three-phase building program. Pjjjst^church built in 1859-61 on land donated by Mary A t m ^ T h e Q u a b f y u im e s I h n N ig h . When more and more banks seem preoccupied by the idea of crossing state lines, we thought you might appreci­ ate hearing from a bank tnat calls North Carolina home and not just home base. Our overriding interest is in delivering the highest Qual­ ity financial services to the people in North Carolina in ways that offer the best overall value. A case in point is LTVEST ' Brokerage Services. UVEST was de­ signed as a way for our cus­ tomers to save up to 70% in brokerage commissions. With toll free service, UVEST provides up-to-the- minute market infonnation as well as prompt execution of trades. But it’s what UVEST doesn’t have that’s really impressive. UVEST commissions are up to 70% lower than those of most brokerage houses. And since the brokers receive no commissions, you’ll find you’re never under any pressure to buy anything. UVEST is available by itself or as a part of a much more comprehensive [jer- sonal financial plan we call OMNI BANKING. OMNI BANKING supplies a wide range of financial services designed to . -to-day banking, but also your planning. ofOMNI HANKING isof the highest facilitate, not oi longtenn financi'.i Eveo' element quality. You receive, for exam­ ple, interest-earning checking with checks designed to identify you as a special customer. You have access to a pre­ arranged line of credit at prime rate tor your personal use. We even provide a special personal financial review to assist you in analyzing your financial objec­ tives and devising strategies to meet them. And that’s just a sampling. At BB&T, we realize that the quality of the ser­ vice is inseparable from the quality of the person who renders it. That’s why we place such importance on the attitude of our people. It’s an attitude that’s reflected, for example, in our deeper cominitment to understanding the ful range of your long-term financial needs. It becomes apparent, tcx), in our responsiveness to your requests. Because we know that, in today’s fast changing world, your requirements will become ever more varied and complex in the future. Finally, the BB&T attitude is evident in the kinds of insight we can provide. Because we realize that, the more insight we can provide for you, the more rewarding the relationship will be for both of us. Come to BB&T. And discover how ^ i t ~ a i thequaii.tycomes fts M o n e I l i a n A B a n k . thing we do. I t ’s A n A t titu d e . BB&r Mi mln i luih'KilPcfxisit litsiiKiHn Ctiilxiialion. ' isusi mct'muikuniludivnumofSUnuntih'Sirtoitu'sOn-fktiatiini. — Mocksville-Davie Chamber of Commerce - Chamber Chatter by Henry Shore, Executive Director W hat Is Your Cham ber Doing? 1. Public inform ation for everyone. Questions you don’t have to answer because your Cham ber does it for you. For instance, W here are your Day Care Centers? W hat is the population of Mocksville, Davie County? W here do I pay my w ater bill? W hat is the largest industry in Davie County? AND on and on arid on. 2. Public relations. When someone new comes to town or moves to the community, the first place they head is your Cham ber of Com­ merce. Your Cham ber of Commerce is usually their first contact in this area. We always put our l>est fool forward--for you. We are pleasant and friendly and heipful--on your bchalf--and en­ courage them in every way possible to live here, work here, and patronize your businesses. 3. Statistical information. We have it or will get it for you to fit your individual need. 4. INDUSTRIAL D EV ELO P­ MENT TEAM. Your prospective industries first contact when con­ sidering w hether or not to locate a plant in M ocksville or D avie County. The red carpet is always out. Everyone in the County benefits from new industry. The Team is com posed of 7 m en, eadh knowledgeable in a specific area, who encourage and work with desirable industries who are con­ sidering Davie County as a site location. 5. Your Cham ber of Commerce works with the Town Council and the County C om m issioners on problems that involve residents of our area. 6. Your Cham ber of Commerce is a key m em ber involved in the an­ nual Farm -City Week observance. 7. Each year the annual Christ­ m as Parade is sponsored by the Cham ber of Commerce and the Davie County Law Enforcem ent Association. 8. Small Business is of vital concern to the Cham ber of Com­ m erce and our com m ittee is aw are of their needs. 9. Your Cham ber of Commerce is a service Organization. It belongs to her mem bership. Your dues sustain its operation, pay staff salaries, and give us a base from which your appointed directo rs plan th eir program s for the upcoming years. Your Cham ber of Commerce depends on input from the m em ­ bers. We will be as effective as you allow us to be. Make your specific areas of concern known to your Cham ber and become a part of the process by which your problems are dealt with. Volunteer Firemen’s News Davie County fire departm ents have responded to numerous brush fires in the past month. Most of these fires were caused by burning trash. A few simple rules should be kept in m ind before burning m aterials outside. 1. Obtain a burning perm it if required. 2. Do not burn in dry weather. 3. Do not burn if there is any wind. 4. Have rak es and-or w ater available should the fire start to spread beyond the burn area. 5. If the fire does get out of con­ trol, call fire control immediately (634-2211). These simple rules will prevent property dam age and assist the local fire departm ent in fire prevention. DAVIE COUNTY FIREM EN’S Association Projects The F ire D epartm ents and I Rescue Squad in Davie County have em barked qn two m ajor projects I that are much needed in the county. These projects include; 1. The replacem ent of an outdated and unsafe system for filling self- contained breathing ap p aratu s bottles, and 2. Development of a county fire training ground. Several local businesses have provided assistan ce for Ihese projects. These businesses include:' Ingcrsoll-Rand Co., McKksvillc Drexel-Heritage f ur., Mocksville Burlington Ind. Inc., Cooleemee Wonderknit Corp., Mocksville The new Eagle air system is in­ stalled and the (raining ground is under cons(ruction. DAVIE FIREFIGHTER CALENDAR M arch 2 Farm ington Square Dance 8:00 p.m. Wm. R. Davie Breakfast 5:00 a.m. Jerusalem Business Mtg. 7: Sheffield Calahain Reg. Mtg. p.m. Smith Grove Ladies Aux. 7: M arch 5 Smith Grove Reg. Mtg. 7: M arch (I Farm ington Training Mtg. 7: M arch 7 Cooleemee Training Mtg. 7: Jerusalem Training Mtg. 7: Wm. R. Davie Training Mtg. p.m. Center Training Mtg. 7: M arch !l Jerusalem Breakfast G M arch 3 Smith Grove Board Mtg. 2:00 p.m. M arch 4 Cooleemee Board Mtg. 7:00p.m. Countywide Firefighter I 7.00 p.m. M arch 11 Countywide Assoc. Mtg. 7; Fork Regular Mtg. 7: Sheffield Calahain Reg. Mtg. p.m. 00 p.m. 7:00 30 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 7:00 00 p.m. 00 a.m. 30 p.m. 00 p.m. 7:00 Monday, March 4 7:00 pni Single Again Group Dealing With Loneliness And Depression After Loss Of Spouse Through Death Or Divorce . S3.00 Fee. Tuesday, March 5 10:00 am Spiritual Gro^vtli Group Biblical Study, Meditation And Prayer. S3.00 Fee MICAH COUNSELING CENTER PO Box 944 101 N. Main St. Mocksville, NC Phone 634-5050 Ham & Sausage Breakfast Saturday March 2,1985 5:00 am-11:00 am Wm R. Davie V.F.D. Hwy 601 North Of Mocksville, N.C. Tack Out Order s Available M arch IH Sheffield Calahain Aux. Mtg. p.m . Wm. R. Davie Regular Mtg. p.m. M arch l!l Cornatzer Dulin Board Mtg. p.m. Smith Grove Regular Mtg. 7 M arch 20 Farm ington Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. 7:00 7:00 7:30 00 p.m. M arch 21 Center Training Mtg. 7:00p.m. Cooleemee Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. Jerusalem Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. W m.R. Davie Regular Mtg. 7:00 p.m. M arch 22 Jerusalem Supper ,^):00p.m. M arch 23 Countywide Firefighter I i):00 a.m. M arch 2,'i Sheffield Calahain Reg. Mtg. 7:00 p.m. M arch 2(1 Mocksville Training Mtg. 7: Center Training Mtg. 7: M arch 2ti Cooleemee Training Mtg. 7: Countywide Firefighter I 7: Jerusalem Training Mtg. 7: 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. 00 p.m. M arch 30 County Line Supper 4:00p.m. Persia In Persia, apples were considered the fruit of im mortality. iSIGNAL HILL MALLj PRESENTS CRAFTS WITH A SOUTHERN TOUCH ARTS AND CRARS SHOW AND SALE Friday thru Sunday March 1-3 Craftsmen from N.C., S.C., Tenn., Va., Ga., and Ohio will be present with unique handmade arts and crafts. TON HiLL 1-77 at E. Brood St. Stofesville M arch 12 Cornatzer-Dulin Ladies Aux. 7:30 p.m. • Mocksville Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. March 14 Center Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. Cooleemee Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. Jerusalem Training Mtg. 7:00 p.m. Wm. R. Davie Board Mtg. 7:00 p.m. We extend our sincere sympathy to the family of Douglas Ratledge in the recent loss of this man. He was a form er resident of this community. We extend our sincere sympathy to the family of Mr. R. A. Cornette who died recently. He was a form er resident of this community. Mr. and Mrs. Batry Smith at­ tended a birthday supper for Weston W allace Sunday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bud W allace. Weston was 8 years old. Mr. and Mrs. Joe White and M ark, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Dull and Tina w ere supper guests Saturday night of Mr. and Mrs. Joe C arr Harpe honoring Mr. Harpe for his birthday. Mocks Homemaker Met February 19th The M ocks Extension H omemakers m et February I9th in the home of Mrs. Henry Jurgensen. Mrs. Huston C rater called the m eeting to order and welcomed the guest and a new m em ber, Mrs. C. W. Moser. After the opening ceremony led by Mrs. Eva Jones the roll was called, m inutes read and treasurer’s report given. Pennies for friendship were collected. The club voted to join the other hom em akers M arch 19th to spend the day in observing court ac­ tivities. Since this is the regular meeting day for Mocks, business of the club will be discussed over lunch. M arch 12 Mocks Club will host a party for the residence at Autumn Care. Mr. Huston C rater was introduced by Eva Jones, safety leader. Mr. C rater is the form er Fire Chief of the A dvance V olunteer F ire D epartment. Mr. C rater presented an excellent program on safety in the home. He stressed the need for fire extinguishers and smoRe detectors in every home. He also stressed the need for everyone to know the telephone num ber 634-2211 to call to report a fire or emergency. Mr. C rater said, “When reporting a fire or other emergencies, try to stay calm. Tell the operator your name, the type of fire (house, car, grass, etc.), or emergency, the exact location, street or road name or number, give the telephone number you are calling from. In case the fire is a house fire get out and stay out.” The meeting was adjourned with the saying of the club collect. Refreshm ents were served. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISLRECORD, THURSDAY.FEBRUARY 28,198S-13 Marketing Survey Winner A recent marketing survey conducted by Davie Jewelers of Mocksville resulted in a new Ricoh watch for Mrs. Juan Cohen of Rt. 1, Advance. The survey, concerning jewelry buying habits, was sent to 1000 randonnly selected residents of Davie County with Mrs. Cohen's survey number randomly selected as wmner of the watch. Barry McBride of Davie Jewelers is shown ^resenting the watch to Miss Cohen. McBride extended lanks to the many residents who completed the survey for their par}icipation in the project. Davie Jewelers is en­ tering its 25th year of business in the Mocksville-Davie area. Four Corners News Mrs. Johnsie Shelton attended a birthday dinner Sunday at Dockside honoring Tim Hughes for his bir­ thday. Mars Though Mars m ay once have been a wet planet, tem peratures and atmospheric pressures are now so low that w ater can exist only as vapor or ice, says N ational Geographic. So winds alone alter the M artian landscape, which is roughly equal in area to E arth’s continents. Fabric Scraps Fabric scraps can be made into a patchwork tablecloth, placem ats and napkins. Shady Grove Begins Kindergarten Registration Shady Grove School at Advance has begun registering students for Kindergarten for the 1985-86 school year. If you have a child who will be 5 year's old on or before October 16, 1985, and will be attending school at Shady Grove next school year, please call the school for registration information. The school num ber is 998-4719. Please call immediately so that your child will be included in all pre­ school activities. SPECIALS 14kt. EARRINGS • Genuine Ruby • Genuine Sapphire • Genuine Amethyst • Genuine Garnet Compare at ’50.00 • Genuine Aquamarine Genuine stones set in 14Kt. yellow gold • 4mm stones are approximately the diameter or a Va ct. Diamond 14 Kt. DIAMOND PENDANTS Genuine Diamond Set in Lovely 14Kt. Gold $ g 8 8 Buy one for a friend! Buy one for your self! Illustration enlarged (o show detail_____________ LARGE SELECTION OF RINGS NOW 33% to 75% OFF FINAL WEEK AT THESE PRICES • 30 Day Layaway bn Rings over 50% off • 90 Day Layaway on any other ring • Ruby and Diamond • Emerald and Diamond • Sapphire and Diamond ONEWEEK ONLY Nothing Else Feels Like Real Gold .... 18” Rope Chains ^27®® 18” Serpentine Chains 18” Wide Herringbone $3300 24” Wide Herringbone ^125®® 14Kt. Bangle Bracelet 2 0 t " 5 0 % OFF Large Selection I4Kt.Gold Our Gold chains are of the High Standards and Quality Insist on Fine Jewelry that will last.......... downtown ^ Mocksville 634-5216 ' 'SmtUnfjf confit&ittcepo% 2 S ‘ 14-DA VIE COUNTY ENTERPRISIi RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 Dirt That Up And Moved Leaves Gullibility Gap By M ercer Cross National Geographic N ew sservice Among aficionados of oddball natural occurrences, it’s callcd the “ Cookie-eutter" puzzle. Ther term refers to a mysterious hole in the ground that was discovered last October in nor­ thwest Washington state, on the Colville Indian Hescrvation, not far from the Grand Coulee Dam. A chunk of earth 10 feet long, 7 feet wide, and 18 inches to 2 feet deep, weighing at least a couple of tons, w as uprooted from a depression in a wheat field. It ap­ parently arced through the air, , rotating slightly en route, and landed virtually intact 73 feet away. Since then, winter storm s have blanketed the hole with snow. Cows grazing in the field have tram pled down the edges. Nobody has figured out how or why the dirt took flight. Several scientists have examined the divot and come away scratching their heads. Investigators of unidentified- flying-objects (UFO) phenomena have expressed interest. Okanogan County farm ers Rick and Pete Timm, wlio found the displaced dirt, notified Don Aubertin, director of mining on the Indian reservation. He suspected a m eteorite fragm ent. A geologist hired by the reservation took a look and said no. “There was no sign of im pact," Aubertin told a newspaper reporter in November, when the story cam e to public attention. “The hole was not a crater. It has vertical walls and a fairly flat bottom. It was almost as though it had been cut out with a giant cookie cutter.” Theories abound. One is that an earthquake caused the freakish upheaval. A quake with a 3.0 rating on the Richter scale, its epicenter some 20 miles from the hole, had rattled the area nine days before the Timm brothers’ discovery. Stephen D. Malone, a University of Washington earthquake expert, discounts th at possibility as "beyond the incredible.” A quake that sm all, he explains, lacks the power to boost a heavy patch of turf out of the ground. "A hoax, I think, is a possibility,” Malone says. So do some other scientists how have not inspected the site. Others say they don’t see how a hoax could have been perpetrated in the field, situated in a rem ote area sprinked with massive boulders that local residents call “haystack rocks.” For one thing, no signs of human instrusion-no wheel tracks, foot­ Four Make Dean’s List At UNC-G Two students from Davie County are among the 283 undergraduates at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro who m ade all A’s on courses completed during the first sem ester. The two students who m ade all A's at UNC-G are:A ngela J. Riddle, an elem entary education major, daugliter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald U. Riddle of Route 2, Box 158, Mocksville; and Kelly G. Vogler, a nursing m ajor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richmond S. Vogler of Route 4, Box 1, Advance. One other student from Davie County attained the dean’s list during the first sem ester. The other student is Susan M. Rothrock, a psuchology m ajor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis F. Rothrock of 165 Sunset Drive, Mocksville, Also, Patricia R. Jones, a nursing m ajor, of Kernersville, daughter of M r.and Mrs. Jam es P. Reavis of 764 Y adkinville R oad, M ocksville, made all A’s at UNC-G during the first sem ester. To m ake the dean's list at UNC-G, students must earn a grade point ratio of 3.5 or better and have no grade below a “ C” for the sem ester. Students must be carrying 12 o r ' more sem ester hours of course work graded on an A, B, C, D, or F basis in order to be eligible for the dean’s list. Altogether, 992 UNC-G students out of a total u n dergraduate enrollment of 7,325 attained the dean’s list. UNC-G also has 2,704 graduate students. Davie Golden Age Club Has Meeting The Davie County Golden Age Club met February 21st at the R otary Hut for th eir m onthly meeting with fourteen mem bers attending.The Rev. David Hyde, pastor of Blaise Baptist Church, gave the devotions. Mrs. Ruth Richardson of the Sheriff’s Dept, gave a talk on personal safety and crim e prevention in our homes. Frank Stroud read a very m- teresting poem.Mrs. Laura Koonfz, one ol our mem bers, is reported to be much belter at Davie County Hospital. The next m eeting will be the 0th of M arch, at which tim e a covered dish meal will be served. Mrs. Ruth Jones dismissed the group with prayer. prints, or evidence of m achinery- were found. Robert L. Schuster, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey in Golden, Colo., exam ined the puz- zeling hole. He leans toward the theory that an undcrpround m ethane gas explosion m ay have |x>pped the earth out. " I’m not ruling out the ear­ thquake, m yself," says Greg B ehrens, a geologist W’ith the federal Bureau of Reclamation at Grand Coulee Dam. Behrens, who probably has spent more tim e studying the riddle than anyone else, thinks the m ethane theory is improable. Nevertheless, in November he sent soil samples to the bureau’s regional office in Boise, Idaho, for analysis. No lab test had Ijeen conducted by F eb ru ary ; low priority and a shortage of staff were given as reasons. The government plans no further investigations. The quake could have generated concentric surface seismic waves, Behrens says. “Trouble is,” he w rote John P. T im m erm an, chairm an and treasurer of the C enter for UFO Studies, in D ecem ber, ‘‘th at anything this large has neither been witnessed nor monitored during a seismic event.” In his letter to Timmerman, B ehrens cited other potential natural causes of the so-far inex­ plicable uplifting: a “freak tor­ nado” or a “ complex freezing ac­ tion” combined with strong winds. But, he wanly noted, the weather was warm when the incident is supposed to have occured. Behrens went on to mention several eonceiveable m an-m ade causes, among them an excavation dug by an anormous crane or an airborne pickup of the earth by a helicopter. “ Man has done more spectacular things,” Behrens concluded. “ But the cost would bo high and the profit nil.” The cookie-cutter m ystery “ doesn’t hold up as a very strong case for out field of study,” says T im m erm an, a saving-and-loan executive in Lima, Ohio. Bui, he adds, “ It's a lilllo hard to walk away from something like this, because it’s so tantalizing. It's very suggestive." One scientist who is particularly tantalized by the Washington in­ cident is Bruce N. Kaliser, hazards geologist for the Utah Geological and Mineral Survey. In 1978, on an inspection trip following a 3.5 earthquake in nor­ thern Utah, he cam e upon a cross­ shaped depression 14 feet in diam eter. The “only possible ex­ planation” for it, Kaliser concluded, was "an object dropped from an aircraft," possibly a large chunk of ice. Holes in our planet almost never go unexplained. Most common are sinkholes, the kind that occasionally make headlines with cave-ins that sw allow buildings, cars, and sometimes people. Such subsidence, as it is called, usually occurs in the 15 percent of the United States that overlies soluble lim estone that erodes underground, from causes both natural and man-made. Noljody can say with certainly whether an answer to the enigma will ever be found. "It's the most bizarre tiling I ever .siiw.” says Don Aubertin. “There are just enough unknowns about this case to have it hanging in the air, so to speak,” says Tim­ m erm an. .4 . T o reg ro u n a ana aeposiTea virtually inTacT73feet away. Theoi scientists have not found an explanation. No signs of human activity were evident at the site when it was discovered in October 1984. Photo was taken before snow covered the hole and cattle trampled its edges. ALL SEASON RADIAL SAVINGS P1S5-80-R13 TIEMPO RADIAL • 10 .0 0 0 bum g trend e d g e s for traction, rain or sh in e • G n s-savin g steel bolted rndial ply con struction • Built-in scu ll rib h elps protect sid ew alls Oiy SiieASldtwall SALEPfllCE* 4 P185-75R14 $47.004Pt95*75R14 $49.006P205-75R15 $52.004P21S-7SR1S $55.007 P235-75R15 $61.00 •And acceplablo ifnoo-ir POLYSTEEL RADIAL SAVINGS STEEL BELTED RADIAL SAVINGS P155-B0*R13 P155-80R13 CUSTOM POLYSTEEL • G as-s;ivinc) radial ply con struction • P en etration - re sistan c e o( steel cofd btjits • Sun.'-foot*?d wet tiaction tfCN'Kt Qiy Size ft SALESidewall PfllCE* 6 P175-B0R13 $48.004P175-75R14 $49.006P195-75R14 $58.004P215*75Rt4 $63.006P235-75R15 $69.00 •And .iccjipMtiio tiafl(?-in ARRIVA RADIAL • All se a so n yea r round perform an ce • F or front or rear v/lieel drive • Long-v./earing. steel-b elted radial con struction QIV Size ft SALESidtwallPRICE* 4 P175-75R13 $53.004 P185-75R14 $56.008 P205*75R15 $61.004P225-75R15 $69.006P235-75R15 $72.00 •And .icceptablo trade-in PERFORMANCE RADIAL SAVINGS P185>70R13 ^ miantities I X eSds Saturday, F e b r u a r y EAGLE ST RADIAL • D ouble-belted g a s-sa v e r for street m ach in es and van s • R oad-gripping tread d esig n • B old v;hite letter sidew all QlK Raised While LetlerSlze 6 P19S'70R13 $59.007P195'70R14 $6S.00'B P225-60R15 $79.006P245*60R15 $79.004P25S-60R15 $83.00 •And iJCCf?ptablo irado-in LIGHT TRUCK & RV RADIAL SAVINGS P235-75R15 WRANGLER ALL SEASON RADIAL All se aso n , all terrain, all v;tieel position 01 If Outline White leltti Size SALEPRICE* 4 9R15 $99.4 10R10 '$115431.11.50-15 $104233>12S0-1S $119 •And acc«ptnbl{* tiadu m Hurry Quantites Are Limited Op Tires! — Rain Checks Are Available If Your Size Is Sold Out—Tire Prices Include FREE Mounting —Computer Balancing $5.50 Per TIr* Llfntlme Guarantee DISC BRAKE SERVICE «44.00 4 W a y s t o C h a r g e . . . O u r I n s t a n t som i-m etallic d isc p a d s are req u iro d .a d d S14 New ItonI disc pads, repack IronI wheel bearings, resurface front rotors. Conventional rear-wheel drive vehi­ cles. Prices vary for front wfieel drive. Caliper overliaul $19 each if needed. Hydraulic service w ill be recom ­ mended If needed for safe vehicle operation. C r e d it P l a n . . . T h e S i l v e r C a r d . Lube, Oil Change And Filter 1 1 8 8 Includes up to five quarts oil. Special diesel oil and filter type may result In extra charges. . M a s t e r c a r d . . . V is a Som e people have believed that geranium s could drive away snakes. XAROLINA TIRE CO. Retail Division of Brad Ragan, Inc. 962 Yadkinville Road Phone 634 6115 NEW STORE HOURS 8:00-6:00 Mon.-Sat. Len Berrier, m aO O D fV E A R ■ ’W ' - i '-s, I . ^ s s lS f ■??■---" A steer for a pet? No, four local teenage girls are raising steers for market. Kerri Wilson gives hers a friendly pet as Laura Phillips, Katherine Meadows and Tricia Reilly await their turn. Raising a market steer seems an girls, but four local teenagers are doing purchased a steer for $400, hopes to sel unlikely job for teenage loing usTthat. Each girl it at a profit this aising Market Steers; husual Job For Girls Rv K nihv Tnm linsnn spring. Kerri Wilson (right) shows her steer named Yogi to Catherine Meadows, wno is also raising a steer for sale. Extension livestock agent, John Hall (background) admits that this is an unusual task for a girl. By Kathy Tomlinson W hat would the typical 10-year- |ld girl buy with 5400? (A) A new w ardrobe complete |vith all designer jeans labels. (B) Lots and lots of jewelry, specially necltlaces and dangling arrings. i (C) A complete collection of the host current top 40 hits. (D) A feeder calf. [ Most would instinctively invest in othes, jew elry and records in that td e r of priority. However, four lav ie County teenage girls invested nooeach in individual feeder calves |hich they hope to sell at a profit lis spring. I Does it sound unusual? Well, jiaybe so. But not for four girls who on’t mind investing tim e and honey in a project which could hake a few dollars for them in the nd. The four, Katherine Meadows, •icia Reilly, K erri Wilson, and aura Phillips, are all avid 4-H’ers kho plan to pursue careers as Veterinarians following higli school j-aduation. Even local extension livestock fcgent, John Hall, and extension 4-H Igent, Dale Safrit, adm it that it is l-ather unusual for girls to raise and Kell m arket steers. However, they pgree that these four girls are evoted when it comes to properly feeding and caring for their m arket ;teers, and they expect each to nake a strong showing at the iN orthw est Junior Livestock Show and Sale this June in Winston- Salem. But raising a m arket steer takes Itim e and money, efforts for which Ithe girls hope they will be reim- Ibursed when the gavel sounds on the lauction block. In addition to spending $400 on the I initial purchase of a 500 pound I feeder calf, each girl will spend I another $400 feeding it. Hall estim ates that each of the I four m arket steers will weigh an average of 1200 to 1300 pounds when the sale is held. Each steer eats about 20 pounds of a corn, soybean m ixture per day with the average feed cost at about $8 per 100 pounds. The girls are responsible for all feeding and groom ing of the anim als, quite a task for four girls who probably each don't weigh much more than a 100 pound sack of feed. “ It’s hard to gain the respect of an 1100 pound steer,” laughed Tricia Reilly, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Jam es Reilly of Rt. 1, Mocksville. She adm its that it took some ingenuity on her part to halter break her steer and teach it who is the boss. “ I had to lie a rope to the tractor and pull him around a few tim es before he realized that I was, in­ deed, in charge,” she said. The objective to raising a m arket steer, is to provide optimal nutrition so that the steer will gain the m axim um am ount of w eight possible during a given period of time. This includes daily records of the amount of food each is fed com pared to actual weight gain. Each of the four anim als is weighed at regular intervals to determ ine if rations are satisfactory for proper weight gain. There are also medical records to be kept on each anim al including vaccinations, when the animals were wormed, and the removal of horns if desired. In addition, as 4-H’ers and m em bers of the newly formed livestock team , the girls must groom and train the anim als for showing. A big, hulky steer m ay not seem the ideal pet, but the girls admit they can’t help becoming attached to them. Katherine Meadows decided to nam e her steer a seemingly un­ caring "302” due to a previous experience. "I thought that if I named him something like 302 I wouldn’t become so attached,” she said, “especially after my ex­ perience with a m arket lam b.” “ It seem s that K atherine became so attached to the lam b that she couldn’t bring herself to take it to m arket. “ I donated it to the Nature Science Center,” she laughed. “ I simply couldn’t bear the thoughts of it winding up on someone’s dinner table.” She’s decided to be “tough” where 302 is concerned. “He will go to m arket,” she said. The girls have no assurance of making money or even breaking even when the anim als go to sale. At the Northwest Livestock Show and Sale, the girls will at least receive the going price of 60 cents a pound, which wouldn’t cover purchase of the animal and cost of feeding it. “That’s why it’s so im portant to secure sponsors who are willing to bid m ore than the CO cent m inim um ,” said Kerri Wilson, who made a slight profit on her last m arket steer. “ It will be quality beef, and w e're all hoping to at least m ake a small profit at the sale.” With only a few months to go, the girls will continue monitoring food intake and weight gain. They realize they probably won’t get rich, but the knowledge and experience they’ve gained will prove invaluable. DAVIE COUNTY Feature 1B February 28,1985 Tncia Reilly., whose stMr is a Santa Gertrudis noted for its good, lean muscling, carefully weighs the animal's daily food intake. Each steer eats about 20 pounds of corn, soy mixture each day. #f! Laura Phillips admits that the girls have had problems teaching the animals just who the bosses are. Her size, compared to that of the steer is an adequate com­parison. "But they're really just big babies," she said. 4 y Each girl is required to keep growth charts on their steers to document weight gain as compared to actual food intake. Kern Wilson said it takes about m o hours a day to care for her 1100 pound steer. Yogi. 2B-DAV1E COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 Davie Wrestlers Receive Top Conference Honors -M- Sha^vn Steele - • - Most Outstanding Four Davie High War Eagles have been named to the All-North Piedm ont Conference w restling team . Ttiey are Steve Buchin, 105 lbs; Shawn Sleele, 112-lbs; Tony Foster, 132-lbs; and Dale Bar- neycastle, H5-lbs. Shawn Steele was selected 'th e conferenee’s m ost outstanding wrestler. David Lindsey of Trinty was second and Dale Barneycastle of Davie was third. Buddy Lowery of Davie was named the coach of the year. The squad: 98-Derwood Bynum, Salisbury, and Mike Grisson, Trinity 105-Steve Buchin, Davie County, and David Hall, Trinity 112-Shawn Steele, Davie County, and Junior Farm er, North Davidson 119-Mitch Gibson, Salisbury, and Kalph Hollifield, North Davidson 12G-David M alkins, A sheboro, and Wylie Wells, Salisbury l.'!2-Tony Foster, Davie County, and Troy Steed, Trinity 138-Jerry Simmons, Trinity, and Jake Fine, Thomasville I4.i-D ale B arneycastle, D avie County, and Keith Ridge, Trinity 155-Eric G arner, Asheboro, and John Jeffries, Lexington ir.7-Barrie Bunting, Asheboro, Buddy Lowery — Coach of Year and Steve Young, Lexington 185-David Lindsey, Trinity, and Cedric Ellison, Lexington 195-Jon Howard, Asheboro, and Bruce Page, North Davidson Heavyweight-M ilch Vales, North Davidson, and Dan Richbourgh, Tliomasville. South Davie Jayvee Girls Are 14-0 By T.J. Eanes South D avie’s jayvee girls basketball team finished the season as conference cham ps with a record of 14-0. The Tigers won 2 gam es last week, defeating Trinity 32-24 and N ortheast 39-29. Rebounding and a scrappy defense has been a key to South s victories this season. South defeated T rinity 32-23 behind Shawn Smoots' 19 points and 5 steals. Shannon Jordan added 8 points and played a tough defensive gam e for the Tigers. AngiePotts had 4 points. 15 rebounds and 1 blocked shot and Jenny Stevenson had 11 rebounds, 1 point and 2 blocked shots. At the end of the first half South Mocksville Recreation Basketball Mocksville Recreation D epart­ m ent B asketball R esults for Wednesday, February 20, 1985, Jr. High Tournam ent Finals are as follows: Bucks (14) N cts(l«) C. Mayfield-18 Striet-4 J. Mayfield-7 Johnson-2 Childress-1 Jones-7 Peebles-11 Welch-5 McDaniel-7 Jr. High All Stars Win Welch Tim Jones David Streit Dale Clement John Robinson Michael Chunn David Clark Everett Anderson Eric Lyons Michael McDaniel John Mayfield Corey Mayfield Eric Peebles All Star gam es with Smith Grove will be Friday, M arch 1 at the Brock Gym in Mocksville. Girls Little League Mocksville vs. Smith Grove - 6:00 p.m. lioys Little League Mocksville vs. Smith Grove - 7:00 p.m. FINAL STANDINGS Men’s Adult W ....L L L. Long Const. 11 1 H eritage 10 2 Mocksville Bldrs. Supply 9 3 T. Ancerson G ti Jam es Barber Shop 4 8 Crown Wood 3 9 Bobkats 0 12 Men’s Adult Tournam ent finals will be Thursday, Feb. 28 at 8:15 p.m. Boys Jr. High Mocksville vs. Smith Grove ■ p.m 8:00 "Robinson Crusoe" w as based on the life of a real sailor, Alexander Selkirk, w ho lived alone on a desert islandlor m ore than four years. The War Eagle bench looked relaxed in the opening half of Davie High's NPC championship game with North Davidson Friday night. __________ South Davie Boys Post 11-3 Record South Davie’s boys’ basketball team ended regular season play in second place with an 11-3 record. This is the varsity team s best record in the history of the school, according to Clyde Studevent, coach. The team ’s only losses this season were to first place Lexington and Chestnut Grove. However, South recovered from its initial loss to Chestnut Grove by defeating the iPHni bv 20 points during their seccond meeting. South Davie was unable to ad­ vance to tournam ent play at Walnut Cove due to stale regulations which prohibit because of m ake up gam es caused by snow The South Davie Varsity Basketball team finished the season with an 11-3 record. Team members are (front row, I to r ) Glen Wilkes, trainer, Bryan Suiter, Chris Callison, Vincent Cockerham, La Von Clement, Dale Clement, trainer, (2nd row) Sissy Slye, stats keeper, Shane Fleming, Kris Latham, David Rossler, GregSlye. __________Miller, Clifford Dulin, Studevent, coach. Greg Anderson, Tori Evans, score keepr, and Clyde Former Davie Basketball Star To Tour Internationally With Athletes In Action was ahead 12-8 before Trinity cam e back to m ake the score 19-18 in favor of South at the end of the third q u a rte r. Shaw n Smoot started hitting from the outside and South started to rebound and steal to win 32-24. In their last regular season gam e South defeated N ortheast 39-29 to give Coach Donna Ireland her first undefeated team and the conference championship. Rebounding was the key as South had 53 team rebounds. The Tigers were led by Shawn Smoot with 19 points and 5 blocked shots. Angie Potts had a fine gam e with 13 points and 18 rebounds. Shannon Jordan had 5 points and Jenny Stevenson had a good day rebounding with 11 and 1 blocked shot. Beth M ashburn added 2 points and 10 rebounds. South Davie-;i2 Trinity-24 South Davic-Smoot 19, Jordan 8, Potts 4, Stevenson 1. Triiiity-Pugh 10, Joyce 2, Taylor 2, Wood 2, Wliite 2, Corneilson 2, Elliot 2, Monroe 2.South I)avlc-:i!t Nnrthcast-2USouth Uuvlc-Smoot 19, Potts 13, Jordan 5, M ashburn 2. Northeast-Boone 10, Hargrove 6, Pope 5, More 4, Billingsley 4. Jill Amos, a basketball star at Davie County High School and UNC- Wilmington between 1976 and 1984 will tour internationally with an Athletes In Action team this sum­ mer. “ Playing for Athletes in Action will combine my two loves-sharing the love of God and playing basketball," Amos said. An All-State guard for the War Eagles, Amos went on to become the first player ever to score over 1,000 points at UNC-Wilmington. She is currently working in the Academic Support Services Office at the University of South Carolina, while earning a m aster's degree in health and physical education. Amos serves as a graduate a ssistan t coach for the Lady Gamecock basketball team. To be able to participate in the athletic m inistry organized by the Campus Crusade for Christ, Amos will have to raise .$3,600 from in­ dividual supporters so she can meet her share of the team ’s expenses. The amount must be raised by May 15, a few weeks prior to the beginning of AIA training cam p in Hawaii or California. “The opportunity to serve God with the talents He has given m e by playing basketball overseas in Australia, the South Pacific and Latin American is truly a blessing,’’ Amos said. “ It’s difficult to put into words how wonderfully God has blessed my life and this opportunity is just one more of the many blessings.” The 23-year-old daughter of Bob and Georgia Amos of Cooleemee will bring 13 years of basketball experience to the AIA team . Besides being a basketball standout, Jill was a superlative tennis player at both the high school and college level, playing num ber one position throughout her career. Amos had an outstanding four- year career at UNC-Wilmington, where she helped the Seahawks reach the North Carolina stat-“ nnal twice. Averaging over 16 points per game, she was named an Jill Amos (pointing) is a graduate assistant coach for the University of Soutn Carolina Lady Gamecock basketball team. AIAW all-stater as a sophomore and UNC-Wilmington. a NAIA all-stater in 1984. . For m ore information, contact . Amos has also been active in the Amos at University of South Fellowhip of Christian Athletes Carolina Athletic D epartm ent, Rex since high school, assisting in the Athletic Center, Columbia, organization of a FCA chapter at 29208. Stokes Wins Local Tournament Southeastern Stokes edged Troutman 58-52 in an exciting championship gam e Saturday at South Davie. Southeastern was led throughout the tournam ent by the scoring of John Ziglar and the rebounding of Scott Joyce. John Stanfield held the hot hand in the second half of the championship gam e. T routm an used g reat quickness and the superb play of guard T.J. Davidson to lead much of the gam e. Omar Lenster con­tributed excellent rebounding and scoring. In opening round gam es Southeastern Stokes defeated Mooresville and Troutm an edged South Davie 32-29. Mooresville then beat South Davie 41-40 in the third place game. An All-Tournament Team was selected. It included: Jam es M arshall, South D avie; Anslo Fow ler, South D avie; A nthony R ickett, M ooresville; A nthony H a rp e r,' M ooresville; T racy Ram sey, Troutm an; Om ar Lenster, Troutm an; T.J. Davidson, Trout­ m an; Scott Joyce, Southeastern Stokes; John Stanfield, S outheastern Stokes; and John Ziglar, Southeastern Stokes. RESULTS South Davie-29 Troutnian-32 South Davie-Jam es M arshall 10, Brad Jones 4, Anslo Fowler 8. Marc Holcomb 7. South D avie-40 Mooresvillc-41 South Davie-Jam es M arshall 19, Anslo Fowler 8, M arc Holcomb 10, Brad Jones 2, David Stevenson 1. Som e people used to think < hedgehogs carry fruit on their spines. FINAL NOTICE FOR LIH LE LEAGUE NATIONALS SIGNUPS Cooleemee And Mocksville Area if Interested In Signing Up For Baseball Contact One Of The Following People Immediately Frankie Garwood.. 284-2670 Barbara Chapman.. 284-2086 Danny Correll. .998-2268 Grimes Parker. ,284-2424 Jimmy Spry... 284-2461 You must call one of these people before March 6th which will be the final day to sign up. If you have a child that wants to play baseball this year. Please call before March 6th for more information. (C hild must be 8 years of age before A u g u ttlS , 196Sand not 16 years o f age before August IS , 1985) A Mocksville Builders Supply EXTRA S e l f - S e a l i n g A s p h a l t Roofing Designed to stay/, down during /^r; high winds and rain. Rugged enough to last many years. Roofing - Special Price ONLY *2395 per square The combined Buying Power of Over 1200 Builder Mart Dealers BEAT THE FIRST OF MARCH PRICE INCREASE Mocksville Builders Supply South Main StreetStreet Mocksville, NC Phone: 634 5915 or 634 5916 Hours: Monday Friday 7:30 5:00 Saturday 8:00 12:00 NOW LOCAL OWNED AND OPERATED DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985-3B Davie Girls Meet Kannapolis Thursday Night In District 5 Basketball Tournament Girk Nosed Out In Finals OfNPC Toumey 41-39 The Davie High Girls basketball team will meet Kannapolis Thur­ sday night at 7 p.m. in the District Five tournam ent being played in the South Rowan High School gym. Coach Bill Peeler’s lassiesearned the district tournam ent berth through their stellar play in the N orth Piedm ont C onference Tournament in which they went to the finals losing only two points to North Davidson. Davie, after a sixth-place finish during the regular season, upset third seeded West Rowan and second seeded Thomasville to get to I the finals. The local girls defeated West Rowan 46-37 last Thursday night to earn a spot in the finals. This m ared the sixth tim e in seven years that I Davie has reached the finals. Davie I was on the championship five of I those times. DAVIE COUNTY Fowler Rayle Pulliam Presnsll DealFreshwater I Stroud I Total!I WEST ROWAN J Holland I'Crass I Raid iMyers iBoele iKnox iLollln Steele iTotala Davie County ‘Veat Rowan Turnovers: Davie 14, Weal 20 FG FT RB PF TP3-10 2-2 9 2 61-3 3-6 3 5 50-2 2-4 12 1 26-11 2-2 4 4 14 4-9 5-8 0 4 132-3 0-0 3 1 4 0.4 0-0 2 0 016-42 14-22 33 17 46 FQ FT RB PF TP 2-13 2-2 6 4 6 t-7 4-5 7 2 6 2-8 8-9 10 3 12 3-12 3-4 4 5 9 2-5 0-0 6 5 40-4 0-0 3 0 00-1 0-0 0 0 00-0 0-0 0 0 010-5017-20 36 19 37 '9 9 ' 9 19 - 46 6 S 14 12 - 37 In the tournam ent finals last Friday night, Davie lost to the regular season champion North Davidson teaiji 41-39, w ien North's Debbie Swicegood hit crucial free throws in the closing minutes to lead her team In victory. The win snapped Davie County's three-year streak of tournament championships. D espite a sub-par shooting perform ance by Swicegood, North Davidson Coach Rick Phelps had no doubts alxjut turning to the league's leading scorer in the closing minutes. "I kept putting the ball in Deb­ bie's hands," he said. “She didn't shoot particularly well from the field, but she's a clutch player." Swicegood who was named the tournam ent's most valuable player, keyed a fourth-quancr rally that saw the Black Knights rebound from a seven-point deficit. D avie's Michellle Deal hit two free throws with 7:Wi rem aining to pul the War Eagles in front 37-29. But Davie com m itted several consecutive turnovers, and North Davidson took advantage. Shelly Slabach hit an inside shot to make the sco re'36-31. Then hit two free throws at the 4:29 m ark to pull the Black Knights within one. Nine seconds later Swicegood made two more foul shots, and North Davidson led 37-36. Davie m issed a shot, Swicegood rebounded and the Knights called on their delay offense. North ran the clock to 2:3B left in the game, then Swicegood hit two free throws to give the team a three-point lead. D avie then broke scoreless stretch of nearly five minutes on a basket by Sandy Stroud. Both team s added a single free throw, leaving N orth with a 40-39 advantage heading into the final minute. The War Eagles, after rebounding a missing free throw, had a chance to take the lead but missed an outside shot. The ball fell out-of- bounds and was awarded to North Davidson. Swicegood then made one free throw with 15 seconds left to set the final margin. Davie turned over the ball on its next posession, ending its chances for a tie. After Swicegood missed two foul shots with seven .seconds remaining, both team s hiltlcd lor the rebound as the time expired. "I am extrem ely proud of them, " Davie Coach Bill Peeler said. The War Ealges, now 8-17, also gained a berth in the District 5 tournament next week at South Rowan. Four Davie players scored eight points, including. Deal. Tammy Pulliam, Selena Fowler and Carla Presnell. DAVIE COUNTY Fowler Rayle Pulliam Presnell Deal Stroud Team Totals FQ 4.6 2-11 . 3*4 4-12 1-4 1-1 FT 0-1 1-3 2-4 0-0 6-8 0-0 15-40 9*16 PF TP 4 e 2 5 2 6 3 65 a 1 2 17 39 NORTH DAVIDSON FG FT RB 4-1312-19 11Swicegood Jacobs Murphy Kellar Slabach Tuttte Wallace Buller Team Totals Davl9 County North Davidson 2-4 0-5 3-6 4-7 0-0 0-0 1-2 0.0 1-2 0-1 0-1 0-2 0-0 0-0 14-3913.25 10 14 10 13 TP 20 4 1 6 80 0 2 lavie American Little League Basketball The Davie American Basketball eague completed its basketball |ournam ent on Saturday, February at the Smith Grove gym. The Iham pions in the girl's division pere the Panthers. They defeated ne Blue Devils in a tight defensive lam e by a score of 8-7. In boys' Pivision II, the Deacons, who were 6 Ind 6 in the regular season, lefeated the No. 3 seed Tar Heels by 1 score of 39-28. In boys’ Division I, pe Deacons held off the Celtics, 58- The three divisions are now reparing their all-stars for two ta m e s w ith the M ocksville Xecreation League. These games vill be played Friday, March 1, at |h e Brock gym in Mocksville, and Monday, M arch 4, at the Smith jrove gym. Tlie girls’ gam e will ta rt at 6:00 p.m., followed by the 3ivision II gam e at 7:15 p.m., and Jhen Division I at 8:30 p.m. These _am e tim es will be the sam e at Smith Grove on Monday night.I The honorable mention all-stars Jin Division II (4th, 5th, & Glh grade ■boys) will play Mocksville Thur- |sd ay night at 6:00 p.m. at the Brock ym. TOURNAMENT SCORES: ■TUESDAY, FEB. 19 lBruhisCI3) Eiiglcs(i:i)I Pitts-4 Cooper-3 lFreuler-14 Campbell-4I Dunn-fi Freuler-2 I Newsome-3 Jordan-2I Darnell-4 Stockton-2I Blackbum-2 Di-ucons (4K) Nail-22 Yandell-I4 Foster-8 Jones-2 Smith-2 THURSDAY, FEB. 21 T arllccis CI2) Sharpe-12 B. Myers-10 Laws-4 J. Myers-6 D eacons(It) Nail-17 Yandell-18 Foster-3 Clemo-6 FRIDAY, FEB. 22 Panthers (2!l) Smith-4 Payne-2 Nail-9 Tucker-2 Moore-4 Clement-4 Hoots-4 Blue Devils (10) Sloan-20 Sheridan-IG Drane-2 Hutehens-2 nine Devils ( Hi) K. Rhynehardt-5 C. I{hynehardt-3 McClannon-4 Freuler-4 SATURDAY, FEB. 23 Girls’ S ta rs(9) Boger-2 Habegger-I Duncan-4 Bruins CHI)Faiilhors (K)Blue Devils (7)Pitts-10 Nail-7 R. Rhynehardt-2 Freuler-12 Payne-1 C. Rhynehardt-3 Dunn-C McClannon-2 Bright-2 Division II Wolfpack m )Hoys' Championship Duncan*6 Deacons Ci!))T arllccis (28) Murphy-16 NaiI-21 J. Myers-10 Bailey-6 Yandell-12 B. Myers-4 Mecham-6 Foster'2 Sharpe-7 Barney-2 Cleino-4 Carler-5 Laws-2 Bullets (K)Division I Eberl-8 Boys'Championship Deacons (58)Celtics (52) Smith'20 MendenhaII'35 Pardue-B Losh-6 Carter-26 Jarvis-3 Correll-2 Cline-4 Bright-2 'I’hompson-4 Receation Dept. Sponsors Women’s Exercise Classes iT arllccIs (44) I Sharpe-8 B. Myers-12 Laws-5 Carter-12 J. Myers-5 Allen-2 Bulls (17) Griffin-2 Hansen-2 Uice-1 Carter-10 Boger-2 The M ocksville R ecreation D epartm ent is sponsoring two exercise classes for women Soccer Meeting The Mocksville Recreation Dept, will have a meeting for parents and Coaches on Monday, M arch 11 at 7:00 p.m . at the Brock gym. The m eeting will be for Soccer. The Recreation Dept, would like to start an Athletic Association for Soccer. All parents are invited. For more information call the Recreation Dept, at 634-2325. txiginning Monday, M arch 4. A beginners’ exercise class will be held from 6:30 p.m.-7:00 p.m. each Monday and Wednesday at tlie B.C. Brock Gym. The class will be followed by an aerobics class from 7:00 p.m. to 7:45 p.m. Cost is $15 for the beginner's class and $20 for the aerobics class. Each will run for six weeks. Karen Wishon will serve as in­ structor for Ijoth classes. For registration or further in­ formation contact the Mocksville Recreation Departm ent at 634-2325. Davie fans whoop it up at the NPC championship game between the War Eagle 18 41 S — 39 13 - 41 Coach Bill Peeler sends the War Eagles back on the court following a time out. Carla Presnell (30) scored 8 pts. in Davie's loss to North Davidson in the NPC title qame as did Michelle Deal (33}. And! Rayle (32) scored 5 pts. (Photos by John Verne Ison) Davie fans whoop it up at tl ^ijiirls and North Davidson. District Tournament To Be Held Here The Mocksville Recreation Dept, will host the'D istrict M en's Adult B asketball T ournam ent on Saturday, M arch 2 at the Brock Gym. Two team s from Mocksville will play; I. L. Long Const, and H eritage. A dm ission will be charged $1.00 for adults and $.50 for Students. Everyone is invited. South Davie Girls Win Tournament By T.J. Eanes South Davie’s jayvee girls won the Invitational Tournam ent at South Davie this weekend. On Friday South defeated Troutm an 34- 28 to advance to S aturday's championship game. They then defeated a tough Mooresville team 44-32 to win the championship. Beth Mashburn, Angie Potts, Shannon Jordan and Shawn Smoot were all nam ed to the 10-girl All- Tournam ent team . Against Troutman South was led by Shawn Smoot with 18 points, 5 steals and 1 blocked shot. Shannon Jordan had B points and Jenny Stevenson had a good defensive gam e with 10 rebounds and 5 steals. Angie Potts and Beth Mashburn each had 4 points but Potts and 13 rebounds and 1 block while Mash­ burn had 12 rebounds and 3 steals. In the championship gam e South cam e out with good defense and rebounding to lead 13-2 at the end of the first quarter and a 23-8 halftime lead. In the third quarter both team s played even and South was ahead 31-17 before M ooresville cam e back and was forced to foul near the end. South was 9-17 from the foul line in the fourth quarter and won 44-32. The Tigers were led in scoring by Shannon Jordan with 13 points and she shot 50 percent from the filed and 70 percent from the line. Beth M ashburn scored 10 points and had 9 rebounds. She was 4-4 from the line with 8 of her points in the second half. Angie Potts had a fine game with 9 points, 16 rebounds, 5 steals and 1 blocked shot. Shawn Smoot scored 6 points, had 7 steals; 5 rebounds and 2 blocked shots before getting hurt. Gail Bohannon cam e off the bench to add 4 points and 7 rebounds and Janice Powell added 2 ix)ints. Against a much taller team South had 44 rebounds and 5 blocked shots. South Davie finished the season undefeated with a 16-0 record. South was led in scoring by Shawn Smoot averaging 14.8 points, and Shannon Jord an 10.4. Leading rebounders w ere A ngie P otts averaging 14.4 and Beth M ashburn 11. As a team South averaged 38.2 points and 44.6 relxjunds a game. S. Davie 31 Troutman 28 S. Davie • Smoot 18, Jordan 8, Potts 4, M ashburn 4, Stevenson, Powell, Bohannon. Troutm an - Grady 14, Davenport 6, Ikard 4, F o ster 4, O vereash, Compton, Hetlrick, Massey, Early, Davidson, Weber 5. Davie 44 Mooresville 32 5. Davie - Jordan 13, M ashburn 10, Potts 9, Smoot 6, Bohannon 4, Powell 2, Stevenson, Henson. Mooresville - Norman 10, Berryman 6, Hickett 6, Caldwell 4, Gallmon 2, Booth 2, Key 2, McLaughlin, Sat­ terfield. ACC INSIDE STUFF Dick DeVenzio ACC Tournam ent; Who Cares? Who’s going to win the ACC Tournam ent? That is the question everyone is already asking, even though it isn’t yet certain who will win the regular season. While reporters and analysts give you hundreds of reasons and com m entaries during the next week, a better question might be, “Who cares?” I ask that question, not sarcastically. Like all of you, I am a big ACC fan. I’m looking forward to going to Atlanta and being a minor part of that super-charged ACC atm osphere. And I will be very interested in each of the gam es. In fact, for the first tim e in years-even though coaches have been saying this eternally-anyone can beat anyone. There are reasons why each team can win. Duke has that great defense, the guards that cannot be pressured, and M ark Alarie. Georgia Tech has the big front line and Mark Price. N.C. State has depth, experienced gam e breakers Spud Webb and Nate McMillan, and the great strength of Lorenzo Charles. North Carolina has the big people inside, the most consistent point guard, and the wizardry of Dean Smith. And M aryland has speed, size, and Len Bias. But there are reasons, too, who no team can win three straight ACC games. Lorenzo Charles will run out of gas for State, or the Wolfpack will start bombing from outside. Duke will be im patient on offense. Georgia Tech will get players in foul trouble. Carolina will get a run of needless turnovers. And M aryland...has Lefty Driesell. The point is, this year’s ACC races, both the r e ^ la r season and the Tournam ent, are w ars of atrition-som eone will win because someone has to. But each of the team s has lim itations-precisely the reason the regular season m ay end in a three-way tie between five-time losers. So, who’s going to win the Tournam ent? The reason I say “Who cares?” is that a week later it won’t m atter at all. Let m e take that a step further with a prediction. A team that loses in the first round of the ACC Tournam ent will go farther in the NCAA playoffs than the winner of the ACC Tournament. There are several reasons why I think this. A first round loser will have longer to rest before NCAA competition, they’ll have something to prove, the pressure will be off, and they’ll be enthusiastic about the opportunity. The winner? They’ll have some sense of anti-climax, a factor which has long been a subject of debate around the ACC. Does the pressure of the ACC tournam ent sap the w inner’s energy and spirit to such an extent that perform ance suffers in the NCAA playoffs? It is difficult to answer that conclusively-especially now that nearly all the con­ ferences have tournam ents. Nevertheless,, for team s like Duke and Georgia Tech-w ho don’t have particularly strong, benches-it is dif­ ficult to imagine them winning three ACC tournam ent gam es and then still difficult to imagine them winning three ACC tournam ent gam es and then still having the stam ina and drive to go on and win in the NCAA’s. It has been done, of course. But it's not easy. Which is why I think faas of a first round loser-assum ing it’s one of the top five team s- shouldn’t get all upset. Your team m ay actually have a better chance in the NCAA’s by losing. That seems strange, when you consider w hat factors momentum and “peaking at the right tim e” are supposed to be. But in this case, this year, I don’t think a team will pick up momentum by winning the ACC. W hether they do or not, you have to realize, in these times of 64 N- CAA bids, the ACC Tournam ent doesn’t have near the pressure associated with it that it used to when only the winner went on. This year’s ACC Tournam ent is mostly for Virginia, Wake Forest, and Clemson-'three team s that can salvage Uieir season and an NCAA bid by reaching the finals. For the rest of the team s, it’s a grand exiiibition with a definite sense about it that the best is yet to come. Foster-Rauch Drvg Company WILKESBORO STREET MOCKSVILLE, NO PHONE; 634-2141 4B -D A V IE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 Third Graders Present'Secrets Of A Super Smile’ At School T hird g ra d e rs a t M odtsvm e Elem entary School presented tlie play “Secrcts of a Super Smile to fellow students in three p e r­ formances this week as part of the school’s observance of National Dental Health Month. Tw enty-six students in M rs. E lizabeth M artin’s class p a r­ ticipated in the play which was presented at the school Monday through Wednesday. The setting for the play is a third grade classroom. Inspector Strong of the Friendly Dental Investigators (FDD arrives with two of his FDI Agents to check out the "Class Smile.” They’re visiting schools across the country on behalf of the Smile Foundation, to m ake a Super Smile of America Award. In the course of its examination, the FDI team uses special equip­ ment to look deep inside the teeth, lliey suspect a problem in one m olar and discover that Acid Amy and Acid Andy, Dental Double A gents, have been at w ork dissolving the enam el. This could lead eventually to a cavity. Through the use of simulated, greatly magnified enamel rods (w hich students m ake), the audience watches mouth m inerals begin to rebuild the disolved enamel with help of flouridc. Action in­ volves the alternate work of acid versus m outh m inerals and flourlde. As the activity of dissolving and rebuilding enam el proceeds. In­ spector Strong and his two FDI Agents explain (with the help of Dental Billlxiards) what people can do to reverse the decay process and keep healthy teeth for a lifetime. Tliree actions are involved: I) dally flossing and brushing with an ef­ fective flourlde toothpaste; 2) eating healthful non-sugary snacks and 3) going for regular dental checkups. In the last scene of the play, six months tim e has elapsed since the initial visit of the FDI. The FDI team retu rn s, announces that Secret Agents have kept tabs on the dental health of the class, reviews the dental health rules, then presents the class with the Super Sm ile A w ard, evidence th at students have been practicing good dental health habits. Third graders at Mocksville Elementary School explain the "Secrets to a Super Stnile'^ during presentation of a school play this week. Will Dwiggins, Melvin Gaither and Shelly Foote/ demonstrate how good dental habits can result in a "Super Smile" award. Area Urologists Have New Method Of Treatment For Kidney Stones Citing a need to prevent over 1,000 Piedm ont Nor(h Carolina residents from having to undergo surgery for kidney stones this year, Piedmont Slone C enter A ssociates has petitioned N orth C arolina’s D epartm ent of Human Resources to perm it the group to purchase an innovative tre a tm e n t m achine known as a “ kidney stone busier” for operation on an outpatient basis. • The announcement was m ade by a spokesman for the Piedmont Stone Center Associates, a par- tenership of 17 urologists from High Point, Lenior, Lexington, Statesville and Winston-Salem. Dr. Fred Howell of Winston- Salem said, "The kidney stone buster m eans treatm ent can be less costly, m ore convenient and without the discomfort associated approval, to acquire a $1.6 1 Extracorporeal Shock Wave Western Carolina University Inspirational Choir In Concert Sunday, March 3,1985 3:00 p.m. B.C. Brock Auditorium Contribution: $ 3.00 i -TWO STORES- 8 X 10 LIVING COLOR PORTRAIT EASTER Special C48 Limit One .48 8X10 Per Family Guaranteed By Holder’s Studio REX HOLDER, PHOTOGRAPHER Additional Sittings, Same Family: 2.98 Groups .48 Per Person - Pictures Will Be Delivered In Store. There Will Be A Variety Of Por­ traits Available At Reasonable Prices To Fit Your Family Needs. ONEDAY I COOLEEMEE ! JllSCQUW Cooleemee Shopping Center Friday, March 1st 11:00-5:00 I W Q P A YS I R&JSPQRIS i Willow Oak Shopping Center Mocksville Minors must be accompanied by parent or guardian. U___I Friday, March 8th 11:00-5:00 Sat., March 9th 11:00-4:00 with m ajor surgery. We will be able to use shock waves to pulverize the kidney stone in the Center’s office and then let the patient go home that day. Current m ajor surgical treatm ent requires around six days hospitalization and two to four weeks of home recuperation." The C enter's urologists have m ade arrangem ents, subject to stale ap million i U lholripler which is manufactured by its inventor in Germany. The Center’s m achine would become the ninth stone buster installed in the United States since the machine gained approval by the U.S. Food and D rug A dm inistration in December 1984. At present there is no machine in the Carolinas. The Area II Health Systems Agency last year overwhelmingly recommended a Certificate of Need for the Piedmont urologists, but this approval was denied by the Facility Services Division of the Department of Human Resources in Raleigh. Prior to federal approval of the L ilholripler in D ecem ber, hospitalization was required during ils use in this country, "But now,” Dr. Howell said, "experience with the U thotripler in other locations' in the United Stales clearly in­ dicates that only in rare cases can Ihe patients be treated in the office and not go back home to resum e Ihelr normal pursuits," Dr. Fred Held, President of the Group, said that according to urological studies. Piedmont North Carolina has one of the highest incidence rates for kidney stones in the country-betw een l.G and 2.9 per thousand residents each year. That means in the upper Piedmont region with over two million residents, over 4,000 people will suffer from kidney stones in 1985, and over a fourth of them will require surgery to rem ove the stones if a Lilholripler is not available. "The stone buster Is a very cost effective alternative to surgery,” said Dr. Reid. He added, "In addition to treating patients we are willing to make available all research and educational opportunities to health care Institulions in Ihe region.” The physician add, "We are dedicated to minimizing pain and sufferings in our palienls. At the sam e time, we want to do this at the least possible cost tothepatient with the leasl disruption to the patient’s normal life," Dr. F red Howell said the urologists hope to gel an early ruling from the stale on the request lo set up an outpallenl center lo treat kidney stones. He said, "The stxinei theyiyveuslheo.k., the sooner our neighbors in the area will have a cost effec'Jive, less painful alter­ native lo hospitalization for kidney stones." Only two Presidents of ihe U .S.—James K. Polk and Woodrow W ilson-have been clected w ithout winning the vote of their home state. Brooke Potts (left) Gaither, Becky Cregar teeth. f ' V Mouth Mineralportraying r and HolTv shows incisors Tanganyika y Hendricks why good nutrition means healthy Inspector Strong^ the Friendly Dental Investigators (left) played by Ben Ed- the school Nurse (Wendy trow ii), Miss Tuttle, the thi*rd gradeTea<fher*(K^^ (Brad“ ?agle) " (Charles Childress) and FDI Agent Healthy We Treat You Special!».In Our Deli*Bake^f Hoffman’s Smokey Sharp ^ • 9 OO Fresh Baked 18 Oz. LoavesCheddar Cheese. Lb.^3 Italian Bread .. rresniy K-repareo aouinem siyte Kesn Baked ^ Potato Salad.... Lb 8 9 Onion Rolls ... 15 Piece Barrel of Southern a A o a Fresh Baked 16 Oz. LoavesFried C hicken.... Cheese Bread ......... Frmsh BakmaApple Pies Fresh Glazed Doughnuts $ 1 ^ 6 9I * / * PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MAR. 2,1985 Davie School Lunch Menus The Davie County School Lunch Menu for the week of March 4- March 8 is as follows: GHADRS K-(i Monday, M arch “I Breakfast Cereal or Blueberry muffin Pears w-cheese Milk Lunch Ham hoi di|>f>ily w-cheese or HamburRcr w- onions Slaw Tator tots Pineapple tidbits Baked beans Milk Tuesday, M arch 5 Breakfast Cereal or Oatmeal Hot cinnamon apples & raisins Milk Lunch Meat loaf or Corn dog Pintos Turnip greens Creamed potatoes Apple pie Corn bread Milk Wednesday, M arch 6 Breakfast Cereal or Buttered biscuits w-honey or jelly Peaches Milk Lunch M anager's choice Thursday, March 7 Breakfast Cereal or Doughnuts Apijle juice Lunch Fried chicken w-gravy or K raut & Weiners Green beans Buttered corn Vegetable strips Peaches w-raisins Biscuit Milk Bonus; Kice Friday, M arch 8 Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuit Orange juice Milk Lunch Pizza or Quiche Tossed salad Broccoli Waldorf salad Orange smiles Roll Milk GRADES 7-12 Monday, M arch 4 Breakfast Cereal or Bluebei ry muffin Pears w-cheese Milk Sandwich Pizza or H am burger Cole slaw Tossed salad : French fries • Fruit Milk Lunch Ham hot diggity w-cheese or Sausage biscuit Tomato soup Pineapple tidbits Baked beans Broccoli Milk Tuesday, March 5 Breakfast Cereal or Oatmeal Hot cinnamon apples & raisins Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad French fries Fruit Milk Lunch Meal loaf or Corn dog Pintos Turnip greens Creamed potatoes Apple pie Corn bread Milk Wednesday, M arch 0 Breakfast Cereal or Buttered biscuits w-honey or jelly Peaches Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad French fries Fruit Milk Lunch M anager’s choice Tliursday, M arch 7 Breakfast Cereal or Doughnuts Apple juice r a k Sandu'k'h Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad French fries Fruit Milk ' Lunch Fried chicken w-gravy or Kraut & weiners Green beans Buttered corn Vegetable strips Milk Bonus; HIce Friday, M arch B Breakfast Cereal or Sausage biscuit Orange juice Milk Sandwich Pizza or Hamburger Cole slaw Tossed salad French fries Fruit Milk DAVIE COUNTY ENTliRPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985-5B "Planning Your Estate" Seminars Scheduled Lunch Chili Iwans or Quiche Tossed salad Broccoli Waldorf salad Orange smiles Roll Milk I'ire Aiul Children Fires kill m ore children each year than any other accident. A child is seriously burned every four minutes. If you’re like the m ajority ol North Carolinians, you may not liavc w ritten a will. If you have a will, it m ay be out of date and m ay not give adequate protection against death taxes. On Thursday, Marcli 7, and T hursday, M arch 14, the Agricultural Extension Service will sponsor a sem inar on ’’I^lanniiig Your E state”. Both sessions will begin at 7:(H) p.m. in the County Office Building Auditorium, ac­ cording to Nancy H artm an, Home Economics Extension Agent. Mrs. H artm an says that Henry P. VanHoy, local attorney, and ll.L. Roycroft, trust officer with Central Carolina will be guest speakers. The sem inar will cover how to begin planning your estate, wills, han­ dling financial affairs after a death, trusts and death taxes. M rs. H artm an adds "E s ta te P lanning is the process of developing a program for effective m anagem ent, enjoym ent, and dispo.sition of property at the least possible tax cost. Making a will is a crucial part of E state Planning but it includes m ore." Estate Planning is for everyone. Not just the elderly or rich. If you let tim e run out on you and do not plan your estate, your family will have to live with that choice. Plan now to attend Extonsion’.s Planning Your Estate Seminar. Questions or comments m ay be made to Nancy H artm an at 634-C227. Program s sponsored by the Davie County A gricultural Extension Service are open to all persons regardless of race, color, religion, sex, age, national orgin, or han­ dicap. Gospel Sing There will be a gospel singing on Saturday evening, M arch 2 at 7:30 p.m. at Harmony Grove United Methodist Church. The church is located behind Food F air on Styers Ferry Hoad. Featured will be the Rhythmnaires, The Craft Brothers and The Favorite Five. " ^ T h r if t i^ a r t W e T r e a t Y o u Special! PRICES GOOD THRU SAT , MARCH 2.1965 QUANHTV RIGHTS RESERVED NONE SOLD TO DEALERS -'V* * .*j Boneiess Bottom Round orRump Roast USDA CHOICE House OS RaeCord Turkey Breast GRADE A SELF BASTING New Crop FloridaRed Potatoes 5 Lb. Bag USDA Choice Boneless BItm.R ound S te ak . Lb.*X* USDA Choice Boneless EyeR ound R o a st.. Lb.^Z^^ Armour Veribest Center CutP o rk C h o p s. .. Lb.*I Armour Veribest P o r k B a c k b o n e * . L b. X Holly Farms Fryor Drumsticks AndF ry e r T highs . L b.99 $ ^ » 9 10 Oz. Hormel Midget LinkP o rk Sausage . 12 Oz. ChampionS liced B acon.. 8 Oz. Oscar Mayer All Meal or ^ « n a Beef B ologna ... 12 02. Vnlieydale Sandwich Buddies or ^ F u n B u d d i e F r a n k s O ^ 16 0z. ValleydaleReg./ThickB ologna.................. 16 Oz. Hormel Frank S Stuff c « a aW ein ers.................. Fresh (All Sizes)G round ChuckLb.’ X *’ Bonmless Ribeye Steak USDA CHOICE A rm o u r V eribest Pork Chops COMBINATION S u n n y lan dBacon MARKETSTYLE 8 9 * Lb. If California Red Ripe Straw- Berries NEW CROP 49 P in t Washington Extra Fancy 138 Ct. Red or Gold ^ ^ F CDelicious Apples Florida 40 ct. Red or White ^G rapefruit..............3 / 9 9 California Seedless 113 ct. -Navel Oranges..... 0 / ^ 9 California 18 ct.Fresh Broccoli • • • BunchCWP Snow WhiteFresh M ushrooms. soz.CIV 'Maid lOO'i. PURf ORANGE'-'JUICE MinuteMaid 1001 PURt ORANGEJUICE Lowes SandwicliBread Minute MaidBread Orange Juice 1 'h LBS. CARTON LOAF ^ ■ HEGULAROR H yT op V egetable O il C. . . BOTTLE LIMIT1. PLEASE Folgers Bag Coffee 13 0 2 DECAF ADC OR PERC Breyer^s Ice Cream V , GALLON ALL FLAVORS 12 0z Generic mCheese Slices...............0 9 ^6 0/ QlueDefry StfaAbwry Ptach RoJ Qik C»^y Breyer’sYogurt ...Z//9 Breyer’s Plain Yogurt0 9 24 02 SlieddsCountry Croclv..........9 " 16 0z Quarters Land'O LakosMargarine...................2I9 30C t.4PackButter.S/M O rB MPillsbury Biscuits ... 9 9 Z Liter Coke OR ASSORTED COKE PRODUCTS I a uz {jnichen :^ucks urChicken P atties ........ 8 0z CM/ckcn. Tu^k&y. B oef P o t P i g s ••••••••••••• I I 0 7 C hicken. Turkey, 5/ili.s Slonk, M eal LoalBanquet TV Dinners. 8 9 32 0? Banquet ^ — —Fried Chicken............» ■J?0/ Ii/Kny S.ii'S yiiMk Noo(>ifS OLM.-f Mac Clu*rbe ^ i k ABanquet Entrees........ 16 Oz. McKenzie Breaded Okra Or « £ ^ V e g e t a b l< ^ ju m b o ^ ^ ^ 2 2 ^ 907Mumford Drive-Mocksvi lie, N.C.Sunday Hours:10 A.M. to 7 P.M. i 6B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 North Davie Junior High Students Hold First Annual Science Fair Wendy Keuper was named ninth grade winner for tier project Junior High's first annual science fair. Her project was entitled Conditions Trigger the Best Memory Recall?'’. ject in North Davie Memory-What Close to 400 North Uavie Junior High students tested various scientific principles during the school’s first annual Science Fair last week. Students team ed up to create a total of 196 entries, spending an average of three weeks on each project. The event will be held annually to prom ote creativity through scientific research and experimentation. Projects were judged with the top ten making oral presentations for judging last Monday night during the school’s P.T.S.O . m eeting. Entries were judged on the basis of originality, use of scientific method, validity of inform ation, visual ap p earance and evidence of knowledge gained. First, second and third place winners were named following the oral presentation and presented cash aw ards by the North Davie P.T.S.O. Wendy Keuper was nam ed ninth grade first place winner for her entry entitled “ M em ory-W hat Conditions Triggers Best Mcnxiiv llecall." During her experim ent. Miss Keuper presented 20 words, listed in various orders to approxim ately 17!) North Davie students. After this testing, she com piled stu d en ts’ individual responses to determ ine which list was the easiest overall to memorize. She is the daughter of Gary and Sharon Keuper of Bermuda Hun. Testing the relative heating value of different types of wood won a first place aw ard for Todd Gulledge and Kobert Ligon, both eighth graders at North Davie. In their experim ent various types of wood were burned during a lime test. A pan of w ater was placed atop the burning wood w ith the maximum a r and w ater tem ­ p eratu res carefully m onitored during the tim ed burning. The two used the weight of the ashes and the air and w ater tem peratures to compute how much energy (BTU’s) was transferred from each typo of wood to the water. Gulledge is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Todd Gulledge of Bermuda Run. Ugon is the son of David and Ellen Ligon of Rt. fi, Mocksville. Lisa Lanier, a seventh grader at North Davie, was named first place winner for her experim ent on the perm eability of eggs in various solutions. During her testing, Lisa soaked whole eggs in various solutions including coke, sugar, food coloring, chlorine, salt water, coffee and tap w ater for one week. The eggs were then cracked to reveal how osmosis occurs through egg m em branes, thus changing the appearance, texture and color of the raw egg. E ach egg was photographed as record of osmosis with results charted to prove her point. Lisa is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Lanier of Rt. 2, Mocksville. Each of thq first place winners received $20 from the North Davie P.T.S.O. Several students received $10 cash prizes as second place win­ ners. 'Iliey are M att M echam, Angie Newsome, Robert Edw ards and Rodney Cline. Third place winners receiving cash aw ards of $5 each were Kim York, Melissa Sofley, Danny Hall, Lee Hendrix, Craig Cartner and blake Livengood. Several students received ribbons for their participation in North Davie’s first Science Fair. Red Ribbon winners included M ichelle B racken, K ris F resh ­ w ater, K aty H ealy, Donna H ildebrand, K ristin Hill, Chad Atkins, Jeffrey Jarvis, Alan Pfau, Chip Stovall, Dawn Strider, K erry Healy, Ashley Habegger, Jennifer Johnson, M arc W agner, and Bradley Ball. White ribbon winners included W endy H utchins, Angie Sm ith, Shannon C aldw ell, P atricia Beauchamp, LuAnn Browder, Kim Freshw ater, Cindy Levan, Christie Jones, Julie Hobson,Jayme Nancy, Renee Patillo, Lowell Abeyta, Tim King, Kevin M arion, Stacie Strickland, and Jennifer Vogler. Yellow riblx)n winners were Kim Moser, Erik Blaknenship. David Payne, Ashely Wade, AllisonSmith, Lori Cornish, Lori Jones, Susan Spach, T racey H ackett, Vickie Hutchins, Trent S m ith, Carrie Pope, Kim Fearrington, Andrea V est, T racey Young, B rian Baysinger, and Rhonda Fortner. (Photos by Robin Fergusson) Lisa Lanier, was North Davie's seventh grade science fair winner, for her per­meability tests of eggs in various solutions. She soaked whole eggs in various solutions to show how osmosis occurs through egg membranes. 4-H Leaders Workshop Is This Week Davie County will be represented by six people at a conference in Raleigh for citizens who serve as advisors to the local staff of the A gricultural Extension Service. Ronnie W. Thompson, county extension chairm an,' said the statewide conference will be held Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 26 and 27, at North Carolina State University. Planning to attend from Davie ■ County areJane Crow, Deborah Dull, M arie Miller, Wayne Lutz, Mike Morton and Ronnie Thompson, County Extensive Chairman. Thom pson said conference participants will attend workshops onl leadership skills and the subject m atter areason which the Extension Service has educational program s. These a re ag ricu ltu re, hom e economics, 4-H, and community and rural development. They will also attend a banquet to which m em bers of the Feneral Assembly have been invited. Cadet Rufus N. Ilroi'k of Muvksville, N.C. lias been selrtted as "Out­ standing JROTC .Student", for the Diunlh of January. Ills seleetion was based uii grades, participutiiin hi JHOTC events and overall j u t- formanee in the prugrain. Cadet Brui'k is a nieniber of the C'ulur Guard and Drill Team. His parents are IMr. and Mrs. Itufus llruck uf (ilil Sanford Avenue. Hve Smart IRA Choices,One Great Bonus. All EromC^ Com|)()Uiidc'cl iJnily 'In Vicki CCB offers live smart ways to invest for your retirement. And save on taxes, now. Our customer sei'vice represen­ tatives will help you choose from our 30-month IRA, 18-month IRA, 12- month IRA, or our Money Market or Tiiist IRAs, But no matter which choice you 7 5 % Current bonus rate on new 1984 and 1985 contributions to our 12-month IRA. make, you’ll be making a very smart move. Now here’s our bonus progi'am.If you open a 12-month IRA with CCB before April 15, we’ll pay you a bonus rate on all new 1984 and 1985 contributions to your 12-month IRA. And we’ll pay you this bonus rate, compounded daily, for the full twelve months of your investment. So come in and see us before April 15. To save on 1984 taxes. To build for your retire- 1 1 .3 5 " ment security. And to get our bonus rate, if you ImhiRf'CentralCarolinaBank DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FliBRUARY 2 8,1985-7B Kim Hattaway and Lisa Sherrill conducted experiments to determine why plants are green. As ninth grade, first place winners, the two determined and demonostrated how light affects the production of chlorophyll. John Sharp, seventh grade winner in South Davie's science fair, purchased two calves and implanted one with a growth stimulant. After three months, he said he saw no significant increase in growth due to the implant. He plans to continue his experiment and enter the results in next year's science fair. South Davie Junior High School Scientific Principles Are Tested Approximately 300 students at South Davie Junior Higli School tested various scientific principles during the school’s third annual Science Fair last week. Lorene M aritland, science teacher and program chairm an, said that the 300 students paired off to create a total of 150 entries. Students spent approxim ately three weeks preparing for the event which prom otes creativ ity through scientific research and ex­ perim entation. P ro jects w ere judged last Thursday, with the lop ten making oral presentations for judging T hursday night. E n tries w ere judged on the basis originality, use of scientific method, validity of information, visual appearance and evidence of knowledge gained. Three first, second and third place w inners w ere nam ed following the oral presentation and presented cash aw ards by the South Davie P.T.S.O. Blue Ribbon winners at South Davie included Elizabeth Cren- : shaw, Becky Frank, Kim Hattaway, ■ Lisa Sherrill and John Sharp. Each was awarded $20. Elizabeth Crenshaw and Becky Frank both eight graders, team ed up to determ ine if students at South Davie get enough exercise. The two • passed out 450 surveys questioning ; students about personal exercise habits. A total of 375 surveys were returned with the girls tabulating results to determ ine the average amount of exercise completed daily by students. The girls then tested 22 South Davie athletes and 22 non athletes to : determ ine their endurance and overall physical condition through guidelines established in the Har­ vard Step Test. Their conclusion ; was that the athletes were only slightly more physically fit th a n . i South D avie's non athletes. Elizabeth is the daughter of Mr. i and Mrs. Charles Crenshaw of Park ; Avenue. Becky is the daughter of Mr. and . Mrs. John Frank of Garden Valley. Kim H attaway and Lisa Sherrill, also first place winners, team ed up ; to determ ine why plants are green, : and the effects of light on the ,• production of chlorophyll. The girls closely monitored light • received by individual plants during a four week period. At the end of : each week, leaves were toiled in : alcohol to remove the chlorophyll, ' showing that the longer a plant is : subjected to light the m ore ■ chlorophyll it produces. : Lisa is the daughter of Judy and ■ Alec Sherrill of Route 1, Mocksville. Kim is the daughter of Barbara ; and Dick llulluw ay of 450 : Ridgeview Drive. Kmh nirls are ninth gnidcsladenls at South Davie, John Sharp, a seventh grader, won a first place aw ard for testing (he impact of growth im plants on feeder calves. Sharp purchased two calves three montlis ago. implanting one with a growth slim ulant. The cows were w eighed and photographed periodically to m onitor grow th. However, al the end of a three month period, Sharpe said he determ ined no significant increase in growth duetothe implant. He said he plans to continue his testing through the year and submit the results during the school’s fourth annual science fair next year. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Millon Sharp of Rt. 3, Mocksville. Tw elve other students w ere named cash recipients for their entries in the science fair. Students aw arded $15 prizes are Tammy Overcash, Kim Salyer, Beth Dwiggins, Scott Kollins and Chris Callison. Students winning S5 cash prizes included Shellie Plott, Katie Hart- ness, Dottie Sigmon, Sarah Odium, Hank Jones, Wynn Welch and Bobby Bowers. N um erous students w ere presented ribljons for second third, and fourth place wins. Second place prize w inners included A ngela Hinson, Angie Potts, Grog Miller, Dean Humphrey, Melinda Frye, Torrie Evans, Michelle Hendrix, Yvonne Cosentino, Tricia Cook, Susan Carter, Brent Foster, Tracy Angell, Lisa King and Jay John­ stone. Third place prize winners were Natalie Godwin, Timika Brooks, Amy Snyder, April Green, David Brown, Marc Holcomb, Lori Gif­ ford, Lori Brannock, Kim Stine. Susan Boger, Lori Cartner, Celest Carter, Amy Cook. Jim m y Green, Selena Lew is, K eginia C arson, Emily Jam es and Jennifer An­ derson. Fourth place winners included Chad Forrest, Matt Barnhardt, Ricky Younts, Cliris Tuck, Garth Bishop, Eddie Ijam es, Brian Mash- Ijurn, Tommy Beaver, April Lank­ ford, Anita Spry, Carolyn Kal- tledge, Rodney Cassidy. ClinI Jun­ ker, C arole M cD aniel, Jody Everette and Scott Boger. Elizabeth Crenshaw and Becky Frank, eight graders at South Davie Junior High, teamed up to determine if today's youth are out of shape. Their efforts got them a first Diace win in the school's third annual science fair last week, (photos by Robin Fergusson) H E R E ’S HOW IT WORKS. . . FACTORY FUNDED .c,'. TRUCK . O P FINANCING GUARANTEED MINIMUM DISCOUNT ON NEW NISSANS MINIMUM 10% DISCOUNT ON ALL DELUXE TRUCKS! Living Room &Hall-*27.00 Any Sofa-*18.00 Ask About Our Drapery Cleaning Service TRUCK MOUNTED POWtH CLEANS DFfP WHERE DIRT & ODORS STAY R&S Carpet Cleaning 998-5093 & 8 % Financing On All New Nissan Trucks Offer Good Through Month Of February 1-40 East Linville RoacJ Exit Winston-Salem, J.R. Spillman Need A Car ? See J.R. 725-6200 4x4 Reg. Bed Was .............................S9660 N o w ..........................*8700 S a ve .............................*960 8.8% SAVINGS...........*924 T o m SAVINGS.. .M884* 2-Wheel Drive King Cab W as...............................S8502 N o w ..........................*7802 S a ve .............................*700 8.8% Savings...........*818 TOTAL SAVINGS. . .M518* King Cab 4x4 W as..........................510,323 N o w ..........................*9,323 S a ve ........................*1,000 8.8% SAVINGS...........*996 TOTAL SAVINGS.. .M996* 8.8% FINANCING & BIG DISCOUNTS SAVE FROM $ 1300 TO ^2600!! DISCOUNTS ON EVERY TRUCK IN STOCK. OVER 70 TO CHOOSE FROM! * Based on SBOO Down Payment Plus Tax & Tags 8.8%IN TER EST C H A R T 48 M O N TH S AMOUNT FINANCED ‘ 7 5 0 0 PAYMENT (Nearest $) *186 *650 0 *161 *550 0 *136 *450 0 *112 11 V I W inston-Salem 725-6200 G reen sb oro 274-0835 N.C. Toll Free 1-800-722-2140 JUST OFF 1-40 BETWEEN W INSTO N-SALEM & KERNERSVILLE AT LINVILLE RD. NCL 2718 8B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, I'EBRUARY 28, I9S5 Cana Extension Homemakers Meet The C ana E xtension H omemakers m et February 21 in tlie Club building with Mrs. Herman Brewer as hostess. The m eeting was called to order by the president, Mrs. Jam es Essie, Jr. Mrs. Herman Brewer had charge of the devotional period. She used Chapter 13, I Corinthians as the basis for her rem arks. Prayer followed by Mrs. Essie. The group sang “A m erica." Eight m em bers answered roll call with their definition of "Ixive Is.” The Pledge of Allegiance to the U.S. flag was given. Minutes of the January meeting were read and approved. The treasurer’s report was given by Mrs. Edwin Boger. Pennies for friendship were taken. A note of thanks was read from the family of Mr. John J. Wooten who passed awav recently. The Program of Work (P.O.W.) chairm an of the Citizenship and Community Outreach, Mrs. Era Latham, reported on the upcoming Court W atcher’s Day. C ultural A rts, T extiles, and Clothing chairm an, M rs. Cecil Leagans reported on the new labeling law which requires all clothing and home fashions made in this country to carry a label saying so. The intent is to identify and cncourage buying A m erican m anufactured goods. Mrs. Edwin Boger was leader in the Safety and E m ergency Preparedness lesson for the month. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Com m ission Hom e E lectrical Safety Audit was well prepared and delivered. Mrs. Cecil Leagans was winner in a quiz "Test Your Fire Safety LQ." Mrs. Duke Pope gave some tips on fam ily relations and child development. The m eeting closed with the club collect. Mrs. Brewer served refreshm ents of chicken salad sandwichcs, potato chips, fruit salad, pickles, brownies, punch and coffee. St John’s Class Aids Ethopia The Juni^or Sunday School Class of Saint John A.M.E. Zion Church decided they wanted to go on record of doing more than talking about what Christians should do. Each member of the Junior Class gave one half of their monetary gifts the Sunday School gave them to their Hungry Brothers and Sisters in Ethiopia. During the morning worship ser­ vice other members of the Saint John Church Family joined the Juniors in sharing with the needy. On February 3, 1985, Eighty Eight Dollars ($188.00) was mailed to The Department of Overseas Missions for the Ethiopia. Above, left to right: Front row - Amanda Leak, Kim Jimmerson/ Chanese Jimerson, Selena Lewis, Sharon Wilkes, Kim Wilkes, Stephanie Lewis; Back row - Melvina Spellman, Nikki Watson, Brian Suiter, John Leach, Maurice Wallace, and Michael Wallace. Becky Wallace Named "Cycle For Life” Chairman Lunnic C ockcrham II, a li)8t graduate of Davie High School, Mocksville, N.C. has qualified for the Freshm an Honor Koll under the Industrial Engineering program at A&T State University in Green­ sboro, N.C. He is also a m em ber of the Alpha Lambda Delta Freshm an Honor Society. He is the son of Lonnie and Lucille Cockerhan: of Houle 2, Advance. Women's Aglow To Meet March 12th At YWCA The evening chapter of The W omen's Aglow Fellowship In­ ternational will meet on March 12, 1985 at the Y.W.C.A. in the living room. Fellowship at 7:00 p.m. Singing and featured speaker at 7:30 p.m. llie speaker for March in Judy Pittm an from Courtney, N.C. For more information call 765- ilOHG. U efrigerator (iaskets Check the gaskets on your refrigerator to see if they are cracked or worn and leaking cold air. The L eukem ia Society of America, North Carolina Chapter announced last week that the 1985 C ycle for Life C hairm an for Mocksville will be Becky Wallace. The Leukemia Society of America is dedicated towards the conquering of leukemia. Proceeds from the Bike-A-Thon w ill be used for research and patient-aid. At the present time, the Leukemia Society of America, North Carolina Chapter has $319,053 in research projects granted in the state of North Carolina. These research projects are being conducted at D uke University and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. The Leukemia Society of America is also providing financial assistance to 550 patients in the state of North Carolina. In spite of rem arkable medical advances in the last ten years, leukemia rem ains a Number 1 killer disease of children. Leukemia is no longer a hopeless disease. There is hope for children and adults with leukemia due to the GospelMusic At Hardison Church A program of gospel music will be presented at H ardison U nited Methodist Church, Sunday, M arch 3, at 7 p.m. Featured singers will be from Uowan M ethodist Church in Salisbury, N.C. Their pastor, the Reverend Bill Thompson is a for­ m er pastor of Smith Grove United Methodist Church. The Hardison choir, both adult and children will also sing. The church is located 2'™ miles out of Mocksville on the Jericho Koad. The public is invited to at­ tend. research that has helped in treat-* inent and diagnosis. When a boy or girl comes by your ■ home asking you to sponsor them in : the upcoming Bike-A-Thon, please consider that the funds will be used right here in North Carolina for research and patient-aid. Anyone w ishing inform ation should contact Ms. W allace at 998- 3331 in Mocksville. After extensive training in Travel T ourism , E lizabeth F oster of M ocksville, N.C. is a recent graduate of Suulheastern Academy. To complete the program of study, Elizabeth met rc(|uirenients in the areas of c aree r and personal developm ent in addition to apecializcd occupational training. Slic is now qualified for an entry- level position ill all areas of the Airline, Travel or Tourism In­ dustry. GOD'S FIVE MINUTES “There is a time for everything....." - Eccienastes 3:i, The Living Bible ASSEMBLY OF GOD NEW BETHEL ASSEMBLY OF GODG09 N. Main street Mocksvlllc. N.C.Rev. Mike Broke Sunday School 10:00a.m.Morning Worship ll:00a.m .Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.BAPTIST ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 801 Wesley Cook, Pastor Sunday Services;Bible Study 9:45 a.m. Bible Study 11:00 a.m.Youth Meetings 4:30 p.m.Wednesday Services:Start 6:30 p.m.BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH Bear Creek Church Rd.BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 North at 1-40 Rev. David Hyde, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Evening 7:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:30p.m. J.P. GREEN MILLING CO., INC. Makers of DAISY FLOUR We Custom Blend Depot Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2126 COBLE LIME& FERTILIZER SERVICE Highway 801 Cooleemee, N.C. Business 284-4354 Phone Home 284-2782 LANIER-RIDDLE General Contractors New Homes or Remodeling N.C. Lie. 5064 N.C. Lie. 1 5SS2 492-5474 998-4708 BREAD OP LIFE BAPTIST CHAPEL ]Four Corners Community on Hwy. 601 Phil Kltchln, Pastor 1Surxlay School 10:00a.m.Preaching 11:00a.m. | CALAHALN FRIENDSHIP BAPTIST CHURCH Calahain Road Rev. Graham Wooten, Pastor Sunday school 10:00a.m.worship 11:00 a.m.Sunday Night worship 7:00 p.m.Wed. Bible Studyfi. Prayer 7:00 p.m. CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 South Route 7, Box 92, Mocksville, N.C.Jim Gryder, Pastor , _Sunday school 0:00 a.m. Worship EveningWednesday 7:00 p.m. CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST Cedar Creek Church Road CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Rd. , _Sunday School 10:00a.m. Worship 11:00a.m.COOLEEMEE FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHGuthrie Colvard, Pastor Sunday School 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 7:00 p.m. CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Pork. N.C.SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship ll;0 0a m .Evening ^ = p.m.Wednesday 7:a0p.ui.DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCHHighway M l oH 64 EATON'S BAPTIST CHURCH Eaton'S Church Rd.SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship ll:00a.m .EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH Highway 601 West Cooleemee, N.C.FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCHFarmington Rnad..Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Youth Training Union 7:00p.m.FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 309 N. Main Street Mocksville. N.C.SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Evening 6:30p.m.Oct.thruMay FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Marginal Street Cooleemee, N.C.Rev. Larry G. AllenSundaySchool 9:45 a.m. WorshipEvening 7;00p.m.•Wednesday 7:15p.m. ' ' ■ FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG CO. Wiikesboro Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2141 CAUDELL LUMBER CO 1238 Bingham Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2167 FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 Miles East on Hwy. 64 SundaySchool 9:45a.m. WorshipEvening 7:20p.m.GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 6, Moxksvllte. N.C.SundaySchool l0:00a.m.WorshipEvening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. GREEN HILL BAPTIST CHURCH Green Hill Road Rev. Steve Hedgecock. Pastor Sunday School 9;30a.m.Worship 10;45a.m.Evening 7;00p.m.Wednesday 7;00p.m.GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST Highway 601 Farmington J. Keith Money, Pastor sunaay icnooi 10;00a.m. WorshipEvening 7:30p.m.Wednesday 7:30p.m, HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Highway 158 East Norman S. Frye. Pastor SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.Worship 10:45a.m.Evangelistic 7:30p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. HE SAW ETERNAL LIFE "Be of Cjood cheer!" Jesus shouted to His followers, "I have overcome the w orld!" {John 16:33) He spoke the words almost in the faces of the men who came to kill Him. "D on't w orry," He seemed to philosophize, "things could be worse." But of course, that was not what He "seemed" to say. WhiU He saic, was "D on't worry. I know what is beyond the cross. I AM the way, the truth, and the life. I AM the Son of God " Straightway a flame was kindled in the souls of His followers. They KNEW He was wliat He said He was. That he Had looked beyond the tomb and had seen eternal life, That He would come again to receive them unto Himself. They knew! That, friend, is the wisdom for which you should [iray every day. "That they may know me. the only Son of my Father." + + + + + + + + + + + ■»• 4 + 4 + + 4 ATTEND CHURCH THIS WEEK -f- + -I- + 4- + -f -- 4- 4 - 4- + 4-4-4- Thu rolumn bckongi lo our r*id»ri Wf »||| printtbir iirm* »nd p») ISflO Inr f»rh .irm publithf<i In jh f of quoltltoni, thr ntm f ol the lulhor ind Ihr m if »f'd pul»li»hfr nl ihr tM-ik mull be fjven A ddrrii Uftni lo "Cod't Tivp M in uJfi.' P O IJni IfWir. A»hp»illf. N ( '.’WM © Com m unily Advtrtiling UAMES CROSSROADS CHURCH Kenneth Hyde. PastorSunday SchoolWorshipEveningWednesdayJERUSALEM BAPTIST 9;45a,m,l»:00a.m.6:00p.m.7:30p.m. Highway 601 South- • , Scl ■ WorshipSundaySchool 10:00a,m. M:00a.m. 7:30p.m. 7:30 p.m. BAPTIST C.A. SEAFORD LUMBER CO. Jericho Rogd Mocl<$vllle, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5148 Evening WednesdayNO CREEK PRIMITIVE CHURCH NO Creek Rd. off 64 SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH Highway ISB East TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH Route 4, Mocksville, N.C.Gene Blackburn, Pastor SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.worship 11:00 a.m. Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:00 p.m. TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH Rt. 7. Mocksville Rev. Judge Johnson SundaySchool 9;45a.m.Worship 11:00a.mEvening 6:30 p.m.Wed. Prayer Meeting 7:00 p.m.VICTORY BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee Shopping Cen*er Sunday School 10:00 a m.Worship Service 11:00 a.m.Evening Service 7:00 p.mWednesday Prayc’- Servici 7-OOp.m. YADKIN VALLE Y BAPTIST CHURrM Yadkin Vatiey tuuJ CATHOLIC ST. FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCHHighway 60i North Sunday 10:00a.m.CHURCH OF CHRIST CORINTH CHURCH OF CHRIST Minister: Charlie Harrison. Jr. Worship: Sun. 11:00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.NORTH MAIN STREET CHURCH OF CHRISTRobert Darnall. Minister SundaySchool 10:00 a.m.Worship ll:00a.m.Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:30p.m. CHURCH OF GOO CHURCH OF GOD Cooleemee, N.C.CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD Highway 64 West l.W. Ijames. Pastor SundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship I'OOp.m.Evening 6:00p.m.Wednesday 6;00pm.MOCKSVILLE CHURCH OF GOD Hwy. 64 E. & Depot ST.SundaySchool 10:00a.m. Worship ll;00a.m . Evening 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:00p.m. EPISCOPAL COOLEEMEE EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD Rev. Willis M. Rosenthal, Priest Sermon 9:30a.m. Sur>day School 10:50 a.m FORK EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF THE ASCENSIONRev. Canon C. Nichols, Pasior Sunday Schotil 10:00a.m.Church School 10:15a.m, Sunday Worships Sermon 11:00a.m. Thursday Prayer Mtg. 7 00 p.m. INTEKDENOMINATIONAL MOCKSVILLE IN- TERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH Pastor Rev. Llndsa^ Walters SundaySchool 9:45a,m.Morning Worship 11:00a.m. Radio Program (WDSL) 1:00 p.m. Youlh Service 6:30 p.m.Mid Week Bibly Study by: Mrs. Knox Johnston 7:00p.m. LUTHERAN HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH Gary Gllreath, Pastor Hwy. 601 S.Mocksville. N.C.SundaySchool 9:45 a.m,Worship ll:00a,m. METHODIST A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Advance, N.C.BAILEY'S CHAPEL UNITEDMETHODISTBailey'S Chapel Rd.BETHEL UNITED METHODISTBethel Church Rd.BETHELEHEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCHRedland Rd. off 156 East CENTER UNITED METKODfSTCHURCHHighway 64 WestRev. Claudia G. Harrelson, Minister 1st & 2nd Sunday ChurchSchool 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.3rd & 4th SundayWorship Service 9:45 a.m. Church School 10:45a.m.5 t h Sunday Church School 9:45a.m. CHESTNUT GROVE METHODIST James Chip Wotob. Pastor 2nd & 4rn budnaySundaySchool 10:00a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.CONCORD UNITED METHODIST Cherry HIM Rd. COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHRev. Alton Fitzgerald, Pastor CORNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Cornatzer Rd.DUL1N METHODIST CHURCHAdvance. N.C.ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCHHwy. SOI Advance. N.C.FARMINGTON METHODIST CHURCH Sunday School (1st Sunday) 11:00 a.m. (2nd, 3rd. 4th Sun.) 10:00a.m.Worship (1st Sun.) 10:00a.m.(3rdSun.) 11:00a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCHNorth Main St. Mocksville N.C.Rev. Don Davis, Pastor Sunday School 10:00a.m. Worship 11:00a.m. FULTON UNITED METHODIST Hwy. SO) at ForkHARDISON UNITED METHODISTJericho Church Rd.HUNTSVILLE METHODIST Worship (2nd Sun.) 10:00a.m.(4thSun.) 11:00a.m.LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Gladstone Rd. MOCKS UNITED METHODISTCHURCHAdvance, N.C.MT. OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH Rt. 5, MocksvilleWorship (2nd Sun.) 11:00a.m.(4thSun.) 10:00a.m.SundaySchool (4thSun.) 11:00a.m. (1st,2nd,3rd,Sun.) 10:00a.m.NEW UNION UNITED METHODIST Rev. Kermlt Shoaf, Pastor Sunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a,m.OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST Highway 156 East SALEM UNITED METHODIST Davie Academy Rd. SMITH GROVE UNITED METHODIST Hwy. 158 East, Mocksville Rev. J.C. Lane. Pastor Worship (IsfS. 3rd) 10:00a.m.(2nd,4th. S. 5th Sun.) II :00a.m.Sunday School (1st & 3rd) ll;00a.m . (2nd, 4th & 5th) 10;00a.m.Bible Study Wed. 7:30p.m. UNION CHAPEL METHODIST James Chip Webb. Pastor Isi. 3rd. & 5thSundaySchool 10:00 p.m.Worship 11:00a.m.WESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST Advance, N.C.Worship (1st Sun.) 10:00a,m.(3rdSun.) 11:00a.m, Sunday Schoo«3rd Sun.) lt:00a.m. (2nd, 3rd, 4th Sun.) 10:00 a.m.ZION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST Rev. Kermlt Shoaf. Pastor MORAVIAN MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. E. Hampton Morgan, Jr., Pastor Hwy. 801 & FarmingtonSunday School 10;00a.m.Worship 11:00am.Evening 7:30p.m. SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Milling Road Sid Mills, Pastor,Sabbath School 9:30a mWorship 11:00a.m PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CLARKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL Liberty Ch. Rd.Rev. Albert GentleSunday School 10:00a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.M O C K S V IL LE P EN TEC O S TA LHOLINESSMilling RoadRev. Curtis WoodSunday School 10:00 a.m.Worship 11:00a.m.Sunday night Services 6:00 p.m.Evangelistic 7:00p.m.Wednesday 7:30p.m.R E D L A N D P E N T E C O S T A L HOLINESS Don Sigmon, Pastor Sunday School I0:00a.m.Worship 11:00 a.m.Evangelistic 7;00 p.mWednesday Family Night 7.00p m.PRESBYTERIAN BIXBY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH R. Shane Owens, Pastor Sunday School 9:45a.m.Worship 11:00a.mWednesday Choir 7;00p.m. BibleStudy 8:00p.m, WESLEYAN LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH Jeff Collins, Pastor MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCHHospital Street Mocksville, N.C.Rev. Doug SmithSunday School 9:45a.m.Sunday Evening Worship 6;00p.m. Wednesday 7:00p.m. Daily Devotion 9:30 to 9:45 a.m. Monday ihm Saturday WDSL SHEFFIELD LUMBER & PALLET CO. Route 6, Box I 53 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 492-5565 EATON FUNERAL HOME 328 North Main Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2148 DAVIE TRACTOR & IMPLEMENT CO. Ford Farming Sales and Service New Holland Equipment Highw/ay 601 South Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-5969 ED FISHER PLUMBING SERVICE Cooleemee, N.C. 27014 Phone 284-2721 or 284-2232 Expert Repairs and New Installation FREE Estimates and Emergency Service JEFFCOCO.JNC. In the Hillsdale Community Route 1 Advance, N.C. 27006 Phone 998-8192 SUPPORT YOUR MERCHANTS WHO BRING YOU THIS INFORMATION - ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE - MARTIN HARDWARE & GENERAL MDSE. Feeds, Dry Goods, Groceries and Fertilizer Depot Street _ Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone 634-2128 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, I985-9B Area Obituaries DOUIS WALL IIANELINE Doris Wall Haneline, 48, of IIU Overbrook Drive, Greer, South C arolina, died W ednesday, February 20,19B5, after an extendeil illness. She was a licensed practical nurse at Mary Black Memorial Hospital in Spartanburg, S.C., and a m em ber of Fairview Baptist Church. Surviving a re h er husband, Eugene “Gene” Haneline of the home; her mother, Mrs, Eula Yow W all of M ocksville, N.C.; a daughter, Linda Hines of Lyman, S.C.; a son, Lynn Haneline of the home; two sisters, Carolyn and Pam W hitaker, l»th of Mocksville, N.C. Funeral services were conducted Friday at Fairview Baptist Church. M emorials m ay be made to the D oris H aneline N ursing En­ dow m ent, U niversity of South Carolina at Spartanburg, S.C.; or to the Chaplains Discretionary Fund at M ary Black Memorial Hospital, Spartanburg, S.C. RAYMOND W. JOHNSON Raymond Wesley Johnson, 83, of 723 Boger St., died at Davie County Hospital Saturday afternoon. Services were held at *1 p.m. Monday at Eaton’s Funeral Chapel with the Rev Leland Richardson and the Rev. Lindsey W alters presiding. Burial followed in Joppa Cemetery. Johnson was born Sept. 13, 1901, in Surry County, a son of the late Charlie and Betty Simpson Johnson. He was a retired furniture worker and nursery operator,I Survivors include his wife, Mittie 1 Coe Johnson; four daughters, Mrs. I^ ld e n (O dessa) Taylor of ] Mocksville, Mrs. Leonard (Beulah) I;Honeycutt of Locijst, Mrs. Julius l'(Jeraline) Goss of Lancaster, S.C., la n d Mrs, Vance (Elsie) Hartley, of IjAdvance; five sons, Paul, Charlie la n d Landon Johnson, all of I'Mocksvllle, Wesley Junior Johnson l of High Point and the Rev, Jack B, 1‘Johnson of Route 4, A sister, Lottie While of Dobson; Ithree brothers, Dillard Johnson of ■Dobson, Brady Johnson of Rural iH all and Floyd Johnson of High |P oint; 21 grandchildren; and 23 reat-grandchildren. Right To Life Holds IMeeting By Janice Schooler Davie County Right to Life met I last Thursday and m em bers gave [reports about some recent ac- Itivities, I John Butero reported on his trip to IW ashington, D,C,, for the annual ■ "M arch for Life,” He was among ■some 70 thousand people who march Ion January 22 of each year to Iprotest the Suprem e Court decision Iw hich legalized abortion on Idem and. This was the twelfth year lof the m arch. President Reagan ■addressed the group by taped ■message and vowed again to ask the ICongress to move this year on ■legislation to protect the unborn. I Amy Medwin, chairm an, will Ipresent a program to the youth at ■M ocksville P en tecostal H oliness |C h u rch on M illing Road this Wednesday night, February 27. There will be a film and tim e for discussion and debate. Janice Schooler reported on the counselor training sessions that she had attended in connection with “Salem Pregnancy Support” which will soon open on Healy Drive in W inston-SaJem . This crisis pregnancy center will be a valuable resource for Davie County as well as Winston-Salem. The people in­ volved are dedicated to helping women m ake choices that they can live with and then helping those women to be able to carry through with those decisions. Come and hear m ore about our plans for this year. Our next meeting will be Thursday, M arch 21 at 7:30 in the Grand Jury room of the courthouse. ____ •i.u |Amanda Slye, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Taylor Slye, is to the World Hunger Pot at First [.United Methodist Church in Moclisville. tl5S 722-6101 SEIRVICE '"V22Z IT ^ fum ehai D ire c to rs 2951 Reynolda Rd. :126 Years of Service 766-4714 national SELECTED MORTICIANS"“rSe?'”' 405 S. Main St. L e x i n g t o n 766-4715 ______Davie County Plione Number 998-3428 PEARL M. NAIL Pearl M orris Nail, 93, form erly of M arginal Street, Cooleemee, died at the Autumn Care Convalescent C enter in M ocksville S aturday "'T he funeral was held Tuesday at Eaton's Funeral Home Chapel in Mocksville, conducted by the Rev. Alton Fitzgerald. Burial was in City Memorial Park in Salisbury, Born July 7, 1891, in Rowan County, she was a daughter of the late Maxwell and Melinda Morris, Her husband, Barney E, Nail, died Aug, 11, 1943, Survivors include a daughter, Lucille N, Benson of Cooleemee; a son, Charles E, Nail of OIney, Md, ; and a brother, Jam es L, “ Bud” M orris of Gastonia. GASTON JARVIS MYERS F uneral services for G aston Jarvis M yers, 90, of VA Hospital, Salisbury, N.C. were held Saturday, February 23, 1985, at Zion Baptist Church in Yadkin County, at 2:30 p.m., with the Reverend Joey Tomlin and the Reverend Alvin Jones officiating. Burial followed in the church cem etery. Mr. Myers died Thursday at the VA Hospital in Salisbury, N.C. following a confinement of four months. Ho was a retired farm er; and a m em ber of Zion Baptist Cliurch in Yadkin County. Mr. Myers was first m arried to A trey Johnson, who preceded him in death in 1971. His second wife, Lula Peele Rachels survives. Other survivors included 2 sons, Dwight M yers of Mocksville, N.C., and William J. Myers of Cleveland, N.C.; 2 daughters, Mrs. Ruby Walton of Atlanta, Ga,, and Mrs. Lucille Levan of Mocksville; 3 stepdaughters, M rs, M adgelene Brumbelowof Houston, Texas, Mrs, Elizabeth R, M yers of Salisbury, and Mrs. Linda Thomas of H ar­ mony, N.C.; 2 stepsons, Clayton Rachels of Oklahoma and Larry Rachels of Statesville; 18 grand­ children, 10 step-grandchildren, 14 great-grandchild and 2 step-great- grandchildren. The Wednesday afternoon craft class of Autumn Care has been busy making dolls. These ladies have completed theirs and are quite proud of their work. The class is taught by Mrs. Virginia Tomlin through Mitchell Community College in Statesville, N.C. left to right -Mrs. Aliene Dw- (qgihs, Mrs. Virginia Tomlin (teacher), Mrs. Ruth Shaw, Mrs. Minnie Shoemaker, and Mrs. Geneva Nance.n r '-vA Autumn Care Residents Raise Money For Davie's Heart Fund f t* * ,- 1 - . * I Friends and family mem bers of residents of Autumn Care have donated $1.00 for each heart on this tree in honor of.tlicir loved one. The name of the donor and the one honored was written on the heart and added to the “Tree of Love.” The money will be given to the H eart Fund. Anyone wishing to contribute to this may contact the office at Autumn Care from 8 a.m. until 5 D.m. Mrs. Bettie Beck and Mr. James Royal were recently chosen Autumn Care's Valentine King and Queen for 1985. The pair were chosen by the employees and families vohng for each participant. One cent equaled one vote. The crowning was held on Valentine's Day at 2 p.m. in the iHoirt^pVinH"^ room. All proceeds were given to the N.C. Alcohol jnfo Report Think about these facts cerning alcoholism: -Alcoholism is ranked among the first three of our nation’s health problems. -A lcoholism accounts for 40 percent of all admissions of mental hospitals. -T here are over 100,000 deaths each year in the United States because of alcohol abuse. -Alcoholism is a progressive illness and unless it is treated, will cause insanity and death. -Alcohol is the most abused drug in the United States. -Alcohol is involved in over 50 percent of all arrests. -Problem drinkers are increasing at the rate of 500,000 a year. -T w en ty to fifty percent of general hospital beds are occupied by people whose illness is associated with alcohol abuse. -N o one ever takes a drink with the intention of becom ing an alcoholic. A potential alcoholic m ay be defined as anyone whose use of alcohol causes difficulty in any area of life,,,family, social, employment, or health. As with any illness, early byBillWeant Richard Ferebee Has 49 Years Of Sunday School Attendance Richard Ferebee was honored Sunday, February 24th, by the Eaton’s Baptist Church for 49 contlnous y ears of perfect a t­ tendance in Sunday School. The 49th bar for his pin was presented to Ferebee during the Sunday School program by Jam es Eaton, D irector of Sunday School. The 68-year-old Ferebee received the first pin in February 193G, presented by the Rev. Edward Laughridge. “ Richard has attended church all his life and his church is the most im portant thing in his life,” said his late sister, Mrs. Ruth Howell at the 1978 event. Others said they had seen Richard come driving in on a tractor in heavy snow. He lives at the homeplace in the Cana com­ munity about three miles from the church. On two separate occasions he was adm itted to the hospital for surgery. “The doctor operated on me on Monday and let m e go home on Saturday so I could go to Sunday School, but I didn't get to stay for preaching,” he recalled. “ However, there was one tim e he was in the hospital on Sunday and Richard Ferebee the doctor wouldn’t let him go home.” “ My class cam e to the hospital and held Sunday School,” he said, "and I didn’t have to m iss.” ___ 4-H News like answered in a future column, phone G;i4-2195.)________________ The Davie County 4-H County Council met Tuesday, January 22, 1985, at 7:00 p.m. in the County Office Building. The meeting was called to order by President, Tricia Reilly. Amanda Sigmon and Julie Allen led the pledges to the American and 4-H Flags. Laura Phillips had devotions. Terri Wilson called the roll and read the minutes of the last meeting. We discussed old and new business . There will be a District Horse R etreat M arch 1-3 at Betsy- Jeff Penn 4-H Center. A State Council R etreat will be held March 8-10 in Raleigh. Dale Safrit gave an excellent program on Trinidad. Sheffield- Calahaln and Trailblazers 4-H Clubs had refreshm ents. The meeting was then adjourned, Cloverbuds The Cloverbuds held their first meeting for 1985 on the 31st of January with ten m em bers present. We welcome to the club Neil Hen­ dricks, who was a regular visitor that decided to join. We also welcome two new m em bers Justin Taylor and Joshua Manning, Reflecting on projects and ac­ tivities for 1984 we realize just how busy we were. We've bumbled through baking biscuits, withstood the scrutinous eye of the fashion judge, trem bled on stage during the talent show, sung our hearts out on a hayride, collected our coins during the flea m arket sales, rode most every ride at Carowinds, caught w ater ballons and laughed as the bigger kids pushed potatoes with their nose at the county picnic, molded teeth and painted boards for the fair display, laughed and laughed at getting Nancy H art­ m an's goat at the Farm-City Week, hit the gutter eight out of ten times at bowling, served refreshm ents at the bike-a-thon, piled a truck high with paper during the paper drive, made big fruit baskets and sung carols as we gave them out. We've learned how to care for our teeth, plant tulip bulijs, finger printed by a real police officer, learned how to do CPR and save a drowning victim, became aw are of our five sense, identified tics and how to remove them, traced the circulation of the heart, learned the digestive system and labeled m ajor bones. We also realize the thrill of receiving ribbons and aw ards and certificates for our work. We were busy and it looks like the coming year m ay challenge us yet as we begin our study of communications, Angela McClemrock and Robrina Walker won the prize for listing the most ways to communicate. We did a hearts and flowers deco-art pie plate for our Valentine craft and served pizza as a refreshment. Everyone filled out their project selection sheets and w e're looking forward to working on them, Trailbhizcrs The Trailblazers 4-H Horse Club held their regular monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Eleanor Wilson on February 14. The meeting was called to order by the President, We discussed old and new business. Two leaders, Jean Shoaf and Sandy Jolly were inlroduced. We then saw a film on two-day eventing. The m eeting was adjourned and refreshm ents were served Two Named To Dean's List Two Davie County residents were named to the Dean’s list at Lenoir- Rhyne College in Hickory, Elizabeth Helms of Advance and Carol V ictoria D ayw alt of Mocksville were among 234 students named to the honor roll during the fall sem ester. Helms is the daughter of Joe and Joann H elm s. D ayw alt is the daughter of David and Miriam D ayw alt. A ccording to Lenoir-R hyne registrar Steve M. Shuford, the students qualified for the Dean's list by compiling a 3.4 grade point average out of a possible 4,0 while carrying a course load of at least 12 sem ester hours. Tliey made no grade lower than a “ C” . Lenoir-R hyne is a four-year liberal arts college owned and operated by the North Carolina Synod of the Lutheran Church in America,_______________________ treatm ent greatly aids recovery, and counseling will be helpful to the drinker and to other mem bers of the family. When anyone contacts Alcoholism Services at Tri-County Mental Health, the person will be given assistance in evaluating the extent of the abuse problem and will be provided information on ways to deal with the situation. If you sometimes wonder if m aybe you have a drinking problem, you probably do have an alcohol abuse problem . If alcoholism is a part of your life or the life of someone you love, rem em ber that life can be different, ('I1)is series is prepared by Bill W eunt, alcoholism education consultant w ith the Tri-C ounty Mental Health Complex, G22 North Main Street, Mocksville. These articles are designed to create understanding about drinking, alcohol abuse, and alcoholism in our society. If you have a question concerning alcohol that you would HOW HARD WOULD FIRE HIT YOU? Think Fire Safety WE OFFER; •Standard fire, wind & hail insurance •Home protection policy •Farm protector policy What would fire do to your bank account? To your other Investments? The answer depends on your Insurance Coverage! Is It In line with present-day values? CHECK NOW ON REBUILDING COST, ttien Inquire ABOUT OUR LOW-COST POLICIES No properly owner should be without Insurance coverage that is adequate. Come In and talk over your Insurance coverage with us. Serving iredell, A lexander and Davie C ounty Rural Property O w ners For The P ast 77 Y ears! While we have principally insured rural properly owners In the past, we welcome inquires Irom any property ov/ners In our three-county area (Iredell, Alexander and Davie). __________ DIRECTORY IREDELL JO H N a . BLACK'A'tLDER RICHARD A. GARTNER HUGH A. CRAW FORD ALEXANDER W. SO LON MITCHELL J. W OO DROW PAYNE WILLIAM M,PRESSLY A.Y.NEEL KENNETH GOODMAN DAVIE ROBERT G. ALLEN R.L.SEAFORD JAMES A. EATON HOMEOWNER — We can provltle a $40,000 HO-3 tor a cost as low as S135.60 a year. AAA-I-Homeowners' Policy $ 50,000-S156.0a $ e0,000-$176,40 $ 70,000-8196,80 S eo,000-3217,20 $ 90,000-$237,60 $100,000-$2S8,00 AAA Slatidard Rie Policy S 50,000-S 93,50 S 60,000-5112,20 S 70,000-8130.90 8 SO,000-8149.60 8 90,000-8168.30 8100,000-8187.00 FARM ERS M UTUAL FIR E INSURANCE ASSOC. 301 Harrill Street, Statesville, N.C, • Phone 873-7461 Collect lOB-DAVIU COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985 Trailways Announces Student DiscountsCollege Ti-aiJways announces college student discoutns on Round trip purchases Trailways Lines, Inc. announced tlial no round trip fares will exceed $<)8 for persons presenting a college identification card at the lim e of purchase. And students who are traveling from, and returning to Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Ken­ tucky, U uislana, Mississippi, North C arolina, South C arolina, T en­ nessee, Virginia or West Virginia will pay no more than $84 for their round trip tickets on Trailways. In making the announcement Mr. Robert Buschner, vice president of m arketing for Trailways stated, "T he new T railw ays college discount program Is designed to attract students to us during the spring sem ester when a good portion of student travel takes place. The fares are only $49 one way or $42 each when students buy a round trip ticket. We want to offer students a viable alternative to using llieir own cars for spring break trips and for travel to and from their hom es,” Buschner said. According to Buschner the $84 round trip fare being offered from eleven southern tier states 'n effect through .lune 1,'j, 1985 for both sale and transportation. The $98 round trip fare being offered from all other Trailways origin points is good for sale through either April 15, 1985 or April 30, 1985 on tran- Health Watch PinO NeWS sportation through either April 30, 1985 or May 15, 1985, depending on the state. Students are urged to contact their local Trailways ter­ minal or agent for specifics on the new fares. A Ton OfSandivich Stuff A TON OF SANDWICH STUFF-Judy Tucker, of Davidson County, and Ann Ivey, of Yadkin, begin sorting ap- iroximately 1,000 jars of jelly and peanut butter donated by ellow employees of Forsytti Memorial Hospital. The food is part of that being distributed to needy families in the area by the Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina, Inc. r; '400 Years Of North Carolina' Program Becoming Popular "400 Years of North Carolina," a c o m p u te riz e d m u lti-im a g e presentation of the state’s history, culture and unique qualities, has become one of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's most popular productions. Since the show>'s debut last Oc­ tober, It has been shown by about 30 organizations to more than 7,000 N orth C arolinians statew ide. Recently, the show has traveled to G reensboro, A sheboro and Mocksville, and it will start a 16- county tour of w estern N orth Carolina In April. Students at William R. Davie and North Davie Junior High viewed the show last week. The 42-m inute sight-and-sound show was produced by UNC for the people of North Carolina, especially its junior and senior high school students. The show celebrates the 400th annlverary of the first English co lony in the New World and the earliest recorded history in the state. "M ore than just a history lesson, the presentation focuses on the characteristics and qualities of North Carolina which have created a long list of historical firsts, colorful folkways, custom s and traditions, a promising future, and the unfailing pride that symbolizes North Carolinans,” said Dr. Ralph W ileman, show producer and UNC- CH education professor. The presentation exam ines the state’s 400 years of history from the Lost Colony to today’s high-tech industries. The show also explores the state’s geography and resources that have attracted industries and im m igrants, m aking N orth Carolina one of the country 's fastest growing andmost desirable places to live. The show’s content was approved by a panel of North Carolina historians, cultural experts and educators. Dr. J. Carlyle SItterson, Kenan professor em eritus of history and form er UNC chancellor, chaired the advisory committee responsible for the program con­ tent.A multi-imiage program is one of the most versalile and exciting types of presentation available for large audiences, Wileman said. With computer-guided precision, nine slide projectors fade and blend images on a wide screen, producing com posites, panoram as and animation. 'The medium has many uses, including tourism and trade promotion and new product ad­ vertisem ent. EPCOT Center at Wall Disney World uses multi-image, as does Bush Gardens andm anytrade expositions. "400 Years of North Carolina,” which is crossing the state by van, will be shown to students, civic groups, churches and other organizations through the spring of 1987. ■ Tor m ore information about the project, or to schedule a presen­ tation, contact Peggy Cleary, 400 Multi-image Project, Educational Media UNC School of Education, Peabody Hall 037A, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514; (919) 902-3791. The I'ast Kood Kollile If you have a weakness for fast food, you are not alone, It’s been estim ated that more than half of the American people eat more than half of their m eals away from home. Millions go In fast food reslauranls. It’s widely debated whether fast food restaurants offer food that has real nutritional value. The North Carolina Medical Society observes that fast foods are usually made from the staples of the American diet: beef, chicken, potatoes, and bread. Most fast food restaurants offer llttles else, and frying is the predom inant method of cooking. As a result, most fast food tends to be the opposite of w hat m osti, A mericans need. Fast foods are ' high in calories, high in saturated fats, and high in salt. It your schedule and your iwcketbook dictate frequent stops for fast food you can lake some steps to avoid som e of the nutritional pitfalls: (1) Skip the soft drink that usually accompanies a fast food meal. It probably contains alwut 100 calories and llltle nutritional value. Un­ sweetened lea or w ater are good options. (2) Tliough it’s almost Impossible to avoid salt in a fast food meal, you can at least restrain the urge to salt French fries that have already been sailed. (3) Eat your ham burger with a fork. You can leave off one-half of the bun, and using a fork will help you eat slower and feel fuller. (4) Don’t lock youself into burger and fries. Some fast Food places offer salad bars. The green and yellow vegetables are good alter­ natives to the usual fare. The Rev. .Jim Raines will be at Wesley Chapel Church M arch 3 for Sunday school at 10 a.m . and also at 11 a.m . for regular service. The charge-wlde-Lenten worship and Bible study will meet at Wesley Chapel M arch 7 at 7 p.m. Everyone Is invited to come and worship and study together. Mr. and Mrs. Gray Harper, Mrs. Nell H arper, Mrs. Dewey Sain, Mrs. Ora Mae Miller and John Henry Baity were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. L.M. Dull. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Miller, Mr. and M rs. V ernon Dull spent Saturday at the Southern Living Garden Show in Charlotte. Mrs. Floyd Dull and Dewllla Smith visited Teresa Correll and family Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Craver and Mattliew of Lexington, Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Dill and sons, John and Jason, of Courtney, were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dill. L . 4 s. ’ College Students Urged To Lineup Private Scholarships Now D eadlines a re quickly ap­ proaching for sum m er and fall financial aid, according to The Scholarship Bank. Students with financial needs should begin now to investigate some of the m ore than 25,000 private aid sources, according to Steve Danz, Director. These funds are available to students with interests in a num ber of fields, and many do not depend on dem onstrated financial need, as do state and federal funds. For exam ple, students with an in terest in business, law, and accounting can receive a stipend from the E.x- ceptional Student Fellowship Fund, and apply to the parent corporation for full lim e work following graduation. The Scholarship Bank is the largest private scholarship bank in the country for undergraduate and for graduate grants and loans. The som puter can help you find sources designed jusl for you, based on your m ajor, occupational goal, geographic desires, type of aid requested (scholarships, loans, sum m er work), and special skills and hobbies. According to the director, the com puter guarantees each student at least fifty sources of aid. It has been estim ated that each package of aid represents ap­ proxim ately $20,000 in potential money for college. Private aid com es from A m erica’s largest foundations, corporations, unions, and private donors and totals ap- 'Tips On "Medigap” Insurance’ Booklet Is Available From BBB Where more Americans find a bigger refund H&R BLOCK’Wc can't prom ise everyone this, but in a recent survey of custom ers who got refunds. 3 out of 4 believe they got bigger refunds than if they did their own taxes. 3 out of 4! Found Patricia Leser $1117! W hat can we find for you? Cooleemee Shopping Centerton Rd. MocksviTIe.'fJC 704-634-3203 Open: M onday thru Friday 8:30 A .M . • e P.M. Saturday 8:30 A .M . • 5 P.M. C ooleem ee, NC 704-284-2724 Open: M onday thru Friday8:30 A .M . • 1 P.M. 2 P.M. • 5:30 P.M.Saturday 8:30 A .M . - ^ P.M. Master Card and V iia accepted at most area locations. Since “ m edigap” insurance Is a relatively new, and often misun­ derstood, type of health Insurance, elderly Americans are urged to get the facts before they sign up for the coverage. "M edigap” insurance is a M edicare supplem ent designed to help close the gap between the health cost M edicare will cover and senior citizens’ actual expense. A new booklet released by the B etter Business Bureau in Winston- Salem, N.C. "Tips on Medigap Insurance” , answ ers many of the questions consumers have about this new insurance. The booklet devotes considerable attention not only to the value of the policies, but also to their lim itations. C onsum ers are rem inded that m edigap insurance is general unwilling or unable to pay fees not approved by Medicare. The booklet also points out that medigap does not provide coverage for nursing homes, prescription drugs or health supplies. "Tips on Medigap Insurance” has been added to the Better Business B ureau C onsum er Inform ation Series which offers helpful lips on more than 80 topics of consumer interest. For a copy of the booklet or a catalog of topics, send a self- addressed, business size, stam ped envelop to 2110 Cloverdale Ave., Suite 2-B, W inston-Salem , N.C. 27103. proxim alely 500 million dollars, or one fourth of all available aid. Thus, it is an extrem ely valuable addition to the private and state moneys available. As an exam ple of Ihe depth of the search, the bank reports one student found thirty six sources for the most unusual m ajor of "deep sea diver” . Students wishing to use the search should send a stam ped, self addressed envelope to The Scholarship Bank, 10100 Siinta Monica No. 2«00, LA, Ca 900G7. '.Ii, Jennifer Lee Anne Day celebratedl her 4 th birthday S atu rd ay ,! February 9 with a party at herl home. H er guests included Allenl Livengood, Dana Smith, Sara and! Hope Day. Jarrett Bailey and Julicl Smith. They enjoyed sandwiches,! chips, Cabbage Patch Kid cake, icel cream , and K ool-aid. Jen n iferl received many nice gifts. Ile rl parents are Mr. and Mrs. W arrenl Day. She has two brothers, JasonI and Justin. G randparents are M r.l and Mrs. Jam es Shoaf, Marion S.C .,| and Uev. and M rs. Elm er D ay,| Mocksville. Kevin Hendrix, a Davie High has been named ICT (Industrial Cooperative Training) Student of the Month by instructors, Monte Taylor and Joey Kennedy. ICT allows students to gain valuable on- the-job train in g and classroom credits through jobs with local in­ dustries and businesses. Hendrix Is employed by Bailey’s Landscaping and Hendrix Bar-B-Que. He said ICT has proven helpful in teaching Job respansibllities. Hendrix hopes to secure a job with R. J> Reynolds fallowing graduation this spring. Country Florist NOW HAS A NEW PHONE NUMBER Phone 284-2088 ALL LIVE PLANTS W 2 0 % ° ^ L ^ 2 f Cooleemee, NC . K o ^ 'K a u ch I)«ukb. ?(K) Wllkt>tboro 81. Tel. 63-{‘'Ji n I— ^ A , Put a sm ile on your teeth Put it this way. Children must either learn good dental techniques, or dentists will sooner or later be filling rotten, decaying teeth, rather than S offering jusl a good tooth-polishing service. I This week is “Children’s Dental Health Week." !]: So, it is a good time to be reminded of the importance for kids to learn good tooth-cleaning |.performances through effective brushing and flossing. Disease-causing plaque must be removed^ and controlled. Join with us and your dentist in encouraging your children toward sensible dental hygiene. ^Healthy teeth are something to smile about. jiii: ALTHY SAVINGS Foster-Rauch Drugs « ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ VVe Appreciate Your Buaineaii mmmmma VS. The Competition Mode! 990 8 H.P. Rear Tine Tiller Does More! COMPARE Attachment Options ii li Shredder (3) SIckIc Mower (2) Sdow Thrower Water Pump Aerator Log Splitter Generator Tillage Tools Chart fureUbed for u ir In compiHion tkoppliig. Cosis Less! M O D E L 910 5 H.P. Rear Tine T iller S Speeds Forward and Reverie S *789"® M O D E L SP 5 H.P. Chain Drive T iller Specify Engine Type Tw o Speeds Forward Now ^ j Only M O D E L 990 a H.P. Briggs Rear Tine T ille r 5 Speedi Forw ard and Reverse Now Only 399®® $ 8 9 9 0 0 Mocksville Karting (in the same building as Mocdcsville Automotive) At the overhead bridge South Main Street, Phone 634-2944 Mocksville, N.C. FORD ROLLS OUT J FINANCING! FORD TRACTOR OFFERS LOW 7^4% FIXED ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS Buy and take delivery of any new Ford tractor by June 30,1985. We'll help arrange low 7%% FIXED ANNUAL-PERCENTAGE RATE financing for qualified buyers for up to five years on 1000 Series, Series 10, and TW Series tractors. Financing is thirougfi Ford Motor Credit Company. And, you get tfie security of fjxed rate financing. Your payments remain tfie same for tfie entire term of tlie finance period... even if othier interest rates sl<yrocl<et. OR DELAY YOUR PAYMENTS UNTIL OCTOBER 1,1985 We can fielp arrange a waiver of finance chiarges and deferral of payments until October 1 for qualified buyers, followed by up to five years of 10%% FIXED ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE financ­ ing. You'll make no payments and finance charges will not begin to accrue until October 1,1985. Implements purchased with the tractor may also be financed under these special rates. STOP IN SOON FOR DETAILS Davie l7acforl and Implement Co., Inc. Route 4, Box 9 ' Mocksville, N.C. 27028 DAV/E COUNTY ENTEIiPRlSE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1985-1JB Tornado Awareness Week Proclaimed The tornado season will be arriving soon in North Carolina, according to the National W eather Service, W eather officials urge all residents of the state to familiarize them selves with severe w eather danger signs and safety procedures. “The prim e month for tornadoes in North Carolina,” said Robert K. Muller, M cteorologist-in-charge of the Raleigh-Durham NWS office, “ are M arch, April, and May. They can occur at other times, but are most common during those mon­ ths.” In view of this fact. Governor Jam es G. M artin has proclaimed the first week of M arch as Tornado Awareness Week in North Carolina. The National W eather Service, the D ivision of E m ergency M anagement in the N.C. Depart­ m ent of Crime Control and Public Safety, and the N.C. Departm ent of Public Instruction will cooperate to conduct a statewide tornado drill sometime during that week. “The most devastating severe w eather event on record in North Carolina occurred just last year. During the evening of M arch 28th, a series of tornadoes and severe th u nderstorm s sw ept across eastern North Carolina. There were 42 deaths and 810 injuries,” Muller said. Even though one of the M arch 28th tornadoes had an average w idth of one-and-a-half m iles, Muller said that tornadoes in North Carolina are usually the large, long- duration tornadoes that are more com m on in the G reat P lains, Midwest, and Gulf Coast states. “ Ours are generally sm aller and of less tim e duration,” Muller said, "but they can be devastating in term s of property loss, deaths, and injuries. Since 1916, 123 people have been killed by tornadoes in North Among the Pines in beautiful Davie County is a new lifestyle that you can afford MOCK PLAC New one bedroom apartments designed for Senior Citizens and handicapped individuals featuring: — Central Heat & Air Conditioning — Wail to Wall Carpeting — Modern Appliances — Master TV Antenna & Telephone Hookup — Centralized Laundry — Community/Recreation Building — Organized Social Activities For more information, come by, write or call; EQUtl HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Mock Place Apartments North Main Street P.O. Box 690 Mocksville, NC 27028 (704)634-2005____________ Phone V04-634-6111 Phone .704-634-6112 REAL ESTATE - BONDS - INS dilANCE - A U , TYPES 2114 W. Church St. 922 Yadkhivillc Hd. - Powell Kd. - Little John Ur. - Bethel Ch. Kd. - Meta Breeze Ln. - SRII92 orr Gladstone _M illing Rd. - Sanford Rd. • PIN E RIDGE RD. Ocean Drive Ileucli, U.SC -__________ O ff L e w is v ille Clemmons Rd. • 519 Wilkcsboro St. Stroud Mill Rd. Meta Breeze Lii. Rivcrdalc Rd. - .O ff Gladstone Rd. 60IN near I-IU • FOR RENT County Home Rd. Daniel Rd. - Karmlni!ton_ Liberty Ch. Rd. - Near Mocksville - Gladstone Rd. - Karmin|>tun Area HOMES Brick ranchcr 3BR - full hsmt w ith own kilchcn-B ath and pla.vrooni-BR-FP. 5 room hse, zoned business- detached liarage-central air 3BR brick on VL'A. :iB t brick, 2B, lismt playroom. Central air, heat pump, vac system - 2FP___________________ IHOn sqft heated split level hse - 2 car garage - ;i bay sep. garage and work area. New hj own E - pick 19S0 Tidwell mobile home - 3BR, 2B total elec. county water. Stove and Refr. 3BR, IViiB. LR, eat in kitchen 2BR, 2B mobile home furnished. lA lot - 2 BR, IB fram e house on 3.073A with pond. New town homes hses JT.'i.iKHI. Patio Lot 17 Holly Hedge Dr. 1800 sqft heated area new Farm style home. 2i jlJ, LR-FP dishwasher, central air, bsmt. dbl garage Recently renovated 3BR,2B,LR- fpl, DR, den screened porch, 2 zone HP. Dbl CP-partial bsmt. storage bide and lias pump. Country home on 5.7A. Fenced, barn, bidgs._____________________ EE 3BR, I'/aB, deck, car port, paved drive !ib r home, rural setting, cellent buy 2BR home on l ‘vA. Fnrnlshed. COMMERCIAL Prim e business lot lUO x SOU ■/■! Ciiiilerella lleauty Shop lildg. 1150 per month Mobile home Park. 4A 12 mobile homes _____ Call for into on Cedardale Log Homes. LAND 2.8A Nice iiardwood frontage, good road Small tracts. Have been perked 24A. cleared, woods & stream , can split Approx 5A1 wooded, stream , county water. lA building lot. Creek at back. Eaton St. - Wilkes Co, - DavAcad. Rd. ■ Willow Run Woodland Dev. Oakland Hts. 8 & IDA long paved rd. frontage. m No. 2 lots aiul 7 A. Ideal for development.lopn____ _________________ 9.7A Mtn. land-white pines & poplar. N ear Pkwy. 80A. .')« under cuUlvation rest wooded. Many lots, paved St. city w ater & ■sewtr^ 5.8A wooded. Reasonably priced. Borders creek. Mobile lionie ()5,U00 .‘{8,000 65.000 ■ 89,000 •15,500 25,000 34,500 2f>.onn 148,000. 59,»00 72,500 01,500 60,000 40,900 36,000 22,500“ 50,000 135,000 1,950 A $3700 3,900 2,300 Eugene Bennett • 998-4727 G race Cabe • 634-2272 Holland Chafin • 634-5186 Louise Frost Daigle - 634-2846 Sam Howell - 634-2060 G raham Madison • 634-5176 Gwynn Meroney - 634-2208 Luther Potts, lUlU • 998-8420 Henry Shore - 634-5846 Kathi Wall - 492-7631 634-6Hlor 634-6112 i£S> [Qll*! HOJim Carolina.” The typical North Carolina is sm all and short-lived with an average path length of about one- and-a-half miles and a life span of just a few m inutes according to Muller. "This lim its our ability to alert people to the presence of a tor­ nado,” Muller said, "because a tornado W arning is not issued unless there is a strong radar in­ dication or there is a confined public s ittin g ." The W eather Service has two levels of severe w athcr alerts. The first is a Tornado or Severe Thun­ derstorm Watch. It is issued by the National Severe Storms Forecast Center in Kansas City. A watch can cover up to half of the state at a time. Everyone in and near the Watch area should monitor local conditions and be prepared to take action if threatening weather is sighted. R adar sum m aries and Miilcmcnls arc issued periodically by the W eather Service. The second level of alert is a Tornado or Severe Thunderstorm Warning. It is issued only if severe weather has been reported or there is a strong indication on radar. W arnings are issued by W eather Service offices in Asheville, Cape M atteras, Charlotte, Greensboro, Uaieigli-Durham, and Wilmington. “Since we are limited in our ability to gel W arnings of North C arolina type tornadoes to citizens,” Muller said, "it is very im portant for residents of the state to be aw are of weather signs that accom pany tornadoes. This knowledge could save their lives." Muller offered the following tips on severe weather safety: -T o rn ad o es a re alw ays associated w ith thunderstorm s and they usually move from southwest to northeast. -If a funnel-shaped cloud forms at the base of a thunderstorm. bew are. A tornado could be developing! -Tornadoes are most common during the late afternoon or evening. Muller also said that winds caused by severe thunderstorm s can be just as destructive as a small or m edium -size tornado. Such ‘downburst’ winds, which can ex­ ceed 100 miles per hour, are relatively common in the state, he said. If someone does sight a tornado or w eather signs which indicate the likelihood of a tornado, Muller of­ fered the following advice: -S tay away from doors, windows, and outside walls. Protect your head -In homes and sm all buildings, go to basement or to an interior part on the lowest level such as closets, bathrooms, or interior halls. Get under something sturdy. - I n schools, nursing hom es, hospitals, factories, and shopping centers, go to pre-designated shelter areas. Interior hallways on the lowest floor are usually best. -In higli-rise buildings, go to interior sm all rooms or hallways. -In vehicles or mobile homes, leave them and go to a substantial Miao M arriage M arriage among the Maio people of China is less a physical union that a social one, says N ational Geographic. On the m arriage day the couple m ay not even converse publicly, let alone cohabit. Ant Colonics Ant colonies are female societies, in which the sole job of drones, or males, is to m ate for a few moments with a young queen, then die, says National Geographic. Nuclear Plants Tlie United States has 83 nuclear power plants, more than any other country, says National Geographic World. The Soviet Union is second with 37 plants. structure. If there is no shelter nearby, lie flat in the nearest ditch, ravine, or culvert with your hands shielding your head. Muller reminded everyone that "knowledge about weather signs for tornadoes and how to protect yourself from them is the best in­ surance there is against severe w eather.” WINTER COLD !l i with these Home winterizing SPECIALS... i February and Marchi SAVE 10 to 15% Off \Our everyday low prices on ^ f Storm Windows and Doors ALL BINNINGS and MOSS SUPPLY DOORS and WINDOWS ARE ON SALE AluminumAluminum Storm/ Screen Doors Tempered Safety G la» • Pre-hung and pre­ drilled • Fully w eather- •tripped • H ardw are Included Storm/^reenJ Combination ) Windows Fully w ealhor- strlpped fo r year- round protection. 2 gloss, 1 screen insert. REPLACEMENT WIN DOWS- SPECIALLY PRICED CAUDELL LUMBER CO. SERVIIItAR phone 634-2167 162 Sheek Street Mocksville, N.a 330 Salisbury Street Mocksville, N.C. 27028 704-634-3538 NEW OFFICE- 2601 Lewisville-Clemmons Road Clemmons, N.C. 27012 919-766-4580 AGENTS Julia Howard Ann F. Wands Mike Hendrix Vicki H. Fleming C.C. Chapman M yrtle Grimes Calvin Ijames Rickey Bailey Sarah Baiiey Cecil C artner Whit Honeycutt Connie Kowalske Randall Wnrri HOME PHONES 634-3754 634-3229 284-2366 634-3640 634-2534 998-3990 492-5198 634-3621 634-3621 492-7112 873-7872 634-6343 REALTOR' M :W LISTINGS NO. 573-HWY. 158E. ~ Fram e house plus 16 plus or minus acres, 1161 s.r. 2 bdrm s., 2 bath, untlnish. basem ent, llv. rm . w-fh'eplace, 1 car carport. - house & land sold separately - house $29,900.00, land $100,000.00. NO. 590-HWY. 158-3 bdrm ., fram e house, liv. rm ., kit., part basement, utility rm „ alum , outbuilding, lean to, Il62s.f. -$28,000.00. NO. 569 HILLCREST kit., fam . rm ., w- fireplace, back patio, 1 c a i^ ffilJi ffn in* in im onlte sid. $39,500.00. NO. 577-WILL BOONE ReT ^ 12 F leetw o^ Mobile home - 2 bdrm., liv. rm ., large kit., w-bay window, underpinned w-block - concrete porch. Situated on 4.2 acres - $19,000.00. NO. 579-RIDGEMONTSUBD.-3 bdrm . houses - FmHA loans available - low monthly pay. NO. 57!i-KLUENIE RD.-2 mobile homes situated on 12.01 acres -(1 )3 bdrm., 2 bath, back screened porch underpUined, (2) 2 bdrm . 12 x 60 mobile home. 2 stall horse barn, natural spring on property, fencing - rJu.®™i??COUNTY LINE RD. - 3 bdrm ., 2 bath, fuU basem ent (part finish.), liv. rm ., (fireplace w-glass doors & m antle), din. rm ., kit., central air, fenced in pool, dishwasher, trash comp., good cond. $88,500.00. i\0 . 480 - SANFORD AVE. - 3 l)drm. brick rancher, liv. rm .. din. rm ., den, kitchen, outbuilding (wired). Interior & exterior freshly painted in the fall, 1659 s.f. $56,500.00. NO. 400 - CHESTNUT WAY - 3 b d r m - ^ t level, 2>A baths, den (cathedral ceiling w -exp o se|U M M ^^Iii^M e (built-in heatolator w- glass doors) cent. v a c l^ g iE # M g $ i2 car), smoke & fire alarm s, excellent cond. $91,000.01). NO. 443 - COUNTRY ESTATES - 5 Bedrooms, dining room. living room, family room (fireplace & ceiling fan), kitchen, front porch, 2 baths and deck on back. Good Condition. 10 years old. Central air (upstairs). $90,000. NO. 584 - N. MAIN ST. - Acre lot plus large 4-5 bedroom 2-story with bonus office or craft space. Spacious foyer, form al dining and living room. Large kitchen with breakfast room, den, P/i baths downstairs, IVi baths unfinished upstairs. Double detached carport with workshop, storage buildings and barn. $79,900.00. WO. 566-LEXINCTON ROAD-Enjoy country living "in town" In this charm ing two story fram e farm house. 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, den with 25 ft. cathedral beam ed ceiling with cozy loft overlooking den. Lots of wallpaper, custom made drapes and much more. See to appreciate. $138,500.00. NO. 594 SOUTHWOOD ACRES-Attracl|iM« pllt level. 1525 sq. It. plus basem ent and I I ^ baths, large living area with li jU jlll > IWl' ........ $64,400. No. 555-COUNTRY LANE ESTATES- Under construction, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, 1570 sq. ft., W illiamsburg, form al dining room, deck, 2-car garage in basement, EES. ^ No. 535-llwy. 64 East- 2 BR, U M tK jC S frm . den, dining area, kit- chen, brick, patio, )' i No. 512-SOUTHERN DAVIE COUNTre, 3000 heated sq. ft. Includes 3 bedrooms, 3 full baths, living room with fireplace, den with fireplace, form al dining room, large eat-in kitchen, Ig. Florida room, beautifully decorated, freshly painted inside and out, new heat pump and gas furnace, storage building and playhouse, wooded acre is beautifully landscaped, 12 miles to Salisbury, 8 miles to Mocksville, just reduced $10,000 to $89,900. Call today to see this beauty. No. 523-SANFORD AVENUE-3 bedroom, 2 baths, large living room and dining room with pine floors, spacious kitchen, den, full bsmt., glassed-in sunporch, patio, circular in-ground pool, burglar alarm system, new carpeting, 1.5 acres, excellent condition, $85,000.00. No. SSI-b'ORK CHURCH RD,-double wide mobile home, 3 bdrm . (w- walk-in closets), I bath, fam . rm ., din. rm „ kit., utility rm ., central air, nice 1 acre lot, good cond., $39,900.00. No, 537-MAIN CHURCH KOAD-3 bdrm. brick, approx. 1420 sq. ft., 2 bath, living rm ., din, area, den w-fireplace, kitchen, full basement (drive-in door), 1.03 acre lot, 8 years old, excellent cond., central air, $65,000.00. Will rent No. 462 IN TOWN-quiet n eig h b o rh o o ^lJ|ad n im , 2 bath, brick ran­ cher, featuring spacious l|X |||in !|^ T u U » * ^ e x tra large utility for sewing or office, screened iQ U M m nnliig area, 2 car garage, wooded, 156,500.00. “No. 508-LAKEWOOD VILLAGE-3 bdrm, 1 bath, brick, 1425 s.f. llv. rm ., den, din. area, kitchen w-bar, patio, partial basement, $41,900.00. COMMERCIAL NO. 565 - HWY. 601 - Pre-fab. alum . sid. build, w-brick front, showroom has suspend, ceiling, panel, carpet, built-in shelves, bathrooms, paved park. 2026 heated sf. - 6 yrs. old - X-tra 938 s.f. of NEW LISTINGS i\0. .ii--Crcekwood Estates, Section 1. Charming tri-level on lovely landscaped corner lot with fenced back yard. House features 4BRs, 2 baths, LR, DR, large screened back porch, and family room with wet bar and sliding glass doors onto patio. See today! Corner of Creek wood Dr. and Forest Drive $84,500. NO. 519 - MILLING RD. - 3 bdrm., 2 bath, liv. rm.-din. rm . comb, den, kit., brick veneer. 1 car garage, recently pahited interior-exterior, new carpet in den, ceiling fan, excellent cond. $49,900.00. NO. 574 - MOTOR RD.-Winston-Salem - Excellent investm ent op­ portunity. Very sound 3BR, IB house with full basement. Interior is ta excellent condition and comes complete with refrig, oven, range, woodstove, freezer, w asher and dryer. Has $22,000 assum able at 8>/^ percent. Priced at $41,900. NO. 586 - OFF DANIELS RD. - 3 bdrm. 2 full bath mobile home on 1 acre, fenced lot - flue and insulation installed, storm windows. Refrigerator, range, dinette, love seat and couch included. $20,000.00. NO. 588 - O FF ANGELL RD. - Teaching & riding horse farm on 33 cleared acres, 11 stall barn, tack room w-complete bathroom, cross fenccd pasture, lighted riding ring, both county & well w ater - 2 yr. old energy efficient 2 bdrm. Berm (underground) house, 1532 s.f. - $165,000.00. , n ,No. 525-WOODLAND-3 lidi w ■ llj I 1710 s.f. basement, new patio in rear, $65,900.00.\!in 'n » ’*"»*‘ ’ NO. 576 - HICKORY HILL I - Lovely tri-level brick home on com er lot in walking distance of Hickory Hill Tennis Court, pool and golf course. House features form al living room and dining room, den, breakfast room, family or playroom, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, 21 x llVi screened porch, double car garage and central air. See to appreciate. $91,000. No. 514-EATON DRIVE-3 bdrr.i, brick, 1250 plus or minus sq. ft., living rm . w-fireplace, din. rm ., kitchen, basement, central air, garage. Reduced to $52,000.00. NC). 589- MILLING RD.- 2 steel bldgs., 2400 sq. ft. dwelling, city sewage and water. Industrial zoning. No. 560-TWINBROOK- Must see to appreciate the quality and special features in this three bedroom, two bathroom, great room wi-tirepiace enclosed glass sun porch, totally energy erficient, carport, beautiful corner lot well landscaped, rustic siding, one of the better neigh­ borhoods in Mocksville, city w ater and sewage. Priced at only $63,400.00. ........ .............. No. 558-N. MAIN ST.-Great in-town location within walking distance of churches, shopping, 3 bdrm, brick, llv. rm „ din. rm ., breakfast rm ., with glassed sunporch. i5H.50fl.00. No. 562-1517 WINSTON bedroom, fram e, den, kitchen, front and re a |W fti^ B W * * > ^ No. 458-IIISTORIC IvSMCTlvrDEPOT STREET-oId Depot bldg.,- I!44.0xl54.50x256.0'ir'0.8.beside Southern Railway. • No. 556-CHURCH ST.-BrIck rancher, 2620 s.f., 4 bdrm., 3 baths, liv. rm., din. rm ., fam. rm ., utility rm ., kitchen w. d.w. and disposal, front porch and rear patio, 2 car garage, extras include bulll-ln book shelves and cabinets, child's playhouse, 2.96 acre lot. good cond. $130,000.00. No. 386-WILLOW RUN-4 bdrm., dining room-family room, combo, 2 story, front porch, reardeck. H i yrs. old, 2 car garage, storage room off deck. $49,900.00. ^ irT I No. 469-601S-1759 s.f., 3 central air, 3 acre lot, fireplace, ceiling fan, No. 498-IN TOWN-Beaunnil 3 bdrm. brick rancher including huge m aster suite form al living room, dining room, breakfast room, covered patio, gorgeous landscaping. $75,000.00. No. 544-IIARDISON ST-Lovely 2-story fram e farm house situated on 3.2 acres is surrounded by m any hardwoods, magnolias, and fruit trees. House features 1 bath, 3 bdrms., liv. rm ., 27 x 13 kitchen-den' comb, with oil heat and central air. G reat place for gardening, with barn for storage. See to appreciate. No, 496-MOUNTAIN CHALET-A-FRAME-2 bedrooms plus loft sleeping area on large wooded lot only minutes from ski area and G randfather Mt. Assumable loan possible. $32,500.00. L A N D ^ NO. 553 - HWY. 601 county water available, residential $l45,000.00|gS|3JS!*****^^ NO. CIOOOCLEMMOn M Approx. 2 acres on Littiebrook Drive. Owner financing at 10 percent. $11,400.00. No. 413-HICKORY HILL-Lakeside lot. $11,000. No. 495-20.22 acres plus excllent building lot (acre plus) in Country Estates. M an-made pond, fenced. Timber. No. 515-WOODLAND-4 lovely wooded lots, 200x200 $9,200.00. NO. 493-7 lots in Oakdale Subdivision off SOI. Total price $18 000 00 Can be sold individually. No. 349-Lots In G arden Valiev 12B-DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPIUSE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 PBB83000 UNITED STATES OP AMERICA FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION Notice of Application Filed with the Com­mission (February 6. 198S)•Take notice that the foHowIng hydroelectric application has been filed with the Federal Eneray Regulatory Commission and Is available for public Inspection: a. Type of Application: Preliminary Permit b; Project No.: 8803 000c. Date Filed: January 18, 1985d. Applicant: Cooleemee Hydro Associatese. Name of Pro|ect: Cooleemee Hydropowerf. Location: In Davie County, North Carolina, on the South Yadkin Riverg. Filed Pursuant to: Federal Power Act, 16 U.S.C. SS 791(a) • 825{r)h. Contact Person: Casey A. Cummings, Synergies, Inc., 4to Severn Avenue, Suite 409, Annapolis, Maryland 21403I. Comment Date: April IS, 1985 I. Description of Pro|ect: The proposed pro|ect wooW consist of: (1) a lO fool hIgh and 5/5-foot- long existing dam including spillway at elevation 650 feet m.s.l. to be refurbished? (2) an existing reservoir with a surface area of 14 acres and a storage capacity of approximately 100 acre-feet at a surface elevation of 842 feet m.s.l.; (3) an existing power canal approximately 2,400 feet long, 40 feet wide and 10 feet deep; (4) an existing penstock 6 feet in diameter and ap­proximately 40 feet long; (5) an existing rein­forced concrete powerhouse to be refurbished, 100 feet wide and 180 feet long containing 2 proposed turblne-generators w ith a rated capacity of 1,500 kW; (6) an existing taiirace 40 feet wide and 150 feet long; (7) a new 12.5 kV transmission line 100 feet long; and (8) ap­purtenant facilities. The estimated average annual energy produced by the protect would be 4.75 Gwh operator under a net hydraulic head of 35 feet. Project power would be sold to the Duke Power Company. The dam Is owned by Davie County.k. This notice also consists of the following standard paragraphs: A5, A7, A9, B, C, D2 I. Proposed Scope of Studies under Permit: A preliminary permit. If Issued, does not authorize construction. The term of the proposed preliminary permit is 18 months. The work proposed under the preliminary permit would Include economic analysis, preparation of preliminary engineering plans, and a study of environmental Impacts. Based on results of these studies Applicant would decide whether to proceed with more detailed studies, and the preparation of an application for license to construct and operate the prolect. Applicant estimates that the cost of the work to be per­formed under the preliminary permit would be S30,000.A5. Preliminary Permit: Existing Dam or Natural Water Feature Pro|ect--Anyone desiring to file a competing application fol preliminary permit for a proposed project at an existing dam or natural water feature project, must submit the competing application to the Commission on■ or before 30 days after the specified comment date for the particular application (see 18 CFR 4.30 to 4.33 (1962)). A notice of Intent to file a competing application for preliminary'permit. will not be accepted for filing.A competing preliminary permit application . must conform with 18 CFR 4.33(a) and (d).A7. Preliminary Permlt-Except as provided- In the following paragraph, any qualified license, conduit exemption, or small hydroelectric• exemption applicant desiring to file a competing• application must submit to the Commission, on• or before the specified comment date for the particular application, either a competing' license, conduit exemption, or small- hydroelectric exemption application or a notice- of Intent to file such an application. Submission■ of a timely notice of Intent to file a license,• corKJult exemption, or small hydroelectric• exemption application allows an Interested person to file the competing application no later than 120 days after the specified comment date for the particular application.In addition, any qualified license or conduit exemption applicant desiring to file a competing application may file the subject application until: (1) a preliminary permit with which the subject license or conduit exemption application woukJ compete is issued, or (2) the earliest specified comment date for any license, conduit exemption, or small hydroelectric exemption application with which the subject license or conduit exemption application would compete; whichever occurs first.A competing license application must conform with 16 CFR 4.33(a) and (d).A9. Notice of in1ent"A notice of intent must specify the exact name, business address, and telephone number of the prospective applicant. Include an unequivocal statement of intent to submit, if such an application may be filed, either (I) a preliminary permit application of (2) a license, small hydroelectric .exemption, or conduit exemption application, and be served on the appilcant(s) named In this public notice.B. Comments, Protests, or Motions to In­ tervene • Anyone may submit comments, a protest, or a motion to intervene in accordance with the requirements of the Rules of Practice and Procedure, 16 C.F.R. SS385.210, .211, .214. In determining the appropriate action to take, the Commission w ill consider all protests or other comments filed, but only ttiose who file a motion to Intervene In accordancc>wlth the Commission’s Leonard Realty K ESTIU CTEI) wooded lots, stream - 2‘,. to S' j acres $8!I0U- $i»,!iun. 801 - ;iIiH rancher remndeled, stove, ref., W&I) included. EES - ;:ir>,ouu. 0(11 WOODED acres with IIBR brick randier, 2:i()0 Sfj. ft, plus lar(>c workshop. DAVIE CO. - ;iBIl, 2B, brick ran ch er bsm l. Ex. Cond. $K2,r>oii. I,OT ON LAKE - JI0,.il)0. House For H enl $;17!>.00. Office - 7U4-«:il-:;875 Linda Leonard 634-:i650 Elizabeth Bohl__________919-998-fil»7 Rules may become a party to the proceeding. Any comments, protests, or motions to Intervene must be received on or before the specified comment date for the particular application.C. Filing and Service of Responsive Documents - Any filings must bear In all capital letters the title "COMMENTS", "NOTICE OF INTENT TO FILE COMPETING AP­PLICATION” , "COM PETING AP­PLICATION", "PROTEST” , or "MOTION TO INTERVENE", as applicable, and the Project Number of the particular application to which the filing is in response. Any of the above named documents must be filed by providing the original and those copies required by the Commission's regulations to: Kenneth F. Plumb, Secretary, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, 625 North Capitol Street, N.E., Washington, D.C. 20426. An additional copy must be sent to: Fred E. Springer. Director, Division of Project Management Branch, Office of Hydropower Licensing, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, Room 208 RB at the above address. A copy of any notice of Intent, competing application or motion to Intervene must also be served upon each representative of the Applicant specified In the particular ap­plication.02. Agcncy Comments • Federal, State, and local agencies are invited to file comments on the described application. (A copy of the ap­plication may be obtained by agencies directly from ttie Applicant.) If an agency does not file comments within the time specified for filing comments, it w ill be presumed to have no comments. One copy of an agency’s comments must also be sent to the Applicant’s represen­tatives. Kenneth F. Plumb Secretary 2-21 4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX NOTICEHAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the estate of Jasper Tony Conner, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­dersigned on or before the 21st day of August, 1985, being six months from the first day of publication or this notice w ill be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 15th day of February. 1985.Dorothy Anderson Conner, Route 2, Box 157-A, Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028.Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Box 606Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028 2-21 4tn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY CO EXECUTOR'S NOTICEHaving qualified as Co-Executors of the estate of W. S. Spillman, deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 21st day of August. 1985, or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the un­ dersigned. This the 21st day of February, 1985.W. W. Spillman. Sr., and Anita W. Harding, Rt. 2, Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028. Co-Executors of the estate of W. S. Spillman, deceased.2-21 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICEHaving qualified as Administrator of the estate of Samuel Dean Parks. Sr., deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 7th day of August. 1965, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to sakJ estate w ill please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 7th day of February, 1985.Samuel Dean Parks- Jr.. Rt. 13, Box 184, Statesville, N.C. 28677, Administrator of the estate of Samuel Dean Parks. Sr. deceased.2-7 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Samuel M. Howard, deceased, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­dersigned on or before the 21st day of August, 1985, or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the un­dersigned.This the 21st day of February. 1985.Lucille C. Howard. Rt. 4. Box 1937, Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028, Executrix cf the estate ol Samuel M. Howard, deceased. 2-21 4lnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTRIX'S NOTICE Having qualified a^ Executrix of the estate of Dalton Boger, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons having claims against . said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of August, 1985, 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 14th day of February, 1985.Lois Boger Renegar, Rt. 2. Box 195, Harmony, N.C. 28634, Executrix of the estate of Dalton Boger. deceased.2-14 4tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Enoch W. Smith, deceased, late of Davie County. Ihis is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 2)st day of August, 1965, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. Ml persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 3rd day of December, 1964.George E. Smith, Rt. 6, Mocksvllle, Executor of the estate of Enoch W. Smith, deceased. 2-21 4tn LAREW-WOOD-JOHNSON,lnc. 135 South Salisbury Street Mocltsville, N.C. , M IW INO- UAVIE ACRES ALMOST NEW-14x66 Fleetwood Mobile Home on 1 acre lot - wltli furniture, all appliances, air conditioner & ceiling fan, garden space and space for extra Mobile Home $26,500. WANDERING LANB-4 bedroom, 2 bath, brick veneer home, 2 fireplaces, all appliances, 16x32 fenced pool with all equipment. Ex­ cellent nelRhborhood. 175,000 NAYl^OR STHEET-2 bedroom, 1 bath, very neat brick starter home. Convenient to shopping, schools and churchy, )29,S00. BEAR CREEK CHURCH R O ^ -3 bedrnaM Pli bath brick veneer spUt foyer home with 2 fireplacesoiU to»® S!W n> lcturesque setting w l^ large trees and pond, flortgE S IIPlrult trees. Full basem ent, rough finished. 185,000.00. FARMINGTON R D -16 acres prim e land with frontage on Farm ington Road. Fencing, stream , pasture, trees and borders Cedar Creek. »49,000.00. E. MAPLE AVE-One of M ocksvllla’s finest 2-story older homes. Six bedrooms, large entrance hall with fireplace, large porches and beautiful grounds. Separate garage and guest house. Quiet neigh­ borhood. Convenient to downtown. 189,500.00. E. MAPLE AVE.-2.43 acres and like new 3 bedroom brick veneer home with large den-dinlng combination, fireplace, paved drive, fenced yard, playhouse and large outbuilding. Convenient to schools, churches and downtown area. 169,500.00. 334 RAILROAD STREET-Industrial property available, 115,000. Call ^U TH W O O D ACRES-Owner needs 'to”seir - reduced to $75,000 . 4 bedroom, 2 bath brick veneer home with 'h basem ent finished, car­ port, nice wooded lot. COMMERCIAL lot on W estgate Drive in Winston-Salem. CENTER COMMUNITV-41 acres bordering Interstate 40, $44,000.00. SOUTIiWOOD ACRES-Cholce Lots Available JACK BOOE ROAD-Small acreage h-acts available ___ tis l Pjione 634-6281 d. BUI Johnson 284-2202 June JoluiBon 284-2202 Don Wood 634-2826 Sarah Wood 634-2826 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYIN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE Superior Court Division IN THE MATTER OF THE FORECLOSURE OF THE DEED OF TRUST OF Tommy R. Anthony and wife,Mary J. /‘nthony GRANTOR. TO:Richard E. Stover TRUSTEE, As recorded in Book 115 at Page 235 of the Davie Public Registry NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE of the power of sale, contained in a deed of trust executed by Tommy R. Anthony and wife, Mary J. Anthony, dated March 3rd, 1981, and recorded In Book 115, Page 235. Public Registry of Davie County, North Carolina, and by virtue of FINDINGS AND ORDER entered by the Clerk of Superior Court of Davie County. North Carolina, on February 7, 1965, default having been made In the payment of the Indebtedness hereby secured and the said deed of trust being by the terms thereof subject to forpclosure and the holder of the Indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the purpose of satisfying said Indebtedness, the undersigned Trustee w ill offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the front door of the Davie County Courthouse Mocksvllle, North Carolina,at2;00o’clock p.m., February26,1985, all the property conveyed In said deed of trust which property as of the 7th day of February, 1965, was owned by Thomas D. Neal and wife, Margie H. Neal, the same lying and being In Davie County, North Carolina, and more par­ticularly described as follows:BEING KNOWN AND DESIGNATED as Lot No. 2 as shown on the Map of Cedar Forest as recorded In Plat Book 5, Page 6, In the Office of the Register of Deeds of Davie County, North Carolina, reference to which is hereby made for a more particular description.This property Is sold subject to any County Taxes and any special assessments that are a Men against the premises.The Trustee reserves the right to require of the highest bidder a deposit of five (5) percent of his bid as evidence of good faith.This notice of foreclosure Is pursuant to N. C.G.S. Chapter 45 as amended, and pursuant to terms of security instrument.This 7th day of February, I9B5.Richard E. Stover, Trustee Attorney at LawP.O. Box 765 King, Nonh Caroiina27cCl (919-983-3177) 2-21 2tnp NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Baxter Howard, deceased, late of Davie County, this Istonotify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­ dersigned on or before the 21 day of August 1985 or this notice w ill be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will Diease make immediate payment to the un derslgned. This the 21 day of February, 1985. Clifford W. Howard, Administrator of the estate of Baxter Howard deceased. Clifford W. Howard P.O. Box 901 Mocksvllle, N.C. 2-21-4tnp WhattaYaSay? "Happy Birthday" We Love YOU Your Mom, Dad, Brother and 2 Sisters Paid fo r by G ilm er Foster PUBLIC NOTICE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT COMMISSION POST OFFICE BOX 27Afl7 RALEIGH. NORTH CAROLINA 27611-7687 NOTIFICATION OF INTENT TO ISSUE A STATE NPDES PERMIT Public Notice of intent to Issue a State NPDES Permit to the Following: 1. Coble Dairy Products Cooperative, Inc., Coble Dairy Plant, Davidson County, NPDES No. NC0046329. There is one existing discharge of cooling tower bleed off and melted condensate water Into an unnamed tributary to Abbots Creek located one block off North Main Street. 2. Thousand Trails, Inc.-Forest Lake Preserve, Davie County, NPDES No. NC0060640. There is one proposed discharge of treated domestic wastewater Into the Yadkin River located off Highway 64 approximately 0.5 mile west of the Yadkin River bridge, On the basis of preliminary staff review and application of Article 21 of Chapter U3, General Statutes of North Carolina, Public Law 92-500 and other lawful standards and regulations, the North Carolina Environmental Management Commission proposes to issue permits to discharge to the person listed above effective April 1, 1985 and subject to special conditions. Persons wishing to comment upon or object lo the proposed determinations are Invited to submit same in writing to the above address no later than March 15,1985. All comments received prior to that date w ill be considered in the formulation of final determinations regarding the proposed permits. A public hearing may be held where the Director of the Division of En­vironmental Management finds a significant degree uf public Interest In a proposed permit. A copy of the draft permit and a fact-sheet for discharges over 500,000 gallons per day are available by writing or calling the Division of Environmental Management, Archdaie Building. Raleigh, North Carolina, 919-733-5083 or the Winston-Salem Regional Office. 6003 North Point Boulevard, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 9I9-761-235I. The applications and other information may be inspected at these locations during normal office hours. Copies of the information on file are available upon request and payment of the costs ol reproduction. Ail such comments or requests regarding a proposed permit should make reference to the NPDFS Permit number listed above. February 11.1985 Alan W. Kilmeie For R. Paul Wilms. Acting Director Divlsicnof Environmental Management 2-27 itn NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTYEXECUTRIX NOTICE HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the estate of Maggie Mae Sheek. late of Davie County, this Is to notify ail persons having claims against said estate to present them to the un­dersigned on or before the I4th day of August, 1985. being six 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 immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 8th day of February. 1985.Lillian Sheek Hauser, Route 1. Box 426. Ad- viince, N.C. 27006. Executrix of the estate of Maggie Mac Sheek, deceased. Martin and Van Hoy, Attorneys Box 606Mocksvllle. N.C. 27028 2-14 4tnp Realty Ranch 634-3113 GWYN ST.3Br.Ranchervinyl*ldlng *43,500 VUMF0RDDR.2 BR Cottage $32,500 POWELL RD..3BR (FmHA) Brick $39,900 WHITNEY RD.- 3 BR with basement $37,SOO COOLEEMEE-2 BR. partially remodeied$2s.OOO COOLEEMEE- 3 DR, 2.story, 5 fpl. t2B.S0C LAND*27.sAcwithstream $2300perac. LAND'11 Ac.private $2300perac. LOT - .55 Ac. D. Acad.Rd. near Hwy.64 $4,950. LOT - 1 Ac: Twin Cedars (w ill divide) $9200. Me subscribe to ttie Davie County Real Estate Sales Guide CEDAR RIDGE APARTMENTS H.irdison Street, Mocksville, NC NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS *1 A n d 2 Bedroom s * F u lly Carpeted * A lr C o nditio ning , *K itc h e n A ppliances Furnisiied For Information Or Application Contact 634-2070 or 300 Milling Road, Mocksville, N.C. Between the hours of 2:00 - 5:00 Monday - Friday. ^^^^^^^JM anaged^b^^PhoenijnM an.^^ O n tu iK 2 1 CLEMMONS VILLAGE REAL ESTATE mREALTOR' VCltlPtl listw , :M IS . ItEDUCED-Over K private acrcs with 2 outbuildincs. Cottage design liomc has 3 bedrooms and 3 full baths. Carport. Call for showing. ADVANCE-I’retty rancher wlUi 4 bedrooms! Living room and den have fireplaces. Large playroom. Detached garage. |94,900.00. TAUMINGTON.-.-Pretty 9 acres with a 1882 Mobile Home. 3 l>edraoms, fireplace in living room. Inground swimming pool. Shed and fenced pasture. |59,90U.00. GAIIBEN VALLEY, MOCKSVILLE-This spacious home is a real bargain! 4 bedrooms, 3 full baths, fireplace in den and playroom. Large putio. MAIN STIIEET, MOCKSVILLE-Renovated home with 3 bedrooms. Fireplace in living room. ONLY $46,»00.00. KAINTKEE ESTATES-Thls lovely 2 story home is perfect for a large family. 5 bedrooms, 3 full baths, den with fireplace. Screen porch. 2 large decks with swimming pool. |139,»00.00. 121 MAUCONI .STKEET-Nice 3 bedroom split level in convenient area. Fam ily room has fireplace. |36,900.00. DAVIE COUNTY - 3 acres. $8,500.00. GAIIDEN VALLEY-Nice building lot. 17,500.00. ■ Put Number 1 ■ to work for you. ' M arty Haynes Carolyn Johnson Jo Mackintosh Allen M artin 76G-40H 766-4777 766-6»:i0 »98-S2l)4 Office 766-1777 or 706-9111 Announcing DR. DARYL L.WEAVIL Bermuda Quay Eye Care Optometry Family Eye Care- Glasses, Contact Lenses and Treatment of Eye Disease Five Professional Plaza Bermuda Quay, Advance (919)998-5297 Hours; Mon. & Tu. 10-8 p.m. Wed. & Th. 9-6 p.m. Fri. 9-2 p.m. Saturday Hours Available Financial Statement for Period Ending December 31,1984 Morrison-Studevant Mutual Burial Association, Inc. Mocksvllle, N.C. 27028 Balance - December 31, 1983 $9,831.59 RECEIPTS: Currents assessments L’ollcclcd Number New members 1 (" 50c Interest on time deposit Totul Net difference of advance asst. Receipts Total receipts DISBURSEMENTS: 51,916.85 .50 8KH.09 2,805.44 + 82.20 2,887.64 12,719.23 200.00 673.12 Salaries Miscellaneous e\pen^es Tola! expenses Death benefits paid No. $200 7 Total disbursements BALANCE TO BE ACCOUNTED FOR: ASSETS: Bank Deposit HBT Mocksville Savinjis & Loan CD Mocksville Savings & Loan I’H Total assets LIABILITIES: 873.12 1,400.00 655.79 9.727.85 62.47 2,273.12 10,446.11 10,446.11 Advance assessments Ivspenses unpaid rolal liabilities SURPLUS: Number of assessments during year: 12 364.40 0 364.40 10.081.71 in jrood standinji: 875 Secretary'Treasurer Mocksville, N.C. Dorothy Graham Carolina E E XEEH^ Homes, Inc. For All Your Building arid Remodeling Needg Home Place Realty, Inc. For All Your Real Estate Needs On Housing If .vou have not owned a home in the last three years, and earn t2g,r>U0.U0 or less per year you could qualify for a very special low interest fixed rate mortgage loan, with a down payment of only S percent! - VVehavepre-approved building lots available in many areas of the county - some with w ater and sewer. Or we will build on your land. IJSTINGS New Cape Cod under construction 4811, 2STATESVIIXE-Kingswood Baths, i.arge corner lot. MOCKSVILI.E-li.'i story under -• miitry Farm House look - within city limits - U H D tR SANFOUD UD, Mocksvllle- Split Level on basement, 3 or 4 BR, 3 baths, fpi w-custom built insert, 1718 heated sq. ft., attached carport, house and grounds in excellent condition. |59,900. MOCKSVILLE - Assumable FllA-235 Loan Available (low monthly paym ent), 3im , 2 full baths, passive solar ranch-styie home with built- in flue for woodstove. 142,900. IREDELL CO- New 3 Br, 2 full baths, split foyer home with FP and drive-in garage. J54,900. RURAL HALL AREA-l'A story cQ \_0 bath, full basem ent, upstairs unfinisii^ with plumbing and e l.rti ical work roughed in, $48,900. HARMONY - New 3 BR l'/!i B<-cQ^Qxher. Fm llA Approved. Low monthly paym ent. ^ LAND BERMUDA RUN-Excellent building lot. Will build to suit owner. IIWY. (MW-Two adjoining lots |3,000 each to sell or will build to suit buyer. DAVIE COUNTV-rherry Hill $OLD ores with well 16250.00. RURAL HALL-Excellent building lots and acreage for sale, STATESVILLE-Lots for sale from $4,200. HARMONY-FmllA Approved lots. ADVANCE-Nice wooded lots from $4,500. HICKORY IIILL-Two nice building lots - $5,900 each. WILLBOONE ROAD -U rge wooded building lot - $4,500. BEAR CIIEEK CHURCH RD.- 40plus acres - >/, cleared, 'A Umber. BEACH PROPERTY NORTH MYRTLE BEACH-1, 2, & 3 Bedroom condominiums at ex. cellent locations in N. M yrtle Beach from $49,900.00._______________ We build Conventional, Farm ers Home Administration (Fm llA ), Federal Housing Administration (FHA), and Veterans Administration (VA) Homes. ___________________________ ____________________■ 19 Depot Street Mockfvillp, NC Boh .Shelton, Broker Shelby W alker, Sales PHONE 704-634-2252 919-998-2969 Von Shelton, Broker Frank Payne, Broker DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 8,1985-13BIMENTAL rLASSIFIED ADSRETARDATION MONTH ABORTION •ABORTION -<=rce Pregnsncy T o s 'li'O '" "• ,appointment,callcollccl-4,Vlnslon.5alcmSI9) ; .72M6J0, Arcadia Women's j '.A B O R T IO N A LT E R N A T IV E S .,,F = R E E • . PREGNANCY TESTING. "We Care Atioul • You; and Your Baby; and We can HELP." / • Call: "RIohf to Life" at: i92-S723 or 6U S2iS.2-217tp-JB : WANTED-TOBUY ■' WANTED: GOLD COINS. SILVER COINS, Gold ■' £?.w ILiy?'' Jewelry and Diamonds.• 9UY...SELL...TRADE. Silver Shop II, 123• Winston-Salem, N.c. Call 724- IHnSS REWARD SIOO.OO REWARD...For information for recovery from driver who hit a White 1966 Mercedes at Boggs Garage, Farm ington Community, Friday morning, February M, l9as. Call (9l9) 990 M?B or 768-1463. 2-2Bltp-RD -------------PRIvATe'"^^' INVESTIGATOR PR|VAT^NVEni0ATl0N$?TM^r«?fr(!ny ContldMillBl, LIcenie No. 3J0. Telephone; Salisbury (704) 634.7533. 7.3i.ttnJL PAINTING & REPAIRS FRUIT TREES FURNITURE REFINISHING...The antique -workshop furniture re-flnlshlng and restoration. rOUALITY WORK. Reterehces. Call: 998 9916 or ■(919) 7M-0069. Ask lor Dianne. H-57t(no MUSIC .PIANO TUNING: Repairing and Rebuilding, 77• years experience. All work guaranteed.• PIANO TECHNICIANS GUILD CRAFTSMAN. ■ Call Wallace Barford at 294.2447. ;_____________________________ 77-tfn p B ‘PIANO AND VOICE LESSONS. Experienced ' teacher. Degree In music. Teaches all levels ■ - beginners to advanced, and all ages. Including ' adults. Mocksvllle, 634 2305.2-7BtpMD PIANO FOR .SALE...WANTED: Responsible : parly to assume small monthly payments on • splnet console piano. Can be seen locally.' W rite; {Include phone number) Credit ' Manager, P.O. Box 520, Beckemeyer, Illinois.i ; 62219. 2-2l3tnp-MP GROW YOUR own fruit. Free copy 4Bpage Planting Gulde Catalog In color. One of the most complete lines of plant material offered Including Fruit Trees, Nut Trees, Berry Plants, Grape Vines, Landscaping Plant M aterial. WAYNESBORO NURSERIES • Waynesboro, VAJ2980. ,.7«„p.,A EMPLOYMENT HELP WANTED: “ Llve ln Nanny"...A mature lady, non-smoker preferred. In a new home In the Advance area. Salary Negotiable. Lots of privacy. Call: 634-3168 after 6 p.m.1-24-tfnTS SERVICES CALL; OSBORNE ELECTRIC at: 634-3398 for' ALL of your electrical needs. FREE estimates. No job too large or too small. Unlimited [ license. Karl Osborne, Owner.1-3tfnOE ilNCOME TAX PREPARED by an Experienced■ Tax Preparer at Reasonable Rates. For an. appointment, call: Gene Hendrix at: 99B-5»45■ after 6 p.m.1-24-12tp hlNCOME TAX PREPARATION...For Fast EHiclent, Confidential service, call: Peggy Joyner, 4r3-SSS*. Greenhlll-Sanford Avenue _________________________ 1-24tfnPJ I'HOMEOWNERS tN SU R AN ^ is'expenslve. Get your money's worth. Call Larew-Wood- Johnson for a computer quote from eight different Insurance companies. 634-6284 or 1- 000-255-7777.1-24-tfnLWJ r NEW HOME B lilLT ON YOUR LOT...- Completely finished quality homes. Prices Starr under $M,000 Low down payment. Ex­cellent financing. No points or closing costs. Call NOW...1-800-722-7000, Ext. 1797.2-14-HnAFH I FOR ELECTRICAL WIRING & REPAIR...for residential and commercial, call: 284-2785. Electric Control Service, Cooleemee, N.C. Buck Smltherman. mgr.2-212tpBS I SERVICES...Taxes prepared by an experienced public accountant. Fast and personable ser­ vice off Hwy. 801 on Underpass Road, Ad­ vance, N.C. Call today...Betty Cornatier at 998- 2-2e2tnp-BC ■ t r u c k LETTERING...! Day Service. Call for FREE quotes. All work GUARANTEED. Ted’s Signs, 1417 Alexander Street, Statesville, N.C. Phone: 872-0038.2-2e6tp-TS IfffM WORLD DAY OF PRAYER M A R C H 1 ST WANTED Sewing Machine Operators SKILLED OR WILL TRAIN A pplications will be accepted on Tuesdays and Wednesdays ONLY from 8 a.m. till 4 p.m. W o n d e r k n i t / S c o r e b o a r d Milling Road Mocksville, N.C. 704-634-5991 E.O.E. M /F II SHEEKAtii» iREAin m l P.O. Box 903 Highway 158 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 n m m m m m t t C a l l Jim Sheek, Auctioneer L ie. & BONDED fc^NCAL 924»NCRL 40328 APARTMENT - FOR RENT SENIOR CITIZENS: Final appllpatlons are being taken for 1 bedroom apartments In Senior Citizens Housing Complex In Mocksvllle. Rent based on Inconie. For In­formation call A34 2005 or write; Mock Place, P.O. Box 690, Mocksvllle N.C. 27028. Equal Housing Opportunity. 11-29tfn-MP APARTMENTS: Applications are being taken for a 1 bedroom apartment designed for a tiandlcapped Individual. Rent based on In­ come. For information call; 634-2005 or write: Mock Place, P.O. Box 690, Mocksvllle, N.C. 11-29ffnMP CLEANING BOOER'S KAR KLEEN, Rt. 3, AAocksvilie, r?:c. 25 years of experience In auto reconditioning. We clean: Engines, interiors. Wax or Polish and dye vinyl fops. Call 998-3189 or 998-3159 for an appointment. Ann and Jack Boger. Owners and Operators. 7.7MnBK HELP WANTED; Now accepting appllcafioni for cooks and waitresses at Waffle House, 2413 Lewlsvlile-Clemmons Road. Experience helpful, but not necessary. Apply weekdays between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. Must be 18 or over. NOW ACCEPTING APPLlCATIONS...Some immediate openings. No experience necessary. Apply In person only to: P. K. Foods, inc., Rt. 3, Peoples Creek Road (Off 801 South), Advance, N.C. 27006.2-212tnpPKF HELP WANTED: Respiratory Therapy Technician...Position, first and second shifts, and part-time. Mechanical ventilators, ABG's, PFP's. Very active department...looking for credentialed and non-credentialed therapist. Call: Tom McMillan, RRT, at: (704 ) 634-1546. Davle County Hospital, Mocksville. 2-282tnp-TM HELP WANTED: REGISTERED NUR. SES...FUII time position available on Medical Surgical Unit. Part-time positions available on OB-GYN and CCU. Contact Personnel Dept., Davle County Hospital, Mocksville, N.C. (704) 634-3546. EEOC. 2-38ltnp-DCH HELPWANTED: PART-TIME PERSON to take inventory In Mocksville and Cooleemee Stores. Daytime hours. Car necessary. Write your phone number and experience to: ICC, Box 527, Paramus, N.J. 07653. 2-2B2tnp HELP WANTED-Full time position in Clem­ mons. Must be able to work weekends. Mechanical experience helpful. Call: 766-7371. 2-28lfnpCCW NEEDED IM M E D IA TE LY ... / Avon Representatives in this area. Start im ­ mediately. Call: (704) 492-57(U, Wednesday, from 6 p.m. until B p.m. 2-28ltnp-SD Instruction Tractor Trailer Driving Careers CHARLOTTE TRUCK DRIVER SCHOOL Hwy. 16N. Charlotte, N.C. Toll Free 1-800-222-4161 or 1-704-393-3000 HOMES FOR RENT FOR RENT: Nice home in Cooleemee with 2 bedrooms. Call: 634-3855 after 6 p.m. 2-28ltnpGP FOR RENT: 2 Bedroom Mobile Home. Nice. On a private lot. Cali after 6 p.m. 99 8 87 07. _____________________________________________2-281IP ANIMALS MUST SELLIll Beautiful AKC Registered Golden Retriever pups. Shots and vwrmed. S75.00 or best offer. Call: 284 4381 or 634-2326. 2-28ltp FOR SALE: AKC Siberian Husky Pups. Beautiful Black and White markings. Wormed and shots. S125.00 each. Call: 996-3409. 2-28ltnp-PM FIESORT PROPERTY FOR RENT FOR RENT: 2 bedroom condominium, beach front, North Myrtle Beach. Available weekly or weekends. Rent locally and save. Call Bill Poster at 634-2141.2-14 tfn FOR RENT: Beach Cottage at South Myrtle...2 Bedrooms plus bunks and sofa, air condition, color TV, near Ocean. $40.00 per nlght l265.00 per week. Call: 634-3875 or 634-3650.____________________ 2-28tfn-WL LAND FOR SALE FOR SALE: 74 Acres...Priced to Sell. 9 miles N.W. Mocksvllle, 1,400 ft. paved frontage S.R. 1317. Mostly cleared, stream. Long-term owner financing. Suitable for part-time farm, country homeslte. Phone 634-2159. 8:30 a.m. • 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 2-28 3tnpFCS FOR SALE: $2.33 acrts...Priced to Sell. 9 miles N.W. Mocksvllle, BOO ft. paved frontage on S.R. 1^0. Approximately 2o acres cleared. Long­ term owner financing. Good country homeslte and part-time farm. Phone: 634-2159, 6:30 a.m. • 5 p.m., Monday thru Friday.2-28 3tnp-FCS BEGINS MISCELLANEOUS MARCH 20 " m o bile h6 mes FOR SALE WICKS...WICKS.,.WICKS...For all brands of Kerosene Heaters. Complete Heater Service aisol WESTERN AUTO. Inc., Mocksville Store. Phone: 634-2371.2-143IPWA FOR SALE: Formal d r*u slit 3. Good aiNEW , Worn only cnt tim t. A 0 0 0 0 Bargain. Call: 434-20S.2-3s1tp-WP FOR SALE: A Green Vinyl Recilner with Vibrator. <75.00. Call: 998-4968. 2 28ltp-GM WEIGHT LOSS BREAKTHROUOHl The Grapefruit Diet Plan with DIadix. Medically proven results available. AT DAVIE DISCOUNT DRUGS, Cooleemee. N.C. 2-283tpCD FOR SALE...LEE'S MOBILE HOM^S;..Road 1923, Norwood, N.C. 14x70 Mobile Home. S10.999.00 or 24X60, I1 7,m v0 0. 7 days fill Sun-. down. Call 704 474-J741. •_____________________________— BEST PRICES ON MOBILE H0MES...14 X 70...- 3 bedrooms, 2 boths. $10,995. 24 X 40 Mobile Home S13.995. GOOD SELECTION OF USED HOMES. DAVIDS MOBILE HOMES. HWY. 52. Norwood. N.C. Call: (704) 474-5512. \ 8-9.tfnDMH HOME FOR LEASE WANTED WANTED: To Buy or Lease...Tobacco pound allotments. Call: 998-3163.2-14-3tp WANT TO LEASE...1 to lo acres of land in Davie County for corn or hay. Cali: 634-5090.2-:eitp-JW HOUSE FOR LEASE...3 Bedroom Brick house with full basement and carport. Lease with or without option to BUY. References and deposit required. ALSO a room for rent to a gen­ tleman. References required. Cali: 284-2688 or 284-2433. 2-28ltp-LT WANTED EMPLOYMENT NURSINO ASSISTANT...WIII do private smino In the home. Have had 5 years Experience. Cali: 6 3 4-2864. 2-282tp-CP Vegetable Transplant Regulations Are Explained to meet North Carolina's standards. Diseases like black rot of cabbage CHILD CARE EXPERIENCED MOTHER will take care ol vour children. References available. Contact; A. Diesel, 739 North Main Street, Mocksvllle, N.C. or call; M4-51S0.2.2Bltnp-AD HOMES FORSAlF " HOUSE FOR SALE...InMocksvllle.2 Bedrooms, 1 Bath, living room with partial basement and MOREl Hardison Street Near South Davle Jr. High School. S]i,500.00. Call; 634.34M. 2-21 3tpLM HOUSE FOR SALE BY “bW NER...l'/i Story home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, living room with fireplace, den, kitchcn, and utility room. Spiral staircase to upstairs. Recently remodeled. Heat pump. Fenced backyard. Garage with workshop. "M ove-ln" condition, Very Nice. Call; 634-3921 alter 11 a.m. 2-282tpCM WRAY'S HOMES HWY. 6 Lexington. Take Southmont Ext. lust off new 1-65 H mile South In tront of Jr. Order Home) Septic tank In­ stalled with all new homes. Guaranteed lowest prices on Fleetwood and Redman doublewldes. Contact Tim Wray, 704-352.7153.2-28ttn-TW Individuals, brokers, or dealers who intend to transport vegetables transplants into North Carolina during the 1985 growing season for commercial purposes should be aw are of the vegetable plant regulations and understand their real intent, said state Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham. The regulations, administered by the N orth C arolina D epartm ent of A griculture’s P lan t Industry Division, were designed to ensure that tran sp lan ts purchased by North Carolina growers for their vegetable production operations meet certain standards in regard to freedom from diseases and insects. “Anyone who brings vegetable transplants into North Carolina for personal use, resale, or distribution to others should insist that the plants be property certified in the state of origin, making sure the variety has been indicated in the inspection certificate and a cer­ tificate is attached to each con­ tainer of plants,” Graham stated. The certificate indicates that trained regulatory personnel have inspected the plants and found them Social Security Q & A My husband gets Social Security disability benefits. Will our daughter’s monthly payments stop if she gets m arried? Yes. Benefits for a child of a disabled worker always end if the child m arries. This event must be reported right away. I have been getting Social Security disability benelits since I was injured in an accident about 10 years ago. I’m now almost 65. Will I need to apply again to get retirem ent benefits? No. Your disability benefits will he autom atically converted to retirem ent benefits when you reach li.'i. At that time you will be sent instructions defining your new rights and responsibilities, which will be different from what they are now. I’ve been getting disability benefits for about 5 years. Although gotten any try working my condition hasn’t better. I’d like to because I need the money. If I do find some kind of job, what will happen to my disability benefits? If you do take a job you should notify Social Security. People who return to work before there is im­ provement in their medical con­ dition may be eligible for a trial work period. During this t)-monlh period they test their ability to work while they continue to receive disability benefits. Of course, if your attem pt to return to work is unsuccessful and you are still scv.crely disabled benefits will continue. W A N T E D U V E S T O C K A.L Beck & Sons yvinston>Salem Whosale Meat We Buy Cows & Bulls 6 Days A Week We Will Kill & Process Your Locker Beef CONTACT: A.L. Beck Jr. Route 1 Thom asvllle Call Collect Anytime Winston-Salem 91 9-788-9008 or 788-7524 Phone After 6 P.M. or Early A.M. 919-476-6895 Ray's TV Now offering service to Oavie County residents. We service all ma|or brands. We offer pick-up and delivery service, plus inhome servicing. Residents on (704) ex­ change may call at no extra cost. Phone: 998- 3403 for service or appointments. Shop No. is (919) 7656284. Located at 1337 Jonestov^n Road, Winston-Salem. N.C. 27103, beside Little League ball park. 998-3403 or 765-6284 Buy now and be ready for the cold weather just around the corner! PHONE 284-2226 REBUILT STARTERS & ALTERNATORS «24.95For Am erican Cars W ith Trade In $34.95 W ith Internal Regulator Boger Texaco Service 185 N. Main Street M ocksvllle, N.C. NEW AND USED OFFICE FURNITURE ★ Safes ★Files ★ Fire Proof Files ■f!9fffln0f(iteFyrnitnf9 11 • N. Main Street Salisbury, N.C. Phone 636>6022 NOTICE Ads appearing in the classified columns of this newspaper are $3.00 for just 25 words if paid for in advance by U a.m . Thursday mornings. All such classified ads not paid for by 11 a.m . Thursday at which time tliey will be transferred to an account to be billed, will be charged at the rate of $4.00 for Just 25 words. All ads not paid for within 30 days will have 10 percent service charge added to the total. All ads in excess of 25 words will be charged at the rate of 10 cents per word. , , , Deadline for accepting classified ads In 2 p.m. Tuesday of the week to be run. and bacterial leafspot of pepper may be carried to a field on infected transplants. Certification can help reduce the chance th at this will liappcn. If anyone buys certified plants that appear to be diseased, he should contact the Plant Protection Section, as it could indicate an improper use of certification tags. Pepper transplant importers should also be aw are of additional special regulations that require that they notify the Plant Protection Section of their intent to import plants. On the notification form, the im porter lists the nam e of the out- of-state source and other general inform ation. This provides the additional information needed to ensure that the plants are under an inspection program in the state of origin and that Regulatory per­ sonnel pay special attention to detectionof pests of m ajor concern to North Carolina when they inspect the plants. A bacterial leafspot di.seasc epidemic three years ago was a m ajor reason for adoption of the notification regulation, which was requested by pepper growers themselves. “ Bringing diseased or insect- infested plants into a production area isn’t only a concern for the im porter but for his neighbors", Graham said. A dditional inform ation and notification forms can be obtained from the N.C. D epartm ent of Agriculture, Plant Division, Plant Protection Section, P.O. Box 27647, Raleigh 27C11 (919) 733-6930. Forms will also be available through County Extension Offices. YARD SALES Gar ag e sales _________'FLEA m a r k e ts FLEA MARKET...Friday and Saturday, March 1 & 2, e a.m. until ? at "Trash end Treasure" Store on 6o1 South, across from the school but garage. Lawn mowers, oil drums, single bed. chairs, doll house, and odds and ends...*'TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION." Come on out and BROWSE aroundl BIG YARD SALE....EVERY SATURDAY at the BIxby Church of the Living God fellowship hall. Cornatzer Road, Advance. Sausage biscuits, ham biscuits, hot dogs, hamburgers, coffee and drinks w ill be available. Lots of Crafts and miscellaneous Items, all priced cheap to sell. Proceeds lor the churchi BIG. BIG YARD AND BAKE SALE...Spon»ored by SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH, Depot Street, Mocksvllle. Support Ihe church with your patronage. Saturday, March 2. from 9 a.m. until 7?? In the fellowship hall. Donations of any type will be gratefully accepted. Proceeds will be used for the building fund. "A LITTLE BIT OF EVERYTHING." YARD SALE...Saturday, March 2, from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the hnme of Rayford Hendrix on Pinevllie Road. Lots of Boys and Girls clothes, dishes, toys, and MUCH MOREl 11 Cancelled If raining. ■ f d i '1 u CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING and MEAT PROCESSING 6 DAYS A WEEK We also have fresh meats available Thurs., Tri. & Sat. Also sugar cured coun' try hams for sale. OHNSON MEAT PROCESSING Ray L Johnson Ilwy. 901, Harmony, 28634 Phone 704-546-7453 LOOKING FOR A HORSE? ' WHY NOT ADOPT ONE? For details, write: Bureau of Land Management 350 S. Pickett Street Alexandria, Virginia 22304 ! A public service of this publication. Cline's Paint and Car Clean We Offer Excellent Work at Reasonable Prices ★ WASH AND WAX ★ STEAM CLEAN ENGINESi ★ CLEAN INTERIORS Also Offering: Farm Tractors and Automobile Painting" Call anytime for an appointment Phone 492-5278 store Front - Auto Glass Installed - Storm Doors & Windows - Canopies B & B GLASS & MIRROR Route 1 Box 25-3 Mocksvllle, North Carolina 27028 FREDDIE BREWER Owner Telephone - 634-3966 HOURS: 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Monday-l-riday Closed Saturday Circulation [Apartment P.O. Box 525 H'^odcsville, M.C. 2702B (Check applicable bOK) MNorth Carolina.. .. . $15.00 M Out of State_____ 20.00 tlSchool Sub. In North Carolina........$10.00 MSchool Sub-’ out of state'...............$15.00 NAME- ADDRESS- CITY--------_L STATE.-Z IP . TELEPHONE. M V I B C O U N T Y MOCKSVXLLB; ir: C. 27028 i: I ! I !■I !' ! I I I.. I I I !i i I 14B-DAV1E COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985 G o l d E A R R IN G S r in g s A T U N H E A R D O F P R IC E S O F F C a s h A n d C a r r y O n l y ! N O C H E C K S - N O C H A R G E Good Selection To Choose From BUY NOW FOR EASTER - MOTHER'S DAY - GRADUATION - ANNIVERSARIES - BIRTHDAYS FATHER’S DAY - CHRISTMAS DURING OUR GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE