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2020-11! CS3 : CO ' rn ! O ! cn ! oo Chester’s Quilts Saturday sale to help man with new-found hobby Page 7 DAVIE Who’s in the stands? Davie High deciding attendance at sporting events Page BI UNTY E NTE RPRI/EHlI EC OR D USPS 149-160 Number 45 Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 Former Yadkinville police chief takes interim job here Tim Parks By Mike Bamhardt Enterprise Record Tim Parks wants the Mocks­ ville Police Department to be the best it can be. He started his job as inter­ im police chief on Monday. He is the former chief of the Yad­ kinville Police Depart­ ment. “I don’t have any ven­ dettas Parks said. “I just want to come down here and help.” That lack of a vendetta is one of the main reasons Interim Town Manager Lynn Trivette picked Parks for the job. He will work with current chief. Pat Reagan, until Reagan’s re­ tirement on E>ec. 1. Then he will work with the new town manager on hiring a permanent chief. Trivette said the town board hopes to pick the new manager early in 2021. Parks said he has no intention of filing for the permanent po­ lice chief job. He, along with former Mocksville chief. Jack Keller, have agreed to be on a committee to help the new manager pick the new chief. “I thought it best to go out­ side (current police department employees) for the interim job for a clear opinion,” Trivette said. The department has been the object of contention among town board members for a cou­ ple of years. “Chief Parks brings a wealth of experience having served in the Yadkin County Sheriff’s Office for eight years, Yadkin­ ville Police Department in pa­ trol for seven years, and as po­ lice chief in Yadkinville for 20 years. Chief Parks retired from the Yadkinville Police Depart­ ment two years ago and has felt led to serve as the interim po­ lice chief here in Mocksville,” Trivette said. “Along with his lengthy p>o- lice career. Chief Parks brings a positive attitude, progressive leadership style, and a com­ munity approach with him to Mocksville. The staff can ex­ pect a smooth transition with little disruption to the services we have already established,” Reagan said. “I will work hard with the community and our leaders to keep Mocksville moving in a positive direction,” Parks said. “I’m a people person and that goes a long way. If the commu­ nity knows you and can talk to you, that’s an asset to the po­ lice department.” Parks and wife Angela have one adult son, who is also in law enforcement. i”. ? ■■ 24 PAGES Interim Mocksville Town Manager Lynn Trivette wel­ comes Interim Police Chief Tim Parks to town. - Photo by Robin Snow High-speed internet coming to rural April Ervin spends much of her time in her room at her parent’s house in Advance as she is being treated for Lyme Disease. - Photo by Robin Snow Feeling lymie Saturday BBQ to benefit woman suffering from Lyme Disease What Benefit BBQ for April Ervin; $5 sandwiches, $15/lb. When Saturday, Nov. 7 Time 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Where NC 801 S., Bermuda Run Tickets feelinglymie@gmail.com, 336-575-4754 By Mike Bamhardt Enterprise Record ADVANCE - April Ervin looks like a healthy, happy 35-year-old woman. But looks can be deceiving. The Advance resident - after years of treatment for a variety of conditions - has been diag­ nosed with chronic lyme dis­ ease. And while it was gratify­ ing to finally have confidence in a doctor’s diagnosis - the PleaHe See Lyme - Page 5 By Jeanna Baxter White Davie County Economic Development Commission “Access to high-speed inter­ net is a cornerstone of prosper­ ity, and unfortunately, many of America’s rural communities lack access to this critical in­ frastructure, said U.S. Depart­ ment of Agriculture Deputy Under Secretary for Rural De­ velopment Bette Brand. “Connecting America’s rural communities to this essential infrastructure is one of the US­ DA’s top priorities because we know that when rural America thrives, all of America thrives.” She. was sp)eaking during a grant award ceremony at Yad­ kin Valley Telephone Member­ ship Corporation headquarters in Yadkinville last week. Yadtel Telecom received a $2.3 million Reconnect Pro­ gram grant from the USDA to deploy a fiber-to-the-premis- es network to businesses and residences without 10/1 Mbps internet service. This invest­ Davie’s COVID Numbers Nov. 7 Report Total cases Recovered Active cases Deaths ment will allow the company to lay another 70 miles of fi­ ber connecting 5,686 people, 67 farms, and 18 businesses to high-speed broadband internet in Davie, Yadkin, and Iredell counties. The 2020 pandemic has ac­ centuated the gaps in the dig­ ital divide between rural and urban Americans. Studies indi­ cate that • 75,000 students in rural ar­ eas of North Carolina have no access to broadband; and • rural Americans are 24 per­ cent more likely to have chil­ dren who are unable to partic­ ipate in online learning, while the parents are unable to work from home. "We are here today because 21 million people lack con­ nection to high-speed internet and 80 percent of those people live in rural communities. In this day and age, all Americans need this modem robust infra­ structure to thrive. It is a neces­ sity and not an amenity. Please See Yadtel - Page 4 807 730 56 {6 in hospitef) 12 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - 3 2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 Editorial Pa^e Don’t let pandemic stop you from honoring veterans In The Mail... NHS students deserve recognition Martha Washington a gracious first First Lady What do you say to Harold Frank of Cornatzer, the Da­ vie man who went through hell in a German prisoner of war camp during World War 11? What do you say to Craig Hanes, the Smith Grove man who went through his own kind of hell floating aimlessly on an overcrowded raft in the Pacific Ocean after his ship was hit by a torpedo during World War n? Thank you just doesn’t seem like enough. Every year on Veterans Day, which falls next Wednesday, we would proudly attend local ceremonies which these two men at­ tended. It was an honor to shake their hands. It was an even bigger honor that they both called me a friend. With ceremonies going virtual this year, those hand­ shakes won’t happen. But it shouldn’t stop us from thank­ ing them and all other veterans. We don’t have to agree ■with all of the wars and conflicts our country gets into, but we damn sure should agree that all of the men and women who bravely put on a uniform of the United States Military • are treated with respect. Here are some ways you can help. If you personally know a veteran, call them, write them, ■ send them an email. Ask them about their time in the mili- tary, most will gladly re-tell a story - usually a very in­ teresting story. Ask where they served, where they were stationed and what tasks they performed. Don’t know a veteran? Write a thank you card, or cards, and drop them off at a VA center or local veterans service office. Go to church? Make sure all of the veteran graves in that church’s cemetery have a small American flag flying on Veterans Day. Check with those veterans service offices and VA hospi­ tals, they will have ideas on how you can volunteer - things such as driving a disabled veterans to the doctor, doing yard work, or simply running errands. Find a reputable cause that supports veterans, and make a donation. Many of our local World War II veterans went on “honor flights” to see their monument in Washington, D.C. because grateful Americans donated. Display the American Flag proudly and correctly. Be sure to look up flag etiquette so you are properly honoring our country and our veterans. Read the poem, “In Flanders Fields” by John McCreae. In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row. That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fiy Scarce heard amid the guns below. To the editor: On Tuesday, Oct. 27, Davie High School held an induc­ tion into the National Honor Society for 43 juniors and se­ niors. Probably some of you didn't know that as it was not widely publicized. In fact, some of the high school teachers didn't even know until the next day. The NHS induction was held inside the high school building at 5:30 p.m. No one was allowed to attend, not even one parent. This was a momentous event in the life of the students who were being inducted. You might say that it was a pret­ ty big deal - a once-in-a-lifetime event even. One which will never happen again. Since no one was allowed to at­ tend, there were no pictures taken of the students receiving their certificates of induction. That moment in time was stolen from the inductees and is gone forever, like a thief in the night. Apparently the school administrators didn't think it was a big deal because the certificate given to the student had only their name on it. There was a place for the date as well as the place where the ceremony took place, but that was left blank. I spoke via telephone with Davie High principal, Mr. Doyle Nicholson, and expressed my concern about the lack of parental attendance at the NHS induction. He put the blame on Covid-19. I suggested that perhaps it could have been handled much like graduation was this past May. Covid-19 was a factor then as it continues to be now. Mr. Nicholson was not receptive to that idea and advised that graduation was so expensive and time consuming and it just couldn't be done for the NHS induction. Our conversa­ tion turned into a screaming match. I don't remember ex­ actly who hung up on who. We're talking 43 students. How expensive and time consuming could it be to put a table outside to hold the cer­ tificates, have the students come forward when their name was called, receive their certificate, and then turn toward their parents who would be driving by with a camera to snap a picture of their child receiving such a prestigious honor? An honor which hapjjened on Oct. 27, 2020, and will never happen again. A one-time-only event at Davie High School for these 43 students. An event which is now history, not documented in the family album by even one picture. I was reminded by Mr. Nicholson that it was live- streamed. Well, yes it was. However, the student could not be seen actually receiving their certificate. The only thing one could see was the student walking in front of the camera for about 1 second as they were on their way out of the building. Obviously, there was no thought at all about camera placement. Guess that would have been too expen­ sive and time consuming as well. In closing I want to say that I feel that the 43 Davie High School National Honor Society inductees of 2020 were given the short end of the proverbial stick. I, for one, am proud of and congratulate each and every one of you for a job very well done. Keep up the good work. Mona Potts Advance The Literary Corner Renegade Writers Guild VVfe are the Dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow. Loved and were loved, and now we lie, -In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die -We shall not sleep, though poppies grow Tn Flanders fields. ~ Find a book or website that tells something you don’t Icnow about our military personnel and the sacrifices they made for us. Read it. Learn it. Pass the information along Jo someone who is younger. J And if you do see a veteran on this Veterans Day - or •any other day for that matter - at the very least, thank them 4br their service. Give them a fist bump or elbow bump or handshake, whatever you are comfortable doing. Just let them know you care for them, and you appreciate their willingness to do what it takes to keep our country free. If you really want to thank a veteran, be the kind of American who is worth fighting for. Think about that one for a minute. It has nothing to do with politics. It has noth­ ing to do with race. It has nothing to do with religion. Actu­ ally, it has something to do with all three of those things. In America, because of our veterans, we are free to vote for whomever we want. In America, because of our veterans, the white man and the black man - and all of those in be­ tween - have the opportunity to succeed. And in America, because of our veterans, we are free to worship the God of our choice. “America with her soldiers would be like God without his angels.” Claudia Pemberton - Mike Bamhardt DAVIE COUNTY USPS 149-160 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Salisbury Newsmedia LLC Robin Snow..........................................General Manager Mike Bamhardt...................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow.......................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts..............................................Sports Editor Mocksville Enterprise Davie Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 75 Cents $32.03 Per Year In Davie County POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to: Davie County Enterprise Record -t P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 > Built to Inst By Marie Craig In early times there were two newspapers in Mocksville. The Davie Record was for Republicans, and the Mocks­ ville Enterprise was for Democrats. All the newspapers, back to 1898, are online on the website of Davie County Public Library. Click on Martin-Wall History Room and then click on newspapers to access. In searching for my grandmother’s obituary in the two Davie County newspapers of 1934, I found an advertise­ ment for Hotel Atlantan, Comer Luckie and Cone Streets in Atlanta. There was a sketch of the nine- story hotel. It was described thus: “3CX) rooms, 300 baths, new beds, new baths, new car­ pets, new decorations — A new and better hotel for less money than ever before. “Room Rates: per day, $1.50 up; parlor suite, $5.00 up. “Auto Storage and parking immediately adjacent to the hotel. “Cafe Rates: Good food as you like it! Breakfast, Dinner or Supper — 25 cents to 50 cents.” This is very difficult to understand in 2020. Less than two dollars for a hotel room. I know about inflation, but this is crazy. Is the building still there? I used Google Maps on my computer and looked to see what occupies that spot now. Street View feature shows a current image of Holiday Inn Express and Suites. It appears that the same structure is still there; it has the same number of floors; the ratio of width to depth seems the same; and the same penthouse shape is evident. The exterior has been modernized but it seems like this old building was built really well to last this long. Using Google search for Atlantan Hotel showed me an old postcard with a photograph of the hotel. Ebay had a postcard also. Pretending that I wanted to book a room, I found the current Website. No rooms are available until April. One night at this location costs $427.01. It is in the heart of downtown Atlanta within walking distance of many desir­ able entertainments and sites. Messages resulting from this old ad: somebody chose the correct location of a hotel back in the 30s; it was well-built; “if you build it, they will come”; and maybe this could be the location of a time-travel story or book. Nursing Notes By Gaye Hoots I was employed as a nurse from 1980 when I graduated from the program at Forsyth Tech and passed state boards, until 2006 when I retired. While working, I completed a BSN and MSN degree. Most of my career was spent in psychiatric nursing, which was my preference. Both the medical and psychiatric units were frequently short-staffed, and one of the changes I had hoped to see was parameters established for the number and acuity of patients assigned to nurses. The rule of thumb left the responsibility on the individ­ ual nurse to ask for help if she could not manage, but the other nurses were usually carrying the same patient load. If yoil came on duty and refused an assignment you were fired. The acute care units were usually staffed adequately but the general fioor was often overwhelmed. This is true today, and from what my daughter, who has a BSN, tells me perhaps even more so, and still no param­ eters. There have been improvements made with the medi­ cations being dispensed by the pharmacy and individually packaged for each patient. When I gave meds, they were stored in a med room and we dispensed from large bottles to med cups for each patient. We also had to take verbal orders from the doctor, often over the phone, and if an error was made, it fell on the nurse. Now th*'doctors are required enter the orders into the computer and the nurse reads the order before she dispense.s it. This eliminates chances for error. Patients often expressed appreciation and gave positive feedback, but nursing sujjervisors gave little praise. Most communication was focused on how to improve your per­ formance. I once remarked to a friend that one or two er­ rors could cost you your license and that I didn’t know of any other profession like that. Forgetting he was an air traf­ fic controller. He said. “Well, if I let two small planes hit each other even once, my career is over.” I enjoyed most of my experience as a nurse, especially the teaching aspects and would choose nursing again. My hope is that improvements will be made, but the industry, like all others, is money driven. Decisions are made by administrators with a business degree looking at profit, or lack of it, as the bottom line. When you have loved ones in the hospital, it is best to have someone stay with them until you are sure they are getting the needed care. This may not be possible with our present guidelines for CO VID. If your health is impaired, I would urge you to err on the side of caution and not expose yourself to the public. There are varying views on CO VID, and as I am writ­ ing this in a coffeeshop to have internet access, I have heard several views expressed. One young healthy-looking man stated he was not going to live his life in fear, and he believed the death figures were skewed. He stated that Medicare and Medicaid paid an extra 20% for patients di­ agnosed with CO VID. I have no idea if there is any truth to this. Others said they are tired of it all and willing to take their chances, believing it was no worse than the flu. Some were masked and exited as soon as their orders were filled seeking to keep their distance. I am 75 years old and healthy, but I wear my mask for myself and for others. I do go to restaurants where the ta­ bles are distanced and the staff is masked. All our systems are flawed, and we have to assume responsibility for our­ selves. Only a Bruise By Julie Terry Cartner It was only a bruise. Except, maybe it wasn’t. When De­ tective Brent first noticed the lady, nothing seemed amiss. Then two things happened, almost simultaneously. She reached up on the top shelf for a requested item, and the sleeve of her T shirt slid up towards her shoulder, reveal­ ing a small oval shaped bruise. He probably still wouldn’t have noticed, but immediately, shamefacedly, she looked around to see who was watching and quickly pulled the sleeve back in place, hiding the bruise. He wondered, if he pulled the sleeve back up, would there be four matching fingerprint bruises on the opposite side of her arm? Would peering under the scarf around her neck reveal more bruising? Detective Brent took the oath, to serve and protect, seriously. Conscience warred with conunon sense. She s not asking for help — the opposite, in Please See Renegade - Page 3 Letters Welcome The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read­ ers on topics of local, state, national or international is­ sues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space Letters should include the name and address of the writer and a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is requested. Have letters in the newspaper office no later than noon Monday of the week to be published. Enterprise RecordP.O. Box, 99, Mocksville, mikeJbamhardt® davie- enterprise .com By Betty Etchison West Cana/Pino Correspondent I have been asked sever­ al times to do a series of ar­ ticles about the First Ladies of the United States similar to those articles that I did concerning the Presidents. I looked at one of my bookshelves recently and among others saw these titles: “The First Ladies of the United States” by Margaret Brown and Alli- da Black; “Becoming” by Michelle Obama; “Spoken from the Heart” by Lau­ ra Bush; “First Lady from Plains” by Rosalynn Car­ ter; “Living History” by Hillary Rodham Clinton; “Bess Truman” by Marga­ ret Truman; “The Matri- arch-Barbara Bush and the Making of an American Dynasty” by Susan Page; “The Secret Lives of the First Ladies,” which did not contain much that was se­ cret; Life Magazine’s “First Ladies —Portraits of Grace and Leadership”. After see­ ing those titles and other smaller books which con­ tained information about all of the First Ladies, I decid­ ed that I could begin such a series. Martha Dandridge was bom in 1731 on a plantation in the Williamsburg area of Virginia, Even though she was bom into a well-to-do family, she only received a mdimentary education in academic subjects, but, like other young women of that era, she received training on how to mn a household and to care for a family. Martha also learned the so­ cial skills which were valu­ able to her in her later life. When Martha was 18, she met a wealthy old­ er widower who owned a large plantation and had George and Martha Washington and Martha’s grandchildren, George Washington (Wash) Curtis. Eleanor Parke (Nelly) Curtis and many slaves. They were married a fairly short time after they met. Martha and her husband, Daniel Parke Curtis, became the parent.s of four children; two of whom died in infancy. Dan­ iel Custis only lived eight years after he and Martha were married. Martha be­ came a wealthy young wid­ ow with two small children to raise and a large planta­ tion to manage. She arose to the task and did just that. She managed the plantation with it.s many slave.s and cared for her two remain­ ing children in an efficient manner. Two years after the death of her husband, Mar­ tha Custis met and mar­ ried a young man that she Renegade. Continued From Page 2 fact. If ever a woman were trying not to gamer any atten­ tion, she wa.s the one. Ducking her head down, Lydia continued to do her job — arranging shelves of merchandise, dusting, helping cus­ tomers, and generally trying to be an agreeable face in the store. She loved her job; the gentle interaction with people, the anonymity of helping when needed and fading into the background whenever possible. She noticed the pxjliceman; who wouldn’t? He looked kind, capable and strong. For a second she considered asking for help, but her husband’s threats echoed through her brain, 24/7. “If you tell anyone what goes on in our house, our home, you know what will happen, but let me remind you. That little boy, my son — you’ll never see him again. I’ll take him and disappear. You’ll have your freedom — but not your son. Choose wisely. You’re nothing to me.” She had no doubt he’d do as he said. After all, he’d fol­ lowed through with every other promise he’d made. Hadn’t he cut her off from her family? Hadn’t he systematically gotten rid of all her friends? Hadn’t he pushed her down the stairs last fall, terminating her pregnancy when the doctor had announced the baby was girl? “Don’t want no more fe­ males in my house. One is more trouble than she’s worth.” Then he’d told her he expected her to be “knocked up” with a boy within the next three months. When that hadn’t hapjjened, he’d gone into a rage, for­ getting himself and his self-imposed mles, striking her repeatedly in the face. She hadn’t been able to leave the house for three weeks, had to tell her boss she had a bad case of the flu. Without her paycheck for three weeks, the family had struggled to pay the bills and put food on the table. It broke her heart when Hank, their little boy, would cry, “I’m hungry. Mommy.” And her husband, instead of seeing how his actions had caused their struggle, blamed her. “If you’d do what you’re told. Hank wouldn’t be hun­ gry. It’s your fault.” “It’s your fault. It’s your fault. It’s your fault.” The words reverberated through her brain. If she didn’t obey her hus­ band, Hank would be hungry, and if she told, he’d take him and leave. And, if he didn’t have her to beat on, would he turn on Hank? The possibility was unthinkable. She had to keep quiet. She had to protect her son. Even with thoughts swirling through her brain like a cy­ clone, she didn’t miss the concerned looks she was getting from the detective. She couldn’t say anything. “Hello, I’m Detective Brent. Is everything all right?” Looking up into concerned brown eyes, she simply re­ plied, “Thanks, I’m fine,” as she continued arranging the display. “On average, nearly 20 people per minute are physically abused by and intimate partner in the United States. During one year, this equates to more than 10 million women and men.” National Statistics Domestic Violence Fact Sheet “An average of about 716,000 instances of nonfatal domestic violence were reported to police each year, and about 582,000 instances went unreported.” Crime and Jus­ tice ^ews May 3, 2017 met at a cotillion, George Washington. Some writers indicate that George Wash­ ington was attracted by Martha Custis’ wealth, but other writers indicate they cared deeply for each other. George and Martha moved to the plantation called Mount Vernon where they lived the rest of their lives except while George served his country as Commander of the Continental Army and while he was President of the United States. The colonists became more and more disturbed by the taxes imposed on them by England and be­ cause of other grievances; in fact, they became so enraged that they declared war on England. George Washington answered the call of his country and became the Commander of the Continental Army. Martha spent most of her time managing their plan­ tation with its many slaves, but when the troops went into winter quarters, Mar­ tha would go and stay W'ith the General. While they were in winter quarters at Valley Forge, Martha lived there with George and was terribly upset by the fact that the soldiers were so poorly clothed and fed. She did everything she could to alleviate their suffering. She and other women who she got to help patched the soldiers’ clothes and knitted them warm socks and scarves. One regiment appreciated what Martha had done for them so much that they called themselves "Lady Washington’s Dra­ goons” according to “Life” magazine’s book. The Con­ tinental Army managed to defeat the British Army, The Revolutionary War was over and there was great joy among the colonisLs be­ cause they would no longer have to bow to the edicts of the King of England, Mar­ tha was happy when vic­ tory was achieved because George was then able to re­ turn to Mount Vernon. That period of domes­ tic tranquility did not last long enough to suit Martha. After the new government was formed, George was elected President of the United States. Once again Washington left the place he loved to serve his coun­ try. Though she hated to say good-by to Mount Vernon, Martha moved with George to New York, the site of the first Capitol. Martha did not really like New York, but she performed the duties befitting the First Lady of the land in a gracious man­ ner. It seems lucky that Martha Washington was the first First Lady. She en­ tertained in a gracious man­ ner - having the dinners and receptions which she and her husband thought were important, and she was able to handle those situations with great aplomb. She did not get involved with political or governmental matters, but she established what seemed like an appro­ priate role for the wife of the President of the United States. The seat of government moved from New York to Philadelphia. That move pleased Martha. She was much happier in the new city because there were more people she knew there. After serving two four-year terms, Wash­ ington was asked to serve another term. He refused saying that eight years was enough. He and Martha were so happy to return to their beloved home. The book. First Ladies Who Called the White House Home by Beatrice Gormley quotes Martha as saying, “The General and I feel like children just released from school.” They were both so happy to be at home at last and hoped to spend many years together there. That was not to be. Just a little over two years after they returned, George got deathly ill and died. He was buried in an unpretentious grave at Mount Vernon. Some au­ thorities wanted him to be buried in Washington, D.C., the city named for him, but that was not hi.s or Martha’s wish so to this day his body rest in peace at Mount Vernon on the bank of the Potomac River in Virginia. After her husband’s death in 1799, Martha Washington was once again in charge of the plantation, but she did not seem to have the will to go on. Mar­ tha died about three years later in 1802 and was bur­ ied at Mount Vernon beside her husband. He’s 10 Last week’s article stat­ ed that Joseph Burchette, the son of Joe and Izzy Tutterow Burchette, had celebrated his 9th birthday at the Tutterow Bam. Jo­ seph, in fact, celebrated his 10th birthday. That was a big mistake if you are a 10 year old. FARM FRESH PORK A* Matml No ArttHdal bwa-aiNawti GRAIN FED REEF Jerry & Cindy Foster (336) 998-7175 YOU’RE INVITED TO A MEDICARE EVENT Learn more about Cigna Medicare Advantage plans. Join us to learn how Cigna Medicare Advantage plans offer all the coverage of Original Medicare plus added benefits such as; > $O or low monthly premiums > $O for many prescription drugs > Dental, vision and hearing benefits > Fitness programs > Telemedicine SATURDAYS WITH CIGNA - BAGELS, BISCUITS, AND BEIGNETS 10/31/20 9Wam McCafl Insurance Services 2511 Neudorf Road, Suite G Oemmons, NC 27012 TALK TO A LICENSED BENEFIT ADVISOR. David L. 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Enrollment in Cigna depends on contract renewal. 947361 © 2020 Cigna. Some content provided under license A_F_43 Y0036_21_87513_M g L--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---------------------L I ’ 1 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - 54 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Rural Development Bette Brand presents a $2.3 million grant to Yadtel to expand high­ speed broadband internet to unserved or underserved areas in Davie, Yadkin, and Iredell counties. - Photos by Jessica White Huyett NC Commissioner of Agriculture Steve Trox- ler believes that part­ nerships like these are a game-changer for ru­ ral North Carolina. Yadtel... Continued From Page 1 “If you have access to high-speed internet you can incorporate precision ag­ ricultural technology into your agri-business; you, your children, or grand­ children can participate in distance learning and still maintain their studies when schools remain closed; you can access life-saving medi­ cal services remotely using telemedicine; and you can continue to run your busi­ ness and keep your em­ ployees employed while working from home,” said Brand. “Yadtel is setting a great example for the rest of the country right here in North Carolina. They are showing that no household, no busi­ ness, and no person should be left behind in this criti­ cal infrastructure develop­ ment.” “Yadtel Telecom is proud to be a premier provider of reliable, high-speed inter­ net.- We are committed in our - efforts as a partner in the - deployment of high­ speed broadband e-Connec- tivify to areas in local com­ munities that lack access to such critical infrastructure,” said Janet Culpepper, vice president of human re­ sources and public relations at Yadtel Telecom. “Yadtel is passionate about build­ ing essential infrastructure to meet the critical needs for high-speed broadband internet in either unserved and underserved rural com­ munities.” US Rep. Ted Budd, US Rep. Virginia Foxx, US Rep. Patrick McHenry, NC Sens. Joyce Krawiec and Vicki Sawyer, NC. Rep. Julia Howard, USDA Rural Development State Director Robert Hosford, and N.C. Commissioner of Agricul­ ture Steve Troxler were among the national, state, and local political represen­ tatives on hand for the an­ nouncement. During her speech, Foxx shared that she had received a letter from a fifth grader expressing his frustration over not having consistent internet service to do his school work. “Internet access is criti­ cal for all over the country, but particularly in rural ar­ eas. I appreciate what is be­ ing done at the local, state, and federal levels to make it available to everyone. I don’t want another fifth grader to have to write me a letter because they don’t have internet.” “I am really proud that our state has received this grant,” said Budd, who is also a Yadtel customer. “We realize that helping rural America thrive is really the bedrock for the great American comeback and I am glad that we can play a part in that.” “Things like this don’t just happen,” said Troxler. “It started with local people who understood what con­ nectivity really means. It took our Congress being able to step up for rural America. It took the De­ partment of Agriculture in Washington. And it took the Trump administration hav­ ing the wherewithal to un­ derstand what rural Amer­ ica really is. It has been a great partnership and one that has been a game-chang­ er. Every time we do this we are moving rural North Carolina forward. And ev­ ery time we do something for rural North Carolina we are doing something for the Ag businesses in North Carolina and we are moving North Carolina’s economy forward.” Hosford ended the pro­ gram by contrasting his in­ ternet access in Raleigh to that of a family he met in ru­ ral eastern North Carolina. “My little girl is in third grade. She and another little girl are homeschooling in the back of the house while I’m working in the front of the house and they can get their homework done just like that. “I was talking to the Chief of the Waccamaw-Siouan Tribe, who is also a Baptist preacher, owns a car fix-it shop, and is a single dad. He has to drive his child to the burger joint to do homework because he doesn’t have the internet yet where he lives. Just think about that, that’s a double whammy. The kid is sitting in the back seat with a Chromebook out, which isn’t really a conducive way to get educated and he has to take time away from preparing sermons or fixing cars which pays the bills. “Getting quality broad­ band into all of North Car­ olina’s 100 counties is a daunting task. Nevertheless, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time, one proj­ ect at a time, one $500,000 grant at a time, one $24 mil­ lion grant at a time. That’s how you get it out there and we are looking forward to being proud partners with this community and many others.” USDA Rural Develop­ ment provides loans and grants to help expand eco­ nomic opportunities and create jobs in rural areas. This assistance supports in­ frastructure improvements; business development; housing; community facili­ ties such as schools, public safety, and health care; and high-speed internet access in rural areas. For more information, visit www. rd.usda.gov. Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership Corporation is a member-owned non-profit cooperative founded in 1950 in the Piedmont area of western North Carolina. The company’s origin was a grassroots effort to provide telephone service to rural area.s deemed unprofitable by commercial telephone companies. Today, 70 years later, the mission ha,s ex­ panded to include bring­ ing high-speed broadband fiber internet to unserved rural areas. They proudly serve the residents of Yad­ kin, Davie, and portions of Alexander, Forsyth, Iredell, Rowan, and Wilkes coun­ ties. For more information, visit www.yadtel .com. USDA Rural Development State Director Robert Hosford, US Rep. Patrick McHenry, US Rep. Virginia Foxx, Yadtel CEO Mitzie Branon, USDA Deputy Under Secretary for Rural Development Bette Brand, N.C.Commissioner of Agriculture Steve Troxler, and US Rep. Ted Budd. I 1 U.S. Rep. Virginia Foxx thanks federal, state, and local officials for working to make this ex­ pansion possible. Confused? T&G, ShipLap. Rough Sawn, Dressed, Clear, Kiln Dried, Edge & Center Bead, Knotty, -Air Dried, C&Btr, Green, [HardwoodA Live Edge, MDO, Composite &LVL Map of the areas that will be receiving broadband internet through the USDA grant Call or Corn^l^...We’ll Clear it up for you! WE KNOW WOOD! Monday-Friday 7:30 - 5:30 Saturday 7:30 - 3:00 (704) 872-3148 lilshavers.com 3301 Salisbury Highway, Statesville, NC , 28677 interior anti'Exterior Pressure. ^Washing HUMCI iniwefl3738 FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED ME4T1M6, COOUMG, KSIOBmU:________SALES, setancB, utSTMjumaS^ I OA WC April Ervin talks about her journey with Lyme Disease. A benefit barbecue on her behalf will be held Saturday in Advance. - Photos by Robin Snow.'>: Lyme ... Continued From Page 1 treatment isn’t easy. And it’s expensive and not covered by insurance, either. On Saturday, members of Bethlehem United Meth­ odist Church are hosting a barbecue to benefit Er­ vin, who is trying to raise $80,000 up-front money for the treatment she hopes will some day allow her to have a family. That's on top of the thousands of dollars of medications she already take.s. Lyme disease is caused by a tick bite, and doctors think she may have been around age 10 when she was bitten. The problem - she didn’t know it at the time. She remembers getting really sick some eight year.s ago while visiting her broth­ er, a Navy officer stationed in San Diego, Calif. She wasn't eating, but was gain­ ing weight - a lot of weight. “The doctors said, ‘We don't know what’s wrong with you, but you need to go home to your family',” she said. It began a long list of doctors who diagnosed and treated the symptoms. Lyme disease mimmicks many other ailments, especially when infected for the long term such as Ervin. At one point, a doctor told her she had two weeks to live. She has suffered from rheumatoid arthritis, chron­ ic migraine headaches, heart damage, severe stomach is­ sues and allergies. “Nothing was getting bet­ ter,” she said. Then a friend asked if she had ever been tested for Lyme Disease. She hadn’t. No doctor had mentioned it. And when she would bring up the question, the doctors - one after another - would tell her she didn’t have Lyme Disease. “You’re fighting a system that isn't made for you.” Her mother helped find an integrative doctor, who started the first appointment with 19 pages of questions. She learned that her symp­ toms all could be traced back to Lyme. “The results indicated a long-term infection," she said. “Your system is so impacted. Nothing works. You're so sick and you can’t heal.” The Lyme infection led to others. The bacteria were so strong that traditional an­ tibiotics couldn't penetrate them. “I would feel like bugs were crawling all over me.” The bacteria typically hit the brain, joints and the gut. She suffers from all three. “It's crazy when you think about it,” she said. “Two doctors said I was bitten when I was about 10 years old.” Psyciatric problems are common, and Ervin hasn't been immune to that, ei­ ther. She has one friend who committed suicide, a more common trait among men. She remembers crying out of control while watching a cottage cheese commercial on television. Schizophre­ nia is often a result of the infection. “I wa.s normally a person with a ton of energy,” she said. Now, she looks for­ ward to having enough en­ ergy and a low enough pain level just to be able to walk to the mailbox. She had to quit her job. She no longer drives a ve­ hicle. She’s sick more often than not. There’s times she can't walk. “There were improve­ ments at times, but there was no longevity to it.” She loves photography, but can no longer hold a camera steady. She thinks the problem got worse in 2016 because of stress. She lost several close family members. “It’.s not just physical. It's a mental battle.” She’s overcoming that mental battle. She has a “feelinglymie” website with testamonials. “I feel like I have a mandate on my life to spread hope,” she said. ”1 feel that Christ's death wa.s not a lie. There is hopie.” She worked with troubled kids at a church in Wilkes­ boro, and had them write promises from God on their arms. “And 1 told them to write, April loves me.” “It's a mandate on my life to carry hope, to im­ part enough gratitude and to plant in people that there is hope.” Her issues worsened in the spring of 2020, when she went 17 days without eating. Nothing would stay down. Not even ice. It left her not wanting to eat, not wanting to even look at food. Her father, Gary, had a health issue. Her dog had died. She had hit rock bottom. “This is not worth it,” she thought. “How can I keep going?” A trip to see a worldwide specialist in Lyme Disease in Washington, D.C. offered hope - and the $80,CXX) nine- month treatment - much at the facility in Washington, and much more at home, where her mother - Jane Ann - will be her caretaker. Ervin has talked to oth­ ers who went through the treatment. “It’s incredibly expensive but it will change your life.” they told her. She remembers that first six- hour appointment. A doc­ tor gently touched her wrist in several places “My arm turned red in front of her. Then the rest of my sys­ tem turned red, I was itchy all over. All because she touched me.” Now, there are only 14 food.s - including spices - that Ervin can eat. For a while, she could only stom­ ach warm, blended foods. “Food has been a big prob­ lem for me.” But there’s hope. “I’m looking for the best quality of life I can have and a future to look forward to. I could start to get my life back.” She knows two of her goals, hiking the Appala­ chian Trail and running a marathon, likely won’t hap­ pen. But she could still have that family. And hope goes with her whereever she goes. “Hope” tattoo on Ervin’s wrist reminds her of her purpose. April Ervin knows she is fortunate to have her parents, Jane Ann and Gary Ervin, in her corner as she battle^ Lyme Disease. LIFETIME ★ Trustpilot WARRANTY □□□□□ "My only regret is that I wish I had known about LeafFilter sooner." -Doug L. .... ADDITIONALLY SENIOR & MILITARY DISCOUNTS THE FIRST 50 CALLERS WILL Receive CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE Promo Code: 285 Mon-Thurs: 8am-11 pm. 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Oct. 25: domestic distur­ bance, W. Chinaberry Ct., Mocksville; harassment. Cross St., Cooleemee; sus­ picious activity, Fred Lanier Road, Mocksville; larce­ ny, Liberty Church Road, Mocksville; assault, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; larceny, Becktown Road, Mocks­ ville; harassment, US 158, Bermuda Run; illegal dump­ ing, NC 801 S., Advance; domestic disturbance, US 601 N., Mocksville; suspi­ cious activity, NC 801 S., Mocksville; burglary, NC 801 S., Advance; domestic disturbance. Jasmine Lane, Mocksville. Oct. 26: domestic dis­ turbance, Wall St., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity. Fork Bixby Road, Advance; suspicious activity. Harper Road, Advance; damage to property, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, US 601 S.,Mocks­ ville; larceny. Buck Seaford Road, Mocksville; trespass­ ing, NC 801 S., Mocksville; damage to property. Wood­ ward Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 601 S., Mocksville; damage to property. Cross St., Coolee­ mee; trespassing, I 40 WB, Mocksville; suspicious pack­ age, Danner Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity. Pen Ct, Mocksville; suspicious activity. Wall Street, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity. Sain Road, Mocksville. Oct. 27: suspicious activ­ ity, Mocks Church Road, Ad­ vance; damage to property, US 601 N., Mocksville; do­ mestic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; fraud. Ford Trail, Mocksville; distur­ bance, Ralph Ratledge Road, Mocksville; domestic assist. Potters Ridge Drive, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity. Old Towne Drive, Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, US 158, Mocksville. Oct. 28: larceny. Green- hill Road, Mocksville; sus­ picious activity. Southland Way, Advance; domestic dis­ turbance, US 64 W., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, NC 801 S/, Advance; sus­ picious activity, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; fraud. Watt St/, Cooleemee; assault, Westview Ave/, Cooleemee; fraud, S. Main St., Mocks­ viUe; domestic disturbance. Thousand Trails, Advance; larceny. Country Lane, MocksviUe. Oct. 29: harassment, Kay Lane, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, McCallister Road, Mocksville; trespass­ ing, US 601 S., Mocksville; harassment, US 158, Bermu­ da Run; harassment, Merrells Lake Road, Mocksville; illegal dumping, Jerusalem Ave., Mocksville; suspi­ cious activity, Elberon Ct., Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, NC 801 S.; .domestic disturbance. Childrens Home Road, Mocksville; harass­ ment, Cana Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, NC 801 SJCherryhill Road, Mocksville; burglary, Pep­ perstone Drive, Mocksville. Oct. 30: larceny, NC 801 S., Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, US 158, Bermuda Run. Oct. 31: robbery, Dan­ iel Road, Mocksville; tres­ passing, Shadybrook Road, Mocksville; assault, Dalton Road, Mocksville; assault, US 64 W., Mocksville; sus­ picious activity, Comatzer Road, Mocksville; harass­ ment, Plott Lane, Mocks­ ville; harassment, Boone Lane, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Westside Drive, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Stony Brook Trail, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Riverdale Road, Mocksville; intoxicated, US 64 W., Mocksville. - The breaking, entering and larceny of firearms on Yadkinville Road was report­ ed Oct. 25. - The burglary and lar­ ceny of firearms from a business on Yadkinville was reported Oct. 29. - A domestic disturbance was reported Oct. 31 at a residence on Foster St. - The breaking, entering and larceny from a vehicle on Salisbury Road was reported Oct. 31. Arrests The following were ar­ rested by the Davie County Sheriff’s Dept. Oct. 27: Labron Ramiek Mayfield, 32, of East Bend, nonsupport of child; Mer­ cedes Gabriella Moses, 21, of Boone Lane, Mocksville, nonsupport of child. Oct. 28: Desmond Allen, 32, of Milling Road, Mocks­ ville; indecent liberties with child. Oct. 29: Jevin Lorenzo Scott, 28, of S. Angell Road, Mocksville, nonsupport of child. Oct. 31: Florentino Arcos Jr., 26, of Westside Drive, Mocksville, assault on a female, false imprisonment; Kendall Anne Beauchamp, 36, of Cedar Brook Lane, Mocksville, embezzlement. Mocksville Police The following are from Mocksville Police Depart­ ment reports. - Timothy McGriff was charged Oct. 25 with posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia. - Jevin Scott was charged Oct. 29 with possession of paraphernalia and resisting an officer. - Steven Prevette was charged Oct. 29 with operat­ ing a vehicle with a fictitious tag. - Jennifer Hahne was charged Oct. 29 with posses­ sion of drug paraphernalia. - Joseph Ervin was charged Oct. 31 with assault. - William Gyier was charged Oct. 31 with assault by pointing a gun and resist­ ing an officer. Land Transfers The following land trans­ fers were recorded with the Davie County Register of Deeds, listed by parties in­ volved, location, size of property and deed stamps purchased, with $2 repre­ senting $1,000. - Ronnie Barnette and Linda Barnette to David Charles Engel Sr. and Deb­ orah Engel, .9 acre, $146. - Corey T. Mitchell and Lea H. Mitchell to Joseph McCoy Mydosh and An­ drea Christine Mydosh, 1 lot, Baltimore Downs, Ad­ vance, $840. - Marcus L. Brewer and Cherie H. Brewer to Jerry T. Kiger and Amy L. Kiger, 1 lot. Oak Valley, $960. - William Robert Mor­ rison and Bobbi Jo Morri­ son to Adam P. Sain, 1 lot, Dutchman Hills, Clarksville Township, $578. - Matthews D. Reavis and Tammy S. Reavis to Fletcher A. Samuels and Amber P. Samuels, 10 acres, Clarksville Township, $182. - Butner Real Estate In­ vestments to Johnaton Ray Sutton and Lauren Cas- sady Sutton, 1 lot, Oakland Heights, Calahain Town­ ship, $85. - Judy Stroud Elliott, Rhonda Stroud Lytton, Sha­ ron Renee Stroud and Ter­ ry Dale Renegar to Sharon Renee Stroud, 2 lots, Davie/ Iredell. - Judy Stroud Elliott, Sharon Renee Stroud and Terry Dale Renegar to Rhonda Stroud Lytton, 1 lot, Davie/lredell. - Wanda H. Gaither and John Alvis Gaither to Jess Thomas Cartner, 1.32 acres, Clarksville Township, $260. - James Clyde Smoot Jr. and Teresa Rogers Smoot to Katherine Jean Duty and Mcihael Shannon Duty, tract, Calahain Township. - Evenda Hayes and Jef­ frey Hayes to Jeffrey Hayes, 1.5 acres, US 64 E., Mocks­ ville. - Evenda Hayes and Jef­ frey Haye,s to Developmen­ tal Services of NC, tracts, US 64 EJCharleston Ridge/ John Crotts Road, Mocks­ ville. - Randy M. Whitman and Lisa V. Whitman to Nick Cianciosi, 3.6 acres, Jerusa­ lem Township, $56. - Jeff West and Juli West to Michele M. Sandell, 1 lot, Bermuda Run, $1370. - Vasta Z. Pruitt and Stanley Ray Pruitt, and Betty Z. Nichols to Jeanna Maiorana, 1 lot, Mullins Road, Mocksville, $150. - Hubert F. Stine and Pa­ tricia W. Stine to David Ja­ son Ward and Crystal Cleary Ward, 1.5 acres, Mocksville Township, $50. - Brenda .Dianne Zim­ merman to Scott Bracken and Alisha Bracken, 2.39 acres, NC 801 S., Advance, $74. - Brian T. Hurst and Stephanie S. Hurst to Ter­ rence J. Joyce III and Sarah Elizabeth Joyce, I lot. For­ est Glen, Mocksville, $884. - Scott Hatcher to Scott Hatcher and Christy Hatch­ er, .69 acre, NC 801 S., Ad­ vance. - Beverly F. Miller and Ronald C. Miller to Frank Baxter Carter, 12.12 acres, US 64 E., Mocksville, $260. - Norman Harold Boger Jr. and Kathy Boger to Bri­ an T. Hurst and Stephanie S. Hurst, tract, Mocksville Township, $ 1,200. - Reliant Homes to Brett C. Draughn and Jacey Rus­ sell Draughn, 4.38 acres, Wagner Road, Mocksville, $756. - SECU*RE to William K. Lumley and Kathryn A. Lumley, 1 lot. Heritage Oaks, Mocksville, $460. - Christopher M. Hagger- son and Amanda H. Hagger- son to 536 N. Hiddenbrooke Drive Trust, 1 lot. Oak Val­ ley, Advance, $860. - Blake McNeal Tinsley as executor of estate of Den­ nis Cudd to The Historic Preservation Foundation of North Carolina, 1.82 acres, McGuire-Setzer House, Jer­ icho Church Road, Mocks­ ville. - M&K Partners to Ve­ ronica Garcia Rodriguez, tracts, Clarksville Town­ ship, $84. - Debra Jones and as executor of estate of Jack Doub, Jeffrey B. Doub, Jackie Doub, David A. Doub and Gary D. Doub to Ryan Douglas Carter, .96 acre, Fork-Bixby Road, Ad- vanc, $250. - House Farmers Arrow­ head to Ell wood K. Greiner Jr. and Michele J. Greiner, I lot. Lantern Drive, Ad­ vance, $128. - Bryan C. Thompson public administrator of es­ tate of Thomas Lea Gwynn to Timothy Burge and Gin­ ger Bodenheimer, 1 lot, Riverbend Drive, Bermuda Run,$680. - Edward D. Burkhart Jr. and Jane Shore Burkhart to Jennifer Burkhart Harrison, 1.53 acres. - Brenda R. Bailey to Hope H. Tate, .73 acre, Halander Drive, Mocks­ ville. - Farmstead Lane Part­ nership to George C. Haire and George E. Haire, 1.15 acres, Farmington Town­ ship. - Bryan C. Thompson, administrator of estate of Brent Sterling Martin to Howard Hurtt, tracts. Coun­ ty Line Road, Harmony, $322. - Cathy R. Yount and Al­ lan Preston Brooks to Glo­ ria Fussell Caudill, 1 unit. Spyglass Condominiums, Bermuda Run, $505. - Charles Bradford and Linda Bradford to Shelby Jason Harbour and Chris­ tine Baughman Harbour, 12.31 acres. Snow Hill Drive, Mocksville, $130. - Frederick D. Smith and Julie C. Smith to Clay­ ton Gartrell and Willette C. Gartrell, 1 lot. Greenwood Lake, Advance, $570. - Larry Gray Daniel to Kerry Alina Daniel, 1 acre, Nancy Easter Loop, Mocks­ ville. - Wayne Morris Hemphill to Wayne Morris Hemphill and Tabitha Melissa Shiip Shaw, tract, Farmington Township, Mocksville. - Karen Boyles, trustee to Amy Basham, 1 lot, Kinder­ ton Village, Bermuda Run, $418. Jubilee Capital to Windsor Investments, 1 lot, Saddlebrook Drive, Ad­ vance, $120. - B. Carroll Brock to Amy Virginia Porteus and Richard Joseph Brock Jr., 1 tract, $30. - B. Carroll Brock and as executrix of estate of Rich­ ard Joseph Brock Sr. to Amy Virginia Porteus, 1 acre. - B. Carroll Brock and as executrix of estate of Rich­ ard Joseph Brock Sr. to B. Carroll Brock, 1 tract. - Carter Grubb Invest­ ments to Lee Edward Kye Jr. and Penny Cryner Kye, and Patty Cryner Stockner, 1 lot. Whispering Oaks, Ad­ vance, $662. - James Alan Oliver to Horatio Alcaron Jackson Jr. and Chantalle Noreen Jack- son, 1 lot, Glenwood Road, Mocksville, $260. - Corey A. Hewitt and Karen T. Hewitt to Kristina Spasic, 1 lot, Essex Farm, Advance, $738. - Trent Adams Properties to Eastwood Construction, 2 lots, Kinderton Village Con­ dos, Bermuda Run, $420. - Robin W. Hauser to Even Blake Stepansky, 1 lot. Greenwood Lake, Ad­ vance, $460. Matthew R. Riggs and Stephanie J. Riggs to Rickey Dale Parman, 1 lot. Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run,$500. - Robert S.W. Martin and Laura Martin, George W. Martin Jr. and Cecilia H. Martin, and Helen White Martin to Ralph Harding and Justin Edward Draughn, 15,661 square feet. Railroad St., Mocksville, $74. -Amanda Paige Haneline and Dana Gabriel Haneline, and Thomas Shane Potts to L. Leonard Shelton and Jean Shelton, and Abby Michelle Ferguson, tract, Clarksville Township, $24. - Harold Loyd Rollins Jr. and Martha H. Rollins to Angela Warner, trustee, tract, Mocksville Township, $106. - Kimberlee Crewey and Biran Crewey to Karen Gra­ ham, 1 lot, Pembroke Ridge, Bermuda Run, $408. Marriages The following were is­ sued marriage licenses by the Davie Register of Deeds. Kristopher Robin Hoots, 43, and Melissa Ann Kelly, 39, of Mocksville. - Matthew David Hum­ phries, 43, and Amy Beth Golle, 44, of Clemmons. - Hunter Stuart Hagins, 22, of Advance, and Alex­ is Mackenna Benge, 22, of Mocksville. - Annie Norman Kinder, 20, and Jonathan Paul Res- sa, 20, both of Mocksville. - Shevona Vonte Ayres, 35, and Deidreion Shamar Kelley, 36, of Clemmons. - Brady Lee Harrison, 56, and Joann Loujean Viei­ ra, 43, of Arkansas. - Christopher Alan Walk­ er, 28, and Hannah Marie Huie, 29, of Mocksville. - Colby Lane Crisp, 22, and Kamryn Paige Wagner, 23, of Kings Mountain. - Nichola.s Alexander Neilsen, 49, and Cheryl Ja­ nine Metcalf, 51, of Mocks­ ville. - Tyler Scott Beaver, 25, of Lexington, and Alice Christine Stovall, 25, of Ad­ vance. - Aaron Lavem Gillum, 53, of Lexington, and Chris­ tine Lou Binkley, 64, of Greensboro. - Weston Gray Edwards, 33, and Jessica Elaine Stan­ cil, 33, of Winston-Salem. - Heather Marie Kimel, 26, and Christian Colin Mitchell, 28, of Locust. - Branden Austin Grimm, 25, and Haley Denise Trivette, 22, of Mocksville. - James Sean Taylor, 49, of Rocky Point, and Wendi Lea Stallings, 42, of Kern­ ersville. - Dalton Sean Lamb, 27, and Sarah Margaret Stall­ ings, 25, of Winston-Salem. - Jennifer Leanne West, See Marriages - Page 9 ®r. 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S:Jia,!94S ----- For RV’s, Campers, Trucks, Boats, etc. Go To: angellstorage.com to sign up or call 336-940-7982 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - 7 Chester Reeves will be selling quilts, throws and masks from his home this Saturday, some of which are pictured here. - Photos by Robin Snow Quilting helps man in cancer recovery By Mike Barnhardt Enterprise Record We are . • • % SHEFFIELD - Chester Reeves’ life was turned up­ side down in 2017. He had been diagnosed with lymphoma. Coupled with the treat­ ment, he could no longer detail cars which he had done for years. His family and friends were worried. Knowing he liked to stay busy, they suggested he oc­ cupy his time with puzzles. Chester Reeves isn’t a puzzle man. But he remembered back in the 1980s, when Wilma Phipp.s had taught him how to quilt. A friend and neigh­ bor, Christine Dyson, came by and got him started quilt­ ing. Boy, did she get him started. Reeves puts his all into everything he does - and quilting is no exception. From 10 a.m.-3 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 7, he will host a quilt sale at his home on 247 Turkeyfoot Road west of Mocksville, next to Pallet One. He’ll also be selling throws, face masks and other handmade items. “It helps me to have a little spending money,” he said. “Social security don’t pay that much.” He’s got quilt.s and throws with farm scenes, with a Carolina theme, a NC State theme, tradition­ al patterns and ones he comes up with in his head. Last year, the hot item was an old Chevy pickup truck with flowers in the bed. He’s counting on thi.s year's hot item being that truck with dogs in the bed. He had depleted all of his savings after that cancer treatment, and then folks started sending him cards - with money. Some of them he barely knew. “I just fell out,” he said. He knew he needed a new hobby - one that could provide some income. His masks are sold at Foster Drug, and some will be available Saturday, as well. “I wouldn’t be here to­ day if it wasn’t for that ma­ chine,” he said, pointing at his new quilting machine. “I would have give up. Just looking at four walls is hell.” When Chester Reeves starts something, he finishes it, he said. Many nights, he’s up until 1 or 2 in the morn­ ing working on a quilt. No television or radio required. “Everybody fusses at me because if 1 start something. I’m going to finish it,” he said. There will be more than 50 quilts, plus throws and masks at Saturday’s sale. Davie Center for Violence Prevention continues to serve our community during the COVID-19 crisis. lift tl Senior Living Apartments in Mocksville Age 50-1- with Disability OF 55-1- WITHOUT Disability Join our waiting list NOW for future openings! s E N I o R A P A R T M E N T COMMU Applicant must meet age and income regulrements as set forth by the NCHFA program ELEVATOR IN BUILDING SECURED ACCESS COMMUNITY SPACES FITNESS CENTER COMPUTER ROOM . PRIVATE PATIOS • SPACIOUS FLOORPLANS • W/D CONNECTIONS • HANDICAP ACCESSIBLE • AND MUCH MORE! 891 YADKINVILLE ROAD MOCKSVILLE, NC 27028 MANAGED BY EXCEL PROPERTY MGMT.. INC. 1004 Buterd Ct . Ste. 106. Raleigh. NC 27615 ■ 919.878.0522 RENT & INCOME RESTRICTIONS APPLY CrUisinlprvpnlion • Advocacy • Upsouitpx • fduration - Support If you need help, call our 24/7 Hotline: ■751-HELP (435Z) CONFIDENTIAL ' Easy Access > Gated Facility ' 24 Hour Access ’ Well Lighted ' Security Cameras Conveniently Located Just off 1-40 exit 170 at 128 Strawberry Lane in Mocksville! 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - 9 Bake Apple and Raisin Bread and oth­ ers in greased and floured loaf pans. Slices of Maraschino Cherry Bread highlight the red cherries, making it a perfect holiday bread. Loaf of prune bread is made with baby food, aged on loaf paper, and ready for gift delivery. Sw33t br33ds bring b3ck sweet momorios Nothing gets me in the holiday spirit faster than a home filled with scents of warm, spicy, homemade sweet breads — sometimes called quick breads. While perfect as seasonal gifts, the breads can be enjoyed anytime during the year, especially for spring teas or sum­ mer garden parties. A favorite childhood memory, I grew up enjoying the small loaves of goodness that are more like cake than bread. But my best memories come from years ago when a former neighbor, Gerrie, baked what seemed like every kind of sweet bread known to man during the holidays. Her home was always filled with comfort­ ing smells of warm brown sugar and cinnamon. Gerrie was a nur- turer and gift giver, always taking care of people by delivering small Bless Your Spoon 1 Vi cups vegetable oil 4 eggs 1 cup chopped walnuts 1 cup golden raisins Sift flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon to­ gether. Then add sugar and brown sugar and mix well. Mix the fresh pumpkin (or canned), vegetable oil, and 4 eggs. Add to dry ingredients. Mix well. Fold in chopped nuts and raisins. Bake in 2 greased and floured loaf pans, in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. By Stephanie Williams Dean loaves of her homemade breads. Today’s recipes include some loaves perfect for fall and win­ ter — think taking coconut, cran­ berries, carrots, prunes, pumpkin or sweet potatoes while spicing things up a bit with favorite flavors. Julie Terry Cartner, writer and retired English teacher, shared with readers her mom’s fresh pumpkin bread recipe combined with sweet memories. Julie grew up in a beauti­ ful, old farmhouse with a large, warm and sunny kitchen. Her mom, Loraine Terry, took great pride in the white, billowy curtains that hung in the windows throughout her home. Julie remembers how the curtain would softly blow in the breeze, gracefully brushing across the kitchen coun­ tertops — a special recollection. Loraine was a fantastic cook who enjoyed trying new recipes and tweaking them to make original recipes. When Julie would get home from school, she’d find freshly baked goodies cooling on wire racks in front of the window. When fall arrived, the treat was often Pumpkin Bread —al­ ways accompanied by sweet scents of fresh pumpkin and cinnamon that filled their home. When I close my eyes — I can see and smell both — cur­ tains just a blowin’ in the wind and whiffs of homemade bread lingering in the air. You’ll want to sample a little smear of the Cream Cheese Spread on your sweet breads. Oh, so delicious. APPLE AND RAISIN BREAD 4 beaten eggs 2 cups sugar 1 Tbsp. vanilla extract 1 !4 cup vegetable oil 3 cups all-purpose flour 1 Vi. tsp. baking soda Vi tsp. baking powder 2 tsp. cinnamon 1 tsp. ground cloves 3 cups chopped, unpeeled apples Vi cup raisins Vi cup chopped nuts In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add flour, baking soda, powder, and cinnamon while alternating with vegetable oil. Fold in apples, raisins, and nuts. Mix well. Bake in 2 greased and floured loaf pans in a 325-de­ gree oven for 1 hour. Cool on racks. A slice of Loraine Terry’s Fresh Pumpkin Bread offers big pumpkin taste without being too sweet. Richard & Linda Gaii Davis C3i3brat3 5Oth annivarsary Richard and Linda Gail Davis of Mocksville will cel­ ebrate their 50th wedding anniversary on Nov. 4. A reception will be held in their honor on Saturday, Nov. 7 at 2 p.m. at Center Methodist Church Community Build­ ing. The couple has three children: Randy (Melissa) Davis of Mocksville, Crystal Davis of Mocksville, and Wayne Davis of Gamer. They have five grandchildren: Ashleigh (Jonathan) Freeman, Lyndsay and Brett Davis, and Mat­ thew and Connor Davis; and three great-grandchildren: Gracelyn, Madalyn, and Barrett Freeman. Mr. Davis retired from the Army after 20 years and later worked in computer programming and surveying. Mrs. Da­ vis retired from home health. Planners to discuss rezoning Marriages ... Continued From Page 6 25, of Mocksville, and 2Lachary Kane Wallace, 26, of Harmony. - Anastasia Noelle Eddy, 23, of Salisbury, and Dakota Brett Childers, 26, of Cleve­ land. - Anthony John Vogel, 28, and Destiny Danielle Lutz, 25, of Mocksville. - Sabrina Kristine Es- careno, 25, and Dustin Lee Mooe, 24, of Mocksville. - Joshua Allen Cottrell, 27, of Advance, and Nicole Diane Oldham, 26, of Vir- CINNAMON SPICED LOAF 2 beaten eggs 1 cup sugar 'A cup softened, salted butter 1 tsp. vanilla extract 2 cups all-purpose flour 1 tsp. baking powder 1 tsp. baking soda cup salt 1 cup sour milk 3 Tbsp. brown sugar 1 Tbsp. cinnamon In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add butter and vanilla. Mix well. Add flour, baking powder, soda, and salt while alternating with sour milk. Mix well. Pour half of the batter in a greased loaf pan. Add the cin­ namon and brown sugar together. Sprinkle batter with half the sugar mixture. Add remaining batter and top with re­ mainder of sugar mixture. Swirl a knife through the batter to distribute cinnamon mixture. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 45 minutes or until done. GERRIE’S SWEET POTATO BREAD 3 beaten eggs 3 cups sugar 1 cup oil 1 cup water 3 cups self-rising flour Vi tsp. baking powder 2 tsp. baking soda 1 tsp salt 2 tsp cinnamon 1 tsp nutmeg 1 tsp ginger Vi tsp cloves 2 cups cooked, mashed sweet potatoes 1 cup chopped nuts In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add oil and mix well. Add flour, soda, powder, salt, and spices while alternating with water. Mix well. Fold in sweet po­ tatoes and nuts. Mix thoroughly. Bake in 2 greased and floured loaf pans in a 325-degree oven for 1 'A hours. RUM RAISIN QUICK BREAD 2 beaten eggs 1 cup sugar 1 cup brown sugar 6 Tbsp. vegetable oil 1 tsp. rum extract 5 cups all-purpose flour 2 Tbsp. baking powder 2 tsp. salt 2 cups whole milk 1 cup raisins In a mixer, beat eggs. Add sugars and mix well. Add oil and extract. Mix well. Add flour, baking powder, and salt while alternating with milk. Fold in raisins. Bake in 2 greased and floured loaf pans in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. SWEET COCONUT BREAD 1 beaten egg 1 cup sugar (4 cup softened, salted butter Vi tsp. coconut flavoring Vi tsp vanilla extract 2 cups all-purpose flour 3 tsp. baking powder 'A tsp. salt 1 cup milk 3.5 oz. flaked coconut In a mixer, beat egg. Add sugar and mix well. Add butter and mix with coconut flavoring and vanilla. While alternat­ ing with milk, add flour, baking powder and salt. Mix well. Fold in coconut and mix thoroughly Bake in a greased and floured loaf pan in a 350-degree oven for 50-55 minutes. MARASCHINO CHERRY BREAD 1 beaten egg % cup sugar 2 tbsp. melted, salted butter 1 Vi cup cherry juice from jar plus milk to equal 2 14 cups all-purpose flour 3 tsp. baking powder 'A tsp. salt 1 cup chopped maraschino cherries 14 cup nuts In a mixer bowl, beat egg. Add sugar and butter. Mix well. Add flour, baking powder and salt while alternating with cherry juice and milk. Mix well. Fold in cherries and nuts. Bake in a greased and floured loaf pan in a 350-de­ gree oven for 60-70 minutes. Cool on rack. The Mocksville Planning Board will meet on Nov. 12 at 5:30 p.m. at Mocksville Town Hall. Board members will re­ view a request by CVB Partners to rezone approxi­ mately 17.858 acres from OSR Open Space Residen­ tial to GI General Indus­ trial. The property is at the end of Eaton Road and i.s Davie County Tax Parcel J5(XX)OOO3207. A full copy of agen­ da items is on file at the Mocksville Town Hall and the Davie County Develop­ ment & Facilities Services Department. ginia. - Sherry Ann Dickerson, 50, and Deborah Whitling, 61, of Mocksville. - Joshua David Myers, 28, of Mocksville, and Del- anee Michelle Jackson, 24, of Advance. - Steven Daniel Smith, 48, of Winston-Salem, and Jennifer Nicole Goodwin, 43, of Woodleaf. - Jaycie Elizabeth Wil­ liams, 23, and Joseph Dylan Pate, 23, of Mocksville. - Katy Lynn Wogatzke, 33, of Mock.sville, and Josh­ ua Jameson Fincannon, 37, of Hiddenite. - Jeffrey Lynn Hunter, 42, of Clemmons, and Am­ ber Michelle McCutcheon, 37, of Cornelius. - Joseph Edward Hen­ ry Cregar. 50, and Eliza­ beth Janette Bailey, 48, of Mocksville. - Kailey Brooks Neal, 24, of Yadkinville, and Kendall Avery Lanier, 24, of Mock.s­ ville. - Michael Ray Lanier Jr., 34, and Jessica Lee Mazza­ rella, 33, of Mocksville. - Logan Ray West, 22, and Madison Claire Riddle, 21, of Mocksville. Haley Michelle Ginther, 25, and Eric Clin- ton Howell, 30, both of Mocksville. - Simone Marie Valcourt, 34, and William Thomas Hoyle, 44, of Advance. - Paula Frances Lancast­ er, 52, and Jesse Franklin Dobbins, 48, of Mocksville. - Terry Drew Warden II, 34, and Kimbra Leigh Hicks, 28, of Conover. - Sarah Ashley Adams, 32, and Frankie Monroe Ke­ aton, III, 39, of Mocksville. - James Henry Harrell Jr., 47, and Debra Jean WTiitt, 58, of Winston-Salem. - Amanda Marie Stark, 27, and Richard Dayne Webster, 29, of Advance. - Ashton Scott Swaim, 19, and Cheyanne Cierra Durst, 21, of Mocksville. - Darius Efrain Seaw- right, 34, and Yesenia Car­ men Pena, 43, of Advance. - Walton James Stanton, 20, and Lindsey Renee Bev­ erly. 20, of Advance. - Wendy Jean Lanier, 47, and Daryl Allen Brewer, 5 1, of Mocksville. - Rebecca Renee Smith, 34, and Graham Sp)encer Harmon, 30, of Mocksville. - Shawn Michael Ebright, 28, and Amanda Lee Pow­ ers, 24, both of Mocksville. - Leslie Bowden Mur­ phy, 56, and Vincent John Gonyer. 56, of Winston- Salem. Christopher Randall Cottrell, 32, and Christina Diane Lash, 43, of Advance. - Jordan Lurae Long, 30, and Hunter Ellsworth Stur- kie, 29, of Bermuda Run. Morgan Elizabeth Dragon, 23, and Nichola.s Stephen Tate, 25, of Clem­ mons. - Johnna Raye Hewitt, 59, and Neal Liner Adams, 59, of Bermuda Run. - Kristen Briggs Neely, 24, and Laurence Neil Probst, 24, both of Mocks­ ville. - Thomas James Gibson. 25, and Sabrina Nikol Britt, 23. of Cooleemee. - Jared David Reinert, 35, and Yvette Marie Kel­ logg, 43, of Advance. - Colleen Rachelle Dew- yer, 26, of Winston-Salem, and Michael Watkins Holt, 26, of Charlotte. - Rodney Dale Everhart, 51, and Rhonda Leigh Fort­ ner, 49, of Mocksville. - Patrick Thomas Clark, 25, of District of Columbia, and Julia Pikula, 25, of Ad­ vance. - Nichola.s Todd Cash, 40, and Jessica Ann Allen, 39, of Mocksville. - Adam Parks Sain, 36, and Casey Micheal Quak- enbush, 3 1, both of Mocks­ ville. - Kevin Dylan Powell, 25, of Harmony, and Heath­ er Cheyenne Mitchem, 23, of Advance. - Anna Marie Stout, 25, and Cody Everett Mason, 27, of Mocksville. - Chelsie Adriana Re­ nee Endicott, 26, and Chad Van Robertson, 27, both of Mocksville. - Lois Darlene Propst, 50, and Randy Eugene Jones, 52, of Winston-Salem. - Richard Lee Held 11, 48, and Courtney Nicole Seamon, 28, of Charlotte. - Frank Conner Spen­ cer Jr., 72, and Rosie Mae Clark, 68, both of Clem­ mons. - Cory Dean Hayes, 27, and Kaitlyn Lavonne Par- ton, 27, of Mocksville. - Lauren Ashley Pardue, 29, and Christopher Linn Beck, 33, both of Mocks­ ville. - Charlie Winford Cagle, 20, and Amity Christine Miller, 1 8, of Mocksville. - Lauren Ashley Wil­ son, 27, and Justin Bradley Phipps, 24, of Advance. - Jessica Lorraine Isa- man, 34, and Jason Lee Booth, 47, of Mocksville. - Marla Devere Griffith, 22. and Joshua Michael Mc­ Daniel, 29, of Mocksville. - Johnathan Carl Dunn, 23, of Advance, and Olivia Grace Boger, 21, of Mocks­ ville. Commeka Joyceann Brown, 39, and Christo­ pher Tyrone Spratt, 42, of Mocksville. - Jason Edward Cunning­ ham, 46, and Christina Ma­ rie Hartman, 40, of Mocks­ ville. - Jesse Hayden Crotts, 30, and Kristen Dawn Bar­ nette, 29, of Mocksville. - Allen Rafalko, 57, and Janice Lynn Greer, 59, of Lewisville. - Brandy Nicole Doby, 30, of Advance, and Philip Kenyon Scales, 37, of Re­ idsville. - Carla Danielle Baker, 32, and James Michael Head Jr., 45, of Mocksville. - Mallory Michael Mul­ ligan, 23. and Mark Mathew Olive, 27, of Mocksville. - Gareth Matthew McK­ ee, 25, of Winston-Salem, and Molly Brooke Mann, 22, of Trinity. - Caoimhin Ryan Cahill Saylor, 23. of Mocksville, and Hannah Ashton-Marie Bryant, 21, of Virginia. Christopher Samuel Aaron, 28, and Kellie Anne Chapman, 26, of Clem­ mons. - William Jason Shep­ herd, 43, and Katherine Diane Johnson, 28, of Ad­ vance. - Logan Dean Newsom, 26, of Winston-Salem, and Timothy Knox Bingham, 28, of Advance. CRANBERRY ORANGE BREAD 1 beaten egg 1 cup sugar Vi cup orange juice 2 Tbsp vegetable oil 2 cups all-purpose flour 1 tsp. baking powder '/4 tsp. baking soda Vi tsp. salt 1 grated rind, orange 1 cup quartered or chopped cranberries 1 cup chopped walnuts In ai mixer bowl, beat egg. Add sugar and mix well. Add orange juice and vegetable oil and mix well. Add flour, soda, and salt. Mix well. Fold in orange rind, cranberries, and nuts. For 3 small loaves, bake in a 350-degree oven for 20-30 minutes or until done. For 1 large loaf, bake 45 minutes- 1 hours until done. PRUNE BREAD 4 beaten eggs 3 cups sugar 1 cup vegetable oil 3 cups self-rising flour 1 tsp nutmeg 1 '/i tsp cinnamon 2-4 oz. jars prune baby food 1 cup chopped nuts In a mixer, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add oil while alternating with flour, nutmeg, and cinnamon. Mix well. Fold in prune and nuts. Mix thoroughly. Bake in 2 greased and floured loaf pans in a 350-degree oven for 50- 60 minutes. Cool on racks. HOLIDAY FRUIT & NUT BREAD 1 beaten egg Vi cup sugar 3 cups Bisquick 1 !4 cups whole milk 1 cup chopped pecans 1 cup chopped, mixed candy fruit In a mixer, beat egg. Add sugar and mix well. Add Bis­ quick while alternating with milk. Mix well. Fold in nuts and fruit. Bake in a greased and floured loaf pan and bake in a 350-degree oven for 40-50 minutes. Cool on rack. LORAINE TERRY’S FRESH PUMPKIN BREAD 3 cups all-purpose flour 2 tsp baking powder 2 tsp baking soda 2 tsp. cinnamon 1 tsp salt 1 cup sugar 1 cup brown sugar 2 ci^s fresh pumpkin (or 1 can) FRESH CARROT BREAD 3 beaten eggs Vi cup white sugar 'A cup brown sugar 2 sticks softened, salted butter 2 cups all-purpose flour 1 tsp. baking powder A tsp salt 1 tsp. cinnamon 3 cups grated carrots 1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add butter and mix well. Add flour, baking powder, salt and cinnamon. Mix well. Fold in carrots and nuts. Mix thor­ oughly. Bake in a large, greased and floured, loaf pan in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. Cool on rack. LEMON NUT BREAD 2 beaten eggs 1 cup sugar Vi cup salted butter 3 'A cups all-purpose flour 3 'A tsp. baking powder 1 tsp salt 1 Vi cups whole milk 1 cup chopped pecans 2 Tbsp. grated lemon peel In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add butter and mix well. Add flour, baking powder and salt while alternating with milk. Fold in the nuts and lemon peel. Mix well. Bake in a large, greased and floured, loaf pan in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. CREAM CHEESE SPREAD FOR BREADS Softened cream cheese Whipping cream Confectioners’ sugar Take softened cream cheese and thin it a little with fresh cream. Sweeten slightly with a little confectioner’s sugar to taste. Slice bread loaf and spread with cream cheese spread. Enjoy. Also, you can add another slice of bread on top and cut into finger sandwiches. WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11th Celebrating those who Served Our Country Eaton Funeral Service 325 North Main Street Mocksvflie, NC We will be presenting our Veterans with a gift bag that includes a gift certificate for a meal at one of our local restaurants. Doors will be open from Sam - 8pm or call 336-751-2148 to make arrangements for delivery. JOIN OUR TEAM! BE A PART OF OUR EXCITING GROWTH JOURNEY! APPLY AT ComfortBilt.com COMFORT-BI LT Mb! 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 Obituaries DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 - 11 ed race going virtual - all for a good cause Novella Forrest Safley Mrs. Novella Forrest Safley, 99, of Adams Road, Mocksville, died Wednesday, Oct. 28,2020 at her home. She was bom on May 10, 1921 in Davie County to the late Lewis Bailey and Beu­ lah Walker Forrest. Mrs. Safley was a lifetime member of Jericho Church of Christ, and was the oldest living member. In her ear­ lier days, she was involved with the Davie County Senior Center, Silver Striders, and Meals on Wheels. She was a wonderful seamstress, loved gardening, and enjoyed making meals to share with others, thus Mrs. Safley be­ came known for her hospitality ________ and will be remembered for her delicious persimmon pudding. She was also preceded in death by: her husband, Wil­ liam Safley; and 9 siblings, Georgia Boger (Glenn), Clau­ dia Gantt (Albert), Clarence Forrest (Sadie Mae), Ralph Forrest (Willie), Conard Forrest (Mary), Paul Forrest (Mary Helen), Juanita Prather (Herman), Jean Seamon (Ernest), and Freda James. Survivors: 2 daughters. Ruby O’Neal (Bill) and Ver­ na Webb (Jim), all of Mocksville; 2 grandchildren, Frankie O’Neal (Lynette), and Matthew Webb (Pam); 6 great-grandchildren, Taylor O’Neal, Archer Webb, Nix­ on Webb, Ashlyn Hicks, Avery Hicks, and Kolby Hurt; a brother-in-law, Jimmy James; numerous nieces and neph­ ews; and many special friends. A graveside service was conducted at 2 p.m., Friday, Oct. 30 at Jericho church of Christ Cemetery with Jack Lipsey officiating. The family received friends for one hour following the service in the fellowship hall. Memorials: Carolina Bible Camp, c/o Bobby Grigsby, 307 Oak Meadow Lane, Mocksville; Davie Senior Center, 278 Meroney St., Mocksville; Agape of North Carolina, PO Box 985, Wake Forest, 27588; or a charity of the do­ nor’s choice. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice.com. Robert Williams Jr. Mr. Robert Williams Jr., 73, died on Oct. 30, 2020. He was bom in Greenville, S.C. to the late Robert Wil­ liams Sr. and Mary Jones Williams on Aug. 16, 1947. He was educated in the Davidson County School Systems. He moved with his family to Lex­ ington, at an early age and was a member of First Baptist Church and later joined Cedar Grove Baptist Church. He attended Ashmore Business College and Davidson County Community College and earned a certificate in criminal justice. He served four years in the U.S. Air Force and received an honorable dis­ charge. He also served in the US Army National Guard and retired after 23 years. He was a member of Prince Hall Corinthian Lodge No. 17 Free Masons. He retired from Ingersoll Rand R&D department after 34 years. He enjoyed fishing, golfing and most sports. Survivors: his wife, Barbara B, Williams of the home; a sister, Susan (Fred) Holt of Lexington; 2 sisters-in-law, Betty (Charles) Godwin and Phyllis Brown; 4 brothers-in- law, Jesse (Geraldine) Brown III, Kenneth (Linda) Brown, the Rev. Kelly (Christine) Brown and Harvey Lindsay, all of Mocksville; and a host of other relatives and friends. Private funeral service were Monday, Nov. 2 at Cedar Grove Baptist Church with public viewing from 1-1:30 p.m. Burial followed in the church cemetery. Roger Brown Mock Jr. Mr. Roger Brown Mock Jr., 71, of Advance, died on Tuesday, Oct. 27, 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center. He was bom in Forsyth County to the late Roger Brown Mock and Doris Hilton Mock on Dec. 5, 1948. Mr. Mock served in the U.S. Army during the Vietnam War, and had retired from R J. Archer after 30 years. He was a loving husband, father, and grandfather. Survivors: his wife of 49 years, Carol W. Mock; son, Chad Mock (Tabatha); grandchildren, Christian and Na­ than Mock; brothers, Thomas E. Mock (Carol) and Wil­ liam C. Mock (Jackie); and several nieces and nephews. A funeral service was held 2 p.m. Sunday Nov. 1 2at Mocks United Methodist Church, with the Rev. Luke Mitchell officiating. Burial followed in the church cem­ etery. Memorials: Mocks UMC. Condolences: -wwwJiayworth-tniller.com. Thank You We are forever humbled and appreciative of the outpouring of support shown to our family during the passing of our beloved “Cooter." To everyone who has called, texted, sent cards and flowers, provided meals or stopped by to say a special word of remembrance, we all feel blessed and thankful. Thank you for being a light in a dark, difficult time. A special thank you to Sheriff JD Hartman and the Davie County Sheriffs Department, Davie Fire and EMS, Davie Detention, Mocksville Police Department, Jerusalem Fire Department, NC Highway Patrol and all other agencies and departments for honoring him so respectfully on the day of the funeral. That will never be forgotten. We think about you always We talk about you still You have never been forgotten And you never will We hold you dose in our hearts And there you will remain To walk and guide us through our lives Until we meet again. - The Correll Family It’s this time of the year the Twas the Night Before Bed Race Committee starts reaching out to past teams and recmiting new teams for this event. “All plans, the course, and volunteers are ready to go but this year will be different for this whacky, whimsical event,” said Tami Langdon, Mocksville community development coordinator. “There will be no bed race this year. The teams will not be showing off their creative sleds and costuming. There will be no dancing in the street be­ tween the heat.s of the race.” The Twas the Night Before Bed Race has been cancelled this year due to COVID and the Phase 3 guidelines. “This year, we want to embrace the spirit of the bed race with a different spin,” Langdon said. “We are mak­ ing this a charity race. We have reached out to past teams and would like to in­ vite any new teams to this event.” Each team will compete with raising funds for their favorite charity or non-prof­ it. Teams can be creative with social media - display­ ing their bed, perhaps run­ ning laps with their sled bed, comic relief with their costuming to create fun and excitement for their team and their charity. The committee will fea­ ture all teams on Facebook and other media. There will be first, sec­ ond and third place winners. Like the past races, there will a Team Spirit and Total Package Awards. “But the real winners will be the charities,” she said. “Every charity will receive funding through the effort.s of these teams, their mem­ bers, friends, and family. “So let’s keep the bed race alive but a new concept this year. This will be Fun.” For more information, contact Langdon at 336- 753-6705 or tlangdon® mocksviUenc .gov. “Let’s make 2020 holiday season great. Come Down- town Mocksville for your holiday shopping, share a meal at any of our restau­ rants, grab a coffee or ice cream, and enjoy the holi­ day lights,” she said. Caregiver, Very Caring to be alone Available Day or Night 7 Days a Week Housekeeping, Run Errands, Drs. Appts., Grocery Shopping and Cooking Meals Call: 336-648-0270 Virginia Reavis Seats Mrs. Virginia Reavis Seats, 82, died on Wednesday, Oct/ 28, 2020 at Pruitt Health in Elkin. She was bom Sept. 11, 1938 in Iredell County to Vance and Margaret Reavis. She worked for Southern Bell, where she started as an operator and worked her way to become a supervisor. She was an active member of Pioneers (a volunteer network). She enjoyed spending time with her family and support­ ing their activities. She always sacrificed herself for others and put their needs and wants above hers. She will be remembered as a great wife, mother, grand­ mother, great-grandmother, sis­ ter and friend. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by: her loving husband, Leonard Seats Sr.; and a brother, Johnny Rea­ vis. Survivors: her daughter, Sheila Scott (Ricky); son, Vance Holdsclaw (Sucha); brothers, Jimmy Reavis (Ra­ chel) and Robert Reavis (Jane); a sister-in-law, John- sie Reavis; grandchildren, Chassidy Ford, Jonathan Ford (Kim), Christina Holdsclaw and Emily Holdsclaw; great-grandchildren, Madilyn Ford, Cody Ford and Way- Ion Ford. Due to public restrictions there will be no formal visita­ tion. A graveside service was held at 1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 2 at Westlawn Gardens of Memory in Clemmons. Condolences: www.hayworth-milter.com. Rodney Alexander Petroff Rodney Alexander Petroff, 64, of Cle Elum, Wash., died on Aug. 3, 2020. Bom July 4, 1956 in Seattle, Wash, to Alexey Dimitri Petroff and Lydia Woznow Petroff, who joked that Rodney was their July 4th firecracker and the youngest sibling to half brother and sister Nick and Anne Marie. From an early age he learned to enjoy the bounty and beauty of nature by for­ aging for berries, mushrooms as well as camping, hunting, fishing, cooking and most of all photography. Following in the family tra­ dition of sea life and service he proudly served in the U.S. Coast Guard, mainly in the Pa­ cific NW. His military career led to an easy transition work­ ing as an able class seaman on tug boats in and out of the Puget Sound area of Seattle. He acquired skills as a welder which allowed him to take basket cases of parts to build motorcycles, especially his vintage knuckle-head “Rat- bike” a Harley Davidson which took him over many miles of adventures across the country. With his love for the open road and travel, he embraced the philosophy that it’s the journey that matters rather than the destination. He graduated from Central Washington University in 1997 with a teaching degree that supported his passion for literature, writing and education. He married Janice Sushereba in June 1997 and the couple later moved to Mocksville, where he became a bom-again Christian who grew his faith with a passion for defending the truth of the God’s Word and supporting a Gospel based church. While being actively involved with church ministries the couple met and fostered Nina as a teenager until she graduated from high school and chose a career in the U.S. Navy. Af­ terwards the Petroff’s moved to Florence, Ore. where he remained until their divorce in 2011, He was preceded in death by: parents; brother, Nick Levko, and cousin Victor Peters. Survivors: a sister, Anne Marie Dokken (Bruce); niece, Lisa Russell (John); nephew, Tyrell Dokken (Jennifer); niece, Allison Martin (Trace); nephew, David Moberg Thompson and all their children; and his extended fam­ ily, Nina Sweet (Shaun and Abby), Bill Strahl, Patricia Moberg, Mike Hayslip (Jennifer), Mark Schadewitz (Jan­ et), many Canadian relatives and his church family. He will be most remembered for his love of Jesus Christ, his Lord and Savior; his family and close dear friends. A celebration of his life will be arranged at a later date. James ‘Calvin’ Mayfield James “Calvin” Mayfield, 68, of Mocksville, died on Oct. 26, 2020 at Davie Nursing and Rehab in Davie Coun­ ty- He was bom Aug. 9, 1952 in Rowan County, the son of the late James Mayfield and Bernice Mayfield. He attended Morningside High School in Iredell County. He worked in the construction industry as a concrete finisher. He was em­ ployed with Mocksville Mill- works, Cockerham Construc­ tion, and Tanglewood Country Club for a number of years. He was a member of Shiloh Baptist Church. Survivors: a brother, Randy Mayfield (Tunya March-May­ field) of Winston-Salem; 4 sis­ ters Carolyn Tatum of Mocks­ ville, Patricia Williams (Harold Williams) of Woodleaf, Jose­ phine Mayfield of Mocksville, and Jeannie Rivers (Tommy Rivers) of Mocksvillel and lots of nieces and nephews A private memorial service for immediate family was held at 3 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 30 at Shiloh Baptist Church in Mocksville. Condolences: www.daviefi^eralservice.com. William Thomas ‘Tommy’ Mitchell Mr. William Thomas “Tommy” Mitchell, 37, died Fri­ day, Oct. 30, 2020 at his home. He was bom April 24, 1983 in Iredell County. Mr. Mitchell spent the last 6 years as a stay at home Dad, the job he loved most. Prior to that, he had been employed by Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. He was a loving and caring husband and father. Mr. Mitchell was a kind and compassionate follower of Je­ sus. He was preceded in death by his father, William Robert “Bobby” Mitchell. Survivors: his wife, Brit­ tany Lauren Bryant Mitchell; a daughter, Emery Mitchell; a son, Tobias Mitchell; his mother, Pattie Sue Wrenn Foster (Allen); a brother, Chns Mitchell (Karolyn Carroll); his in-laws, Charles Bryant (Martha), and Kathy Huie (Dennis); and his extended family. A private family celebration of life service will be con­ ducted at 4 p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 4 at Lambert Funeral Home with Pastor Chuck Taylor is officiating. There will be a live webcast of his service on the Lambert Funeral Home website, or visit: https:llwebcast.fiineralvue.coml events/vieweri39734. The family invites friends to come by Lambert Funeral Home, Monday, Nov. 2 or Tuesday, Nov. 3, during business hours, to sign the register book. Memorials: Trellis Supportive Care, 377 Hospital St., Ste. 103, Mocksville; Colon Cancer Coalition, 5666 Lin­ coln Dr., #270, Edina, MN 55436; or Cancer Services, 3175 Maplewood Ave., Winston-Salem, 27103. Felton Lee Mayfield Sr. Mr. Felton Lee Mayfield Sr., 60, died on Saturday, Oct. 24, 2020 at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center. He was bom in Davie County to Johnnie Mack May- field and Lizzie Martin May- ___________________________ field on June 3, 1960. He was educated in the Rowan and Davie County schools. He worked for Fish Game Sweep- stakes as a security guard. At an early age, he joined Er­ win Temple CME Church in Woodleaf. Later, he joined Chosen Church of Faith and was a faithful member, serv­ ing as an Elder, lead usher and groundskeeper. In addition to his father, he was preceded in death by: 3 brothers: Alvin Mayfield, Frank Mayfield and John Mayfield; and 2 sisters, Doris Gray and Deborah James. Survivors: his devoted wife of 40 years, Judy Dulin Mayfield; 5 children, Sherita Cow­ an, Felton Mayfield Jr., Rita Dulin-Gray, Isaiah Mayfield and Candace Mayfield; his mother, Lizzie Mayfield; a brother, Wilton (Kimberly) Mayfield; 3 sisters, Olympia (Milton) Neely, Pastor Ruby Howell and Alexis Cline; 8 grandchildren; and a host of other family and friends. The funeral service was held on Sunday at The Bridge Church in Cooleemee with public viewing from 2-3 p.m. Burial followed at Fairfield Baptist Church Cemetery in Mocksville. Condolences: www.robertsfuneral.com. Mary Alice Goolsby Benson Mrs. Mary Alice Goolsby Benson, 88, died Sunday, Nov. 1,2020 at Lexington Health Care. A private memorial service will be held Wednesday at Cedar Grove Baptist Church. Arrangements are in the care of Robert.s Funeral Ser­ vice, Lexington. Flora Mae Hockaday Mrs. Flora Mae Hockaday, 89, of Advance, died on Tuesday, Oct. 20, 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center. She was bom July 26, 1931 in Davie County to John Odell and Mildred Allen Smith, She was preceded in death by: her husband, Thurmond; her parents; brothers, Wayne and Glen; and her sister, Nancy Howell, Surviving: her brother, Willie Gray Smith; her sister, Annie Howell; and many nieces and nephews. A private graveside service was held at Macedonia Moravian Church Graveyard. She loved her Lord and had a servant's heart. Memorials: Macedonia Moravian, 7{X) NC 801 N., Ad­ vance. Condolences: www.hayworth-miller.com. Obituary Clyde William ‘CW’ Whitley Jr. Mr. Clyde William “C.W.” Whitley Jr., 79, of Deer Run Drive, Mocksville, died on Friday, Oct. 30 .at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom on July 25, 1941 in Davie County to the late Clyde William Whitley Sr. and Josephine McBride Whitley. Mr. Whitley worked more than 30 years as a paper carrier for the Winston-Salem Journal and Salisbury Post, and worked 14 years for YVEDDI Transporta­ tion. He enjoyed visiting the beach and horses. He will be re­ membered as a loving husband, father, son, brother, and friend. He was also preceded in death by: 2 daughters, Lisa Whitley and Cindy Gaither; and a sister. Survivors: his wife of 27 years, Bonnie Smith Whitleyof the home; 2 children, Tim Whit­ ley (Wendy) and Jeff Whitley; 5 grandchildren, Robbie Whitley, Leigh Ann Weatherman, Ashley Patterson, Jason Whitley, and Angel Kelly; and 4 great-grandchildren, Kade Whitley, Sophia Patterson, Josie Patterson, and Raylen Patterson. Condo le nces: wwweatonfuneralservice .com. PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION of James (Jim) & Ann Johnson 1201 Muddy Creek Rd„ Clemmons, NC 27012 Sat., November 14*” • 10:00 AM 5 zrr Saturday, Nov. 7 at 10 a.m. — GATES OPEN AT 8:30 a.m. — 2835 Griffin Road, Rural Hall, NC 27045 Coniplsta Lic^tiiticition / Est^o Und^r contract) Convenience Too busy to go out to buy a copy of the latest eidition of the Davie County Enterprise Record? Then visit www.ourdavie.com on your own device to get local news and obituaries, much before the newspaper goes to press! Mercury 1993 Grand Marquis LS 75K miles white/Grey interior, 1967 Ford 100 one owner. Original motor 352 V8, Farmail Super A, Ford 4000,4x7 Utility Trailer single axle 6x12 farm trailer, Huskee Supreme Sit 4200 Mower,Ground Work yard sweeper. Grist Mill, Coal Stove, Hobart Commercial Mixer {3 attachments), Blodgett Commercial Oven 11 racks w/pans,32' Lagan Lathe, Screw Cutting and Turret Lathe, Rockwell model 15-081 Drill Press, Dayton industrial 2 ton Artw Press, Hartford Milling Machine, Leten DCM-6 Bandsaw, Kent Industrial Co. LTD Milling Machine. Sears Craftsman Table Saw, Vise, Wellsaw Serial 20709 Bansaw, Irrigation Pump Briggs motor. Delta Milwaukee Drill Press, Power Back Dectric 5250 watts Generator, Sears Craftsman 3HP Air Compressor, fertilizer box for ^per A, 3PT hare. 16 disc, 6' box blade, 7* scrape 3Pt, 6' bush hog. Ford 4 bottom 14' plow trip shanks. Super A turning plow, 1 bottom 3pt Scoop pan, 2 ree! type mowers. Fertilizer hand truck. Corn Planter. Mowing machine, 2 wooden barrels, canning jars, wooden barrels, NC Bakers council bread rack, 5 gal wine buckets. Hospital gurneys. Aluminum redwood chairs. Dial Caliper. Blue canning jars. Garden se^er planter w/plates, Drill bits.Sears Craftsman tool box. drill press clamps. Work and trouble lights. 15ft heavy log chains, Sitrex 250 Spreader, Boom Pole. Firewood, Oak. Pine, Cherry and Maple Lumber, coal bucket. Woven fence wire. Chicken brooder. Farm bench. Crocks. Cherry seeder, wash tubs. 2 stone jugs, butter churn. 2 ladder back chairs. 6' stainless metal table and LOTS MORE ITEMS TO BE SOLD, Terms: Payment due in full day of Auction by Cash. Credit Card or Checks, NO OUT OF STATE CHECKS. Sales tax will be collected on all sales at a rate of 7°x>. A 3% handling fee will be charged on all credit card purchases. Everything sold AS IS WHERE IS. Sale Conducted By: BOSTICK AUCTION SERVICE NCAFL# 6273 191 Jones Rd.. Mocksville, NC • Phone 336-492-5992 For more pictures go to: wwwauctionzip.com #: 16902 ,,37,37 Car Sold at 12 Noon (with Low Reserve) 2018 Alfa Romeo Giulia Quadrifoglia — 23,000 Miles One Owner. Excellent Condition! John ihrmr 54“ 1 urn MtMci Suhl ('hainw%* Pirwc* txiU All X(nd<^ ot I ss»n A lutnJen I qutpRtcni Poker I able & (.'hips RJH AIctTUXabtlia SiyMxl .Anwork < ivil Vk ar I omicur*: Apptianco (Ymm SfTwII Kiuticn Xpptuuxc^ 1 «mpi Pro Irainrr I naKfantll I IikIi <>u«1ii> IU*u^chi>U I umrUuntf^ rtc (by llnpprr '\ Qnk A CMrrwburffn. lint fktjp. ttu! Worr PAYMENT TERMS: LIVE FLOOR BIDDERS PAY NO BUYER'S PREMIUM! Pervonai Property Term*: Pay with Caan - ChecK - V«a - Masiart ■M* ifvs gnon* 0«« »eo Z2*. Buyer • Prerruum {ConSkCt NC SALES TAX 7^ WILL BE COLLECTED PLEASE PRACTICE SOCIAL DISTANCING! NBACH AUCTION & REALTY, LLC THE ESTA TE SETTLESfE.\T PROFESStOSALS M M ( TtO**! ( k nHOKIK .' (ITU UM M T«H«» V 1 '336) or CELL (336? Ate-OeiA NCAFL aeSM NOtEBL L FFL Dh* zXuctionZip.com / UeinhachAuctions.net Perkins Roofing of Mocksville He lives under just one roof, but Jesse Perkins cares about every roof. That’s what makes his busi­ ness so special. ..................... As owner of Perkins Roofing in Mocksville, Jesse treats each roof as if it was on his own home. If it isn’t good enough for him, it will not be good enough for you. That is the way Jesse treats each roofing job and customer. His work and integrity speak for itself. Jesse, a Reidsville native, became interested in roofing when he was just 13 years old. At age 17, the summer before graduating from high school, he began helping his brother in the roofing business. Af­ ter graduating the next year, Jesse moved to Davie County and has been here since. After years of working for other roofers, Jesse de­ cided it was time to go out on his own. So, in the fall of 1997, he started Perkins Roofing. “I have been roofing most of my life and that’s what I love to do,” Jesse explains. “Installed out with a lad­ der, hatchet and pick-up truck.” Now, along with roofing, Jesse has added vinyl sid­ ing to his line of work. “I work with several local contractors on new homes and do tear offs for older homes that need a new roof. I have done some repair work but we just don’t have that many bad storms around here to do too much damage for roof repairs,” Jesse notes. Jesse takes a great deal of pride in his work and will work however many hours and days it takes to get the job finished and done right. “I keep my business somewhat small. That way I can be on the job to see what goes on and make sure the job is completed like it would be for someone in my family.” Perkins Roofing also enjoys giving back to the com­ munity. They are involved in various fund raisers including the law enforcement and rescue squad. If you are in need of a new roof and a good, honest, dependable man for the job, give Jesse at Perkins Roofing a call for a free estimate at (336) 753-8355. The BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT-An AFFORDABLEmaitetiiigi In FORSYTH County call (336) 766-4126 In DAVIE County call (336) 751 -2120 Put the BUSINESS SPOTUGHT toWorfi for YOUR Businessl In FORSYTH County call (336) 766-4126 In DAVIE County call (336) 751-2-120 PERKINS ROOFING "Quality work at reasortabk prices" (Roof Repair Specialist) Phone:336-7536355 M it jr Fax: 336-7534373 Jesse Perkins • Owner 300 Sprmg Street " Modc^fie. NC Propane REFILL STATION We Also Sell New Tanks! 20 lb.................$8.00 301b...............$12.00 40 lb...............$16.00 100 lb............$40.00 'ReAtJ*' Bailey’s Barber Shop 3225 U.S. Hwy. 64 East • Advance. NC (336) 998-7102 Tell our readers the stoiy of YOUR business hi the BUSINESS SPOlUGHT ‘Trusted Jewelers Since I960’ MOCKSVILLE NnrTnctorSivpl* • 751-37<7 Expert Jewelry Repair WE BUY GOLD! LAYAWAYS! ' GOLD GALLERY CLEMMONS Aovtt from Hip CMa • 766-1800 ADVERTISE YOUR BUSH HERE! Call TODAY To Ptrt The BUSINESS SPOTUGHT To Work For YOUI-O- 12 - DAVBE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 r^- Adam Smith helped Wakefield High enjoy a turnaround season as offensive coordinator. At right, he coaches receivers at Hampden-Sydney College. Former Davie QB finds success in coaching Smith at Leesville Road. By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Adam Smith was a defensive starter on the 2010 Davie football team that marched all the way to the state 4A championship game after a 5-6 regular season. No team ever could top that for a Cinderella story. He turned in one of Davie’s greatest quarterbacking seasons in 2011. He broke game, season and career records as a receiver at Guilford College. He has not only played in a state championship game, he has coached in one (2019 Leesville Road). He’s a player in arena football. with two seasons under his belt and a third hopefully coming in spring 2021. Whew. He’s done a lot in foot­ ball over the past decade. As a Davie junior. Smith played comerback for coach Doug Illing’s War Eagles. After limping to 5-6 and 3-2 for third place in the Cen­ tral Piedmont Conference - the two league losses were both at home and both were ugly, as in 34-0 to Mt. Tabor and 51-28 to North Davidson - Davie went nuts in the second half and buried North Da­ vidson 35-10 in the first round in Welcome. The War Eagles rallied for 30-29 overtime win at Tabor, [jerhaps the most memorable upset of all time. Smith came up with a gigantic, game-turning intercep- tion in that one. Davie got a home game in the next round and staved off High Point Central 18-15, Then Davie traveled to Porter Ridge, came out like gangbusters and held on 21-14. The state championship game was a 40-0 loss to an unbe­ lievable Hillside team. After serving as Carson Hem- don’s backup at quarterback in 2010, Smith was handed the offensive keys as a senior. Fans witnessed a meteoric ascension. A very persuasive case can be made that his 2011 quarterbacking run is one of the top three or four of all time, and Davie’s been in existence since 1956. He could make defenders grasp for air as well as he could zip precision passes all over the field. He threw for 1,917 yards and 18 touchdowns in 12 games, while only throwing three interceptions. What’s more, he was the No. 2 rusher with 771 yards on the ground. He averaged 6.5 yards per carry and ran for 11 TDs. Oh, and he also played occasional defense when it was do-or-die time and had two INTs. That team went 8-3, 4- 1 in the regular season and tied Tabor for first. The season ended in excruciating fashion. After op)en- ing up a nice lead, visiting Dudley stormed back to steal a 29-25 first- round decision, the winning points coming in the final 10 seconds on a throw-it-up-and-pray heave by Please See Smith - Page B4 Atrium Health and Wake Forest Baptist Health are combining. We re bringing together brilliant minds to advance life-changing care — an unrivaled approach for life-changing results. Medical education transforms, research expands, care is enhanced for your life. Your community will benefit. So wiII your children. And your grandchildren ... and their grandchildren. Because we believe when it comes to health, no one should settle for anything short of life-changing. Wake Forest Baptist Health Atrium Health Wake Forest School o"*^ r/iecJ’c’ Home fans only? Schools figuring out how many, and who can attend sporting events ; I • » I 1 John McDaniel went 12-2 with an 0.75 ERA in 2006, tying for most wins in program history. ‘Johnny Mac’ delivered in every single game By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Second in a two-part series on new Davie hall of famer John McDaniel. It’s hard to overstate how truly good John McDaniel was on the mound as a Davie senior in 2006. His numbers were breathtaking. He pitched at a high level every ... single ... game. His senior year did not start like he had hoped, however. He missed the first four games with an injury. Davie went 3-1 in his absence, but the one loss was 7-5 at home to Mt. Tabor in the Cen­ tral Piedmont Conference opener. McDaniel made his senior debut in the fifth game at Freedom. Al­ though Davie ultimately lost 3-2, McDaniel sizzled for five innings. Freedom’s only hit coming on a solo homer by the No. 9 batter. He tossed 63 pitches in six innings, but the lack of offensive support spoiled his effort. Davie’s back was against the wall after a 4-1 loss at West For­ syth. Davie wa.s seething over a lOth straight loss to the Titans and an 0-2 start in the CPC. West Please See McDaniel - Page B3 Expect fewer teams in the playoffs High school teams will have condensed seasons in 2020-21. No team will play more than 14 games in the regular season. The good news is there will be state playoffs. The brackets will be smaller than normal, but at least the opportunity to chase a state championship will be there. Playoff brackets that normally have 64 teams will have 32 this year. Football will have two 16- team brackets in each classifica­ tion. There will be four playoff weeks in football and two in the other sports. The football playoffs are set to begin April 16 and end May 8. Girls and boys basketball playoffs will run from Feb. 23 through March 6. The voUeyball playoffs will start Jan. 12 and end Jan. 23. The boys soccer playoffs will be from March 16-27. The playoffs for girls soccer and softball will be May 3-15. The baseball playoffs will be June 15-26. Conferences with six or fewer teams will be given one playoff berth. Conferences with seven or eight teams will be given two berths. Conferences with nine- plus teams will get three berths. If there are additional at-large spots, they will be based on conference winning jjercentage. The casualties of the reconfig­ ured seasons are dual team tennis and dual team wrestling champi­ onships, Those sports normally have both team and individual championships. This year there will be only individual state cham­ pionships. Cross country regionals will be held Jan. 16 with the state cham­ pionships to follow. Swimming regionals will be held Feb. 4-6 and the state meet from Feb. 10-13. Girls and boys golf regionals are scheduled for May 3-4 with the state championships May 10-11. Boys tennis regionals will be May 7-8 with the state champion­ ships May 14-15. Girls tennis re­ gionals will be June 18-19 with the state championships June 25-26. Wrestling regionals will be June 18-19 with the state champi­ onships on June 26. Get ready for overlaps. For in­ stance, the basketball playoffs will conflict with the first two weeks of football season. By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record March 13 was the day sf)orts shut down. Good news for sports- starved fans: Around 250 days af­ ter the shutdown, sports is nearing a return date. Two high school sports will start their seasons in November. Three middle school sp>orts will do the same. The pandemic rear­ ranged the schedule, and all the sports will see condensed seasons. "This is obviously the longest offseason ever, and I think every­ body is anxious to get back and compete." Davie athletic director Mike Absher said. “You hate that the kids have had to be confined for so long. So, yeah, it’s time to move out of the workout phase that we’ve had for months and go out and play.” Davie’s JV and varsity volley­ ball teams will op>en Nov. 17 at Reynolds. Their first home match will be Nov. 19 against West For­ syth. Davie cross country will start Nov. 18. Davie swimming will be the next sport to crank up, the first practice Nov. 23 and the first meet in early December. Cross country, volleyball and girls tennis will be the first sports out of the gate in middle school. South Davie cross country and volleyball will start their seasons Nov, 17. South tennis will open Nov, 19, At North Davie, volley­ ball and cross country will start Nov. 17 and girls tennis will open Nov. 19. At Ellis, all three sports will start Nov. 17. Twenty-five fans will be al­ lowed in the gym for volleyball matches. Cross country can have 100 spectators. “There will be 25 fans for the JV match,” Absher said. “Then we’ll have to clear those 25 out, and there will be 25 for the varsity match. It’s just following the man­ dates from the governor. The N.C. High School Athletic Association has followed suit with it.” ADs in the Central Piedmont Conference haxifc decided to have home fan.s only for volleyball matches. “In the CPC, we decided it would be easier to manage if we said no visiting fans,” Absher said. “That was a conference agreement. The bad thing is Johnny off the street can’t come in there and watch it. But it’s better than not playing. “Cross country will be limited to nine (runners) per team - nine girls and nine boys.” Ben Baity, the .AD at South Davie, said the Central Carolina Conference (Ellis, N. Davie, S. Davie, Summit, Wesleyan Chris­ tian Academy and Canterbury; Forbush is a conference member for football only) is pretty much using the same guidelines as the high schools. “We’re still trying to figure out how we’re going to (do the 25 fans for volleyball),” Baity said. "We’re not sure if we’re going to give out tickets or make it a first-come, first-serve. We’ve talked about streaming (volleyball matches), like Facebook live or something like that if somebody couldn’t get in. We have a South Davie Facebook page, so we would just have somebody with a phone streaming it.” And then: “We've talked about doing home fans only. We’ve talked about once the JV match is done, have those parents exit, spray down the bleachers and then bring the varsity parents in. We’re tying to be as fair as we can. Wesleyan has already been playing, and that’s what they’re doing - just home fans. Summit and Canterbury aren’t letting fans in at all (for volleyball).” The National Federation of State High School Associations put out a statement on Twitter last week: “We have been in contact with all of our state associations over the past eight months, and we have heard a positive story. If there have been any reported cases of COVID-19 transmission based on playing sports, the number is extremely small.” 1 B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 John McDaniel gets a save during a Mocksville Legion win over Rowan County. At right, he throws a pitch for Davie. Enter WleeWy Chance to $20 WEEKLY 1®" PRIZE and an Enterprise Record Cap $5 WEEKLY 2"“ PRIZE CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone can enter except employees of the Davie County Enterprise Record and their families. Only one entry allowed per person per week. All entries must be on originaJ newsprint or fax to 336- 751-9760. 2. Games in this week’s contest are listed in each advertisement on this page. Fill in the contest blank and submit or mail the entry to the Enterprise Record, P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028. 3. Weekly prizes are $20 & Cap for first place and $5 for second place. 4. In case of ties, the entrant who came closest to the total number of p>oints in the tie breaker wins. If a tie still exists, awards will be divided equally among the winners. 5. Entries must be delivered to the Enterprise Record before 5:00pm Friday each week. The office is located at 171 S. Main St., Mocksville, NC. 6. Winners will be announced following each contest. Decisions of judges will be final. A new contest will be announced each week. PhilCar Automotive & Tire Your Full Service Vehicle Maintenance Center NO NEED TO TRAVEL TO A DEALER Now Offering All Ford - Lincoln - Mercury Factory Diagnostics & PlOjramming 1. Liberty vs. Virginia Tech “Philcar for your car. ’’ 1628 Hwy. 601 S. • 751-1800 beside Lakewood Motel • Mocksville tfiip Woodmen Life’ 980 Salisbury Road, Mocksville, NC 27028 joey D.Anderson, FICF ReprGsentativG 4. Charlotte vs. Middle Phone: 336-642-0066 Tennessee JDAnderson@woodmen.org Woodmen of the World Life insurance Society, Omaha. NE Frank Vogler & Sons Clemmons Chapel 2849 Middlebrook Dr., P.O. Box 540, Clemmons, NC 27012 " N'iTrZ'S’- (^^6) 766-4714 Funerals ~ Cremations ~ Advance Planning Follow the Davie County Enterprise Record ONUNE! Look for us on Facebook and on our Website...10. NY Giants vs. Washington WWW..com SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL Call today for Heating on Delivery! 2. Michigan vs. Indiana Call Ils Today (336) 284-255 1 “Trusted Jewelers Since I960’ WE BUY GOLD! LAYAWAYS! 5. Pitt vs. Florida St. Eats — Drinks — Spirits &23S Towncenter Drive, Clemmons (336) 766-7045 8. Detroit vs. Minnesota Open: Mon.-'lhur. Ilam-lam; Fri. & Sat. 11 am*2 am; Sun. 12 noon -1 am 'wvu'w.xn.osssrsclem.zn.oixs.com Advertise Your Business Here! Call 336-751 -2120 today to place YOUR BUSINESS on our next FOOTBALL CONTEST PAGE! 11. Seattle vs. Puffalo Congratulations to this week’s WJAfAf First Place = $20.00 to Anthony Sellers Second Place = $5.00 to Aaron Naylor This week came down to a tie between numerous contestants with three missed games. Congratulations to one of our long-time contest participants, Anthony Sellers, who had the closest pick in the tie-breaker by a single point to claim First Place. Coming in Second Place by the narrowest of margins was, Aaron Naylor. The Clemson vs. Notre Dame game looks like a great one this week but Clemson looks to be without their QB Trevor Lawrence as he sits out another game due to Covid-19. With a highly touted freshman taking the reigns the Tigers will still be a strong opponent. ■Qie Panthers come off a tough loss only to face the powerful Kansas^ity Chiefs. 336-909-1042 3. Florida vs. Georgia CRENSHAW PAIN TINS jBOMPANY.tLLI A Professional L^^k JVith A Personal Toueh^ Whitnee's New & used variety store 998Yadkinville Rd., Mocksville (Beside Mocksville Tire <fi Automotive) You Never Know What You’ll Find! Socks, Collectibles, New t£ Used Furniture, Glassware, Party Supplies, Greeting Cards dt So Much Morel ^'VIRUS HOURS”: Open Tuesday and Friday Noon-5XX)pm; Every Other Saturday IO:OOam-2X)Opm (336) 753-1388 LAMBERT F U N E R A L H O M E * CnFMKTJON SERVICE 635 Wilkesboro St. • Mocksville, NC • (336) 751-H<X) www.lambertfuneralhomenc:.com selected 9. Chicago vs. Tennessee WW I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I NAME:_____ I ADDRESS:. J DAY PHONE ADVERTISER WINNER PHILCAR AUTOMOTIVE __________ SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL __________ CRENSHAW PAINTING CO. __________ WOODMEN LIFE __________ DAVIE JEWELERS __________ WHITNEE'S NEW & USED VARIETY __________ FRANK VOGLER & SONS __________ MOSSY’S __________ LAMBERT FUNERAL HOME __________ 10.OURDAVIE.COM __________ 11. ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE__________ Tie Breaker Predict the total score in the following game. In cases of ties the tiebreaker will be used to determine the winners. Clemson vs. Notre Dame Continued From Page BI Greg Holt, a junior who had already committed to North Carolina, jammed gas down This is when the War rolling.They didn’t stop un- playoffs. They didn’t stop until they broke the program record for wins. In a put-up-or-shut-up home game against South Rowan, Davie steamrolled 10-0 behind McDaniel’s pitching, Whit Merrifield’s three-run homer and Zach Howard’s three-hit night, which matched South’s to­ tal. “This was definitely a must-win game,’’ Merrifield said. McDaniel pitched a three-hitter. Several War Eagles displayed renewed unity by shaving their heads. This game was also note­ worthy for junior catcher Chris Kinard’.s Davie debut. He moved from Charlotte to the Merrifield home, but missed the first seven games after getting beaned in the eye in a scrimmage. “I knew Johnny was ready when he shaved his head, because that’s unchar­ acteristic of him,” coach Mike Herndon said. Davie got a payback win in a big way, 11-3, over Tabor and freshman pitcher Mat Batts. Kinard slammed two homers. Zach Vogler (4 for 5) and Howard also went deep. Merrifield went 3-4. McDaniel walked one and struck out eight. At North Davidson, not even a 13-K, one-walk per­ formance by North’s Zach White could slow Davie. That’s because McDaniel countered with a four-hit, no-walk shutout in a mon­ ster pitchers’ duel that ended 1-0 in Davie’s favor. It was 0-0 in the fifth when Merrifield laced a two-out single. After he stole second, Brandon Stew­ art dumped a two-strike of­ fering into shallow left-cen­ ter, driving in the game’s only run. Stewart flashed his leather in the North sixth, racing back to the right-field warning track and making an over-the-shoulder, diving catch. That play loomed large when two North hits followed. “He kind of saved my butt that inning,” Mc­ Daniel said. East Rowan at Davie was an anticipated matchup. East was 6-0 in the CPC, but Davie handed the Mustangs an emphatic beating, 9-1. Davie took control when Howard homered in the fourth. Trailing 1-0 against Craige Lyerly, a pitcher who would land at Catawba, Merrifield's high fly landed on the right-field chalk for a triple. Cleanup man Brad Corriher coaxed a two-out walk. Then Howard blasted a monster homer to center. Suddenly, the War Eagles were ahead 3-1. They blew it open with five in the fifth. McDaniel walked one and fanned 11 in a four-hitter. “This is huge,” Howard Brad Corriher and McDaniel hug after an emo­ tional 2-1 win over West Forsyth in 2006. said. “If we don't win this game, we’ve got a slim chance of winning the con­ ference .” A 10-0 verdict at South Rowan was a beautiful re­ run for the War Eagles, who stole 10 bases and watched McDaniel hurl his third straight four-hitter. Merrifield, Stewart, Vogler. Kinard and Brent Beam stroked two hits each as Davie roughed up Zach Brown. McDaniel permitted two balls to leave the infield. “Johnny Mac’s been in­ credible,” Herndon said. The Freedom Easter Tournament featured eight teams. Davie destroyed East Burke 17-2. It was ruthless in every facet of the game in an 11-0 win over McDowell, which had won seven straight. McDan­ iel covered five innings in 42 pitches, with no runner reaching second base. In a seven-run third, Merrifield and Kinard homered and Corriher banged two hits. “To be honest, the bus ride lasted twice as long as the dadgum game did,” Herndon said. Davie dispatched East Lincoln 5-2 in the title game. Corriher was stellar (six innings, five hits) and Jonathan Hutchens earned the save. Merrifield, How­ ard and Kinard had two hits each. Davie eked out a 1-0 home win over North Da­ vidson. The heart-stopper put a ribbon around Davie’s Senior Night for Corriher, McDaniel, Vogler, Brandon Johnson, Hutchens and Sax­ on Pratt. McDaniel escapted a bases-loaded jam in the sixth. He faced bases-load­ ed, one-out pressure in the seventh with the leadoff man up. Herndon walked to the mound. “I talked to him and he just looked at me,” Hern­ don said. “He was as calm as ever.” With everyone holding their breath, a Black Knight hit a short fly to right. Stew­ art raced in to make the catch. He threw to shortstop Merrifield at second for a game-ending double play. Andrew Hunt, the 2005 CPC V. Player of the Year, worked a complete game in defeat. McDaniel walked one and struck out eight. The lone run came in the fourth. Corriher pulled a single between first and secon d. H oward legged out a swinging bunt. Then Kinard knocked in Corriher with a sharp grounder up the middle. Afterward, Herndon marveled at Stewart’s catch. “I thought it wa.s a flare hit,” he said. “Here comes Brandon and he throws a strike to second.” The War Eagle.s were tired of coming up short against West Forsyth, so they did something about it - before a raucous packed house at Rich Park. They reached a new high in 2-1 victory, the 15th straight win eclipsing the record from 1993. By ending the lO-game skid to West and prevailing over Holt, Davie, West and E. Rowan were now tied for first. “I’m proud of everybody on the team, one through 18.” Corriher said. “To win a game of this magnitude, it’s amazing. I’m on cloud nine.” With two outs and no­ body on in the third, Mer­ rifield and Stewart drew walks and Vogler grounded to second. A hurried throw got past the first baseman and two runs scored. Corriher used grit and determination to hold West to one run over five innings and win his fourth straight decision. Working in relief, McDaniel retired all six batters he faced. “He’s as cool as he can be,” Herndon said of John­ ny Mac. “It doesn’t matter what the situation is. I mean, I don’t think he has any nerves.” CPC competition was electric. Another white-knuckle game was next at East Rowan. It was 8-1 McDaniel against 9-0 Cy Young with the regu­ lar-season title on the line. It was a spectacle setting in Granite Quarry as fans filled the grandstand and streamed down both sides of the foul lines. The War Eagles got it done 4-1, stop­ ping a six-year title drought and celebrating their first outright championship since 1993 (Davie’s 10-2 mark was followed by East and West at 9-3). “We ran up against some good pitchers and we found a way to gut it out every time,” Corriher said. "To win 10 straight (in the CPC), that’s pretty dad- gum satisfying,” Herndon said. “We did it the hard way. We weathered the storm.” Beam was at second with two outs in the third. Mer­ rifield deftly placed a bunt on the third-base side. Ly­ erly made a wild throw and Beam scored for a 1-0 lead. Stewart’s RBI hit made it 2-0. Kinard drove the nail in East’s coffin in the sixth, smoking a single past short to plate Vogler. When the ball rolled through the cen­ ter fielder, Corriher came home for the 4-1 lead. McDaniel’s economi­ cal 87-pitch effort was a ho-hummer. He had a streak of 26 consecutive score­ less innings broken by a fourth-inning double, but he retired the last .seven batters. “I love him,” a graceful East coach Brian Hightower said. “I love him because he’.s a competitor. Guys come in here and want to light up the radar. McDaniel works ahead in the count and he locates - and that’s the art of pitching.” Davie hosted the CPC Tournament and received a first-round bye. In a 3-0 win over No. 4 North Da­ vidson in the semifinals, the War Eagles used a familiar formula; They scratched out a few runs and rode McDaniel, who blanked the Knight.s for the third time. Merrifield and Vogler blis­ tered run-scoring hits in the third, and Corriher slapped a fifth-inning single to add insurance. McDaniel shoved an 83-pitch four-hitter in a game that lasted one hour, 16 minutes. In the championship game against E. Rowan, Corriher wa.s the hero in 1 -O victory. (This wa.s Davie'.s ninth game decided by one or two runs; it was 7-2 in those nailbiters.) Corriher’s third-inning hit set up the game’s only run by pushing Vogler into scoring posi­ tion, and he was brilliant on the hill, walking one in a three-hitter. Vogler made two sfjec- tacular catches in center - on back-to-back plays. Kinard had three of Davie’s six hits. “We clawed back (from 0-2 in the CPC) and came out on top,” Corriher said. “It’s been an amazing ride.” Corriher’s money pitch was a parachute changeup. “Now they call me The Professor and I’ve taken that to heart,” he said. “I change speeds and locate.” When the War Eagles hosted Grimsley in the first round, it was their first play­ off appearance in six years. The 4-1 win marked their first playoff win since 1993. The game was defined by dazzling defensive plays. Merrifield ranged to hi.s right and threw out a runner at first from his knees. Later he speared a laser and dou­ bled up the runner at third. Kinard hosed a runner trying to steal. He rifled a throw behind the runner at second and Merrifield tagged him out. Left fielder Beam nailed a runner at second. Corriher dug out two low throws at first. McDaniel achieved hi.s 11th complete game in a.s many starts. It was his fifth complete game without issuing a walk a.s Davie held a 15th straight opponent to less than three runs. The .second round against visiting Northwest Guilford produced an epic 10-inning battle. Davie survived 6-5 because Howard cracked a three-run homer, because McDaniel disarmed the Vikings in the last three innings, because second baseman Heath Boyd made two sensational plays that saved at least three runs and because Merrifield atoned for two errors by making things happen on the bases, including a stolen base that led to his clinching run. Davie wa.s clinging to a 2-1 lead when Howard stepfjed up with two on and two outs in the fifth. He homered to right-center on a 3-2 pitch. Corriher was strong again on the mound, but the 5-1 lead slipped away as Davie made four errors, including a two-out throwing error in the sev­ enth that plated two runs and tied the game at 5. Reliever McDaniel faced the minimum in the eighth, ninth and 10th. In the bot­ tom of the 10th, Merrifield led off with a walk and promptly stole second. Mo­ ments later, he broke for third and notched his 26th steal. The throw slammed off his helmet and rico­ cheted into dead-ball terri­ tory. Merrifield trotted home a.s teammates charged out of the dugout. Davie reveled in its 24th win, a record that still stands. Davie hosted North For­ syth in the quarterfinals. With 1.500 ticket.s sold at the gate, fans had to fight for a seat. Davie had a 20- game winning streak, but the Vikings had an abso­ lutely jam-packed roster of stars. They were 28-0 and nationally ranked. They entered with a .362 team batting average, 33 homers and had outscored oppo­ nents 253-35. Their lineup included Dustin Ackley (UNC, six years in the major leagues), Wes Hobson (Ap­ palachian State), Addison Johnson (Clemson, drafted by Oakland), Stefan Morris (Gardner-Webb), Michael Wall (UNC Greensboro) and Jamie Serber (High Point). North cuffed Davie 5-0. “We just ran into a better team,” Herndon said. Merrifield went 2-3, but Vogler (1-3) had the only other Davie hit. McDaniel gave it all he had in a no-walk effort. North’s 1-3 batters went 2 for 12, with Ackley going 0-4 with a strikeout. “Mc­ Daniel was tough,” North coach Jamie Lowe said. “He did a good job of battling. To keep (Ackley) hitless tells you what kind of pitcher was on the mound against us.” When McDaniel got the first batter in the seventh to ground out, Herndon went out and took the ball. “We wanted to give him a standing ovation becau.se of the year he's had," Herndon said. While N. Forsyth lost two games to one in the semifinal series to Madison Bumgarner and South Cald­ well, Davie’s electrifying run ended at 24-4. “It all started when they all signed the Inger­ soll-Rand sign (in right field)," Herndon said. "They made a commitment to one another,” The all-conference se- lection.s from Davie were seniors McDaniel (pitcher of the year), Vogler and Cor­ riher and juniors Merrifield, Howard and Kinard. McDaniel signed with Division-II Pfeiffer and turned in a distinguished ca­ reer. By going 9-3 with eight complete games, two walk.s and 62 Ks in 86.1 innings, the 6-2, 180-pounder won Carolinas-Virginia Athletic Conference Freshman of the Year in 2(K)7. His name is in the Pfeiffer record book. In career rankings, he's first in innings pitched (361.1). second in strikeouts (285) and seventh in wins (21). His Davie stat.s are frozen in time. As a .senior, he threw six shutout.s in 12 starts. In each start, he walked one or none. In seven outing.s as the starter, he delivered a four-hitter or better. He went 12-2 with an 0.75 ERA. seven walks and 72 K.s in 84 innings. In his three-year varsity career, he went 22-9 with a 1.95 ERA. 25 walks and 182Ksin215.1 innings. Two of the seven walks in 2006 were intentional. Five unintentional walks in 84 inning.s is just incredible. He was a quiet warrior. He never looked excited, ner­ vous, scared, happy or sad. You could live another lOO years and never see another pitcher quite as calm and cool as Johnny Mac was. Herndon; “You don’t know if you’ll ever see a year like he had.” Vogler: “Johnny’s got the same look on his face 24/7.” Assistant coach Tim De­ vericks: “On the bus ride (to E. Rowan before the show­ down for the regular-season title), he was sleeping.” Merrifield: “Johnny Mac’s effective because he can throw it in a two-inch hole. He can hit his spots like nobody I’ve ever seen before.” After Davie, McDaniel pitchpd at Pfeiffer.Entries Mf^st Be Received Before 5 pm Friday B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - B5 ‘95 War Eagle girls work their way into Hall of Fame By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record The 1994-95 girls bas­ ketball team will be in­ ducted in the Davie High Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2021 at halftime of a Da­ vie basketball game in late January or early February. The individuals who will be inducted are Jonette Wil­ liard, Duane Phillips, John McDaniel and Billy Riddle. Here’s a game-by-game look at Davie’s unforgetta­ ble run in 1994-95. Won 85-51 vs. West Rowan. ... Stat leaders: Ma­ ria Newsome 18 points, 11 rebounds; Keisha Wagner 16 points, 9 rebounds; Beth Wall 12 points; and Jonette Williard 12 points. ... Da­ vie coach Laddin Lakey: “Eighty-five points - that’s a lot for a first game.” Won 63-30 at North Ired­ ell. ... North shot 5 of 36 in the second half as Davie scored the final 17 points. ... .Scoring leaders: Tami Ramsey 19, Wall 18 and Wagner 11. Won 51-50 vs. States­ ville. ... Davie led 48-40 with two minutes left. Statesville rallied furious­ ly before missing a free throw to tie and a jumper to win in the final seconds. ... Stat leaders: Newsome 21 points, 11 rebounds; Wil­ liard 14 points, 7 rebounds; and Wagner 12 points, 8 rebounds. Won 52-48 vs. Salisbury. Newsome had 22 points and 11 rebounds. Won 58-49 at Salisbury. Elizabeth Greene and Wall paced Davie with 10 points each. Won 53-43 at Statesville. Davie’s top scorers were Ramsey 16 and Williard 11. Won 68-62 vs. North Iredell. ... Davie trailed 43- 39 before ripping off a 13-4 Smith ... Continued From Page BI a Panther QB who wasn’t known for his arm. Smith didn’t receive any scholarship offers because of his lack of size. He went to Guilford with intentions of playing quarterback; he was quickly moved to re­ ceiver. As a freshman in 2012, Smith scraped and clawed his way into the starting lineup. He had a sterling 40- game career for the Quak­ ers. He holds the game re­ cord for receiving yards (253 against Shenandoah in 2015). He holds the season record for receiving TDs (18 in 2015). He holds career records for receiving yards (3,988), receiving TDs (46) and games with at least lOO receiving yards (19). His next chapter was coaching. He was an assis­ tant for two years at Hamp­ den-Sydney. Then he landed a job at Wakefield High in Raleigh. “They were able to find me a spot as a teacher assis­ tant in special education,” he said. “They were going to allow me to be offensive coordinator, which was my ultimate goal.” Smith walked into a pro­ gram full of gloom and doom. The Wolverines, a 4-A school, went 0-11 and averaged a meager 9.8 points the year before Smith’s arrival in 2017. run.... Stat leaders: Ramsey 21 points; and Greene 13 points and 11 rebounds. Lost 64-59 South Rowan in the Sam Moir Christmas Classic semifinals at Ca­ tawba. ... South’s Jill Cress and Summer Nelms com­ bined for 42 points as the Raiders, who came in with a 3-6 record, stunned the War Eagles, who were 7-0. Lakey: “South just played a real good game. Nelms had the best game of her career.” ... Davie’s top scorers: New- some 20 and Wagner 13. Won 51-45 East Rowan in the Moir’s third-place game at Catawba. ... The Mustangs shot 26 percent from the floor. ... Davie’s top scorers: Ramsey 15 and Williard 12. Won 52-47 at West Row­ an. ... The Falcons pulled within one with 1:4O to go. Williard came up with a steal and basket at :44 to secure the win. ... Stat lead­ ers: Newsome 24 points on 12-of-16 shooting and 12 re­ bounds; Williard 11 points. Won 47-30 at West For­ syth. Davie’s scoring lead­ ers in its Central Piedmont Conference opener were Ramsey 14, Wall 13 and Newsome 10. Won 48-32 at North Da­ vidson. ... Davie jumped to a 20-4 lead in the first quarter and coasted from there. ... Wagner led the War Eagles with 10 points. Won 71-45 vs. South Rowan. ... Stat leaders: Newsome 27 points on ll-of-16 shooting, 14 re­ bounds; Williard 16 points; and Ramsey 15 points. ... Lakey; “We’ve worked real hard since we lost that game (to South) in the Christmas tournament, and it paid off.” Won 63-44 vs. South Stokes. The scoring leaders were Ramsey (16), Greene (15) and Newsome (14). Smith was the offensive coordinator in 2018, a sea­ son that began with a 37-12 loss to Leesville Road. That pushed Wakefield’s losing streak to 15. The streak ended the next week as Wakefield broke loose for a 31-9 decision at Millbrook. It was the Wolverines’ first win in 672 days. “They went nuts,” Smith said. “I believe I have a vid­ eo on Twitter.” The other wins were 61-7 over Southern Durham, 37-9 over Corinth Holders ,23-12 over Knightdale and 21-14 over Heritage. The Wolverines were playoff-bound and they met Fuquay-Varina in the first round. They put up a strong fight in 21-19 defeat, a game-tying two-point pass barely failing in the waning moments. While Fuquay improved to 8-4, Wakefield exited at 5-7. “That was a great game,” Smith said. “We had a late comeback. That was a good Fuquay-Varina team, too.” The Wolverines went 3-2 to finish second in the conference and averaged 20.5 points. Think about that: With Smith pulling the offensive strings, they went from 0-11 to five wins and doubled their scoring output from the previous year. “It really went well,” he said. “We were No. 2 in the conference behind The 1994-95 girls team, from left: Page Steed, Beth Wall, Heather Johnson, Wendi Cartner, Laura Moyer, Keisha Wagner, Maria Newsome, Elizabeth Greene, Jonette Williard, Tami Ramsey, Brooke Suiter and Amanda Sigmon. The coaches: assistant Sherrie Myers and head coach Laddin Lakey. Advance Family Dental Dr. David Barabe Dr. Amy Li 149 Yadkin Valley Rd., Ste 101 Advance, NC 27006 336-998-1076 www.advancefamitydentist.com Won 50-32 vs. Reynolds. ... Davie raced to a 21-4 lead. ... Demons coach Jeff Faullin; “They have four legitimate players. Greene is an excellent player. She’s a scrapper. Wall is a great point guard. Newsome is strong in the post. Ramsey does everything.” ... Stat leaders: Ramsey 13 points; Greene 9 rebounds; Wil­ liard 4 points, 7 assists, 5 rebounds and 4 steals. Won 56-39 at Mt. Tabor. ... Davie carved out a 35-15 halftime lead. ... Scoring leaders: Newsome 14 and Ramsey 13. Won 67-51 vs. West For­ syth. .Stat leaders: Greene 16 points, 10 rebounds, 5 assists; Williard 14 points; Ramsey 12 points; and Newsome 11 points and 11 rebounds. Won 60-36 at South Stokes. Won 67-46 at South Rowan. ... The Raiders’ leading scorer, sophomore Cress (16.6 ppg) missed 19 of 22 field goals. ... Davie’s scoring leaders; Newsome 20, Ramsey 16, Wall 11 and Williard 10. Won 58-55 vs. North Davidson. Won 52-37 at Reynolds. Won 81-37 vs. Mt. Ta­ bor. ... The War Eagles blast­ ed their way to a 50-14 lead on the way to complet­ ing a perfect season in the CPC (12-0). ... Stat leaders: Newsome 26 points and 17 rebounds; and Ramsey 18 points. Won over Mt. Tabor in the first round of the CPC Tournament at Davie. Won 66-64 over West Forsyth in the CPC Tourna­ ment championship game at Tabor. ... After holding a seemingly comfortable 59- 50 lead with three minutes left, the War Eagles watched West storm to a 61-60 lead at 1:52. ... Greene drove for a layup that tied it at 64-64 at :25. Then Wall drilled two free throws at :04 to give Davie its 16th straight win. Wall: “It was the most nervous I’d ever been.” ... Stat leaders; Newsome 24 points; Greene 14 points, 8 rebounds, 3 assists and 2 steals; Williard 11 points, 8 rebounds and 7 assists; and Wall 7 points, 6 assists and 5 rebounds. Won 60-56 vs. Hoke County in the first round of the 4-A playoffs. ... Davie was behind 56-53 before Wall saved the day. The senior point guard scored the game’s final seven points to finish with a team-high 20. Lakey: “She pulled us through.” Won 59-41 vs. Purnell Swett in the Sectional 2 championship game. ... The War Eagles faced a 21- 20 halftime deficit as they missed 20 of 30 shots and all seven free-throw attempts in the first half.... With Swett’s 6-3 center, Myshka Wilker­ son, on the bench with four fouls, Davie surged to a 34- 27 lead in the third quarter. ...Wilkerson, who came in averaging 17, only man­ aged two in the first three quarters. ... After missing their first eight foul shots, the War Eagles sank 14 of 17 down the stretch. ... Stat leaders: Newsome 21 points and 21 rebounds; Wall 12 points and 5 assists; Wagner 10 points; and Ramsey 9 re­ bounds. ...The 18th straight win lifted Davie to 25-1. Lost 44-39 to North For­ syth 4-A regional at Le­ noir-Rhyne College. Davie committed 23 turnovers and faced an uphill climb Lakey: “We had a fantastic year, and that’s something that can’t be taken away. When we get to be 70 years old, we can say we were 25-2.” Davie only had one double-figure scorer - Wall with 10. ... The War Eagles finished 25-2. ... In the West final. Freedom crushed N. Forsyth 63-36. Notes: Newsome, the 6-3 center, earned CPC Player of the Year for the second year in a row after averaging 15.5 points and 16 rebounds. ... Lakey took home coach of the year. ... Wall and junior Ramsey were also selected to the all-confer­ ence team. Ramsey made it for the second time as she averaged 12 points and 11 rebounds. Wall averaged 7.5 points and 5 assists. ... The only Davie girls team to win more games came in 1978-79, when coach Bill Peeler’s War Eagles, an­ chored by Deanna Thomas and Jill Amos, soared to 3-A runner-up and finished 26-4. The 1981-82 team went 25-2, so the 1994-95 team is tied for second in single-season wins. ylllstate. You’re in good hands. Drew Ridenhour 852 US Hwy.64W.,Ste.1Ol,Mocksville 336-751-0669 Black Sand Company Sand, Gfxnrat & Landscape Matwriak Sine* lasr- Residential & Commercial .Mark A Cindy Shtnrf, Ownert Moodav-Friday 7i3O.5i30 • Saturday 8HM>>3:00 PICK UP OR HEUVERV 745 W. 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We had multiple all-conference guys on of­ fense, which was a complete 180 froni the year before. “I took how I was treat­ ed in high school by coach Bum (Todd Bumgarner) and all of those guys - the way they treated me and how they cared about me as a person - I took that and treated my guys the exact same way. I took everything I learned about offense from my offensive coordinators in college and tried to imple­ ment them here. I tried to make everything very sim­ ple in our eyes, but make it look very complex and very different from the defensive side. So I took my human resources skills from people at Davie and took all of the football stuff from college and experiences past that.” While keeping his teach­ ing position at Wakefield, Smith moved 14 miles down the road to coach receivers at Leesville Road in 2019. “Some things happened in the offseason, which re­ sulted in me moving on,” he said. “But my season at Wakefield was really awe­ some. I had a great time. When Wakefield hired a new head coach, it was really late in the game. I started searching for another posi­ tion. When Leesville Road offered me a job, they had already had their full staff hired, so they gave me an opportunity to coach receiv­ ers, which I was OK with.” At Leesville Road, Smith found an established winner, the Pride going 8-5 in 2017 and 10-3 in 2018. Both years they were knocked out in the second round of the 4AA playoffs. But Leesville Road had a formidable squad in 2019. It finished 13-1 as the state runner-up. The season kicked off with a 37-6 win over Smith’s former team, Wakefield. “That was pretty interest­ ing,” he said. “The former head coach from Wakefield and me coached against Wakefield. So there was a lot of positive and negative anxiety going into that game from both sides.” The semifinal matchup against Wake Forest was an iconic moment for the Pride. Wake went 14-0, 15-0 and 16-0 from 2016-18, the 45 consecutive wins result­ ing in three state champi­ onships. Before the game against visiting Leesville Road, Wake was 12-1 with 57 wins in 58 games. Lees­ ville triumphed 21-10. “It felt like Leesville had finally gotten over the hump,” Smith said. “The year before. Wake Forest ended their season (41-10 in the second round) and we knew it was our turn. STEVE IJAMES CARPET CLEANING DISCOVER THE BEAUTY OF YOUR CARPET! ’ Residential & Commercial FREE ESTIMATES ' Carpet & Upholstery Steam Cleaning e AO A E Deodorizing & Soil Guard (336) • Water Extraction Service Locally owned & operated SERVING DAVIE COUNTY AND SURROUNDING AREAS MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL FALL IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today! Hwy. 601 S.. Mocksville |336) 751-2304 Although Wake Forest was home, the aura the whole night was that power was about to shift out of Wake Forest’s hands. The relief after the game felt eerily similar to post-Porter Ridge (in 2010).” Leesville lost 24-3 to Vance in the state final. It was a closer game than the score suggests. With eight minutes remaining, it was 10-3. “Our starting quarter­ back went out in the second quarter,” Smith said. “Some things went sideways (in the final eight minutes) and Vance tacked on two touch­ downs. We really battled and Vance was really, really good.” But man, was Leesville Road good in 2019. “The second place team in our conference was Car­ dinal Gibbons, who lost to East Forsyth in the 4A final,” he said. “It was really fun to coach such a talented team. From top to bottom, it was the best position group I’ve ever coached, even going back to when I was coaching in college (at Hampden-Sydney). One of my receivers (Noah Bur­ nette) is a kicker at North Carolina. He was one of the top kickers in the nation. He just happened to be a freak athlete and could really play receiver.” Smith loved Leesville, but he wanted to get back in position to call plays. So he’s made another coaching change, this time to Enloe, which is 14 miles from Leesville Road. He’s still a teacher at Wakefield. “It’s been a wild few years,” he said. The Enloe Eagles started 8-0 in 2018 before settling for 8-4. They fell off a cliff in 2019, going 2-9^ Smith is the run.iing backs coach, but “the plan is to transition into calling plays pretty quickly and be offensive coordinator,” he said. “Getting the opportu­ nity to call plays again was the goal. I was interested in going somewhere that needed coaching and needed support. Enloe is a program that’s had success, but it’s just not a stable program. They’re a magnet school, so they don’t have access to a lot of students like a nor­ mal school does. We’ve got some talent, we just need to build a full team. It should be fun, should be a good challenge.” Smith got married in June of 2019. He and his wife live in Morrisville, which is near Durham. No one can love football more than Smith. Not only is he going full speed in coach­ ing, he’s still playing. His arena career began in 2018 with the Triangle Torch in Raleigh. It only took him two weeks into the season to break into the starting lineup at receiver. In 2019, he starred for the Cape Fear Heroes in Fayetteville. “That was my best sea­ son since I was in college,” he said of the 65 catches for 850 yards and 17 TDs. “The only guy I was behind statistically (Larry Beavers) had played for the Patriots and Panthers.” The 2020 season last spring/summer was wiped out by COVID-19. Smith is hoping to latch onto the Car­ olina Cobras in Greensboro next spring. “I was ready to go with the Cobras (last season), but, of course, COVID killed that,” he said. “I’ve been talking to the staff and I’m planning to resign with the Cobras and play in 2p21.” A Traditi 140 N. Clement St., Mocksville. NC (336) 751-5820 GENTLE Machine & Tool Inc. 2716 Hwy. 601 North Mocksville, NC 27028 336-492-5055 jg LAMBERT I l S K a .\ I ,11 <> -M E 635 Wilkesboro St. Mocksville, NC (336) 751-1100 www.lambertfuneralhomencxom nSPaUetOne www.palletone.com 165 Turkey Foot Road Mocksville. NC 27028 336-492-5565 Antiques, Collectibles, and Repurposed 121 N. MAIN ST. MOCKSVILLE NC 27028 336-753.8700 Hours; wea i Thurs n-6. 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B6 - DAVDE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - B7 A’ PURRH-rtCI. <■ - r^kj’ J* . Jean Hyack and Barbara Martin planting a bed of Violas in a Butterfly Garden.Susan Hayworth planting violas in one of the beds. Advance dub maintains gardens r'i*? '■Amelia and Rilynn Bailey and Gunter and Shelby Lassiter pose in their costumes at Clarksbury UMC’s trunk or treat. Christi Wall and children Benjamin, Stephen, Catherine and Silas are ready for treats. Eight members of the Advance Garden Club met at the Healing Garden at Clemmons Novant Health on the morning of Oct. 28 to remove summer plant­ ings and replace them with violas. Members Barbara Mar­ tin, Katherine Creasy, Jacquelyn Bargoil, Patti Brennan, Jean Hyack, Su­ san Hayworth and Angela Hodges came prepared with planting tools, gloves, wa­ ter, and masks to work in the garden for the Fall planting. Tim Dionne delivered 10 trays of violas in mixed colors and two bags of pot­ ting soil purchased by the club. Violas commonly called "Johnny Jump Ups" were chosen since they are cold-hardy plants that will continue blooming during those cold winter days. The garden committee will meet again in the new year to discuss additional containers and flower beds at the garden for this Spring. Club members have signed up for maintaining and wa­ tering the garden during the fall and winter months for the club's project of main­ taining and planting in the garden outside the Infusion Center. f/ Patti Brennan working with one of the planters in front of the Infusion Center. flPPlIHHCE repair years ofex[)erience in af)f>Hance repair" 540 Sanford Avenue Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3162 DavieMajorApplianceRepair.com DavielVIajorAppliance@gmail.com ■-i Advance Garden Club members working in the garden at Novant Clemmons included, from left: Barbara Martin, Katherine Creasy, Jacquelyn Bargoil, Patti Brennan, Jean Hyack , Susan Hay­ worth, and Angela Hodges Jacquelyn Bargoil plants Violas around garden rocks. - Drivew * Asphal jbaljid’*3^- • Crack 1Filling & Seal Coating TKngell I Paving Commercial and Reaidential | .. Asphalt SpecialistsMocksville NC 336-751-3759 www.angellpavlng.com "WING" NIGHT! Starting at 4:00 PM Every Saturday! All You Can Eat Wings from our buffet on Saturday nights or order wings anytime off our menu. If you like wings...you'’n fo^e ours!!! OPEN 11AM-8:3OPM 7 DAYS A WEEK In MOCteVliXE: Located between Peebles and factor Supply VILLAGE INN Family Proudly Serving Your Family Since 7.96?7** villageinnpizza.cbm Katherine Creasy water’s the newly planted Violas. Benjamin Tutterow earns degrees from Campbell University Benjamin Josiah Tutte­ row graduated in May 2020 during a virtual commence­ ment ceremony at Campbell University in Buies Creek with Doctor of Pharma­ cy and Masters of Clini­ cal Research degrees from the Campbell University College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences. Dr. Tutterow’s first-year pharmacy residency ap­ pointment began in June 2020 at Cape Fear Valley Medical Center in Fayette­ ville. He and his wife, Ra­ chel, live in Dunn. He is the son of Jeff and Sheila Tutterow, and grand­ son of Peggy D. Tutterow of Mocksville. 2» Benjamin Josiah Tutterow 701 North Main St, Lexington, NC 27292 336-224-2228 300J Ohs Greensboro Rd. Winston-Salem, NC 27107 336-778-3955 wyffw,robertsfxineral.cotrt „„„ County Line Trunk or treat popular at Clarksbury UMC By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondent As photos show, many kids enjoyed Halloween last Saturday even though some events were canceled or limited due to Zeta. Thurs­ day of last week Zeta swept through the Piedmont, in­ cluding Iredell and Davie, with rain and high winds and left a trail of downed trees and power lines, dam­ aged homes, and folks with­ out power for days. Local churches have ser­ vice schedules this week, but contact the church for any updates weather may require: Calvary Baptist, indoor Sunday worship at 11 a.m.; Clarksbury Meth­ odist, outdoor Sunday wor­ ship at 10 a.m. and indoor "Book of John" Bible study at 7 p.m. Thursday, both with masks and social dis­ tancing; Piney Grove AME Zion, indoor Sunday school at 10 a.m. and worship at 11 a.m.; Pleasant View Baptist, regular indoor services Sun­ day and Wednesday; Salem Methodist, indoor Sunday worship at 9:30 a.m. with social distancing and masks in the sanctuary; Society Baptist, indoor Sunday wor­ ship at 11 a.m. with message by Gene Tutterow in fellow­ ship hall. Wednesday night prayer and Bible service at 7 p.m. in sanctuary; no Sun­ day night service. Please See CL - Page B9 D I C ...r -^Tfilia Marie Heath brings great-grand- kids Conner and Katelyn Woo­ ten. Karlie and Lisa Cartner are ready for “Trunk or Treat” at Clarksbury United Methodist.Riggs Cartner meets “Mr. Pumpkin.” April Lassiter gets a big laugh from daughter Shelby. Fc E N Registered Nurse Amanda Rogers receives Davis Regional Medical Center's Excellence in Nursing Award, which recognizes the critical role nurses have played in treating patients through­ out the coronavirus pandemic. Her compassion for patients was shown when she went beyond duty to grant a dying elderly gentleman's last wish to see his daughter and to have a cup of Cheerwine, not stocked by Davis. She was able to set up a Facetime visit for him and then get him a glass of cold Cheerwine, which he drank a few minutes before breathing his last breath. Amanda is the daughter of Starr Rogers Burgess and the late Danny Rogers and resides with son Bailey on US 64 West just east of N(^ 901. Carol and Richard Bra- zel await the spooks and goblins. O o New Pool & Spa Installation Cleaning • Chemicals Openii^ & Closii^ | Vinyl Liner Replacement * Tommy Harris/Owner - Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (33e) 284-4817 Cell: (338) 908-4027 J RANDY MILLER &SONS SEPTIC TANK SERVICE 295 Miller Road • MocksviUe (336) 284-2826 * We Pump Septic Tanks • state , Certified Inspector SR/d Steer Wortt Trencher Wofli Hauling Septic Systems J Fooangs 2 . Loeder iforir AllYdufMarketinqiWeeils DAVIE IMTY ENTERPRI/^^ECORD Marketing Solutions for YOUR business Newspapers • Special Sections OurDavie.com • Digital Marketing Business Card Directory Including: SEO, SEM, Targeted Marketing, Social and Reputation Management, Website Design, AND MORE, For more information contact us at: 1 71 S. MAIN STREET • MOCKSVILLE, NC (336)751-2120 GRown H IN Davii Cat “Ctory (^xyberts Q^uneral Q!^>errice "The Best that Heart and Hands Can Give" I B8 - DAVTE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 Daisy Shepherd gets ready to cast her first ballot in 81 years. Woman votes for first time in 81 years Wednesday, Oct. 28 was a historical day for Daisy Shepherd of Mocksville. It was her first time vot­ ing in 81 years. “Ms. Daisy” is home- bound due to being 'hand­ icapped with physical ailments and wheelchair mobility. After being regis­ tered; she was so delighted, excited, emotional, grateful and empowered to know that she has a voice and that her vote counts. It was not about Demo­ crat or Republican, she said. The most important thing is that she had the opportunity to exercise her right to vote during her lifetime. “This just goes to remind us that it is never too late to do something new and something you have never done before,” said Angelia Ijames. “Be empowered and let your voice be heard.” WWW. ourdavie .com > Fully Insured • Tree Work & Tree Removal • Trimming & Thinning > Free Estimates ■ Stump Grinding • Bucket Truck Service ‘•’C ■” ' * J * Marie Kerley examines the big oak tree that fell up her driveway when the remnants of Hurricane Zeta roared through Davie last week. - Photo by Robin Snow Zeta downs trees across Davie The weather forecasters predicted the high winds as the remnants of Hurricane Zeta roared through Davie County last Thursday. What wasn’t expected was the widespread power outages, caused by downed trees. Damage was reported across the county, with trees across roads, across power lines, and even onto houses, outbuildings and vehicles. Marie Kerley of Mocks­ ville heard the crash when a giant oak tree fell on her driveway, buckling some of the pavement and hitting the edge or her carport. A neighbor moved limbs so she could get out, and an­ other volunteered to cut the big tree. She has lived in her neighborhood for about five years. “I love it here. It was quiet ... until thi.s morning. I loved that tree. It makes me want to cry, but at least no­ body was hurt.” Icz.... Continued From Page B7 <11 services for local Ihurches will continue on­ line. Our community sends ^appy birthday wishes to lildred Cartner Beck, who lelebrated her 92nd birth- lay last Saturday. The past veek she was treated to linners by family members. )he enjoys daily activities at te Elder Center of States­ ville and cards and calls fom friends and relatives. County Liner Amanda togers has been recog- lizcd by her peers at Davis (legional Medical Center 3r her caring and dedica- Jon to her patient.s during lis coronavirus pandemic. Lmanda, all of us in County Line appreciate your front Ine pandemic service and longratulate you upon re­ lei ving this award. Our community ex­ tend.s sympathy to the family of Novella Forrest Safley. who died at home early Wednesday morning of last week. The seventh of 10 living children, she was bom in Davie County in 1921 to the late Lewis and Beulah Walker Forrest of Jones Road off Davie Academy Road near Ridge Road. She attended Jericho Church of Christ, where she was a lifetime member, and helped her family with their large farming busi­ ness. She attended Davie Academy Grade School and Cool Spring High School. In 1940 she married school­ mate William Wesley "Bill” Safley of nearby Ratledge Road; the couple made their home on Adams Road off Davie Academy Road near Greenhill Road and reared daughters Ruby and Verna. Gentle and caring. Novella had been active in Davie Se­ nior Services, Silver Strid- ers, and Meals-on-Wheels. She enjoyed sewing, gar­ dening, and cooking. A ser­ vice celebrating her life was held Friday afternoon of last week at Jericho Church of Christ Cemetery; where she was laid to rest beside her beloved Bill, who died in April 1998. We extend sympathy to the family of Patricia "Pat" Mohler, who died Wednes­ day of last week at Rose­ wood Assisted Living in Harmony. One of two chil­ dren, she wa.s bom in Iredell County in 1954 to the late Howard Adams and Kay Fox Mohler. She graduat­ ed from South Iredell High School in 1972 and married Joe Harri.s of County Line in DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD TIiur.sday, Nov. 5, 2020 - B9 February 1974. The couple settled on the Harris family farm on Piney Grove Road, where they reared their three children. She had worked as a shipping and receiving clerk at Intercraft Industries and also helped with the Harris cotton and tobacco family farming business. A member of Chajjel Hill United Methodist Church, she was a caring person and enjoyed time with her grandchildren and her craft hobbies. A graveside service celebrating her life was held last Sunday afternoon at Clarksbury United Method­ ist Church Cemetery, where she wa.s laid to rest. Paul Ressa ha.s improved and has been recuperating at home since last Satur­ day. Faye Stroud continues to rest at home while under treatment for cancer. Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessing.s upon Paul, Faye, and other resident.s who are having health problems. Pray for the Lord's comfort and support upon the fam­ ilies of Novella and Pat as they adjust to life without their loved ones. Also, re­ member in prayer those res­ idents with coronavirus-re­ lated infections. Remember in prayer the families affected by Zeta in our state and other areas. Pray for the many families affected by the coronavirus as the number of corona- virus-related deaths in our country passed 237,CXX) last Monday and the daily count of infection cases reached new daily highs over 90 .OCX) last week. Please remember to do the three W's: Wear mask. Wait 6-8 feet apart. Wash your hands. For news and memories to share, please call Shirley on 336-492-5115 or email sdtlink® hotmail .com. BROWDER DENTISTRY Sheffield-Calahaln Liberty Wesleyan plans holiday events Thomas S. Browder, DDS is accepting new patients! (336) 909-0609 Scotty Seaford (336) 909-0610 Jack Seaford Central Davie alumni offering scholarships The Davie County Train­ ing School/Central Davie High School alumni (former schools on the Central Da­ vie campus) commemorate their school days with an annual reunion. Due to Covid -19, the 2020 planning committee had to cancel the June event. The scholarship commit­ tee typically announce the recipients of DCTS/CDHS scholarship at the reunion. HUNEYCUTT / specialize in small projects! Interior & Exterior Painting Pressure Washing Punch-List Maintenance Handyman Work & Light Carpentry General Home Improvement John Huneycutt 336-618-2425 huneycuttpalntlng@gmail.com The reunion’s scholarship recipients for the 2019-2020 school year were announced by the Davie Community Foundation. The recipients were high school seniors. Josh Robinson, Evan Steele, and Chhaya Scott. It is now time for high school seniors who are relat­ ed to a DCTS/CDHS alum­ nus to apply for the 2020- 2021 scholarship. Deadline is March 4, 2021. Students may access online applica­ tions from high school guid­ ance departments, or the Davie Community Founda­ tion scholarship website. The former DCTS/CDHS students’ goal is to keep their legacy alive, even in these uncertain times. Alumni are encouraged to donate to the scholarship fund. Donations should be sent to Davie Community Foundation, PO Box 546. 107 N. Salisbury St. Mocks­ ville. The sponsoring class of the 2020 reunion made a generous donation to the scholarship fund. Plans for 2021 reunion have not been finalized to date. Letters will be sent in 2021 regard­ ing plans. SiRtDCESTOnE iSr-'anniNirun^Fiac'e; /FALL ll\ITO SAVINGS DAVIE COUNTY GET UP TO A INSTANT SA VINCS I » ' ^60 WHEN YOU BUY A SET OF A EUCtBLE BRIDGESTONE OR FIRESTONE TIRES I^ENYOU USE-YOUR ■ CFNA CREDIT CARD ENTERPRI/ERECORD Marketing Solutions for YOUR business Newspapers • Special Sections OurDavie.com • Digital Marketing Business Card Directory Including: SEO, SEM, Targeted Marketing, Social and Reputation Management, Website Design, AND MORE. For more information contact us at: 1 71 S. MAIN STREET - MOCKSVILLE, NC (336) 751-2120 OFFER VALID NOVEMBER 2 - 30, 2020 EttQfbh? Tires: DnveGiiaid. Dueler H/L Alenza. Dueler H/L Alenza Plus. Due’er A/T REVO 3. Dueler’H/L 422 Ecopia.- Ecopia EP422 Plus, Ecopia H/L 422 Plus. J^otenza RE980AS. Turanza QuietTrack Champion With Fuel Fighter Tt’chnol-juy. Destination LE2, Desti'^ j’ii.n; LE3 Oestinatr';? A/T2 Destination X/T. and Firehawk AS. Receive $60 off 4 e'igibk Bfidgcr.K'ue or Fin:none tires purchased Detweeii Novemoer 2 and November 30 2020. Participating retailers unly Not combinable with other c.-hrtfs. Void where prohibited Other restru hf-r-s fees, and taxes mav apply. Discount gr.-’n at c: pufcnase and :»p amount. See store associate for details. Rcr*.iv- it’-: $120 sayings when you . irike a quairfying tire puichase with any ehgibie CFNA credit card account. CFNA credu earn subject to credit approval BEROTH TIRE & AUTOMOTIVE MOCKSVILLE 132 Interstate Drive ■■ Mocksville, NC 27028 B (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 Sat. 7:30 - 12:30 MockBerothTire.com LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! —_ O't By Brenda Bailey Sheffield Calahaln torrespondent Birthday wishe.s to: Cin- ^y Reeves, Morgan Thutt rid Skyler Wilson on Nov. Louise Spry on Nov. 9; knd Lori Cobb on Nov. 12. Several couples are cele­ brating anniversaries; Craig id Jessica Myers on Nov. and Britt and Jecca At­ kins, Chris and Candace /aughn and Mark and Lynn lendrix on Nov. 10. If you [would like a birthday or an­ ti versary listed, please do Inot hesitate to contact me. The Sheffield-Calahaln I VFD meetings are held each I Monday night at the station I at 7. If interested in becom- I ing a volunteer firefighter or would like to join the auxil­ iary, feel free to come to the y meetings or see any mem­ ber of the fire department. ^We look forward to having more community involve- ^ment. Everyone is welcome. In last week’s column Ithere was a photo of a young lady. Were you able to iden­ tify her? It was my sister, lary Lou Teague, who cel­ ebrated a birthday on Nov L This year it was one of Ihe biggest days of all times ^election). We all wish her a elated Happy Birthday .She |vas cute then and is still a uery pretty lady. If you have photo you would like to ^hare, please forward to me. Chester Reeves, own- fcr of Chester’s Quilts, will pave a sale of his quilts and trows Saturday, Nov. 7 fom 10 a.mm.3 p.m. Ches- er has a new wide selec- |ion of Christmas and other trows for Christmas shop- bing. The throws and quilts pave been pieced and quilt- pd by him. The sale is at 247 Turkeyfoot Road. He will Iso have some facial masks sale. As many of you pnow, he was diagnosed i'ith cancer a few years ago td had to give up his auto Retail business. For more iformation, please contact kirn at 336-492-5837. Ijames Baptist Church vill continue to hold an out- lide worship services this punday morning at 10. In te event of rain, services vill be drive in. Please join ps for worship with Pastor Lobert Jackson. Liberty Wesleyan Church holding worship services |s each Sunday at 10 am and Jible Study at 10 am each Saturday. You can also hear tie message each week on racebook. The church is at 1106 Sheffield Road, Har- tony. Upcoming events re Liberty are: "Hanging bf the Greens" on Sunday, Qov. 29 at 10 a.m.; and on :c. 6 at 6 p.m., "The True -ight" John 1:9 Children's "hristmas celebration will be held a.s an outside ser­ vice. Bring a chair or stay in your car to enjoy the pro­ gram. Hot chocolate, coffee and snacks will be served. Everyone is welcome to these events and services. The Rev. Keith Ledford and Community Covenant Church, 1446 Sheffield Road, invites you to join them for worship sen/ice each Sunday morning at 10:45, Kid's Power Hour at New Union UMC is at 6:30 p.m. and the Youth Group will meet at 6 p.m. each Wednesday outside. Hope you can join for an eve­ ning of fun, fellowship and learning more about Jesus through scripture, stories and song. New Union’s Sunday morning worship services will be held each week at 10 in the church. Wear­ ing of facial masks will be greatly appreciated. You can also view the services on Facebook. Everyone is welcome. Wesley Chapel UMC is selling TerriLynn fjecans, cashews, black walnuts, and more. To place an order or for more information, con­ tact Kathy Ellis at 336-830- 5 1 23 or you may contact me via my phone number, email or Facebook. You can also order nuts from their web­ site; https ://wesley-chap- el-umc Jerri lyn n .corn. Prayer requests contin­ ue for Bryan Swain, Jean Reavis, Lori Dyson, John­ ny Naylor, Dot Keller, Pat Moore, Deborah Nich­ ols, Sylvia Ratledge Wil­ liams, Wellman Beck, Hazel Smoot, Tim Keller, Junior Dunn, Betty Damer- on, Tammy Keller, Naomi Wooten, Jeff Potts, Charles England, Greta England, Lincoln Dyson, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Ted Adams, Jane Tutterow, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Bob Ellis, Car­ en Morgan, Melissa Spry, Wade Reeves, Helen Bul­ la, Joann Renegar, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Greg Gob­ ble, Betty Richardson, Fred Beck, Larry Dyson and Su­ zonne Stratton. Our sincere condolences to the Allen Snipes family. Please submit all news to brfhaiiey® msn.com, mes­ sage me on Facebook or call 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thursdays. Doyie^ County Since- 197 3‘ lAUTQMOTIVEi 336-751-3372 " Brakes Tires Batteries Alignments Scheduled Maintenance Complete and Professional Auto Repair 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 Park 158 Professional Centre 5380 US Hwy. 158 Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 336.998.9988 www.browdersmiles.com Preferred Provider: HUMANA Delta Dental CIGNA Ameritas ASSURANT United Healthcare BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD AETNA Mutual of Omaha SUNLIFE Principal Life GUARDIAN Specials ef the Week BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina PREFERRED PROVIDER V2 LITER CHEERWINE PRODUCTS (Includes regular & diet varieties ot; Cheerwine, Sun Drop, Sunkist RC Cola, TUP, Canada Dry, and Diet Rite) S2.50/s„p«k $10.00/case Limit 8 FLU & SHINGLES SHOTS Avai/ab/e Anytime During Business Hours SENfOR CmZENS May DR/VE-UP to our BACK DOOR for FLU & SHINGLES SHOTS 7 AIVI — 8 AIVI Every Wednesday or come inside during our regular hours Foster Drug 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fosterdrug.com Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-1 • Sun 1:30-5 SL4DOKU DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5, 2020 - Bll I Court... BIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 District Court The following cases Oct. 15 session of Davie were disposed of during the District Court. Presiding: You are always welcome at First United Methodist Church 310 North IVIain Street Historic Downtown Mocksville Join us on FaceBook, YouTube, our church website and WDSL 96.5 FM at 5 p.m.on Sundays www.firstumcinocksville.org Telephone: 336-751-2503 Judge Wayne L. Michael. Prosecuting: Pearce Dou- gan, assistant DA. - Stephanie Lynn An­ gell, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, prayer for judgment con­ tinued, cost, $280 attorney fee. - David Joseph Bivins, DWI, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse The (K) Clues Are for Kids Created by Timothy E. Parker November 9, 2020 ACROSS 1. (K)___ Day (June 14th) 5. (K) “___time to replace that bulb” 8. (K) Stately male deer 12. Like a stadium with no dome? 13. Prefix meaning “new” 1<*. Song for one, at an opera 15. (K) Part of a list 16. ___it on thick 17. (K) Reveal verbally 18. Gatherings that bring groups together again 21. (K) Pizza___ 22. Time period of 1 billion years 23. (K) Fruit with a tart taste 26. Cul-de-___ (place with a dead end) 27. (K) Not he, the other one 30. Pretending to be another person 33. (K) Used a spade 34. (K) A car fluid 35. (K) Prerecorded 36. (K) Opponent 37. (K) One of the Seven Dwarfs . (K) People who need no motivation (2 words) . (K) Be concerned . (K) Sticky roof sealant 46. Word in a footnote 47. (K) Fiona’s species 48.11, in blackjack 49. (K) Give over, as land 50. (K) Low-voiced singer 51. Rescue signal from the Atlantic 52. (K) Skiing requirement DOWN 1. (K) Like a good judge 38. 45. 2. Lower in fat, on labels 3. (K) Length X width 4. (K) Footwear for indoor sports (2 words) 5. Fjord 6. (K) Any ballclub 7. Protein-rich legume 8. Luxurious material 9. (K) Playhouse or fort site 10. (K) Needs to get better? 11. Guy’s opposite 19. (K) Car option that slides 20. “You are here” arrow, e.g. 23. Eye opener? 24. (K) Flightless bird from Australia 25. Important no. to new car buyers 26. (K) Music staff note after “fa” 27. (K) Small, delicate drink 28. (K) Gardener’s tool that chops weeds 29. (K) Final word, after “The” 31. Types of breaks, in Mexico 32. Elements of a strategy 36. (K) Escapes, as from jail 37. Has the nerve 38. Long, adventurous tale 39. Points in the wrong direction 40. (K) Mexican snack food 41. Biblical garden 42. (K) Change completely from the start 43. Smallest of the merganser ducks 44. (K) Corn’s connection? Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? Thing with a bullet point? Look for the answer in next week's paper. PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWERIvniflicic IB HirJCES 10 lanBBB 10 n HHB ■iusiai0«3 mEEEMEE annc Ks EEEEEIH E iSEiS l0i0EEEj CB 10m BB 10131 Previous riddle answer: Weatherproof home on the beach? 4-D) Shell assessment, surrender li­ cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, limited driv­ ing privilege, $300 lab fee, $100, cost. - Emily Cheryl Burris, misdemeanor probation vi­ olation, probation terminat­ ed successfully. - Susan Lee Corriher, DWI, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse assessment, surrender li­ cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, limited driv­ ing privilege, $1(X), cost. Barry Lynn Crow, DWI, sentenced to 7 days active, obtain substance abuse assessment, sur­ render license, not oper­ ate vehicle until licensed, $362.50 attorney fee; reck­ less driving, expired regis­ tration, expired/no inspec­ tion, dismissed per plea. - Dakota Ray Ferguson, misdemeanor probation violation, probation con­ tinued 6 months, will be terminated when restitution is paid. - Kendra L. Garrison, driving while license re­ voked DWI revocation, prayer for judgment con­ tinued, cost, $170 attorney fee. - Erick Thomas Hendrix, possession of stolen goods/ property, dismissed in the interest of justice; assault on a female, dismissed, in compliance. - Donald Keith Inman, assault on a female, sen­ tenced to time served, $500 jail fee, $252.50 attorney fee. - John Dillard Kend­ rick, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, prayer for judgment con­ tinued, cost, $225 attorney fee; reckless driving to en­ danger, dismissed per plea. - Amber Sue Kilmer, giving false report to police station, dismissed per plea; simple assault, sentenced to See Court - Page Bll Advertise in the Enterprise 336-751-2120 Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you'll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the testl Laval: Intarmadiale Here’S How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row. column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzlel :H3MSNV Get the peace of mind that with taking care of Funeral Arrangements in advance. By pre-planning you can select how you want things to be handled, lock in the cost, take advantage of payment W” options and relieve your family of making difficult decisions. Call Carol Lewallen for a FREE Personal Planning Guide at 336-766-4714. Vogler & Sons Funeral Home 2849 Middlebrook Dr., Qemmons nDignity) Serving Winston-Salem, Clemmons, and Surrounding Areas Public Nonces Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices No. 1127007 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DAVIE IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION 20 CvD 223 COUNTY OF DAVIE, A Body Pol­ itic and Corporate, Plaintiff, BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES, UN­ KNOWN SPOUSE OF BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES, PARRISH TIRE COMPANY, Lienholder, and NORTH CAROLINA DE­ PARTMENT OF LABOR, DIVI­ SION OF STANDARDS, Lienholder, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an or­ der of the District Court of Davie County, North Carolina, made and entered in the action entitled DAVIE COUNTY. A Body Politic and Corporate Plaintiff vs. BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES. UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES, PARRISH TIRE COM­ PANY, Lienholder. NORTH CARO­ LINA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. DIVISION OF STANDARDS. Lienholder, Defendants, the un­ dersigned commissioner wilt on November 19, 2020 at 11:00 AM offer for sale and self for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction, at the courthouse door in Davie County. North Car­ olina in Mocksville, the following described property lying in Davie County, North Carolina and more particularly described as follows: TRACT 1: BEGINNING at an iron stake in the edge of Wilkesboro Street near a large oak; thence North 48 deg. 16 min. East 224.91 feet to an iron stake in Brewer’s line; thence South 40 deg. 36 min. East 100 feet to an iron stake; thence South 48 deg. 16 min. 10 sec. West 225.08 feet to an iron stake in line of Wilkesboro Street; thence along the edge of Wilkes­ boro Street; North 40 deg. 30 min. West 10O feet to an iron stake in edge of said street near a large oak the beginning corner. As sur­ veyed and platted by T. J. Byrum. Reg. C. E. March 1957. tract 2; BEGINNING at an iron stake in the edge of said Wilkesboro Street thence North 49 deg. 41 min. East along the line of Church Street 224.77 feet to an Iron stake in the edge of Church Street Extension thence South 40 deg. 36 min. East 43.95 feet to an iron stake; thence South 48 deg. 16 min. West 224.91 feet to an iron stake in edge of Wilkesboro Street near a large orak. Thence North along the line of the edge of Wilkesboro Street North 40 deg. 30 min. West 49.50 feet to an iron stake the beginning corner. As surveyed and platted by T. J. Byrum. Reg. C. E. March 1957 and being the same property conveyed to Gulf Oil Corporation by deed of Tremarco Corporation dated August 25, 1971 recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina in Book 84. page 620. Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey. Also being identified as Parcel ID# 14 120 CO 015, Davie County Tax Office. Address: 277 Wilkesboro Street The sale will be made subject to all existing easements and restric tions, any superior liens, all out­ standing city and county taxes, all local improvement assessments against the above-described prop­ erty not included in the judgment in the above-entitled cause, any prior lien in favor of the State of North Carolina, any right of re­ demption of the United States and any rights of any persons in pos­ session. A deposit of the greater of $750.00 or five (5) percent of the successful bid will be required at the time of sale unless the highest bid is by a taxing unit; then a de­ posit shall not be required. In the instance where multiple tax parcels are indicated in this No­ tice, the Commissioner may elect to sell all of the parcels either in one sale, or on the sale date indi­ cated sell each parcel individually by conducting a separate sale for each, or group various parcels together for several sales, or not conduct a sale at ail on one or more parcels, as the Commission­ er determines in his sole discre­ tion as being most likely to sell the parcels at a price adequate to pay all taxes due. as well as fees and costs. Any party contemplating the filing of an upset bid is therefore strongly encouraged to consult the Clerk of Court records to ascertain the parcel or parcels included in the sale for which an upset bid is planned. Upon delivery of the deed, the winning bidder sha^be required to pay the costs of recordation of the deed, including deed stamp taxes due to the Register of Deeds. Title and condition of the property will be granted to the successful bid der “as is" and without warranties. This the 12 day of October, 2020. Richard J. Kania Commissioner 600-A Centrepark Drive Asheville. NC 28805 828-252-8010 estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov.. 2020. Rojetta McBride C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/05, 11/12, 11/19, 11/26 I412OCOO15 277 Wilkesboro^ Wilkesboro- tree! TAX VALUE: $166,390.00 Publish 11/05, 11/12 No. 1129280 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Berneice Arnold (aka Berneice Bertha Arnold. Bernice Arnold), deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor- fiorations having claims against he estate of said deceased to exhibit them to Mr. Bret Russell Cogan, Executor, c/o George A. ^rip” Payne. Esq., Kasper & Payne, P.A.. P.O. Box 687, 3626 Clemmons Road. Clemmons. NC 27012, on or before the 5th day of February, 2021, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov­ ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of October. 2020 Bret Russell Cogan. Executor Attorney George A. “Trip” Payne Kasper & Payne. P.A. P.O. Box 687 3626 Clemmons Road, Clemmons. NC 27012 Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 No. 1137126 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of ANITA MERLE JOHNSON.(a/k/a ONITA MERLE JOHNSON) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5. 2C521 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said F" BBQ BUTTS & SMOKED TURKEYS! For Thanksgiving Butts = $35 with 16 oz. BBQ Slaw & Dip Turkeys = $40 with 16 oz. BBQ Slaw Pre-Order Due By Nov. 17 at 5pm Contact the Hre Station at 336-998-2395 or Michael Galliher at 336-782-4544 to order. PICKUP ON NOU. 25 • 4pm-6pm at Cornatzer-Dulin Volunteer Fire Department 1522 Comatzer Rd., Mocksville, NC It^s almost time! Medicare Open Enrollment October 15 - December 7 New and updated options for 2021! • Medicare Advantage • Part D Prescriptions • $0 Premium Plans • Supplements Let us help you find a plan to meet your financial and health needs. CALL NOW for appointment options Appointments available starting October 1. JOHNSON INSURANCE 127 Marketplace Drive 336-751-6281 Tina Brown-West, RHU. LUTC www.ourdavie.com FEATURE OF THE WEEK 690 Salisbury Street, Mocksville, NC Lovingly cared for home built in 1948 in downtown Mo3<sville. Spacious home with 1564 sf. spiit bedrooms plan, large laundry room, all appliances remain, stacked 2 car gara^ with front & back garage doors, natural gas furnace with central air, paved drive & outbuilding. Hardwood flooring urxler carpet, some arched doorways, fireplace & onginaJ glass paneled doors between the IMng & dining room add a touch of yesteryear to your next hon^. Schedule Your Appointment Today! $148,000 HOWARD REALTY 330 S. Safisbuiy St, Mocksville • 336-751-3538 To view all our current listings visit us at: |1S> www.howardrealty.com. Continued From Page BIO time served, cost, $225 at­ torney fee. - Phillip Justin Kitts, pro­ bation violation, probation terminated unsuccessfully; assault on a female, dis­ missed per plea; possession of a controlled substance on prison/jail premises, sen­ tenced to time served, $360 attorney fee. - Roger Lemont Martin, probation violation, proba­ tion terminated unsuccess­ fully, $360 attorney fee. Thomas Ross Mc­ Queen, [xjssession of mari­ juana up to one-half ounce, $25, cost; misdemeanor probation violation, pos.ses- sion of marijuana parapher­ nalia, guilty. 11 LAMBERT F IJ N E R A L U O .M E * CHKM.niO.N SERVK'K Davie County Family owned and operated by Carl & Kim Lambert Serving Davie County and Surrounding Communities for over 30 years Prearranged Funerals and Preplanning options available Cremation Services In your time of need, it is more important than ever to be with trusted funeral professionals who are also your friends and neighbors: - Please feel free to stop by and see our newly refurbished facilities and have any questions answered with regard to our services. LAMBERT E I \ K I< \ 63S Wilkesboro St. Mocksville. NC (336) 751-1100 Ckristmos Open, -Housef Sunday, November 8*^ 12:30 PM to 4:00 PM 20% OFF One Item! ()aUigrQ{>ker -Here to 'Personalize Ljoor Gift! 5539-102 U.S. Hwy. 158, Bermuda Run, NC 27006 (336) 998-0341 Mocksville. NC 27028 www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com S CLEMMONS No. 1130711 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of WADE SHERMAN BURNS, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before January 29. 2(521 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 21 ST day of October. 2020. Jon Scott Woodring, Executor c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY, LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29. 11/05, 11/12. 11/19 No. 1130253 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of DAVID WAYNE COTHRAN, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before January 29, 2CJ21 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate wilt please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 20th day of Oct., 2020. Jason Wayne Cothran, Executor c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II. Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29, 11/05, 11/12, 11/19 No. 1136160 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec­ utrix of the Estate of BETTY S. BROOKS.(a/k/a BETTY L. SMITH) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5, 2021 (being three [3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov.. 2020. Ginger P. Bennett C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 Publish 11/05. 11/12. 11/19, 11/26 No. 1131044 ” NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec­ utrix of the Estate of WALLACE WAYNE REYNOLDS late of Da­ vie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the un- day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 29th day of October. 2020. Cynthia Reynolds Booe C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 10/29, 11/05, 11/12 11/19 No. 1131559 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTRIX for the Estate of HXkZEL COBLE GARWOOD, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons' firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBUARY 3. 2021 This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate p^ment. Today’s date 10/29/2020. SUSAN G. BIDDEN 148 WARWICKE PLACE AD- execu­trix of the Estate of HAZEL CO­ BLE GARWOOD, deceased File #20E337. • ® Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 No. 1124771 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of SADIE A WIL­ LIAMS, late of Davie County NC this IS to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to ex­ hibit them to the undersigned on or before January 20, 2Cfel This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make LIAMS, jJ85. PLEASANT ACRE DR.. MOCKSVILLE. NC 27028. as EXECUTOR of the Estate of SADIE A WILLIAMS, deceased File #20E316. Publish 10/15. 10/22, 10/29, 11/05 Ematk PeaciRnes: Classified ads: Monday 3:00 pm; Legals; Monday Woon .com OR place your ad online at: SalisburyPost.com and click'Place Classified Ad’ No. 1134928 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the requirements of Article 20-B of Chapter 153-A of the General Statutes of North Car­ olina and Section 155.235 of the Davie County Code of Ordinanc­ es, that the Davie County Board of Adjustment will hold a Public Hearing in the Commissioners Room of the Davie (bounty Admin­ istration Building. 123 South Main Street Mocksville. NC on Tuesday November 17, 2020 at 6:00 p.m. to hear the following request: Advance Country Store own- g.r Jeff Jones has applied for a Variance to the front yard set­ backs in the Highway Business (H-B) zoning district pursuant to §155.145 (B) of the Davie County Zoning Ordinance. The subject property is located at 1878 NC HWY 801 S, Advance. NC 27006 and is further de­ scribed as a 3.89 acres parcel of the Davie County Tax Map G800000023. A sign will be placed on the above listed properties to advertise the Public Hearing. All parties and interested citizens are invited to attend said hearing at which time they shall have an opportunity to present facts and testirnony in support of, or in op­ position to, the request. Prior to the hearing, additional information request may be obtained by ^siting the Development Services Department weekdays between ^30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by telephone at (336) 753-6050. As a result of the public hearing, substantial changes might be the advertised proposal, roflecting objections, debate and di^ussion at the hearing. Anyone who rieeds an accommodation to par^cipate In the meeting should notify the Development Services Department at least 48 hours prior to the meeting or call North Caroli­ na Relay at 1-800-735-8262. Andrew MeadwefI Planning Department Publish 11/05, 11/12 O 1, Auctions & Sales Deals & Bargains Real Estate North Carolina North Carolina North Carolina f fargge Sales Advasce, 157 Odell Myers Rd Yard Sale. Sat. 11/7 8am-3pm. New and used po^et knives, golf clubs, shotgun, rifle, air tools, misc. tools, ladies clothing. Clos­ et Maid wire shelving and much more. ; TxTemmons, 3412 x'llca^ Dr. ; •Yard Sale. Sat. 11/7 8am-12pm. J I Household goods. furniture. i J books, dishes, TV, microwave. J «linens. Christmas lights, dolls, > I school supplies, art supplies. * J frames, dolls, bread maker. & J I much more. • Mocksville., 950 (IS Hwy 64 West HUGE Multi-Family Yard/Bike Sale.. Fri. 11/6 & Sat. 11/7 8am- 6pm. Bikes, household items, ap­ pliances. furniture, building mate­ rials. hand & power toots, camping gear, beach, clothing, electronics, gun accessories, holiday deco­ rations. collectibles, and more. Mark. 704-267-2969. C-PAP ACCESSORIES Full face masks and supplies. Still in package. Call 704-267-8479 $50.00 Cherry Curio Cabinet 72’x24’’ w/ lights. Octagon shaped front, glass doors & shelves. Mirror back. Mint condition. $85. 336-753-0179 DISPOSABLE WATERPROOF Men/ Women’s Extra Thick Diaper Pul- lups. Sizes: S. M. L & XL. 100 for $40. (3all 980-330-3041. Fresh Local Pecans in Shell $3.00 per pound or 2 pounds for $5.00. Call 704-425- 2552 LARGE THICK, WATERPROOF 30x30 inch pads for pets, wheel­ chairs & hospital beds. Very thick. 150 for $40. Call 980-330-3041 Moped Front Tire with rim Size 120-70-12. If interested call 704-920-8246, China Grove. $40. Norman Rockwell Collector Plate Mint condition. $10. photo avail­ able. 336-753-0179 Mei'chandise 1960 Push Heed Turned Push Lawn Mower Briggs & Straton, does run. $80. 704-310-0135 4-Spin Cast Rods & Reels $25. 704-278-9527 Bolins Weedeater Great condition. Ready to use. $40 704-310-0135 Back Massager Spa Life. For back pain. sore, tight muscles. New in box. Mint condition. $50. retail cost $200. 336-753-0179 C-PAP MACHME Used very little. Call 704-267-8479 $125.00 Crafstman Push Mower Has mulching b^. $50. 704-310- 0135 Troy Bitt Leaf Blower Great condition. Ready to run. $50. 704-310-0135 Netices Lost & Found Found on Longs Street in Spencer. Small, yellow dog 704-636-7637 Found dog around CC Camp Road. Please call 336-926-3751 to iden­ tify. No collarAags or Microchip. Found male dog, brown and white, shinny with ribs showing. China Grove, between Mt. Mari­ ah and Patterson, 704-797-1195, leave message if no answer. Lost 10/29/20 1 blue eye. 1 brown eye husky ramus and brown and white walker chanca. Please call 704-224-3543 Sweet Boxer Mix Fouad la Spancar Unaltered male. (Please contact 910-381-4401 to identify. JI-'J L .ML4J Land For Sale 8.03 Acres For Sale 800 block of Cana Road. Partially cleared & wooded. Perked. $75,500. 336-601-1755 or 336-993-6879 Manufactured Homes For Rent newtoday 3BR, 2BA Doublewide. Central heat/air. 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Cal 844-213-6711 B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 5,2020 Puff it Up Make Thanksgiving side dishes special Page 10 Billy Riddle Sports hall of famer got his start at South Davie _______________Page B1_________________ UNTY O U R VETERANS V • Novernl appreciate your service to our country id offer oiir hearffelt gratitude for your he^ protecting our nation and our freedoms. Allstate Insurance Drew Ridenhour 852 US Hwy. 64 W., Ste.lOl, Mocksville 336-751-0669 Eaton Fun.eral Service 325 N. Main Street, Mocksville 336-751-2148 Foster Drug Co. 495 Valley Road, Mocksville 336-751-2141 Farmington Road y^^reclter Service 721 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville 336-753-1485 Fleming & VPlUiams, LLP Attorneys at Law 284 South Main St, Mocksville 336-477-2529 Joe’s Tow 24 Houi^oadside Rollback Service Small, Medium & Heavy Duty Towing 1441 Eteadmon Rd., Mocksville 336-998-2693 Office Lambert Funeral Home 635 Wilkesboro Street, MocksviUe 336-751-1100 Mocltsville Tire & Automotive Serving You Since 1991 962 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville Mon-Fri 7:30am-6pm; Sat 7:30am-Noon 336-751-6115 This Message Brought To You By These Area Businesses Osborne’s Tire & Automotive Any Brand of Tire • Cars-Trucks-Tractors AU Major & Minor Repairs 1083 SaUsbuiy Road, MocksviUe 336-753-8090 PhilCar Automotive &Tire 1628 Hwy. 601S., MocksvUle 336-751-1800 Wfeathered Rock Stone, Mulch & Recycle Yard 1819 US Hwy. 64 West, MocksviUe 336-492-5979 DAVIE rr ENTERPRIZERECORD USPS 149-160 Number 46 Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 20 PAGES Two more local residents die with COVID Davie County is trending with the rest of North Caroli­ na with an increased number of lab-confirmed COVID {xjsitive residents. And numbers released Mon­ day by the Davie Health and Human Services Department show that two more county res­ idents have died with COVID. bringing the death total in Da­ vie County to 14. Since numbers started being counted in mid-March, Davie County has seen 901 residents be infected with the virus. A to­ tal of 769 have recovered. That means that at least 118 local residents are COVID positive. Six of those are being treated in the hospital. These numbers reflect 10,083 tests administered lo­ cally, which includes some p>eople who were tested more than once. The age group breakdown: 65 and older, 130; 50-64. 192; 25-49, 324; 18-24, 112; and under age 17,143. Chetyl An Lipsteu and Madelyn Greco survey paints going onto a mural on the side of the Martin & VanHoy building in Downtown Mocksville. - Photos by Robin Snow r Running of the Webb only non GOP candidate to win in Davie Greco and Lipsteu are learning that scaffolding on a steep sidewalk can be difficult to climb. Mocksville mural depicts event from the early ‘40s By Mike Barnhardt Enterprise Record The horses are primed and ready to run up Depot Street in Mocks­ ville again. That’s right, again. A mural being painted onto the side of the Martin & VanHoy At­ torneys building on the square in downtown Mocksville is taking shape. It depicts a running of the horses from the early 1940s. William Lester Richardson Sr. remembers. And he told the story of the wild horses to Jane McAllister on Sept. 1. “They brought them in on the train and cowboys came with them from Montana. During the war years, say about ’43 or ’44 maybe on to ’45 because you couldn’t get gasoline to run tractors, and they didn’t have tractors you know, they didn’t make any, so they used hors­ es on the farms. That’s the reason Please See Mural - Page 5 By Mike Barnhardt Enterprise Record With what may be a record turnout of more than 80 percent of the voters, Davie residents voted overwhelmingly for Re­ publican candidates except in one local race in unofficial re­ sults released Tuesday night. In the race for four seats on the Davie County Board of Education, unaffiliated can­ didate Cammie Paige Webb beat Dwight Goodman for the fourth spot. Joining incumbent Republicans Wendy Home, Dub Potts and Paul Drechsler. Home led the ticket with 19,402 votes, followed by Potts with 19,241, Drechsler with 18,902, Webb with 14,115 and Goodman with 11,693. Davie voters cast 18,115 votes for President Donald Trump, and 6,653 for former Vice President Joe Biden. The final results for the state were not available. Republican incumbent Thom Tillis received 17304 votes from Davie residents. Democrat Cal Cunningham, 6317. Republican Ted Budd of Ad­ vance won reelection to the US House of Representatives, with 18,844 Davie votes compared to challenger Scott Huffman’s Dylan Cranfill was seriously injured in an August ATV ac- <^ident. Dylan Cranfill benefit Friday Dylan Cranfill is at the Shepherd Center in Atlanta, receiving rehabilitation for se­ vere brain injuries suffered in an ATV accident in August. Friends and family are spon­ soring a fundraiser on Friday to support the family with medi­ cal expenses^ From 5-9 p.m. at The Farm at Oak Hill, 186 Kent Lane, Mocksville, there will be bar­ becue, raffles and music. Cranfill, 26, is the son of Debbie Jones and Chip Cranfill and a brother to Colby Cranfill. To learn more, contact Kara Rice at 336-90^-3233. Cranfill enjoys a day of fish­ ing: he’s at the Shepherd Center now. 6,128. Davie voters preferred Re­ publican Dan Forrest for gov­ ernor, giving him 16,998 votes compared to incumbent Demo­ crat Roy Cooper’s 7,830. NC Rep. Julia Howard of Mocksville won reelec­ tion over challenger Keith Townsend, and earned 18396 votes in Davie compared to 6.494 for Townsend. Republican incumbent Joyce Krawiec was reelected to the N.C. Senate, getting 17.620 votes in Davie compared to 1,064 for Terry LeGrand. Incumbent Republicans Mark Jones, Terry Renegar and Richard Poindexter were un­ opposed for their seats on the Davie County Board of Coun­ ty Commissioners, with Jones earning 20,444 votes, followed by Renegar with 19,997 and Poindexter with 19,903. Kelly Cozart Funderburk, a Republican, was unopposed in the race for the Davie County Register of Deeds. Davie County election offi­ cials are urging local residents to be patient when trying to find their voter history online. That could take a few weeks. “If you voted in person and inserted your ballot into a tabu­ lator, your selections were im­ mediately rep>orted on election night as part of the unofficial results,’’ said Karen Brinson Bell, executive director of the State Board of Elections. “We respectfully ask that voters trust their bipartisan boards of elections across North Caroli­ na. We are here to make sure your votes count, and they will. “Your county board of elec­ tions will complete this pro­ cess as promptly as possible amid the other post-election tasks that must be completed, including post-election audits and certification of the results,” she said. ittl DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - 32 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 Editorial Page Abigail Adams wasn’t afraid to speak her mind Local political Jn The Mail... parties take the higher road Thank goodness for Davie County. And this time around, thank goodness for politics in Davie County. But we have nothing but good things to say about the Davie County Republican Party and the Davie County Democratic Party. Led by chairs Jon Welborn for the Republicans, and Dr. Erma Jeffries for the Democrats - they have shown that they care about our community. They do it with words and with action. Let's start with Jon Welborn. It isn't new, but you may have seen him during the past week riding around in his pickup truck, walking along the roads, picking up political signs. He does it every year. Right after the election. He also accepts signs at his Mocksville office, and at the GOP headquarters. That in itself is worthy of praise. Like those pes­ ky television commercials, political signs along the roads are nothing less than litter. And it doesn’t say much about us if we really elect people based on the number or quality of their roadside signs. Yes, there may still be some signs out there, but don't count the ones in people's yards. That's their business. And with the way the 2020 presidential election has gone, they're probably more Trump/ Pence signs hanging around. Just in case. Welbom didn't stop there this year. When local voters couldn't find their record of vot­ ing online - which they did by the hundreds, just ask a worker at the Davie Board of Elections - they started complaining to the board of elections, and especial­ ly on Facebook, trying to rile up their homies into thinking something foul was afoot. Some even called it fraud, a case of the Democrats trying to steal the election. Welbom stepped in, as he should have. A true Re­ publican and one of the staunchest Trump support­ ers I know, he helped to calm the storm. There is no fraud going on in Davie elections, he wrote in a post on Facebook. The board of elections and the election office staff - led by Tabatha Parrish - shouldn't be blamed for something they didn't do. He wrote; “I have not been informed of any wrong­ doing or errors made by our local board of elections during this election. In fact I have only heard great things about how they are handling every aspect of the process. So let’s be patient and allow them to do what they need to do.” Words from a leader if I’ve ever heard them. Thank you, Jon. Regardless of your politics, you serve your community well. And then there's Dr. Erma Jeffries. Last month, two teen boys were caught stealing Biden/Harris signs the Democratic Party had placed along roads around Mocksville. When I say they were caught, there was video proof. Jeffries could have used the moment to add fuel to an already stoked fire, showing just how low those Republicans would steep. But she didn't. Instead, she took the high road. Working with Det. Logan Fox of the Mocksville Police Department, the boy's parents, the juvenile justice system and the district attorney's office, she helped work out a plan to have the boys make retri­ bution without becoming criminals. They had to do community service, write letters of apology about the importance of fair and free elections, replace the signs. That's not to mention additional punishment likely levied by the parents. Thank you, Erma. Regardless of your political par­ ty, you serve your community well. Yes, here in Davie County, we care about each other. We may fuss and fight a bit, but deep down, we care. After all, this is our home. Republicans. Democrats. Those of us stuck somewhere in between. White. Black. Those stuck somewhere in between. Just like battling the pandemic - when it comes to politics and choosing our leaders - we’re all in this together. - Mike Bamhardt Ticket for dirty license plate not necessary To the editor; Most days you can find Jerry Hendrix at Miller’s, in his sunroom on Wilkesboro Street or at the sawmill. My Uncle Jerry is 81 years old and still works every day, and his truck shows it. It’s a working man’s truck, bent up, dings, scratch­ es and dirt. Apparently, a lot of expensive dirt. Officer Beck of the Mocksville Police Department pulled over my Uncle Jerry after passing him on US 601. Officer Beck approached the truck and told Jerry that his license plate was dirty. When my uncle tried to exit the truck to see just how dirty the plate was. he was instmcted to remain in the truck. He’s 81. My Uncle Jerry commented that he didn’t know it was illegal to have a dirty plate and Officer Beck handed him a ticket for $213. Really? Officer Beck could have handled the situation bet­ ter. He could have told my Uncle Jerry to clean it or, better yet, wipe it off for him. Respect for elders, common sense and courtesy need to be used by the Mocksville Police Department. Officer Beck must not be from here. Otherwise, he would apologize and wash Uncle Jerry’s truck. Jermifer Slogick, Mocksville Guest Column Newspapers vital to healthy democracy By Dean Ridings CEO, America's Newspapers There was more content available about the 2020 election than likely in any previous cycle. While we could fill this page with media sources that had some type of information about the election, most people found their election information on social media (like Facebook and YouTube), cable news networks, ma­ jor broadcast television networks, talk radio, major public broadcast networks, local television, national newspapers, local newspapers or news websites. While we have a proliferation of media options, we also have more disinformation than ever, and we know that both the Russian and Chinese governments have even had a part in using social media to generate election-oriented content. Unfortunately, the bad news doesn’t end with con­ tent meddling. While there is more content than ever, Americans are increasingly polarized about which media sources they trust and those they don’t. While it is obvious that Democrats lean toward MSNBC and Republicans lean toward Fox News for their cable news coverage, the polarization is made worse by thinking that analysis or commentary is the same as objective news. If you want to truly be informed, it is vitally important to recognize the difference between news and commentary. While those on the left may enjoy Rachel Maddow’s show on MSNBC, it would be more appropriate to consider it as commentary, and not really a news source. And while Rush Limbaugh’s ratings may be high among Republicans, his show is also more focused on commentary, and less about ob­ jective news reporting. Maddow and Limbaugh both have a large following, and many in their audience accept the analysis as news, which it isn’t. To make matters even more challenging, those who rely primarily on social media are clearly just less informed. According to the Pew Research Center, respondents to a survey conducted between October 2019 and June 2020 were asked 29 fact-based ques­ tions, from economics to Donald Trump’s impeach­ ment to the COVID-19 outbreak and more. The aver­ age proportion who got each question right is lower among Americans who rely most on social media for political news, than for those who rely most on other types of news sources, except for local TV. Social media is certainly full of content, but using it as a pri­ mary source will leave the consumer less informed, or even misinformed. So where do local newspapers fit in? Most local newspapers provide detailed election coverage, and almost always more than the other local media sourc­ es. If you are looking for information on state and local races, newspapers are almost always the only media source that covers the majority of the races. Many newspapers provide a deep look at the issues, and questions and answers with candidates are com­ monplace. If you look back at newspapers’ historic coverage of elections, you will likely see that they are usually very careful to provide equal space for each candidate and to even be consistent in where they place the stories, refraining from placing one can­ didate’s bio on page one and another’s on page six. Separating them just isn’t done. Some newspapers will also endorse a candidate or issue. While you may not agree with the newspaper’s position, they most likely published the endorsement on the opinion page, clearly separating it from news pages or sections. Newspapers keep the objective news articles separate from opinion, and work hard to provide clear labels so their readers understand the difference. Endorsements can help readers make up their minds, even if it means voting the opposite from the newspaper if the reader finds they don’t agree with the newspaper’s position. Newspapers want to provide their readers with the information needed to cast an informed vote. How many stories have you seen about voting information in the past couple of months? As we approach what many believe to be one of the most important elections of recent years, seek out accurate information from a source you can trust. For me, the newspaper still gets my vote. On behalf of its approximately 1,500 newspaper and associate member companies, America’s Newspapers is committed to explaining, defending and advancing the vital role of newspapers in democracy and civil life. We put an emphasis on educating the public on all the ways newspapers contribute to building a com­ munity identity and the success of local businesses. Leam more: wwwjtewspapers .org. The Literary Corner Renegade Writers Guild DAVIE COUNTY' r USPS 149-160 171 S. Main St.. P.O. Box 99. Mocksville. NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Salisbury Newsmedla LLC Robin Snow..........................................General Manager Mike Bamhardt....................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow........................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts..............................................Sports Editor Mocksville Enterprise Davie Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 75 Cents $32.03 Per Year In Davie County POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to: Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 Grateful By Linda H. Barnette WTiat a perfect topic for 2020. With the upcoming contentious presidential election and the COVID-19 happening at the same time, this is the true “annus horribilis’ that Queen Elizabeth might have meant in her 1992 speech to Parliament. Although we all prob­ ably have personal situations that fit those words, the virus is a situation that affects the entire world. Even though I remember the polio quarantines of the 1940s, life was simpler then, so the quarantine was not such a big deal because we were not out and about like people are today. Of course, a vaccine was soon available, and all of the school kids lined up for a pop from Mrs. Rachel Stroud, our local health de­ partment nurse. As far as I know, there was only one case of poUo in Mocksville. Now, however, life is much more complex, and we all miss doing the things we love, such as going to church, club meetings, dinner with friends, vacations, and many more. This particular virus is highly con­ tagious, and it appears that we will have to live with this way until a safe vaccine is developed. As for the election, I have never seen anything like it. Television ads are non-stop, and they are brutal. I believe that this situation is unique in our history. I am old enough that the first president I ever voted for was John F. Kennedy. Now I just want this one to be over with. Yet even with all of these situations, I find that there is still much to be grateful for, such as life itself, family, friends, health, faith, modem technology that allows us to keep in touch with others, great books, classical music, food, medical care, and much more. I am so happy to have hobbies that allow me to use my time well—writing and genealogy are gifts that I cherish, especially having lost my voice. I am es­ pecially grateful for my Kindle, which has allowed me to keep reading during these months of isolation!! And I said that I liked to hold a real book. I do believe that God is in charge of everything, and I recall in the Bible that when his people went away from Him, He sometimes caused them to experience Please See Renegade - Page 4 Letters Welcome The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read­ ers on topics of local, state, national or international is­ sues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. Letters should include the name and address of the writer and a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is requested. Have letters in the newspaper office no later than noon Monday of the week to be published. Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99, Mocksville, mike J}amhardt@davie- enterprise .com. By Betty Etchison West ^Cana/Pino Correspondent Abigail Adams was bom in Weymouth, Mass, in 1744. Among her ances­ tors were members on the "Quincy family, a prominent New England family. Ab­ igail’s father was a mem­ ber of the clergy, a highly -respected part of the fabric of New England at the time ,of her birth. Abigail did not receive much formal edu- jCation, but she was bright and had a great desire to leam. After she learned to read, she read any printed ^material she could find. This attractive, largely 3self-educated young lady, who loved books, attracted , the attention of a young. Harvard-educated lawyer, John Adams. The attraction turned into love and the young couple was married in 1764, when Abigail was 19. John and Abigail were '•always devoted to each ‘other. Their marriage lasted • more than a half-century. John and Abigail had (live children; one of whom died as an infant. During many of years of the Ad­ ams’ marriage, John was away from the Adam’s home in Braintree, Mass, much of the time serving his country. While John •was away, Abigail stayed at their home, cared for their four children, and managed their small farm. Throughout those and later .years, she wa.s interested in and out-spoken on matters concerning politics. While John was serving in posi­ tions involved in passing laws, etc., Abigail readily •shared her thoughts and feelings with her husband through letters if she was Abigail Adams - America’s second First Lady - was friends with the first, Martha Washington. not able to speak with him in person. For example, when a special piece of legislation was being con­ sidered, she wrote to her husband and said, “Don't forget the ladies.” Mr. Adams may not have followed her advice, but she continued to freely give it. She and her hus­ band wrote letters and more letters, many of which have been preserved and which provide much information about the history of the pe­ riod in which they lived. John Adam.s served in diplomatic roles in France and Holland and later a.s a minister to the Court of St. James. Abigail wa.s able to join him some of the time during those assignments. She observed the manners of the French and that ex­ posure helped her when she was in positions which re­ quired her to entertain. While on a foreign as­ signment, John and Abigail decided, or maybe it was just Abigail who decided, that they should have a larger house. Their house in Braintree wa.s a typical salt-box style house that was rather small. Abigail remembered a house in Braintree which she had ad­ mired since she was young so they decided to buy that house sight-unseen. That may not have been a good way to purchase real-estate because when they came back to Braintree, they dis­ covered that the house was not quite as great as she re­ membered it. In typical Abigail fash­ ion, she set out to make the house fit the family’s needs. She felt that the liv­ ing/ reception area was too small to meet the needs of the family. Abigail wa.s told that she could not change the roof line of the house so she simply had the work­ men dig down and make the floor lower in the ad­ dition so she got what she wanted without changing the roof line. John Adam.s served as George Washington’s vice president, a position which he found constricting. In fact, he is quoted in a book titled, “The Presidents of the United States of Amer­ ica” by Freidel and Sidey, as saying, “My country has in its wisdom contrived for me the most insignificant office that ever the inven­ tion of man contrived or in his imagination con­ ceived.” More recent vice president.s have agreed with that assessment of the office. During the years that John served a.s vice president, Abigail was with him at least part of the time. She wa.s often by the side of First lady Martha Washing­ ton a.s she entertained. Mrs. Washington seemed to think highly of Abigail and enjoy her company. After serving as vice president for eight years, John Adams was elected as the second President of the United States. Abigail made her way to Washing­ ton, a journey which wa.s quite difficult because there were not any roads in some area.s so her carriage driver had to find his way through the forest. The President’s House was only partially finished when the John and Abigail Adams moved into it. The plaster on the wall wa.s still wet, and it wa.s cold and drafty. Abigail had to hang her laundry to dry in what is now the elegant East Room. The living condi­ tions for the Adam.s family were not good, but as usual. Abigail seemed to make the best of the situation with­ out a lot of complaining. She entertained in a way that wa,s appropriate for the First Lady of the land. In fact her pleasant personality helped ease the rough spoLs that her husband sometimes created - he could be rather abrasive at times. After serving for four years, Adams sought an­ other term as president, but was defeated by Thoma.s Jefferson. Adams wa.s dis­ appointed and disgruntled by his defeat. He no doubt felt that he had spent years serving hi.s country only to have his country turn it.s back on him. John and Ab­ igail returned to their home in Braintree, which by that time may have been called Quincy, a.s it is today. They lived at their home, “The Old House at Peacefield.” Thoma.s Jefferson and Adams were friends for many years, but at some jxiint they became com­ pletely alienated - a fact which made Adam’s wife unhappy. Abigail, however, remained Jefferson’s friend and continued to corre- spxjnd with him. Through that correspondence, she was able to bring about a reconciliation between the two men, and they once again enjoyed correspond­ ing with each other. That correspondence and his correspondence with others seemed to be about the only pleasure that Adams had during his last years. As Adams lay dying in his bed at “The Old House at Peacefield,” his last words were: “Jefferson still lives.” In truth, Jefferson had already died earlier that day, July 4, 1826. John Adams wa.s buried at the United First Parish Church beside his wife who died in 1818. Abigail Adams is one of the most highly respected First Ladies of the Unit­ ed States. She is the only woman who was he wife of a President of the Unit­ ed States and the mother of a President until Barbara Bush also claimed that hon­ or when her son, George W. Bush became the 43rd President in 2(X)1. President John and Ab­ igail Adams’ son, John Quincy Adams, served as the sixth President of the United States and his per­ sonality wa,s some-what irascible much like that of his father. Also like his fa­ ther, he wa.s not reelected to a second term. He did later serve a.s a member of the U.S. House of Repre­ sentatives. He actually was stricken while at the United States Capitol in Washing­ ton, DC and actually died there in 1848. The Old House at Peacefield” and the John Adams’ and John Quincy Adams’ birthplaces are part of the National Historic Park System and are well worth a visit for those who are interested in presiden­ tial history. They may be closed now in November 2020 because of the pan­ demic, but are normally open to the public. FALL 'INTO SA VINCS GET UP TO A INSTANT SA VINCS WHEN YOU BUY A SET OF 4 EUCtBLE BRIDGESTONE OR HRESTONE ORES I *1* TRUST YOUR HANDS. W YOUR 7 WtfENYOU USE YOUR CENA CREDIT CARD OFFER VALID NOVEMBER 2 - 30. 2020 Elinible liras, DriveGiWiri. Dueler H/L Alsnza. Dudci H/L Alenza Plus. Dueler A/T REVO 3. Duetsr H.T, 422 Ecupia, L'. - .'W EP42;- PI Ecni a H/L 422 Plus Poteuza RtPSOAS. (urattza Qu alTrack. Champion With Ersi F-gWEr Tr ■■lie'.: Tersihati;./! iL Deslifiitusis LE2. DtsiinaLh’i A,T2 Desfinalion X/T. antf SuLhaii^ AS. 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DCCC offers a variety of programs with hands-on learning so you can gain the experience and expertise employers are eager to hire. Let our advisors explain your options, discuss apprenticeship opportunities, and help you find the best pathway to the future you deserve. DCCC The College of Davidson a.'vd Davie CoLnvrtEs THE FUTURE IS HERE THOMASVILLE LEXINGTON MOCKSVILLE BERMUDA RUN 336.249.8186 info.DavidsonCCC.edu DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 Extension sponsoring food drive F^enegade ... This year has brought many struggles and chal­ lenges. “As we begin to prepare for the upcoming holiday season, let’s remember those that need a little extra help this year,” said Colleen Church, N.C. Cooperative Extension Davie County Center director. Extension is sponsoring a food drive from Nov. 16- Dec. 11 to benefit local food pantries. A collection box will be located outside the front door of the Extension Cen­ ter for no-contact drop-offs. The Extension Center is also open Monday-Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., for large donations and is located at 180 S. Main St. in down­ town Mocksville, beside the courthouse. Ring the doorbell for assistance. The office will be closed Nov. 26-27 for the Thanksgiving. Non-perishable food items needed for donation include; canned fruits (in juice, water or light syrup), vegetables (low sodium), soup (low sodium), to­ matoes and tomato sauce; applesauce (unsweetened); raisins; fruit cups; dried or canned beans (low sodium); canned tuna, salmon or chicken; peanut butter; dry, evaporated or shelf-stable milk (low fat); brown rice; whole wheat pasta; whole grain crackers and cereals. Healthcare for your entire family such as oatmeal, grits, rai­ sin bran, etc. and high fiber, low sugar granola bars. “Several church-based food pantries have been identified to receive the donations,” Church said. “We hope to collect enough items to share them among multiple locations to reach different areas of the coun­ ty.” For questions or more information, contact Co­ operative Extension at 336.753.6100, or visit da­ vie .ces .ncsu .edu. Store owner seeks variance The Davie County Board of Adjustment will meet at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 17 in the commissioners meeting room of the Davie County Administration Building, 123 S. Main St., Mocks­ ville. Board members will hear a request for a vari­ ance from Advance Country Store owner Jeff Jones for front yard setbacks in the highway business zoning district. Family Care Center Continued From Page 2 bad times so that they might return to him. is giving us another opportunity. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - 5 Even now He The completed mural will look something like this - although the horses will be running in the opposite direction. Mura!... Escaping the Stuck By Kevin F. Wishon Getting stuck really stinks. Whether it occurs in a tree or the crawlspace of a house, it doesn’t matter. It all stinks. The feelings of frustration and helplessness tear at your nerves as they scream within you to wrench yourself free. Still, the fear of injury holds you back. Despite the strong likelihood of escape, your mind reacts as though it is life and death. The part of the brain that influences this reac­ tion is called the amygdala. It is responsible for the fight or flight emotions we experience under stress. Thankfully, most of these situations end in escape or rescue after a short time, but what about being mentally stuck for long jjeriods? Often, we know when we need to make a change. Whether it’s a taxing job, an unhealthy relationship, or ugly wallpaper, you know what needs to happen. How­ ever, there are times in our lives when we feel something needs to change, but we aren’t sure what it is. This situa­ tion is problematic, because as time goes on, the amygdala responds to this issue as though it’s a physical problem. Unlike the job, relationship, or wallpaper, the solution isn’t always as straightforward. The root causes of mentally feeling stuck are more than I can list here. The issue can revolve around the need for a creative outlet or difficulties with getting motivated. Some­ times we desire more variety in our lives or interactions with people to resolve our feelings of stagnancy or lone­ liness. Whatever the cause, if it’s not apparent, then how does an individual deal with being stuck? These four tips may help you shake the stuck feeling but aren’t necessarily the only things you can do. Try several sessions of controlled breathing while meditating to quiet the mind. The answer to why you are stuck may come to you in your stillness. Another option is to ask for help. If you are having trouble getting motivated, find someone to hold you accountable with daily texts or phone calls to keep you inspired. Another option is volunteering. Volun­ teering encourages you to meet new people and take on meaningful tasks, which bestow a sense of worth. Lastly, another option is the one percent technique of change. Be­ gin by steadily making small changes or improvements in your habits, home, or routines until the stuck feeling eases. Shortly, using one or more of these tips, you may find that you feel less stuck, or better, it’s vanished. Clearly, I can’t cover everything that may have us stuck in life in this writing. Furthermore, certain problems that have us stuck can be complex, requiring far more help than these four tips can offer. Yet, for the everyday feeling of stuck, give one or more of these tips a try. No one should feel mentally stuck for too long. Life is far too short for that. HVAC License#13736 MSCTTokes HEATIMC, COOUttC, KStOOmM: SALES, semntx, mstuiltma SBtVtUa DAVIE YOU’RE INVITED TO A MEDICARE EVENT Learn more about Cigna Medicare Advantage plans. "The Best that Heart and Hands Can Give' 701 North Main St. Lexington, NC 27292 336-224-2228 3001 Old Greensboro Rd. WinstonSaUm, NC 27107 336-^778-3955 wwwjobertsfuneral.com ''Over 2J yrt/z-.v of'e.x[>cricncc Join us to learn how Cigna Medicare Advantage plans offer all the coverage of Original Medicare plus added benefits such as: TALK TO A LICENSED BENEFIT ADVISOR. David L. 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Inc.. Cigna Healthcare of Georgia. Inc., Cigna Healthcare of Arizona. Inc.. Cigna Healthcare of St. Louis. Inc.. HealthSpring Life & Health Insurance Company. Inc,. HealthSpring of Florida, Inc.. Bravo Health Mid-Atlantic, inc., and Bravo Health Pennsylvania, Inc. The Cigna name, logos, and other Cigna marks are owned by Cigna Intellectual Property. Inc. All pictures are used for illustrative purposes only. For accommodations of persons with special needs at meetings call 1-888-284-0268. Cigna complies with applicable federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, or sex. Cigna cumple con las leyes federates de derechos civiles aplicables y no discrimina por motives de raza. color, nacionalidad. edad, discapacidad or sexo. English: ATTENTION: If you speak English, language assistance services, free of charge, are available to you. Call 1-888-284-0268 (TTY 711). Spanish: ATENCION: Si habla espariol, tiene a su disposicidn servicios gratuitos de asistencia linguistica. Llame al 1-888-284-0268 (TTY 711). Chinese: >$,«. : 1-888-284-0268 (TTY 711). Cigna is contracted with Medicare tor POP plans. HMO and PPO plans in select states, and with select state Medicaid programs. Enrollment in Cigna depends on contract renewal. 947361 ©2020 Cigna. Some content provided under license. A_F_43 Y0036_21_87513_M flPPlIflNcf repair in a/TftHance repair" 540 Sanford Avenue Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3162 DavieMajorApplianceRepair.com DavieMajorAppliance@gmail.com Interior and 'Exterior Pressure 'Washing FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED '.i-r \ .• Crack Fjllinq & Seail Coating j Angell I Ra^i^ Commercial and Residential Mocksville NC Asphalt Specialists 336-751-3759 www.angeilpaving.com Madelyn Greco and Cheryl Ann Lipsteau on the scaffold ready to paint. - Photo by Robin Snow A' ; - i >4* Continued From Page 1 they brought them in here. “They were wild. They would unload them at the depot, run them up Depot Street, across Main Street on the square, and down to where Junkers Mill is. To the right, daddy had a black­ smith shop there, had a cor­ ral there. First thing you had to do was shoe them. You had to break them to work on the farm.” Richardson went on to talk about life as he knew it growing up and living in Mocksville and Davie County. From past newspaper ac­ counts, the running of the horses attracted quite the crowd to downtown just to watch. But back to the mural. Cheryl Ann Lipsteu was commissioned by the Mocksville Tourism De­ velopment Authority and Davie County Tourism to paint the mural, and is being assisted by Madelyn Greco. The two put their on twist onto the mural, approved by the town. Lipsteu, who along with Greco, have seen business grind to almost a halt since the pandemic. Both are pro­ fessional artists, special­ izing in body art, murals, portraits, illustrations and sculpture. Greco is a five­ time world champion body painter. Lipsteu said she gave multiple designs for the town to approve. "They wanted the oak trees and something creative and col­ orful. It’s got to be exactly as they approved.” The horses are the color of the rainbow, represent­ ing the diversity of all of the people in the town. The oak trees are connected to earth goddesses, represent­ ing unity. It’s been quite a task for the two women, as it’s the largest mural they’ve ever painted. They started clean­ ing and priming the first of the month, and hope to be finished, weather jjermit- ting, no later than early 2021. “We are just going with the flow and it’s working out,” Lipsteu said. “We’re persevering,” Greco said. Making matters more difficult is the terrain. The scaffolding is set up on a steep sidewalk, and the portion of the almost 1.2CK) square-foot wall at the bot­ tom of the hill is impossible to reach to paint any detail. “Its very wobbly because the ground is uneven, so it’s been a challenge.” Another challenge is painting up close, and still trying to see the big picture, making sure everything is to scale. To say the least, they walk acros.s the street a lot to see the progress. The two have worked together on several projects for years. Lipsteu lives in Winston-Salem, Greco in Reidsville. “It’s been such a fun town,” Lipsteu said. “Ev­ erybody has been coming by with positive reactions to the mural.” How long will it last? “The paint company says 25-30 years.” Secure your savings. Lock in your rate toeJay. CDs are a great way to save for your long-term goals. Our financial experts are ready to help you open a CD today. 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Penalty for early withdrawal IRA CD is subject to eligibility requirements. Offer not available to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions. Fees could reduce earnings. Offer subject to change without notice. Offer good In Davie County. NC only. ••|RA CD must be opened In person and cannot be opened online. MEMBER FDIC r42',;^-£t’, DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 - 7 Turkeys = $40 with 16 oz. BBQ Slaw 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 Public Records Records ... Mocksville Police The following are from Mocksville Police Depart­ ment reports. Winson Scott was charged on Nov. 2 with fel­ ony possession of Schedule I controlled substance and possession of drug para­ phernalia. Cody Watson was charged Nov. 3 with posses­ sion of marijuana and para­ phernalia. - Eric Mize was charged Nov. 4 with possession of heroin and possession of drug paraphernalia. - Kristen Hawotte was charged Nov. 6 with shop­ lifting. - Humane Society prop­ erty on North Main Street was damaged, it was report­ ed Nov. 2. - Suspicious activity was reported on Salisbury Road on Nov. 3. - ?\n attempted fraud was reported Nov. 3 at a busi­ ness on Yadkinville Road. - Suspicious activity was reported Nov. 3 on North Main Street. - A trespasser and assault were reported Nov. 3 on S. Salisbury St. - The breaking and enter­ ing of a house on Cemetery Street was reported Nov. 6. - Shoplifting from a busi­ ness on Yadkinville Road was reported Nov. 6. Land Transfers The following land transfers were filed with the Davie County Register of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, location and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $1 ,OOO. - Chris Payne and Mau­ reen Payne to Frederick William Toburen and Julia Kimball Toburen, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Advance, $1,060. - Jacob L. Cozart and Lauren N. Cozart, Saman­ tha R. Trotter and Nicholas Wilson, Bradley M. Staple- ton and Courtney H. Staple- ton and Drew A. Stapleton and Sarah E. Stapleton to Dawn I. Cozart, Sherri I. Trotter and Torri I. Staple- ton, 143 acres, Clarksville Township. - Myra K. Sauerbrun to Chad Evans, .33 acre. Pleas­ ant Acre Drive, Mocksville, $250. - The Smith Grove Com­ munity Development Center to Smith Grove Volunteer Fire Dept., tracts. Farming- ton Township. - Tara A. Smith and Jack Lee Smith to Dylan Nie- bauer, 1 lot, Twinbrook, Mocksville, $386. - William Charles Reedy and Evelyn Clemons Reedy, co-trustees to Michael J. Ziall and Kira Rae Blazek- Ziall, I lot. Savannah Court, Advance, $572. Rosalind Ophelia Brown to Christopher Lee Johnson, tract, Fulton Township. - Christopher Lee John­ son and Elizabeth Johnson to Rosalind Ophelia Brown, 9.74 acres, Fulton Town­ ship. - Christopher Lee John­ son and Elizabeth Johnson to Rosalind Ophelia Brown, 1 lot, Craftwood, Mocks­ ville. - George L. Scott to Deidra S. Robinson and George Lemuel Scott Jr., tracts, Farmington Town­ ship. - Deidra S. Robinson and Tim Robinson, and George Lemuel Scott and Kia Scott to Lillie Mae Scott, tracts, Farmington Township. - Lillie Mae Scott to Clifton Scott and Ramona Scott, 1.55 acres. Farming- ton Township. - Lillie Mae Scott to Lil­ lie Mae Scott then to Sarah Scott, 1.08 acres. Farming- ton Township. - Richard Bowden Nay­ lor and Judy Phelps Nay­ lor, Joseph Anthony Pickett and Patricia Phelps Pickett, James Edward Linville and Nancy Phelps Linville to Patricia Phelps Pickett and Joseph Anthony Pickett, 5.67 acres. - Jason Mosley and Kel­ ly Mosley to Jack Daniel Draker and Stephanie C. Draker, 1 lot, Redland Way, Advance, $588. - Sheila A. Howell to Cranfill Realty, tracts, Jeru­ salem Township, $260. - Bruce Walter Speckin and Lauren Speckin to Aar­ on Michael Veach and Kel­ ly Presley, tracts, Calahaln Township, $386. - Carol Dean James and Shirley W. James to Casey Dale James, 3 tracts. - Hope Tate Hall to Mat­ thew Ryan Jones and Am­ ber Lynn Jones, 1.95 acres, Mocksville Township, $671. - Jansen Phipps Bailey to Janet M. Lance and Frances F. Dunn, 1 lot, Baltimore Heights, Advance, $516. - Joseph Carl Harris, trustee to Joseph Carl Har­ ris, tracts. - Hope H. Tate to Brenda R. Bailey, .5 acre, Mocks­ ville Township. - Jerry Todd Kiger and Amy L. Kiger to Bradley David Barton, 1 lot. Green­ wood Lake, Advance, $590. - William E. Heller Jr. and Anna Marie Heller to Heidi Marie Arnett and Michael Keith Arnett, .81 acre,. - Colonial Estates to Mark E. Robertson and Catherine C. Robertson, 1 lot. New Hampshire Court, Mocksville, $30. - Robert C. Nichols and Julia C. Nichols to Garth Re- gan and Carly Regan, tracts, Bermuda Run, $1,050. - Jim Gil and Brenda Gil to Dustin Millirons and Stephanie Millirons, 1 lot, Bermuda Run, $966. - Rene' D. Bermudez and Lezlie E. Bermudez to Dinah S. Miller, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Advance, $1,214. - Carson S. Jemigan and Kathleen N. Jemigan to Ju­ lie D. Knabenshue and Jef­ frey A. Knabenshue, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Advance, $908. - Glenda S. Carter to Bradley R. Rogers and Rob­ in C. Rogers, tracts, Farm­ ington Township, $290. - Alan D. Mackey and Beverly L. Mackey to Na­ tional Residential Nominee Services, 1 lot. Pudding Ridge Subdivision, $760. National Residen­ tial Nominee Services to Edward Crosby and Kel­ ly Crosby, 1 lot. Pudding Ridge Subdivision, $760. - Enan J. Karl and Ange­ la Karl to Gerald Diaz and Geneva Diaz, 1 lot, $444. - Timothy R. Abee and Deena B. Abee to Jesse E. Nester and Allison M. May­ nard, .89 acre. Ridge Road, Mocksville, $262. - Michael Brown, tmstee to Elizabeth Jordan Moroz and Mark James Moroz, 1 lot, Bermuda Run, $630. - Jason Dion Hodges and Lori Hodges to John South­ ard Inc., .36 acre. Advance, $160. - Terry E. Branch and Bettie B. Branch to Rt. 3 In­ vestments, .27 acre. Shady Grove Township, $7. - Christopher F. Gaide and Deborah C. Gaide to Rayvon Alexander, 1 lot, Princeton Court, Advance, $655. - Lorraine C. Angel and Thomas Henry Bougus to Deitra Harrison, 1 lot, Pem- brooke Ridge, Bermuda Run,$380. - Eastwood Construction Partners to Cynthia A. Staf­ ford, 1 lot, Kinderton Vil­ lage, Bermuda Run, $675. - Clara C. Patti and Vic­ tor S. Patti to William Nich­ olson and Michelle Nich­ olson, 1 lot, Mocksville Township, $340. - Ivey Carney and Brax­ ton L. Riggins to Wendy G. Cumberland, 1 condomini­ um, Bermuda Run, $340. - A-1 Industrial Park to Fast Track Carports, 4.21 acres. Milling Road, Mocksville, $80. - AMH Properties to Randy Johnson and Shei­ la Johnson, 1 lot, Kinder­ ton Village, Bermuda Run, $480. - Matthew J. Chin and Melissa Chin to Gregory Serena Jr. and Patricia Ser­ ena, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Ad­ vance, $980. - Elizabeth Swicegood and Tracy Kyle Swicegood to Benjamin Burton and Ashton Burton, 1 lot, McAl­ lister Park, Mocksville, $550. - Ernest Franklin Park­ er Jr., administrator of es­ tate, an Susan Diane Parker Wright and Edward Wright to Gerald Roger Belanger, 1 condominium, Bermuda Run,$230. Cory Foreman and Noel Foreman to Cesar Her- era Rodriguez and Diana Acencio Trejo, 1.18 acres, Jerusalem Township, $126. - Gary P. Smith and Ivey Jo Smith to Thomas Link- ous, 2 tracts, $150. - Isenhour Homes to Cathy D. Allen, 1 lot. Turn- berry, Mocksville, $517. - Rickey A. Busch and Dianna K. Busch to Carol McRorie, 1 acre, Mocks­ ville Township, $326. - E. Lauren Watson Hub­ bard, commissioner to Elea- zar Bueno and Diana Chiq- uito, 2.38 acres, Pineville Road, Mocksville, $29. - Leah Deanne Law to Melissa Dawn Baker, .3 acre, Mocksville Township, $210. - Timothy M. Gallimore and Karen R. Gallimore to Dawn W. Wilson and Mar­ tin D. Wilson, 1 lot, Bermu­ da Run,$476. - Harvey H. Boysen Jr. and Susan Young Boysen to Michael M. Antony and Christine S. Antony, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Advance, $130. Noe Almaguer and Amelia Vera Almaguer to Norman C. Dillingham and Linda S. Dillingham, 1 acres. Advance, $60. Sheriff’s Dept. Nov. 1: domestic distur­ bance, US 601 N., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Edgewood Circle, Mocks­ ville; trespassing, Duke Whittaker Road, Mocks­ ville; domestic distur­ bance, Merrells Lake Road, Mocksville; fraud, Bonkin Lake Road, Mocksville; robbery, Shadybrook Road, Mocksville. Nov. 2: domestic distur­ bance, Shadybrook Road, Mocksville; harassment, Prevette Road, Mocksville; domestic assist, Canterbury Lane, Mocksville; burglary, Daniels Road, Mocks­ ville; assault, Calvin Lane, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; solicitation, Turkey Foot Road, Mocks­ ville; domestic disturbance. Liberty Church Road, Mocksville; domestic assist. Farmland Road, Mocks­ ville; larceny, Odell Myers Road, Advance; domestic disturbance, Elberon Ct., Mocksville; harassment, US 64 W., Mocksville; do­ mestic assist, Jessica Trail, Mocksville. Nov. 3: domestic distur­ bance, Essex Farm Road, Advance; fraud, Comatzer Road, Mocksville; ha­ rassment, Midway Drive, Statesville; domestic distur­ bance, Wall Street, Coolee­ mee; domestic disturbance. Watt Street, Cooleemee; do­ mestic disturbance, Swice­ good St., Mocksville; do­ mestic disturbance, Redland Road, Advance; fraud, Springhill Drive, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Caspers Way, Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 N., Mocksville; domestic disturbance. Farm Ridge Lane, Mocksville; suspi­ cious activity. Government Center Drive, Mocksville; burglary, Tifton St., Bermu­ da Run; suspicious activity, Salisbury Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity. South Main St., Mocksville. Nov. 4: fraud, Gladstone Road, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Fairfield Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Trestle Lane, Mocks­ ville; domestic disturbance. Four Comers Road, Mocks­ ville; domestic disturbance. Shady Lane, Advance; fraud, US 601 S., Mocks­ ville; larceny, NC 801 S., Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, US 64 W., Mocks­ ville; domestic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville. Nov. 5: domestic dis­ turbance, Fairfield Road, Mocksville; larceny. Brack­ en Road, Mocksville; suspi­ cious activity. Government Center, Mocksville; fraud, Westview Ave., Cooleemee; suspicious package, US 64 W., Mocksville; fraud, Clin­ ton Lane, Advance; fraud, Foster Dairy Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, US 158, Advance; assault, Cana Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Kings- mill Ct., Advance; trespass­ ing, US 601 S., Mocksville. Nov. 6: disturbing the peace, Comanche Drive, Advance; suspicious ac­ tivity, Farmington Road, Mocksville; larceny. Hank Lesser Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Advance; harass­ ment, West Kinderton Way, Bermuda Run; assault, Farmington Road, Mocks­ ville; fraud, Yadkin Valley Road, Advance; fraud, S. Main St., Mocksville; do­ mestic disturbance, Fonso Way, Mocksville; domes­ tic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Gunter Lane, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Spillman Road, Mocksville; larceny, Hilton Road, Advance; burglary, Riverview Townhouse, Ad­ vance. Nov. 7: domestic dis­ turbance, Hank Lesser Road, Mocksville; disturb­ ing the peace, Glenview Lane, Mocksville; larceny, US 158, Mocksville; sus­ picious activity, US 158, Mocksville; domestic assist, Millstone Lane, Bermuda Run; disturbing the peace, Deadmon Road, Mocks­ ville; trespassing, NC 801 S., Mocksville; 911 hang up, Elmore Road, Mocks­ ville; harassment, Fletcher St., Mocksville; larceny, US 158, Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 N., Bermu­ da Run. Arrests Nov. 1: Brandon Michael Campbell, 29, of Ridge Road, Mocksville, cyber- stalking; Ryan Wade Schai- ble, 34, of Winston-Salem, assault on a female. Nov. 2: Nikki Nichole Mojica, 25, of Guenivere Lane, Mocksville, failure to appear in court. Nov. 3: Dams Loronn Hamilton, 40, of Salisbury, felony possession of co­ caine, possession of drug paraphernalia; Kevin Justin Home, 39, Court Square, Mocksville, non-support of child. Nov, 4: Katherine Dan­ ielle Mossman, 28, of Edge- wood Circle, Mocksville, larceny; Brenden Gerard Jr. Steele, of County Line Road, Harmony, nons-up- port of child. Nov, 5: Matthew Lam- onte Cowan, 35, of States­ ville, failure to appear in court; Pharris Ray Frank, 39, of Jamestown Drive, Mocksville, nonsupport child; Brady Franklin Link, 27, Cedar Creek Road, Mocksville, non-support of child; Justin Lee Liven­ good, 19, of Lexington, failure to appear in court; Joseph Richard Wolfe, 48, of Rick Way, Mocksville, probation violation, assault on a female, assault inflict­ ing serious bodily injury. Nov. 6: Aaron Glenn Ussery, 27, of Prevette Road, Mocksville, commu­ nicating threats. Building Permits The following building permits were issued in Da­ vie County, are listed by applicant, type of construc­ tion, estimated cost and lo­ cation. Stillwater Homes, mini-storage buildings, $300,000, US 601 N., Mocksville. - Frank L. Blum Con­ struction, remodel space, $377,475, NC 801 N., Ber­ muda Run. - Scott Johnson, addi­ tion, $18,500, Godbey Rd., Mocksville. - Pack Constmction, de­ tached carport, $35,000, Ketchie Creek Rd., Mocks- r Continued From Page 6 - Accelerate Solar, solar panels, $42,707.38, Joyner St., Cooleemee. Clayton Homes of Statesville, off-frame mod­ ular home, $265,000, Ollie Harkey Rd., Mocksville. - Camel City Resto­ ration, renovation, $50,000, Station Lane, Mocksville. - Crystal Devore, acces­ sory stmcture, $10,000, NC 801 S., Cooleemee. Blakely Landscape Services, swimming pool, $75,000, Laurelbrook Lane, Advance. - Champion Windows, three-season room ,$18,008, N. Lake Louise Dr., Mocks­ ville. Stillwater Homes, single family dwelling, $400,000, Arrow Glenn Ct., Advance. - Champion Windows, three-season room, $ 17,000, N. Lake Louise Dr., Mocks­ ville. - Erie Construction Mid- West, renovation, $27,951. Fork Bixby Rd., Advance. - J. Reader Construc­ tion, single family dwelling, $430,000, Arrow Glenn Ct., Advance. - WJH, single family dwelling, $33,543, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $29,889, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $41,524, NC.H 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $38,142, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $33,540, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $29,889, N.C. 801 S., Mocksville, - WJH, single family dwelling, $41,525, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $38,142, NC 801 S., Mocksville. - WJH, single family dwelling, $33,543, NC 801 S., Mocksville. Randy Grubb Con­ struction, duplex, $150,000, Raymond St., Mocksville. - Bost Pools, swimming pool, $41,340, Drum Lane, Mocksville. - Rodgerco Builders, ad­ dition, $45,000, Sycamore Ridge Dr., Bermuda Run. - Richard Pope, accesso­ ry structure, $50,000, An­ gell Rd., Mocksville. - Michael Sloan, addi­ tion, $8,000, US 64 W., Mocksville. - Thomas Foster, acces­ sory building, $1,000, Car­ olina St., Mocksville. - Randall D. Grubb, ac­ cessory building, $20,000, NC 801 S., Advance. - Harvest Building and Design, single family dwell­ ing, $277,000, Nellwood Ct., Mocksville. - John Southard, Inc., renovation, $45,000, Mck­ night Rd., Advance. - Jerry Hutchens, acces­ sory structure, $40,000, W. Knoll Brook Dr., Mocks­ ville. - Clay Hoaglund, single family dwelling, $20,000, Noble Lane, Mocksville. - Select Homes, off- frame modular home, $243,000, S. Angell Rd., Mocksville. B. Hawks Homes, deck, $15,000, Riverbend Dr., Bermuda Run. Benge Construction, addition, $30,000, Archer Dr., Bermuda Run. Riley Construction, deck, $5,000, Lakeview Rd., Mocksville. Smith & Company Custom Homes & Remod­ eling, renovation, $51,932, Beauchamp Rd., Advance. - M2 Custom Homes, single family dwelling, $347,400, Juney Beau­ champ Rd., Advance. Eastwood Construc­ tion, townhome, $105,500, Pinewood Lane, Bermuda Run. Eastwood Construc­ tion, townhome, $65,400, Pinewood Lane, Bermuda Run. Eastwood Construc­ tion, townhome, $105,500, Pinewood Lane, Bermuda Run, - Henry Lash m it, ac­ cessory structure, $6,000, Spillman Rd., Mocksville. - Siddco, single family dwelling, $325,000, Rocky Dale Lane, Mocksville. Eastwood Construc­ tion, single family dwelling, $190,000, Archer Dr., Ber­ muda Run. Eastwood Construc­ tion, single family dwelling, $137,200, Pendleton Dr., Bermuda Run. - Band of Brothers Con­ struction, deck, $27,454, Riverbend Dr, Bermuda Run. Siddcoaenovation, $75,000, Spyglass Dr, Ber­ muda Run. Carolina Foundation Solutions, underpinning piers, $14,725.79, Mount- view Dr, Mocksville. - Paul Gale, fire resto­ ration, $80,000, Godbey Rd., Mocksville. - Brian Whitley, reno­ vation, $400, E. Lake Dr, Mocksville. - Steve Cassidy, move double-wide mobile home onto property, $45,000, Wil­ liams Rd., Advance. - Isenhour Construction Management, single fami­ ly dwelling, $354,900, Oak Valley Blvd., Advance. - Isenhour Construction Management, single fami­ ly dwelling, $324,900, Oak Valley Blvd., Advance. - Wood Construction, ad­ dition, $39,375, Warwicke Pl., Bermuda Run. - McKnight Builders, ad­ dition, $45,000 , 448Liven- good Rd., Advance. - Cecil Starnes, shed, $1,000, 535 Sheffield Rd., Mocksville. - Dawn Cozart, roof/ cover over existing deck, $2,000, Bear Creek Church Rd., Mocksville. -Marc Jones Construc­ tion, doing business as Sunpro Solar, solar panels, $47,740, Michaels Rd., Mocksville. - Greg Parrish Build­ ers, single family dwelling, $350,000, S. Madera Dr., Mocksville. - Trent Adams Proper­ ties, single family dwelling, $357,000, Baltimore Trails Lane, Advance. - Pine Properties, off- frame modular home, $150,000, Eaton Rd., Mocksville. Marriages The following were is­ sued marriage licenses by the Davie County Register of Deeds. - Scott Carter Dixon, 42, and Lori Denise Shore, 47, of Mocksville. - Amanda Nicole Doby, 36, and Peter Wahbnum As- selin, 40, of Salisbury. - Andrew Ross Josupait, 23, of Charlotte, and Mad­ ison Elizabeth Hartness, 24, of Mocksville. - Erica Ebony Peebles, 26, and Reginald Carey 11, 26, both of Mocksville. - Erin Colleen Vallance, 41, and Jose Fernandez Tapia, 43, of Advance. - Kasey Nicole Potts, 21, and Danny James Spry Jr., 23, of Mocksville. Catherine Marga­ ret Cheney, 26, of Rocky Mount, and Marshall Alex­ ander Fleming, 26, of Ad­ vance. - Brian Daniel Jordan, 46, of Mocksville, and An­ gelina Marie Taddeucci, 48, of Pfafftown. - William Rodgers John­ ston Dameron, 37, and Leah Rachel Shaw, 34, of New York. - Elizabeth Sue Maas, 30, and Arrakeem Jeemel Alexander, 29, of Win­ ston-Salem. - Robert Carey Brunstet- ter Jr., 24, of Mocksville, and Briana Nicole Eustace, 20, of Waxhaw. - Claude Edgar Cartner, 78, of Harmony, and Sarah Eva Wallace, 78, of Mocks­ ville. - Jeremy Daniel Seamon, 25, and Betsy Lynn Forrest, 25, both of Mocksville. - Melissa May Gault- ney, 42. and David Adam Carnes, 41, of Cooleemee. - Kenny Wilson Doby, 60, and Mitzie Gay Lewis, 62, both of Mocksville. - Samantha Alece Moy­ er, 25, and Christopher Ryan Maddox, 28 .ston-Salem. - Arron Glenn Ussery, 26, of Rockwell, and Kellie Dean Viers, 24, of Mocks­ ville. -Tarik Mustafa Dahnoun, 22, of Cary, and Maria Ga­ briela Boada Gutierrez, 22, of Bermuda Run. - Amanda Grace Vestal, 38, and Anthony Todd Jus­ tice, 47, of Mocksville. - Abigail Ruth Tesh, 29, and Ian Middleton Smith, 28, of Charlotte. Michala Chandler Washburn, 23, and Travis Ryan Davis, 24, of Advance. - Allison Claire Staley, 22, of Bermuda Run, and Matthew Aaron Quigley, 21, of Pfafftown. - Jennifer Violeta Rodas, 28, and Kevin Curtis Mabe, 22, of Advance. - Victoria Ann Nelson, 20, and Robert Theodore Olive, 30, of Mocksville. - Melissa Dawn Marion, 50, of Mocksville, and Gil­ bert Alan Parker Jr., 5 1, of Salisbury. - Jeremiah Justin Coates, 20, of Cleveland, and Akay- la Taymar Campbell, 19, of Statesville. - Lisa Rae Mitzel, 46, and Billy Ray Greer, 51, both of Mocksville. - Meredyth Rachel Nunn, 33, and Daniel Timothy Waller, 35, of Clemmons. - Christy Lynn Whiten- er, 43, and Jason Chadwick New, 43, of Mocksville. Tammie Suzanne Shore, 58, of Mocksville, and Eugene Morris Miller Jr., 66, of Jamestown. - Tatum Jakob Williams, 22, and Katy Elizabeth Al­ exander, 22. both of Mocks­ ville. Stephani Brooke Shook, 21, of Asheboro, and Michael David Conley. 21, of Ohio. - Jason Bradley Weabey, 34, and Tia Marie Weagraff. 3 1, of Mooresville. - Heather Nicole Lax- ton Perry, 38, and Joseph Michael Bartha Jr., 38, of Mocksville. - Aaron Michael Veach, 28, and Kelly Marie Presley, 25, bc>th of Mocksville. - Michael George West, 71, and Bonny McKay, 65, both of Mocksville. - Herman Lee Shouse, 60, of Burlington, and Cher­ yl Ann McDaniels, 64, of Kentucky. - Alfred Alexander Bo- esenberg, 82, of Advance, and Nancy Lee Hughes, 82, of Kernersville. - Ricky Anthony Wor- ster, 51, and Wendy Sue Grose, 51, of Mocksville. - Serria Nicole Renken, 16, and Christopher Dale Drake, 25, of Linwood. of Win-BBQ BUTTS SMOKED TURKEYS! For Thanksgiving t Butts = $35 with 16 oz. BBQ Slaw & Dip Pre-Order Due By Nov. 17 at 5pm Contact the Fire Station at 336-998-2395 or Michael Galliher at 336-782-4544 to order. PICKUP ON NOV. 25 • 4pm-6pm at Cornatzer-Dulin Volunteer Fire Department 1522 Comatzer Rd., Mocksville, NC / am honored by the outpouring of support and look forward to continuing to serve each of you in Raleigh. Julia Howard NC House of Representatives ★ District 77 Paid for by the Horvard for House Committee BROWDER DENTISTRY Thomas S. Browder, DOS is accepting new patients! Park 158 Professional Centre 5380 US Hwy. 158 Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 336.998.9988 www.browdersmiles.com Preferred Provider: HUMANA Delta Dental CIGNA Ameritas ASSURANT Unrted Healthcare BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD AETNA Mutual of Omaha SUNLIFE Principal Life GUARDIAN Driveiray Cracks " are nothing to laugh.at r " Cali us TODAY for more details and an estimate\ , ' before your small cracks become Shoaf Concrete Co. Mocksville, NC 336-751-1989 Mon-Fri 6:30am — 3:30pm i/ou. !94S ---- Come See Our NEW LOOK!©r. Hlver^ ___ Denial Tip cfthe. "Week “Babies and toddlers should not^o to bed with bottles or sippy cups. Milk, and juice contain sugars that can cause tooth decay if they remain on the teeth for extended periods.” Andrew J. Rivers DMD FAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY 118 Hospital St. • Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-6289 "Serving. ChUdren. £--fliluUi" Accepting Most Major Insurances Riversfamilydentistry.com Please See Records - Page 7 A For RV’s, Campers, Trucks, Boats, etc. • Easy Access • Gated Facility • 24 Hour Access • Well Lighted • Security Cameras Conveniently Located just off 1-40 exit 170 at 128 Strawberry Lane in Mocksville! Go To: angellstorage.com to sign up or call 336-940-7982 PERSONAL PROPERTY AUCTION of James (Jim) & Ann Johnson 1201 Muddy Creek Rd.,Clemmons, NC 27012 Sat., November 14"' • 10:00 AM Specials o/ the Week Davie County Family owned and operated by Carl & Kim Lambert Serving Davie County and Surrounding Communities for over 30 years Prearranged Funerals and Preplanning options available Cremation Services In your time of need, it is more important than ever to be with trusted funeral professionals who are also your friends and neighbors. Please feel free to stop by and see our newly refurbished facilities and have any questions answered with regard to our services. iS LAMBERT 63S Wilkesboro St. Mocksville. NC U N K R A L 11 <) M K (336)751-1100* I UrMttltlS SKBXICfc ^apjcTW www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com if Mercury 1993 Grand Marquis LS 75K miles wvhite/Grey interior. 1967 Ford 100 one owner, Original motor 352 V8, Farmall Super A, Ford 4000,4x7 Utility Trailer single axle 6x12 farm trailer. Huskee Supreme Sit 4200 Mower. Ground Work yard sweeper. Grist Mill, Coal Stove. Hobart Commercial Mixer (3 attachments), Blodgett Commercial Oven 11 racks w/pans, 32’ Lagan Lathe. Screw Cutting and Turret Lathe. Rockwell rrxxlel 15-081 Drill Press. Dayton industrial 2 ton Arbw Press, Hartford Milling Machine, Leten DCM-6 Bandsaw. Kent Industrial Co. LTD Milling Machine, Sears Craftsman Table Saw, Vise. Wellsaw Serial 20709 Bansaw. Irrigation Pump Briggs motor. Delta Milwaukee Drill Press. Power Back Electric 5250 watts Generator. Sears Craftsman 3HP Air Compressor, fertilizer box for Super A. 3PT hare. 16 disc, 6' box blade. T scrape 3Pt. 6' bush hog. Ford 4 bottom 14’ plow trip shanks. Super A turning plow, 1 bottom 3pt Scoop pan. 2 reel type mowers. Fertilizer hand truck. Com Planter, Mowing machine. 2 wooden barrels, canning jars, wooden '/j barrels, NC Bakers council bread rack, 5 gal wine buckets. Hospital gurneys. Aluminum redwood chairs. Dial Caliper, Blue canning jars,Garden seeder planter w/plates. Drill bits. Sears Craftsman tool box. drill press clamps, Work and trouble lights, 15ft heavy log chains, Sitrex 250 Spreader, Boom Pole, Firewood, Oak, Pine. Cherry and Maple Lumber, coal bucket. Woven feixe wire. Chicken brooder. Farm bench. Crocks, Cherry seeder, wash tubs, 2 stone jugs, butter chum, 2 ladder back chairs, 6' stainless metal table and LOTS MORE ITEMS TO BE SOLD, Terms: Payment due in full day of Auction by Cash, Credit Card or Checks. NO OUT OF STATE CHECKS. Sales tax will be collected on ail sales at a rate of 7%, A 3% handling fee will be charged on all credit card purchases. Everything sold AS IS WHERE IS. Sale Conducted By: BOSTICK AUCTION SERVICE NCAFL# 6273 191 Jones Rd.. Mocksville. NC • Phone 336-492-5992 For more pictures oo to: wwwumctionzipxom 16902 BlueCross BlueShield Th" of jNorth Carolina PREFERRED PROVIDER V2 LITER CHEERWINE PRODUCTS (Includes regular & diet varieties of; Cheerwine, Sun Drop, Sunkist, RC Cola, 7UP, Canada Dry, and Diet Rite) $2.50Axp«i, $10.00/,Limit CdSG Cases Foster Drug 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fosterdrug.com Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-1 • Sun 1:30-5 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 Obituaries DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - 9 Betty Anderson Spillman Mrs. Betty Anderson Spillman, 83, of Yadkinville, died on Wednesday, Nov. 4, 2020 at the SECU Hospice Care Center of Yadkin. She was bom June lO, 1937 ____________________ in Iredell County to the late Vemie W. and Elsie Jackson Anderson. Mrs. Spillman was the retired co-owner and op­ erator of Town and Country Cleaning Service. She was a faithful member of Court­ ney Baptist Church where she served the church as a Sun­ day School teacher and choir member for several years. Mrs. Spillman loved working in her flowers, going to Saturday yard sales, and especially taking rides on her golf cart with her husband,Troy. She loved all of her family and was a devoted wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother. She was also preceded in death by: her great-grandson. Hunter Spillman; a sister, Dora Sumner; and 2 brothers, Dwight Anderson and Bud Anderson. Surviving: her husband of 66 years, Troy Lee Spillman of the home; 3 children, Ricky Lee Spillman of Mocks­ ville, Terry Wayne Spillman of Butner and Teresa Spill­ man (Doug) York of Yadkinville; grandchildren, Brooke Spillman (Tommy) Shipley, Patrick Lee (Kayleigh) Spill­ man, Brandon Douglas York, Brittany (Grant) Davis; a step-grandson, Kalib Shipley; 2 great-grandchildren, Lak- en Shipley, Troy York; 3 sisters, Margaret Vestal, Dorothy Childress, Ruth Johnson; and with several nieces, neph­ ews and cousins. Her funeral service was at 2 p.m. Saturday at Court­ ney Baptist Church by the Revs. James Williams and John Brown. She lie in-state from 1-2 p.m. before the service. Burial followed in the church cemetery. Memorials: SECU Hospice Care Center of Yadkin, 243 North Lee Ave., Yadkinville, 27055. Condolences: www.gentryfuneralservice .com. Maggie Hartman Carter Maggie Hartman Carter, 80, of Hickory, died on Friday, Nov. 6, 2020 surrounded by family and friends at home. She was bom Aug. 25, 1940 in Davie County to the _____ late Lewis Edward Hartman iKG.s-'vl and Ollie Mock Hartman. She was employed with Deal Office Equipment and The Book Ex­ change in Hickory. She was also preceded in death by: her son, Dax Andrew Carter; brothers, Alvin “Abe” Hartman, Robert “Bob” Hart­ man, and Henry “Hen” Hart­ man; sister, Ann H. Bamhardt; and half-sisters, Mary Lewis Hartman, Mabie Bailey, Sal­ ly Bailey and Lizzie “Bogey” Marsh. Survivors: a son, Jason Leon Carter and wife Jerri Alice of Conover; grandchildren, Mag­ gie Lou Alice Carter and Mary Elizabeth Lucille Carter; God-grandchildren, Kristin Baker, AJ Baker, and Joseph Self; sister. Bet Bamhardt of Advance; sister-in-law, Inez Hartman of Advance; and many family, friends and neigh­ bors A graveside service to celebrate her life was held on Monday, Nov. 9, 2020 at 11:30 a.m. at Mountain Grove Baptist Church cemetery in Hickory. The Rev. Dr. Barry Keys officiated. The family received friends prior to the service from 9-11 a.m. at Bennett Funeral Service in Con­ over. Memorials: University Christian High School Scholar­ ship, 602 7th Ave. NE, Hickory, 28601, Alzheimer's Assoc, of Catawba County, 228 2nd Street NW, Hickory, 28601; Carolina Caring, 3975 Robinson Rd., Newton, 28658 Condolence; www.bennettfiineralservice.com. They co-founded Craft Dry Cleaners on South Main Street in Winston-Salem and worked together daily until his unexpected death in 1980. She continued to operate the business for 2 years before selling it, then worked at the cleaners for an additional 10 years. Her greatest joy was her Savior, Jesus, and her family. Helena took great delight in her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She was also preceded in death by: siblings, L.S. Shel­ ton, Marie White and Edna Ann Beck. Surviving; her daughter, Linda Hill (Doug); son, Ter­ ry Craft (Sharon); grandchildren. Drew Hill, Blake Hill, Abby Hill Sharpe, Robbie Craft, Kinsley Craft Coley, Courtney Craft Woodall; 13 great-grandchildren; siblings, Bettie Smith, Leonard Shelton and Bill Shelton. A celebration of her 94 years was held at Calvary Bap­ tist Church on Nov. 1. Memorials: Calvary Baptist, 134 S. Peace Haven Rd., Winston-Salem, 27104. Condolences; www.hayworth-miller.com. Alfred Lee McMahan Alfred Lee McMahan, 67, of Mocksville, died Oct. 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom Dec. 4, 1952, in Davie County, the son of tht late Mandy Louise Mock. Ht was also preceded in death by grandmother, Mammie McMah­ an, and a brother Eugene Mod Sr. He graduated from Davie High School. In 1998 he married Quintenna White. He was a de­ voted member of Smith Grove AME Zion Church where hi served as tmstee, steward, ush er, church school superinten dent and the men’s ministry. He' worked for the Davie County School System. His hobbies included welding, auto mechanics and drag racing. Survivors: his wife. Minister Quintenna C. (White) McMahan of Mocksville; sons, Justin and Jeremy Cody of Mocksville; god-daughter, Shatoddra Curry of California; sister, Betty McMahan of Winston Salem; grandson, Justin Cody Jr.; nieces, Denise and Terri; nephews, Wayne, Will, and Rodney. A visitation was held Tuesday, Oct. 20 from 4-6 p.m. at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville. Graveside funeral service with burial was held Wednesday, Oct. 21 at Smith Grove AME Zion Church Cemetery. The Rev. Sharon McKinney officiated, and Elder Calvin Miller presented the eulogy. 10, Phyllis ‘Dianne’ Cook Chandler Phyllis “Dianne” (Cook) Chandler, 70, of Mocksville, died on Nov. 1,2020 at her home in Davie County. She was bom June 6, 1950 in Rowan County. She was the daughter of Myrtle (Seaman) Cook and the late Oscar Brady Hardin Cook. She is also pre­ ceded in death by her sister, Joyce Cook. She graduated from Davie County High School. She had been a seamstress for Southeast­ ern Sewing before renting. She attended Trinity Baptist Church in Mocksville. She loved spend­ ing time with her family espe­ cially sitting around the table after a good meal playing Phase 10. She was a kind and loving woman with a huge heart and treated everyone the same no matter. Survivors: her husband, Luther Chandler of Mocks­ ville; a son. Tommy Chandler (fiancee Anne Marie Tab- erdo) of Mocksville; a daughter. Crystal Meadows (fianc6 David McDaniel) of Mocksville; and 2 stepdaughters, Ann Hutchins (Roger) of Yadkinville, and Linda Hutchens of Booneville; and a grandson, Brady Cook of Mocksville. Memorials: to Davie Funeral Service to help with ex­ penses. A visitation was held at 1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 6 at Trinity Baptist Church. A celebration of life service followed at 2 p.m. with Pastor Darrell Cox officiating. Condolences: www.daviefuneralservice.com. L ) f I Local obituaries online www.ourdavie .com Gracia Martha Littauer Gracia Martha Littauer, 88, died at Forsyth Medical Center on Oct. 28, 2020. She had been residing at Clemmons Village I in Win­ ston-Salem since March of 2020 and experienced a steady decline in health and failure to thrive. She was bom on Nov. 8,1931 in Annapolis, Md. to Professor Sebastian B. Littauer and Bella Light Littauer. She had one brother, Eugene H. Lit­ tauer. She moved to New York City after high school to study dance and then pursue a career as a ballet dancer performing for several years in many pro­ ductions on and off Broadway. Later she transitioned into the television industry working as a wardrobe technician for NBC. She retired in the early 1990s and moved to Cooleemee to live with her longtime friend and fellow entertainer, actor John Bennes. Tbey were married in 2004 at age 71 and 73. Her interests included computers, books, politics, knit­ ting, quilting and she loved cats and dogs. She was a social person and appreciated the company of her good friends, family and neighbors. She volunteered actively for the Democatic party and the Cooleemee Historical Society. She was outspoken and passionate about her views and spoke her mind freely. She loved to argue and debate which was sometimes not well received; but for those who tmly knew her, it was accepted and expected. She was definitely one of a kind and will be greatly missed and not easily forgotten. Helena S. Craft Helena S. Craft, 94, died at 2:45 p.m. on Oct. 29, 2020. Bom on March 23, 192-6, she was raised in the Four Comers community of Davie County, the oldest of 7 chil­ dren bom to Smoot and Abbie Shelton. Being the oldest, her responsibilities included help­ ing her parents care for her sib­ lings, doing laundry, ironing, farm chores, attending church weekly with her family, deliv­ ering the Sunday newspaper at 4 a.m. with her dad, having perfect attendance in school for 11 years, taking piano lessons and generally being a model daughter and sister. After grad­ uation from Farmington High School, she attended Draughn Business School where she met her husband, Robert Craft. Sadie Faye Richardson Rice Mrs. Sadie Faye Richardson Rice, lOO, of US 64 E., Mocksville, died on Tuesday, Nov.3, 2020 at her home with her daughters by her side. She was bom on Aug. 1, 1920 to the late James Nathan­ iel Richardson Sr. and Chessie Alma Carter Richardson in Davie County. She graduated from Mocksville High School in 1937 and was married to her high school sweetheart, Thom­ as Alvin Rice Jr. in 1939. She was an original and faithful member of North Main Street Church of Christ in Mocks­ ville and was their oldest living member. In her earlier years, Mrs. Rice served as Postmas­ ter of the Fork community until the Post Office was closed by the U.S. Government in 1952. __ She retired from Davie Coun­ ty Hospital in 1986 after 29 years, beginning as head of housekeeping and ending her career as director of pur­ chasing. After retirement, she devoted her life to caring for loved one.s during their end of life illnesses. First, her father and then her husband. She continued always putting the comfort and needs of others above her own. Her family looked to her to plan events, and she was instmmental in organizing and hosting a "cousins reunion for the Carter family for 35 years, giving it up only when her health be­ gan to decline. She was an excellent seamstress and cook and will be remembered as a wonderful wife, mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister and friend. She was also preceded in death by: her husband, Thom­ a.s A. Rice Jr.; her siblings, J.N. Richardson Jr., Everette A. Richardson, Irene Hege and Lillian Tallent; a son-in-law, Sam Walker; and a grandson, Lloyd Rice Martin. Survivors: her daughters. Carmen Walker of Advance and Gloria Gaye Martin (Eddie) of Winchester, Tenn.; a sister-in-law, Mildred Bean of Mocksville; 3 grandchil­ dren, Nathan Walker (Lynette) and Jodi Walker (fianc6, Ron Wood) all of Advance and Tracy Martin (Candy) of Maryville, Tenn.; 6 great-grandchildren, Stephanie Walker, Justin Walker, Nikki Martin, Johnathan Corey Martin (Cassie), Dori Headrick (Bo) and Drake Martin; 4 great-great-grandchildren, Tennyson, Nehemiah, Grace­ lyn and Waylon; and many niece.s and nephews. A graveside service wa.s conducted at 11 a.m., Saturday, Nov. 7 at Jericho Church of Christ Cemetery with Matt Langfield officiating. No formal visitation wa.s held due to Covid-19. Memorials: Carolina Bible Camp, PO Box 1234, Mocksville; or to Trellis Supportive Care, 101 Hospice Lane, Winston-Salem, 27103. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralser\’ice .com. Rev. Dr. William Fife Long The Rev. Dr. William Fife Long died on Thursday Nov. 5, 2020 at Salemtowne Babcock Health Care in Win­ ston-Salem. He was bom Feb. 9, 1926 in High Point, the son ol the late David Allison Long Jr. and Jennie Mae Fife Long of Thomasville. He grew up ir Thomasville where he was £ member of First Presbyteriar Church and served as its organ­ ist while in high school. A Worlc War II veteran, he served in the 78th Infantry Division 1st Bat­ talion of the 31Oth Regiment and participated in the battles ol Remagen Bridgehead and Ruhi Pocket. Following VE-Day he was a chaplain’s assistant ir Berlin before being dischargee in 1946. He was awarded the Bronze Star. He graduated from Davidsor College in 1949 and UNC Law School in 1952, and latei earned a D.Min. degree from Union Presbyterian Seminaiy in Richmond. He met his wife, Ann Phifer Hammond, ir Chtirlotte while practicing law, and they married in 1955. Ordained on Jan. 26, 1958 as a Presbyterian minister he served as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Mocks­ ville, Armstrong Memorial Presbyterian Church in Gasto­ nia, and First Presbyterian Church of Hamlet. Dr. Long anc his wife moved back to Mocksville in 1980 where they re stored and lived in the historic Jesse Clement House before moving to Salemtowne Retirement Community in 2006 He wa.s honorably retired by Salem Presbytery in 1984 bui continued working as interim supply or tempiorary sup­ ply in Salem Presbytery. He also was a part-time chaplair at the VA Hospital in Salisbury. Dr. Long was active ir YMCA work in Davie County and in the American Cancel Society in Gastonia, and also in the ministerial associa­ tions of communities he served. He was a commissioner tc the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in 1975 and wa.s a trustee of Davidson College from 1972 to 1980 Surviving: his wife of 65 years, Ann; his daughter Nan­ cy Metzler and her husband Charles,of Charlotte; his son William F. Long Jr. and husband Dr. Raymond Hahn ol San Francisco; 3 grandchildren, Elizabeth Metzler, An­ drew Metzler and wife Jessica, and John Metzler; a sister Mary Jarrell of High Point; a brother, the Rev. Dr. Davie Long of Jamestown and wife Mellie; and an extended anc well-loved family of cousins, nieces and nephews anc great nieces and nephews. A graveside service was held on Monday, Nov. 9, ai 11 a.m. at the Long family plot at Calvary United Church of Christ cemetery, 1410 Lexington Ave., in Thomasville 27360. Memorials: Salemtowne Resident Assistance Fund, oi to Presbyterian World Missions at presbyterianmission org. Condolences: www.jcgreenandsons.com. Obituaries Wayne E. ‘Pete’ Arrington Jr. Wayne E. “Pete” Arrington Jr., 63, of Mocksville, for­ merly of Princeton, W.Va. died on Oct. 22, 2020. He was bom on July 18, 1957, to Wayne and Thelma Arrington in Mullens, W.Va. He was preceded in death by his parents Wayne and Thelma, and paternal grandparents H.W. and Daphna Arrington, and mater­ nal grandparents William “Bill” and Fain Barton. Survivors; longtime com­ panion Ginger Kimrey of the home; his daughters, Ashley Lowe (Jeff Winkleman) of Flor­ ida, Jessica Kluge (Paul Jr.) of Princeton, Megan Arrington of Maryland; his son, Jason Arrington (Emma) of Maryland; grandchildren, Mallory Norton (Hunter), Ethan Lowe, Dalton Reynolds, Hailee Kupner, Timothy Kupner, Jax Harvey, Chaz Harvey, and Willow Johnson; great-grandson, Waylon Norton; siblings, Beverly Walker (Scott), Bill Arrington (Teresa), Lisa Rich (Todd), and Joseph Arrington. A memorial at Seaver Funeral Home & Cremation Ser­ vice of Princeton was held Nov. 7 at 4 p.m. with the Rev. David Johnson of Concord United Methodist Church of­ ficiating. For a full obituary and to share your memories: www. seaverfuneralservice.com. I Memorials; Mountain Valley Hospice of Yadkinville at mtn valleyhospice .org. K Randall Neal Swartsell Mr. Randall Neal Swartsell, 63, of Statesville, died Sat­ urday, Nov. 7, 2020. He was bom Nov. 19, 1956 in Richmond, Ind. Mr. Swartsell enjoyed hunting and fishing. He was preceded in death by his father, Robert U. Swartsell; and his mother, Gladys W. Sproles Keegan. Survivors: his sons, Nikolas Swartsell and Gabriel Swartsell. A memorial service will be conducted at a later date. Condolences; www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. ir'- * < r~ Perkins Roofing of Mocksville He lives under just one roof, but Jesse Perkins cares about every roof. That’s what makes his busi­ ness so special. As owner of Perkins Roofing in Mocksville, Jesse treats each roof as if it was on his own home. If it isn’t good enough for him, it will not be good enough for you. That is the way Jesse treats each roofing job and customer. His work and integrity speak for itself. Jesse, a Reidsville native, became interested in roofing when he was just 13 years old. At age 17, the summer before graduating from high school, he began helping his brother in the roofing business. Af­ ter graduating the next year, Jesse moved to Davie County and has been here since. After years of working for other roofers, Jesse de­ cided it was time to go out on his own. So, in the fall of 1997, he started Perkins Roofing. “I have been roofing most of my life and that’s what I love to do,” Jesse explains. “I started out with a lad­ der, hatchet and pick-up truck.” J Theodore Carroll Foster Mr. Theodore Carroll Foster, 79, of Dogwood Lane, Mocksville, died Saturday, Nov. 7, 2020 at Forsyth Medi­ cal Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom on Feb. 9, 1941 in Davie County to the late Wil­ liam and Margaret Godbey Fos­ ter. He was a member of First United Methodist Church, a veteran of the U.S. Marines and retired from Ingersoll-Rand. He was a NASCAR racing fan hav­ ing drove stock cars of his own on short tracks. He had coached girls' softball in Davie County and loved Carolina basketball. He was a loving husband, father and grandfather. He was also preceded in death by: hi.s wife, Mary "Missy" Vir- gina Waters Foster; a daughter, Melanie Lynn Foster Turner; and a brother, James Foster. Survivors: a daughter, Beth Goad (Chtirles) of Mocks­ ville; 5 grandchildren, Charlie Link (his close buddy), Em­ ily Turner, Daniel Turner, Sam Taylor and Maggie Goad; 2 sisters, Mary Williams and Martha Luffman (Don), all of Mocksville; and several nieces and nephews. A graveside service was conducted at 1 1 a.m., Tuesday, Nov. 10 at Rose Cemetery with Dr. Glenn L. Myers Jr. of­ ficiating. Friends may pay their respect.s to Mr. Foster at Eaton Funeral Home. Memorials; St. Jude's Children's Hospital, 501 St. Jude Place, Memphis, TN 38105; or to the Pastor's Discretion­ ary fund of First UMC, 310 N. Main St. Mocksville. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice .com. Shannon Marie Custer Miss Shannon Marie Custer, 49, of Newton, formerly of Mocksville, died Sunday, Nov. 8, 2020 at her home. She wa.s bom Aug. 21,1971, in Norwich, N.Y., to the late Kenneth Merle and Diana Carol Cruikshank Custer. Miss Custer had been employed by Campers Inn, and loved all her co-workers. She loved butterflies and wa.s a big fan of NASCAR and the Pittsburgh Steelers. Survivors: a brother, Kevin Merle (Renae) of Statesville; a sister, Laurie Neill (Jeffery) of Hickory; her boyfriend, Rodney Miller of Mocksville; and 4 nieces, Anesia Boyd (Ethan) of Statesville, Kendra Custer (boyfriend, TJ.) of Newton, Megan Custer of Hickory, Mackenzie Jordan (Matthew) of Statesville. Now, along with roofing, Jesse has added vinyl sid­ ing to his line of work. “I work with several local contractors on new homes and do tear offs for older homes that need a new roof. I have done some repair work but we just don't have that many bad storms around here to do too much damage for roof repairs,” Jesse notes. Jesse takes a great deal of pride in his work and will work however many hours and days it takes to get the job finished and done right. “I keep my business somewhat small. That way I can be on the job to see what goes on and make sure the job is completed like it would be for someone in my family.” Perkins Roofing also enjoys giving back to the com­ munity. They are involved in various fund raisers including the law enforcement and rescue squad. If you are in need of a new roof and a good, honest, dependable man for the job, give Jesse at Perkins Roofing a call for a free estimate at (336) 753-8355. hl.I I Stephen Mack Walker Mr. Stephen Mack Walker, 68, of Mocksville, died Sun­ day, Nov. 8, 2020, at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom April 18, 1952 in Iredell County to the late Edd Sanford and Ruth Earle Peoples Walker. He was a member of Chestnut Grove United Meth­ odist Church. He was owner/ operator of Walker Trucking & Grading. He was a mem­ ber of Farmington Lodge #265 AF&AM. He had a wonderful sense of humor; he could tell a joke better than anyone else. When you left his company, you left smiling. He loved spread­ ing humor, listening to music, and going to Miller’s to eat and “shoot the bull.” Survit ors: his wife, Melanie Carter Walker; his siblings, Edwin Walker (Sue) and Melissa Souther (Keith); nieces and nephews, .'vlisty (Steve), Amanda (Mitchell), Tiffany (Nolan i and Avery (Kayla); and special friends, Scotty An­ gell, Richard James and Monty Smith. A graveside service will be conducted at 11 a.m., Fri­ day, Nov. 13 al Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church Cemetery with the Rev. Chip Webb officiating. The family invites friends to come by Lambert Funeral Home from 9 a.m. tl o p.m., Wednesday, Nov. 1 1, or Thursday, Nov. 12, to sign the register book. Memorials: Chestnut Grove UMC, c/o Ken Harpe, 2812 US 601 N.. .Mocksville. Condolences; www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. A graveside service will be conducted at 2 p.m.. Sunday, Nov. I .5. at Victory Baptist Churcti Cemetery, 1074 Midway Road. Statesville. The family invites friends to come Lambert Funeral Home in Ml sville, Saturday, Nov. 14, fro. ' a.m. to 5 p.m. to sign the regi- . ■ book. Condolences: www.lambertfu- neridhornenc .com. Put the BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT iL Work for YOUR Sushiessl In FORSYTH County call (336) 766-4126 In DAVIE County call (336) 751-2120 PERKINS ROOFING "Quality work at reasonable prices" (Roof Repair Specialist} Phone:336-753-8355 Fax: 336-753-8373 Perkins - Owner 300 Spring Street Modcsvflle,NC Tosha Champ Owner/C 336.671.6127 . 7308 US Hwy. 801 S. • Cooleemee. NC (N^ar Cooi^^m^R Pott Oflfct) iicpetcaregroomlrtfiiegman.com I" Tell our readers the story of YOIIR business in the BUSINESS SPOTUCHT ‘Trusted Jewelers Since I960’ MOCKSVILLE Near Tractor • 751 -3747 Expert Jewelry Repair WE BUY GOLD! LAYAWAYS! GOL,D GALLERY CLEMMONS Aeron from Hip CMcs • 756-1800 Propane REFILL STATION We Also Sell New Tanks! 20 lb..................$8.00 30 lb................$12.00 Sai 40 lb...............$16.00 100 lb............$40.00' Barber Shop 3225 U.S. Hwy. 64 East - Advance. NC (336) 998-7102me BUSINESS SPOTUGHT-flnArroBDSBiiniaitettig To Advertise On This Page Call: FORSYTH County (336) 766-4126 • DAVIE County (336) 751-2120 ■ 4^ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - BI ft 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 Vegetable Stuffed zucchini is both a fancy and tasty side dish. Add a vegetable of your choice or diced potatoes to the Broccoli Puff.. Individual meat pies can Stuffed Chicken Pie recipe. Sports Riddle’s rise to HoF began at South Davie Gussy up Thanksgiving side dishes with puffy stuff Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean Turkey’s aren’t the only thing to stuff this month. Gussy up savory vegetable and meat dishes — and fill them with store-bought stuffing. Start a few new holiday traditions with delicious recipes that will do both — save on time and please the palate. A few of my favorites, these herb stuffed sides and entrees are big on flavor — and stuffing adds some extra texture to the dish. It’s not uncommon for recipes to include bread crumbs, crushed crackers, or stuffing — but the lat­ ter often will puff up just a bit, like that of a souffld. Try serving a fancy, stuffed, vegetable side dish alongside a simple meat entrde. Or serve one of the stuffing-filled, meat recipes with a simple, steamed, vegetable side. Either way it goes down, you’ll be filled with southern comfort — and there’s nothing better. TWO SQUASH OVEN BAKE 1 stick salted butter 8 oz. Pepperidge Farm herb stuff- ------------------------------------- ing 1 cup chopped zucchini 1 cup chopped yellow squash 1 cup chopped onion 3 shredded carrots 1 small jar of pimento 1 can cream of chicken soup , 8 oz. sour cream ' Salt and freshly ground black pepper. In a skillet, melt butter. Add herb stuffing and mix. In a < greased casserole dish, line bottom with of the dressing . mix, reserving the remainder. In a mixer bowl, combine ' zucchini, yellow squash, onion, carrots, pimento, soup, and sour cream. Mix well, season to taste, and pour into but- , ter greased casserole dish. Cover with remainder of herb • stuffing. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes or until bubbly. SHRIMP AND CRAB SEAFOOD CASSEROLE 8 oz. cooked Alaskan king crab 5 oz. cooked shrimp i4 cup chopped green pepper cup chopped celery !4 cup chopped onion 1 ^4 Tbsp. Worcestershire sauce 1 cup Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing 1 cup premium mayonnaise Salt and freshly ground black pepper In a mixer bowl, mix all ingredients. Pour lightly into a butter greased baking dish without packing it down. Season to taste. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes. STUFFED CHICKEN PIE 2 cups diced chicken meat 2 cups warm chicken broth 2 cans undiluted, cream of chicken soup 1 melted stick of salted butter 8 oz. Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing Salt and freshly ground black pepper. In a mixer bowl, combine diced chicken, broth, soup, melted butter, and stuffing. Season to taste. Pour into a but­ ter greased oven dish. Bake in a 350-degree for 30 minutes. EGGPLANT & ONION CASSEROLE 2 medium eggplants 2 beaten eggs ?4 cup melted, salted butter 1 V4 cups grated white cheddar cheese 1 chopped onion 2 Tbsp.sugar 1 tsp. celery salt 1 Vl cups Pepperidge Farm dressing Salt and freshly ground black pepper. Peel eggplants. Slice in circles about */4 inch. Bring salt water to a boil and cook eggplant for 20 minutes or until fork tender. Drain well and set aside. In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. To eggs, add butter, cheese, onion, sugar, salt, and dressing. Fold in eggplant. Mix well. Season to taste. Bake in a butter greased baking dish in a 350-degree oven for 45 minutes. TWO CHEESE & TOMATO CASSEROLE 2 Tbsp. melted bacon fat 14 tsp. garlic salt 14 tsp. seasoning salt 1 tsp. sugar 2-16 oz. cans drained tomatoes 2 sliced onions '/4 cup grated white cheddar cheese 14 cup grated sharp cheddar 1 cup Pepperidge Farm herb dressing Salt and freshly ground black pepper In a skillet, add butter, salts, and sugar, and melt togeth­ er. In a butter greased baking dish, layer drained tomatoes, onion, cheese, and dressing. Season to taste. Drizzle seasonings over the tomatoes. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes. BROCCOLI PUFF 1 pkg. frozen chopped broccoli 2 beaten eggs 1 cup whole milk Vi cup sour cream 1 tsp. grated onion 3 Tbsp. melted butter 1 '/4 cups Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing Salt and freshly ground black pepper ‘/4 cup stuffing crumbs 2 Tbsp. melted butter In a saucepan, steam broccoli until slightly tender and set aside. In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add milk, sour cream, and onion. In a bowl, melt butter, add stuffing, and mix well. Add buttered stuffing to egg mixture. Fold in cooked broccoli and mix well. Salt and pepper to taste. Pour into a butter greased casserole dish. Top with ’/4 cup of stuff­ ing mix mixed with 2 Tbsp. melted butter. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes. THE STUFFY CHICKEN % cup evaporated milk 3 Tbsp. salted butter 7 oz. Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing Condensed cream of mushroom soup '/4 cup evaporated milk 2 cups diced chicken 1 cup shredded Swiss cheese 2 stalks chopped celery 1 cup cooked broccoli flowerets 1 tsp. crushed dried thyme Salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 cup shredded Swiss cheese In a saucepan, heat milk and butter to scalding. In a mix­ er bowl, combine scalded milk and stuffing. Spread Vz of mixture evenly into the bottom of a butter greased baking dish and set aside the remaining stuffing mixture. In a mix­ er bowl, combine soup, milk, chicken, cheese, celeiy, broc­ coli, and thyme. Salt and pepper to taste. Mix well. Spoon over and spread mixture evenly over the stuffing. Then top with remaining stuffing mixture, spreading evenly. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes or until heated through. Sprinkle with cheese and continue to bake until cheese is hot and bubbly. TWO CHEESE BEEF PIE 1 lb. lean ground beef !<4 chopped onion 1 cup Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing 2 Tbsp. chopped basil 1 cup uncooked minute rice 1 cup crumbled white cheddar cheese, plus '/4 cup tomato sauce Salt and freshly ground black pepper 1 V4 cup tomato sauce Thin tomato slices 1 cup crumbled sharp cheddar In a mixer bowl, combine beef, onion, stuffing, and ba­ sil. In a 10-inch greased pie plate, make a bottom crust with the beef mixture. In a mixer bowl, combine uncooked rice, cheddar cheese, tomato sauce, and spread over the crust mixture. Salt and pepper to taste. Cover in foil. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour or until set. Cover top with thin tomato slices and salt. Sprinkle grated yellow cheddar over the top. Bake for additional 30 minutes. VEGETABLE STUFFED ZUCCHINI 4 large zucchini 10 oz. frozen mixed vegetables 2 crushed garlic cloves ‘/4 tsp. salt Vz tsp. freshly ground black pepper 1 cup peeled, chopped fresh tomatoes 2 cups Pepperidge Farm herb stuffing 1 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese Cut squash in half lengthwise. Cook in salted boiling water for 5 minutes. Drain. Scrapte out seeds and pulp and discard. Sprinkle the inside of squash shells with salt and pepper. For the filling, steam the mixed vegetables and add garlic, salt, and pepper. Drain well. Add tomatoes and stuffing. Mix well. Using a spoon, fill the squash boats. Cover tops with grated cheese. In a butter greased glass oven dish, bake in a 350-degree oven for 30 minutes or until top begins to brown. You can use yellow squash il preferred. By Brian Pitts Davie Enterprise Record First in a series on new Davie hall of famer Billy Riddle. If you’ve never heard Billy Riddle’s story, settle in because it’s something. It’s hard to be more dominant in football and wrestling than Riddle was at South Davie Middle. At Davie High, Riddle wres­ tled on varsity for two years, but football was where he made his name. There’s no debate whether he ranks among the best safeties of all time - only where after he made 165 tackles in 2003 and 381 during his three-year varsity career from 2001-03. At the time, both total.s ranked second in the Davie record book, both trailing Patrick Lowery, who made 174 tackles in 2001 and 457 from 1999-01. Then Riddle took his football talent to Appalachian State and helped the Mountaineers win the their first-ever national champi­ onship in 2005. As good as Riddle was on the field, he was even better off the field. Few athletes could meet his standard for warmth, courtesy and heart. The Davie High Athletic Hall of Fame Class of 2021 includes Riddle (2004), Jonette Williard (1996), Duane Phillips (2000), John McDaniel (2006) and the 1994-95 girls basketball team (25-2 record). 1998 Seventh-Grade Football Before the 1998 seventh-grade season. South Davie coaches would have taken a win - any win - from this team. Seven of 24 players had suited up for football before 1998. That’s why coach Todd Bumgarner, who called the shots on offense in the opener as head coach Barry Whitlock trav­ eled with the eighth-grade team, walked with a spring in his step after a 28-6 drubbing of Northwest Cabarrus. “It really tickled me,’’ Bumgar­ ner said. “I wasn’t expecting to go out there and control the game like we did.” Whitlock endorsed Riddle, a halfback/linebacker, as one of the Piedmont Conference’s sharpest weapons before the season, and Riddle did not disappoint, carrying the Tigers to a 20-0 halftime lead. On the first play from scrimmage, Maurice Wilson threw a 32-yard halfback pass to Riddle, who scored on two runs, returned an interception 50 yards and account­ ed for all 20 first-half points in South’s wishbone attack. In a 20-8 win over Concord, Riddle overwhelmed the Gold- miners with 116 rushing yards, 44 receiving yards and two touch­ downs. “We don’t have any big guys, we don’t have any size and we don’t have much speed,” Whitlock said. “They really play hard and play together.” Then South pulled a 28-26 stunner over Mooresville. “That ranks as the second biggest win behind (48-46 over Concord in the 1996 conference championship game),” Whitlock said. “And probably talent-wise, it’s the biggest win I’ve ever had.” The Tigers were behind late in the fourth and facing third- and-12. Andrew McClannon ig­ nited a game-winning drive by hitting Riddle on a backdoor pass, and Riddle raced 50 yards to the Mooresville 18 with 1:14 on the clock. Three ineffective runs later. South was backed in a comer: fourth-and-8 at the 12 with 18 seconds to go. Whitlock tossed the playbook out like a rotten apple and drew up a play in the dirt. “I said: ‘Listen up. Maurice, you’ve got to fake it like you ain’t never faked it before. Andrew, you’ve got to bootleg out to the right. And Billy, you’ve got to run the flag pattern,’” Whitlock said. “I drew it on the back of (left guard) Paul Williams’ helmet.” Wilson faked a run, McClan­ non rolled out and floated a pass to Riddle, who was shadowed by two alert defenders. Somehow, Riddle reeled it in for a game-ty­ ing catch. On the two-point play. Riddle sailed across the goal line untouched. Wilson finished off the Red Imps with an interception. Riddle finished with 120 yards on 19 carries and three TDs. Wilson added 108 yards on 10 carries. Against J.N. Fries, Wilson pulled down a pass from Riddle with no time on the clock as the scrappy Tigers celebrated their second miraculous win in as many weeks, 12-6. “It’s probably the least athlet­ ic team I’ve ever had, but with their desire and heart and guts, they’re probably one of the top two (teams) I’ve ever had,” Whit­ lock said. With the score 6-6, South stopped Fries on fourth down at the South 35 with 1:44 left. Riddle’s 22-yard reception on a backdoor pass from McClannon ignited a magical march. Riddle’s 32-yard run off tackle moved South to the Fries 9. Two incompletions left one second on the clock. Without the luxury of a timeout, Whitlock switched Riddle from halfback to quarterback and Wilson from halfback to receiver. “I moved them because Billy was kind of winded and Maurice can jump a little bit higher and is a little bit taller than Billy,” Whit­ lock said. After a penalty moved South back to the 14, Riddle rolled left and found Wilson in the end zone. Touchdown. Riddle accounted for 163 receiving/rushing yard.s - not to mention the TD pass. “A guy gets a hold of his jer­ sey, he gets away and it looks like Billy’s going to run the ball,” Whitlock said. “He stops, throws it in the back of the end zone and Maurice gets his feet down in bounds.” After the 4-0 start, Kannaf>olis spoiled South’s quest for an un­ beaten season. The Tigers failed twice to score in the red zone and lost 6-0. Going into the final game of Please See Riddle - Page B4 I Fred Pierce talks about John Grimes (left) at Grimes’ in­ duction ceremony. Grimes one of Davie’s first sports legends Pasciolla a great fit for War Eagle football Tree of Honor Help us "flag" the tree. A tribute Tree of Honor to remember those who serve or have served to protect our freedom will be located at MOCKSVILLE TOWN HALL. For each $1 contribution, a United States flag will represent a designated service person. Our goal is to have the entire tree filled with flags! Tax deductible contributions should be made payable to Historic Davie, Inc. These contributions will be presented to Davie County Hero's Fund for local veteran services.The Davie County Chamber of Commerce and the Mocksville Town Hall will have forms available with a $1 contribution or you may mail the form below to: Historic Davie, Inc. 171 S. Clement St. Mocksville, NC 27028 Please PRINT Information I By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Davie High lost one of its first sports legends recently as John Grimes died Oct. 20 at the age of 77. He passed away at his Siler City home after four days of hos­ pice care. iHe was the son of John F. Grimes, Jr., and Virginia Williams Grimes and grew up in Cooleemee. He made his mark at Davie in 1961, becoming the first Davie athlete to earn an athletic scholar­ ship to a Division-I school. He re­ ceived 22 full-ride football offers, including one from all eight teams in the ACC. After playing football at Wake and graduating from col­ lege, the Cleveland Browns and Baltimore Colts offered him an undrafted free agent contract. But Grimes declined because he was ready to join the military and start a family. He fulfilled his military obliga­ tion, serving in the 3/8th Calvalry of the 8th Infantry Division in Germany and retiring with the rank of Captain. In 1968, Grimes’father-in-law asked him to join Cecil Budd Tire Company in Siler City and he accepted, setting up 59 years of public service. His career there as a businessman spanned 49 years. He became the first and only Re­ publican elected to the Chatham County Board of Commissioners during the 20th century, serving from 1994-98. In Siler City, he ran successfully for District 4 Town Commissioner from 1999-03. He was re-elected in 2003, 2007 and 2011 and served 10 years as Mayor Pro Tern before going on to win four consecutive terms as Mayor. He was re-elected for his fourth two-year term as Mayor in Please See Grimes - Page B3 By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record The offensive line has become one of the real stories of the Davie football offseason. The JV/varsity o-linemen, which numbers around 27 guys, have established a reputa­ tion for their collective work ethic. “Their dedication to being at workouts has been second to no group that we have,” head coach Tim Devericks said. “Their num­ bers have been outstanding. Their dedication to work hard and get better has been really impressive. On both sides of the ball, it starts up front. What the offensive line has shown has been really good. “They average about 18 show­ ing up every time. That’s impres­ sive when you’re not in season and it’s voluntary workouts. Some of them are not even in school that day and they’re having to find a ride to get there. It’s just really, really awesome.” ••• Jimmie Welch has been Davie’s OL coach since 2007. He has a new right-hand man in Spencer Pasci­ olla, who joined the staff in 2019. Pasciolla, 26, grew up in Oak Ridge, just outside of Kernersville, and attended Bishop McGuinness. He played on the offensive and defensive lines and graduated in 2012. “We had like 21 kids total on the team, so you had to play both ways,” Pasciolla said. “When I got to Davie, it blew me away the dif­ ference between the two football programs. I had never seen big football before. I don’t want to go back now; I love it.” Pasciolla got his teaching de­ gree at Appalachian State. He was an assistant coach for two years at his alma mater. Bishop. His first teaching job was at Trinity High. After spending a semester there, he was a substitute teacher at Bishop for a short while. Then he landed the PE job at William R. Davie Elementary. This is his third year at WRD. How did Pasciolla, 26, join Devericks’ staff before the 2019 season? “(Devericks) called me out of the blue,” he said. “I was going to take a break from coaching foot­ ball and just get used to being in Davie County and adjust. Dever­ icks called me up and said: ‘I heard you coached at Bishop. Would you want to come in for an interview?’ I said: ‘Absolutely.’ I wasn’t going to turn that down. I got in there and felt out the program. Everybody is really tight and close, and I got that feeling right off the bat. I knew I wanted to join if Devericks would have me. So I’m really glad he gave me that call.” The feeling is mutual. Dever­ icks said one of Pasciolla’s gifts is his magic with p>eople. “He played offensive line, but he really loves the weight room,” Devericks said. “He loves to try to make kids better in the weight room. We have a young man on the team that’s not even in his position group that he checks on regularly because he knows he doesn’t have the best home life. That shows he cares about kids and their home lives. He’s always willing to go the extra mile and help out whenever we need it. And he has tremendous knowledge of offensive line.” Pasciolla said: “Jimmie and I over the past year have gotten pretty tight and we’re on the same page 99 percent of the time.” ••• The Camden Beck/Spencer Williams tandem offers a com­ pelling foundation for the 2021 varsity OL. Both are juniors and both are returning starters - Beck at left tackle and Williams at RT. Beck is a budding star. “You can go back and watch tape on Camden, and it’s just rare to find a mistake,” Pasciolla said. “He’s already so technically proficient. With everything he does, he has a purpose in all of his movements. It really makes your job as a line coach easy because you can go through the film and be like: ‘He took care of his job.’ He doesn’t really let guys fluster him and he doesn’t really care who’s acros.s from him. As an offensive line coach, you could not ask for anything more than that.” S. William.s is primed to take a big step forward in 2021, a season that opens Feb. 26 at Ragsdale. “They both had really strong years (in 2019) and they’re very coachable guys,” Pasciolla said of Beck and S. Williams. “And I love that they’re juniors. Consistency along the offensive line is a huge thing.” Davie graduated three starters on the OL. One of the new starters could be senior Ashton Williams. That is a testament to his offseason commitment. “It looks like he’s making a big maturity jump,” Pasciolla said. “He’s picked up everything we’ve thrown at him, and he seems to have a good handle on things as well. I know he’s done some camps outside of us, so I think he’s making that extra effort to improve and have a really good senior campaign.” There’s more. The JV o-line has shown considerable promise. “We have a lot of great poten­ tial,” Pasciolla said. “We had a lot of freshmen start on JV last year, and now we’ll have a lot of them back on JV. And we have a lot of good-looking freshmen, too.” 1 1 Name: 1 1 1 1 Circle One: Honor Memory 1 1 1 Service Branch:1 1 1 Given By;11 1 Phone Number:1 1 1 For names to be printed in the Enterpri<;»> 1 11forms must be legible and turned in by 1 1 Wednesday 12-09-2020. '1 Barneycastle thriving in dirt modifieds By Brian Pitts Baterprise Record Jake Barneycastle has more than held his own as a sec­ ond-year, 21-year-old racer in d^ modifieds. In fact, the 2020 season he just completed is one he won’t soon forget. In 18 races, he took first place two times, second three times and “finished fourth numerous times,” his father, Jeff Barneycastle, said. “He raced all over the South­ east and was always in the top seven or eight,” Jeff said. “When you win in these cars, you’ve done something. There’s so much comfjetition. It’s tough to run up front in these cars. It’s unbelievable how much com­ petition there is. I mean, every week seven pr eight cars could win the race easily.” The biggest event was the World Short Track Champion­ ship at Charlotte Motor Speed­ way. Jake qualified fifth out of 62 cars and finished fourth. He knows he couldn’t do it alone. “You’ve got to credit the people around you, all these wonderful sponsors (Magno­ lia Constructicn, Sensible Air Systems Inc., Bamhardt Farms, Springboard Inc., Elite Chassis, Infinity Insurance and LB Dry- wall) and the people that help the car get better every week,” Jake said. “It’s easy to drive a car that pretty much drives itself. My uncle Dale (Barneycastle) is a pretty big part of it. Of course, my dad and mom (Carla) have helped a lot, and also my girl­ friend (Kayli Lanier)/’ Although Jake had more victories during his 2019 rookie season, he said he was better overall in 2020. “We ran consistent,” he said. “Our equipment held up. We pretty much didn’t have a DNF (did not finish) all season. It’s good to run up front almost ev­ ery weekend. Really it was the equipment holding up and me getting better as a driver.” mi DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - B3B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 Grimes Enter WeeWV tor YourChance to 1 $20 WEEKLY 1"" PRIZE and an Enterprise Record Cap $5 WEEKLY 2''“ PRIZE CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone can enter except employees of the Davie County Enterprise Record and their families. Only one entry allowed per person per week. All entries must be on originaJ newsprint or fax to 336- 751-9760. 2. Games in this week’s contest are listed in each advertisement on this page. Fill in the contest blank and submit or mail the entry to the Enterprise Record, P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028. 3. Weekly prizes are $20 & Cap for first place and $5 for second place. 4. In case of ties, the entrant who came closest to the total number of points in the tie breaker wins. If a tie still exists, awards will be divided equally among the winners. 5. Entries must be delivered to the Enterprise Record before 5:00pm Friday each week. The office is located at 171 S. Main St., Mocksville, NC. 6. Winners will be announced following each contest. Decisions of judges will be final. A new contest will be announced each week. PhilCar Automotive & Tire Your Full Service Vehicle Maintenance Center NO NEED TO TRAVEL TO A DEALER Now Offering All Ford - Lincoln - Mercury Factory Diagnostics & Programming 1. Wake Forest vs. UNC “Philcarfor your car. ” 1628 Hwy. 601 S. • 751-1800 beside Lakewood Motel • Mocksville SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL Call today for Heating OH Delivery! 2. 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Seattle vs. LA Rams Open: Mon.-Thur. Ham-lam; Fri. & Sal. 11 am-2 am; Sun. 12 noon-1 am -w-w-w. eTn.xn.oxis . com LAMBERT F U N E R A I. HOME * Cremation Service 635 Wilkesboro St. • Mocksville. NC • (336) 751-1100 www.lambertfuneralhomenccom 9. Philadelphia vs. NY Giants SELECTED Follow the Davie County Enterprise Record ONLINE! Look for us on Facel^k and on our Washington Website... vs. Detroit www.ourdavie.com Advertise Your Business Here! K3 I II ADVERTISER Call 336-751-2120 today to place YOUR BUSINESS on our next FOOTBALL CONTEST PAGE! 11. Buffalo vs. Arizona I I I 3 Congratulations to this week’s FOOTBALL CONTEST WINN First Place = $20.00 to Nicole Collet Second Place = $5.00 to Todd Zimmerman Congratulations to Nicole Collet who missed only 3 games and was closest in the tie­ breaker to claim First Place this week. Second place goes to Todd Zimmerman who was next closest in the tie-breaker. Several contestants tied at the top this week. The Charlotte vs. Middle Tennessee game did not count since it was postponed due to coronavirus. Clemson dropped out of the top spot in the polls after losing an exciting game at Notre Dame. Liberty stayed unbeaten with a last second win at Virginia Tech. The Panthers lost a back and forth battle at Kansas City on a missed 67 yard field goal. Tom Brady and the Buccaneers come to Charlotte this week. V. » PHILCAR AUTOMOTIVE 2. SPILLMAN’S HOME FUELOIL CRENSHAW PAINTING CO. 4. WOODMEN LIFE 5. DAVIE JEWELERS 6. WHITNEE’S NEW & USED VARIETY 7. FRANK VOGLER & SONS 8. MOSSY’S 9. LAMBERT FUNERAL HOME 10.OURDAVIE.COM 11. ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE Tic Breaker ■ Predict the total score in the following game. In cases of ties, ■ the tiebreaker will be used to determine the winners. Penn St. vs. Nebraska I ADDRESS:__ J DAY PHONE Entries Must Be Received Before 5 pm Friday I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Continued From Page BI the fall of 2019. He was awarded the Or­ der of the Long Leaf Pine, North Carolina’s highest civilian honor for a citizen of our state. ••• You can’t have a con­ versation about Davie’.s all- time football greats without mentioning John Grimes. You can’t have a conver­ sation about running back Brian Piccalo’s record-set­ ting 1964 season for Wake Forest without mentioning the blocking tight end. A blue-collar, lunch-pail player. Grimes was every­ thing a coach could ask for in a player, and he’s legendary for his toughness. Here’s Grimes’ toughness in a nutshell: He got two teeth knocked out in the first half of a 1958 Davie foot­ ball game against Barium Springs, but he continued on. He got two more teeth knocked out in the second half, but he kept gutting it out. “At some point in the game we were going along hot and heavy, we had a pileup and John came out of the game and said: ‘Coach, look,’’’ the late Jack Ward, Davie’.s coach from 1956- 67, said in 2007. “John’s front two teeth were gone. They were broken off, which had to be painful. We were wanting to get him some attention from some medical people. Well, it wasn’t long after that and John came up to me and said: ‘Coach, we’ve got something I could bite on and I’d like to go ahead and play this ball- game.’ I said; ‘Get back in there.’ We ended up cutting a piece of foam rubber. John bit down on it and played the rest of the game - and did a good job.’’ Ken Cassidy, a lineman ~ from 1958-61, remembers the Barium Springs game. “Back then our running backs had one plastic bar, and that (Barium Springs) guy was known for throwing elbows,” he said. “He got Bob Thies with an elbow and he had to get stitched up. He caught John with an elbow and that plastic bar came into his teeth. Coach Ward said: ‘Well, they’re gone.’ But John was ready to go back in. Back then it wasn't mandatory to use a mouthpiece. I never wore one. You didn’t have to have a bar on your helmet.” Grimes’ parents, Effie and Virginia, didn’t find out the teeth news until John got home. “I got two knocked out in the first quarter and two in the third,” Grimes said in I 2007. “I came in after the .' game and my dad (Effie) said: ‘You didn’t play very well. What was wrong?’ I didn’t say anything. I finally turned around and smiled and he said; ‘Oh, my God.' Mom said: ‘What’s wrong?’ I went to the dentist Satur­ day morning. He cut my gums. The teeth were broke off even with the gums.” Grimes was Davie’s first four-year varsity football player. He was the first four- year varsity boys basketball player. In 1961, he became Davie’s first East-West All- Star football player. For Davie football, he was a two-way starter for ! three years, and he even got starting time at tackle as a freshman. He played , offensive end and linebacker as a sophomore and junior. He played fullback and line­ backer as a senior. Grimes practiced with the varsity as a 6-1, 155-pound eighth grader. “John was one of those athletes that was real easy to coach,” Ward said. “John had a lot of ability. He had good size, could run, had Benny Merrill (4) and John Grimes were co-captains for Davie basketball. good hands and it was easy for him to get into the mix at an early age. The hitting, blocking, tackling and all that stuff didn’t faze him. He was a starter for four years, and I don’t know of any oth­ er freshman that started in my time. John was a player at Wake. He wasn’t just at Wake - he wa.s a player.” Davie football took a big step forward during Grimes’ junior year in 1959, the 7-3 record far surpassing any­ thing the Rebels had done in their first three years. With Grimes and Thie.s serving a.s co-captains in I960, Da­ vie sustained the success at 6-3-1. Grimes scored a touchdown in all six wins. Grimes was a differ­ ence-maker in the West’s win over the East in the all- star game. "On a pitch-out play. Grimes came in and hit the runner so hard he caused a fumble,” Peattie Feathers, a Wake assistant during Grimes’ career at Wake, said in 1964. “The West went on to score the touchdown that won the game. Grimes wa.s the one really responsible for the victory.” Grimes was deeply ad­ mired by his Davie team­ mates. “As far as I’m concerned, you won’t find a better end,” the late Mole Spry, a running back from 1956-59, said in 2007. “John had big hand.s and he was an excellent receiver. John was an out­ standing forward on the basketball team. He was like running into a brick wall. You didn’t mess under the basket. John was as tough as they come under that board.” “We lived two houses from each other (on Duke Street),” said Roger Pierce, a basketball/baseball player from 1960-64. “John was al­ ways one of the biggest guys in town. You didn't have the recruiting then like you do now. We had so many good athletes that came out of Cooleemee, but a lot of them didn’t get noticed. But John wa.s one of those that did be­ cause of his football talents. So when he went to Wake, it was a big thing. Everybody was excited because we had somebody from Cooleemee playing college football.” In 1961 at Wake, Grimes made the all-state freshman team as a 6-2, 201-pound split end. He was among five Deacons honored on a team comprised from the Big Four (Wake, N.C. State, Duke and UNC). A 55-yard I D pass from John Mackov- ic to Grimes was frozen in Grimes’ mind nearly a half-century later. “We were playing Clem­ son, and we had been doing some down-and-out routes,” he said. “I said: ‘Mack, any time you’re ready for a down, out and go, it’s there. The defensive back is com­ ing up real fast.’ He didn’t say anything. I didn’t know whether it registered with Mack or not. About a quarter later, he said; ‘Well, let’s see if you know what you’re talking about.’ So we ran the down, out and go and it was a 55-yard completion.” Grimes became a starter midway through his soph­ omore year and he never looked back. The Deacons wallowed through lots of misery, going 0-10 in 1962 and 1-9 in 1963 and break­ ing a 19-game losing streak with a 20-19 win over South Carolina. “The campu.s went cra­ zy,” Grimes said. Spry attended a game against Maryland during the long losing streak. Spry and Grimes were as close as brothers, and Spry wasn’t happy with coach Bill Hil- debrand’.s game plan. So he got up, marched down the steps and made sure the coaches heard his dis­ pleasure, “John got us good sweats (at Bowman Gray Stadi­ um),” Spry said. “(Wake basketball coach) Bones McKinney was sitting right behind us. John had made two or three great catches. I yelled: ‘Put Grimes in!’ They didn’t pay any atten­ tion to me. So I got up out of my seat, walked down, opened the gate, went to the bench and said; ‘What the hell’s going on down here? You had a man leading you down the field and then you take him out!’ Doc Martin was the head trainer. He came over and said; ‘Who are you and how did you get through here?’ So they ushered me back up to my seat. I don't think John was too thrilled with me.” “I’m sitting on the bench resting,” Grimes said. Then I feel somebody pat me on the back and say; ‘You're playing good, big boy.’ I look back and there's Mole.” Hildebrand left after the 1963 season and Bill Tate took over in 1964, the senior seasons for Piccalo, Mackovic and Grimes. Tate was 32 and had been an as­ sistant at Illinois. He inherit­ ed morale at an all-time low, but it didn’t take Grimes long to catch Tate’s eye. “I remember John viv­ idly,” Tate said from his Nebraska home in 2007. “The players had been beat­ en down the previous years, and we tried to get some pride built back into the players. So we instituted what we called the red hel­ met for practice, which meant if you wore one of those it was very meaning­ ful. It meant you were one of those individuals that gave effort on every play, every minute of practice. And John wa.s either the first or second one to get one of those red helmets.” Tate dropped 10 players during preseason, rejuve­ nated a moribund team and Wake shocked everybody with a 5-5 record that in­ cluded a 4-3 mark in the ACC. Dick Anderson, the Wake offensive coordinator in 1964 who later moved to Davie County, said Grimes was an indispensable cog. "John was one of our pre­ mier athletes, one of the best athletes we inherited when we came to Wake,” he said in 2007. “He was a good, hard-nosed player. He was a good pass-catching tight end. He had an excellent attitude. We considered him one of our team leaders.” No one could believe it when Wake opened the 1964 season with a 31-21 win at Virginia. Student.s rolled the campus with toilet paper. “John and Piccalo helped lead the most wonderful song-fest all the way back on the bus,” Tate said. “It almost brings tear.s to my eyes thinking about it. They had worked so hard. We worked very, very hard in the spring of ‘64. There were a lot of kids that quit because we wanted to weed some of them out. We want­ ed kid.s that were going to get knocked down and get back up, and John wa.s one of those guys. You just couldn't keep him down. The guys sang all the way back from Charlottesville, and it’s one of the most memorable occasions 1 had in college football. That doesn't seem like a lot, but if you take a team that’s lost 19 in a row and they go up and beat a team that's outmanned them, you can imagine what that does to them.” More mayhem was set off when Wake followed with a 38-21 upset of Virgin­ ia Tech and its All-American quarterback. Bob Schweick- ert. Six week.s later, the ju­ bilation peaked when Wake stunned first-place Duke 20-7 before a Bowman Gray capacity crowd of 17,000. Not only had Wake not de­ feated Duke since 1951, the Blue Devils were a three-TD favorite. It was one of the most memorable moments in Wake history. Duke had dogged the Deacons by a combined score of 112-10 the previous three years. Even though there was an­ other game to be played at Bowman Gray a few hours later, students tore down the goal posts. “It was my greatest thrill,” Grimes said in 1964. “The very greatest in high school, college or any time. We took the ball and rammed it down their throats.” In the Duke game. Grimes was a three-year starter at Wake Forest. Grimes caught a 10-yard pass from Mackovic. He caught a TD that wa,s erased by a penalty. You would never guess how Pierce got a seat for the Duke game. “I was a freshman at (North) Carolina,” he said. “I thumbed from Carolina. I didn't have any money. The band marched in. Well, 1 marched right in with the band. It wa.s thrilling to see somebody I know playing in a college football game," The Deacons rallied past Maryland 21-17. They closed in style, beating N.C. State 27-13, killing the Wolfpack’s title hopes and giving Tate and Anderson a victory ride on their shoul­ ders. It gave Wake its best record in five years. People who don't care a thing about football know about Piccalo, the All-Amer­ ican fullback who led the nation in rushing ( 1 ,044 yards) and point.s (111), He set ACC season record.s for rushing yards, points and TDs ( 15). A few years later, when “Pic" wa.s playing for the Chicago Bears, he lost a battle with cancer. The 1971 movie “Brian’s Song" recalled Piccalo’s friendship with Chicago star Gale Say­ ers and tugged at everyone's hearts. “I used to go see him play at Wake." Cassidy said. "Being younger players, we really looked up to John, We were proud. I was with a group that went over to see him one Sunday and we met Brian Piccalo. That wa,s quite an experience." Tate wa.s the unanimous ACC Coach of the Year. The only mistake he made wa.s not naming Grimes the game captain for each game. Wake wa.s 5-0 when Grimes served as captain. "I’d like to have a whole team of player.s like John Grimes," Feathers, the end.s coach, said in 1964. Yes, Piccalo was one- man wrecking crew. But Tate said Grimes was vital to Piccalo’s success. “John always played tight end,” said Tate, who ran a Wing-T offense. “We had another fella that played the split end, so John was always the blocker. He was one of the best blocking end.s that I never had. When­ ever we did throw a pass, he was always there. He never dropped a pass. He helped make Brian Piccalo. because he was on the end of our option series that carried us through the year. He had to make critical blocks. As you know, Brian led the nation in rushing and scoring. John was one of the main reason.s for that. He had a critical block that had to be made. “The other thing I re­ member is John was an intense, intense player. He never made any mistakes. He wa.s alway.s in the right place at the right time. He gave 100 percent all the time. You'd like to have players like that all the time. When we got there we didn’t know what we were going to get. John was a real pleasure to have. He came back (in 1965) and helped us a.s a graduate assistant. He did a wonderful job with u.s then, too.” Grimes was inducted in the Davie High .Athletic Hall of Fame in 2007. His sister, Kathy Januzelli. wa.s inducted in 2019. Sunday, Nov. 15***. lOam-Opm Vinyl LPS 45s 78s Picture Sleeves Memorabilia — Mask Will Be Required — Viaage Inn Ewent Center 620S Ramada DC Clemmons. MG Z7O12 Free Admission CDs DVDs Bo(4cs Posters Magarinos; Comics, Stereo Equipment For more Informatioa contact Mcham HUt 33&97B.7618 emaN: Rlwn944aTriadnxom DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 - B5 M B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 Riddle ... Continued From Page BI regular season. South need­ ed a win over Northwest Cabarrus coupled with a Mooresville win over Kan­ napolis to clinch the South­ ern Division title. Guess what happened? South won 20-6 behind Riddle’s two TDs, Mooresville dis­ patched Kannapolis 16-6, and South had the division crown and a berth in the Piedmont Conference cham­ pionship game. Erwin captured the Northern Division. South and Erwin clashed at Mooresville High. The Ti­ gers held to a 16-8 lead at the end of the third, but they ran out of gas and lost 28-16. “Every one of them were in tears after the game,” Whitlock said. South was behind 22-16 with possession at its 43, but Riddle’s third-down pass was picked off and returned 60 yards for a decisive TD with under two minutes to play. Riddle piled up 102 yards on 16 carries as South settled for a 5-2 record. “They gave it 110 per­ cent,” Whitlock said. “It was a dream season.” Riddle rushed for over 700 yards in seven games and anchored the defense at middle linebacker despite being “slowed by injuries,” Whitlock said. “His leg gave him trouble all year. He got a pulled groin, he kept aggravating it and really I don’t think he played at lOO percent in any game.” 1999 Eighth-Grade Foot­ ball In a thrilling season open­ er that counted as a non­ conference game. South’s eighth-grade squad rallied for a 20-14 overtime win over archrival North Davie. With South trailing 14-8 and a little over three min­ utes left in regulation, ev­ erybody knew the backdoor pass was coming sooner or later. And yet: South’s money play resulted in a McClannon-to-Riddle 20- yard completion on third- and-7, moving South to the North 2. North’s coura­ geous defense stuffed South on first, second and third downs as the clock dipped to : 12. But fullback Mitchell Roberts plowed two yards for the game-tying TD to force OT. (North stopped the two-point conversion to stay alive.) The Wildcats got first crack in OT, but they fell a foot short of the goal line on fourth down. On fourth-and- goal for South, McClannon hit halfback Wilson on - you guessed it - the backdoor pass. Wilson dug out a low throw, weaved through traf­ fic and clinched a one-for- the-books victory. Earlier, North’s Brandon Pane, who had nine runs for 114 yards and also made 14 tackles, scampered 70 yards to set up Justin Norswor­ thy’s 11-yard TD to give North the 14-8 lead. Riddle finished with 13 carries for 91 yards. “I think it carried over from last year,” Whitlock said. “We won two games on the last play of the game. It’s built in these kids. They keep believing in them­ selves .” In a 19-6 win over China Grove, McClannon show­ cased his enhanced arm, completing a bomb to Jason Winters, who raced 80 yards to extend South’s lead to Mitchell Roberts (left) and Maurice Wilson block for ball carrier Billy Riddle during a South Davie football game. 13-0 and send South toward victory in its conference opener. “(McClannon) went to football camp at Davie and I’ve worked with him every day,” Whitlock said. After China Grove cut the margin to 13-6, Riddle took over, powering for 12 and 57 yards and driving a stake through the Red Dev­ ils’ hearts. Riddle had 175 yards on 15 carries, while Roberts supplied 84 yards on 14 attempts. “Billy is sneaky fast,” Whitlock said. “He reads his blocks and keeps two hands on the ball. We got good blocks out of our backs and linemen (Jason Smoot, Ben Gobble, Derek Foster, Dustin Mise, Jamon Jef­ feries and tight end Josh Riddle) because Billy was getting five or six yards before he was getting hit.” In a 20-6 loss to West Rowan, South played on even terms in the first half (6-6) before succumbing to the Bulldogs’ superior ath­ leticism. Riddle powered for 159 yards on 22 carries, Jef­ feries helped South control the line of scrimmage and Scott Maxwell and Gobble led a defense that held West to its lowest output. But it wasn’t enough. Riddle ran for 90 yards in a 14-0 win over Cor- riher-Lipe. Riddle (154), Roberts (71) and Wilson (64) combined for 289 rush­ ing yards in a 44-12 rout of Erwin. But if one game could capture what Riddle meant over two seasons, it was an 18-6 win over Knox. The 140-pound workhorse pounded out 174 yards on 26 attempts and carried the Tigers, who scored on their first three possessions. “I’m going to tell you, that young man pound for pound is the best player in the conference,” Whitlock said. “And they were all be­ tween the tackles. We lined up with two tight ends and said: ‘Here we come, the best man wins.’” Because a game had to be rescheduled. South played two games in three days to end the season. In a domi­ nating 35-6 win over North Rowan, Riddle gained 224 yards and Roberts added 70. Two days later. Riddle ran for 214 in a 20-14 win over Kannapolis. For the week. Riddle pounded out 438 yards on 56 carries, lifting South to five straight wins and a 7-1 record. He had 1,281 yards on the season, an average of 160 per game. “It was bam, bam, bam,” Whitlock said. “He was like a pinball. I’ve got to give credit to our offensive line (Foster, Gobble, Jody Dillard, Mise, Chris Blak­ ley, Jason Smoot and J.R. Jones). They were sending seven, eight people and I give all the credit to the linemen and (fullbacks) Tyler Lowe and Mitchell Roberts.” Over two years. South won 12 of 15 games. “This group’s been special,” Whit­ lock said. “This was one of the most - if not the most - enjoyable teams I’ve had for two years.” 1998-99 Wrestling Not to anyone’s surprise. Riddle was an immediate star on the wrestling mat as well. After his 3-0 start as a seventh grader, coach Matt Wilson said: “He looks sharp. He looks like a kid that’s been on the mat for a couple seasons.” During a 5-0 start that looked effortless, he had four first-period pins. “Rid­ dle is so smooth,” Wilson said. “He doesn’t put him­ self in a position where he’s going to be in trouble.” The Tigers whipped their first nine opponents by a combined score of 663-129. North Davie was 12-0 after stomping opponents 888- 139. When the two unde­ feated teams met at North, it was a blockbuster matchup that drew a packed-house crowd. South triumphed 45-27 to cap an 11 -O season, including 10-0 in the Pied­ mont Conference. North went on to finish 13-1,9-1. “We were the best we could possibly be,” Wilson said. “My guys were just as pumped for it as they could be.” Eleven days after win­ ning the regular-season ti­ tle, the Tigers captured the 13-team conference tour­ nament with 250 points to second-place North’s 219. Larry Hudson (96), Riddle (128), Michael Clement (143), Ryan Barber (148), Adrian Pacheco (163) and Kenny Gray (174) won their weight classes for South. North’s champion.s were Colt Stanley (133), Armand Vonsiatsky (155) and Trent Young (250). The top sea­ son records from South belonged to Hudson (13-0), Clement (13-0), Carson Glass (13-1), Riddle (12-0) and Barber (12-1). “Riddle is phenome­ nal,” Wilson said. “He is a real coachable student. He knows exactly what to do. You tell him one time and he’s going to do what you tell him.” 1999-00 Wrestling Wilson stepped down as coach and his veteran assistant, Howard Riddle, took the helm. A 45-38 heart-poundiiig win over West Rowan produced one of the greatest comebacks you’ll see. The Tigers trailed 32-12 with six weight class­ es to go. They responded with six wins. Foster pinned and Florencio Rojas pulled out an 11-lO decision. After Riddle got a forfeit. Gob­ ble, D J. Rice and Roberts capped a 33-0 run with pins. “We had to be perfect,” coach Riddle said. “One mistake and we could have been beaten, and we didn’t make that mistake. Down 32-12 and winning six in a row shows a lot of guts and heart.” Against NW Cabarrus, Riddle actually had to work for a win. He was pushed to the third period by an undefeated opponent, not that he was ever threatened. He led 4-0 before lowering the boom on his eighth pin victim in 10 matches. North and South both went 9-0 in the confer­ ence. Their showdown was snowed out, so they shared the regular-season title. North used extraordi­ nary balance to win the conference tournament with 230.5 points. Considering nine of South’s 14 starters were seventh graders or first-year eighth graders and it forfeited every time at heavyweight, coach Kiddle gladly banked a 12-0 regu­ lar season and tournament runner-up with 206 points. “There’s 11 other teams that would like to be where we are,” he said. Riddle punctuated a 15-0 rampage - and 27-0 South career - with three pins. Roberts and Gobble went 14-1 and Anton McNeil 13-1. “I don’t think he gave up any points in the three (tour­ nament) matches,” coach Riddle said. “Billy had two great years. I mean, you don’t see many kids come through and go two years undefeated.” New Pool & Spa Installation Cleaning • Chemicals Opening & Closing Vinyl Liner Replacement Tommy Harris/Owner - Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (336) 284-4817 Cell: (338) 909-4027 District Court The following cases were disposed of during the Oct. 15 session of Davie Dis­ trict Court. Presiding: Judge Wayne L. Michael. Prosecut­ ing: Pearce Dougan, assis- . tant DA. - Patrick James Mullen, assault on a female, dis­ missed at request of prose­ cuting witness. - Terri Hunter Reid, fail­ ure to report an accident, dismissed per plea; DWI, sentenced to 60 days active/ credit for inpatient treatment, obtain substance abuse as­ sessment, surrender license. not ojjerate vehicle until licensed, $1OO, cost, $390 attorney fee; misdemeanor probation violation, proba­ tion terminated unsuccess­ fully. - Daniel Mayfield Rob­ erts, resisting public officer, driving while license re­ voked not DWI, dismissed per plea; fleeing to elude ar­ rest with vehicle, sentenced to time served, $430 jail fee, $280 attorney fee. - Joseph M. Shambley, probation violation, sen­ tenced activated, 150 days active; domestic violence SUDOKU protective order violation, sentenced to 150 days to run concurrent with sentence now serving, $445 attorney fee. - Christian Lea Sparks, simple assault, dismissed per plea, cross warrant. - Thurmond J. Swilling, DWI, sentenced to 30 days, susf>ended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse as­ sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, $100, cost, $390 attorney fee; simple posses­ sion of schedule II controlled 8 2 4 4 7 2 3 9 3 9 8 6 5 7 6 7 2.6 9 1 5 2 8 3 9 1 Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Level: Intermediate Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! 5 2 Z T L 6 B 8 9 8 T 9 Z E 2 S 6 L I.6 E 9 9 8 Z V 2 Z 9 6 E V L 8 2 9 E L 2 8 z 9 tr 9 6 Y 8 S 2 6 9 1-Z E 6 B 8 L 2 Ir 9 9 Z 2 S L 9 8 z 6 E y 9 Z 6 S E 2 L 8 :U3MSNV The (K) Clues Are for Kids ACROSS 1. (K) Final word, after “The” 4. Large iron hook 8. Kind of diving duck 12. (K) Sticky gunk 13. (K) Fruit that doesn’t sound pretty 14. Shangri-la resident 15. (K) Supervised 17. (K) Etching agent that burns 18. Prince Xtndrew’s ex 19. Stir things up 21. To the right, to a trained donkey 23. (K) This is the best day___! 24. Person assisting in a crime 28. (K) Ump’s call, sometimes 31. (K) Pothole’s place 32. (K) Garfield is one Crested by Timothy E. Parker November 16. 2020 33. Facts, in brief 34. Jailbird 35. Activity that deviates from a norm or standard 37. (K) Carpentry fastener 39. Email attachment, sometimes 40. Of little consequence 43. (K)___Island (US state) 47. (K) Infant 48.1920s weapon nickname (2 words) 50. (K) Reminder of surgery 51. (K) Wind instrument 52. (K) Accelerate an engine 53. Hunter’s fur skin 54. Alternative to a chestnut horse 55. Cathedral city of England DOWN 1. (K) They give people big heads 2. (K) Exploding star 3. No idle person 4. (K) Flows forth fiercely 5. (K) Add days to one’s life 6. (K) Insect that bugs dogs 7. (K) Identification means 8. (K) Flintstone’s boss, Mr.___ 9. (K) Cheese companion, in a meal 10. Give off or send forth 11. (K) Play in a kiddie pool 16. Spoke with fury 20. (K) Plant that covers garden 22. (K^*Elevator alternative 24. (K) Rainbow path 25. (K) Dove cry 26. One who has a guest for dinner? 27. (K) Bladed tool for water travel 29. Sky sighting you cannot identify 30. (K) Heavy coal weight 33. (K) Needing scratching 35. (K) Seven, in Roman numerals 36. Non-PC flying aces 38. Stave off 40. (K) 0.5 fl. oz. 41. (K) 200-yard dash, for one 42. (K) Wolf with a brindled grey coat 44. Horrible monster 45. (K) Faceoff with swords 46. (K) Jealousy 49. E)dinct New Zealand bird Previous riddle answer: Thing with a bullet point? 15-A) Item O 2020 Andrews McMeel Syndication. substance, reckless driving to endanger, dismissed per plea. - Teodoro B. Valeriano, interfering with emergency communication, injury to personal property, dismissed per plea; resisting public officer, sentenced to 4 days, $280 attorney fee. - Ashley Linn Vanhoy. simple assault, dismissed at request of prosecuting wit­ ness. - Larry Shawn West, as­ sault on a female, dismissed at request of prosecuting wit­ ness. - Katherine Anna Wilson, probation violation, proba­ tion terminated successfully, $335 attorney fee. Oct. 22 The following cases were disposed of during the Oct. 22 session of Davie Dis­ trict Court. Presiding: Judge Wayne L. Michael. Prosecut­ ing; Pearce Dougan, assis­ tant DA. - Eddie Lee Barrier, DWI, sentenced to 12 months, sus­ pended 12 months, 30 days active/credit for 30 days in­ patient treatment, credit for substance abuse assessment, surrender license, not op­ erate vehicle until licensed, $250, cost; speeding 85 in a 70, driving while license re­ voked DWI revocation, dis­ missed. Charlie W. Broggin, DWI, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse as­ sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, $1OO, cost, $280 attorney fee; no license, pos­ session of open container/ consuming alcohol in pas­ senger area, dismissed. - Bryan Keith Call, break­ ing or entering, dismissed; assault, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, con­ tinue with current treatment, have no contact with victim, $25, cost. - Morgan Lee Carter, misdemeanor probation vio­ lation, probation continued; 2 counts identity theft, 3 counts each obtaining prop­ erty by false pretense and fi­ nancial card fraud, dismissed per plea; financial card fraud, misdemeanor larceny, sen­ tenced to 45 days, suspended 12 months, CBI treatment, do not be on profjerty of Sheetz, $25, $12 facility fee. - Mark Twayne Dalton, assault on a female, dis­ missed, cross warrant. - Christy Ann Davis, 2 counts misdemeanor larce­ ny, sentenced to time served, do not be on the property of Goodwill or Dollar General, $280 attorney fee; resisting public officer, dismissed. - Mandy Sue Hawotte, DWI, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse as­ sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, $1OO, cost, $280 attorney fee; no license, dis­ missed. - Fred Romero-Hernan­ dez, attempting to break or enter a building, communi­ cating threats, dismissed. - Elijah Nathaniel Joynes, possession of drug para­ phernalia and marijuana paraphernalia, maintaining vehicle/dwelling/place for a controlled substance, posses­ sion of marijuana, dismissed. - Antowane D. Koontz, possession of drug parapher­ nalia, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 12 months, obtain substance abuse assessment. $25, cost, $170 attorney fee; possession of heroin, dis­ missed. - Jerry Wayne Makas, as­ sault on a female, dismissed at request of prosecuting wit­ ness. - Dayanna Nicole Neely, sf>eeding 97 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $500, cost; reckless driving, dismissed. - Tanisha Paulette Parks, simple assault, dismissed, cross warrant. - Qumar Deshaun Price, possession with intent to sell/ deliver marijuana, maintain­ ing vehicle/dwelling/place for a controlled substance, possession of marijuana par­ aphernalia, dismissed; felony possession of marijuana, re­ duced to possession of mar­ ijuana more than one-half to less than one and one-half ounces, prayer for judgment continued. - Tya.s Khalid Smith, pos­ session with intent to sell/de- liver marijuana, maintaining vehicle/dwelling/place for a controlled substance, posses­ sion of marijuana parapher­ nalia, speeding 94 in a 70, dismissed; felony possession of marijuana, reduced to pos­ session of marijuana more than one-half to less than one and one-half ounces, $25, cost. - Anthony Q. Strickland, misdemeanor larceny, dis­ missed; unauthorized use of vehicle, sentenced to time served, cost, $252.50 attor­ ney fee. - Joshua Leon Wheel­ er, assault on a female, dis­ missed. ■ Fully Insured • Tree Work & Tree Removal > Trimming & Thinning (336)909-0609 (336)909-0610 Free Estimates Stump Grinding Bucket Truck Service Scotty Seaford Jack Seaford MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL FALL IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today! Hwy. 601 S.. Mocksville |336) 751-2304 RANDY MILLER &SONS SEPTIC TANK SERVICE 295 .Miller Road • .Mocksville (336) 284-2826 • We Pump Septic Tanks • State Certified inspector Skid Steer Work TrerKher Work Hauling Septic Systems Footings Loader Work You are always welcome at First United Methodist Church 310 North Main Street Historic Downtown Mocksville Join us on FaceBook, YouTube, our church website and WDSL 96.5 FM at 5 p.m. on Sundays www.firstumcmocksville.org Telephone: 336-751-2503 Caregiver, Very Caring You don't have to be alone Available Day or Night 7 Days a Week Housekeeping, Run Errands, Drs. Appts., Grocery Shopping and Cooking Meals Call: 336-648-0270 On Medicare and Taking Insulin? A New Plan May Save You Big $$$! Call me and see if a plan using the new Senior Savings Model is right for you... JOHNSON INSURANCE 127 Marketplace Drive • Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-6281 Tina Brown-West, RHU. LUTC DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 - B7B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 Hurricane Zeta took many leaves down, but God's beautiful foliage still abounded in our area this past week. County Line Storm doesn’t destroy beauty By Shirley Thome County Line Correspondent Last week was eventful for many of us in our area and country. Tuesday of last week was "Election Day," but most folks had already voted by mail or early vot­ ing due to the coronavirus pandemic. Due to states' rules regarding mail-in bal­ lots, we had to wait until about noon last Saturday as Pennsylvania favored Joe Biden and pushed him over the 270 electoral mark. Then Saturday night we ACC football addicts watched Notre Dame de­ feat No. 1 Clemson in dou­ ble overtime. That should be enough excitement, but Sunday we NASCAR fans watched Chase Elliott win a hard-fought race to become the 2020 NASCUP Cup Se­ ries Champion. Hurricane Zeta downed trees and leaves and blew over plants and flowers. As photos show, God's beauti­ ful fall foliage and bloom­ ing plants still abounded this past weekend. Local churches have these schedules: Calvary Baptist, indoor Sunday wor­ ship at 11 a.m.; Clarksbury Methodist, outdoor Sunday worship at 10 a.m. and in­ door Book of John Bible study at 7 p.m. Thursday, both with masks and social distancing; Piney Grove AME Zion, indoor Sunday school at 10 a.m. and wor­ ship at 11 a.m.; Pleasant View Baptist, regular in­ door services Sunday and Wednesday; Salem Meth­ odist, indoor Sunday wor­ ship at 9:30 a.m. with social distancing and masks in the sanctuary; Society Baptist, indoor Sunday worship at 11 a.m. with message by Gene Tutterow in fellow­ ship hall, Wednesday night prayer and Bible service at 7, no Sunday night service. Services for local church­ es will continue online as previously stated. County Line native Faye Felker Duncan celebrated her 94th birthday Oct. 6. She has made her home in Statesville since the 195Os. She continues to recuperate at home from a broken hip in May. Faye, all of us in County Line send you belat­ ed happy birthday greetings and wish you a healthy and happy new year of life. Our community extends its deepest sympathy to the family of John David "John­ ny" Felker; who died Thurs­ day, Oct. 22 in Lexington. The seventh of eight chil­ dren, he was bom in 1948 to the late William Dewey and Mae Ellen McDaniel Felker of County Line. He was reared off what is now Dorse Road and attended Cool Spring High School. He first married Donna Lu­ cille Wood of Harmony in 1967, and they later wel­ comed the birth of daughter Madeline Jones of Ridge Road poses with her beautiful yellow angel trum­ pet plant. Donna Michelle. He mar­ ried Joyce Hill in 1986; the couple made their home in Davidson County, where they were married. Due to the coronavirus pandemic, a service celebrating his life will be held at a later date. We send get-well wishes to Kevin Stroud and Clark Young. Kevin is being treat­ ed for circulation problems at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center since last Sunday. Clark ha.s been at Wake Forest Baptist-Da- vie Medical Center. Faye Stroud continues to rest at home while under treatment for cancer. Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessings upon Kevin, Clark, Faye, and other resi­ dents who are having health problems. Pray for the Lord's comfort and support upon the family of Johnny as they adjust to life without him. Remember in prayer former County Liner Sar­ ah Elizabeth Stroud Wall, whose husband Charle.s died Friday of last week. Also, remember in prayer the family of Linda Wil­ liams Knox, who died Mon­ day of last week and was a daughter of the late County Line native Ruth Elam Wil­ liam and granddaughter of the late County Liner Alma Gaither Elam. Continue to pray for the many families in our area affected by the coronavi­ rus. Pray for our country as the daily count of infection cases has reached new daily highs over 120,000. Please remember to do the three W's; Wear mask. Wait 6-8 feet apart. Wash your hands. For news and memories to share, please call Shirley on 336-492-5115 or email sdtlink® hotmail .com. We are Davie Center for Violence Prevention continues to serve our community during the COVID-19 crisis. Crisis intervention • Advocacij • Resources • Education • Support If you need help, call our 24/Z Hotline: -Z51-HELP (435Z) CONFIDENTIAL Leaf Filter GUTTER PROTECTION \ LIFETIME ★Trustpilot WARRANTY □□□□□ "My only regret is that I wish I h known about LeafFilter sooner.' -Doug L. CLOG-FREE GUTTERS OR YOUR MONEY BACK GUARANTEED! INSTALLS ON NEW fi. EXISTING GUTTERS 15% OFF YOUR ENTIRE LEAFFILTER PURCHASE' KxcHistv* Offer - Redeem By Phone Today! ---------------------:r| ADDITIONALLY ~|----------------------- CALL US TODAY FOR A FREE ESTIMATE 1-866-419-2047 ‘The leading consumer reporting agency conducted a 16 month outdoor test of sutler euards in anin and ____ ______ _ . professionallv installed gutter guard system in America - -For those who aualily ••otter valid a, "T *' i No obligation estimate v 99338 License# '------ License# LEAFFNW Registration# HIC.C IR731804 Registration# 13VH09953900 Registration# PA069'383sJff^lk'Hrc'Licenke-'5i229-’'H Promo Code: 285 Mon-Thurs: 8am-11 pm. Fri-Sat; 8am-5pm, Sun: 2pm-8pm EST I SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE ■ RESIDENTS IN 5 STATES CASH IN: The phone lines will be ringing off the hook. That's because for the next 48 hours, packages containing actual Gold Vault Bricks still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold minted by the Federated Mint are being shipped to residents in 5 states. These are the only Gold Vault Bricks known to exist and everyone wants them. That’s because they’re still loaded with Jumbo Gold Bars bearing the name of The First Bank of the United States of America and the state they were once destined for. And here’s the best part. If you live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just ’49 per ounce. That’s a real steal because residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay ’124 per ounce if any remain. Residents snap up Gold Bars issued in 5 States Heavy Gold Vault Bricks loaded with valuable Jumbo State Bars layered in 24 Karat Gold are up for grabs as thousands stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold bars; now residents in 5 states can claim the Gold Vault Bricks for themselves and keep all the valuable bars found inside just by covering the minimum gold fee set for state residents within the next 48 hours “It’s like a modern day gold rush,” said Mary Ellen Withrow, emeritus 4Oth Trea­ surer of the United States of America. That’s because actual Gold Vault Bricks™ still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold bear­ ing the name of the First Bank of the United States of America™ and the state they were once destined for are up for grabs as thou­ sands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold. Now any resi­ dent of those states can claim the Gold Vault Bricks for themselves and keep all the valu­ able gold found inside. That’s four mas­ sive bars weighing a full 20 ounces of high demand bullion copper layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold in all. And here’s the best part. If you live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just ’49 per ounce which totals *980 for the full 20 ounces locked away inside these gold vault bricks. That’s a real steal because residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay *124 per ounce which totals *2,480 if any remain. “As special counsel to Federated Mint I earn my pay delivering breaking news. And today’s announcement confirming the release of Gold Vault Bricks to the general public is as big as it gets. Believe me, I know how valuable these Gold Vault Bricks are to resellers, collectors, dealers and anyone else who gets their hands on them,” Withrow said. “So my advice is this, anyone who gets an opportunity to get their hands on one of these Gold Vault Bricks better jump at the chance before they’re all gone,” Withrow said. “These Gold Vault Bricks loaded with massive 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold make the most impressive gifts for Christmas, birthdays, graduations, weddings, and any other occa­ sion, especially for that hard-to-buy-for per­ son,” Withrow said. According to Ms. Withrow, since thou­ sands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold, today and tomor­ row are intended as a “special 48 hour release” for the benefit of persons living in; NC, GA, SC, TN and VA. This gives resi­ dents of those states a fair chance to claim the Gold Vault Bricks and all the valuable gold loaded inside for themselves. But, Ms. Withrow added, “The Gold Vault Bricks are only available as inventory per­ mits during the special 48 hour release and once they’re gone, they’re gone.” The emer­ itus Treasurer added, “Remember this, these Gold Vault Bricks contain a full 20 ounces of high demand bullion copper lay­ ered in valuable 24 Karat Gold and we have no power to stop dealers, resellers, collec­ tors and the like from buying up all the Gold Vault Bricks they can get their hands on and reselling them for a big profit,” Withrow said. Anyone who fails to obtain them during this special 48 hour release may be forced to buy them later in the secondary market from a dealer, reseller or collector at a hefty premium. ”We already know the phones will be ringing off the hook. That’s why hundreds of agents are standing by to answer the phones beginning at 8:3Oam this morning. We’re going to do our best, but with just 48 hours to answer all the calls it won’t be easy. So make sure to tell everyone to keep call­ ing if all lines are busy. We’ll do our best to answer them all.” Withrow said. “That’s why Federated Mint set up the State Distribution Hotlines in order to make sure residents in the 5 designated states listed in today’s newspaper publication can get them now,” Withrow said. The only thing readers of today’s newspa­ per publication need to do is make sure they live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s newspaper and call the State Distribution Hotlines before the special 48 hour release ► Who gets the Jumbo Gold Bars: Listed below in bold are the states that get the gold. If you live in one of these states immediately call the State Distribution Hotline at: 1-800-749-6917 GB1452 AK CO Hl KY MD MT NM OK South Carofina VT AL : CT lA KS Ml ND North Carolina OR Tennessee WA AR ' DE ID LA MN NE NV PA TX Wl AZ FL IL MA MO NH i NY RI UT WV CA Georgia IN ME MS NJ OH SD Virginia WY VALUABLE: THESE ARE THE FOUR 5-OUNCE JUMBO GOLD BARS SEALED AWAY IN EACH GOLD VAULT BRICK BEARING THE STATE DESTINATION NEVER BEFORE SEEN: THESE FIRST BANK OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA JUMBO GOLD BARS ARE THE ONLY ONES KNOWN TO EXIST ► How much are the Gold Vault Bricks worth: The answer is, it’s impossible to say. But, it would be foolish for anyone to try and determine the value of these Gold Vault Bricks based on today’s price of gold. Here’s why. Gold, silver and all precious metal values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees. But what we do know is that these are the only Gold Vault Bricks still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars known to exist. In fact, the value of the pure 24 Karat Gold layered content is just a bonus for anyone lucky enough to get one of these Gold Vault Bricks because there’s no telling how much the actual collector value could be worth. That makes the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just ’49 per ounce which totals ’980 for the full 20 ounces locked away inside these Gold Vault Bricks a real steal since residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay ’124 per ounce, which totals ’2,480, if any remain. ► Why the vault fee is so low: Since thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold. Federated Mint has re-allocated Gold Vault Bricks to be sent out in the next 48 hours. That means the gold is up for grabs and now residents in 5 states can claim the Gold Vautt Bricks for themselves and keep all the valuable bars found inside. These are the only Gold Vautt Bricks known to exist and everyone wants them. That’s because they're still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold bearing the name of The First Bank of the United States of America and the state they were once destined for. That’s four massive bars weighing a full 20 ounces of 24 Karat Gold and valuable bullion copper in all. And here’s the best part. If you live in one of the 5 states listed in today's publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just ’49 per ounce. That's a real steal because residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay ’124 per ounce if any remain. BTATE OF NORTH CAROUNA COLD - j-O* <’ORTM CAROLINA■3RTH CAROLINA >01-0 -T BRICK - fAT< OF NORTH CAROLINA * COLD VAULT BRICK *BTATC OF NORTH CAROLINA * oouo VAULT BRICK ■ FIRST LOOK INSIDE THE GOLD VAULT BRICKS: Pictured above are the Gold Vault Bricks containing the only Jumbo State Gold Bars known to exist bearing the name of the First Bank of the United States of America and the state they were once destined for. State residents are rushing to get them because the Gold Vault Bricks are still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold. Everyone lucky enough to get them better hold on to them because there’s no telling just how much they could be worth. ends midnight tomorrow. ■ FEDERATED MINT, LLC IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH THE U.S. MINT. THE U.S. GOVERNMENT. A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN 30 DAYS FROM SHIPMENT YOU ARE DISSATISFIED. RETURN THE PRODUCT FOR A REFUND LESS SHIPPING AND RETURN POSTAGE. THIS SAME OFFER MAY BE MADE AVAILABLE AT A LATER DATE OR IN A DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION. OH RESIDENTS ADD 6.5% SALES TAX. FEDERATED MINT, PO BOX 1200, MASSILLON. OH 44648 ©2020 FEDERATED MINT ( liUlib DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD Thursday, Nov. 12,2020 - B9B8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020 Sheffield-Calahaln Church selling holiday nuts Courdy Since 1 d73‘ By Brenda Bailey Sheffield-Calahaln Correspondent Birthday wishes to: Syl­ via Draughn and Randy Groce on Nov. 13; Jerry Keller on Nov. 15; and Judy Fay on Nov. 18. The follow­ ing couples are celebrating an anniversary: Jr. and Pa­ mela Ladd on Nov. 14 and Randy and Vicki Groce on Nov. 17. If you would like a birthday or anniversary listed, please do not hesitate to contact me. Ijames Baptist Church will continue to hold an out­ side worship services Sun­ day morning at 10. In the event of rain, services will be drive in with Pastor Rob­ ert Jackson. Liberty Wesleyan Church is holding worship services is each Sunday at 10 a.m. and Bible Study at 10 a.m. each Saturday. Hear the message each week on Facebook. The church is at 2106 Sheffield Road, Har­ mony. Upcoming events are Liberty: "Hanging of the Greens" on Sunday, Nov. 29 at 10 am; and on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m., "The True Light" John 1:9 Children's Christmas celebration will be held as an outside service. The Rev. Keith Ledford and Community Covenant Church, 1446 Sheffield Road, invites you to join them for worship service each Sunday morning at 10:45. Kid’s Power Hour at New Union UMC is at 6:30 p.m. and the Youth Group will meet at 6 p.m. each Wednesday outside for an evening of fun, fellowship and learning more about Jesus through scripture, sto­ ries and song. New Union’s Sunday morning worship services will be held each week at 10 a.m. in the church. Wearing of facial masks wis appreci­ ated. View the services on Facebook. Wesley Chapel UMC is selling TerriLynn pecans, cashews, black walnuts, and more. To place an or­ der or for more information, please contact Kathy Ellis at 336-830-5123 or you may contact me via my phone number, email or facebook. You can also order nuts from their website: https:!/ wesley-chapel-umc .terri- lynn.com. Prayer requests con­ tinue for Bryan Swain, Jean Reavis, Lori Dyson, Johnny Naylor, Dot Keller, Pat Moore, Deborah Nich­ ols, Sylvia Ratledge Wil­ liams, Wellman Beck, Hazel Smoot, Tim Keller, Junior Dunn, Betty Damer­ on, Tammy Keller, Naomi Wooten, Jeff Potts, Charles England, Greta England, Lincoln Dyson, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Ted Adams, Jane Tutterow, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Bob Ellis, Car- en Morgan, Melissa Spry, Wade Reeves, Helen Bul­ la, Joann Renegar, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Greg Gob­ ble, Betty Richardson, Fred Beck, Larry Dyson and Su- zonne Stratton. Please submit all items to me at hrfbailey@msn.com, message me on Facebook or call me at 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thurs­ days. AUTOMOTIVE 336-751-3372“ MB ' Brakes ’ Tires Batteries Alignments Scheduled Maintenance Complete and Professional Auto Repair 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 HOWARD REALTY List With Us Property d 212 Summit Drive Get Your Today! 177 Point Harbor Rd. 330 S. Salisbury St, Mocksville • 336-751-3538 www.howardreaity.com. | Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices No. 1137911 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXECU­ TORS for the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, late of Davie County. NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpora­ tions having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 02/17/2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. To­ day’s date 11/12/2020. GARY KIS­ ER. 1500 PHIFER ROAD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. NC 28086 AND MI­ CHAEL KISER. 930 WOODLAND DRIVE. SHELBY. NC 28150. as CO-EXECUTORS of the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, de­ ceased. File #20E289. Publish 11/12. 11/19. 11/26. 12/03 No. 1134928 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the requirements of Article 20-B of Chapter 153-A of the General Statutes of North Car­ olina and Section 155.235 of the Davie County Code of Ordinanc­ es, that the Davie County Board of Adjustment will hold a Public Hearing in the Commissioners Room of the Davie County Admin­ istration Building, 123 South Main Street Mocksville. NC on Tuesday November 17, 2020 at 6:00 p.m to hear the following request: Advance Country Store own- BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES, UN­ KNOWN SPOUSE OF BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES, PARRISH TIRE COMPANY, Lienholder, and NORTH CAROLINA DE PARTMENT OF LABOR, DIVI SION OF STANDARDS, Lienholder, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of an or­ der of the District Court of Davie County, North Carolina, made and entered in the action entitled DAVIE COUNTY. A Body Politic and Corporate Plaintiff vs. BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES. UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BRIAN CURTIS BOWLES. PARRISH TIRE COM PANY, Lienholder, NORTH CARO­ LINA DEPARTMENT OF LABOR. DIVISION OF STANDARDS, Lienholder. Defendants, the un­ dersigned commissioner will on November 19, 2020 at 11:00 AM offer for sale and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction, at the courthouse door in Davie County, North Car­ olina in Mocksville, the following described property lying in Davie County, North Carolina and more particularly described as follows: tice, the Commissioner may elect to sell all of the parcels either In one sale, or on the sale date indi Gated sell each parcel individually by conducting a separate sale for each, or group various parcels together for several sales, or not conduct a sale at all on one or more parcels, as the Commission er determines in his sole discre­ tion as being most likely to sell the parcels at a price adequate to pay all taxes due. as well as fees and costs. Any party contemplating the filing of an upset bid is therefore strongly encouraged to consult the Clerk of Court records to ascertain the parcel or parcels included in the sale for which an upset bid is planned. Upon delivery of the deed, the winning bidder shall be required to pay the costs of recordation of the deed, including deed stamp taxes due to the Register of Deeds. Title and condition of the property will be granted to the successful bid­ der “as is” and without warranties. This the 12 day of October, 2020. Richard J. Kania Commissioner 600-A Centrepark Drive Asheville. NC 28805 828-252-8010 Public Notices No. 1139640 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXEC­ UTORS for the Estate of FLORA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY: aka. FLORA SMITH HOCKADAY. late of Davie County. NC. this is to notify all persons, firms and cor­ porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRUARY 17. 2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their re­ covery. All persons, firms and cor­ porations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. Today’s date 11/12/2020. RICHARD D. HOCKADAY, 500 HILLCREST DRIVE. ADVANCE. NC 27006 and DEBORAH Y. CASS. 139 ELLIS LANE. AD­ VANCE. NC 27006. as CO-EX­ ECUTORS of the Estate of FLO­ RA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY. deceased. Fite #20E349. Publish 11/12, 11/19. 11/26, 12/03 Denim and Pearls to benefit Just Hope Denim and Pearls, a fundraiser for Just Hope’s Women LEAD program, will be held from 6-10 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 21 at The Farm at Oak Hill, 130 Kent Lane, Mocksville. Tickets are one for $30 or two for $50 and can be pur­ chased through EventBrite or at the Just Hope store on 643 Wilkesboro St., Mocks­ ville. There will be a barbecue dinner, desserts, beverages, a cash bar, a performance by His & Hers and music by DJ Mike “Bubba” Williams. BR planners to discuss Masionettes request BERMUDA RUN - The town planning board and board of adjustment will meet at 3 p.m. on Wednes­ day, Nov. 18 at 120 Kinder­ ton Blvd., Suite lOO. Board members will review a design waiver re­ quested by the Masionnettes Homeowners Association in accordance with 11.11 of the Zoning Ordinance. The applicant requests to waive portions of 5.2(B) Height and Materials (wood) for permitted fencing materi- al.s for properties within the masionnettes. Bed races officially canceled for 2020 er Jeff Jones has applied for a Variance to the front yard set­ backs in the Highway Business (H-B) zoning district pursuant to §155.145 (B) of the Davie County Zoning Ordinance. The subject property is located at 1878 NC HWY 801 S, Advance. NC 27006 and is further de scribed as a 3.69 acres parcel of the Davie County Tax Map G800000023. A sign will be placed on the above listed properties to advertise the Public Hearing. All parties and interested citizens are invited to attend said hearing at which time they shall have an opportunity to present facts and testimony in support of, or in op position to. the request. Prior to the hearing, additional information on a request may be obtained by visiting the Development Services Department weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, or by telephone at (336) 753-6050. As a result of the public hearing, substantial changes might be made in the advertised proposal, reflecting objections, debate and discussion at the hearing. Anyone who needs an accommodation to participate in the meeting should notify the Development Services Department at least 48 hours prior to the meeting or call North Caroii na Relay at 1-800-735-8262. BEGINNING at an iron stake in the edge of Wilkesboro Street near a large oak: thence North 48 deg. 16 min. East 224.91 feet to an iron stake in Brewer’s line: thence South 40 deg. 36 min. East 100 feet to an iron stake: thence South 48 deg. 16 min. 10 sec. West 225.08 feet to an iron stake in line of Wilkesboro Street: thence along the edge of Wilkes­ boro Street: North 40 deg. 30 min. West 100 feet to an iron stake in edge of said street near a large oak the beginning corner. As sur­ veyed and platted by T. J. Byrum. Reg. C. E. March 1957. TAX VALUE: $166,390.00 Publish 11/05. 11/12 Andrew Meadwell Planning Department Publish 11/05, 11/12 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DAVIE IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION 20 CvD 223 COUNTY OF DAVIE. A Body Pol­ itic and Corporate, BEGINNING at an iron stake in the edge of said Wilkesboro Street: thence North 49 deg. 41 min. East along the line of Church Street 224.77 feet to an iron stake in the edge of Church Street Extension: thence South 40 deg. 36 min. East 43.95 feet to an iron stake: thence South 48 deg. 16 min. West 224.91 feet to an iron stake in edge of Wilkesboro Street near a large orak. Thence North along the fine of the edge of Wilkesboro Street North 40 deg. 30 min. West 49.50 feet to an iron stake the beginning corner. As surveyed and platted by T. J. Byrum. Reg. C. E. March 1957 and being the same property conveyed to Gulf Oil Corporation by deed of Tremarco Corporation dated August 25. 1971 recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davie County. North Carolina in Book 84, page 620. Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey. Also being identified as Parcel ID# 14 120 CO 015, Davie County Tax Office. Address: 277 Wilkesboro Street The sale will be made subject to ail existing easements and restric­ tions. any superior liens, all out­ standing city and county taxes, all local improvement assessments against the above-described prop­ erty not included in the judgment in the above-entitled cause, any prior lien in favor of the State of North Carolina, any right of re­ demption of the United States and any rights of any persons in pos­ session. A deposit of the greater of $750.00 or five (5) percent of the successful bid will be required at the time of sale unless the highest bid is by a taxing unit: then a de­ posit shall not be required, in the instance where multiple tax parcels are indicated in this No- . 1139038 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of PAIJL DAVID “COOTER” CORRELL, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them To the undersigned on or before the 17th day of February, 2021, said date being at least three months from the date of first publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All per­ sons indebted to said estate will 3lease make immediate payment o the undersigned. This 12th day of November. 2020, the same being the first publica tion date. Elaine C. Correll. Personal Rep­ resentative Estate of PAUL DAVID COOTER” CORRELL GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Estate 161 South Main Street Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 Telephone:(336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/12. 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 >. 1129280 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Berneice Arnold (aka Berneice Bertha Arnold, Bernice Arnold), deceased. late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor- jorations having claims against he estate of said deceased to exhibit them to Mr. Bret Russell Cogan, Executor, c/o George A. ^rip" Payne. Esq.. Kasper & Payne. P.A.. P.O. Box 687. 3626 Clemmons Road, Clemmons, NC 27012, on or before the 5th day of February, 2021, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recov­ ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of October. 2020 Bret Russell Cogan. Executor Attorney George A. “Trip" Payne Kasper & Payne, RA. P.O. Box 687 3626 Clemmons Road. Clemmons. NC 27012 Publish 10/29, 11/05, 11/12, 11/19 No. 1130711 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING OUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of WADE SHERMAN BURNS, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersiqned on or before January 29. 2(321 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 21 ST day of October. 2020. Jon Scott Woodring, Executor c/o Henry R Van Hoy. II, Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29. 11/05. 11/12. 11/19 Public Notices No. 1139579 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson Deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 20^ , or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020 Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO, PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Win ston-Salem. NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1139048 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Public Admin­ istrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry Deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem. NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1141367 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator. CTA of the Estate of Helen Beau­ fort Murphy. Deceased, late of Da­ vie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Administrator. (JTA of the Estate of Helen Beaufort Murphy SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem. NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publis' Public Notices Due to a lack of partici­ pation, the virtual ‘Twas the Night Before” bed races in downtown Mocksville have been canceled for 2020. “We are sad to announce that the ‘Twas the Night Before’ Bed Race has been canceled due to Covid-19 restrictions,” said Tami Langdon, director of com­ munity development. “The virtual charity race, sched­ uled for Nov. 20 in lieu of the bed race, has also been canceled due to a lack of participation. “The Bed Race commit­ tee will miss all teams and the overwhelming public re­ sponse,” she said. “We look forward to 2021 with a few new surprises.” ( [3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov.. 2020. Ginger P Bennett C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/05, 11/12, 11/19, 11/26 853 solar rezoning hearing Nov. 24 O. 1131044 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec­ utrix of the Estate of WALLACE WAYNE REYNOLDS late of Da­ vie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the un­ dersigned on or before January 29. 2021 (being three [3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 29th day of October. 2020. Cynthia Reynolds Booe C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams, Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 There will be a meeting of the Davie County Plan­ ning Board on Tuesday, Nov. 24 at 6 p.m. at the Da­ vie County Senior Center, 278 Meroney St., Mocks­ ville. Junction Solar Project has applied to rezone 853.35 acres of land consisting of six parcels from Resi­ dential Agricultural (R-A), Residential 20 (R-20) and Cooleemee Zoning Overlay District (CZ-O) to Special Purpose-Special Conditions (SP-S) to operate a solar en­ ergy generating facility. The proposed solar facility will occupy approximately 545 acres of the total 853 acres. The subject properties are along Junction and Ratledge roads. The properties are parcels of the Davie Coun­ ty Tax Map K3OOOOOO65, K3(XXXXX)58. L3(XXXXX)17, L4OOOOOO16, L4OOOOOO55 and L4OOOOOOI7. 1141365 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu­ tor of the Estate of TOMMY RAY MENIUS late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 12. 2021 (being three [3] months from the first day publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Neil R. Menius C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/12, 11/19. 11/26, 12/03 No. 1139042 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of SAR­ AH BOGER JONES, deceased, late of Davie County. North Caroli­ na, this is to notify all persons hav­ ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of Feb­ ruary. 2021, said date being at least three 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. This 12fh day of November. 2020, the same being the first publica­ tion date. Sarah J Whitaker, Personal Representative Estate of SARAH BOGER JONES GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Estate 161 South Mam Street Mocksville. North Carolina 27028 Telephone: (336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/12/20, 11/19/20, 11/26/20, 12/03/20 No. 1130253 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of DAVID WAYNE COTHRAN, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before January 29, 2(321 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 20th day of Oct., 2o20. Jason Wayne Cothran. Executor c/o Henry R Van Hoy. II. Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville, NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29. 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 II ■lie till III! Ill xHsm =ublish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1137126 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of ANITA MERLE JOHNSON,(a/k/a ONITA MERLE JOHNSON) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present wirit- ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5, 2021 (being three [3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned This the 5th day of Nov., 2020, Rojetta McBride C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/05, 11/12, 11/19, 11/26 No. 1136160 ' NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec­ utrix of the Estate of BETTY S. BROOKS,(a/k/a BETTY L. SMITH) late of Davie County this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5, 2(321 (being 1140573 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTOR tor the Estate of BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT, late Of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRU­ ARY 17; 2020. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Ail persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are noti­ fied to make immediate payment. dale 11/12/2020. TAMMY L. MYERS, 1445 COUNTY HOME ROAD, MOCKSVILLE, NC 27028 as EXECUTOR of the Estate of BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT deceased. File #2020E354 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1131559 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTRIX ‘de Estate of HAZEL COBLE late of Davie County.NC, this IS to notify all persons, firms and corporations havina claims against the said decedenl to exhibit them to the undersiqned on or before FEBUARY 3. &21. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make P^ment. Today’s date SUSAN G. SIDDEN148 WARWICKE PLACE AD- of the Estate of HAZEL CO- ‘^®'=®®sed. File Publish 1*0/29, 11/05, 11/12, 11/19 LooRing for tKe porfect CKristmats gift? Look no more! A subscription to the Davie County Enterprise Recond makes a perfect gift for anyone. All the latest news of Davie County will be delivered right to their mailbox each week. Each issue is tilled with interesting stories from Bermuda Run, Cooleemee, Nlocksville and all of the other loc^ communities. Plus, they will find out about local businesses who provide a wide variety of goods and services right here in our own back yard. DZWIEE ENTERPRIZE IECORD NEWS • SPORTS •ADVERTISING for All of Davie County Including: BERMUDA RUN, COOLEEMEE, 8c MOCKSVILLE $32.03 in Davie County Call oday! 336-751-2120 DAVIE «nd I /\ I ^3 I CLEMMONS I I Call 704-737-4220 • Monday-Friday Sam-Bpm Deadlines: Classified ads: Monday 3:00 pm; Legal^l Monday noon______ Email: classads@salisburypos1:.com OR place your ad online at: SalisburyPost.com and click Didn’t receive a paper? Call 336-766^1 26j Auctions & Sales Garage Sales Advance, 129 Maplevalley Rd. MOVING SALE. Fri. 11/13 & Sat. 11/14, 8am-12pm. Tons of girls clothes (size 4<14) and girls shoes (size 9-5), home decor and house­ hold items. Mupchandise Deals & Baegains Bush Birmingham Lateral File Cabinet & Hutch Cherry. Very good condition. 704- 754-8485. $100 C-PAP ACCESSORIES Full face masks and supplies. Still in package. Call 704-267-8479 $50.00 C-PAP MACHINE Used very little. Call 704-267-8479 $125.00 Crafstman Push Mower Has mulching bag. $50. 704-310- 0135 ____________________________ Dark Blue Leather Recliner Excellent condition. Can deliver. Can send picture. $125 Call or text, 704-433-7513 DISPOSABLE WATERPROOF Men/ Women’s Extra Thick Diaper Pul- lups. Sizes: S, M, L & XL. 100 for $40. Call 980-330-3041, Everlast Punching-Kick Bag lOOIbs. with Mounting Bracket. Clean & Good Condition. $35.00. Davie-Mocks­ ville, Call Tom. 336-918-6448 Equate Bedside Rail (Support) Inc. instructions. Like new, 704- 754-8485 $20.00______________ ___ LARGE THICK, WATERPROOF 30x30 inch pads for pets, wheel­ chairs & hospital beds. Very thick. 150 for $40. Call 980-330-3041 Standard Easy Ad]ust Bedrail Like new. All parts & instructions included. 704-754-8485 $50 Deals & Bargains Sleeping Santa Retro electronic animated snoring whistling body/motion. Mint condition/ box. Clemmons. $55. 336-766-5096 VTech DM1211 Audio Monitor. Great for parents & caregivers. Like New. 704-754-8485 $20 Whirlpool Dryer Heavy Duty Large (Capacity. 4 Cy­ cle 3 Temperature. Gexid Condition. $75.00. Call Tom. 336-918-6448 ets 6 Livesioc Domestic Pets Free playful kittens. Indoor and litter trained. Call Bren­ da 336-671-3799 Notices Lost & Found Found: small dog near VA hospital. Must provide proof of ownership. Including vet records. Call 304.488-6167. Found dog around CC Camp Road. Please call 336-926-3751 to iden­ tify. No collar/tags or Microchip. Lost 10/29/20 1 blue eye, 1 brown eye husky remus and brown and white walker chance. Please call 704-224-3543 Real Estate Land For Sale 8.03 Acres For Sale 800 block of Cana Road. Partially cleared & wooded. Perked. $75,500. 336-601-1755 336-993-6879 Rentals Manufactured Homes For Bent 3BR, 2BA Doublewide. Central heat/air. You mow. No pets. 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Cornish hens make an elegant appearance at Thanksgiving Page 10 D>^VIIE Whit Visits Youth baseball players meet MLB all-star ____________Page B4_____________ UNTY 1 ENTERPRI/ERECORD Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 20 PAGESUSPS 149-160 Number 47 The Allen family watches as water rises around their house near the South Yadkin River in Cooleemee.- Photo by KC Smith Pilot crash lands in Davie field A pilot suffered minor inju­ ries Monday morning when he crash landed his small aircraft in a Davie County field. The pilot was headed to Twin Lakes Airport but because of a mechanical issue, couldn’t make it, and tried landing in an open field off Williams Road near No Creek Road. The pilot, whose name was not available Monday evening, called 911 to report the crash and his minor injuries, report­ ed Davie EMS Director Brian Byrd. He was taken to Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center for treatment. Davie passes 1,000 mark for COVID cases; 15 dead Davie County Health and Human Services announced that two large scale community testing sites will be opening for Coronavirus testing during the last two weeks of November. This is happening as Davie Davie’S COVID Numbers Nov. 16 Report Total cases 1,019 Recovered 840 Active cases 164 Deaths {6 in hospital) 15 passed the 1 ,OOO patient mark for those with Coronavirus and 15 local residents have died with the virus. OptumServe will provide no-cost drive-thru testing at the Davie County Community Park and Smith Grove Com­ munity Center in partnership with NC DHHS and Davie County HHS. Testing will be available from 9 a.m.-6 p.m. at the Davie County Community Park, 151 Southwood Drive in Mocks­ ville on Monday, Nov. 23. Tuesday, Nov. 24, and Wednes­ day, Nov. 25. All testing will Please See COVID - Page 5 Water floods family’s home By KC Smith Cooleemee Correspondent COOLEEMEE - Michael Allen, his wife Jessica and daughters Mia and Madison woke up on Friday the 13th around 6:30 a.m. hearing a gur­ gling noise coming from the toilet. To their surprise, a quick look outside revealed that wa­ ter was surrounding their house and was quickly rising. Back in February, heavy rain created a foot of water in their home. After living there for 11 years they were shocked, especially since knowing they weren’t in a flood zone area. Essentials were taken to the upper floor in the house, cars were moved quickly. They left with the clothes on their back and stayed by neighbor’s homes to watch the levels rise. The water began receding later that evening. Everyone was safe and the Allen’s were grateful for that, but the family will need a new furnace that was installed just last February, a water heater, new floors and more. Thank you for your service Layken Ludwick of Mocksville is a bit young to understand what this Huey helicop­ ter went through during the Vietnam War, but she enjoys sitting in the pilot’s seat during the Davie Disabled Veterans fundraising and membership drive last week at Bojangle’s in Mocksville. For a story and more photos, please turn to page 5. - Photo by Robin Snow Take a walk and enjoy historic Mocksville properties The Abraham Nail House on North Main Street is part of a new walking tour of historic Mocksville properties put together by the Davie Chamber of Commerce. *5. * By Jeanna Baxter White Word Master Media Group for the Davie County Chamber of Com­ merce Visitors to Mocksville often marvel at the magnificent old homes gracing Main Street and wish to know their history. Now visitors and locals can leam more about these stately structures by picking up a copy of the new Walking Tour of Down­ town Mocksville guide created by the Davie County Chamber of Commerce. “Mocksville has such a rich his­ tory. We thought a walking tour brochure would be a terrific way to showcase our beautiful down­ town homes and attract visitors to our area,’’ said Caroline Moser, president of the chamber. “As fjeople are taking the self-guided tour, we hope they will also stop and shop in our unique downtown stores and grab a bite to eat at one of our palette-pleas­ ing restaurants.’’ The homes, built in the late 180Os and early 19OOs, feature a variety of architectural styles in­ cluding Greek Revival, Italianate, Queen Anne, Shingle Style, Vic­ torian Gothic, Classical Revival, Craftsman, and Colonial Revival. Here is a sampling of the historic homes and distinctive downtown buildings featured: Philip Hanes House This 1902 Neo-Classicalevival house on a hill features a wrap­ around and elaborate pent ga­ ble-roofed dormer, built for Philip Hanes who, along with his brother Benjamin, ran BE. Hanes Tobac­ co Co. in Winston-Salem. Hanes died from injuries received in an accident soon after construction ended. It is at 1085 N. Main St. Abraham Nail House This 1880s Brick Gothic Re­ vival house features jxjinted arch windows and central bay porches on two stories, built for Abrahman Nail, who married Ida G. Rose. Nail’s sister, Mariah, married John Mertz, together they toured in the circus. It is at 768 N. Main St. Former Priucess Theatre & Ho­ tel Mocksville Arthur Daniel built and oper­ ated the Princess Theatre (1927- 1963) and Hotel Mocksville Please See Tour - Page 4 I 1 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 - 3 2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 Editorial Pa^e Daughter, friend fulfill First Lady duties for Jefferson One issue In The Mail... doomed Dan Forest Remember all of those pundits who said the coronavi­ rus would be gone after the election. It isn’t. And it doesn’t matter who wins or won what election. This virus ain’t going nowhere without our help. But those pundits were right for a few days - sort of. The virus wasn’t the top billing on national television news. Who would expect it to be with a presidential election as close as this one? Even a pandemic takes a back seat for a short while. But it didn’t stay in the back seat for long, did it? The number of folks in Davie County with the virus is climbing way too fast. The number of Davie County folks who have died with the virus is way too high. If you don’t know anyone who has died or become severe­ ly ill with the virus, consider yourself lucky. Yes, it’s up to us to stop it. You can hate Roy Cooper and still follow the guide­ lines he recommends. It’s a virus, for goodness sake. It’s not that hard to figure out how to slow the spread. It will take some sacrificing, but to beat it, we’ll all have to sacrifice some. And some of us will have to sacrifice more than others. Are the shutdowns putting people out of work? Yes. AlTC the shutdowns causing thriving businesses to shut their doors for good. Yes. Did Cooper’s handling of the coronavirus help get him reelected? Possibly. More than likely his reelection was based more on what his opponent did. Dan Forrest campaigned on re­ opening the economy. A grand idea, but what else did he regularly offer in pleas to the general public? Not much. And this was happening as people were learning about friends and neighbors who were dying, isolated with no loved ones in sight. It was happening as voters saw friends and neighbors in the hospital, fighting for evety breath. They knew of other friends and neighbors isolated in their homes because they had been in con­ tact with someone with CO VID. The thought of open­ ing up the economy regardless just didn’t make sense to enough voters. Not that it’s a bad idea. Things could be open, almost every business could be open, if we took personal re­ sponsibility for our own behavior. But we don’t. And to be honest with you, our business world can’t be trusted to do just that. Small businesses could, because they eas­ ily see the relationship between customers - especially repeat customers - and the business. Both sides must be healthy for the business to thrive and the customer to be happy. But the larger businesses? Those are looking at profits and not much else. So, do your part to help slow the spread of the virus. It doesn’t make you less of a man to wear a mask in public. It doesn’t make you less of a Republican to avoid gather­ ing in crowds - especially with people you don’t know. It doesn’t make you less of a Christian to worship at home. Mask wearing and business shutdowns - whether you agree with them or not, and there are good arguments on both sides - should not be considered political. That’s where Dan Forrest made a big mistake. Remember, 33 Webb cracks partisan glass ceiling To the editor: My congratulations to Cammie Paige Webb in winning a seat on the Davie County Board of Education, thereby cracking that partisan glass ceiling membership. From what I’ve read and heard, Cammie Paige Webb will provide transparency and work tirelessly in the bal­ anced development of all our young people as they grow into adulthood while meeting ever changing challenges in our complex world today and in the future. Louise Gaither, Mocksville Country’s current situation deplorable To the editor; At 71 years of age, I was proud to cast my vote in the presidential election at the Cooleemee precinct on election Tuesday. Now I sit here reflecting back on that historic event. I came home just in time to vote after visiting my only daughter and her family in Florida where we watched an interview with retired U.S Navy Lt. Tony Bobulinski. After retiring from the military, Bobulinski said he "held a high level security clearance" then served as an instructor for the Naval Nuclear Power Training Command as well as becoming wealthy. In this interview, Lt. Bobulinski told a credible story of how the Biden family utilized its connections with China, while the vice president officially served our country, to enrich itself. At the request of Hunter Biden, Bobulinski was invited to be the CEO of a company that would legally make millions for both his and the Biden family, including for VP Joe Biden after he left office. What allegation could be more relevant to the 2020 elec­ tion? As far as I can tell, aside from the station which aired the interview, this story got no coverage nor did candidate Biden get any thorough questioning from any other report­ ers than the interviewer on the network where it originally aired. Why? There was surely plenty to investigate. I be­ lieve one Biden staffer did call it “Russia misinformation.” I am astounded. Having served two terms as mayor of this small former Piedmont textile town, we all know that these textile days are, of course, over and that fact is argu­ ably due to China. For me, that makes it even more inter­ esting that candidate Biden didn’t feel compelled to answer Lt. Bobulinski’s allegations about being compromised by the Chinese Communist Party. And the media? That such a serious corruption accusa­ tion went unanswered by a presidential candidate seems to me a serious indictment of the major media outlets. Were they satisfied when his refusal to answer was falsely at­ tributed to a nod from “intelligence agencies” or simply or a “smear”. Whoa. Ordinarily, this one story would have been enough to put a serious brake on any other candidate in modem American history. What in the heck is going on? I have searched and searched but I can find no comment, no coverage, not even a challenge from the Bidens or any major news media to this rather huge accusation of com­ promising corruption by a president-to-be. From every­ thing I can learn, Lt. Bobulinski is a patriotic, wealthy man who honorably served his country, has nothing to gain, and much to lose from that interview. China remains our coun­ try’s most strategic adversary. By the time you read this, it will all but be over but the certification by our electors. The other thing 1 worry about are the repeated, hostile references on TV to the Electoral College. To many people, this weird sound set up may seem like an outmoded in­ stitution and a stupid election method especially to many people who understandably find it hard to grasp why our Founding Founders set things up this way. The main thing I can say is this: We aren’t France. We are the United States of America. In fact, if you take a look at our Declaration of Indepen­ dence (originally written cursive) you will notice that right up on top it states independence was being asserted by the 13 united — a small “u” (not capitalized)—and a large “S” States (capitalized). Why? Because it was a Federal gov­ ernment----not a National government. Again — we are not France. In other words, the individual states came together and together those states decided to form a federated govern­ ment. If those states (not provinces) hadn’t joined together, each one was, unto itself, much like a country, with all the rights and privileges that entailed. That’s why, unlike France, we don’t have a national police force and we have states — not provinces. Each state has two Senators, no matter how big or small, because all the states are equal. The House of Representatives is based on representation determined by population. Think on it. The small *u’ and capital ’S’ was one of the interest­ ing bits of heritage that our Cooleemee fifth graders used to learn on their history field trip every year to Pearson’s Graveyard. Things have truly turned upside down. This situation i.s deplorable. Lynn Wells Rumley, Cooleemee By Betty Etchison West Cana/Pino Correspondent Martha Wayles Skelton was a beautiful, rich, young widow. She was bom in 1748, married Bathurst Skelton when she was 18, and was made a widow when her husband died about three years after they were mar­ ried. Martha and Mr. Skel­ ton had one child who died when he was quite young. The attractive, young, rich widow had a number of suitors, one of which wa.s Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson may have been attracted by her wealth and her beauty, but it was her musical talent that made her special to him. Mr. Jef­ ferson loved music, and he played the violin. Martha played the harpsichord. The attraction between Martha Skelton and Thomas Jeffer­ son became love, and the two were married in 1772. Mr. Jefferson took his new bride to his mountaintop home, Monticello, which means little mountain, one cold winter’s night. In Jefferson’s autobi­ ography, he said that their life at Monticello was 7*. Thomas Jefferson’s daughter, Martha, fulfilled some of the First Lady duties during his presi- “ten years of unchequered happiness.” During those years, the Jefferson.s had six children - only two of whom lived to adulthood. Having so many children so quickly may have affect­ ed Mrs. Jefferson’s health. Also, life was hard for her during the Revolution­ ary War. The family had to flee from their home, Mon- ticello, twice to prevent be­ ing captured by the British. Martha Jefferson got sick and her condition contin­ ued to deteriorate. Her dis­ traught husband stayed by her side, but nothing could save Martha Wayles Skel­ ton Jefferson, She died Sept. 6, 1782. Her husband was inconsolable - in fact, he shut himself in his room for three weeks and would walk the floor until he was totally exhausted. When Mr. Jefferson finally came out of his room, he began to interact with people, but he never married again. Mr. Jefferson raised his two daughters, and, after a period of time, he took part in government again. In fact, he became a minister to France and was finally joined there by both of his daughters. He was elect­ ed President of the United States and took office in 1801, 19 years after the death of his wife. Martha Washington and Abigail Adams had helped to establish the role of First Lady of the United States as an important one. Un­ fortunately, Martha Wayles Jefferson did not live to fulfil that important role. There were social functions at the White House that seemed to require a host­ ess so Mr. Jefferson asked the wife of his Secretary of State, James Madison, to fulfill that role on some occasions. Dolly Madison wa.s already a well-known hostess in Washington, who would graciously welcome guests and would seek to make each guest feel im­ portant. Her willingness to serve as a hostess for White House social occasions was a real asset for Mr. Jeffer­ son. The Life magazine booklet titled. First La­ dies, ha.s a section entitled, “They Also Served.” Mr. Jefferson’s daughter, Mar­ tha, who wa.s called Patsy, is listed in that article. She fulfilled the role of First Lady part of the time while her father was President of the United States. Martha, who had married Thomas Mann Randolph Jr., stayed at the White House during the winter of 1802-1803 and again in 1805-1806 and handled social affairs during those periods. In fact, her son, James Mad­ ison Randolph, wa.s bom there — the first child to be bom at the home of the United States President. The Thomas Jefferson/ Martha W’ayles Skelton love affair is a memorable one. It is sad that the wife of Thoma.s Jefferson did not live to become the First Lady of the Land, but Mr. Jefferson had two women, his daughter, Martha, and the wife of hi.s Secretary of State, Dolley Madison, who were able to handle the duties of First Lady in a satisfactory manner. Monticello, where Thomas Jefferson took his bride on a cold winter’s night in 1772, wa.s still open last week even though the covid-19 pandemic was still a big problem. How­ ever, if you are planning to visit Monticello, you should call ahead to be sure that it is open to the public and make reservations for a guided tour. Monticello is near Charlottesville, Va., which makes it an easy trip for North Carolinians, and it is a must for people inter­ ested in presidential places. Jame.s Monroe’s home is near Monticello so it i.s possible to visit two presi­ dential sites in one day. It is said that Monroe built his home which is called High­ land or Ash-Lawn so he could look out hi.s window and see the home of his friend, Thomas Jefferson. Monroe may have been able to see Monticello when he built hi.s house, but Monticello is not visible from Monroe’s home now because of the dense forest between the two places. Thank you for remembering veterans To the editor: I would like to thank Eaton Funeral Service and all other businesses that remembered our veteran.s on Veterans Day. Being the widow of a veteran and a member of the VFW, words cannot express my appreciation for your kindness. May God have blessings on you all and on our country. Arlene Anderson Cooleemee The Literary Corner Renegade Writers Guild Renegade percent of the 7 million or so registered voters in North Carolina do not align themselves with the Democratic or Republican parties. That’s right - 33 percent. They could care less of the perception that Democrats were going to shut the economy down or the Republicans were going to open it up. The result - another four years of Roy Cooper. But Donald Trump won North Carolina, right? Yes he did, which means that a good number of those unaffili­ ated voted for Mr. Trump. They were smart enough to see beyond Mr. Trump’s narcissistic behavior and com­ pare it to the opposition. Voters across the country - especially in the major metropolitan areas - thought differently. I don’t think they were voting for Biden and Harris as much as they were voting against President Trump. But it’s a new day. And the virus ain’t going nowhere unless we all do our part. Forget politics, and use what God gave you. Common sense. - Mike Bamhardt DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRI/ERECORD USPS 149-160 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Salisbury Newsmedia LLC Robin Snow.........................................General Manager Mike Barnhardt..................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow.......................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts..............................................Sports Editor Mocksville Enterprise Davie Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 75 Cents $32.03 Per Year In Davie County POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to: Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 Chattooga River By Marie Craig My husband was an employee of the U.S. Forest Service for about 30 years. We moved around a good bit through­ out the South during this time. One of the most interest­ ing places we lived was on the mountainside in northwest South Carolina. We were seven miles up the mountain from the little town and county seat, Walhalla. We had moved there in 1974 when Bill was selected to become the Ranger on this Forest Service district. The Chattooga River forms the boundary between Geor­ gia and South Carolina. When we went there, it had just been designated a Wild and Scenic River. One of his jobs was to enforce these requirements. Local people had been accustomed to driving their cars into the river to wash them. With this new ruling, the dirt roads accessing the river were blocked a half mile from the river to ensure cleanliness of the area and the water. Locals were not happy about this. Clemson University was about 25 miles away, and many of the students spent time on the river in kayaks and rafts. There were also amateurs who would park their cars at the top of their river ride, boat down the river, and then won­ der how they were going to get back to their cars. Some of them had poor quality rafts which could not last in the rough, fast waters and waterfalls. They were nicknamed Kamikaze Rafts. My husband bought a kayak and learned to maneuver it in the swift, dangerous water. We also bought a sturdy raft for a safer ride for three to four people. My 70-year-old mother was visiting us one summer, and she agreed to go on a raft trip on a spot in the river which was smooth and without rapids. We assured her that there was no way she could fall out. We always wore lifejackets, but still she was a little apprehensive since she couldn’t swim. At one spot, there was a concrete foundation in the river for a previous bridge that had been removed. Our raft got a little bit stuck on it. She took her paddle and pushed against the concrete to back away. Instead of leaning into the raft, she leaned out. Splash! There she went into the river. She immediately latched onto the rope that went around the out­ side of the raf She didn’t lose her glasses, and her paddle was under her arm as she held on, but she wouldn’t open her eyes for a while. We floated down to a spot nearby that was not so deep, and we were able to pull her back into the raft. Bill and I felt so bad about her dunking, since we had promised she’d be OK. We were almost to our spot where we planned to stop. We sat on the bank while Bill hiked back up to get the car and bring it to us. She had just had a new fjerm, and the vast quantity of gnats and mosquitoe.s loved that aroma. We heljjed to fan them away. As we discussed this episode with her on the return trip, she said, “Well, it’s the only exciting thing that’s happened to me in a long time!” I imagine that when she got back to her home that the river got deeper, colder, and faster every time she told it. I was proud of her for being a trooper about this even though it was ‘way out of her comfort zone. Downsizing By Gaye Hoots Several of my friends are downsizing to a smaller space to make life more manageable. I am also moving to a smaller space but one with a view I love. The view of sail­ boats on the water motivated my decision, and the process of renovating on a small scale has kept me occupied and excited to see the improvements. The difficult part is just starting. I plan to rent the house in Advance completely furnished so I can leave the walnut dresser in my bedroom that belonged to my great grand­ mother who died when her youngest child was only 4 years old. My grandfather used it evety day of his life and left it to me. It stands in my bedroom and looks like it came with my house that is around 100 years old. Please See Renegade - Page 4 Letters Welcome The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read­ ers on topics of local, state, national or international is­ sues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. Letters should include the name and address of the writer and a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is requested. Have letters in the newspaper office no later than noon Monday of the week to be published. Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99, Mocksville,mikehamhartJt@(iavie- enterprise x:om. Continued From Page 2 The round wooden kitchen stool that wa.s in my mater­ nal grandparent’s kitchen all my life is small enough to take with me. I have a bedspread that is hand crocheted of small thread by my grandmother. I also have an afghan as do my daughters. She made one for all the grandchildren and great grandchildren. She lived to be 99 years old, and to see two of her great great-grandchildren. The carnival glass bowl that was hers is at my sister's with her carnival glass. The spinning wheel and cards for getting seeds out of cotton in order to spin it belonged to my maternal grand­ mother’s mother. Grandpa told me he paid a dime for the spinning wheel at the sale after her death. He could spin on the wheel. There is a wtxxlen thread tool that the yam is wound onto after it is spun. I don’t know the origin of this piece, but it appeared inside my house mysteriously years ago. My ex-husband had acquired it and brought it to go with the wheel. I am hoping to store these in the garage. There is a large picture from my paternal grandfather of his mother or his youngest sister, who died before she was twenty-five in an epidemic that had frozen bodies stacked in the cemetery at Deep Creek Baptist Church in Yadkin County, waiting for the frozen ground to thaw. About a year ago I met the granddaughter of his sister through a DNA search. We have similar personalities. These are items that I see every day and they always trigger sweet memories. Space will dictate what I can take, and I look fonvard to the move, but at what cost? None of these items are expensive items, but they are priceless to me. More Than a Bruise By Julie Terry Cartner Scrubbing the sink, Adam looked around the spotless kitchen. Dishes washed, dried, and put away. Check. Floor swept and mopped. Check. He continued through the list, checking off item after item. Check. Check. Check. Do­ ne .and just in time. Soup simmered on the stove and corn­ bread was ready to cut. Tempting scents wafted across the kitchen. He could feel hi.s shoulders tense as he heard the key in the door. Relax, he told himself. It’s all good. Maybe tonight would be a nice night. Avery entered the house, dropping her purse carelessly on the floor. "Something smells good,” she called out. Hi.s muscles relaxed tentatively. “It’s your favorite, chicken noodle soup. How was your day?” Brown eyes smiled into his as she kissed him. “Not bad. Mind if 1 take a shower before we eat?” “Sure.no problem. Take your time. The soup’s simmer­ ing,” he smiled. Another kiss and she went upstairs. Hopeful that to­ night would be a turning point, that he’d get his wife back, Adam returned to the kitchen to put final touches on the meal then walked into the living room. Seeing her purse spilled on the floor, he knelt and gathered up the misplaced items, putting them back in her purse. "What are you doing?” she screeched. “Spying on me?” “Just picking it up, Avery. Relax, that’s all.” “Relax! Did you just tell me to relax? 1 get home after working all day and you’re gonna pick on me for dropping my purse? Really? What have you done all day?” Sighing inwardly, Adam tried to remain calm. What have I done, he thought’? Before or after I vacuumed and dusted the whole house? Before or after I fixed the soup and cleaned the kitchen'.’ But he forced himself to stay calm, even as she ran to­ ward him, hand outstretched to hit him. She landed one blow as he rose to his feet. One hit. That’s all, not a big deal, even a.s he felt his arm bum. He could hear his father’s words echo through his brain. "Don’t hit girls. Son. Just don’t. Never pick on anyone smaller than you. Just don’t. Don’t. Don't.” And now here he was, once again confronted with the one to whom he’d pledged to love, honor, resf>ect, as she swung list.s madly at him. The war between the two of them was nothing com­ pared to the war within. As she swung, he reached up and caught her wrist in his hand. And then the other wrist a.s it came toward his face. “Avery, stop. Don’t hit me.” And then the belittling voice, “Oh don't hit the big bad boy. This itty-bitty girl wouldn’t want to hurt the big boy. Oooh, poor little boy.” True to form, when he stopped her from hitting him and refused to hit her back, the verbal assault started. “Avery, stop.” With a scream of outrage, .Avery attempted to pull away, and when Adam merely tightened his grip, she tried to kick him. What could he do’? Nobody believes a man when he admits he’s being abused. Besides, it’s embarrassing. As these thought.s swirled through Adam’s mind, he searched the face of the one he had been sure he would love forever. Anger warred with grief. Pride warred with conscience. Embarrassment warred with justice. He knew he could stop her. He was bigger, stronger. He could hurt her. He could. But he couldn't. Hi,s moral code, his sense of right and wrong was non-negotiable. Heart breaking, he gave it one more try. ’’Avery, stop. You can’t keep hitting me.” Then louder, “Avery, look at me.” When her eyes shifted to his, Adam continued. “We can’t keep living like this. I’m going to leave. I’ll stay at a friend’s house tonight. I’ll be at the coffee shop tomorrow morning at IO:(X). If you want to save this marriage, you’ll be there.” Without another word, he turned and walked away. “1 in 7 men have been victims of severe physical vi­ olence (e.g, beating, burning, strangling) by an intimate partner in their lifetime” ( NCADV — the National Coali­ tion Against Domestic Violence Fact Sheet) “Less than 20% of [male] victims will tell the police or a health professional about their victimization. This may be due to ... fears that they will be scorned, ridiculed or disbelieved by these authorities.” Rob Whitley. PhD “Do­ mestic Violence against Men: No Laughing Matter.” Psy­ chology Today. 19 November 2019. • Fully Insured • Tree Work & Tree Removal • Trimming & Thinning • Free Estimates - Stump Grinding • Bucket Truck Service BROWDER Ct'acSriilflW DENTISTRY Park 158 Professional Centre 5380 US Hwy. 158 Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 336.998.9988 www.browdersmiles.cx3m Preferred Provider. HUMANA Delta Dental CIGNA Ameritas ASSURANT United Healthcare BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD AETNA Mutual ot Omaha SUNLIFE Principal Life GUARDIAN :: 7 ’ DrivewavCracks are nothing 16 laughiat^ Cali us tODfly for'more details and an estiniate i*-’', <'■-'■ beforeyodr smallcracksbecdnie ' BICPBOBIEMSI Shoaf Concrete Co. Mocksville, NC 336-751-1989 Mon-Fri 6:3Oam — 3:3Opm ------ t^ou, .Sinct,7948------ (336) 909-0609 Scotty Seaford (336) 909-0610 Jack Seaford Specials of the Week Due to the rising Covid-19 cases our store will now be open for DRIVE-THRU SERVICE ONLY. Hu Shots & Shingles Shots are available in the Drive-Thru all day. Our Drtve-Thm opens eatly on Wednesdays at 7MIAM for Shots. Assorted Flavors LANCE SNACK CRACKERS for $1 Limit 8 Thomas S. Browder, DDS is accepting new patients! BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina PREFERRED PROVIDER Foster Drug 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fosterdrug.com Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-1 - Sun 1:30-5 4 - DAVBE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 Local ministers preparing service for Thanksgiving The Philip Hanes House. Tour... Continued From Page 1 (1934-). The Hotel Mocks­ ville had 22 rooms and was the only hotel in town. With business strong, Daniel added a third floor in 1935. Traveling salesmen chose to stay at the hotel because of its good food. Chairs line the sidewalk, allowing guests to enjoy the cooling evening air before retiring to their rooms at night. The project was spear­ headed by Moser and Tom Lentz, who serves on the chamber’s board of direc­ tors. Master historian, Jane McAllister, former director of the Davie County Public Library, provided the his­ torical photos and details. Jessica Marie Photography provided the pictures. The brochures are avail­ able in the chamber’s Visi­ tor Center at 135 S. Salis­ bury St. in Mocksville as well as at all of the down­ town businesses. To learn more about the history of Davie County visit the Davie County Pub­ lic Library Martin Wall His­ tory Room at 371 N. Main St. To learn more about the Davie County Chamber of Commerce visit www. Daviechamber.com or call (336) 751-3304. The MocksviUe Ministe­ rial Alliance is sponsoring a virtual Community Thanks­ giving Service on Sunday, Nov. 22. This YouTube service will be available all day Sunday and thereafter. The sermon will be giv­ en by the Rev. Natalie Gray of First United Methodist Church of Mocksville. Other participants will include: Pastor Fred Ter­ ry, Second Presbyterian Church; the Rev. Dr. Glenn Myers, First United Meth­ odist Church; Father Dan Wall, Rector, Episcopal Church of the Ascension at Fork; Carole Demmy, Holy Cross Lutheran Church; the Rev. Dana Fruits, First Pres­ byterian Church of Mocks­ ville; the Rev. Chance Kuz­ ma, First Baptist Church of Mocksville; the Rev. Nathan Bratton, St. John’s AME Zion Church; the Rev. Nettye Barber, New Jerusa­ Davie DAV Commander Gene Potts talks about the organization. lem Apostolic Church; and the Rev. Father Eric Kow­ alski, St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church. The music was selected and the YouTube recordings were arranged by the Rev. Natalie Gray and Tommy Dunn, both of First United Methodist Church. “An offering is desig­ nated to make our commu­ nity a better place,” Carole Demmy said. Benefitting in equal mea­ sure will be The Advocacy Center of Davie County, A Storehouse for Jesus, and Our Daily Bread Food Pantry. To give an offering for this purpose, submit it through your church or to one of the participants’ churches, noting “Commu­ nity Thanksgiving Service” on the memo line of the check or offering envelope. View the service at: https ://youtu .be/hDX2SZ- oB8Vs. parked at Bojangle’s of Mocksville over the week­ end brought back some memories for Vietnam War veterans. A Desert Storm Humvee brought back memories to some of those who have WWW. our davie .com Dub Potts Leaf Filter GUTTER PROTECTION LIFETIME ★Trustpilot WARRANTY QaaQQ THE LEAFFILTER SYSTEM Potts on state school board Davie County Board of Education member Dub Potts has been elected to a second two-year term on the board of directors for the The North Carolina School Boards Association (NC- SBA) during the delegate meeting of the 2020 An­ nual Conference for Board Member Development on Nov. 4. NCSBA’s new president is Amy Churchill from Bun­ combe County; president­ elect is Lucy Edwards, Northampton County; vice president is Darrell Pennell,' Caldwell County; and trea­ surer is Jennifer Thompson, Cherokee Central Schools. Officers will serve a one- year term. Members elected to serve a second two-year term also include Patricia Burden, Wayne County; Mac Hodg­ es, Beaufort County. Members elected to serve a first two-year term on the board are Margaret Brad- sher. Person County; Ben Cooke, Mount Airy City; Worley Edwards, Colum­ bus County; Allison Gant, Alamance-Burlington; and Charles McKellar, Cumber­ land County. The board establishes the mission and goals for the association and ensures that NCSBA activities and pro­ grams remain focused on these goals. In addition, the officers and directors are the personal communications link between their regions and the association. A Freightliner truck wa.s symbols. All brightened the eyes of children, eager to climb aboard the big machines. And both helped local residents to realize that our Armed Forces put every­ thing on the line for them. The event was sponsored by the Davie Chapter 75 of the Disabled Veterans (DAV). used to raise money to help local veterans and as a membership drive. "We’ve been talking to a lot of veterans, and a lot of women whose husband’s were in the military. A lot of teary eyes,” said Gene Potts, Davie DAV Commander. Potts served in Vietnam in the late 1960s. and about to have the elec­ tricity cut off to their home. They help veterans with medical expenses, pay for handicapped ramps and work with the local veterans service office to get help for veterans. "The Davie County DAV is really good at helping vet­ erans,” he said. While there are some 120 members on the books, Potts can count on about 12 to 14 to attend meetings and get work done. Meetings are held at 7 p.m. on the first Monday of each month at the DAV building on 1956 US 601 S., Mocksville. Cook for the red roof. Potts points to where a bullet penetrated the helicopter during the Vietnam War. CLOG-FREE GUTTERS OR YOUR MONEY BACKGUARANTEE^^ INSTALLS ON NEW & EXISTING GUTTERS 15% OFF YOUR ENTIRE LEAFFILTER PURCHASE* Exclusive Offer > Redeem By Phone Today! ADDITIONALLY OFF-------- MILITARY^ DISCOUNTS FINANCING that fits YOUR BUDGET!" 'Subject to credit approval. . Call for details. 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Drive-thru testing will be held in the circle drive and parking area next door to the Smith Grove Fire De­ partment from 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Thursday, Nov. 19, Fri­ days, Nov. 20 and 27, and Saturdays, Nov. 21 and 28. There will be no testing on Thanksgiving Day. “These sites will increase access to testing in Davie County, which will be in­ credibly helpful since cases have been increasing here and across the state,” said Davie County HHS Direc­ tor Suzanne Wright. Anyone who has been exposed or who have symptoms consistent with CO VID 19 may make an appointment to be tested, or they may simply show up at either site. Testing is open to all, including per­ sons from other counties. Children ages 1 to 18 can be tested when accompanied by a parent or legal guard­ ian, and interpreters will be available for Spanish speak­ ing persons. While insurance is ac­ cepted, no ID or insurance is required. OptumServe will generate a unique identifica­ tion number for individuals who do not have an ID or driver’s license. The cost of testing will be covered by NC DHHS for those without insurance or who are under­ insured. OptumServe offers two options to register for ap­ pointments; Internet regis­ tration at https://lhi.care/ covidtesting or by calling (877) 562-4850. If register­ ing children under 18 reg­ istration shouljl be made by phone. A DAV member accepts a donation from a cus­ tomer at Bojangle’s. HUriNO, COOLINO, ReSIO£MTIMSeUJt SALCt, semncE, installation^ W» »•« ^bSlSSS HVAC License#! 3736 *v««i#rMa nAvw amo fvoMMM cocj«rrf*« Motoll«> 33«-34S-a2O7 Rowan: 704 833 ."rTT flPPlIHHCE repair “Over 25 year.': oj exfterience . in appliance repair" 540 Sanford Avenue Mocksville, NC 27028 i 336-751-3162 DavieMajorApplianceRepair.com DavieMajorAppliance@gmail.com — OPEN HOUSE — Friday, Nov. 20*^ and Saturday, Nov. 21’"' Downtown Holiday Lights tjoUI be Turned On at Dusk Gurvi.Ill’s 1.4 Vita I'. Bella O’C.dl.ilian’s Irish Piihlick House Restaurant 101 The Fact<»f> Coffeehouse Sc<H>ps lee (Zrcarn Parlor Mouni.iintop Cheesecakes Oeano’s Barheque Four Oaks Tavern Skv line Bank Main Street Barber Shop .Main Street Canines • Mocksville Barber Shop Mv Friend’s Place Hair Salon Bailev’*' On Main Hair Salon ’Total Real Estate Soitn<l Depot Hatz Off Barber Shop -Brass T.ilon TatiiKi Cognition Davie Able Graphics Printitij; The Station General Store & Taproom Foster’s Jewelry Southern Ties Boutique Artist Market On .Main Bird & Co. Boutique The Vintage Sunflower Bird'.s Nest Boutique Twin’s tJphoIsicn, l.aced \X itb Grace Bridal Counter Point .Music Southern Motxl Art & Home Decor Hast Depot Antiques Triad Auto Group Ma and Me Accessories M.Ashed l_'p Collectibles Gift Shop Towne cT iViocKSviiie y--"' T For More Information; (336) 753-6705 f jfoliday Top Tip ‘Wednesday, December and TiioKers 3^^111 Tarring Tot - 3:00 - 5:30 IbM Tarmers ~ TaRed Qoods ~ JArtisans / Crafts ~ TicXerz 3 aVw. a ' DOWNTOWN MOCKSVILLE A * 6 - DAVTE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 Public Records Land Transfers The following land transfers were hied with the Davie County Register of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, location and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $ 1,000. - Patricia Lacey and Da­ vid W. Lacey to Verne Marie McFerson, 1 condominium, Bermuda Village, $160. - Anthony Nguyen and Katy Wogatzke to Aashley Savoy and Deangelo Savoy, 1 lot. North Ridge, Mocks­ ville, $398. - Gloria Dawn Brindle Wooten, trustee to Diana Darr Davis, 1 lot. Oak Val­ ley, Advance, $650. - Matthew R. Smith and Jenny Smith to Ashley Eliz­ abeth Axmon, 1.01 acres. Advance, $242. - Kimberly D. Meadwell and Andrew J. Meadwell to Paul Joseph Buzanows- ki and Deborah Ann Bu- zanowski, 1 lot. Country Circle, Advance, $645. - Kristen Whitaker and Jason Whitaker to Leah Deanne Law, 1 lot. Charles­ ton Ridge, Mocksville, $310. - Paul C. Cronin and Karen T. Cronin to Kimber­ ly D. Meadwell, 1 lot, Essex Farm, Advance, $708. - Pamela Lucas H. Ea­ gle, trustee and executor of estate of Betty Swaim Bur­ ton, and Roger Dean Eagle, James Larry Burton Jr. and Robin Burton, and David Jerome Burton and Sandra Burton to Pamela Lucas H. Eagle and Roger Dean Ea­ gle, tract, $222. - Alma Hepler Needham to Deborah Whitt, .75 acre, Mocksville Township. - Kristen Leigh Stiller Hollars and Treyton Paul Hollars to Timothy Alan Brown and Rena Brown, 1 tract, Mocksville Township, $272. - John Moorefiled and Mary L. Moorefiled to Jay Kenneth Dietrich and Cindy M. Dietrich, 1 lot, McAllis­ ter Park, Mocksville, $50. - J. Gayle Misenheimer to Cerberus SFR Holdings V, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run, $454. Jubilee Capital to Windsor Investments, 1 lot, Saddlebrook Drive, Ad­ vance, $120. Gary L. Strickland and Janice H. Strickland to Lyndsay C. Lynde, 1 lot, Creekwood, Farmington Township, $270. - Ethel H. Collins Trim- iar to Tonya Hargrove Johnson, 1 lot, Ridgemont, Mocksville, $116. - Denna R. Rominger to Robert Winton Griffey, 1 lot, Bentbrook Drive, Ad­ vance, $630. - Comfort Quality Homes to Summer Joy Smart, 1 lot, Wagner Estates, Jerusalem Township, $366. - Amee E. Chapell to Pa­ mela Fitzgerald and Shawn Fitzgerald, 1 lot, Lakewood Road, Mocksville, $670. - Katelyn Miller York and Cory York to Spen­ cer Miller, tract, Jerusalem Township, $20. Nicholas Alexander Building LLC to Thomas J. Sheeran and Valerie Sheer- an, 1 lot, McCullough Road, Mocksville, $440. - Patricia Price and Rob­ ert Allen Price to Michael D. Hartness and Julie H. Hartness, 1 lot. Oak Valley, Advance, $810. - Mark S. Howell and Renee S. Howell and James Michael Howell and Celin- da Reavis Howell to New­ ton Properties and Invest­ ments, 1.7 acres, US 601 N., Mocksville, $164. - Brenda K. James and as administrator of estate of Gary Franklin James to Kar­ en L. Seymour and Christo­ pher Santa Lucia, tract, Je­ rusalem Township, $270. - Arena Builders Associ­ ates to Nikolas A. Szymarek and Jamie L. Szymarek, 1 lot. Arrowhead, $830. - Eastwood Construction Partners to Kevin S. Craw­ ford and Valerie E. Craw­ ford, 1 lot, Kinderton Vil­ lage, Bermuda Run, $637. - Brandie Lee Rakes to Christopher Murray Rakes, 11.79 acres, Calahaln Town­ ship. - Peggy J. Motsinger to James Timothy Motsinger, 1.32 acres. - Isabel Maria Brown to Stacey A. Simmons and Andrew Sims, 1 lot, Essex Farm, Advance, $730. - William F. Howard and Barbara B. Howard to Joel R. Kiger and Melissa P. Ki- ger, 1 lot, March Woods, Advance, $1,070. - April G. Staley, trustee to Brenda Carol Johnson, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Ber­ muda Run,$554. - Danny Ray Spillman and Susanne Spillman, and Johnny Eugene Spillman Sr. and Patricia Ella Spillman to Johnny Eugene Spillman Jr. and Kara Marie Spill­ man, 9.08 acres. - Casey Michael Quak- enbush and Adam Sain to Tiffany Parks and Ryan Heath Parks, 1 tract, Mocks­ ville Township, $284. - Kristina L. Hamilton and Kevin Hamilton to Wil­ liam R. Howard and Barbara Howard, 2.27 acres. Shady Grove Township, $690. Stephen Michael Lavine and Cynthia Hollard Lavine to Lisa M. Lynch, 1 lot, Creekwood, Farmington Township, $374. - Christie Davis to Bian T. Ballard and Elizabeth A. Ballard, tracts. Shady Grove Township, $200. - House Farmers Ar­ rowhead LLC to J. Reader Construction, 1 lot. Lantern Drive, Advance, $138. - Eastwood Construction Partners to Nathan M. Mun­ ford IV and Adero Munford, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run, $732. James R. Miller and Jake Miller and Allison Miller to Carter Grubb Investments, 1 lot, Whisfjering Oaks, Ad­ vance, $66. - Debbie B. Miller and James R. Miller and Jake Miller and Allison Miller to Carter Grubb Investments, 1 lot. Whispering Oaks, Ad­ vance, $66. - Timothy C. Deegan to Kathryn Adams LaPorte, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Ber­ muda Run,$424. - Christopher L. Burti Jr. and Rachel V. Burti to Atul Batra and Irina Batra, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run,$612. - Gary S. Bowman and Kathy J.Bowman to David H. Cohn and Karen T. Cohn, Hot, Oak Valley, Advance, $984. - WOWAC LLC to Ron­ ald L. Hewett and Lori J. Hewett, 1 lot, Whip-O-Will, $240. Mocksville Police The following are from Mocksville Police Depart­ ment reports. Mark Lewis was charged Nov. 9 with larceny of medication. - Stephine Murphy was charged Nov. 9 with simple possession of marijuana. - John Mayfield Jr. was charged Nov. 9 with posses­ sion of a firearm by a felon. - Roy Arnold Jr. was charged Nov. 14 with pos­ session of marijuana and possession of marijuana paraphernalia. - The larceny of medi­ cation from a residence on East Lake Drive. - The larceny of vehicle parts from a vehicle on W. Church St., was reported Nov. 9. - A woman reported Nov. 12 she was the victim of a fraud on N. Main St. - The larceny of medi­ cations from WalMart was reported Nov. 12. - A larceny from Tractor Supply on Yadkinville Road was reported on Nov. 14. - A larceny from Family Dollar on Wilkesboro Street was reported Nov. 14. - A domestic disturbance with assault was reported Nov. 14 at a residence on Hollow Hill Court. Robertson & Isen- , _ hour Properties to Isenhour Sheriffl S Dept. DAVTE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 - 7 Mocksville; sex offense. Canyon Road, Mocksville; disturbance. Junction Road, Mocksville; harassment, Lakeview Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Pete Foster Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Creekside Drive, Mocks­ ville; trespassing, Wagner Road, Mocksville; distur- FARM FRESH PORK Al NaturalNo Artificial lngro<Nants GRAIN FED BEEFBronoBsiMur-oangnauMi Jerry & Cindy Foster » (336)998-7175. Homes, 1 lot, Tumberry, Mocksville, $60. - Judy Dwyer Woolls and Robert Edward Dwyer, and as co-executors of estate of Judy H. Dwyer to James A. Gagliano and Lisa A. Gagliano, 1 condominium, Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run,$290. - Donna L. Harris to De­ nise Bump, 1 lot. Shamrock Acres, Advance, $480. - Bradley Dean Pruitt and Nena Pruitt Kaan, and as co-exeuctors of estate of Lena Billings Pruitt, and Joseph Peter Kaan Jr., Vas- ta Z. Pruitt, and Crystal Lee Maynard to Leonard Stone Farms, 24.8 acres, Fulton Township, $310. - Mark E. Kelly and Liz R. Kelly to Frances Stacy Entwistle and Katherine Sullivan Frazier, 5.01 acres, Yadkin Valley Road, Ad­ vance, $2,200. - Glenda D. Wood and Lonnie Dean Shores to Mat­ thew Franklin Willis, .93 acres, Mocksville Town­ ship. - Cynthia O. Levine to Thomas C. Robert and Frankie Elaine Robert, trustees, tracts, Calahaln Township, $165. - Thomas C. Robert and Frankie Elaine Robert, trustees to Dale C. Ellis and Stephanie M. Ellis, 3.58 acres, Calahaln Township. - Debbie B. Miller and Nov. 8: domestic dis­ turbance, Wagner Road, Mocksville; trespassing. Junction Road, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Sta­ cee Trail, Mocksville; bur­ glary, Tailwind Drive, Ad­ vance; larceny. Cedar Grove Church Road, Mocksville; harassment, Howell Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Salisbury Road, Mocksville. Nov. 9: suspicious activ­ ity, 1-40 EB; domestic dis­ turbance, White Dove Way, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Marklin Ave., Mocks­ ville; assault, Swicegood St., Mocksville; larceny, Fonso Way, Mocksville; illegal dumping, Baltimore Road, Advance; disturbance, Lancelot Lane, Mocksville; harassment, S. Clement St., Mocksville; larceny, Yadkin Valley Road, Bermuda Run; larceny. Hank Lesser Road, Mocksville; harassment, Williams Road, Advance; suspicious activity, Farm­ ington Road, Mocksville; disturbance, June Way, Ad­ vance. Nov. 10: disturbance. Cable Lane, Mocksville; sex offense. Ridge Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Edward Beck Road, Mocksville; disturbance, US 64 E., Mocksville; lar­ ceny, US 64 E., Mocks­ ville; domestic distur­ bance, Merrells Lake Road, bance, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; harassment. Rainbow Road, Advance. Nov. 11: assault, Granada Drive, Advance; suspicious activity, Farmington Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Leslie Ct, Advance; harassment, Baileys Chap­ el Road, Advance; larceny. Cedar Grove Church Road, Mocksville; fraud, Duke Whittaker Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, US 64 E., Advance; domes­ tic disturbance. Pine Ridge Road, Mocksville; fraud, Sonora Drive, Advance; do­ mestic disturbance, NC 801 S., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Jessica Trail, Mocksville. Nov. 12: disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; domes­ tic disturbance, US 64 E., Mocksville; disturbance. Will Boone Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, US 801 S., Advance; lar­ ceny, Cedar Grove Church Road, Mocksville; domestic assist, US 64 E., Mocks­ ville; harassment, US 64 E., Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Turrentine Church Road, Mocksville; domestic assist. Ridge Road, Mocks­ ville; fraud, S. Main St., Mocksville; disturbance, Turrentine Church Road, Mocksville; damage to property, Ashley Furniture Road, Advance; suspicious activity, Beauchamp Road, Advance. Nov. 13: harassment, US 64 E., Mocksville; larceny, Granada Drive, Advance; domestic assist. Liberty Church Road, Mocksville; fraud, Rick’s Way, Mocks­ ville. Nov, 14: disturbing the peace. Sain Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activi­ ty, Government Center, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Swicegood St., Mocksville; disturbing the peace, US 158, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Tow- ery Road, Mocksville; sus­ picious activity, Bermuda Run Drive, Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, El­ more Road, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Mer­ rells Lake Road, Mocks­ ville; disturbance, Reece Way, Advance; disturbance. Hank Lesser Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Petes Lane, Mocksville; do­ mestic disturbance, Admill Way, Mocksville; damage to property, Neely Road, Mocksville; disturbing the peace, Gordon Drive, Ad­ vance. Arrests Nov. 9: Amber Sue Kilmer, 35, of NC 801 S., Mocksville, cyberstalking; Anthony Jerel Steele, 25, of Swicegood St., Mocksville, assault on a female. Nov, 10: Kathleen Jea­ nette Dillon, 55, of US 64 E., Mocksville, cruelty to animals. Nov. 11: Danny Miller, 37, of Cedar Grove Church Road, Mocksville, larceny of vehicle. Nov. 12: Anthony Drew Church, 23, of Wall St., Mocksville, failure to ap­ pear in court; Danny Ray Miller, 37, of Cedar Grove Teasley, 19, of Thomasville, failure to appear in court. Nov. 13: Jessica Bur­ chette, 24, of Hamptonville, financial card fraud; Steven Jay Magness, 69, of Jarvis Road, Advance, third deg ree sexual exploitation of a minor. Nov. 14: Joseph Todd Deitz, 43, of Salisbury, ob­ tain property false pretense, larceny of a firearm, larceny of vehicle; Meredith Sierra Driver, 21, of NC 801 S., Advance, driving while li­ cense revoked, hit and run; Cedric Jones, 52, of Grana­ da Drive, Advance, assault. Marriages The following were is­ sued marriage licenses by the Davie County Regis­ ter of Deeds.- Mike Daniel Crider, 33, and Kimberly Ivelises Martinez, 33, both of High Point. - Mason Lewis Hooker, 23, and Morgan Elizabeth Miller, 23, of Advance. - Tony Wayne Stitt, 68, of Mocksville, and Linda Page Diego, 67, of Kannap­ olis. - Dustin Alexander Bu- latko, 22, and Kelbi Mae Whitaker, 20, of Win­ ston-Salem. Alexandra Maree Myrick, 25, and John Brad­ ley Potts, 26, of Mocksville. Tamica Shawntelle Foote, 45, and Sebastian Erik Maddox, 49, of Mocks­ ville. - Pamela Denice Pearson, 51, and Frank Campbell Jr., 57, of Winston-Salem. - William Justin Hendrix, 22, and Kassady Paige Size­ more, 21, of Mocksville. - Samuel Cole Ivey, 32, and Rebekah Illah Peeler, 33, of Raleigh. - Gregory Scott Gillasp- ie Jr., 30, of Archdale, and Jennifer Nicole Stokes, 31, of Mocksville. - Robert David Ruther­ ford, 52, and Justine Marie Cosme, 44, of Mocksville. - Jame.s Arthur Graves, 49, and Rusela Pidenes Mensah, 35, of Mocksville. - Douglas Carl Jacobs, 52, and Jamie Sommers Williams, 43, of Mocks­ ville. - Laura Ann Shelton, 26, and Tyler Daniel Byrnes, 26, both of Advance. - Kayla Michelle Hun­ tington, 24, of Clayton, and Taylor Steven Crotts, 22, of Mocksville. - Michael Preston War­ ren, 29, and Amanda Jo Gutierrez, 29, of Mocks­ ville. - Hannah Dawn Dan­ iel, 22, and Daniel William Montgomery, 23, of Ad­ vance. - Patricia Lynn Nichols, 18, and Dominic Ressa, 19, of Advance. - Jessica Brooke Smith, 28, and Kendall Gregory Gobble, 26, of Mocksville. - Kathryn Jean Antony, 30, and Zachary Rodgers White, 30, of Mocksville. - Ayisha Tabarook Jam- bor. 45, and Michael John Petros, 47, of Advance. - Molly Grace Engstrom, 22, of Advance, and Micah Jared Burnham, 23, of Kan­ sas. - Danny Eugene Burton, 41, and Vemadeth Viola Ra­ mos, 38, of Advance. Patricia Eugenia Alexander, 63, of Woodleaf, and Clinton Merrill Jones, Jr., 62, of Salisbury. - Braxton Lee Riggins, 25, and Ivey Chase Carney, 24, both of Advance. - Tyler Coy Bunton, 25 Abache, 28, of Charlotte. - Daniel Anthony Stew­ art, 18, and Selena Joann Scott, 16, both of Mocks­ ville. Benjamin Eli Mc- Culloh, 21, of Mocksville, and Bethany Erin Lowe, 20, of King. - Katelyn Helen Par- menter, 28, and Corey Jor­ dan Moser, 32, of Clem­ mons. - Christopher Ryan Al­ len, 26, and Makayla Leann Blake, 25, both of Mocks­ ville. - Stacey Renea Latham, 42, and Michael Wayne Brandon, 42, of Mocksville. - Heather Lynne Fox, 40, of Harmony, and Eric Paul Williams, 34, of Statesville. Cameron Dakota O’Neill, 23, of Mocksville, and Tiffani Leigh Webster, 28, of King. Christopher Adam Doss, 30, of Mt. Airy, and Erin Renee Robertson, 32, of Advance. - Steven Lee Grimes, 49, and Lottie Jean Chancey, 53, of Florida. - Walter Keith Turpin, 64, of Mocksville, and Lisa Anne Golias, 52, of Boon­ ville. - Trent Lane Hill, 25, and Summer Payton Lawson, 20, of Advance. - Tom Dave Bradford Jr., 58, of Greensboro, and Kim Virginia Hughes, 60, of Ber­ muda Run. - Seth Edwin Seaford, 35, and Caitlin Alexandra Grubbs, 28, of Bermuda Run. - James Eugene Nance, 34, and Ashley Jane Waller, 26, of Cooleemee. - Rebecca Ann Dewosky, 24, and Austin Joseph Rich­ ardson, 25, of Fuquay Vari­ na. - Kandace Suzanne Plott, 48, and Steven Kyle Boger, 49, both of Mocksville. - Adriana Lofiez Garcia, 20, and Cristian Cadena Torres, 28, of Mocksville. -Allen Dean Billings,40, and Sarah Lynn Bateman, 40, of Mocksville. - Jason Michael Dyson, 45, and Samatha Jean Nich­ olson , 41, of Mocksville. Breanna Kaitlyn O’Brien, 22, of Cooleemee, and Jonathan Shawn Black- well, 24, of Salisbury. - James Andrew Kow- les, 71, and Harriet Rachel Helm, 73, of Mocksville. Melissa Kay Plem­ mons, 37, and Reader Thomas Watt, III, 38, of Clemmons. - Jacob Lee Wilson, 25, and Anna Victoria Rhodes, 25, of Advance. - Darius Cordell Hudson, 22, and Elyssa Marie Black- bum, 19, of Mocksville. - Burke Keith Fulcher, 23, and Kaetlyn Marie Mc­ Nabb, 24, of Kannapolis, - Matthew Brandon Ga- lyan, 31, and Fatema Naser Mohamed Alhajeri, 30, of Mocksville. Manuel Hernan­ dez-Gonzalez, 34, and Ce­ cilia Rodriguez Policarpo, 32, both of Mocksville. - John Matthew Hayes, 46, and Wendy Jean Ry- croft, 40, of Mocksville. - Mark Edward Brown, 44, and Mui Chu Chan, 47, of Bermuda Run. Peter Anthony Al­ varez, 39, and Autumn Re- nay Spillman, 22, of Yadk­ inville. - Justin Keith Spillman, 24, and Misty Rae Gilliam, 34, of Mocksville. - Melvin Terrail Clark, 28, and Jasmine Nicole Church Road, Mocksville, and Nicole Ann Riley, 25, of J^tnigan. 24, of Harmony. larceny; Nikki Nichole Mo­ jica, 25, of Guenivere Lane, Mocksville, identity theft; Joshua Aaron Penland, 24, of Granada Drive, Advance, assault; Brady Alexander Mocksville. - Kathryn Elise Brashi- er, 29, and William Harry Potts, 28, of Mocksville. - Serge Asonganyi Atem, 43, and **Marie Ayulaga Michael Allen Presnell, 28, and Natasha Jean Cran­ ford, 25, of Mocksville. - Jose German Segovia, 49, and Olga Lidia Hernan­ dez Canales^ 45, of Mocks­ ville. SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE "o^ncl'jumbo "P?? because for the next 48 hours, packages containing actual Gold Vault Bricks still loaded with four evervone wTnts them ^Thet^^hlee Co fh ? 5° the Federated Mint are being shipped to residents in 5 states. These are the only Gold Vault Bricks known to exist and And heCe's^hC 56^ Mr^ fi tluTvPCn Xne CkP A Y'tp Jumbo Gold Bars bearing the name of The First Bank of the United States of America and the state they were once destined for. residents hvino outsWe of th^ ® Publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just '49 per ounce. That’s a real steal because resiaents living outside ot tne designated 5 states must pay '124- per ounce if any remain. Residents snap up Gold Bars issued in 5 States Heavy Gold Vault Bricks loaded with valuable Jumbo State Bars layered in 24 Karat Gold are up for grabs as thousands stand to m^s the deadline to claim the gold bars; now residents in 5 states can claim the Gold Vault Bricks for themselves and keep all the valuable bars found inside just by covering the minimum gold fee set for state residents within the next 48 hours “It’s like a modern day gold rush,” said Mary Ellen Withrow, emeritus 4Oth Trea­ surer of the United States of America. That’s because actual Gold Vault Bricks'™ still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold bear­ ing the name of the First Bank of the United States of America™ and the state they were once destined for are up for grabs as thou­ sands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold. Now any resi­ dent of those states can claim the Gold Vault Bricks for themselves and keep all the valu­ able gold found inside. That’s four mas­ sive bars weighing a full 20 ounces of high demand bullion copper layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold in all. And here’s the best part. If you live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just *49 per ounce which totals *980 for the full 20 ounces locked away inside these gold vault bricks. That’s a real steal because residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay *124 per ounce which totals *2,480 if any remain. “As special counsel to Federated Mint I earn my pay delivering breaking news. And today’s announcement confirming the release of Gold Vault Bricks to the general public is as big as it gets. Believe me, I know how valuable these Gold Vault Bricks are to resellers, collectors, dealers and anyone else who gets their hands on them,” Withrow said. “So my advice is this, anyone who gets an opportunity to get their hands on one of these Gold Vault Bricks better jump at the chance before they’re all gone,” Withrow said. “These Gold Vault Bricks loaded with massive 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold make the most impressive gifts for Christmas, birthdays, graduations, weddings, and any other occa­ sion, especially for that hard-to-buy-for per­ son,” Withrow said. According to Ms. Withrow, since thou­ sands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold, today and tomor­ row are intended as a “special 48 hour release” for the benefit of persons living in; NC, GA, SC, TN and VA. This gives resi­ dents of those states a fair chance to claim the Gold Vault Bricks and all the valuable gold loaded inside for themselves. But, Ms. Withrow added, “The Gold Vault Bricks are only available as inventory per­ mits during the special 48 hour release and once they’re gone, they’re gone.” The emer­ itus Treasurer added, “Remember this, these Gold Vault Bricks contain a full 20 ounces of high demand bullion copper lay­ ered in valuable 24 Karat Gold and we have no power to stop dealers, resellers, collec­ tors and the like from buying up all the Gold Vault Bricks they can get their hands on and reselling them for a big profit,” Withrow said. Anyone who fails to obtain them during this special 48 hour release may be forced to buy them later in the secondary market from a dealer, reseller or collector at a hefty premium. ”W^e already know the phones will be ringing off the hook. That’s why hundreds of agents are standing by to answer the phones beginning at 8:30am this morning. V^e’re going to do our best, but with just 48 hours to answer all the calls it won’t be easy. So make sure to tell everyone to keep call­ ing if all lines are busy. We’ll do our best to answer them all,” Withrow said. “That’s why Federated Mint set up the State Distribution Hotlines in order to make sure residents in the 5 designated states listed in today’s newspaper publication can get them now,” Withrow said. The only thing readers of today’s newspa­ per publication need to do is make sure they live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s newspaper and call the State Distribution Hotlines before the special 48 hour release ► Who gets the Jumbo Gold Bars: Listed below in bold are the states that get the gold. If you live in one of these states immediately call the State Distribution Hotline at: 1-800-749-6917 GB1374 NM North Carolina NV , NY i OH South Carolina Tennessee , TX UT Virginia NEVER BEFORE SEEN: THESE FIRST BANK OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA JUMBO GOLD BARS ARE THE ONLY ONES KNOWN TO EXIST VALUABLE: THESE ARE THE FOUR 5-OUNCE JUMBO GOLD BARS SEALED AWAY IN EACH GOLD VAULT BRICK BEARING THE STATE DESTINATION ► How much are the Gold Vault Bricks worth: The answer is, It’s impossible to say. But, it would be foolish for anyone to try and determine the value of these Gold Vault Bricks based on today’s price of gold. Here’s why. Gold, silver and all precious metal values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees. But what we do know is that these are the only Gold Vautt Bricks still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars known to exist. In fact, the value of the pure 24 Karat Gold layered content is just a bonus for anyone lucky enough to get one of these Gold Vault Bricks because there’s no telling how much the actual collector value could be worth. That makes the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just *49 per ounce which totals *980 for the full 20 ounces locked away inside these Gold Vault Bricks a real steal since residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay *124 per ounce, which totals *2,480, if any remain. ► Why the vault fee is so low: Since thousands of U.S. residents stand to miss the deadline to claim the gold. Federated Mint has re-allocated Gold Vault Bricks to be sent out in the next 48 hours. Thai means the gold is up for grabs and now residents in 5 states can claim the Gold Vault Bricks for themselves and keep all the valuable bars found inside. These are the only Gold Vautt Bricks known to exist and everyone wants them. That’s because they’re still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold bearing the name of The First Bank of the United States of America and the state they were once destined for. That’s four massive bars weighing a full 20 ounces ot 24 Karat Gold and valuable bullion copper in all. And here’s the best part. If you live in one of the 5 states listed in today’s publication you cover only the minimum gold fee set for state residents of just *49 per ounce. That’s a real steal because residents living outside of the designated 5 states must pay *124 per ounce if any remain. fSTATE O * /iortmcarolina * ' STATE or NORTH CAROLINA L. GOLD . VAULT BRICK jTATE or NORTH CAROLINA COLO . VAULT BRICK y - <5?^ frATE or NORTH CAROLINA * COLO A VAULT BRICK -r JL. <Z'-* I3RTH CAROLINA solo '.T BRICK STATE or NORTH CAROLINA r COLO TE or NORTH CAROLINA ‘ COLO VAULT BRICK C STATE or NORTH * COI-M' VAULT SR STATE or NORTH CAR . COLO * VAULT BRICK ’* STATE or NORTH CAR . OOUO ■R VAULT BRICK ■ FIRST LOOK INSIDE THE GOLD VAULT BRICKS: Pictured above are the Gold Vault Bricks containing the only Jumbo State Gold Bars known to exist bearing the name of the First Banx or tne United States of America and the state they were once destined for. State residents are rushing to get them because the Gold Vault Bricks are still loaded with four 5-ounce Jumbo State Bars layered in valuable 24 Karat Gold. Everyone lucky enough to get them better hold on to them because there's no telling Just how much they could be worth. R1OO7Oends midnight tomorrow. ■ FEDERATED MINT, LLC IS NOT AFFILIATED WITH SHIPMENT YOU ___ DATE OR IN A DIFFERENT GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION. OH RESIDENTS ADD 6.5% SALES TAX. FEDERATED MINT. PO BOX 1200 i ‘ * ’ THE U.S. MINT, THE U.S. GOVERNMENT, A BANK OR ANY GOVERNMENT AGENCY. IF FOR ANY REASON WITHIN MASSILLON. OH 44648 ©2020 30 DAYS FROM A LATER FEDERATED MINT DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 - 98 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 Obituaries Obituaries Ethel Louise Carter ‘Easy’ Payne Ethel Louis Carter “Easy” Payne died on Nov. 11,2020 surrounded by her family at her residence. She was the daughter of the late William and Ethel (White) Carter, bom in Davie County on March 6, 1928. She was also preceded in death by: her husband, Glenn Edward Payne; 5 siblings, Wil­ ly Gray Carter, Virginia Mack­ ey, Alfonzo Carter, Charles Preston Carter, and Pearl Car­ ter; and 3 nephews, Jerome, Kevin, and Kelly. She attended Davie Coun­ ty Training School and retired from Burlington Mills. She was a lifetime and devoted member of the Friendship Mis­ sionary Baptist Church where she served on the church choir, missionary circle, hostess board and was the mother of the church. She loved the Lord, studying her Sunday school lesson, listening to spiritual music, putting on her nice church suits, hats and jewelry, shopping, sewing, crochet­ ing, fishing, and spending time with Coco and bringing him back chicken wings. Survivors: nieces, Harriet White of the home; Frances (Perry) James of Mocksville and Rosa Allen of Woodleaf; a nephew, Melvin (Wanda) Carter of Cooleemee; a special cousin, Faye McCoy of Mt. Ulla; and a large host of niec­ es, nephews, cousins and friends. There was a visitation for Ethel on Saturday, Nov. 14, at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville. A funeral service was held on Sunday, Nov. 15 at 2 p.m. at Davie Funer­ al Service of Mocksville. A private burial took place on Monday at the Rowan Memorial Park Cemetery. Margaret R. Carter Margaret R. Carter, 89, of Uniontown, Pa. died on Tuesday, June 9, 2020 in Pittsburgh. Bom March 30, 1931 in Iredell County, daughter of the late William P. and Ethel (Foster) Roberts, she was the wife of the late Harold L. Carter. She was also preceded in death by an infant daughter, Pamela Jean Carter, and a brother, John W. Roberts Survivors: children, Gary L. (Kathy) Carter of Union- town, Kimberly R. Carter (Emidio) of Pittsburgh, Paul C. (Christina) Carter of Mesa, Ariz.; grandchildren, Lindsey (Gregory) Mikeo of Fairmont, W.Va., Tara (Seth) Takoch of Springfield, Va., Brandon Carter of Arizona, Ryan Car­ ter of Arizona; great-grandchildren, Madeline and Olivia Mikeo and Lindon and Rooney Takoch; brother, James L. (Letty) Roberts of North Carolina; and cousins and nieces and nephews. She was a member of Asbury United Methodist Church and attended the Community Methodist Church in recent years. A memorial visitation was held on Monday, June 15 at Stephen R. Haky Funeral Home in Uniontown. A service was held at 4 p.m. in the funeral home. Memorials: Fayette Friends of Animals or a charity of the donor’s choice. Charles Stradley Stovall Mr. Charles Stradley Stovall, 79, of Bermuda Run, died after a sudden illness on Monday, Nov. 9, 2020. He was the son of the late Julian Baird and Frances Watkins Stovall. He was bom in Granville County on Nov. 18, 1940, and lived in Oxford during his childhood until he graduated from Wake Forest University in 1963. Following graduation, he served as first lieutenant in the U.S. Army for two years where he was stationed in Fort Stewart, Ga. He worked for RJ Reynolds Tobacco Co. in marketing and sales for 34 years until his retirement as senior account manager in 1999. He was a member of Clemmons Moravian Church for 36 years where he served on the board of trustees and the child services committee. He also served on the board of the Clemmons Fire De­ partment for almost 40 years. He cherished spending time with family, playing golf and watching sports, especially the Demon Deacons. Survivors: his wife of 56 years, Rebecca Sue “Susie" Johnson; his daughter, Suzanne Mann (John) of Advance, and their daughters Ashton and Alexis; a son. Chip Stovall (Carol) of Overland Park, Kan., and their children Anna and Charlie; a sister, Ann Stovall Ruff of Memphis, Tenn.; and numerous cousins. A private graveside service was held on Saturday, Nov. 14 at Clemmons Moravian Church with the Rev. Christo­ pher Thore officiating. Memorials: Clemmons Moravian Church, PO Box 730, Clemmons, 27012. Condolences; www.hayworth-miller.com. William ‘Richard’ Cook William “Richard” Cook, 78, of Angell Road, Mocks­ ville, died on Nov. 6, 2020 following a brief illness. He was bom Aug. 5, 1942 to W. Ransom Cook and Lucille Howard Cook. He was also preceded in death by a brother. Bob Cook, and a sister, Wanda Cook. Surviving: hi.s wife of 53 years, Vivian Marion Cook; sons, Richard Brian Cook (Christi R.) of Monroe, How­ ard Craig Cook of Nebraska; grandchildren Derek Cook of Arizona, Michael Cook (Liz) of Arizona, and Allison Cook of Nebraska; sisters, Elizabeth Grubb of Mocksville, Judy Em- minizer (John) of South Caro­ lina; brother, Larry Cook (An­ nie) of Mocksville; and several nieces and nephews. He loved his family and put their needs first. He was a vet­ eran of the Army. He enjoyed golfing. He was a member of the Masons, Jaycees, president of the Booster’s Club, and coached youth football. In his latter years he did wood­ working and helped others with projects. “The world lost a good one today and we are lucky and thankful for the time we had with him,” said his son, Craig. Per his'wishes, there will be no visitation or formal ser­ vice. A celebration of life will be held later for the family. The family requests no flowers be sent. Memorials: Mountain Valley Hospice, Box 1267, Yad­ kinville, 27055. Mary Grey Collins ‘Shorty’ Evans Mary Grey Collins “Shorty” Evans, 90, died on Tues­ day, Nov. 10,2020. She was bom Sept. 26, 1930 in Yadkin County to the late Thomas Sanford Collins and Cora Isabell Speer Collins. She was also preceded in death by: her sisters. Pearl Warden, Beulah Warden, Betty Cheek, and Nellie Ruth Collins; broth­ ers, Joshua Collins, Warren Collins, Thomas Ray Collins, Bruce Collins, and an infant brother. Survivors; her daughter, Pam E. (Barry) Smith; broth­ ers, Bobby Collins, and Roger Collins. Mrs. Evans was a member of Redland Pentecostal John and Carol Sparks Carol Ann Willard Sparks died on Nov. 7, 2020. John Edwin Sparks followed her three days later. Married May 7, 1972, these two were known for many things in the community, chiefly their love for one another. Their love and faith bore fruit in the generosity and service they gave their family, neighbors, church and community. She had an eye for decoration and ran a clean, tidy ship. He worked with his hands and loved to be outside. Together they built their home near Farmington for 48 years. Both were strong, vibrant people until their final week on earth. They were of clear mind, stayed busy with their interests, and were happy with their life. Pestilence was no deterrent to afternoon trips to the mountains they loved or service at their church. Her illness and passing was a critical blow to him and his health, and he followed her with determination and desire for a lasting peace and com­ munion with her. Surviving: a son, Jonathan Daniel Sparks (Amanda Led­ ford Sparks) and his children, Harris, Lily, Wren and Sul­ livan; a daughter, Kimberly Sparks Cook (Michael Cook) and her children, Conner, Henry and Rachel; his mother, Madeleine; his sisters, Helen Myers (Bobby), Nancy Mill­ er (Michael), Teresa Phifer (John) and Alethea Segal; his brother, Dwight (Elizabeth); her brother, Brian (Jane), her sister, Kay Reece; her brother-in-law, William Davis (hus­ band of the late Delia Davis); and numerous nephews and nieces on both sides. They were members of Macedonia Moravian Church for more than 40 years. Due to the pandemic, no public memorial services will be held. Memorials: Macedonia Moravian, Haw River Chris­ tian Academy, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, or Wounded Warrior Project. Contact Jonathan Sparks at (336) 409-0807 for details on how to support these organi­ zations they loved. Ashlee Marie Roger Ms. Ashlee Marie Boger, 31, of Advance, died on Fri­ day, Nov. 13, 2020 at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. She was bom May 1, 1989 in Forsyth County to Jeff and Loretta Boger. Also surviving: a brother, Jake Boger; and her maternal grandmother, Glenda Boger. She wa.s preceded in death by her maternal grandfather, Jim S. Boger and grandparents, Willie “Bill” and Geraldine Pilcher. She loved to laugh and smile. She enjoyed doing arts and craft.s with her mother, Duke basketball, going to the beach, and all types of music. She grad­ uated from Davie High School in 2007 and earned her associate degree in healthcare ad­ ministration from Forsyth Technical Community College. A memorial service will be conducted at Bixby Presby­ terian Church outside arbor by Tim Dunn at 2 p.m. on Sat­ urday, Nov. 21. The family will receive friends following the service. Memorials; Family Promise of Davie, PO Box 1536, Mocksville, www.familypromisedc.org. Mandy Leigh Moorefield Miss Mandy Leigh Moorefield, 39, of King, died at For­ syth Medical Center, Saturday, Nov. 14, 2020. Miss Moorefield was bom Aug. 11, 1981 in Surry Coun­ ty to the late Tommy Vernon Moorefield and Brenda Leigh Lakey Epperson. She was a lov­ ing wife, mother, daughter and friend. Survivors; her mother and step-father, Brenda and Darrell Epperson; her husband. Michael Jackson; daughter, Mackenzie Leigh Jackson; brother and sis- ter-in-law, Brandon Moorefield and Kelly. She was preceded in death by her father. Tommy Vernon Moorefield. A graveside service will be held at Mountain View Pen­ tecostal Holiness Church Cemetery, Saturday, Nov. 21 at 2 p.m. with the Revs. Mitch Nicholas and Tony Goins offici­ ating. The family ask.s everyone to a wear mask and prac­ tice social distancing. Memorials; NAMI NC, 309 W Millbrook Road, Ste 121. Raleigh, 27609-4394. Ruby Morris Smith Ruby Morris Smith, 99, of Advance, died on Sunday, Nov. 15, 2020 at Trinity Elms Healthcare and Rehab in Forsyth County. She was bom in Johnston County on Dec. 24, 1920 to the late Elmer Alonzo and Vic­ toria Lamm Morris and was the wife of 55 years to the late Wil­ liam Wesley Smith. She was a member of Shal­ low Ford Christian Church in Elon, and a lifetime member of the Women’s Fellowship. In her later years she attended Bethlehem United Methodist Church in Advance. She retired from Western Electric Co. after 35 years. She enjoyed fishing at the beach, shopping, gardening, having breakfast with friends and going to different churches for dinner and fellowship. She also loved to entertain, bake and decorate for Christmas. Survivors: her daughter, Gail Smith Page; grandchil­ dren, Maria Page and Jennifer Page Cartner (Doug); great­ grandchildren, Zachary Cartner and Erin Cartner; sister, Connie Morris Edwards; brothers, Milford and Linwood Morris; and numerous nieces and nephews. She wa.s also preceded in death by: son-in-law, Donnie Page; brothers, Herbert, Jesse, Leon, Vester, E.D., Layton and Jimmy Morris; and sisters, Mary Overman Kimrey, Octavia Driver, Juanita Lynch and Jean Faye Thompson. There will be a private service to celebrate her life. The service will be available to view after noon on Saturday at www.Iowefuneralhome.com. You may also send condo­ lences and sign the online register book. Memorials: Shallow Ford Christian Church, 1263 Shal- lowford Church Rd, Elon, 27244; and Bethlehem UMC, 321 Redland Rd., Advance. ■Cd HUNEYCUTTI ■ ‘A:NTI- )M£ improvement / specialize in small projects! Interior & Exterior Painting Pressure Washing Punch-List Maintenance Handyman Work & Light Carpentry General Home Improvement Bobbie Lee ‘Bob’ Goins Bobbie “Bob” Lee Goins, 83, of Rock, W.Va. died on Nov,ll, 2020 at Baptist Hospital in Winston- Salem. He was bom on Nov. 28, 1936 in Matoaka, W.Va., son of the late Harry Lee Goins and Margaret Josephine (Pacit- to) Goins. He was also preced­ ed in death by: brothers, Troy and James Goins; grandsons, Bobby and Brandon Runyon; and brother-in-law, JR Hylton. He worked as a metal fabri­ cator with General Motors. He worked with General Motors for 30 years before retiring. He met the love of his life. Pearl “Pat” (White) Goins and was married in November of 1957. Surivvors: his wife of 63 years. Pearl “Pat” Goins; a son, Bobby Jr. Goins (Mary) of Michigan; daughters, Norma Pray (Matt) of Michigan, Diana Scheinberg (Darren) of New York, Pam Runyon of NC; siblings, Betty Gross, Lib­ by Hylton, Judy Collins, Malcolm Goins, Ronald Goins, Donna Sloane, Roy Goins, Mary Jo Goins, and Wayne Go­ ins, all of West Virginia, Brenda Murray of Indiana, and Johnny Goins of Colorado; grandchildren, Christi (AJ), Hollie (Ryan), Matt (Shannon), Alexa (Ben), Jenna (Ben) and Ryan; great-grandchildren, Hayley, Dylan, Lyndsey, Christian, Justin, Kaycee, Brianna, Gabriella, Brandon, Dallas, Claire, Serenity, Braylon, Addy, Dalton, Sawyer, Aubree, and Luke. A visitation was held Saturday, Nov. 14 at Davie Funer­ al Service of Mocksville. A graveside service followed at noon at Believers Sonship Tabernacle Church Cemetery. The Rev. Tim Sink officiated. Condolences; www.daviefuneralservice .com. Shirley Ruth Hutchens Shirley Ruth Hutchens, 69, of Mocksville, died on Nov.lO, 2020. She was bom June 10, 1951 in Forsyth County, daughter of the late Dallas Cleabom Hutch­ ens and Dorothy Elizabeth Hutchens. She graduated from West High School in Clemmons. She worked in the service in­ dustry as a server for O’Char- ley’s Restaurant. She was a Christian and a talented artist. Survivors; brothers, Da­ vid Hutchens and wife Angela of New Market, Va., Phillip Hutchens of Pinnacle, and Mark Hutchens of Winston-Sa- lem; sister, Rachel Ellis and husband Kenny of Mocks­ ville. No funeral arrangements have been made. Memorials: Somerset Assisted Living. Condolences: www.daviefti.com. More obituaries Page B9 Caregiver, Very Caring You doo'l have to be alone Available Day or Night 7 Days a Week Housekeeping, Run Errands, Drs. Appts., Grocery Shopping and Cooking Meais Call; 336-648-0270 Robert Matthew Wall Mr. Robert Matthew Wall, 39, of Winston-Salem, died on Thursday, Nov. 12, 2020, at Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom Jan. 29, 1981, in Salisbury to Walter and Sherry Wall. He graduated from West Rowan High School and eagerly went to work. He was a service technician for Spectrum and TDS Cable Ser­ vices. He was known for his work ethic and demonstrated pride in a job well done; having won awards for customer ser­ vice. His passion was in service to others, his family, his friends and colleagues. He enjoyed the outdoors, target shooting, Clemson tailgating, OBX fish­ ing trip.s with friends and car­ ing for his canine buddies. He was a long-time member .4 of First Baptist Church Salisbury and was a member of Lighthouse Church in Lexington. He was described as be­ ing selfless, strong, loving and constantly putting other’s needs ahead of his own. He cherished relationships with friends and family; none more than the one with the love of his life, Trish. He was an organ donor. Survivors: his wife, Trish, whom he married on Jan. 7, 2019; stepdaughter. Emma; stepson, Riley; parents. Sherry and Walter Wall; and numerous aunts, uncles and cousins. A funeral service was conducted at 1 p.m., Monday, Nov. 16 at First Baptist Church, 223 N. Fulton St., Salis­ bury with the Rev. Dr. Kenneth Lance officiating. Burial followed in Rowan Memorial Park.. Memorials: Shelter Guardians, PO Box 1934, Salisbury 28145-1934. Condolences: www.lamhertfuneralhomenc.corn. Melissa Denise Pozdniakov Melissa Denise Pozdniakov, 43, of Soddy-Daisy, died on Monday, Oct. 19, 2020 at her home. She worked in IT support with Synthetic Industries. She is preceded in death by: a sister, Amanda Frye; a grand­ mother, Lorene Frye; and a grandfather, Phillip Foster. Survivors: her father, Ed­ ward Frye (Mary Beth); her mother, Arlene Frye; her hus­ band, Alex Pozdniakov; 2 daughters, Anastasia and Is­ abella Pozdniakov; a broth­ er, Matthew Frye; a nephew, Kameron Isaiah Frye; a grand­ mother, Gladys Hudson; and a grandfather. Jack Frye. A visitation was held Wednesday, Oct. 28 at Davie Fu­ neral Service of Mocksville. A funeral service was at 10:30 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 30 at Westlawn Gardens of Memory in Clemmons. Church. The body wa.s available for public viewing on Monday, Nov. 16, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Friends expressed their condolences to her family from 1-2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Nov. 17 at the funeral home. Her funeral service wa.s at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday in the Gentry Family Chapel with the Revs. Roger Collins and Bob Swaim officiating. Buri­ al followed at Yadkinville Pentecostal Holiness Church Cemetery. T Condolences: www.gentryfuneralser\'ice.com. Darrell Wayne Stumbo Darrell Wayne Stumbo, 58, of Mocksville, died on Nov. 9, 2020 at Gordon’s Hospice House in Statesville. He was born Dec. 19, 1961 in Spokane, Wash. He was the son of the late Willard Stumbo and Opal Stumbo. He is also preceded in death by brothers Ronnie Stumbo, Den­ nis Stumbo and Paul Stumbo. He worked in maintenance, and was a fixer. He last worked for BTS of Statesville. He loved the outdoors, fixing things, building cars, ice hockey and football. Survivors: sons, Dylan Wayne Stumbo (Courtney) of Mocksville, Scotty Ryan Stumbo of Mocksville; his former wife and friend, Lisa Wood of Mocksville; a brother, Johnny Stumbo of Statesville; sisters, Barbara Stumbo of Winston-Salem, Sue Clore of Stoneypoint, and Mae Knight of Statesville; and a grand­ daughter, Paisley Grace Stumbo. A visitation was held on Wednesday, Nov. 11 at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville. A traditional service fol­ lowed. He was buried at Chestnut Grove Church. Memorials: Gordon’,s Hospice House of Statesville or Chestnut Grove Cemetery. Condolences; www .daviefitneralservice .com. Ralph Belvin McCrary Ralph Belvin McCrary, 68, of Mocksville, died on Nov. 10, 2020 at Davie Nursing and Rehab in Davie County. He was bom Jan. 4, 1952 in Davidson County. He was the son of the late Foster Grant McCrary and Audrey Con­ rad (Hyatt) McCrary. He is also preceded in death by his sister Pansy McCrary, and his brother Steven McCrary. He worked with his father for 30 years at their family business, McCrary House Moving. Later, he got a job in the transportation industry driving trucks where he even­ tually retired. He was a devoted Christian who enjoyed reading the Bible daily. He loved collecting old things, telling jokes, and fishing. Survivors; brothers, Richard McCrary (Ann), Walter McCrary (Shirley), Lynn McCrary (Beth), RonAie Mc­ Crary (Janelle); and sisters, Patsy Salmon (Billy) and Jan­ ice Patton (Jerry). There are no scheduled services. Condolences: wwwxlaviefuneralservice.com John Huneycutt 336-618-2425 huneycuttpaintin0@gmail.com Ashley Dodson and Tosha Champ offer a stress free, spa like grooming experience for your pets. Low Stress Pet Grooming TLC Pet Care Grooming is Fearfree Certified Pets can become overly stressed while being groomed. Owner, Tosha Champ saw a need and de­ cided to move from the vet industry to the grooming industry seven years ago so she could better serve pet parents and their pets by offering a high quality, low stress grooming experience. The result is TLC Pet Care Grooming. Tosha’s goal is for all of her clients and their pets to have the best grooming experience possible and to help pets overcome their fear of the grooming pro- TLC Pet Care Grooming is a Fearfree Certified Salon offering cat and dog grooming offering a cage free, spa like environment. Tosha is a registered veterinary technician with over sixteen years of experience in the veterinary in­ dustry. she does continue to go to veterinary continu­ ing education classes and keep her license current. “Our staff continuously goes to trade shows and con­ tinuing education classes.” I ‘ According to Tosha, “We use high quality profes­ sional products and match each pet to the appropri­ ate products for their skin and hair type and any skin issues they may have or any allergies the owner may have to scents or products”. Mudd baths are offered to help with certain skin issues your pet may have. “All of our products used are all natural” said Tosha and she added “Grooming is my passion and I continue to strive to be better.” Along with dog grooming, Ashley Dodson also of­ fers bird nail trims and wing trims for feathered pets. They also sell a variety of pet products such as shampoo, cologne, lupine leashes and collars, all natural treats. Pet <3BD oil, brushes and combs. TLC Pet Care Grooming is located at 7808 Hwy. 801 South, Cooleemee, NC (near the U.S. Post Of­ fice in the Cooleemee Shopping Center). Hours are: Tuesday-Saturday by appointment. Find them online at facebook.com/tlcpetcare. Call 336-671-6127 to schedule your pet’s appointment. Put me BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT towom for YOUR Businessl In FORSYTH County call (336) 766-4126 In DAVIE County call (336) 751-2120 " /Lc; PERKINS ROOFING “Quality work at rtasonabit prices” (Roof Repair Specialist) Phone:336-7538355 Fax:336-7588373 Jesse Perkns - Owner 300 Spring Street MocksviBe, NC Tosha Chomp Ownet/Gtoomsf JSj&Xa a-V- - 336.6T1.612-Z’'' ■ ' y. ' ' , 7808 US Hwy. 801 S. • Cooleemee, NC S- ’ (Near Coofemea Fow OtOce) ’ tlcpetcaregioomingegmail.com Tell our readers Hie Story Of YOUR business in the BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT “Trusted Jewelers Since I960’ GOLD GALLERY MOCKSVILLE CLEMMONS Mbm Tractor Si8P*y • 751-3747______Acnm fnwn Wp Oiics » 786-1800 WE BUY GOLD! LAYAWAYS! Propane REFILL STATION We Also Sell New Tanks! 20 lb.................$8.00 30 lb...............$12.00 Sat.^12 40 lb..............$16.00 100 lb............$40.00' Barber Shop 3225 U.S. Hwy. 64 East • Advance, NC (336) 998-7102 lO . DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 A dd some elegance to your holiday table IS you only have a few to feed for Thanksgiving and a turkey’s too big — a simple Cornish game hen might be the answer. Much like roasted chicken, the hen always turns out perfectly ten­ der, golden, and crispy. On a plate, this bird’s big on presentation. With little effort, the hen makes a statement — think delicious and elegant. The small Cornish hen, often referred to as Rock Cornish game hen, is an easy to roast bird and even easier to serve. Choose small to medium hens that are as uni­ form as possible, and be sure to remove any giblets from the breast cavity. Tying the legs together and cooking breast side up will deliver a knock-out presentation. Some recipes call for splitting the birds, but I prefer one whole bird per person. And if your dressing’s too moist, add more bread, and if too dry, add more broth — before baking. The recipes are easy — you can vary amounts to match your personal preferenc­ es for taste and texture. Serve the Easy Baked Cor­ nish Hen recipe alongside a sa­ vory square of Chicken and Grits Dressing. Or gussy up to gourmet with the Apricot or Raspberry Glazed Hen alongside the simple. Old-fashioned Egg-Bread Dress­ ing. These small birds truly give any special occasion the pizazz for which it commands. If you’re looking to serve some­ thing both elegant and festive for your holiday feast — the Cornish hen’s your bird. My grandmother’s simple, Old-Fashioned Egg Bread Dressing is one of my favorites and best paired with a fan­ cier, fruit glazed bird. The small Cornish game hen makes an elegant presenta­ tion on special occasions as well as festive holidays. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 - BI Sports Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean EASY BAKED CORNISH HENS 6 Cornish hens 3 fresh oranges 3 sweet onions Melted salted butter Seasoned flour with salt/pepper Quarter the oranges. Place 2 quarters in cavity of each hen. Peel onion and quarter. Place 2 quarters in cavity of each hen. Brush hen with melted butter. Dredge in flour that’s been seasoned with salt and pepper. Cook birds uncovered, breast side up, in a greased roasting dish in a 350-degree oven for 50 minutes or until. Baste with melted butter while cooking. CHICKEN AND GRITS DRESSING 3 cups chicken broth 1 cup yellow grits 1 stick salted butter 8 slices crustless, loaf bread 1 cup chicken broth 2 beaten eggs 1 chopped onion 1 14 cups chicken broth >4 cup chopped fresh sage Salt and freshly ground black pepper • 'Interior ancL'Exterlar • ^Pressure 'Washing 336>94O-8S6O FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSURED Confused? T&G, ShipLap, Rough Sawn, Dressed, Clear, Kiln Dried, Edge & Center Bead, Knotty, Air Dried, C&Btr, Green, o" Live Edge, MDO, Composite &LVL In a saucepan, bring chicken broth to a boil and add grits. Cook until grits are stiff and add butter. To a cup of broth, add the crustless bread slices. Mix well. Combine bread mixture with grits and add eggs, onion, and another 1 !4 cups chicken broth. Fold in sage and salt and pepper to taste. Mixture should be thick and creamy. Bake in a butter-greased 2-quart casserole dish in a 350-degree oven for 30-40 minutes or until light brown and center is firm. CORNISH HENS WITH APRICOT GLAZE 4 Cornish hens !4 cup chopped onion 16 cup chopped celery 2 cups dried bread cubes !4 tsp chopped marjoram leaves !6 tsp. salt 14 tsp. freshly ground black pepper 14 cup melted, salted butter !6 cup apricot preserves 2 Tbsp. white wine 1 Tbsp. chicken broth Glaze !6 cup salted butter !6 cup apricot preserves 1 tsp. chopped marjoram In a mixer bowl, combine onion, celery, bread cubes, marjoram, salt, and pepper. In a saucepan, melt butter and melt preserves into butter. Add to the bread mixture. Add wine and chicken broth. Stuff hens with mixture, reserving some for basting. Place hens in a greased roasting pan, breast side up, salt and pepper, and baste with sauce. Bake in a 375-degree oven for 50 minutes. While cooking, pre­ pare sauce. In a saucepan, combine (6 cup butter, !6 cup apricot preserves, and marjoram. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and cook 3 minutes. Pour sauce over hens when serv­ ing. SAUSAGE AND PECAN DRESSING Cooked cornbread 1 cup chopped, cooked sausage 2 cups chopped, toasted pecans 1 !6 cups chicken broth 5 Tbsp. melted salted butter 3 cups cornbread crumbs 3 cups bread crumbs !6 cup chopped onions !4 cup chopped mushrooms 3 beaten eggs 3 cups whole milk 1 tsp. fresh thyme 2 Tbsp. fresh parsley Salt and pepper to taste Bake pan of cornbread, crumble, and set aside. In a saucepan, cook sausage, drain, and crumble. Set aside. Toast pecans and set aside. In a mixer bowl, add chicken broth, melted butter, cornbread crumbs, and bread crumbs. Add sausage, pecans, onion, and mushrooms. Beat eggs and combine with milk. Add to crumb mixture. Fold in thyme and parsley. Mix all well. Add more broth if needed for moistness. Season with salt and pepper. Pour into a but­ ter-greased glass baking dish. Bake in a 350-degree oven until firm and brown. ORANGE AND HONEY GLAZED HENS 4 Cornish hens 1 can undiluted frozen orange juice 2 Tbsp. orange marmalade 2 Tbsp. honey 3 Tbsp. soy sauce 1 tsp. salt 2 tsp. chopped, fresh rosemary ?4 cup water All-purpose flour for coating !6 cup salted butter Cut hen.s in half. In a bowl, combine orange juice, marmalade, honey, soy sauce, salt, rosemary, and water. Marinate the hens overnight. In an ovenproof skillet, melt butter. Cover hens with flour. Then brown hens in butter. Remove the hens to a platter and set aside. Pour orange sauce into the skillet and deglaze the pan. Add the hens back to the pan and pour the sauce over them. Cover and bake in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. Serves 6-8. EASY CORNBREAD & SAGE DRESSING 4 cups bread crumbs 4 cups crumbled cornbread 1 cup chopped celery 16 cup chopped onion 2 tsp. chopped fresh sage 3 cups chicken broth 1/3 cup melted butter 1 cup whole milk Salt and pepper to taste In a mixer bowl, combine bread crumbs, cornbread, cel­ ery, onion, and sage. Mix well. Add broth, melted butter, and milk. Add more broth if necessary. Pour dressing into a butter-greased pan. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour or until firm and brown. GOURMET LEMON-RASPBERRY CORNISH HENS 3 Cornish hens Juice of 1 lemon 1/3 cup vermouth 2 crushed cloves garlic 1 cup chopped onion 3 tsp. fresh thyme 4 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice 4 tbsp. vermouth 1 cup raspberry jelly 1 tsp grated lemon rind In a mixer bowl, add lemon, vermouth, garlic, onion, and thyme. Pour several tablespoons of marinade inside hens. In a roasting pan, place the hens, and pour marinade over the top. Marinate overnight while turning hens frequently. In a 325-degree oven, roast hens for 2 hours. When done, remove from oven and cool. In a mixer bowl, combine lemon juice, vermouth, jelly, and grated rind. Baste hens with the glaze. Return to oven for 15 minutes while bast­ ing every 5 minutes. Serves 3 with whole birds or 6 with half a bird. OLD-FASHION EGG BREAD DRESSING 4 beaten eggs 1- quart artisan bread crumbs. Chicken broth 2 tsp. chopped fresh sage 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. In another bowl, cube or crumb bread. Add enough chicken broth to make a soft bat­ ter. Add bread mixture to eggs and mix well. Season with sage, salt, and pepper. Pour into a butter-greased glass bak­ ing dish. Bake in a 350-degree oven until firm and golden. CORNISH HENS FOR STUFFING 2- 1 lb. Cornish hens Salt and freshly ground black pepper 3 Tbsp. salted butter 1/3 cup long-grain rice 3 Tbsp. chopped onion 3 oz. sliced fresh mushrooms 3 Tbsp. slivered almonds 1 cup water 1 chicken bouillon cube 2 tsp. fresh lemon juice Season hens. In a saucepan, melt butter. Cook rice, on­ ions, mushrooms, and almonds for 10 minutes while stir­ ring. Add water, bouillon cube, and lemon juice and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover, and cook 25 minutes. Stuff hens with rice mixture. Place hens in a shallow pan breast side up. Brush with melted butter and broil for 5 minutes or until golden brown. Cover and bake in a 350-degree oven for 1 hour. Baste with butter occasionally. Serves 2 — dou­ ble recipe for 4 or split breasts. Billy Riddle was a stud at free safety even as a soph in ‘01. Riddle second in tackles as varsity sophomore By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Second in a series on new hall of famer Billy Riddle. Billy Riddle’s talent was ev­ ident Day One of his freshman football season at Davie. The only question was whether Riddle was going to dominate on offense or defense. “We had some arguments amongst the coaches,” Davie JV football coach Lee Linville said in the summer of 2000. “We com­ pensated and gave (the defense) Riddle. They wanted both (Derek Comatzer and Riddle), but we have to have a tailback in our offense.” Although Riddle had piled up 1,281 yards while leading South Davie’s eighth-grade team to 7-1 the year before, he gracefully accepted his defensive role at free safety. “He doesn’t get caught up in seeing hi.s name in the paper,” Lin­ ville said. “He’s not a kid that talks a whole lot. He just goes about his business. He’ll be the star defen­ sive player in a couple years.” The 2000 JV season began with a 14-6 win at North Iredell. McK­ enzie Willoughby threw a 4O-yard touchdown to Larry Hudson, and Riddle’s 60-yard punt return made it 14-0. “Brandon Pane and Billy Riddle had a bunch of tackles,” Linville said. Davie suffered back-to-back painful losses, the first a 7-6 home setback to Ledford. Then came a 20-14 double-overtime stinger at Salisbury. Kicker Kevin Winters forced OT by converting a 21-yarder as time expired in regulation. With the score 14-14 in the bottom of the first OT, Riddle came up with an interception. It wasn’t enough, however, to pre­ vent narrow defeat. But Davie recovered beauti­ fully, closing the season on a six- game winning streak. The streak started with a 20-0 home win over North Davidson. Justin Norswor­ thy scored on a 42-yard fumble return, and Riddle forced two fumbles with bone-jarring hits. At Central Davidson, the of­ fense sputtered without Comatzer (ankle), but a relentless defense needed little help in 3-0 victory. The difference was a 3O-yard field goal in the third quarter by the clutch freshman. Winters. Riddle protected the lead with two picks, including one in the end zone on the game’s final play. A backup running back storm­ ing over lOO yards would usually constitute a monumental surprise, but Davie fans already knew about Riddle’s running ability from his South Davie days. After spending five games in the secondary. Rid­ dle replaced the injured Comatzer at RB and ran 20 times for 132 yard.s to help lead a 10-7 comeback win at West Forsyth. “All along everybody’s been on us; ’Why ain’t you running Riddle?”’ Linville said. “We know Billy can run well. But he’s proba­ bly going to be a defensive player on the varsity as a sophomore next year, and on the JV we’re trying to get him ready for next year. With (sophomore) Mike Clement, Billy is not going to get a chance to run the ball until he's a senior.” When it wa.s 0-0, Gareth White had an interception at the Davie 5, Fullback Kenny Gray (9-71 rushing) came through wonder­ fully during both scoring drives. Please See Riddle - Page B3 Call or We'll Clear it up for you! WE KNOW WOOD! Monday-Friday 7:30 - 5:30 I r Saturday 7:30 - 3:00 (704) 872-3148 lilshavers.com Q^uneral Q&ffrvice! Th* Best that Heart and Hands Can Give" 701 North Main St. Laxington, NC 27292 336-224-2220 3301 Salisbury Highway, Statesville, NC , 28677 www.robdrttfunaral.com 3001 Old Grtenuboro Rd. Wlnilon-Saltm, NC 27107 336-778-3955 • Drivew/ * Asphalt • Crack Fllling & Seal Coating . X d S 'AngellPavir^ Commercial and Residential Mocksville NC Asphalt Specialists 336-75i "3758 www.an9eiipaving.com T Brandon has high hopes as she nears 100 volleyball wins By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Five players graduated from last year’s 17-win varsity volley­ ball team. But time and again in Amber Brandon’s program, new players emerge and produce. The 2020-21 Davie season should be no different. As usual, Brandon’s objective is to win the Central Piedmont Conference. With players like McKenzie Stakely, Ali Angell, Abigail Reynolds and Aimee Loj, that aspiration is reasonable. “We’re not quite as strong offensively as we’ve been in the past, but we’re really good at defense and we’re really fast,” Brandon said. Brandon has a raging program. There have been five winning seasons in five years. Her overall record is 97-35 and her CPC mark is 41-13. Davie’s finishes in the past three regular seasons: second, tied for first, second. Last year the War Eagles went 17-10 and 8-2 to take runner-up behind 9-1 West Forsyth. East Forsyth was 6-4, Reagan 5-5, Glenn 2-8 and Reynolds 0-10. Davie’s only three losses in CPC play came from West, twice in the regular season and then in the CPC Tournament final. The 2019 season ended in the second round of the 4-A playoffs against Ardrey Kell. The seniors in 2020-21 are Stakely, Dyllan Everhardt, Kaylee Krause and Elizabeth Tilley. The juniors are Loj, Reynolds, Angell, Peyton Justice, Kimball Little, Sadie Eddinger and Molly Bu­ res. There are three sophomores; Emma Hayes, Kiah Mathis and Emily Gamer. Stakely is a third-year varsity player who recently committed to Grace College in Winona Lake, In. She’s a tireless worker and she moves light lightning. “McKenzie has some big shoes to fill, and she’s more than capable of filling them,” Brandon said of the libero spot. Last year Stakely was a defensive specialist while Dakota Hutchins ran libero. “This year she’s stepping into the role of being the libero and being one of the senior leaders. She’s a kid who has really wanted to play at the next level and she’s worked really hard. She has one of the hardest work ethics I’ve seen. Off the court, she understands the importance of strength training and speed. Definitely one of her strengths is her speed. So a lot of balls that the other team will think is down, she can get to.” Another reason Brandon has high hopes again is the trio of An­ gell, Reynolds and Loj. Angell and Loj are third-year varsity players; this is Reynolds’ second year on varsity. “It’s going to be a big year (for those three),” Brandon said. "Those three have been role play­ ers on varsity and this year they’re going to have to transform from role players into key players. We’re going to need those three to score points and be able to put Please See 1 OO - Page B5 potential in JV volleyball By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Brittani Steger’s coaching career began with a glittering record of 16-1 overall and 9-0 in the Central Piedmont Conference in the 2019 Davie JV volleyball season. She enters her second season with an 11-match winning streak. Although six of her players from 2019 (Peyton Justice, Kim­ ball Little, Sadie Eddinger, Molly Bures, Kiah Mathis and Emily Gamer) are on the varsity, Steger’s outlook for 2020-21 is sunny. “All three of us (including varsity coach Amber Brandon and assistant Mamie Lewis) think the JV has great potential,” Steger said. "It’s just a matter of them coming together as a team and working hard.” There are two returners from last year’s JV - Gracie Wilson and Camden Hurst. They are the only sophomores on the team and they figure to play prominent roles. “Hoptefully they’ll step into those leadership roles and get everybody together,” Steger said. “I’m looking for (Wilson) to be a wall up there (on the front row), making blocks and making plays. She’s 6-foot or maybe a little taller. She’s very coachable. “(Hurst) is a very versatile player, which is great because I feel Please See Potential - Page B5 Kurnitsky’s coaching success started at Davie By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record Nineteen years after leaving Davie, Derek Kumitsky is doing pretty doggone well. His three years at Davie - two as coach of the freshman boys basketball team and one as the JV coach - were absolutely amazing. He got his first varsity head job at East Rowan. It did not go well in Granite Quarry, but since then he’s produced a 269-185 record across 16 years at two stops in Florida. Kumitsky grew up in West Palm Beach, Fl., playing football and basketball at Wellington High. He attended Florida State and was a student-manager for the men’s basketball team. Another stu­ dent-manager was Mitch Young, whose father Jim was the Davie varsity boys coach from 1997-98 through 2001 -02. For two years (1995-96 through 1996-97), Kumitsky coached JV at perennial power Clearwater High in Florida. He was a substitute teacher there. After Jim Young’s first year at Davie, a Sf>ot for a history teacher was available. Kumitsky joined Young's staff in the summer of 1998 at the age of 25. “I’ve always wanted to coach in a one-school county,” Kumitsky said in 1998. “I figured that’s kind of like a dream situation. Coach Young was a big reason. I had a great mentor at Clearwater. I learned from a great guy and I want to leam from coach Young, too, another mentor.” Young said in 1998: “He’s a very good teacher. He’s young, he’s eager and he’s had some good experience at one of the top teams in the state every year. And he’s a gym rat, and that’s what we like.” In Kurnitsky’s first year at Da­ vie, the 1998-99 freshman team went 18-1 overall and 7-1 in the Central Piedmont Conference, winning by an average score of 73-45. In the second game, the War Eagles destroyed Mt. Pleasant 96-21. Then came a 92-30 blood­ letting at East Davidson. Ledford was crushed 88-19. The War Eagles were 10-0 before a 55-51 home loss to Mt. Tabor. They got big payback at Tabor, 52-35. Please See Kumitsky - Page B4 )erek Kumitsky laid the foundation for his successful coaching career at Davie, where he coached freshmen and JV from 1998-2001. V 1 »: f B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 - B3 Riddle .. Enter VleeWV Chance to $20 WEEKLY P" PRIZE and an Enterprise Record Cap $5 WEEKLY PRIZE CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone can enter except employees of the Davie County Enterprise Record and their families. Only one entry allowed per person per week. All entries must be on original newsprint or fax to 336- 751-9760. 2. Games in this week’s contest are listed in each advertisement on this page. Fill in the contest blank and submit or mail the entry to the Enterprise Record, P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028. 3. Weekly prizes are $20 & Cap for first place and $5 for second place. 4. In case of ties, the entrant who came closest to the total number of points in the tie breaker wins. If a tie still exists, awards will be divided equally among the winners. 5. Entries must be delivered to the Enterprise Record before 5:0Opm Friday each week. The office is located at 171 S. Main St., Mocksville, NC. 6. Winners will be announced following each contest. Decisions of judges will be final. A new contest will be announced each week. PhilCar Automotive & Tire Your Full Service Vehicle Maintenance Center NO NEED TO TRAVEL TO A DEALER Now Offering AH Ford - Lincoln - Mercury Factory Diagnostics & Programming 1. Appalachian vs. Coastal Carolina “Philcarfor your car. ” 1628 Hwy. 601 S. • 751-1800 beside Lakewood Motel • Mocksville SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL Call today for Heating OH Delivery! Call Ils Today (336) 284-255 1 336-909-1042 2. Wake Forest vs. Duke 3. 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Congratulations to Aaron Naylor who missed only one game but needed the tie-breaker to claim First Place. Chris Collins takes Second Place with only one missed game but was a few points off in the tie­ breaker. We did not count the Pitt vs. Georgia Tech game since it was postponed due to Covid-19. Wake Forest and UNC tried to wear out the scorekeeper last week running up 112 points between them. Wake takes on Duke this week. Appalachian State and Coastal Carolina face off for bragging rights in the SunBelt Conference on Saturday. The Panthers look to get back on the winning track as they take on Detroit this Sunday. ___ .<1 ADVERTISER 1. PHILCAR AUTOMOTIVE 2. SPILLMAN'S HOME FUEL OIL 3. CRENSHAW PAINTING CO. 4. WOODMEN LIFE 5. DAVIE JEWELERS 6. WHITNEE’S NEW & USED VARIETY 7. FRANK VOGLER & SONS 8. MOSSY’S 9. LAMBERT FUNERAL HOME 10.OURDAVIE.COM 11. ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE WINNER Continued From Page BI converting a fourth-and-1 to set up Riddle’s game-tying 11-yarder with 5:18 to go. Then the reliable defense came through as Jeremy West knocked the ball loose. Norsworthy recovered the fumble and Davie roared to the West 1, where it faced fourth-and-1 at :38. Winters delivered as always with an 18-yard game-winner. Hudson was a one-man highlight show in a 21- 14 home win over South Rowan, catching TD passes of 30, 50 and 37 yards. Andrew McClannon threw two of them, and receiver Matt McAnally threw the other on a reverse pass. Gray bulled his way for 89 yards on nine rushes. Norswor­ thy intercepted at midfield to crush South’s last-gasp drive. Riddle picked off a pass and delivered the hit of the night on the kickoff team. “It looked like a hole was opening up and Riddle came flying out of nowhere and creamed the guy,” Linville said. Davie unveiled a goal­ line package during a 27-22 home win over Reynolds. Curtis Matthews, a 6-2, 393-pound nose guard who became known as “The Freezer,” assumed the short-yardage role after an impressive practice audi­ tion. “I’m going to tell you what, we didn’t stop him all week in practice,” Linville said. After Comatzer followed a Matthews lead block to the Reynolds 12, “The Freezer” covered the rest of the dis­ tance in two smashing runs. McAnally, who mastered the reverse pass, completed a 36-yarder to Hudson, who made an incredible catch for a TD. Matthews’ two- point run pushed the lead to 16-6. Davie gave Reynolds chances down the stretch, but Kevin Boger recovered two fourth-quarter fumbles inside the Davie 5. After a safety pulled the Demons within 27-22, Josh Wallace’s INT slammed the door. "The losses we had were two we could have won,” Linville said. “But that prob­ ably made us hungry and made the guys work that much harder.” An unheralded freshman QB, McClannon, had re­ placed an injured Willough­ by in Week 2. McClannon led a 16-8 win at Mt. Tabor with a 7-for-lO, 98-yard performance. Chris Hauser was the defensive star of the game. “He’s been the biggest surprise offensively,” Lin­ ville said of McClannon. “He’s just gotten better and better and better.” The War Eagles set the tone in unlikely fashion when "The Freezer” picked off a pas.s and thundered to the Tabor 11 - the loudest two-yard return you’ll ever see. West deflected the pass straight up in the air and Matthews snatched it. “We just went crazy,” Linville said. "The last one on the field you’d think would get an interception would be your nose guard.” Davie finished 7-2 over­ all and 4-0 in the Central Piedmont Conference. The season overflowed with ex­ citement, with eight games decided by eight point.s or less. Davie never allowed more than 22 points in a game. “They’re a bunch of overachievers,” Linville said. “We’ve got 29 fresh­ men. Athletically, speed, size and strength, there were probably two teams we matched up with all year. But these guys fought their hearts out and found a way to get the job done.” 2001 Varsity Football In 2001, Riddle was billed as a big star in the making for Davie’s varsity. “Billy right now is just a young puppy, but by the time he’s a senior I think you’ll be able to compare him with Zeke Earle,” de­ fensive coordinator De- Vore Holman said in 2001. “That’s saying a lot.” Said outside linebackers coach Keith Whitaker: “(DB coach Jeff) Ward and them have seen Scott Comatzer. Zeke was the best defensive back I’ve seen, and Riddle early on i.s right there at it. Our free safety’s got to be a stud.” With Riddle joining a stellar senior class, the an­ ticipation for the 2001 sea­ son was overwhelming. In the opener against visiting Alexander Central, the War Eagles stopped the talking and started the walking, throttling the Cougars 49-6 - the highest season-op>ening point total ever. All Riddle did in his var­ sity debut was return a punt 42 yards to set up a TD and intercept a pass and return it 56 yards for a TD. Mike Mike Clement scored three TDs, Jon Goode scooped a fumble and scored, and Patrick Lowery collected 14 tackles. “Oh man, it was awe­ some,” Riddle said of his varsity debut. Said head coach Doug tiling: “Billy’s a gamer. He might be a sophomore by years, but he’s far beyond a sophomore by ability.” In a 20-10 win at West Rowan, lightning-quick Clement ran for 131 yards and Adam Sain, Josh Stan­ ley and Riddle smothered receiver Horatio Everhart, who had 4.3 speed. “He had a lot of hype talked about him, but I think me, Stanley and Riddle stepped it up a little bit," Sain said after Everhart was limited to four catches for 42 yards. In a 38-0 road bashing of North Iredell, Clement, Doug Smith, Neil Rice and Brandon Gentry churned for 290 yard.s behind a swag­ gering offensive line (Chri.s Nichols, Dave Poplin, Justin Lanning, A J. Scales, Adam “Beefcake” Barber and Trent Young). Ben Allred and Sain had interceptions. “Our goal was to not let them have any first downs, and we pretty much showed ’em,” Riddle said. Even though Moores­ ville at Davie was a battle of unbeatens, the War Ea­ gles piounded on the power­ house Blue Devils, 31-13. They held Mooresville’s explosive flexbone to 125 yard.s as star runners Chris Winford and Lonnell Dunn were upstaged by Rice (117 yards). Mooresville sliced a 17-0 deficit to 17-7 and had momentum until Riddle helped shred its comeback plans late in the first half. He intercepted at midfield to set up the dagger, a reverse pass from Jason Hogue to Jacob Gamer for 49 yards to the Mooresville 1. Lowery had 16 tackles, Kyle Gustafson had 12 and Goode had two sacks. “It was an awesome game for us,” drop end Timmy Redmond said. “It let’s everybody know we’re ready. We ain’t no joke. We’re Bad Boys for life. This is one of the greatest defenses.” After whipping through the first four opponents, the question was how would Davie handle crunch-time stress. It delivered with the game on the line in a 10-6 home win over Statesville. A 10-0 lead was chopped to 10-6. “We knew we were going to have to face adversity this year, and that was one of those times," Nichols said. Davie’s offense took pos­ session with 6:46 remaining. Rice powered for five first downs as Davie clicked off 15 plays and drained the entire 6:46. QB Dan Sul­ livan completed 10 of 15 attempts. In a collision of unbeat­ ens at Freedom, the War Ea­ gles came so close to tying it late and possibly staying perfect when the ball left kicker David Wooldridge's foot from 41 yards out. The visiting side exhaled confidently and waited for officials to raise their arms, as they usually did after a Wooldridge field goal. In­ stead of signaling good for a 6-6 tie with 2:52 left, they waved no good. Freedom had survived 6-3. “I looked at each of them in the eye and they were all hurting,” Illing said. “Two good defensive teams slugged each other out.” In the CPC opener against visiting South Ired­ ell, juke artist Hogue (7- 110 receiving) set the tone, Lowery blocked a punt and Goode registered two sacks in a piece-of-cake win, 28-3. “(Lowery) and (d-tack- le Sam Stovall) are Divi­ sion-! prospects,” South coach Kent Millsaps said. “(Hogue’s) a great receiver and (Sullivan’s) a great quarterback, but the of­ fensive line is what makes them because he had plenty of time to pick and choose.” After a 7-0 first half at West Forsyth, the avalanche that everyone expected came in the form of 17 points in three minutes a.s Davie recorded the largest win over West (38-8) since 1965. Josh Pfaff had a pick- 6. Allred and Sain had INTs. Lowery had 15 tackles. “We wanted to send a message because we felt like we should have won the game last year,” Rice said. “There were some lit­ tle things they did over the summer, painting our rock and talking about we ain’t played nobody. So we hope they still feel like we ain’t played nobody.” Davie raced to a 27-0 lead and coasted in a 27-14 home win over South Row­ an. Allred made eye-catch­ ing plays on ,a sack and on his fourth INT, Riddle blocked a FG and Goode, Riddle and Pane had sacks. The Clement/Rice tandem prrxluced 282 rushing yards. The War Eagles rolled up four TD.s in a span of 5:55 in a 50-10 obliteration at Reynolds, giving them sole possession of first place. Hogue had six catches for 110 yards. Redmond and Lowery had pick-6s. Low­ ery also scored on a fumble return. The defense had five picks in all, including two by Stanley and one by Allred. To this point, the defense had allowed six TD.s in 10 games. “Nobody - not yet at lea.st - can stop Hogue,” Sullivan said. Even though Davie wa.s 9-1 when it hosted 9-1 North Davidson on the final night of the regular season, the season became a bitter what- if. North was coming off a 6-3 loss to a South Rowan team that wa.s manhandled by Davie, but the Black Knight.s rallied to beat Davie 20-13 with 6,OO()-pIus fans on hand. Wooldridge drilled 31- and 45-yard FGs to provide 3-0 and 6-3 leads. On a third-and-8 option play, Sullivan pitched to Clement, who wiggled out of trouble and sped 80 yards to provide a 13-6 lead. But moments later, Davie cheers were transformed into moans as North star Sean Tuttle took the ensuing kickoff 99 yards to tie it at 13. Sain bailed Davie out with an INT in the end zone, but North would take over at its 41 with 3:11 to go. Tuttle ripped off 23 yards on a toss sweep to settle the issue - the first TD allowed by Davie’s defense in eight quarters. “We’re very disappoint­ ed,” Illing said. The night would get worse for Davie. The North upset created a three-way tie at the top between Davie, North and S. Rowan and forced a drawing for the 1-2 playoff seeds. Nearly an hour removed from the game, S. Rowan coach Rick Vanhoy arrived at War Eagle Stadium for the molar-grind­ ing draw. Vanhoy picked the lucky one. North’s Bill Butts plucked the two. Illing drew the stinking three, bringing a 9-2, 4-1 year to an abrupt end. "I couldn’t be prouder of what we did tonight,” Butts said. "The bad part of thi.s game is you have to go draw and somebody good is not going to practice Monday. That’s a shame. It’s not right, but there’s nothing we can do about that.” “What’s going to really frustrate (Illing) and his team over the next cou­ ple of week.s are the what- ifs,” Vanhoy said. “How far would they have gone?” Twenty-one Davie se­ niors departed with red- rimmed eyes. “We tried to console them and hold their heads up,” Illing said. “We’re the best team in this conference. There’s something missing in that 9-2. There’s a void and it’s a dang shame. It was just like someone punched you in the gut and smacked you in the face with a brick.” Illing became the first Davie coach to win two conference titles. Ten War Eagles made all-CPC, led by Lowery (174 tackles, defensive player of the year. Shrine Bowl) and Wool­ dridge (43.2 punting av­ erage, 12 FGs, 42 touch- backs. Shrine Bowl). Poplin, Nichols, Hogue (35-520 receiving) and Clement (949 rushing yards) were named from Davie’s offense. Se­ lected from the defense were linemen Stovall (57 tackles) and Pfaff (55 tackles), line­ backer Gustafson (84 tack­ les) and strong safety Allred (45 tackles, five INTs). Riddle did not make the team even though he was second behind Lowery with 99 tackles. Upcoming Games Wednesday, Nov. 18 Davie cross country vs. East Forsylh/Reagan at Ivey Redmon at 4 Ellis volleyball at Wesleyan Christian Academy at 4 Ellis girls tennis at South Davie at 4 Thursday, Nov. 19 Davie varsity volleyball at home vs. W. Forsyth at 6 Davie cross country vs. Forbush/South Stokes in Yad­ kinville South Davie cross country at Canterbury vs, Canterbury/ Summit at 4 South Davie girls tennis at North Davie at 4 North Davie varsity volleyball at home vs. Summit at 4 Ellis J V/volleyball at South Davie at 4 Ellis cross country at home vs. North Davie at 4 Friday, Nov. 20 Elli.s girls tennis at home vs. Canterbury at 4 Monday, Nov. 23 Davie JV/varsity volleyball at Glenn at 5/6:30 South Davie varsity volleyball at Summit at 4 South Davie girls tennis at home vs. Canterbury at 4 North Davie varsity volleyball at Wesleyan Christian Academy at 4 Tuesday, Nov. 24 Davie JV/varsity volleyball at home vs. E. Forsyth at 5/6:30 . Tie Breaker Predict the total score in the following game. In cases of ties, the tiebreaker will be used to determine the winners. Liberty vs. NC State ADDRESS: DAY PHONE: Total Points Scored. Entries Must Be Received Before 5 pm Friday — — 7 — — — You are always welcome at First United Meth(xlist Church 310 North Main Street Historic Downtown Mocksville Join us on FaceBook, YouTube, our church website and WDSL 96.5 FM at 5 p.m.on Sundays www.firstumcniocksviUe.org Telephone: 336-751-2503 RANDY MILLER &SONS SEPTIC TANK SERVICE 295 Miller Road • Mocksville (336) 284-2826 * We Pump Septic Tanks • state Certified inspector SUd Steer Wortc Trerwher Worit Hauling Septic Systems Footings Loader Work B4 - DAVTE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 C Crenshaw recently hit a hole in one - his first - at Pudding Ridge. > a - 1 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 - B5 Potential... —UJ Kurnitzky... Sean Stevens was a big star, averaging 20.5 points, including 37 in a 68-40 rout of North Davidson and 36 in a 78-71 shootout win over Reynolds. The long-range bomber was complemented by Andrew Daywalt (11.5 ppg, double figures in 14 of 19 games), Jason Hogue (10.8) and David Wool­ dridge (7.5). The roster included Neil Rice, Kenny Orsillo, Josh Pfaff, Justin Dotson, Brandon Gentry, Donnie Vestal and Doug Smith. In Kurnitsky’s Year 2, the 1999-00 freshman team ran the table, going 18-0 and winning by 20 on av­ erage. Among the routs were 70-25 over Salisbury, 74-42 over South Rowan, 67-48 over Tabor and 70-50 over Reynolds. Only three games were decided by single digits: 44-41 at North Davidson when Matt Moser poured in 19 points; 81-73 at Reynolds when Moser had 23, Micah Gamer 19, McKenzie Willoughby 15 and Kurt McNabb 12; and 72-65 over Parkland in the season finale when Moser had 18, Gamer 12, Brian Hunter 11 and Josh Wallace 10. That team included Pat­ rick Law, Matt James, Ian MacBryde, Dustin Carter and Nick Luffman. Kumitsky moved up to JV for the 2000-01 season. The War Eagles’ average margin of victory was 29 during a 5-0 start. Although they opened the season with N o Insurance? No Probl em Join CapCares Membership Club at Mocksville Family Dentistry Child, Adult, or Perio Memberships A available to suit your needs ) KJMOCKSVI LLE dentistry 113 Marketplace Drive, Mocksville, NC 27028 www.mocksvillefamilydentistry.com Jason Caputo D.D.S„ P.A. (336) 753-6630 CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT a 94-81 home win over Alexander Central, Kur­ nitsky’s 31-game winning streak was stopped in the sixth game at Central, 59- 43, because Davie was out- scored 13-1 in the fourth quarter. It won the next eight, including 104-41 over Salis­ bury; 66-59 over Reynolds, when Garner was doubt­ ful with an ankle injury but played through it and turned in 14 points and sev­ en assists; and an incredible 74-70 overtime decision at home against Chris Paul and West Forsyth. Against Paul and the 13-0 Titans, the War Ea­ gles trailed by lO with two minutes left in regulation. Willoughby, who had not scored all game, capped a huge rally with a game-ty­ ing shot at :07. Seconds later on the defensive end, Willoughby took a charge from Paul. Gamer nailed a big 3-pointer in OT. Luke Phelps finished with 28 points and 15 rebounds. Moser had 20 points and five steals, and Gamer had seven of his nine points down the stretch. “Chris Paul was on JV as a sophomore; that’s how good West Forsyth was,” Kumitsky said last week. “He had kind of an attitude, so the coach was teaching him a lesson. Chris Paul was in tears shaking hands.” Suffering a major let­ down after the emotional win, the War Eagles dropped the next game at Tabor, 74-58. They carried a three- game winning streak into the rematch at West Forsyth. Paul was anxiously waiting, and he put up 37 points against a box-and-one. West outscored Davie 27-8 in the third and breezed 92-62. The War Eagles dusted themselves off and won the final three to finish 20-3 and 6-2 in the CPC. Moser aver­ aged 18.5 points, Phelps 9.8, McNabb 9.7 and Gamer 9. The roster also consisted of Vestal, Orsillo, Law, James, Zach Hanrahan, Carter and MacBryde. After carving out a 56-4 record at Davie, Kumitsky was eager to start his own program and he accepted the job at East Rowan. He had two rough seasons there (11-37 record) and decided to return to Florida in 2003, becoming an assistant at Godby High in Tallahassee, FI. He was at Godby for one year before getting another shot as a head coach. He took over at Port St. Joe in 2004 and spent 10 years there. He built a 2-A mon­ ster, winning seven straight district championships, ad­ vancing to four final fours and reaching the state cham­ pionship game in 2007. The Tiger Sharks settled for state runner-up against Arlington, a five-time 2-A champion. “We were up one in the third and lost by 29,” Kumitsky said. “I went Dean Smith four corners Lifetime Activation Fee Covers First Month vna MWE cMinrs BESIIEMISI orrowed 7 iron ace for Davie By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record C Crenshaw, 17, started playing golf last April. Sev­ en months later, he had an unforgettable moment. Crenshaw, Burke Rosen­ baum and Tommy Landy were playing at Pudding Ridge Golf Course on Nov. 9. They stepped up to No. 17, a par 3 at 149 yards. “Last time we played it, me and Burke absolute­ ly ripped a seven and six iron and just couldn’t get it to start the game. We were slowing it and slowing it. Eventually, we couldn’t keep up.” Ten glorious years saw the Tiger Sharks win 179 games under Kumitsky. “We had 300 kids in the whole school,” he said. “It is 1-A now. We had a good mn. It was fun.” Now Kumitsky was ready to see what he could do at a larger school. He arrived at Orange Park High in Orange Park, FI., in 2014 and he’s been there ever since. “I love Port St. Joe; I’m still a St. Joe guy,” he said. “But it was time. I talked to my wife about moving to a bigger city like Jacksonville. St. Joe is small. I always wanted to take over a bad program and make it good. My family thought I was crazy. I said: ‘We’re going to go to Orange Park.’ They looked it up on maxpreps and my son was like: ‘What are we doing? They won eight games last year.’ I said; ‘Those are the best jobs to take. There’s only one way to go.’ I wanted to move up to a big school. Triple-A coaches want a shot in the big leagues. You want to see what it’s all about. We’re a 5-A school. We’ve got 1,600 kids in our school.” Right away, Kumitsky remade the Raiders from an also-ran to a contender, winning 14 games in Year One in 2014-15. They’ve enjoyed six winning seasons in six years under Kumitsky, including four straight play­ off appearances. “We turned it around right away,” he said. “In Year Three, we won the district tournament. In Year Four, we won the district tournament again.” The only downer: The New Pool & Spa Installation Cleaning • Chemicals Opening & Ctosing s Vinyl Liner Replacement - Tommy Horris/Owner - Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (336) 284-4817 , C«ll: (336) 909-4027 J there,” Crenshaw said. “So I was like: ‘Well, I might take a five iron because I just couldn’t get it there.’ So Tommy was like: ‘Here, just use my seven iron.”’ Landy’s suggestion pro­ vided lightning. “I kind of hit it on the toe and it was drawing in there,” Crenshaw said. “Tommy looked me dead in the eyes and kept saying it’s really good and that might be in the hole. It kept drawing but I didn’t think it would be as good as it was. I thought it Hz Merrifield visits with local players The Davie P4:13 11-under baseball team recently got a visit from major leaguer Whit Merrifield of Advance and the Kansas City Royals. The team members, from left: Jackson Nance, Carson Nichols, Jack Greer, Preston Young, Taylor Schenberger, Austin Samuels, Noah Potts, Chad Hardin, Kolby Long, Jason Riddle and Brody Willard. Derek Kumitsky got his first teaching job at Davie. Raiders have caught the wrath of the basketball gods the past four years in the first round. There have been devastating defeats. “We keep getting bounced in the first round,” he said. “We can’t catch a break in the playoffs. Three years ago, we got beat on an 80-footer. We tied it with three seconds left. They in- bounded and threw it in like a SportsCenter highlight. Last year we lost in over­ time. Four years in a row we’re in the playoffs and we have these heartbreakers. “But from where we started to now, it’s amazing. I tell the kids we’re knock­ ing on the door. When we bust that door down, we’re going to win a bunch of playoff games.” Over his 18-year mn as varsity coach at East Rowan, St. Joe and Orange Park, Kumitsky is 280-222, av­ eraging 15.6 wins per year, capturing nine district titles and advancing to six Sweet 16s, five quarterfinals and four semifinals. “I could have been like (Syracuse’s) Jim Boeheim and had 400 wins by now,” he said with a laugh. “But I think losses early in the season can be really good was short again. “We got in the golf carts and flew up there. Lo and behold, it was in the hole.” High as a kite, Crenshaw couldn’t come down enough to play the last hole, so they called it a round. The Davie junior has equaled his dad’s hole-in-one total; Charlie Crenshaw had one at Twin Cedars many years ago. “We skipped 18,” he said. “Tommy said we’re not playing 18. We’re going in (the clubhouse and take a photo). It was crazy.” * for you. It gets you remo­ tivated. I’ll play anybody. I don’t want to be undefeated. “I’ve got a really good gig. There’s good athletes here. I think I’m going to do this until I’m 65, so I’ve got 18 (more) years.” Derek and Kim have been married 15 years. They have three children and one grandchild. His seventh sea­ son at Orange Park is about to begin and Kumitsky can­ not wait. “We’re pretty damn tal­ ented,” he said. “We’re big. There will be times when the lineup will be 6-2, 6-3, 6-4, 6-5 and 6-6. That’s a big lineup for a high school team. My 6-3 point guard is getting Division-I looks.” But no matter how much success Kumitsky has the rest of the way, he’ll never forget his Davie days. “I liked St. Joe and I like Orange Park,” he said. “But Davie County was a fun place to coach and teach. I really enjoyed that place. I coached two hall of famers - Sean Stevens and Duane Phillips. Some of those times at Davie County were the most fun I’ve ever had coaching. I had a freaking blast.” Continued From Page BI like I can put her at any po­ sition on the front row. I’m trying to get her more com­ fortable in an outside role this year. She had to play more middle last year, but hopefully we’ll get her into more of that outside role. She’s also very coachable.” Steger needs others to blossom. She’s confident the freshman group will be sol­ id. Those 10 girls are Melia 1OO ... Continued From Page BI some balls away.” Although Brandon can envision a typical Davie season in terms of winning percentage, it will be a dif­ ferent kind of team. “This team is really tal­ ented in a different way,” she said. “The last couple of years we’ve had a lot of offensive firepower. This year I think we’re going to be really good defensively, and I think we’re going to frustrate teams and some good hitters. We just have to figure out this new style . We have to adjust the way that we’re playing based on our strengths as a team.” The War Eagles appear to have a lot - if not all - of the requisite parts to take MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL FALL IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today! Hwy. 60 I S.. Mocksville |336| 751 -2304 xx> Privett, Jordan Kistner, Hai­ ley Johnson, Macey Smith, Mikaylah Hutton, Sophia Brady, Reily York, Caroline Lakey, Taylor Smith and Lauren O’Connor. “Mikaylah is going to be either middle or right side,” she said. “She’s over 6-foot as well. I think she’s going to be a good hitter on front row. She'll hit outside, mid­ dle or right side. She’s very versatile as well. She seems first. They could also finish fourth. The CPC figures to be the crapshoot of all crap- shoots in 2020-21. “West Forsyth has a su­ per talented outside (Clara LaRue),” she said. “They Get the peace of mind that < with taking care of Funeral Arrangements in advance. By pre-planning you can select how you want things to be handled, lock in the cost, take advantage of payment options and relieve your family of making difficult decisions. Call Carol Lewallenfor a FREE Personal Planning Guide at 336-766-4714. Vogler & Sons Funeral Home 2849 Middlebrook Dt, Clemmons Scr^ng fVinstim-Satrm, Clanmons, and Surrounding Areas very passionate and wants to leam the game, so I think she’ll be a great addition. “Hailey is going to be our libero. She’s very talkative and I can definitely tell she loves to pass the ball. She is going to work hard on back row. “Caroline has been standing out. She’s probably going to play right side, and she’ll also pass for us some on the back row. have good ball-control piec­ es. East Forsyth has a really good outside who ha.s com­ mitted to play at Tennessee. I definitely think they’re going to be in the mix. I think Reagan is going to “Lauren is going to be one of our setters, so we’re definitely trying to get her into the role of communicat­ ing with everyone. (With M. Smith also playing setter), we’ll probably run a 6-2.” Then she added; “I see a lot of good potential in the 10 freshmen. Once we get them all in sync, com­ municating and working as a team, I think we’ll be successful.” be pretty young this year. They’ve got some really good young talent. “I think it could be any­ body’s game this year in the CPC. I don’t see anybody going 10-0. It’s a tossup.” ComeSeeOur NEW LOOK!®r. RiverA^ Dental Tip cfthe ^eeK “Allow toddlers to sip water from sippy cups between meals, but save juice and millc primarily for meal times.” Andrew J. Rivers DMD FAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY 118 Hospital St. • Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-6289 "Serving Children & ■fidulti" Accepting Most Major Insurances Riversfamilydentistry.com Whe: 1 yo'■ ne^d ‘ choose a ^’edic:^ e • u m n co '^e: ■ Talking it through, helping you choose, getting answers, finding resources—human care. Call a licensed independent sales agent for a free consultation* TINA BROWN-WEST 336-753-1033 (TTY: 711) Monday - Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 5 p.m. tina@>gojohnsonins.com gojohnsoninsurance.com JOHNSOr Y0040 GHHHXDDEN 21 C "No obligation lo enroll. B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 County Line Sheffield-Calahaln Church planning drive-through nativity Poplar Springs open houses scheduled for early December By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondent The Thanksgiving hol­ idays will soon be here; however, many church fel­ lowship dinners have been canceled. Many folks will again celebrate with a tra­ ditional Thanksgiving din­ ner, but perhaps there will be fewer family members at the table this year since medical professionals rec­ ommend to avoid traveling and facts show family gath­ erings are a virus spreader. Sadly, there are many families are having diffi­ cult financial times and may not have a bountiful dinner. This year the Baptist Men of Society did not have their annual dinner-auction fund­ raiser for Thanksgiving-din­ ner groceries for families of need in our area. However, they are collecting monetary donations to buy the grocer­ ies. Perhaps you have plenty "Seruirig County Since 1973" • Brakes • Tires • Batteries • Alignments • Scheduled Maintenance • Complete and Professional Auto Repair lAUTOMOTIVE 336-751-3372 " 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 FEATURE OF THE WEEK 690 Salisbury Street, Mocksville, NC Lovingly cared for home built in 1948 In downtown Mod^lle. Spacious home with 1564 sf, split bedrooms plan, large laundry room, all appliances remain, stacked 2 car garage with front & back gara^ doors, natural gas furnace with central air, paved drive & outbuilding. Hardwood flooring under carpet, some arched doorways, fireplace & original glass paneled doors between the living & dining room add a touch of yesteryear to your next home. Schedule Your Appointment Today! $148,000UNDER CONTRACT HOWARD REALTY 330 S. Salisbury SL, Mocksville • 336-751-3538 JH51______To view all our current listings visit us at; nMej ifTSi www.howardrealty.com. and would like to help some family less fortunate. If so, please call Johnny Nantz on 704-929-8199 or Gene Tut­ terow on 336-408-0405. Our local churches have these service schedules this week, but please contact the church for any updates weather may require: • Calvary Baptist, no ser­ vices until Sunday, Nov. 29; • Clarksbury United Methodist, outdoor Sunday worship at 10 a.m. and in­ door special "Book of John" Bible study at 7 p.m. Thurs­ day, both with masks and social distancing; • Piney Grove AME Zion, indoor Sunday school at lO a.m. and worship at 11 a.m.; • Pleasant View Baptist, regular indoor services Sun­ day and Wednesday; • Salem United Method­ ist, indoor Sunday worship at 9:30 a.m. with social dis­ tancing and masks in the sanctuary; and • Society Baptist, indoor Sunday worship at 11 a.m. with message by Gene Tut­ terow in fellowship hall, Wednesday night prayer and Bible service at 7 in sanctuary, no Sunday night service. Upcoming community events include a live "Christ­ mas Nativity" drive-thru from 6-8 p.m. Dec. 1 1-12 at Clarksbury United Method­ ist Church. Our community sends congratulations to Jennifer West and Zachary "Zack" Wallace, who were mar­ ried Saturday, Oct. 3 at The Barn of Cranberry Creek in Boonville. Jennifer is the daughter of Terry and Shirley Koontz West and granddaughter of the late Roy and Clara Sain West and the late Roy and Nancy Cartner Koontz, all of Ridge Road. Zachary is the son of Stephen and Vickie Wallace of Harmony. The couple is making their home on Pow­ ell Bridge Road in Harmo­ ny. We also send congratu­ lations to Toby Sellers and Eva Hicks, who were mar­ ried last Saturday afternoon at Calvary Baptist Church in Statesville. Toby is the son of Robin and Glen Sellers of Vaughn Mill Road and grandson of Lucille Hous­ ton Beck and the late Tom Beck of Stroud Road. Eva is the daughter of Thoma.s Hicks of Harmony and the late Leslie Hicks. The cou­ ple will make their home on Vaughn Mill Road af­ ter a honeymoon to Pigeon Forge, Tenn. Our community extends its deepest sympathy to the family of Ann Faires Cartner, who died Thurs­ day morning of last week at Wilkesboro Health and Habitation. She had been in declining health the past few years. One of two chil­ dren, she was bom in 1932 to the late Clyde Allison and Della Beatty Faires in Clo­ ver, S.C. She and her hus­ band William Lonnie "Bill" Cartner, whom she married in 1965, made their home on the Cartner family farm on Old Mocksville Road near Vaughn Mill Road. The couple then joined in worship at Society Baptist Church; where she was a dedicated member, Sunday school teacher, and mem­ ber of the Young-at-Heart as long a.s her health permit­ ted. She was retired from Schneider Mills after more than sixty years of service. An avid reader, she also en­ joyed sending greeting cards to friend.s and spending time with her family. A grave­ side service celebrating her life was held last Monday afternoon at Society Bap­ tist Church Cemetery; she was laid to rest beside her beloved husband Bill, who died August 1991. We send get-well wish­ es to Melanie West Walker, who was hospitalized for a few weeks with an infection and has been recuperating at home since last week. Kevin Stroud remains at Wake Forest Baptist Medi­ cal Center. Clark Young has been recuperating at home since Tuesday of last week; he continues to be treated for heart rhythm problems. Faye Stroud continues to rest at home while under treatment for cancer. Join U.S in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessings upon Melanie, Kevin, Clark, Faye, and oth­ er residents who are having health problems. Pray for the Lord's comfort and sup­ port upon the family of Ann. Please especially remember Melanie and her family in prayer; her husband Ste­ phen "Steve" died at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Cen­ ter on November 8, the day after Melanie came home from the hospital, and a graveside service was held last Saturday. Continue to pray for the many familie.s in our area affected by the coronaviru.s. Being unable to be with loved ones as they are dying is difficult and sad. We are I By Brenda Bailey Sheffield-Calahaln Correspondent Birthday wishes to: Bri­ an Williams and Bradley Beck on Nov. 20; Debbie FYevette on Nov. 24; Jason Swisher and Amanda Keller on Nov. 25; and Wade Reeves and Olivia Wooten on Nov. 26. The follow­ ing couples are celebrating their anniversary this week: Roger and Judy Daniels and Allen and Barbara French on Nov. 22 and Tommy and Barbara Gobble on Nov. 25. If you would like a birthday or anniversary listed, please do not hesitate to contact me. Chester Reeves thanks everyone for coming out to his quilt show and sale on Saturday. A special thank you to Robin Snow and Mike Bamhardt for the won­ derful article in the newspa­ per. Due to their coverage, the sale was a huge success. Again, many thank.s to ev­ eryone. If you were unable to attend last week, another show may be scheduled the first Saturday in December. Watch this column for more details. Vauda Elli.s is planning to have the annual Christ- ma.s Open House at Poplar Springs School on Satur­ days, Dec. 5 and 12. More details in upcoming col­ umns. Sheffield-Calahaln VFD meetings are held each Monday night at the station at 7. If interested in becom­ ing a volunteer firefighter or would like to join the auxil­ iary, feel free to come to the meetings or see any member of the department. We look forward to having more community involvement. Everyone is welcome. Liberty Wesleyan Church is holding worship services is each Sunday at lO a.m. and Bible Study at 10 a.m. each Saturday. You can also hear the message each week on Facebook. The church is at 2106 Sheffield Road, Harmony. Upcoming events are Liberty: "Hanging of the Greens" on Sunday, Nov. 29 at 10 a.m.; and on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m., "The True Light" John 1:9 Children's Christ­ mas celebration will be held as an outside service. Bring a chair or stay in your car to enjoy the program. Refresh­ ments will be served. On Sunday, Dec. 20 following the 10 a.m. worship ser­ vice, there will be “An Elf Surprise” for the children. On Dec. 24 from 5-7 p.m., “Silent Communion” will be observed, a time of guid­ ed reflection, prayer and communion. Everyone is welcome to join us for these events and services. Ijames Baptist Church will continue to hold outside worship services on Sunday at 10 a.m. Bring a lawn chair or remain in your ve­ hicle. Everyone is welcome to join us for worship with Pastor Robert Jackson each Sunday morning. The Rev. Keith Ledford and Community Covenant Church, 1446 Sheffield Road, invites you for wor­ ship service each Sunday morning at 10:45. Kid’s Power Hour at New Union UMC is at 6:30 p.m. and the Youth Group will meet at 6 p.m. each Wednesday outside. Join for an evening of fun, fel­ lowship and learning more about Jesus through scrip­ ture , storie.s and song. New Union’s Sunday morning worship services will be held each week at lO a.m. Wearing of facial masks will be greatly appre­ ciated. You can also view the services on Facebook. Everyone is welcome. Wesley Chapel UMC is selling TerriLynn pecans, cashews, black walnuts, and more. To place an or­ der or for more information, please contact Kathy Ellis at 336-830-5123 or you may contact me via my phone number, email or Facebook. You can also order nut.s from their website; hups:/! wesley-chapel-umc .ter ri­ lynn .com. Prayer requests contin­ ue for Bryan Swain, Jean Reavis, Lori Dyson, John­ ny Naylor, Dot Keller, Pat Moore, Deborah Nich­ ols, Sylvia Ratledge Wil­ liams, Wellman Beck, Hazel Smoot, Tim Keller, Junior Dunn, Betty Damer­ on, Tammy Keller, Naomi Wooten, Jeff Potts, Charle.s England, Greta England, Lincoln Dyson, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Ted Adams, Jane Tutterow, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Bob Ellis, Car- en Morgan, Melissa Spry, Wade Reeves, Helen Bul­ la, Joann Renegar, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Greg Gob­ ble, Betty Richardson, Fred Beck, Larry Dyson and Su­ zonne Stratton. Our sincere condolences to the Stephen Walker family. Please submit all news to brfhailey@msn.com. mes­ sage me on Facebook or call me at 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thursdays. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19,2020 - B7 Secure your savings. Lock in your rate today. CDs are a great way to save for your long-term goals. Our financial experts are ready to help you open a CD today. Whether it’s in a branch or online, we’re here for you. 11-Month CD or IRA CD Special 0.70% 24-Month CD or IRA CD Special 0.7 O %^^ <> BankOZK Open an account at ozk.com or one of our local branches.** •Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of the publication date. Offer applies to new CDs only $1,000 minimum deposit is required to open CD and to earn stated APY. Penalty for early withdrawal. IRA CD IS subject to eligibility requirements. Offer not available to brokers, dealers and other financial institutions. Fees could reduce earnings Offer subject to change wrthout irotice Offer good in Davie County, NC only. ■•|RA CD must be opened in person and cannot be opened online MEMBER FDIC ^RiDGESTOnE Davie Center for Violence Prevention continues to serve our community during the COVID-1 9 crisis, e«?C©«»©^ visit LexingtonhlC.cam SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 22ND 1:00 - 6:00 PM FALL INTO SA VINCS GET UP TO A INSTANT SA ViNCS Crisis intervention • Advocacy • Resources • Education • Support If you need help, call our 24/Z Hotline: -751 -HELP (435Z) Check off youj: holiday shopping list in Lexington, NC! Marketing Solutions for YOUR business Newspapers • Special Sections OurDavie.com • Digital Marketing Business Card Directory induding: SEO, SEM, Targeted Marketing, Soda! and Reputation Management, Website Design, AND MORE. For more information contact us at: 1 71 S. MAIN STREET • MOCKSVILLE, NC (336) 751-2120 CONFIDENTIAL 'a31f!IKI. OFFER VALID NOVEMBER 2 - 30. 2020 Eligible. Tires; Orr^eGuard, Dueler H/L Alenza, Dueler H,.; Alenza Plus, Dueler A-T REVO 3. Dueler H/L 422 Eedph, Ecopia EP422 Plus. Ecopia H/L 422 Plus Pe'^nza RE930AS. Turanza QuietT'ack. ChampiOP. Wirh Fuel Fighter TeCinology. DcslinaliOi LE2, Destination LE3. Destination A72. Destination X/T. and Fitehawk AS. Receive S60 oft 4 eligible Br dgestor c or Firestone tires purchasi-d Oeiween November 2 and November 30. 2020. Participating reiailers only Nr-.t crimbiiiah'.. ■.vitli other offprs. Void vmere prohibited. OliW restrictions, fees, and taxes may apply. Discoust gi-.-si; at '-'T,.; 4 inu.cjase and is on pretax amount. See e-ore associate tor details Receive the $120 savings wnen ynij make a Qualifying L're puiTtrase with any eligible CFNA credit raid accounL CFNA credo card subjer?.’ to credit approval. BERiTH TIRE & AUTOMOTIVE MOCKSVILLE 132 Interstate Drive Mocksville, NC 27028 ■ (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 Sat. 7:30 - 12:30 MockBerothTire.com U LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! ‘bs'-'dAVIE county enterprise record, Thui-sday, Nov’ 19, 2020 The (K) Clues Are for Kids Crested by Timothy E. Par1<er November 23, 2020 Jonathan Jarrett earns The Citadel ring 1. (K) Talk casually to a friend 4. Sound of a heavy blow 8. Leaning Tower city 12. (K) Easy number to add 13. (K) People mover 14. “There’s___ day coming ...” (2 words) 15. (K) Had chili 16. “Want___ a secret?” (2 words) 17. (K) Night spectacle up high 18. (K) Shopping memos 20. Domination 22. (K) “___time for breakfast!” 24. Thick rug variety 25. Exaggerate verbally 29. (K) Operated, as a forklift 32. (K) Green citrus fruit 33. (K) What a tree ring indicates 34. (K) Win a boxing match dramatically 35. (K) Apply paint with light strokes 36. Swam with a tube 38. (K) Was in debt 40. Japanese money 41. (K) Let go, as a dog from a restraint 44. (K) Hot bread? 48. Half of an argument 49. Bouncy 51. (K) Underwater eggs 52. Squeezed (out), as a living 53. Rough, hard seed covering 54. (K) Thing on the side of your face 55. (K) Say, “I didn’t do it” 56. Any huge reference book 57. (K) Kind of wrestling DOWN 1. (K) Hockey score 2. (K) Voting no on, or not pro 3. (K) Insects that hover near flowers 4. (K) Belts wrap around them 5. Attila was one 6. Minuscule particle 7. Where a monk lives 8. (K) Elbow macaroni, for example 9. Absolutely necessary 10. Add a brand to, on a ranch 11. Anagram of “wary” 19. (K) It can just roll along 21. “___sells seashells ...” 23. Doesn’t draw in poker (2 words) 25. (K) Like MacDonald with a farm 26. Through, in itineraries 27. Encourage mightily Jonathan Jarrett of Mocksville, has joined the thousands of alumni who wear The Citadel ring. The seniors of the Class of 2021 were celebrated Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? Catch lazy flies? Look for the answer in next week's paper. PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER RiI EiniE ElBHin EBnn HSBESB BBCCBCCn BBBB BBBBB HBMBBBB BEB HBBC HBBCBBECB iSiSBa BBBC iQBB IHEEB EBB EBBBEBBBB laBBB BBB BBBB B EEEIBBB B BBBB B B BBBB BI Previous riddle answer: Time left? 1O-D) Emit O 2020 Andrews McMeel Syndication, syndication.andrewsmcmeel.com Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices No. 1137911 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXECU- TORS for the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpora tions having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 02/17/2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. To­ day’s date 11/12/2020. GARY KIS­ ER. 1500 PHIFER ROAD, KINGS MOUNTAIN. NC 28086 AND Ml CHAEL KISER. 930 WOODLAND DRIVE. SHELBY. NC 28150, as CO-EXECUTORS of the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, de­ ceased, File #20E289. Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 Public Sale Dates DECEMBER 4. 2020 at 12:00 Noon 124 Eaton Road. Mocksville (336) 751-2483 Publish 11/19 28. Before the present time 30. (K) “Yes!” in a vote 31. (K) “Yes” gesture 34. Casino game with a caller 36. (K) Thing typically bigger than a lake 37. (K) Thing that whistles 39. (K) Like an untended garden 41. (K) Like something you cannot call new 42. Tennis shoe company 43. (K) Any puppy rescuer 45. (K) “Candied apples ___ treat” (2 words) 46. Do some ballooning 47. (K) Senator’s time in office 50. (K) Outer part of a mug Public Notices with a traditional Ring Pre­ sentation Ceremony on Fri­ day, Sept. 25. Attendance was restrict­ ed to only ring-eligible se­ niors due to the need for so­ SUDOKU cial distancing to reduce the spread of COVID-19, but the event included the same traditions that recipients an­ ticipated for this important milestone. 9 2 8 1 8 7 1 8 3 2 4 1 5 9 1 8 6 3 2 7 9 3 4 Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you’ll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Level: Intermediate Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! 8 p 1.s Z e 2 6 9 Z 6 2 8 1-9 V 9 e s 9 e 2 6 t’z 8 I. 9 1.6 t’S z e 2 8 e Z 8 1-9 2 9 P 6 2 s k e 8 6 U 9 z 6 e s 9 t?1-8 Z 2 1-8 9 z 2 S 6 e ■V V 2 Z 6 C 8 9 u 9 :U3yWSNV Public Notices Public Notices DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 - B9 Farm City Week Local Extension holding video series, food drive No. 1143866 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORETHE MOCKSVILLE TOWN BOARD FOR THE FOLLOWING ORDINANCE AND ZONING AMENDMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO THE REQUIRE MENTS of Chapter 160A-364 of the General Statutes of North Carolina and pursuant to Section 8-3.9.7 of the Mocksville Zoning Ordinance, that the Town Board of Commissioners will hold a PUB Lie HEARING at the Mocksville Town Hall located at 171 S Clem ent Street. Mocksville. NC at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, December 1, 2020 to hear the following items: Zoning Map Amendment. The Board will review a request by CVB Partners to rezone ap­ proximately 17.858 acres from OSR Open Space Residential to GI General Industrial. The subject property is located at the end of Eaton Road and is further described as a portion of Davie County Tax Parcel J50000003207. All parties and interested citizens shall have an opportunity to be heard in favor of or in opposition to the foregoing changes. Prior to the hearing, all persons inter­ ested may obtain any additional information on the proposal by visiting the Development Services Department. 298 E Depot Street. Mocksville. N.C. between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336) 753-6050. Publish 11/19, 11/26 No. 1143060 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep resentative of the Estate of NAN­ CY ELIZABETH SMITH HOWELL, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify ali persons having claims against said estate to present them To the undersigned on or before the 19th day of February, 2021, said date being at least three months from the date of first publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All per­ sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This is the 19 day of November, 2020, the same being the first publication date. Ronald Dean Howell, Personal Representative Estate of NANCY ELIZABETH SMITH HOWELL GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Es­ tate 161 South Main Street Mocksville. North Carolina 27028 Telephone: (336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/19, 11/26, 12/03, 12/10 No. 1139038 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep resentative of the Estate of PAUL DAVID “COOTER” CORRELL, 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 17th day of February. 2021, said date being at least three months from the date of first publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All per­ sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This 12th day of November. 2020, the same being the first publica­ tion date. Elaine C. Correll, Personal Rep­ resentative Estate of PAUL DAVID “COOTER” CORRELL GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866. Attorney for the Estate 161 South Main Street Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 Telephone:(336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/12, 11/19. 11/26, 12/03 No. 1143565 NOTICE Public Sale: Mocksville Mini Stor­ age intends to sell the contents of the following units In an attempt to collect unpaid rent and expenses: 189 MATTHEW DAVIS 259 KENDRICK MELTON 409 CONRAD MURPHY 439 WESLEY SHOAF 83 SCARLET WITHERSPOON Household Items NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED No. 1137126 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of ANITA MERLE JOHNSON.(a/k/a ONITA MERLE JOHNSON) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5, 2021 (being three [3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov., 2020. Rojetta McBride C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLP Brian F. Williams, Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/05. 11/12, 11/19, 11/26 f No. 1139042 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of SAR­ AH BOGER JONES, deceased, late of Davie County. North Caroli­ na, this is to notify all persons hav­ ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of Feb­ ruary, 2021, said date being at least three 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. This 12tn day of November, 2020. the same being the first publica tion date. Sarah J Whitaker, Personal Representative Estate of SARAH BOGER JONES GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Estate 161 South Main Street Mocksville. North Carolina 27028 Telephone: (336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/12/20, 11/19/20, 11/26/20. 12/03/20 No. 1139640 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXEC UTORS for the Estate of FLORA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY; aka. FLORA SMITH HOCKADAY. late of Davie County. NC. this is to notify all persons, firms and cor­ porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRUARY 17. 2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their re­ covery. All persons, firms and cor­ porations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. Today’s date 11/12/2020. RICHARD D. HOCKADAY. 500 HILLCREST DRIVE. ADVANCE. NC 27006 and DEBORAH Y. CASS. 139 ELLIS LANE, AD­ VANCE, NC 27006. as CO-EX- ECUTORS of the Estate of FLO­ RA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY. deceased. File #20E349. Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1129280 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Bsrneice Arnold (aka Berneice Bertha Arnold. Bernice Arnold), deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor­ porations having claims against he estate of said deceased to exhibit them to Mr. Bret Russell Cogan, Executor, c/o George A. ^rip" Payne. Esq., Kasper & Payne. P.A., P.O. Box 687, 3626 Clemmons Road. Clemmons. NC 27012, on or before the 5th day of February, 2021, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov­ ery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 28th day of October, 2020 Bret Russell Cogan. Executor Attorney George A. “Trip” Payne Kasper & Payne, P.A. RO. Box 687 3626 Clemmons Road. Clemmons, NC 27012 Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12. 11/19 ill! Ill fill Till 11T WITHTHE UTOPFR No. 1143263 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as the Limit ed Personal Representative of the Estate of Esther Evelyn Gadberry, late of Davie County, this is to no­ tify all persons, firms and corpo­ rations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before Feb­ ruary 19. 2021 (being three [3] months from the first day of pub­ lication of this notice) or this no­ tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Es­ tate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Carolyn Sales Sloan, Limited Per­ sonal Representative c/o Henry P. Van Hoy. II, Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 11/19, 11/26. 12/03. 12/10 No. 1130711 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of WADE SHERMAN BURNS, late of Davie County, this Is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before January 29. 2021 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 21ST day of October. 2020. Jon Scott Woodring, Executor c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II. Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 No. 1130253 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of DAVID WAYNE COTHRAN, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before January 29. 2(521 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 20th day of Oct., 2020. Jason Wayne Cothran. Executor c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II. Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12, 11/19 No. 1139579 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson Deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19, 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO, PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Win­ ston-Salem. NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 Public Notices No. 1131044 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec utrix of the Estate of WALLACE WAYNE REYNOLDS late of Da vie County, this is to notify at persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the un dersigned on or before January Obituaries James Francis Coffey James Francis Coffey, 37, of Winston Salem, died un­ expectedly Nov. 14, 2020 at home with his best friend, his twin at his side. Bom June 10, 1983 in Catskill, N.Y., he was prede­ ceased by his parents Michael and Ruth Coffey, by his older sister, Lynn Johnson, and his niece, Alexa Coffey. Survivors; his twin brother John of the home; brothers, Bri­ an Coffey of Advance, Michael Coffey of Albany, N.Y., and Jo­ seph (Kate) Coffey of Albany; sisters, Christine of Advance, Marie (Tim) Hippert of Win­ ston-Salem, Nina (Bryon) Fing- ar of Gamer; nieces and neph­ ews, his pride and joy, Jacob, Jessica, Jennifer and Joseph Johnson of Advance, Lillian, Benjamin and Nicholas Fing- ar, Lucas Coffey and his great-nephew Mason Johnson. A graduate of Empire State College, he was vice pres­ ident of client affairs at Wells Fargo. Although he had no children of his own, he was instmmental in raising his nieces and nephews after his sister’s passing. He was gen­ erous to family, friends and coworkers. He was a Yankee fan, loved his fantasy football and sadly he loved the Mi­ ami Dolphins. Memorials: C Coffey, 212 N. Forke Dr., Advance. A visitation will be held Thursday, Nov. 19 from 6-8 p.m. at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville. A Mass of Christian burial will be held at 10 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 20 at St. Frances Assissi Catholic Church in Mocksville. Burial followed at Rose Cemetery. The Rev. Father Erik Kowalski will be officiating. Condolences: www.daviefuneralser\ice.com. Anna Ruth Whitlock Davis Mrs. Anna Ruth Whitlock Davis, 95, died Friday, Nov. 13, 2020 at Kate B. Reynolds Hospice Home in Win­ ston-Salem. She was bom May 1, 1925, in Davie County to the late John Anderson and Hailey C. Myers Whitlock. Mrs. Davis was a member of First United Meth­ odist Church for 73 years and was a member of the Mary Cir­ cle and the Fellowship Sunday school class. She was a gradu­ ate of Cooleemee High School, Class of 1944, and attended nursing school. Mrs. Davis was a registered nurse and started her career at Autumn Care of Mocksville and retired from the office of Dr. Earl Welch Jr. in Winston-Salem. She was a member of the Clemmons Chapter 373 Order of the Eastern Star. Mrs. Davis enjoyed playing golf, and had a stroke of luck, once, she hit a hole in one. She especially loved working in her flowers, but especially loved being a Nana to her grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She was also preceded in death by her foster parents. Cap and Emily Gullett; husband, Robert “Bob” Davis; sis­ ters, Ruby Jones, Helen Hester, Blanche Vestal, and Janice Edwards; a half-sister, Dora Sheets; half-brothers, Melvin Whitlock and Luther Holder; and fiance, Vernon Dull. Survivors: a half-brother, Stacey Brown; nephew. Bill Davis (Sandra); niece, Judy Paige (Jack); godchildren, Steven Hinson and Joy Hinson; stefxlaughter, Tina Gob­ ble (Brent); granddaughter, Brittany Bost (Eric); grandson, Alex Gobble (Kathryn); great-grandson. Banks Eli Gob­ ble; great-granddaughter (7 days old), Brennan McKinley Bost; several nieces and nephews; and special four-legged friend. Belle. A graveside service will be conducted at 2 p.m., Thurs­ day, Nov. 19 at Rose Cemetery with Dr. Glenn L. Myers Jr. officiating. Be mindful of social distancing and wear a face covering. The family invites friends to come by Lambert Funeral Home, Wednesday, Nov. 18, from 9 a.m.-6 p.m., to pay respects. Memorials : Kate B. Reynolds Hospice House, 101 Hospice Lane, Winston-Salem, 27103. Condolences: wwwAambertfuneralhomenc.com. By Coleen Church Cooperative Extension, Davie Director Since 1955, the Unit­ ed States has recognized National Farm-City Week to celebrate and honor the importance of farmers, ranchers and agriculture to our country. The US is fortunate to have a safe and abundant food supply. Farm-City Week recognizes the contributions that farmers make to rural and urban communities providing the food, fiber and fuel that we all depend on every day. N.C. Cooperative Exten­ sion, Davie County Center, will kick off a virtual Farm-City Week Celebra­ tion on Nov. 22, releasing a video series devoted to local farms and agriculture. To leam more about how to connect with and support local farms in Davie Coun­ ty, visit Extension’s Local Farms page at davie x:es. ncsu.edu. To celebrate Farm-City Week and to leam more about farm.s and agriculture in Davie County and NC, visit the Extension website and go to the Farm-City Week page starting on Nov. 22. Videos will be avail­ able from local farmers, Davie High School’s Future Farmers of America, N.C. Commissioner of Ag­ riculture, President of N.C. Farm Bureau, professional speaker and author, Jolene Brown, and Dean Linton and Rich Bonanno from NC State and NC State Extension. The Extension Center is also sponsoring a food drive from Nov. 16-Dec. 11 to benefit local food pantries. A collection box will be located outside the front door of the Extension Center for no-contact drop- offs. The Extension Center is also open Monday-Fri­ day, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. for large donations and is at 180 S. Main St. in downtown Mocksville, beside the courthouse. Ring the door­ bell for assistance. The office will be closed Nov. 26-27 for Thanksgiving. Non-perishable food items needed for donation include: canned fruits (in juice, water or light syrup), vegetables (low sodi­ um), soup (low sodium), tomatoes and tomato sauce; applesauce (unsweetened); raisins; fmit cups; dried or canned beans (low sodium); canned tuna, salmon or chicken; peanut butter; dry, evaporated or shelf-stable milk (low fat); brown rice; whole wheat pasta: whole grain crackers and cereals, such as oat­ meal, grits, raisin bran, etc. and high fiber, low sugar granola bars. For questions or more information, contact Cooperative Extension at 336.753.6100, or visit davie .ces .ncsu .ed\x. Grand Jury issues indictments No. 1139048 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Public Admin istrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry Deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay ment. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 pleaded in bar of their recovery. Al persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 29th day of October. 2020 Cynthia Reynolds Booe C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 10/29. 11/05, 11/12, 11/19 No. 1141367 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator. CTA or the Estate of Helen Beau­ fort Murphy. Deceased, late of Da­ vie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. Ali persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Aoministrator. CTA of the Estate of Helen Beaufort Murphy SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem, NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1136160 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec­ utrix of the Estate of Bb I IY S. BROOKS.(a/k/a BETTY L. SMITH) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5. 2021 (being three fSJ months from the first day bhcation of this notice), orof pub this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov.. 2020. Ginger P. Bennett C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 Publish 11/05. 11/12, 11/19, 11/26 No. 1141365 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu tor of the Estate of TOMMY RA\ MENIUS late of Davie County this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ ten claim to the undersigned on o before February 12. 2(521 (beinc three [3J months from the first da^ of publication of this notice), o this notice will be pleaded In bar o their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to saic estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020. Neil R. Menius C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26. 12/03 No. 1140573 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTOF for the Estate of BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify al persons, firms and corporarions having claims against the saic decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRU ARY 17; 2020. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Al persons, firms and corporations inc^bted lo said estate are notl fied to make immediate payment Todayjs date 11/12/2020. TAMM't L. MYERS. 1445 COUNTY HOME ROAD. MOCKSVILLE. NC 27028 EXECUTOR of the Estate o BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT deceased. File #2020E354 Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1131559 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTRl> for the Estate of HAZEL COBLE GARWOOD, late of Davie County NC, this is to notify all persons firms and corporations havinc claims against tne said decederV to exhibit them to the undersiqnec on or before FEBUARY 3. 2021 This notice will be pleaded ir bar of their recovery. All persons firms and corporations indebtec to said estate are notified to make immediate p^ment. Today’s date 10/29/2020. SUSAN G. SIDDEN 148 WARWICKE PLACE AD NC 27006. as EXECU TRIX of the Estate of HAZEL CO Publish 10/29, 11/05. 11/12. 11/19 » . The following were in­ dicted by a Davie County Grand Jury Nov. 16. Crandon Hairston, abuse of disabled/elder adult. - Leonard Roy Dean Holland, 2 counts each pos­ session with intent to sell/ deliver cocaine and selling cocaine. - Isiah Ki Jana Huffin, 2 Deadlines early for next week The Enterprise Record will publish a day early next week, meaning local sub­ scribers should receive their copy in the mail on Wednes­ day, Nov. 25. The deadline for all news and advertising for this is­ sue will be at noon on Fri­ day, Nov. 20. Health fair blood drive this Friday A blood drive will be part of the Davie County Cham­ ber of Commerce Health Fair from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 20. All donors will receive; a free OneBlood fleece blan­ ket, a $10 gift card, and a wellness checkup including COVID-19 antibody test, blood pressure, tempera­ ture, iron count, pulse and cholesterol screening. Lunch will be provided from 11:30 a.m.- 1 p.m. To make an appointment, visit www.oneblood.org/do- nate-now and use sponsor code #62822. counts assault with a deadly weapon on government of­ ficer, fleeing to elude arrest with vehicle. - Ryan Daniel Jordan, aid and abet breaking/entering a vehicle. - Robert Owen Martz, 6 counts each taking indecent liberties with a child and statutory sex offense with a child by an adult. - Robert Tyler Minor, possession of methamphet­ amine. - Erikc Kacy Schnelle, 3 counts second degree exploitation of a minor, lO counts third degree ex­ ploitation of a minor. - Janice Shelton Smith, obtaining property by false pretense, uttering forged in­ strument. - Tabitha Denise Whit­ man, possession with intent to sell/deliver methamphet­ amine, possession of drug paraphernalia. District Court The following cases were disposed of during the Oct. 29 session of Davie Dis­ trict Court. Presiding: Judge Carlton Terry. Prosecuting: Pearce Dougan, assistant DA. - Sharon B. Antemann, resisting public officer, mis­ demeanor probation viola­ tion, dismissed, complied with deferred prosecution. Kreshaun T. Davis, littering gameland/access area, target shooting on game lands, dismissed in the interest of justice. - Christopher Kincaid, domestic violence protec­ tive order violation, sen­ tenced to 75 days, suspend­ ed 12 months, enroll in abuser treatment program, do not assault/threaten/ha- rass victim, cost, $280 attor­ ney fee; assault on a female, attempted breaking/entering a building, possession of stolen goods/property, two count.s driving while license revoked not DWI, operating vehicle with no insurance, driving/allowing vehicle to be driven with no reg­ istration, reckless driving, fictitious/altered title/regis­ tration, fxissession of drug paraphernalia, dismissed per plea. - Aaron Isaiah Martin, littering gameland/access area, target shooting on gamclands, dismissed in the interest of justice. Aidan Paul Payne, DWI, .sentenced to 60 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse assessment, surrender li­ cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, do not have any new offenses, $300 lab fee, $1OO, cost; driving after consuming under age 21, reckless driving, dismissed per plea. - Jason Wayne Petereson, misdemeanor larceny, dis­ missed in the interest of jus­ tice. ^LAMBERT I I \ E K \I. H <) M E * CRCMUION SERVICE • Davie County Family owned and operated by Carl & Kim Lambert • Serving Davie County and Surrounding Communities for over 30 years • Prearranged Funerals and Preplanning options available • Cremation Services In your rime of need, ir ts more tmporrjnr than ever ro be wirh rrusred funeral professtonais who are also your fnends and neighbors. Please feet free ro srop by and see our newly refurbished factHries and have any guesrtons answered wirh regard ro our services. F I \ LAMBERT H \ 635 Wilkesboro St. Mocksville. NC H O M E (336)751-1100 www.lambertfuneralhomenc.eom ?l Mb BIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 THE LAW OFFICES OF RYAN B. ADDISON. P.A. vvvvw .TttornevaclcJison.com Personal Service for Your Persona! Needs »Futy Insured • Tree Work & Tree Removal »Trimming & Thinning • Free Estimates • Stump Grinding • Bucket Truck Service 336-936-9067 (336) 909-0609 (336) 909-0610 Scotty Soafonf Jack Seaford Santa Shops In Davie You should too at these participating businesses Special Section, Pages B8-B14 Q-Ca %pp\f ^fiariisgiving Advance Family Dental Septic System installation & Repair OOUNTY Dr. Amy Li Dr. David Barabe 149 Yadkin Valley Rd., Ste 101 Advance, NC 27006 336-998-1076 www.Advar»cefamilydentist-com c • New Septic Systems Installed • Repairs to Existing Systems • Licensed & Insured ’ Servic”- (336) 940-7397 shadyknollseptic <gyahoo.com /lllstate. You're in good hands. Drew Ridenhour 852 US Hwy.64 W, Ste. 101, Mocksville 336-751-0669 ast ttw burden upon Lord, and he shall Shoaf Concrete Co. T 1 ENTERPRI/BMRECORD USPS 149-160 Bkxk Sand COn^xmy Sane^ Onavat A Landacepa fl^atofiait *rs«no» rsar’ Residential & Commercial Mari A Cittdy Shotrf, Owners 7:M4:30 • Saturday 8:00-3:00 PICK UP OR DELIVERY 14S Yi. CliMitmmffle RmwI • Wimtoo-Sakm. NC wwwJitecksaiKicoxom the Lord! and he shall sustain thee: he shall never suffer the righteous to be moved. (Psalm 55:22) (336) 788-6411 COLLETTE .\rt & Framing, Inc. I2(» VilLige I3rive \l.K k>\ ille. NC 27()2S I SMt-751 -2296 ('.in.iil: t ‘olleitd runjinu''" DAVIE ^2=1 NURSING & REHABIUTAnON CENTER 498 Madison Rd. | Mocksville, NC 336-751-3535 inquire today about our NEW StSte**Of'*B%*-ai’tfocitlCy that will o*Fer ShortnWm Rehab. Respite & Private Pav Suites. saberhealtti.com Ipath This scripture message brought to you by these businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. GENTLE Machine & Tool inc.SS LAMBERT -S i; n \ I.II i> M i: 140 N". Clement St., Mocksville. NC (336) 751-5820 2716 Hwy. 601 North Mocksville, NC 27028 336-492-5055 635 Wilkesboro St. Mocksville, NC (336)751-1100 wwwJambertfuneralhomenccom SssPalletOne www.palletone.com 165 Turkey Foot Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-492-5565 Mocksville, NC 336-7S1-1989 Mon-Fri 6:3Oam — 3:3Opm Shores Plumbing & Heating Richard Shores - Owner 1485 N. Main SL, Mocksville, NC (336)751-5653 SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL Call today for Heating OH Delivery! Call Today hr Delivery 284"2551 Mojor Brand liras. Computer Boloncing, Abgnnwdts, Propane Tank RafiUs, N.C Safety tnspedioRS. Oil Changes, Minor Automotive Repairs, Bralis a wznoMmzj 5240 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 336-998-8139 1X.VnJa3e.Sunp!o-w. Number 48 Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 28 PAGES Davie is experiencing critical spread of virus By Mike Barnhardt Enterprise Record Antiques, Collectibles, and Repurposed 121 N. MAIN ST., MOCKSVILLE. NC 27028 336-753-8700 Hours; Wed SThurs ll-B. Fri 11-7. Sat 1CF4 Mindy Snyder, Luca lacopi and Megan Sweede hold up some of Dewey Bakery’s famous sugar cake, being sold now at the Davie County High School Band store in front of Lowe’s off Yadkinville Road in Mocksville. For more information, please turn to page 4. - Photo by Robin Snow Eaton Funeral Service HAYWORTH-MILLER PIINER.'XL HOME 108 East Kintlcrton Way Advance, NC 27006 LaVida^ massage 325 North Main St., MocksviUe, NC 27028 (336)751-2148 www.eatonluneralservice.com 336.940.5555 60-Minute Custom Massage Session or Signature Facial PAR KWAY OF LEXINGTON i w \\ w.havwrirlh-millcr.coni CALL OR BOOK ONLINE LaVida Massage or Clemmons LaVidaMassaecCIcmmonsNC com 336 766.0622 | OKf I UIHCOLN 336-'243-2731 www.myford.tv 98 NcwHwy64^^, Lexir^ton MR* Tbw 4S State*Wildlife Inspection, Removal and/or Exclusion! Farmington Road Wrocker Sonrlco. Inc. 721 Wilkesboro St, Mocksville, NC (ecnjes from MOer^ naetaurenti a* Hour Sorvtce 7 tteyo A Week Wto Acoefrt Moat Mafor Credit Cards 330-753-1485 KEMOVAL FPL Snok*^Bats-tecmn-Satiimh- GrawnAoa$-*ouM<H- Siumkslat-CayotM-llret-MoiM-OpMHxn- AND MOKfl CrawispMe (i 336-9404209 HebitM Marfiiicstlon Servinfl C«o*rai *WMttn Ne^ * SOW*! 8 Ctrnbi Sm«h heritagewildliferemoval.com Keiinetli L. Foster & Associates, PA • I mid Sun-eyors • Planners - Mapping 336-723-8850 FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 495 Valley Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2141 Prescription Call tn: 336-753-DRUG PULLERmsistt Precision Laser Cutting & Metal Fabrication 3301 Salisbury Hwy., Statesville, NC (704) 872-3148 lilshavers.com Mon-Fri 730 - 530 & Sat 730 - 3XK) PhilCai* Automotive & Tire Toot Full Sorke Vehicle Uainlaiaiice Cater ^NO NE3nO5BHn.~ieT “Philcar for your ear." ’ 1628 Hwy. 601 S. • 751-1800 beaide Laltewood Molei • Mocksville 10% OFF www.veniziaadvance.com 5273 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 27006 ^H^336-940-6787 •OeSLJREIbCEbJTERSO' -..A, 41 8 PIEDMONT DRIVE LEXINGTON, NC S7235 336-249-2591 11 JERRY’S MEAT PROCESSING We Custom Meat Process Beef — Pork - Deer 40 years experience 892 Ralph Ratledge Rd * Mocksville 336-492-5496 (c.,336-782-8617 1441 Deadmon Road Mocksville 24 Hours Roadside Rollback Service Small, Medium & Heavy Duty Towing Joseph Crotts, Owner 336-998-2693 - Office 336-940-7256 - Mobile on'Poindexter Lumber David Bone one new county manager David Bone will be the new Davie County manager, start­ ing on Dec. 21. County commissioners made the decision on Nov. 18. Bone serves as county man­ ager in Martin County, (pop. 22,671), a position he has held since 2011. Bone has served 18 years as a local government manager, having also served as the town manager in Wendell, Elizabethtown and Chadbourn. Developmental Associates was contracted to help the county recruit and screen ap­ plicants based on attributes desired by the commissioners. Board members interviewed several finalists and unani­ mously chose Bone. “We are excited to have Da­ vid Bone as the Davie County Manager,” said Terry Renegar, board chair. “David’s unique experience will enable him to lead Davie County into the fu­ ture while respecting our rural heritage.” “I am delighted, humbled and honored to have this op­ portunity to serve such a won­ derful , vibrant community,” Bone said. “1 look forward to working with the county com­ missioners, staff and commu­ nity partners, who are focused on building an even brighter future for Davie County.” David Bone earned a bache­ lor’s degree from UNC-Chap- el Hill and a master’s degree in public Administration from N.C. Central University in Durham. He is also a gradu­ ate of the UNC-CH School of Government’s Municipal Administration Course and its Public Executive Leadership Code Red. It’s not a designation Davie County wants, but as Gov. Roy Cooper rolled out new ways of pinpointing where COVID-19 hotspots are across North Car­ olina, Davie was identified as one with critical community spread of the virus. From Monday to Friday of last week, Davie went from 164 to 238 COVID-positive residents. One more resident died. The number in the hospi­ tal decreased from six to one. Davie had a 12.2 percent positivity rate, meaning that percentage of resident.s who had been tested came back positive. Over IO percent puts a county in Code Red. Davie's 539 case rate per KXJ.OOO pop­ ulation also put it as one of 10 counties designated Code Red. "Join us in doing whatever you can ■ to reduce the spread in our community,” Interim County Manager Robin West said in an email, referring most Please See Code Red - Page 5 Davie’s COVID Numbers Nov. 20 Report Total cases Recovered Active cases 1,144 890 238 (1 in hospitaf) Please See Bone - Page 5 Deaths 16 Sheila Mays BrofcerZREALTOR*/BIC/CNS/SPS 336-240-1858 336-448-4149 Sh»OoOMoy»Glt>aon.com H’e are pleased to serve you in Clemmons Idols Road, Clemmons (336) 766-6481 (STONgMnCT^gJRECT|Unm) PEIJVEMV KVKn.MBT.F Open Mon.-Sat. Sam - 8pm 336-492-5979 1819 US Hwy. 64 W., Mocksville (MO ext 168 Hath SUt d HO beaicto Carttf MeraM Cturii) Sparks family shellshocked, vulnerable and scared By Dvright Sparks For the Enterprise Eats — Drinks — Spirits 6:235 Towncenter Dr. Clemmons 336-766-7045 Mon.-TTiur. liam-lam Fri. & Sat. 11 am-2 am: Sun Noon-lam OSBORNES TIRE & AUTOMOTIVE RANDY MILLER &SONS SEPTIC TANK SERVICE 295 Miller Road • MocksviUe State (336) 284-2826 Certified We Pump Septic Tanks inspector Whitnee's New & used variety Store 998Yadkinville Rd., Mocksville (Borido MocfcnriSe Tin d Automodro) trnn^ Oe&i:Mtsn5iM.Thdr.rTi lOam-Spm Evory Other Sac 9-30am-2JOpm (CLOS^iWod A Sun) (336) 753-1388 FAMILY & COSMETIC DENTISTRY Andrew J. Rivers DMD 118 Hospital St. - Mocksville; NC 27028 336-75T-6289 “Serving Children St Adults“ Acc^-vnuG Most Major Insurances Riversfamilydentistry.com (336) 751-2220 YORK’S SERVICE STATION Tires 980 Salisbury Rd. Mocksville. NC 27028 336-751-3712 www.fullerwelding.com ' Road • Mocksville1083 Salisbur (Appx. 1/4 mite i (336) 753-8090 jry F e tram Davie High Schoo!) 24 Hour Towtng Brakes • OH Changes • Owner. Aaron York 184 N. Salisbury SL MocksviUe, NC She had approved a draft of her obituary, selected hymns and Scripture for the funeral and doled out keepsakes to friends and family. In physical decline at age 95 and diag­ nosed with congestive heart failure, Madeleine Sparks figured she didn’t have long. Then COVID-19 slipped inside her Farmington home. Her breathing became labored. She developed a cough and had no energy or appetite. In the Forsyth Medical Center emergency room, a nurse plunged a cotton swab deep into her nose. The results, “positive.” “Isn’t that a fine how- Two painful, isolated, hacking weeks later, she became one of the 200,(XX) across America claimed by the scourge. The long-time Davie County High School chemistry teacher, mother of six, grand­ mother and great-grandmother died in a Hospice House in Dobson last week. The close-knit family landscape altered tragically during her ordeal. A son and daughter-in-law, John Edwin and Carol W. Sparks, died of the virus three days apart. Two other children tested positive. Another was hospitalized. Daily, the virus attacked from a new direction, leaving us shellshocked, vulnerable and scared — our unsuspecting family a sudden hotspot of the dy-do!” she said. “I guess this could take me out of here.”Please Se^ Sparks - Page 3 Madeleine Sparks and Edwin and Carol Sparks dJed after contracting the COVID virus. 2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 Editorial Pa^e DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 - 3 Socially acJept Dolley Madison most famous First Lady Trump’s 2019 In The Mail I hsnksgiving Agree to disagree without being disagreeable proclamation On Thanksgiving Day, we remember with rever­ ence and gratitude the bountiful blessings afforded to us by our Creator, and we recommit to sharing in a spirit of thanksgiving and generosity with our friends, neighbors, and families. Nearly four centuries ago, determined individuals with a hopeful vision of a more prosperous life and an abundance of opportunities made a pilgrimage to a distant land. These Pilgrims embarked on their journey across the Atlantic at great personal risk, fac­ ing unforeseen trials and tribulations, and unforetold hardships during their passage. After their arrival in the New World, a harsh and deadly winter took the lives of nearly half their population. Those who sur­ vived remained unwavering in their faith and fore­ sight of a future rich with liberty and freedom, en­ during every impediment as they established one of our Nation’s first settlements. Through God’s divine providence, a meaningful relationship was forged with the Wampanoag Tribe, and through their unwav­ ering resolve and resilience, the Pilgrims enjoyed a bountiful harvest the following year. The celebration of this harvest lasted 3 days and saw Pilgrims and Wampanoag seated together at the table of friendship and unity. That first Thanksgiving provided an endur­ ing symbol of gratitude that is uniquely sewn into the fabric of our American spirit. More than 150 years later, it was in this same spirit of unity that President George Washington declared a National Day of Thanksgiving following the Revolu­ tionary War and the ratification of our Constitution. Less than a century later, that hard-won unity came under duress as the United States was engaged in a civil war that threatened the very existence of our Re­ public. Following the Battle of Gettysburg in 18^, in an effort to unite the country and acknowledge “the gracious gifts of the Most High God,” President Abra­ ham Lincoln asked the American people to come to­ gether and “set apart and observe the last Thursday of November next as a Day of Thanksgiving and Prtiise to our beneficent Father who dwelled in the heavens.” Today, this tradition continues with millions of Amer­ icans gathering each year to give their thanks for the same blessings of liberty for which so many brave patriots have laid down their lives to defend during the Revolutionary War and in the years since. Since the first settlers to call our country home landed on American shores, we have always been de­ fined by our resilience and propensity to show grati­ tude even in the face of great adversity, always re­ membering the blessings we have been given in spite of the hardships we endure. This Thanksgiving, we pause and acknowledge those who will have empty seats at their table. We ask God to watch over our ser­ vice members, especially those whose selfless com­ mitment to serving our country and defending our sacred liberty has called them to duty overseas during the holiday season. We also pray for our law enforce­ ment officials and first responders as they carry out their duties to protect and serve our communities. As a Nation, we owe a debt of gratitude to both those who take an oath to safeguard us and our way of life as well as to their families, and we salute them for their immeasurable sacrifices. As we gather today with those we hold dear, let us give thanks to Almighty God for the many blessings we enjoy. United together as one people, in gratitude for the freedoms and prosperity that thrive across our land, we acknowledge God as the source of all good gifts. We ask Him for protection and wisdom and for opportunities this Thanksgiving to share with oth­ ers some measure of what we have so providentially received. - President Donald J. Trump, November 2019 To the editor: Today, we concluded the canvass of Davie County fi­ nalizing the vote count for the 2020 elections. There is a mandated recount scheduled for Nov. 20 due to close down-ballot races. Over 82 percent of registered voters participated in the election creating a high watermark not seen in recent years. On behalf of the Davie County Election Office and Board of Elections, we wish to thank the many volunteers who worked the polls. Without your effort, elections can­ not function. Your cheerful, tireless and open attitude was well noted on social media. You received many compli­ ments on what a pleasant experience it was to vote. I wish to thank the partisan poll and absentee ballot counting observers who diligently monitored the vote pro­ cess, ensuring a fair and free election. I want to thank the voters of Davie County who turned out in huge numbers. Numerous people voted who have not in years. We had a great turnout in first-time voters. Your patience, determination and good nature made for a smooth trouble-free election. We were voting on new ma­ chines that printed a reviewable paper ballot and the re­ sponse to them was terrific. We are so fortunate to live in an area where community spirit runs high. Finally, as in any election, there were winners and los­ ers. We live in a polarized time. I have a personal request: I urge you, when feelings are not so sensitive, to reach out to those friends and family who may not agree with you and start a dialog. Start with common subjects of agree­ ment and remember we can agree to disagree without be­ ing disagreeable. Remember, there are two things that bind us together: the love of our country and the golden rule, the root of all spirituality. We are all in this together. Be well residents of Davie County. We will see you again in future elections. Gary A. Le Blanc, Davie County Board of Elections Be like Joe: positive words comforting To the editor: I want to initiate a new campaign this holiday season called “Be Like Joe.” There’s a gentleman in town who uses positive dialogue to make folks feel good — and I was a blessed recipient. The hard-working employee of Food Lion on Valley Road, Joe Morehead, works at the grocery two days a week and maintains a second job at Dunlop Tire. Joe was clean­ ing a shopping buggy when I walked into the store. He finished wiping down the cart with disinfectant right before I reached for the handle. “Good Morning and thank you,” I greeted him. “Good Morning,” he replied. “When you woke up this morning, I hope someone told you how beautiful you look.” Now, what woman wouldn’t love to begin her day hear­ ing those words? The greeting was downright comforting to a gal who just recently celebrated another birthday — and getting older. In a world that’s consumed by worry, panic, fear-mon- gering, and divisiveness, this holiday season, folks desper­ ately need to hear more tidings of comfort and joy. Instead of participating in the too frequent doom and gloom discussions, can we be more like Joe and channel our words to spread more optimism and cheerfulness? Can we self-discipline ourselves to be more mindful of words and use them graciously to benefit others? Can we redirect negative conversations and, instead, use our voice to uplift and bring joy to other people? Can we remain a calming, steady, and gentle force for family and firiends, creating and sharing new ideas that al­ low us to have the best holiday season ever? Can we use simple, beautiful words that bring smiles to the faces of others? Can we be more like Joe? Stephanie Dean Mocksville The Literary Corner Renegade Writers Guild By Betty Etchison West Cana/Pino Correspondent One of most famous First Ladies of our country was bom in North Carolina. Dolley Payne Madison was bom in Guilford Coun­ ty in 1768. The family then moved to a plantation in Virginia where Dolly grew, up. Her father, a Quaker, decided he should free his slaves. After the slaves were freed, he moved his family to Philadelphia, Pa. The business that Dol­ ly’s father started there was not successful so her mother opened a boarding house. Dolley worked at the boarding house. The attractive Dolley married a young lawyer when she was 21. She and her husband, John Todd, Jr. had two children. Dolley’s husband and one of their babies died in a yellow fe­ ver epidemic three years after they were married. After her husband’s death, Dolley continued to work at the boarding house. She was a pretty lady who had a pleasing personality. After a bit, Dolley be­ gan to attract the attention of many suitors, a number of whom were involved in governmental business because at that time Phila­ delphia was the capital city. One of the young men who sought Dolley’s attention was James Madison. Mr. Madison was shorter than Dolley and was intro­ verted which was quite the opfxjsite of the outgoing, charming young widow. In spite of their differenc­ es, Mr. Madison became the winner in the quest to gain Dolley’s attention. The book. First Ladies, by Margaret Brown Klapthor, quotes Dolley as saying. “our hearts understand each other.” That understanding was evidently the key be­ cause James Madison and Dolley Payne were married in 1794. After her second mar­ riage, Dolley put away the somber clothes that she wore when she was a Quak­ er, and she began to wear the beautiful clothes that she may have always se­ cretly admired. She became a style-setter, with a turban being the signature part of most of her outfits. The capital of the United States of America moved from Philadelphia to New York and then to the place which wa.s designed to be the capital city, Washing­ ton, D.C. The Madisons moved as the center of government moved. They were living in Washington in 1801 when Thomas Jef­ ferson became President, Mr. Jefferson chose James Madison, who had been involved in governmental affairs as his Secretary of State. Mr. Jefferson, who was a widower, needed a hostess for the social affairs which had been established during the administrations of Presidents Washington and Jefferson. He asked Mrs. Madison to serve in that role since she was al­ ready known as an out­ standing hostess. Dolley gladly filled that role and is said to have helped with the planning and the execution of the social obligations. Mr. Jefferson’s daughter also filled that role when she lived at the President’s House for several months. After Mr. Jefferson had served a.s President for eight years, James Madison was elected President. Mr. Madison seemed a logical choice to fill the role be- cause of his heavy involve­ ment in government from its beginning. He is cred­ ited with writing much of the Constitution. He, how­ ever, said that others were involved. Anyway, James Madison and his wife, Dol­ ley, moved into the Presi­ dent’s House in 1809. Mrs. Madison wa.s so socially adapt that she was destined to become a successful First Lady. The North Caroli­ na-born lady was a won­ derful hostess, who knew how to make each guest feel welcome and import­ ant. The one part of Dolley Madison that is sometimes overlooked is the fact that she was astute politically. She knew that it would be valuable to her husband’.s administration for politi­ cians to get together in a social non-threatening sit­ uation where they could get acquainted and chat with each other. She real­ ized that people who real­ ly knew each other were a bit more likely to coop­ erate with each other. She also knew that deals were made and agreements were sometimes reached in the unthreatening climate of a social gathering. In oth­ er words, Dolley Madison was smart and her pleasing personality helped smooth the way for her husband who felt uneasy in large so­ cial gatherings. Dolley is probably best known for her action during the War of 1812 when she had to flee from the President’s House. The British continued to cause trouble at sea concerning the ships of the United States. Finally, the United States declared war against the British. The war did not go well for the Americans, and, by 1814, the British were near Washington. The President rode out on his horse to see what was happening. Dolley spent the day at the President’s House preparing for a din­ ner party that night, but she was worried about her hus­ band and would go to the highest part of the house to look out to see if she could see him returning. People around her were alarmed about the report.s that were coming in, and they tried to get Dolley to flee. She said that she would not leave until Mr. Madison returned. Late in the afternoon, a messenger arrived with a message from the President that said that Dolley should leave immediately because he knew that the British would like nothing better than to capture his wife. Mr. Madison said that he would meet her in Virginia. Dolley listened that time, had as many valuables as she could get together load­ ed into a wagon, and fled. Among the valuables was a famous portrait of George Washington and the Decla­ ration of Independence. The British did march into the nation’,s capital and to the President’s House — no President’s wife, but they did sit down at the ta­ ble that Dolley had set for her guests and devoured the freshly prepared meal. They then went outside; lighted torches, threw them in through the windows, and set the house on fire. The whole interior of the house was destroyed be­ fore a rain storm came and put the fire out — leaving only the blackened outside walls. Even though they did much damage in Wash­ ington, the British were fi­ nally defeated. Dolley Madison was perhaps the most famous First Lady in American history. When James Madison and his wife came back to the city, they took up res­ idence in another house. Once again Dolley enter­ tained as she had always done, a charming hostess who still dressed in the lat­ est fashion. The Madisons were never able to return to the President’s House which was finally repaired but not before Mr. Madison’s term in office ended. It was only after the President’s House was repaired, and the blackened outside walls were painted white that house was called the White House. After his term as Presi­ dent ended, the Madisons went back to their planta­ tion in Orange County, Va., which is called Montpelier. Dolley continued to enter­ tain guests who would ar­ rive at their door, and Mr. Madison busied himself with reading and writing. The sad part of the Mad­ ison story is that of the son of Dolley and her first husband. The son, Payne, was given to riotous living, gambling, etc. Mr. Madison through all the years paid his debts, etc. without let­ ting Dolley know about it because he did not want to worry her. That resulted in big financial trouble. After Mr. Madison died, Montpelier had to be sold to pay the debts. Dolley Madison moved back to Washington where she was accepted into Washington society even though she was almost penniless. Her friends helped her in unob­ trusive ways, and she main­ tained her exalted status. She lived there until her death in 1849. Dolley Madison was/is one of the best known and most honored First Ladies of the Land. DAVIE COUMTY ENTERPRIfEltECORD USPS 149-160 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Salisbury Newsmedia LLC Robin Snow.........................................General Manager Mike Barnhardt...................................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow.......................................Advertising Director Brian Pitts.............................................Sports Editor Mocksville Enterprise Davie Record Cooleemee Journal 1916-1958 1899-1958 1901-1971 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028 Subscription Rates Single Copy, 75 Cents $32.03 Per Year In Davie County POSTMASTER Send Address Changes to: Davie County Enterprise Record P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 * Acceptance By Linda H. Barnette More than 25 years ago, a friend at church who was a speech therapist at Baptist Hospital, suggested to me that I had symptoms of a voice disorder. Although I had no idea what was going on, I noticed that more and more often my voice slipfjed from a regular sound to just a whisper. I was pleased to find out that it might be something that could be cured. Thus began a long journey that lasted over 20 years. At Baptist I was diagnosed with Spasmodic Abductor Dys- phonia, a movement disorder which essentially meant that my vocal cords did not work correctly and made normal speech impossible. Even though there was no known cure, the usual approach of giving the patient a passable voice was the process of injecting botulinum toxin, commonly known as Botox, into the vocal folds in order to try to re­ lieve the vocal spasms. For many years I got those injec­ tions every 3 months and had several episodes of concern­ ing side effects. During that time I had a working voice most of the time although it was generally weak. Eventually, I went to Duke weekly for voice/speech ther­ apy, which never really worked as I had hoped it would. However, I was willing to try all suggested therapies. The last injection that I had was in September of 2015. I will never forget that one because of the gallbladder attack I experienced on the way home! After 2 surgeries and an­ other cancer diagnosis, I decided to end both the injections and the therapy. Luckily, I had been able, with the help of many people, mainly my sweet students, to finish my 30 years of teaching. My decision to end the injections left me with only a whisper, so I could not have taught like that. At first it bothered me not to be able to spieak because I couldn’t talk on the phone, participate in discussion groups, order at a drive-thru or converse normally with friends and family and many other things. You can fill in the blanks. This was not an easy decision, but after hundreds of people asked me if I had laryngitis, I simply turned it over to God and went on with my life as best I could. That was the point of acceptance. However, I have continued with my life as always. I have discovered a real passion for writing in addition to my work as a genealogist. My friend.s and family are all kind and patient with me when we get together (pre- COVID). I learned to play the bells at FPC, and although not a great musician, have enjoyed doing that. Technology has enabled me to continue to communicate with people, and I love keeping up with folks on Facebook too. So, in thinking about my particular situation, I am reminded of my great-grandfather, WJF “Bill” Dwiggins, whose mantra was “God giveth and God taketh away.” Little did I know that I had inherited both his courage and his faith! Hawks By David R. Moore Their backyard was unusually quiet. No squirrels scam­ pering through the branches of trees or hunting for nuts along the ground. No flutters in the trees or birds visiting the feeders or the hanging suet. Then I heard a commotion coming from the woods on the side of the home. Blue Jays were making loud, continuous calls, and a chickadee joined in with its fussing. I spotted the Coojjer’s Hawk sit­ ting on a dead limb just eight feet from the ground. Sev­ eral Blue Jays bounced among nearby limbs making their ruckus. The hawk seemed disinterested while sitting on the branch. Hawks, with their hooked beaks, strong legs, and sharp talons are medium to large size raptors that are active dur­ ing daylight hours. With their excellent eye-sight, they for­ age on a variety of prey including birds, small mammals, fish, reptiles, insects, and amphibians. Most hunt alone but some will team up with others in apparent cooperation. The female of the species is larger than the male. Per­ haps the difference in size allows them to exploit food from different habitats for their brood, or a larger female may better defend her young from intruders. They build nests of sticks which they reuse for years. They also build alter­ nate nests in their territory and may switch nests occasion­ ally. Like many birds, hawks vacate their breeding range in winter and every autumn between August and December migrate south. Some migrate to more temperate areas of the United States but many migrate to Central American and South America. Unlike most birds, raptors migrate during the day, presumably taking advantage of wind con­ ditions and thermals that speed their travels. To monitor the health of the species, bird watchers per­ form Hawk Counts. Dedicated teams of hawk experts scan the skies for the raptors to perform the count. Various sites within North Carolina are used for the counting such as Mount Pisgah (Ashville), Grandfather Mountain (Lin­ ville), Hanging Rock, Pilot Mountain, Lower Creek School (Lenoir) and Seahawk Migration Station (Wilmington). From these yearly counts, generalities can be made about the timing of hawk migrations. Broad-winged Hawks travel through North Carolina mostly in September. Red­ shouldered Hawks, Cooper’s Hawks, and Sharp-shinned Hawks travel through in October, and the Red-tailed Hawks traveling through in October and November. The numbers counted are often in the thousands with Broad­ winged Hawks being the most plentiful. For the Fall of 2020, about 4,000 Broad-winged Hawks were counted at the Grandfather Mountain site and the Lower Creek School site counted over 7,000. During the migration period it is also possible to view other birds of prey such as Bald Ea­ gles and Peregrine Falcons. Please See Renegade - Page 9 Letters Welcome The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its read­ ers on topics of local, state, national or international is­ sues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. Letters should include the name and address of the writer and a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is requested. Have letters in the newspaper office no later than noon Monday of the week to be published. Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99,Mocksville, mikejbarnhardt®davie- enterprise.com. Sparks ... Continued From Page 1 invisible menace. Every child who vis­ ited Mama that weekend was at risk — five of six. The sixth, ironically, hadn’t come for fear of bringing a grandchild’s bug. I helped my invalid mother to bed the night before she was hospi­ talized. I watched her struggle to breathe. When the Davie County EMS unit and Farmington firefighters arrived to take her to the hospital the next morning, 1 jumped without hesitation to stay with my mother. The virus never crossed my mind. In the ER, I helped answer the usual battery of nurse questions. The virus test was a precau­ tion. The results were shocking. Hearing im­ paired. my mother didn’t understand the nurse. I had to loudly repeat the results. “This is awful,” one sister texted. Had I known the fates awaiting my brother and sister-in-law, I might have run from the room. Instead, I calculated this might be the last time I would see my mother. She would go into a lockdown ward at the hospital, no visitors, the chances of survival very slim. I stayed, taking solace in the national survival rates. Besides, I was already exposed. We spent eight hours waiting for a bed to open on the virus floor. Mama retold all the familiar family stories and said nice things about me. skipping over the sleep­ less nights I caused her in my salad days. “This is the day the Lord hath made. I will rejoice and be glad in it.” she quoted. I struggled to choke out Psalm 121, one of her favorites since her col­ lege days at Appalachian. Too soon, the room upstairs opened. The staff wheeled her away. “I’ll be all right.” she said. She was nursed by a hospital staff costumed like space aliens, garbed in protective plastic from head to foot. After 13 days of seclusion, fright, coughing and hacking and sickness, she emerged drastically weakened, moving to Dobson. There, two of us children could be with her. Weakly and halting­ ly, she recited the 23rd Psalm for my sister and urged us to memorize it too. That would be her final testimony. She lost her voice the next day. A day later, she slippied into eternity. Who can figure this virus? It violently attacked my brother and sister- in-law’s lungs. Their oxygen levels dropped rapidly and couldn’t be restored. They were gone two and three days after going into the hospital. By contrast, my younger sister and I have had only minor symptoms. I only tested because my wife and children insisted. From his deathbed, my brother pecked out a final text to us: ”... it’s been wonderful being your V. Carol, Madeleine and John Edwin Sparks brother and wearing the Sparks name.” We siblings groaned in a chorus of typed despair. We have been dis­ traught and unable to grieve together for risk of more contamination. Two weeks later, the storm of infection has abated. I’ve got a couple more days of quarantine remaining. At night, I stay upstairs in the children’s old bedrooms, Elizabeth puts my meals on the stairs. By day, 1 blow leaves from the lawn as if nothing is wrong. Physically, I’m fine. Emotionally, the family is a wreck. We buried my mother Saturday in a brief graveside service. I not wanting to put any- stood alone at a distance, one at risk. The prom­ ising new vaccine can t come soon enough. Healthcare for your entire family Family Care Center MocksvilleFamilyCare.com BMWa*ld.hI^fel* Code Red ... DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 20204 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 War Eagle Bands face masks are offered at the Dewey’s Store which will be open through Christmas Even. Megan Sweede shows some of the gift mugs available. Try some SillyCow from the Davie High Band. Sweets and more at the Dewey’s store Two sizes of Moravian stars are available. Mindy Snyder shows off cookie gift tins. By Mike Barnhardt Enterprise Record Luca lacopi with Davie High Band gear. Luca lacopi prefers those oatmeal sandwich cookies, the ones with two soft oat­ meal cookies with a sweet, sugary filling. Some people, however, prefer the sugar cake. But don’t forget the Moravian cookies - in flavors rang­ ing from traditional to lime, from walnut to spice. Dewey’s Bakery Holiday Store has opened off Yadk­ inville Road in Mocksville, in front of Lowe’s Home Improvement. And a por­ tion of all sales go to the Davie County High School Band program. The band raises some $20,000 annually on the project. “It helps us get better instruments and maintain those instruments,” said la­ copi, a senior French Hom player for the band. “It helps us to go places, buy uniforms.” Band Director Andrew Jimeson is doing a great job of keeping band members working, lacopi said. They have masks with mouth holes to play the instru­ ment. They play together via Zoom. They practice and submit their work to the teacher. “We’re trying our best to keep it as normal as pos­ sible,” lacopi said. But back to those oatmeal cookies. They bring back memories for lacopi. “They remind me of my great- aunt. Every time we would visit, she would have them for me.” Workers at the store are mostly parents of band members, and they volun­ teer. Mindy Snyder said the store is an important fund­ raiser for the band, in which her son. Jack Williams, plays basoon. In addition to the assort­ ment of sweets, the band is selling band gear such as hats and tshirts, sweatshirts and mugs. Face masks are also available. Order online and use the code FHS005 and the Davie band will receive a portion of the money. The store is open from 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Monday-Satur­ day and from noon-6 p.m. on Sundays. Continued From Page 1 infonnation to detailed rec­ ommendations from the state. Already, the Advance Christmas Parade and the Cooleemee Christmas Pa­ rade have been canceled. “After 25 years, this was a very hard decision to make,” said Advance Fire Chief Rodney Miller. His board of directors had met the night before after learn­ ing of the Code Red status. Mocksville had canceled its parade a few weeks ago. The N.C. Department of Health and Human Ser­ vices reported that Bermuda Commons in Advance had five residenLs with COVID, and Davie Nursing and Re­ hab in Mocksville had three staff members and three res­ idents with the virus. The state is using three codes, with Code Orange meaning substantial com- muanity spread and Code Yellow meaning signifi­ cant community spread. Dr. Mandy Cohen, secretary of the N.C. Department of Health and Human Ser­ vices, still recommends the three W’s for fieople in all code zones - wear a protec­ tive face covering, wash or sanitize your hands often, and wait six feet apart. Among the recommen­ dations for individuals in a Code Red county: • limit mixing between households and limit those in your social circle; • avoid settings where people congregate; • consider ordering take­ out from a restaurant instead of dining in, or eat outdoors socially distanced; • stay at home if at high risk for developing serious illness; and • reduce public interac­ tions to essential activities like going to work or school, caring for family members, buying food, getting health care or medications. Businesses and commu­ nity organizations are asked to do the following: • allow employees to work from home if possible, cancel any non-essential work travel; • promote the Find My Testing Place website to employees; • require all employees to participate in County on Me NC training; • manufacturing, con­ struction, food processing sites and farms are asked to consult with NCDHHS (919-707-5900) on reducing transmission; • community and reli­ gious organization.s should avoid in-person indoor meetings, events, worship services or other gatherings above the indoor mass gath­ ering limit (10). The state also listed things for public officials to do: • meet with state officials to discuss plans to mitigate the spread; • work with the state to expand availability of no- cost testing for residents; • work with the state to increase availability of non- Former teacher gets prison time for failing to comply with rules ^RIDGESTOHE We are /FALL INTO SA VINCS For the first time since she was charged with com­ mitting a sex act with a stu­ dent almost four years ago, former Davie High Eng­ lish teacher Jessica Welch Greene will serve active time. Greene, now 31, first ap­ peared in Davie Superior Court in September 2017, to answer to charges that she had an inappropriate rela­ tionship with a student. Greene was married and had a small child when the relationship took place. Grady McClamrock, her attorney during that court apfjearance, told the judge Greene was in an abusive relationship with her hus­ band and had postpartum depression after the birth of her daughter. She received three years probation and had to regis­ ter as a sex offender for 30 years. One of the conditions attached to the sex offender registry is that while she is allowed to be on social me­ dia, she must disclose to her probation officer all infor­ mation attached to her so­ cial media accounts, includ­ ing the name she uses on the accounts. She was also not supposed to be on premises with anyone under the age of 18. In 2018, Greene’s proba­ tion officer, Mandy Mur­ phy, learned Greene was dropping off and picking her daughter up at Advance Dance and that Greene had social media accounts she had not told Murphy about. In 2019, an investigation into her online activity re­ vealed at least 16 additional online accounts that Mur­ phy was not told about. In last week’s session of Superior Court, Assistant DA Rob Taylor told Judge Mark Klass that Greene had several social media ac­ counts using various aliases, and she was using the ac­ counts to “contact indi­ viduals but not juveniles or anyone under the age of 18. There was certainly promis- cuou.s activity on the social media accounts,” he said. He said Greene did not Bone ... CET UP TO A INSTANT SA VI NCS BRIDGESTONE FIRESTONE OFFER VALID NOVEMBER 2 ■ Eligible Tires; DriveGuard. Dueler H/L Alenza-. Dueler H/L Aleiiza Plus. Dueler A/T REVO 3. Dueler H/L 422 Ecopia. Ecopia EP422 Plus. Ecapia H/L 422.Plus, Polenza RE980AS. Turarva QiiieiTrack. Champiui. With Fuel Fighter Technoingy. Deslinatipn LE2, Deslinatibn LE3. Destination A/T2. Destination .XZT. and Firehawk AS. Receive $60 off 4 .■ eligible Bridgestone or Firestone tires purchased between Noveipber 2 and November 30. 2020. Participating retailers only. Not i.otnbinable with other ofiers. Void where prohibited. Other .rOstrictions, fees, and taxes may apply. Discount ■ ■ ' given at time of purchase and is bn pretax amount. See store associate for details. Receive the $120 savings when you make a qualifying lira purchase with any eligible CFNA credit card account. CFNA credit card subject to credit approval. BERBTH TIRE & AUTOMOTIVE MOCKSVILLE 132 Interstate Drive Mocksville, NC 27028 ■ (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 Sat. 7:30 - 12:30 MockBerotliTira.com 14 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! Davie Center for Violence Prevention continues to serve our community during the COVID-19 crisis. o’ SP’ Crisis intervention - Advocacy -tourcps • Education • Support If you need help, call our 24/7 Hotline: r 336-Z51 -HELP (4357) CONFIDENTIAL Continued From Page 1 Academy, as well as the NC Rural Center’s Rural Eco­ nomic Development Insti­ tute. Bone earned the Creden- tialed Manager Certification from the International City/ County Managers Associa­ tion in 2008. Bone has served on the NC 911 Board since 2015 and has served as chair of the Martin County Regional Water and Sewer Authority since 2012. He is active in his community in several organizations, including the Boy Scouts of America, Ro­ tary Club and Ruritan Club. Mr. Bone and his wife, Amy, have three sons. take seriously the require­ ments of the sex offender registry. “Ms. Murphy and I have had many, many long talks about this. Ms. Greene ha.s to abide by the same terms and conditions as everyone else. If she continues with this type of behavior, she’s going to go to jail for a very long time,” Taylor said. Greene’s attorney David Freedman told Klass that Greene ha.s had treatment at an inpatient facility, suffers from a “great deal of anxi­ ety” and is taking the matter “very seriously.” Because of Covid restrictions regard­ ing the number of people who could be present in the courtroom, Greene’s family was waiting outside for her case to be heard. On a charge of failure to register online identifiers, Klass sentenced Greene to 15 to 27 months in prison, suspended 24 months. She must have a mental health evaluation and was given credit for one day she spent in jail. On five additional similar charges, Greene was given the same sentence, each at the expiration of the previous one. On a felony probation violation charge, Greene re­ ceived an active sentence of 90 days. At the completion of the sentence, her proba­ tion will be terminated. Twelve counts of failure to register online identifiers were dismissed, as was one charge of a sex offender on child premises. congregate housing; • increase messaging on the risk of serious disease for older individuals and those with certain underly­ ing medical conditions and recommend those people stay at home; • adopt ordinances that allow for the use of civil penalties for enforcement of the state restrictions; • consider adopting local ordinances to end alcohol sales for onsite consump­ tion at an earlier time; • consider adopting local ordinances with additional restrictions for public facing businesses. “By pinpointing counties with high virus transmis­ sion and asking everyone in those counties to work with us and do more right now to slow the spread of the virus, we can succeed,” Gov. Coo­ per said. “It can help bring down the case rates, keep their communities safer, save lives and keep their hospital systems working.” “It’s going to take all of us working together to avoid tightening restric­ tions like so many states are now doing,” Cohen said. “The COVID-19 County Alert System gives North Carolinians an easy way to see how their county is do­ ing and know that they can do to protect their family and neighbors and slow the spread of thi.s virus.” s The Best that Heart and Hands Can Give' 70/ .Vort* St. 27292 339-229-2228 3881 OUi •iC 27187 338-778-3955 if.ml>8rtsfuneraLcom Caregiver, Very Caring You don’t have lo be alone Available Day or Night 1 Days a Week Housekeeping, Run Errands, Drs. Appts., Grocery Shopping and Cooking Meals Call: 336-648-0270 Need SometWndCome and CliecR Bs Out. sa»raax,oeoe _____ a. W'W'W .ourdavie .com Wlio is Erie Insurance? Erie Insurance is the company you can rely on to get you back to normal (f something bad happens. 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Salisbury St., Nlocksville 336-751-3538 wwvv.howardrealty.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov, 26, 2020 - 76 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 Public Records R eyes stormwater problems Marriages The following were is­ sued marriage licenses by the Davie County Regis­ ter of Deeds.- Mike Daniel Crider, 33, and Kimberly Ivelises Martinez, 33, both of High Point. - Jose German Segovia, 49, and Olga Lidia Hernan­ dez Canales, 45, of Mocks­ ville. - David Lee Potts, Jr., 40, and Kevin Dwaine Mead­ ows, 42,bothof Mocksville. - Nathaniel Moore, 48, and Jesus Minerva Llanes Pinto, 49, of Lexington. - Adeaxis Rodriguez Re- cendiz, 22, of Mocksville, and Milton Jovany Lorenzo Martinez, 27, of Durham. - Kendrick Sean Melton, 37, of Mocksville, and Ni­ cole Danielle Davis, 35, of Winston-Salem. - Anthony James Holew- inski, 24, and Lina Veltri, 34, of Harmony. - Allison Dariana Fon­ seca Lobo, 19, and Wil­ liam Eric Grant, 25, both of Mocksville. - John Thomas Cavel- lo, 81, and Janice Dimetra Ayers, 76, of Mocksville. - Cameron Ryan Play­ er, 20, and Kendra Dawn Brown, 22, of Mocksville. - Ronald Eugene Foster, 64, and Kathy Marie Hahne, 65, both of Mocksville. - Chad Waylon Hem- mings, 40, and Jordan Leigh Harmon, 28, of Mocksville. - Patrick Lee Spillman, 34, and Kayleigh Jane Mitchell, 25, of Mocksville. - Richard Dean Adams, 56, and Wanda Gale Stokes, 58, of Yadkinville. - John Edward Made­ ra, 28, and Brittany Nicole Keech, 27, of Mocksville. - Brenton Jayshon Lewis, 33, and Stacey Lynn Hayes, 35, of Mocksville. Land Transfers The following land transfers were hied with the Davie County Register of Deeds, listed by parties involved, location, acreage and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $ 1,000. Jennifer Rose Asbury and Joey Newton Asbury to Matthew Boger and Ashley Ledbetter, 1 lot, Ridgemont, Mocksville, $290. - Eastwood Construction Partners to Lester T. Palicte and Jeanettte Pagabangan, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Ber­ muda Run,$599. - Pamela W. Holcomb to Bryan Andrews and Steph­ anie Andrews, 1 lot, Pem- broooke Ridge, Bermuda Run,$370. - Timothy James Erb and Tiffany M. Erb, and Tara Lynn Erb to Rebecca Gre- gerson and Josh Gregerson, 5 acres, Farmington Town­ ship, $290. - Timmy Lee Hutchins to Jacob Ezekiel Reavis, 1 acre, Mocksville Township, $200. - Patrick Dylan Thomas and Laura Diane Thomas to Alexander Ansel, 1 lot, Creekwood, Farmington Township, $466. - Lou Ann Jenkins to Meghan Chessall and Moni­ ca Stone-Huggins, 9.6 acres, Calahaln Township, $260. - Kathryn Lumley and William Keith Lumley to Ricky McCann, 1 lot, Southwood Acres, Mocks­ ville, $330. - Eastwood Construction Partners to Grant H. Morine and Amanda Morine, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Bermuda Run,$690. - William G. Markland and Andrea S. Markland to Kevin Pratt, 3.43 acres. Pudding Ridge Road, $430. - Judell M. Chase and Dennis Lloyd Chase to Shannon Lovett, 1 lot, Ridgemont, Mocksville, $145. - Hoots Rabbit Farm Partnership to Torsten Ae- ugle and Pavla Aeugle-Fr- eye, 1 lot. Rabbit Farm, Ad­ vance, $200. - Kevin D, Jennings and Brooke R. Jennings to An­ drew David Regenthal and Lauren Ellen Regenthal, 1 lot, Deacon’s Ridge, Mocks­ ville Township, $670. - Goldie Camille Killian to Gary L. Killian Jr., 2 lots, Calahaln Township. - Piedmont News Co. to McPherson Builders, 1 lot, $65. - April J. Fulk to Mat­ thew Jordan Simons and Lisa G. Leak-Simmons, 1 lot, Kinderton Village, Ber­ muda Run,$670. - Hannah M. Huie and Christopher A. Walker to William Abel Seats, 1 lot. North Ridge, Mocksville, $328. - Ronald D. Campbell and as executor of estate of Loretta M. Campbell, and Yvette A. Campbell, William H. Lynch, Deiara L. Campbell, Damien L. Campbell, Curtis L. Camp­ bell, Sttefani J. Lynch, and Devon C. Rollinson to Af­ finity Logistics, .5 acre, Clarksville Township, $90. - Bradley Steven Wom- baugh and Shannon Adams Wombaugh to Ivan Dennis Adams and Marjorie Boles Adams, 1 lot, $25. - Vicki B. Shaw and Brian Kelly Shaw to Kate­ lyn Nuresa Rath, 1 tract, Mocksville, $294. - Clint Mack to Rita Mack, 1 tract, Fulton Town­ ship. - George T. Schroeder and Betty Sherrell Schro­ eder to Timothy M. Jackson and Hope S. Smith, 1 lot. Farmland Acres, Mocks­ ville Township, $996. - Peggy C. Harrison to Lester Lee Thompson and Judith Ann Thompson, 1 lot, Bermuda Run, $770. - David L. Fowler and Twana N. Fowler to Wil­ liam Sherrill Cranfill and Erica Nicole Cranfill, 2 lots, McAllister Park, Mocks­ ville Township, $837. - Jeffrey Dean Seaford and Donna J. Seaford to Hunckler Fabrication, 4.68 acres, Clarksville Town­ ship, $770. - Michael Zollie Rogers and Sandra S. Rogers to Michael Todd Harper and Amanda Harper, 1 lot. Rab­ bit Farm, Advance, $850. - Ronald J. Stroupe and Penny R. Stroupe to April J. Fulk, 1 tract, Mocksville Township, $530. Michelle V. Wing- ler and Arlie Joe Wingler to Gary Bialobrzeski and Marie Bialobrzeski, 1 lot. North Ridge, Mocksville, $340. - Stephanie Grant Red­ mon and Michael Redmon, Braxten F. Grant and Jas­ mine R. Grant, and Steph­ anie Grant Redmon and James H. Grant as executors of estate of Annie Ethel Dal­ ton Grant to Juan Rodriguez 1 tract, $220. - Terry L. Lawson and Kelly Lawson to Karen A. Bell and James Joseph Bell, 1 lot, Redland Way, $584. - David Harold Ander­ son and Gloria Wilson An­ derson to Gerald Davis and Karen Lachapple, 7.9 acres, Calahaln Township, $530. - Lighthouse Properties to Ronnie Dale Matthews Jr. and Sara Nicole Chandler, 3 lots, Mocksville Township, $270. - Windsor Investments to Terry L. Lawson and Kelly Lawson, 1 lot, Saddlebrook Drive, Advance, $680. - Madison Road Mocks­ ville to TST Properties, tract, Madison Road, Mocksville, $400. - Edward Ellis Jr. and Donna Marie Ellis to Leslie Sandra Thompson and Bar­ ry Thompson, 1 lot, Kinder­ ton Village, Bermuda Run, $520. - Mark T. Beeler and Su­ san E. Beeler to Yadkin Or­ ganics, tracts. Shady Grove Township, $2,400. - David Anthony Ar­ rington and Pamela A. Ar­ rington to Hazel Dyson Smoot, tracts. - Norman Harold Bo­ ger Jr. and Kathy Boger to Teresa Thomas Hurst and Thomas Coy Hurst, .75 acre, Mocksville Township, $270. - JKV Enterprises to Wil­ liam E. Rice Jr. and Dorothy H. Rice, 1 lot, Bermuda Vil­ lage, $300. - Jeremy K. Melton and Sandra K. Melton to John Thom and Bonnie Thom, 6 acres, Clarksville Town­ ship, $88. - Santford L. Brown and Margaret H. Brown to Wil­ liam Jason Brumley and Sybil Elaine Brumley, 75.59 acres, $1,450. - Troy Lee Spillman and Betty Jean Spillman to Kenneth Grant Davis Jr. and Brittany Y. Davis, 4.14 acres, Clarksville Township. Arrests The following were ar­ rested by the Davie Sher­ iff’s Department. Nov. 16: Britani Leann Charles, 23, of US 158, Mocksville, worthless check; Miguel Antonio Ronquillo, 55, of Clem­ mons, failure to appear in court; Khiry Dominque Wharton, 26, of Pineville Road, Mocksville, felony probation violation. Nov. 17: Jacob Lee At­ wood, 32, of Westview Ave., Cooleemee, larceny. Nov. 18: Julius Davis Isaacs, 35, of Daye Lane, Advance, failure to apply for new title; Cedric Jones, 52, of Granada Drive, Ad­ vance, assault on a female. Nov. 19: Joyce Marie Braithwhite, 50, of Duke St., Cooleemee, failure to disclose damage; Michael Dean Collier, 43, of Oak Tree Drive, Mock.sville, failure to appear in court; Tina Marie Craig, 34, of Comatzer Road, Mocks­ ville, non-support of child;- Joshua George Kuncher, 29, of Statesville, failure to ap­ pear in court; Crystal Renee Payne, 39, of Bright Leaf Lane, Mocksville, 2 counts cmelty to animals; Louise Alexander Sherrill, 66, of Junction Road, Mocksville, failure to appear in court. Nov. 20: Kathleen Jea­ nette Dillon, 55, of US 64 E., Mocksville, 4 counts cmelty to animals; Justin Shane Kelly, 24, of Thom­ asville, injury to property. Nov. 21: Anthony Leon Calhoun, 26, of Sunset Drive, Mocksville, driving while license revoked. Sheriff’s Dept. The following are from Davie County Sheriff’s De­ partment reports. Nov. 21: suspicious ac­ tivity, Manchester Lane, Mocksville; harassing phone calls, US 601 N., Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Oakland Ave., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, US 64 W., Mocksville; dis- turbane, NC 801 N., Ber­ muda Run; domestic dis­ turbance, S. Claybon Drive, Advance; larceny, US 601 N., Mocksville; trespass­ ing, US 601 S., Mocksville; burglary, Davie Academy Road, Mocksville; burglary, M&D Lane, Mocksville; disturbance. Liberty Church Road, Mocksville; fraud. River Road, Advance; tres­ passing, Michaels Road, Mocksville; larceny. Shady Lane, Advance; suspicious activity. Center St., Coolee­ mee; disturbance. Deck Cir­ cle, Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 64 E., Mocks­ ville. Nov. 20: burglary. Jack- son Drive, Advance; sus­ picious activity, Joe Road, Mocksville; domestic assist. Cedar Creek Road, Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Cooleemee. Nov. 19: domestic dis­ turbance, Cedar Creek Road, Mocksville; suspi­ cious activity, NC 801/US 64 E., Advance; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Cool­ eemee; domestic assist, Brockland Drive, Advance; disturbance, Joe Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Veach Road, Mocksville; illegal dumping, US 601 S., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Midway St., Cool­ eemee; disturbance, Wind­ sor Circle, Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; larceny, St. Matthews Road, Mocks­ ville; disturbance, Hillcrest Drive, Advance; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Mocks­ ville; larceny, NC 801 N., Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; damage to property, Daniel Road, Mocksville; fraud. Red Cedar Way, Mocksville; domestic dis­ turbance, Madison Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Duke St., Cooleemee. Nov. 18: suspicious ac­ tivity, St. Matthews Road, Mocksville; disturbance. Wall St., Mocksville; fraud. North Forke Drive, Ber­ muda Run; larceny, US 64 E., Advance; larceny, US 158, Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 STWatt St., Cooleemee; larceny, Golfview Drive, Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, Granada Drive, Advance. Nov. 17: harassing phone calls, Deadmon Road, Mocksville; trespass­ ing, NC 801 S., Coolee­ mee; suspicious activity, S. Madera Drive, Mocksville; disturbance, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; fraud, Duke St., Cooleemee; suspicious activity, Gladstone Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac­ tivity, Jack Booe Road, Mocksville; disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; bur­ glary, US 64 E., Advance. Nov, 16: suspicious ac­ tivity, Duke St., Cooleemee; suspicious activity, Dead­ mon Road, Mocksville; burglary. Medical Drive, Bermuda Run; burglary, Comatzer Road, Advance; domestic disturbance. Pine Valley Road, Mocksville; fraud, US 64 E., Mocks­ ville; fraud, Griffith Road, Advance; disturbance, Clark Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity. Liber­ ty Church Road, Yadkin­ ville; domestic disturbance, Granada Drive, Advance. Nov. IS: burglary. Watt St., Cooleemee; distur­ bance, US 601 S., Mocks­ ville; suspicious activity, Comatzer Road, Advance; suspicious activity. Grove St.. Cooleemee; distur­ bance, Gray Sheeks Road, Advance; harassing phone calls. Watt St., Cooleemee; illegal dumping. Cedar For­ est Lane, Mocksville; distur­ bance, Wall St., Mocksville; fight, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; burglary, Lat Whitaker Road, Mocksville; larceny, US 64 W., Mocksville; sus- piciou.s activity, Comatzer Road, Advance; domestic disturbance, Oakland Ave., Mocksville. Mocksville Police The following are from Mock.sville Police Depart­ ment reports. Coyte Puckett of Morning Glory Court was charged on Nov. 16 on a warrant. - Bailey Hollard was charged Nov. 18 with pos­ session of marijuana and possession of marijuana paraphernalia. - Robert Ridings was charged Nov. 20 on traffic violations and on a warrant. - Farren Hudson was charged Nov. 20 with pos­ session of heroin and pos­ session of drug parapherna­ lia. - Raymond Snow was charged Nov. 20 with DWI. - An attempted fraud wa.s repKjrted Nov. 16 on North Main Street. - The larceny of vehicle parts from off Interstate Drive was reported Nov. 16. By Jim Buice Enterprise Record BERMUDA RUN - Like most communities, this town finds itself taking a closer look at stormwater with the recent wave of heavy rains. And in this month’s town council meeting, the town addressed a need by approv­ ing a proposal from Gray Engineering, in association with Jewell, LJB, to pro­ vide stormwater mapping and analysis in the Phase I project area, which con­ sists of the original section of Bermuda Run Country Club served by a wastewa­ ter treatment plant specific to that area. The proposed fee and ex­ pense basis is for a total not to exceed $55,000, and the council also moved to allo­ cate those dollars from the fund balance of the Sewer Fund to the current 2020-21 Sewer Fund budget to pay for the analysis. Town Manager Lee Rol­ lins said the Utility Fund is to operate the small waste- water treatment plant at the Yadkin River that serves Bermuda Run Country Club, the Bermuda Run Club East and the Bing Crosby Bou­ levard area, which includes Bermuda Village and sever­ al subdivisions. Although those residents are served by Davie County Water, their sewer is served by the Town of Bermuda Run. So a utility bill is paid to Davie County and the county then reimburses the town for the sewer charge, which is used to operate the wastewater treatment plant — meaning that the Utility Fund for sewer is only paid for by the residents in those specific areas. “This is really a no-brain­ er,” councilman Mike Ernst said. “Doing this study is extremely important.” Mayor Rick Cross agreed that this is not a solution but a meaningful first step. He added that stormwater has to be viewed as a strategic imperative, and he praised Rollins for developing the town’s stormwater policy more than 10 years ago. “I think this has turned out very well for our town,” Cross said. “Stormwater is critical to the development, to the growth and to the sta­ bility of our town.” Councilman Chris Fowl­ er, in council member com­ ments, added: “With this stormwater, I think it’s very important that we figure out what’s going on. Hopefully, it will drive some of our de­ cisions going forward.” In a related matter in the public comments portion of the meeting, Jim Fulghum, who lives in Kinderton Vil­ lage, brought up the problem regarding flooding from the Aug. 6 storm in Phase 3A and asked how to help slow down the water with the drains being below grade. He asked who is responsi­ ble. “Storms are occurring heavier and heavier every year,’ he said. “They’re not going away.” Of course, there was a recent weather event in late October where high wind.s and heavy rainfall caused some flooding and downed trees. Then, last Wednesday and Thursday morning after the meeting, the town was swamped with another sig­ nificant storm. • In a separate action item in the meeting, coun­ cil members approved an amendment to the contract with Republic Services, which made a presentation in the October meeting. The contract extends solid waste pickup for three years and includes recycling collec­ tion, effective July 1,2021. Rollins said that Davie County ha.s provided res­ idents, including those in Bermuda Run, recycling at no additional charge other than paying their proper­ ty taxes but ha.s decided to get out of the recycling business. And that, coupled with some quantum shifts in the pricing of commodities, required a different way of thinking. “We can state without question that the majori­ ty of residents in Bermuda Run would not want to give up recycling,” Rollins said. “This amendment would then allow us to contract with Republic for trash pickup and for recycling pickup, which resident.s would really see no change in service.” • In his mayoral com­ ments at the conclusion of the meeting. Cross noted that the Hillsdale precinct that serves Bermuda Run had an 82.3 percent voter turnout, just above Davie County’s 80.1 percent vot­ er turnout — while praising the county elections staff, board and poll workers for a smooth process during the recent election. • Cross also shared news that three community mem­ bers — Roseanne Peacock, Sharon Reid and Christy Schafer — have spearheaded an effort for a Bermuda Run Community Christmas Tree that will be placed on the rooftop of the Wake Forest Baptist Health Davie Med­ ical Center. Community members will be able to purchase a light or lights in honor or memory of a loved one, co-worker or friend. More details will be provided. With the coronavirus pandemic, most community celebrations have a different look this year, and Cross said that this one will be available on Facebook Live with a virtual rooftop Christ­ mas Tree lighting scheduled for Dec. 1 at 6 p.m. QUILT SALE! Quilts, Throws, & Masks by Chester Reeves Saturday, Dec. 5 • 10am-3pm Saturday, Dec. 12 • 10am-3pm Quilts Make Great Christmas Gifts! Custom "Designs Available! 247 TUrtceyfoot Road • Mocksville, NC For More Info or to Place an Order Call: 336-492-5837 - OR - 336-823-7273 ®r. irwer^ 'DentaL Tip qfthe "Week Andrew J. Rivers DMD ‘Keep tootfipaste out of children’s reach when it is not in use.” MILLER EQUIPMENT RENTAL FALL IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today! Hwy. 601 S.. 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In FORSYTH County call (336) 766-4126 In DAVIE County call (336) 751-2120 PERKINS ROOFING "Quo/fty work at reasonable prices^’ (Roof Repair Specialist) Phone:336-753-8355 Fax: 336-7538373-- Jesse Perkins - Owner 300 Spring Street Modavili8.NC Mocksville, NC EC Perkins Roofing of Mocksville He lives under just one roof, but Jesse Perkins cares about every roof. That’s what makes his busi­ ness so special. As owner of Perkins Roofing in Mocksville, Jesse treats each roof as if it was on his own home. If it isn’t good enough for him, it will not be good enough for you. That is the way Jesse treats each rooting job and customer. His work and integrity speak for itself. Jesse, a Reidsville native, became interested in roofing when he was just 13 years old. At age 17, the summer before graduating from high school, he began helping his brother in the rooting business. Af­ ter graduating the next year, Jesse moved to Davie County and has been here since. After years of working tor other rooters, Jesse de­ cided it was time to go out on his own. So. in the fall of 1997, he started Perkins Rooting. “I have been roofing most of my life and that’s what I love to do,” Jesse explains. “I started out with a lad­ der, hatchet and pick-up truck.” Now, along with rooting, Jesse has added vinyl sid­ ing to his line of work. ®| work with several local contractors on new homes and do tear offs for older homes that need a new roof. I have done some repair work but we just don’t have that many bad storms around here to do too much damage tor roof repairs,” Jesse notes. Jesse takes a great deal ot pride in his work and will work however many hours and days it takes to get the job finished and done right. “I keep my business somewhat small. That way I can be on the job to see what goes on and make sure the job is completed like it would be for someone in my family.” Perkins Roofing also enjoys giving back to the com­ munity. They are involved in various fund raisers including the law enforcement and rescue squad. It you are in need ot a new root and a good, honest, dependable man for the job, give Jesse at Perkins Roofing a call for a free estimate at (336) 753-8355. Tosha Champ Owner/Groomor 336.671.6127 7808 US Hwy. 801 S. • Cooleemee. NC (Near Cooleemee Post Oflkrs) ttcpetcaregroorningegmall.com | Tell our readers Ihe Story Of YOUR business in the BUSINESS SPUTUGHT WE BUY GOLD! LAYAWAYS! Propane REFILL STATION Also Sell New Tanks! 20 lb.................$8.00 301b....................................$12.00 SarVjf 40 lb...............$16.00 100 lb............$40.00 < Barber Shop 3225 U.S. Hwy. 64 East - Advance, NC (336) 998-7102 Ihe BUSINESS SPOTUSHT- an AHORDABU marfcettw Ghoicel To AdvertUe On This Page Call: FORS)GTH County (336) 766-4126 • DAVIf County (336) 751-2120 mSMiR DAVBE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - 9 AUCTION Thursday, Dec 3*^ • 10:00 AM Personal Property of Jack and Doris Cook Walker (deceased) Plus a few consignments 190 Redland Rd, Advance, NC Sterling Flatware - 2008 Honda Accord EXL (One owner, only 74K miles) - Guns - Lawn & Outdoor Power Equip. - Coins - Hand Tools - Furniture - Knives - Jewelry (1 OK, 14K, Sterling) - Musical Instruments - Sewing & Embroidery Machines - Ford 8000 Pedal Tractor & Trailer - Old Tobacco Tins - Tobacco Press Plates - Old Toys - Lots More Latest info & photos at auctionzip.com (Auctioneer ID# 3750) WRIGHT AUCTION SERVICE Roy Wright-Auctioneer • NCAL #2120 336-403-8084 Early Buyer Registration on = Wednesday, December 2™* • Noon to 2 PM I District Court Sheffield-Calahaln Church selling nuts for the holidays; quHt sales planned BROWDER DENTISTRY Thomas S. Browder, DDS is accepting new patients! Preferred Provider: HUMANA Delta Dental CIGNA Ameritas ASSURANT United Healthcare BLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD Park 158 Professional Centre 5380 US Hwy. 158 Suite 200 Advance. NC 27006 336.998.9988 wv\zw.browdersmiles.com The following cases were disposed of during the Nov. 5 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge April Wood. Prosecuting: Annemarie Ernst, assistant DA. - Bria Monet Black, as­ sault with a deadly weapon, injury to personal property, dismissed per compliance. - Samantha T. Crafford, misdemeanor probation violation, probation termi­ nated, $225 attorney fee. - Joshua Franklin Dar­ nell, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, prayer for judgment contin­ ued. - Amanda Diane Lee, harassing phone call, sen­ tenced to 30 days, suspend­ ed 12 months, have no con­ tact with victim, $252.50 attorney fee. - Justin Lee Livengood, possession of marijuana up to one-half ounce, 2 counts possession of mari­ juana paraphernalia, simple possession of a schedule VI controlled substance, 2 counts driving while li­ cense revoked not DWI, expired registration, oper­ ating vehicle with no in­ surance, speeding 71 in a 55, fictitious/altered title/ registration, dismissed per plea; driving while license revoked not DWI, reduced to failure to notify DMV of address change, $200, cost, $225 attorney fee. - Mejia Miguel Montoya, DWI, sentenced to 60 days, susf>ended 12 months, 24 hours community service, credit for substance abuse assessment, surrender li­ cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, limited driv­ ing privilege/$ 100 fee, $600 lab fee, $1OO, cost; driving after consuming under age 21, simple possession of a schedule IV controlled sub­ stance, reckless driving, dis­ missed per plea. - Mira Melvin Orellana, assault, dismissed at request of prosecuting witness. - Julie Marie Reinhardt, probation violation, proba­ tion terminated unsuccess­ fully, $280 attorney fee. - Mira Rosibel, 2 counts simple assault, dismissed at request of prosecuting wit­ ness. Failure to Appear - Anthony Drew Church, assault with a deadly weap­ on, injury to real property. - Jesus G. Santos Ortiz, speeding 102 in a 70, driv­ ing while license revoked not DWI, reckless driving. Nov. 12 The following cases were disposed of during the Nov. 12 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge April Wood. Prosecuting: Annemarie Ernst, assistant DA. Kaled Ryan Abou- karam, speeding 96 in a 70, dismissed; reckless driving, $600, cost. - Natalie Ardillo, simple assault, not guilty. Jared Patrick Bass, breaking or entering a ve­ hicle, misdemeanor larceny, dismissed. S. McCarson-Breed- love, simple assault, not guilty. - Brentley J. Carlton, re­ sisting public officer, dis­ missed. - Faralee Chopski, simple assault, prayer for judgment continued, cost. - Shamaran L. Clodfelter, felony larceny of a vehicle, reduced to misdemeanor larceny, sentenced to 90 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours community ser­ vice, write letter of apology to victim, cost. - Scott Michael Crow­ ley, second degree trespass, prayer for judgment contin­ ued, cost. - Derwood Johnson, in­ toxicated and disruptive, disorderly conduct, dis­ missed. - Steven James Loggins, driving while license re­ voked not DWI, reduced to failure to notify DMV of address change; speeding 84 in a 65, driving while license revoked, fictitious/ canceled/revoked license, dismissed. - Tiffany Anne Martin, local ordinance/public nui­ sance, dismissed. Richard A. Parker, speeding 95 in a 70, reduced to careless and reckless driving, $500, cost. - Luis Alberto Portillo, misdemeanor probation vio­ lation, probation terminated unsuccessfully, $225 attor­ ney fee. Failure to Appear Najaria Monique Brown, 3 counts assault with a deadly weapon. - Miguel A. Ronquillo, domestic violence protec­ tive order violation. By Brenda Bailey Sheffield-Calahaln Correspondent Wishing everyone a very happy and blessed Thanks­ giving. This is a time for us to be thankful for what we have, for the family we love, the friends we cherish, and for all the blessings that may come our way. Birthday wishes to: Rodger Feimster on Nov. 27; Chester Reeves on Nov. 30; Stephen Barnes on Dec. 1; Lynn Hendrix on Dec. 2; and Candace B. Reeves on Dec. 3. If you would like a birthday or anniversary listed, please do not hesitate to contact me. Vauda Ellis is still plan­ ning to have the annual Christmas Open House at Poplar Springs School on Saturdays, Dec. 5 and 12. More details in uficoming columns. Chester Reeves, owner of Chester’s Quilts, will have a sale of his quilts and throws Saturdays, Dec. 5 and 12 from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Chester has a new wide selection of Christmas and other throws for Christmas shopping. The throws and quilts have been pieced and quilted by him. The sale is at 247 Tur­ keyfoot Road, Mocksville. He will also have some facial masks for sale. As many of you know, he wa.s diagnosed with cancer a few years ago and had to give up his auto detail business. For more information, contact him at 336-492-5837. Sheffield-Calahaln VFD meetings are held each Monday night at the station at 7. If interested in becom­ ing a volunteer firefighter or would like to join the auxil­ iary, feel free to come to the meetings or see any member of the department. We look forward to having more community involvement. Liberty Wesleyan Church is holding worship services is each Sunday at 10 a.m. and Bible Study at 10 a.m. each Saturday. You can also hear the message each week on Facebook. The church is at 2106 Shef­ field Road, Harmony. Up­ coming events: "Hanging of the Greens" this Sunday at 10 a.m.; and on Dec. 6 at 6 p.m., "The True Light" John 1:9 Children's Christmas celebration will be an out­ side service. Bring a chair or stay in your car to enjoy the program. Refreshments will be served. On Sunday, Dec. 20, following the 10 a.m. worship service, there will be “An Elf Surprise” for all the children. On Dec. 24 from 5-7 p.m.. Silent Com­ munion will be ob.served, a time of guided reflection, prayer and communion. Everyone is welcome for these evenLs and services. Ijames Baptist Church will continue to hold outside worship services on Sunday at 10 a.m. Bring a lawn chair or remain in your ve­ hicle. Everyone is welcome to join for worship with Pas­ tor Robert Jackson. The Rev. Keith Ledford and Community Covenant Church, 1446 Sheffield Road, invites you to join them for worship service each Sunday morning at 10:45. Kid’s Power Hour at New Union UMC is at 6:30 p.m. and the Youth Group will meet at 6 p.m. each Wednesday outside. Join for an evening of fun, fel­ lowship and learning more about Jesu.s through scrip­ ture, storie.s and song. New Union’s Sunday morning worship services are held each week at 10 a.m. in the church. Wear­ ing of facial masks will be greatly appreciated. You can also view the services on Facebook. Everyone i.s welcome. Wesley Chapel UMC is selling TerriLynn pecans. cashews, black walnuLs, and more. To place an or­ der or for more information, please contact Kathy Ellis at 336-830-5123 or you may contact me via my phone number, email or Facebook. You can also order nuts from their website: https:// wesley-chapel-umc .terri­ fy nn .corn. Prayer request.s con­ tinue for Bryan Swain, Jean Reavis, Lori Dyson, Johnny Naylor, Dot Keller, Pat Moore, Deborah Nich­ ols, Sylvia Ratledge Wil­ liams, Wellman Beck, Hazel Smoot, Tim Keller, Junior Dunn, Betty Dam­ eron, Tammy Keller, Naomi Wooten, Jeff Potts, Charles England, Greta England, Lincoln Dyson, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Ted Adams, Jane Tutterow, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Bob Ellis, Car- en Morgan, Melissa Spry, Wade Reeves, Helen Bulla, Happy birthday to Wade Reeves who turns 91 on Nov. 26. Joann Renegar, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Greg Gobble, Betty Richardson, Fred Beck, Larry Dyson and Su­ zonne Stratton.. Please submit all items to me at brfbailey@msn.com, message me on Facebook or call me at 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thurs­ days. School board OKs personnel decisions Renegade ... AETNA Mutual of Omaha SUNLIFE Principal Lite GUARDIAN IS LAMBERT FUNERAL HOME A CREMATION SERVICE Davie County Family owned and operated by Carl & Kim Lambert Serving Davie County and Surrounding Communities for over 30 years Prearranged Funerals and Preplanning options available Cremation Services in your rime of need, ir is more important than ever ro be with trusted funerai professionais who are aiso your friends and neighbors. Please feel free ro stop by and see our newly refurbished facilities and have any questions answered with regard ro our services. The following personnel changes were approved at the Nov. 2 Davie Board of Education meeting. Employment: Leslie Mc­ Craw, teacher assistant, Pinebrook; Rebbecca An­ derson, teacher assistant, William R. Davie; Bailey Gest, virtual interim math teacher, William Ellis; Cathy Cover, school nutri­ tion assistant; and Deitre Junker, pre-K teacher as­ sistant. For information only (not voted on): Reassignment: Tracy Kassel, data manager/book- keeper, William R. Davie; Kelly Kluttz, data manager, Davie; and Dana Aderhold, administrative assistant, Davie. Resignation: Melinda Britton, teacher assistant, Cooleemee; Wesley Martin, custodian/bus driver. South Davie; Tanicia Jackson, EC teacher, Davie; Janice Mc­ SHP traveling The State Highway Patrol is gearing up for the holiday season and for the increased number of roadway users expected across our state. Prior to traveling, the SHP encourages the public to X cvir.ffziu, ,CracbiLUp! SS LAMBERT 635 Wilkesboro St. _________Mocksville, NC PUNE R A L H M E (336) 751-1100 * t'RKMMIUS SKMCt www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com Specials of the Week - Driuewav Craclis '<! are nathiitg te laiigh^l - -- Call us TODKY for more details and an estiniate . - before your small cracks become Due to the rising Covid-19 cases our store will now be open for DRIVE-THRU SERVICE ONLY. Flu Shots & Shingles Shots are available in the Drive-Thru all day. Our Drhm-Thru opons oarly on Wednesdays at 7:00 MH for Shots. Shoaf Concrete Co. Mocksville, NC 336-751-1989 Mon-Fri 6:3Oam — 3:3Opm Slating i/ou. Since 794S ----- MOON PIES 2 for $1 JREMEMBER: We have a DROP BOX or Outdatec and Unused k V■jFF BlueCross BlueShield of North Carolina PREFERRED PROVIDER Foster Drug 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fostenlrug.coni Regular Hours: M-F 8:3(^8 • Sat 8:30-1 • Sun 1:3p-5 Bride, teacher assistant/bus driver, Mocksville; Karina Guerrero, data manager, Davie; Victoria Snow, ele­ mentary teacher, Pinebrook; and Justin Silvidi, EC teach­ er, Davie. Retirement: Susan An­ thony, custodian, Comatzer; Cindy Myers, principal, William Ellis; Starla Hoots, school nutrition, William R. Davie; and Pamela Smith, administrative assistant/li- censure specialist. Central Office. caution when this holiday season visit the NC Department of Health and Human Services (NCDHHS) for the latest to help slow the spread of CO- VID-19. Best practices dur­ ing the holiday season and information on the state’s response to COVID-19 can be found by visiting https:// covidl9 .ncdhhs .gov/. According to the Ameri­ can Automobile Association (AAA), more than 47 mil­ lion people will travel by automobile across our na­ tion representing a reduction from last year’s predictions. AAA relates this decrease in travelers to our country’s current public health land­ scape. Nonetheless, mem­ bers of the State Highway Patrol will increase visibil­ ity on highly traveled corri­ dors in an effort to promote safe driving habits. “Although this holiday season might look vastly different for many families, a commitment to safe driv­ ing must be paramount for those traveling,” said Col. Glenn McNeill Jr., com­ mander. “The safety and health of all across our state should guide our activities this holiday season and part of that equation is safety be­ hind the wheel of a vehicle.” '"Setting Vm/ie County Sitice 1 d73" • Brakes • Tires • Batteries • Alignments • Scheduled Maintenance • Complete and Professional Auto Repair AUTOMOTIVEj 336-751-3372" 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 The NCSHP will partner with the N.C. Governors Highway Safety Program for the 2020 Thanksgiving “Click It or Ticket” cam­ paign Monday, Nov. 23 through Sunday, Nov. 29 with the ultimate goal of re­ ducing preventable injurie.s and deaths in collisions due to a vehicle occupant’s fail­ ure to use a restraint device. Motorists can partner with the lifesaving mission by practicing these safe driving principles: • Don’t drive distracted: Eyes on the road and hands on the wheel, let passengers control the use of techno­ logical devices. • Always wear a seat belt. • Never drive while im­ paired. Use one of the many safe alternatives and plan ahead to ensure a safe end to the evening. • Maintain a safe speed and reduce speeds during in­ clement weather. The speed limit is set for ideal condi­ tions. If wipers are required to be on, lights should be activated as well. Check traffic conditions before starting your travel at wwwJOriveNC.Gov. Motor­ ists can contact the SHP by dialing ’'‘HP(47). Junction Rd. solar project hearing postponed A planning board hearing for a rezoning for a large solar project off of Junction Road has been postponed. A new date for the hear­ ing, originally scheduled for Nov. 24, has not been set. Continued From Page 2 After a squirrel joined in with its scolding, the Coo­ per’s Hawk finally flew on it.s way with Blue Jays chas­ ing its tail. Will it overwin­ ter here? The Blue Jays and others hope not. Remind Me Again By Kevin F. Wishon A Zoom friend recently spoke of how forgetful we are. She continued by say­ ing we needed reminding more often than we real­ ized. She wasn’t referring to things like birthday.s or infrequently used items, but how we think about things which are intangible. As adults we are good at finding ways to remind our­ selves of things we forget. A string tied around a fin­ ger or a to-do list are inge­ nious devices to encourage recall. Lately electronic devices and personal assis­ tants are quickly replacing the old ways. So, we know just by our habit of using these devices, we are poor at remembering. However, I think it might be more accurate to say that we are poor at remembering many details unless we are excited about something in particu­ lar. Yet, it’s those intangible things that remain forgotten unless someone gently re­ minds us. Not long after my Zoom friend’s conversation, a re­ minder of something I had not considered in many years came to my ears. An­ other friend spoke of having gratitude for things we own. I usually try to practice this as frequently as I can. I find it satisfies any feelings of lacking. Still, this friend took it to a deeper level. She explained how she tries to appreciate the many and various hands of those who had somehow made it pos­ sible for us to acquire the item. By recalling this, she added that we understand how thankful we should be when considering the mining, smelting, milling, manufacturing, and delivery it took to put one item in our hands. Another example of be­ ing reminded of something comes in the form of for­ giveness. In this time of uncertainty and tension, it’s never long before someone steps on your toes proverbi­ ally. One day not long ago, I was reminded of this. I lis­ tened to a tutorial lecture of new college students, which discussed how easy it was for roommates to fall out after sharing the same dorm room for several months. The speech spoke of our sil­ ly pride as being the root of most of these arguments, but what caught my attention was the solution to prevent­ ing these situations from reaching boiling p)oints. We need to forgive. I had been annoyed by a friend’s atti­ tude days before, and it con­ tinued to upset me. Hearing the lecture, I realized why I was feeling disturbed and upset inside. I had forgot­ ten that I needed to forgive. That forgiveness set me free and dissolved the bad feel­ ings I had harbored for days. With each passing year, I need reminding more often. I keep books for reference, printouts of information, and adhesive notes loaded with reminders all over my desk. Yet, it’s not those pieces of information I fear forgetting. I need reminding about the way I think about things. Additionally, I need to hear it from someone who can remind me gently. I’m grateful for those who can remind me of my short­ comings and set me straight gently. Their gift is a relief to my weary mind. Thanksgiving By Stephanie Williams Dean The West End Garden Club is one of the oldest garden clubs in Winston Sa­ lem, and I've been a mem­ ber for many years. I wrote and read the following Thanksgiving blessing for our club meeting in Novem­ ber of 2013. Oh. Great Spirit, we gath­ er together with open hearts and in humble appreciation, as we approach the upcom­ ing season of Thanksgiving. Wf give you thanks for all we have been and all we will ever he. We give thanks for all we have had and all we will ever have. Grant us grateful appre­ ciation by planting a seed within our soul that grows the greatest gratitude for the least significant mo­ ments of our lives. In the discovery of re­ newed gratefulness, also place in our heart not only a thankful spirit hut one oj generosity in the giving to others. We pray our gracious spirit of giving will sur­ round and bring comfort to one in need — one to whom our gift might truly benefit and another to whom we might be a light in darkness. Make our Thanksgiving Day holiday one of true meaning, with both — an at­ titude of gratefulness and a generous spirit of giving. Amen. SUDOKU The (K) Clues Are for Kids Created by Timothy E. Parker November 30. 2020 ACROSS 1. (K) Low guitar 5. (K) Small curve of a circle 8. (K) Tool for punching leather 11. BTU’s “U” 12. (K) Sloppy, sticky stuff 13. (K) Potato___ 15. Comer store with sandwiches 16. “They’re playing song” 17. Memorization by repetition 18. (K) Raised a right hand in court and vowed 20. Kind of park or mobile home 22. (K) Washington Wizard’s judge 24. (K) Anyone bom before you 25. Certainty 29. Hee-___ 31. (K) Show appreciation at a show 32. (K) Dachshund doc 33. Smidgen 34.1 billion years 35. Having an outward curve at the knees (2 words) 37. (K) Type of snake with hollow fangs 39. Have cravings 40. Snare drum sound effect (3 words) 42. (K) Smallest possible amount 46. (K) “I guess so” 47. Counterpart of sis 49. Tater topper that’s not natural 50. Dangerously desperate 51. (K) Showed the others where to go 52. (K) Utilizer 53. Yacht“yes” 54. ___out a living (barely scrape by) 55. (K) More than none DOWN 1. (K) They wait to bloom 2. Get___ lease on life (2 words) 3. (K) Massive grain storage thing 4. (K) Rider’s footrest while on horseback 5. (K) “A long time___...” 6. (K) Opposite of a close game 7. (K) How right answers are given 8. Having a sharply bitter taste 9. Without reservation, on a farm? (2 words) IO. (K) Able to read and write 14. (K) Miles ___hour 19. Poetic “always” I. (K) Ginger . (soi' 21. . (soda type) 23.How one likes one’s conditions? 25. (K) Scoring tennis serve 26. Country near Hungary 27. Germ-free 28. (K) Brand-___ (not used) 30. (K) Huge, well-chewed ball of gum 33. Formed from intense heat 35. (K) Place a wager 36. Bioelectric fish 38. Person on a check list? 40. (K) Fishing___ 41. Old TV show, “Star___” 43. (K) “The Sun ___Rises” (Hemingway) 44. “I don’t___ to recall” 45. (K) Ripped, as paper 45. Dedicatory poem 4 9 1 2 6 9 7 8 5 6 4 7 6 2 3 8 3 6 1 2 1 4 2 7 Fun By The Numbers Like puzzles? Then you'll love sudoku. This mind-bending puzzle will have you hooked from the moment you square off, so sharpen your pencil and put your sudoku savvy to the test! Level: Intermediate Here’s How It Works: Sudoku puzzles are formatted as a 9x9 grid, broken down into nine 3x3 boxes. To solve a sudoku, the numbers 1 through 9 must fill each row, column and box. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and box. You can figure out the order in which the numbers will appear by using the numeric clues already provided in the boxes. The more numbers you name, the easier it gets to solve the puzzle! Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? 9 8 s 6 z e Z p I- 6 Z y Z L 8 e 9 s e z I.9 S t'z 8 6 8 6 z e z L 8 S 9 t e 8 y 9 6 Z z s 7 9 z 6 s 8 L e z S 6 L 8 z P e 9 t?9 z 9 e L I-6 8 L e 8 9 6 s z z :a3MSNV Auction ending letters? Look tor the answer in next week's paper. PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER bbb lane BBB iBBEiaHl KSBCE i3BE0E3Mhann BBBB BBBB BBBB New Pool & Spa Installation Cteaning • Chemicals Op^ng & Closing Vinyl Liner Replacement ' Tommy Horns/Owner - Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (336) 284-4817 k Cell: (336) 909-4027 Previous riddle answer Catch lazy flies? 24-A) Shag O 2020 Andrews mSmmI SyndKStion.il.com You are always welcome at First United Methodist Church 310 North Main Street Historic Downtown Mocksville Join us on FaceBook.YouTube, our church website and WDSL 96.5 FM at 5 p.m. on Sundays www.firstumcniocksville.org Telephone: 336-751-2503 a FARM FRESH PORKAB Natural Jerry & Cindy Foster (336)098-7175 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 A bowl of Fresh Cranberry Sauce adds a burst of ruby red color that will comple­ ment other dishes on the table. The flavors and appearance of stuffing or cornbread dressing are enhanced by adding flavor and natural red color. Pecan-Cranberry Muffins are delicious when but­ tered for breakfast, split with sliced turkey for lunch, or as a sweet bread at dinnertime. There are many ways to enjoy the native cranberry The cranberry is one of only three fruits native to Amer­ ica, making it a perfect choice for Thanksgiving. The many ways to enjoy cranberries make for a long list — and the simple, low sugar fruit is good for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. This holiday season, try one or two of my favorite ways to cook and bake with the autumn staple — or get creative with your recipes. Add a spoonful or two of the berry relish to any sandwich fill­ ing or cold salad such as macaroni or potato. A little sauce is also delicious in a scratch meatloaf or hand-patted burger — or simply spread over the top. The tart-fresh cranberry can be added to your roasted sweet potatoes, a squash casserole, or the rice stuffing or cornbread dressing. The berries add zesty flavor to anything to which they’re added. As if you need another reason to cook with cranberries, here’s one more. They’re known for their phytonutrients — and that’s of benefit to your good health. At my home, no Thanksgiving table’s complete without at least ------------------------------------- one traditional cranberry con­ gealed salad. While I usually pre­ fer cooking with fresh berries, you don’t want to get me started on the canned cranberry sauce — I’ll never move completely past it. Both jellied and whole berry cranberry sauce command a spot on my pantry shelf year-round. FRESH CRANBERRY SAUCE 12 oz. cranberries 1 !6 cups Merlot wine 1 14 cups packed golden brown sugar 2 Tbsp. grated orange peel 16 tsp. cinnamon 14 tsp. nutmeg 14 tsp. allspice In a saucepan, combine cranberries, wine, sugar, peel, and spices. Bring to a boil and stir to dissolve sugar. Re­ duce heat and cook on medium for 15 minutes or until sauce is reduced by 16 and a slightly thick syrup forms. Store covered in a bowl and refrigerate. Serve alongside meats. CRANBERRY-WINE CONGEALED SALAD 6 oz. raspberry gelatin 1 16 cups boiling water 1 can whole berry cranberry sauce 2/3 cup red wine Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean 8 oz. crushed pineapple ?4 cup chopped walnuts In a bowl, dissolve gelatin in boiling water. Add whole berry cranberry sauce, wine, pineapple, and walnuts. Pour into a glass dish or a mold. Refrigerate until firm. Serve with a dollop of cream cheese fluff on top. FRESH APPLE-ORANGE-CRANBERRY SALAD 1 cup sugar 1 cup water 6 oz. lemon gelatin 2 unpeeled, cored, ground apples 4 cups ground cranberries 1 unpeeled, seeded, ground orange 16 cup pecans Lettuce leaves In a saucepan, boil water. Remove from heat and stir in gelatin until dissolved. Chill until gelatin is slightly set. Fold in ground apples, cranberries, orange, and pecans. Spoon into glass dish. Chill until firm. Serve on lettuce leaves with dollop of cream cheese fluff on top. ORANGE CREAM DOLLOP FOR SALADS 8 oz. whipped cream cheese 1 finely grated rind of orange 1 Tbsp. sugar Whip cream cheese until smooth and fluffy. Add grated rind from entire orange and sugar. Spoon a dollop of the Cream Fluff over any congealed salad. EASY CRANBERRY-MUSTARD GRAVY 1 tbsp. olive oil '/6 cup whole berry cranberry sauce 16 cup chicken broth 16 cup freshly squeezed orange juice 2 Tbsp. Dijon mustard 2 Tbsp. whipping cream In a skillet, heat olive oil. Add cranberry, broth, orange juice, mustard, and cream. Bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 7 minutes until slightly thickened. Serve over sliced turkey breast or any meat. VERY BERRY CHICKEN 4 boneless chicken breasts 4 boneles.s chicken thighs I oz. dry onion soup mix 16 oz. whole berry cranberry sauce 1 cup spicy French dressing 14 cup toasted, slivered almonds Chopped fresh parsley In a butter greased glass baking dish, place chicken piec­ es without overlapping. Sprinkle onion soup over all chick­ en. To a bowl, add cranberry sauce and stir until spread- able. Add toasted almonds and mix well. Spread evenly over chicken pieces. Pour evenly the French dressing over the cranberry. Bake in a 400-degree oven for 45 minutes covered in foil. Remove foil and bake for additional 15 minutes. Sprinkle top with chopped parsley. Yield: 4 serv­ ings. FOUR FRUIT RELISH 1 lb. bag fresh cranberries 6 unpeeled apples 1 unpeeled orange 1 large can drained pineapple 2 cups sugar 16 cup chopped pecans Seed and quarter apples and oranges. Finely chop cran- DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 - 11 Students spruce up Deep Roots’ Storehouse garden HEATING, COOLING, RESIDENTIAL'RLUMBINC SALES, SERVICE, INSTALLATION^ **• «•« AmSnS HVAC Lic8nse#13736 SEnVIMO nAVfS amd mommm coumtvjes Offic*: 33e-284-ae&a-| MoblU; 33S.34S-92O7 Rowan: 704-833-4777 Save up to 25% 3301 Salisbury Highway, Statesville, NC , 28677 Adding versatile cranberries to any cold and leafy salad as well as hot vegetable casseroles will add a nice zesty flavor. berries, apples, and oranges. Add pineapple, sugar, and pecans. Mix well. Refrigerate. Add to sandwich spreads, meatloaf, or hamburgers. Yields: 2 quarts. PECAN-CRANBERRY MUFFINS 2 beaten eggs M cup packed brown sugar 2/3 cup orange juice 2 cups all-purpose flour 2 tsp. baking powder 1/3 cup vegetable oil 1 cup coarsely chopped cranberries 1 cup chopped pecans In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar and mix well. Add orange juice and mix well. Add flour and baking powder while alternating with oil. Mix well. Fold in cranberries and pecans. Spoon into 12 paper-lined or greased muffin cups until ?4 full. Bake in a 375-degree oven for 20 minutes or until golden brown. Cool. CRAN-BUTTER 1 cup fresh cranberries 1 cup honey 1 stick salted butter 1 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice In a processor, puree cranberries and honey until smooth. Add butter and lemon juice and blend 2 minutes. To a saucepan, add the mixture, and heat until butter ha.s melted. Pour into a butter serving bowl, and refrigerate un­ til firm. Also good with meats, vegetables, breakfast foods, and all breads. Yield: 2 cups. CORNBREAD WITH CRANBERRIES 2 beaten eggs 1 cup sugar 1 stick softened salted butter 1 cup buttermilk 2 cup.s all-purpose flour 1 cup yellow cornmeal 4 tsp. baking powder ‘/6 tsp. salt 2 cups chopped fresh cranberries In a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add sugar. Mix well. Add butter and mix well. Add flour, cornmeal, baking powder, and salt while alternating with buttermilk. Mix well. Fold in cranberries. Pour into a butter greased 9-inch square glass baking dish. Bake in a 4OO-degree oven for 25 min­ utes or until center is firm and bread is golden. Good to use for stuffing or dressings. CRANBERRY AND APPLE CRISP 3 cups fresh/frozen cranberries 1 */6 lb. peeled, cored, cubed Granny Smiths 2/3 cup sugar 2 Tbsp. all-purpose flour 1 tsp. cinnamon !6 tsp. nutmeg 14 cup old fashioned oats 2 Tbsp. all-purpose flour 2 Tbsp. packed brown sugar 3 Tbsp. cut in pieces, salted butter In a bowl, combine cranberries, apples, sugar, flour, cin­ namon, nutmeg, and toss. Pour into a butter-greased 8 x 8 glass baking dish. In a mixer bowl, combine oats, flour, brown sugar, and butter that’s been cut into pieces. Drop the clusters of oats over the top of the apple mixture. Bake in a 375-degree oven for 1 hour or until bubbly and golden. Serve warm with flavored whipfied cream. flPPlIflHCE repair “Over 25 years of experience in appliance repair" 540 Sanford Avenue Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3162 DavieMajorApplianceRepair.com DavieMajorAppliance@gmail.com The Deep Roots Com­ munity Garden at A Store­ house for Jesus got a fall facelift at the hands of 10 volunteers from Davie High School on Nov 14. Jesse Ledbetter, agri­ cultural sciences teacher, invited Davie High CTE and STEM students to join him for the afternoon to harvest remaining produce and work on a thorough fall clean-up. Students harvested more than 30 pounds of peppers that the Store­ house distributed to cli­ ents. They also pulled weeds, raked beds, applied organic fertilizer, and covered everything with straw. Jarret Barnes, Bailey Dyson, Zane Dyson, Na­ than Haskin, Grayson Haynes, Sophia Heagle, Josh Pilcher, Gabby Thompson, Cole West and Kasey Williford partici­ pated. Most students are or have been in Ledbetter’s classes and his Future Farmers of America club, but three were new to the experience. Bailey Dyson said: “Working at the garden brightens my day because it is refreshing, fun, and I know it’s for a good cause. I volunteer because 1 am blessed with what I have and enjoy blessing others through my work.” “I really enjoyed work­ ing in the community garden at the Storehouse for Jesus,” said Gabby Thompson. “We picked fresh peppers and got the garden beds ready for next spring. We bagged the pep- « ** <3? Davie High STEM and CTE students (above and below) spread straw at the Deep Roots Storehouse garden. pers and took them inside the Storehouse for them to be given to the clients. It was neat to see that kids my age can make a differ­ ence in our community." Grayson Haynes said: “I had participated in canned food drives for Storehouse for Jesus, but I didn't know that Storehouse had a community garden until I saw the volunteer opportu­ nity through Stem Center. I was happy to help clean up and winterize the gar­ den, and we had fun in the process.” The Deep Roots com­ munity garden was es­ tablished in 2013. This season, it produced more than 1,500 pounds of fresh produce. Dianne Salmon, Deep Roots coordinator, said that she was impressed -ti.. with how much the stu­ dents accomplished and that she feels happy to see young people so enthusi­ astic about growing things. Ledbetter’s FFA stu­ dents volunteer weekly throughout the summer maintaining the garden and experimenting with planting everything from peanuts to peppers. “Volunteering in the garden provides a great opportunity for students to enrich their lives; they develop team-building and problem solving skills, and they learn a lot in the process,” Ledbetter said. lung screening, the life saver careybrlife PROTECTED One of every 16 Americans will be diagnosed with lung cancer. If you are or have been a smoker, screening could save your life from America's #1 killer. With early detection, lung cancer survival is greater than 90%. To learn more about screening, insurance coverage eligibility and a location near you, call Wake Forest Baptist Health's Comprehensive Cancer Center at 336-71 3-LUNG. The National Cancer Instituta officially designates select cancer centers in America as "Comprehensive' for meeting the highest possible standards. Research shows that choosing an NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center could increase your long-term survival rate by up to 25%. WakeHealth.edu/LungScreen Wake Forest- Baptist Health Davie Medical Center 12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 Obituaries DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 - 13 THE LAW OFFICES OF RYAN B. ADDISON, P.^ wtvw.utiorn evcicJcjiSon.com Elias Emilio Martinez Baby Elias Emilio Martinez, bom on Dec. 31, 2019 to Carlos Martinez and Ada Ca­ ballero, died on Nov. 14, 2020. He was bom in Winston Sa­ lem, full of energy and joy. He took his first step on Nov. 13, the day before he died. He will be remembered for his golden curls and his constant changing color eyes. A visitation wias held from noon-1 p.m. Friday, Nov. 20 at Davie Funeral Service. Burial service was at 2 p.m. at Rose Cemetery in Mocksville. A . Ernestine Jean Barnard Cleary Mrs. Ernestine Jean Barnard Cleary, 93, of Mocksville, died Sunday, Nov. 22, 2020 after a short stay at Kate B. Reynolds Hospice Home in Winston-Salem. She was bom July 28, 1927 in Iredell County to the ________________late James Phillip and Octavia K ; Friesland Barnard. Mrs. Cleary was a lifelong resident of the Sheffield community. She had worked at Monleigh Garment Co. for more than 40 years as a supervisor. After retirement, she enjoyed gardening and baking. She loved the Lord, at­ tending church, and reading her Bible; these were all important parts of her life. In her 93 years, she attended several churches. After Zion Church closed, she attended Mocksville Wesleyan Church and then Salem United Methodist Church. She was also preceded in death on Jan. 28, 2014, by her husband of 69 years, Ray Cleary; a brother, Charlie Barnard; and a sister, Isabelle Galliher. Survivors: her daughter, Jean Cleary (Bill), her caregiv­ ers since Ray’s death; a sister, Thelma Chambers (Lendon) of Hamptonville; a sister-in-law, Patricia Cleary of Char­ lotte; many nieces and nephews; special nephew, Larry Galliher (Becky); special friends, Richie, Stacia and Sa­ lem Parker. A graveside service will be conducted at 11 a.m., Wednesday, Nov. 25 at Zion Cemetery with the Rev. Wayne Swisher officiating. At the request of the family, be mindful of social distancing and wear face covering. The family invites friends to come by Lambert Funeral Home, Tuesday, Nov.18, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., to pay respects. Due to Covid, there will not be a formal receiving line. Memorials: Zion Cemetery Fund, c/o Jean Cleary, 1506 Sheffield Road, Mocksville. Condolences; www.lambertfuneralhomenc .com. Persona! Service for Your Personal Needs 336-936-9067 Advance Family Dental Dr. Amy Li Dr. David Barabe 149 Yadkin Valley Rd., Ste 101 Advance, NC 27006 336-998-1076 www.advancefamilydentist.coni You don’t have to leave your own home to order the perfect Christmas gift for your friend or loved one - a subscription to the Davie County Enterprise Record. For only $32.03 for subscriptions inside Davie County, they will receive the gift from you every week of the year, delivered right to their mailbox. B«n’< delays Call today! 33C-7S l-« I 90 DAVIE COUNTV' CNTERPRIZEliECORD Larry David Foster Mr. Larry David Foster, 87, of US 158, Advance, died on Friday, Nov. 20, 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem. He was bom on Nov. 12, 19334n Davie County,to the late Richard Paul and Vesta Mae Wilson Foster. Mr. Foster ran Foster’s Esso in Advance in the 60s and 70s, and he was a farmer. He enjoyed being out­ doors, restoring tractors, and at­ tending antique tractor shows. Survivors; his wife, Eliz­ abeth Elaine Eaton Foster,of the home; 2 sons, David Fos­ ter (Pamela Crump), and Chris Foster (Karen); and a brother, Wilson Foster. A private burial was held at Chestnut Grove United Methodist Church in Mocksville. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice.com. Robert Lee Hendrix Mr. Robert Lee Hendrix, 88, of NC 801 S. Advance, died Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020 at his home. He was bom on June 28, 1932 in Davie County to the late Eddie Nathaniel and Annie Sidden Hendrix. Mr. Hen­ drix was a veteran of the U.S. Army having served during the Korean Conflict and retired from Western Electric. He was a servant of God serving in many capacities as a member of Fork Baptist Church. He had been chair of the Board of Deacons and had taught Sunday school and RAs. He had been a vol­ unteer with Fork Fire Depart­ ment and enjoyed landscaping, yardwork, farming and raising his garden. He never met a stranger and was a loving husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He was also preceded in death by 6 sisters, Mary Hen­ drix, Joyce Barney, Vemie Hendrix, Edith Long, Evelyn Fishel and Sarah Smith. Survivors; his wife of 64 years, Elizabeth Foster Hen­ drix of the home; 3 children, James Hendrix (Tanya) of Advance, Wayne Hendrix of Advance and Diane Green (Doug) of Mocksville; 4 grandchildren, Megan Howard (Jermey), Stacy Hendrix, Shelby Jefferies (Tanis) and Zach Green; 3 great-grandchildren, Ella Alexander, Jack- son Howard and Makenzie Howard; 2 sisters, Lucy Carter of Lexington, and Annie Everhart of Advance; a brother, Vance Hendrix (Maxine) of Advance; and several nieces and nephews. A graveside service was conducted at 2 p.m., Sunday, Nov. 22,at Fork Baptist Church Cemetery with the Rev. Robert Garrett officiating. Memorials: Fork Baptist, 3140 US 64 E., Mocksville; or to Mountain Valley Hospice, 401 Technology Lane, Suite 200, Mt. Airy, 27030. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice .com. Frederick O’Neal Gaither Frederick O’Neal Gaither, 81, of Mocksville, died on Nov. 16, 2020 at Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Sa­ lem. He was bom in Davie Coun­ ty on Sept. 4, 1939. He was the son of the late Tom Gaither and Betty Marie (Booe) March. He is also preceded in death by; brothers, Michael Gaither and Bernard Gaither; and a sister, Carole Gaither. He attended school in Davie County and Salisbury. He also attended classes at Livingstone College. In 1974 he married Dorothy Mae Sullivan, who became his wife of 46 years. He honored his family and his country by serving 23 years in the U.S. Army. Outside of his Army days, he was a CNA 3 and worked in Salisbury VA. He was a good Christian man, and a member of St. John AME Zion Church. He loved his grandchildren, playing the saxophone, and spending time with his family and friends. Survivors in addition to his wife of Mocksville, 3 daughters, Patricia Young, LaV’onya Gaither, and Tan­ ganyika Gaither, all of Mocksville; 4 brothers, Regi­ nald Gaither, Victor Gaither, Julian Gaither, and Gordon Gaither; 3 sisters, Thomasina Gaither, Doris Jimerson, and Debbie Ellis; grandchildren, SaTonia Gray, Tevin Gaither, CJ Heiner, Terrell Joyner, Quientin Joyner, Dejah Joyner, Cory Heiner, Colby Heiner, Joshua Collins and Ja­ mie Gray; great-grandchildren, London, Envee, Addison, Rayshaun, Zaydn, Shakyra, Ariah and Serenity. A service was held at 1 p.m. Monday, Nov. 30 at the Salisbury National Service Atrium, officiated by Pastor Rodney Barker. He was buried at Salisbury National Cem­ etery. Memorials; 642 Fred Lanier Rd., Mocksville. Condolences: wwwjiaviefuneralservice .com. Helen Madeleine Smoot Sparks Mrs. Helen Madeleine Smoot Sparks, 95, of Farming- ton, died Tuesday, Nov. 17, 2020 at the Joan and Howard Woltz Hospice House in Dobson, a casualty of COVID-19. The youngest child of Mattie Eaton and Robert Lee Smoot, she was bom July 30, 1925 at the headwaters of Bear Creek in northwest Davie County on the family tobacco farm, spending childhood sum­ mers plucking green worms off tobacco leaves by hand, suck­ ering and priming. As a first grader, she walked two miles to the bus stop. On rainy, muddy mornings, she rode astride the family mule led by her father. At age 12, she was baptized in Bear Creek. She prayed each night on her knees. On her deathbed, she recited the 23rd Psalm and urged her family to memorize it. She was a bright girl who graduated at the top of her class from Farmington High in 1942, and attended Appalachian State Teachers College, majoring in science and math, graduating in 1946. She taught at the old Mocksville and Farmington high schools and was the chemistry teacher at Davie High for 27 years. She married Farmington classmate John F. Sparks in 1947, becoming a dairy farmer's wife. They built a house, planted pecan trees and made the farm their home, rearing six children. Her husband died in 2002. They were married 55 years. She was a member of Macedonia Moravian Church. Since college, she read the Bible from cover to cover ev­ ery year. She followed Biblical instructions to feed, clothe and visit the hungry, needy and sick. She was industrious, compassionate and had an ency­ clopedic memory. She baked and shared thousands of her signature oatmeal-chocolate chip cookies. She had a green thumb and a large, flowering lawn. She commanded the wheel of her Cub Cadet mower, reluctantly yielding at age 92. Also preceding her in death: son, John Edwin Sparks; brothers, McKinley, Cedric, Lester and Johnnie; sons-in- law, Robert "Bob" Segal and Freddy A. Young; and daugh- ters-in-law, Mary B. Sparks and Carol W. Sparks. Survivors: children, Helen S. Myers (Bobby); Nancy S. Miller (Michael); Dwight A. Sparks (Elizabeth); Tere­ sa S. Phifer (John); and Alethea S. Segal; 15 grandchil­ dren; 6 step-grandchildren; 18 great-grandchildren; 16 step-great-grandchildren; sisters-in-law. Hazel Smoot and Betty Sparks Todd. Graveside funeral services were at 11 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 21, with burial at the Macedonia Moravian Church's God's Acre. Memorials: Farmington Vol. Fire Dept., 1880 Farming- ton Road, Mocksville. Condolences; www.eatonfuneralservice.com. Stephanie Leigh Powe Kimrey Mrs. Stephanie Leigh Powe Kimrey, 64, of Dulin Road, Mocksville, died on Sunday, Nov. 22, 2020 at her home. She was bom on Oct. 17, 1956 in Mobile County, Ala. to the late Robert Earl and Dorothy Mae Johnson Powe. Mrs. Kimrey grew up attending Comatzer United Meth­ odist Church. She was an excellent homemaker and cook, who enjoyed getting the family together to share in her de­ licious homecooked meals. Mrs. Kimrey enjoyed watch­ ing cooking shows and court shows, crocheting, and work­ ing outdoors. She loved fishing and helped her husband, Ralph, work on his boats. Mrs. Kimrey also loved her four dogs, Bella, Little Man, Bull, and Brandy. She was also preceded by in death by: a sister, Billie White (Bruce); and a step-daughter, Sheila Renee Kimrey. Survivors; her husband, Ralph Kimrey of the home; 2 step-children. Brad Kimrey (Maricar) of Julian, and An­ gela Jones (Larry) of Mocksville; 3 siblings, Robert Powe (Ruby), Reggie Powe (Bonita), and Emily Couch (Pee Wee). A graveside service will be conducted at 11 a.m. Wednesday, Nov. 25 in Jemsalem Baptist Church Ceme­ tery with the Rev. Shane Young officiating. Memorials: American Cancer Society, PO Box 22478, Oklahoma City, OK 73123; or Medi Home Health and Hospice, 317 S. Talbert Blvd., Lexington, 27292. Condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice .com. /lllstate. You're in good hands. Drew Ridenhour 852 US Hwy.64 W.,Ste.lO1.Mocksville 336*751-0669 Black Sand Company Sand, Gfxjva! & Landteapa Matartaft “STnaa 19ar~ Residential & Conunercial Mark A Cindy Shottf, Ovnen Monday-Friday 7O0-5-J0 * Saturday 8KX)-3KK) PICK UP OR DEUVERY IAS W. ClenxnonsvfDe Road • Wlnstoo-Salctn. NC (336) 788-6411 COLLETTE LjILj .Art & Framing, Inc. 120 Bo.xutKxl Village Drive .MtK'Lsviitc. NC 27O2K 336-751-2296 h.inuil: Colleiicl-ramitig'" titU.ctmi DAVIE NURSING & REHABILITATION CENTER 498 Madison Rd. | Mocksville, NC 336-751-3535 Irtqu re today about our NEW State-of-the-artfaciitty that wMI dder Short-Term Rehab Respite It Private Pav Suites. saberhealth.com 9path 140 N. Clement St., Mocksville. NC (336) 751-5820 Eaton Funeral Service 325 North Main SL, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2148 www.eaionfuneralservice.com Mfe Tbw 48 State* - A L«po Wi«c*sr Servea • Aoi Back Sanwa Farmington Road Wrecker Service. Inc. 721 Wilkesboro St, Mocksville, NC ^DaysAW We Accept Most Major Credit Cante 24 Hour Service - 7 C Man*) 4 OndaSmth 338-7S3-148S Senior Christmas party cancelecJ For 19 years, the Cooleemee Senior Citizens held their Christmas luncheon for all Cooleemee senior cit­ izens. “Regretfully, due the COVID-19, the popular special event is canceled for 2020. Over a hundred Cooleemites attend this Christ special. Even though 2020 is can­ celed, the seniors plan to continue the Christmas party in 2021,’’ said organizers, Judy Webb and Helen Queen. •t James Hubert Payne Mr. James Hubert Payne, 73, of Cedar Ridge Road, Mocksville, died Sunday, Nov. 22, 2020 at SECU Hospice Care Center in Yadkinville. He was bom on Nov. 11, 1947, in Carroll County, Va. to the late Bill and Helen Louise Ring Gordon. He was a member of Blaise Baptist Church and retired from R J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. after 32 years. He enjoyed riding motorcycles, fishing and camping and was a ham radio op­ erator. He was a very fun-loving man and was kind heart­ ed. Survivors: his wife of 37 years, Kay Mason Payne of the home; 2 children, Crissy McEwen (Mike Hicks) of Mocksville and Regan Richardson (Matt) of Florida; a stepson, Mike Byerly (Sally) of Mocksville; 7 grandchil­ dren, Coty McEwen (Ashley), Triston McEwen, Ashlyn Byerly (Ben Donathan), Chelsea Byerly, Madison Byerly, Ethan Heck and Chase Heck; 5 great-grandchildren. Wes­ son McEwen, Sawyer McEwen, Alexis Gadson, Josiah Gadson and Noah Donathan; a sister, Linda Bost (Cecil) of King; several nieces and nephews; and many special friends. A funeral service will be conducted at 2 p.m., Tues­ day, Nov. 24, at Blaise Baptist Church with the Revs. Ken Furches and Glenn Sellers officiating. Memorials: Blaise Baptist building fund, 134 Blaise Church Road, Mocksville; or to a charity of the donor's choice. Condolences; *www.eatonfuneralservice.com . f Kenneth L. Foster & Associates, PA • Luid SuTA'cyors - Planners - Mapping 336-723-8850 FOSTER DRUG COMPANY 495 Valley Road Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-2141 Prescription Call In: 336-753-DRUG E Precision Laser Cutting & Metal Fabrication 980 Salisbury Rd. Mocksville, NC 27028 336-751-3712 www.fullerwelding.com This scripture message broughtto you by these businesses who encourageyou to worship at the church ofyour choice. GENTLE Machine & Tool Inc. 2716 Hwy. 601 North Mocksville, NC 27028 336-492-5055 ^LAMBERT F L N K K K 1.H O M E 635 Wilkesboro St. Mocksville, NC (336)751-1100 wwwJambertfuneraihomencxom SsPaUetOne www.palietone.com 165 Turkey Foot Road Mocksville. 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Salisbury St Mocksville, NC 14 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - BI -Si "Reflect upon your present blessings, of which every man has plenty; not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.” — Charles Dickens Wishing You A S(^e &' Happy Thanksgiving Allstate Insurance Drew Ridenhour 852 US Hwy. 64 W., Ste. 101, Mocksville 336-751-0669 Eaton Funeral Service 325 N. Main Street, Mocksville 336-751-2148 Foster Drug Co. 495 Valley Road, Mocksville 336-751-2141 Farmington Road Wi^cker Service 721 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville 336-753-1485 Fleming & Williams, LLP Attorneys at Law 284 South Main St, Mocksville 336-477-2529 Joe’s Tow 24 Hour Roadside Rollback Service Small, Medium & Heavy Duty Towing 1441 Deadmon Rd., Mocksville 336-998-2693 Office Lambert Funeral Home 635 Wilkesboro Street, Mocksville 336-751-1100 Mocksville Tire& Automotive Serving You Since 1991 962 Yadkinville Road, Mocksville Mon-Fri 7:30am-6pm; Sat 7:30am-Noon 336-751-6115 Osborne’s Tire &; Automotive Any Brand of Tire • Cars-Trucks- Tractors All Major & Minor Repairs 1083 Salisbury Road, Mocksville 336-753-8090 PhilCar Automotive & Tire 1628 Hwy, 601S,, Mocksville 336-751-1800 Wfeathered Rock Stone, Mulch & Recycle Yard 1819 US Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville 336-492-5979 * 4 'This IMLcssagc Brought TolrbuBy The LcKfal Businesses Listed Here Sports Football loaded at By Brian Pitts Davie Enterprise Record Davie’s football team averaged 35.1 points in 2019 and most of the primary weapons are set to return when the 2021 season kicks off in February. Quarterback Nate Hampton is coming off a record-setting seas«jn. Tate Carney amassed 1,998 rush- ing/receiving yards. Jack Reynolds put up a record-setting 15 recep­ tions against a team (West Forsyth) that lost one regular-season game. The top three receivers and four of the top five are back. In short, they’re going to be a nightmare for opposing defenses. But before we get to the boat­ load of dangerous targets for the 6-foot-6 QB, let’s take a look at the receiver coach who has been on the staff since 2(X)3. Chris Callison is beginning his 18th year. Callison is a 1988 Davie grad who played receiver during his high school days. He was actually more of a blocker in coach Mike Carter’s wishbone. As a junior, Callison had two catches; Rod­ ney Latham threw 25 of Davie’s 50 pass attempts in 10 games. Callison also had two catches as a senior in 1987, when J.C. Hendrix attempted 45 of Davie’s 69 passes in lO games. Callison is a cerebral type who is not inclined to leave any “i” undotted. Head coach Tim Devericks is more than grateful to have someone so loyal and so knowledgable. “Sometimes you get caught up in the Xs and Os and you might miss the finer things,” Devericks said. “Cac does a great job of slowing everybody down. He’ll say: ’All of this doesn’t matter if we’re not lined up right.’ It’s the details when you’re rushing through something or you want to get something installed so quickly. Cac does a great job of highlight­ ing those points. I think he’s an outstanding teacher at Ellis and he really teaches these receivers the finer points. It all starts with a great stance, it starts with good route-running, and he really de­ votes a lot of time to that. He’s been in that position for a long time and been a great asset.” ••• Reynolds, Carney and Za’Ha- ree Maddox combined for 182 of Hampton’s 263 completions in 2019. Reynolds is a huge star even though he looks like the guy you’d volunteer to guard in a 7-on-7 contest. He has savvy Please See Loaded - Page B5 Davie varsity volleyball players, from left: Aimee Loj, Kaylee Krause and Ali Angell. - Photos by Mark and Tammy Floyd Volleyball roars out of gate by ripping Reynolds and West By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record It’s too early to make wild predictions - we’re two matches in and West Forsyth was missing a major talent - but Davie’s varsity volleyball team appears to have the talent and skill to make a run at the Central Piedmont Conference championship. After nearly eight months of seeing no high school sports be­ cause of COVID-19, the War Ea­ gles kicked off the 2020-21 season with two shutout wins - and both were against CPC competition. Talk about roaring out of the gate. Davie opened the season at Reynolds on Nov. 17. It was ob­ vious early that the Demons were overmatched. The scores were 25-5, 25-13, 25-8. “We’re seven practices in and \ * Please See Roars - Page B4 Abigail Reynolds attacks from the outside. 151 Riddle had 117 tackles in ‘02 shocking run By Brian Pitts Davie Enterprise Record Third in a series on new hall of famer Billy Riddle. Since Billy Riddle was the second-leading tackier as a sopho­ more on one of the finest defenses ever in 2001, we know he was on his way to becoming a Davie football legend. But how was he on the Davie wrestling mat? Glad you asked. Riddle barely flinched as a var­ sity freshman for the War Eagles of Buddy Lowery. On a 2000-01 wrestling team that went 24-4 and reached the state dual team quarterfinals. Riddle tied for fifth in wins with a 34-12 record. The only ones ahead of him were Pat­ rick Lowery (50-1), Josh Stanley (43-9), Jordan Kahrs (40-9), Adam Sain (36-12) and Jacob Garner (34-14). Riddle went 25-13 in 2001-02, when Davie went 32-3, won the conference championship and placed fifth in the state individual tournament. He did not wrestle as a junior, maybe because football season lasted three playoff rounds and spilled over into the beginning of wrestling. But he returned to the mat as a senior and did so in a big way, going 31-8 at 189 and qual­ ifying for the state tournament. He helped Davie go 27-3, win the CPC title while outscoring league rivals by 53 on average, reach the state dual team quarterfinals and place sixth in the state individual tournament. Add it up and Riddle went 90- 33 in three years. Those Buddy Lowery squads went 83-10 and captured four Central Piedmont Conference crowns (two regular seasons, two tournaments). But it was football that truly captured Riddle’s heart. In the summer before his junior season in 2002, Riddle, who brought a mixture of freight train and light­ ning bolt from his safety position, made quite an impression at a UNC combine. Said secondary coach Jeff Ward in 2002: “He’s a complete football player. He went down to Carolina, ran a 4.48 40 and they were like: ‘Where in the (heck) did thi.s kid come from?’ He’s got that little something extra that’s special. He’s got some of the stuff you can’t coach.” Said head coach Doug Illing: “He’ll knock your head off.” For the first lO weeks in 2002, the season alternated hope and dis­ appointment, resulting in records of 4-6 overall and 2-2 in the CPC. But in the final regular-season game at North Davidson, the soph­ omore-heavy War Eagles pulled off a storybook win over the 8-2 Black Knights. They turned six turnovers into 23 points, weath­ ered 462 passing yards from Dan­ iel Light and 292 receiving yard.s from Chris Noble and somehow managed to win 26-24. Because quarterback Andrew McClannon picked this moment to have a remarkable breakout, because sophomore Dewayne Col­ lins joined the off-the-bench QB a.s an unlikely hero, Davie forced a three-way tie for second. “We kind of came into the game big-headed and it hurt us,” Light said. “We overlooked them because we thought we would be able to beat them with no trouble.” Davie shook the North mon­ key off it.s back (North had won the previous four meetings) and West Forsyth (10-1, 5-0 CPC) beat Reynolds to force the tie for second between Davie, North Please See Riddle - Page B3 Seth Grooms a silver lining during virus ----- 1 ?th Grooms at Pudding Ridge with, from left: Dan Ward, David Streit and Sandra Boyette. By Katie Brewer and Grace Matthews For the Enterprise Special Olympic.s Davie Coun­ ty (SODC) has found a silver lining during the COVID-19 pan­ demic: Seth Grooms. Local athlete, motivator, friend and advocate of all things Davie County, Grooms continues to bring inspiration and athleticism to the forefront despite the challenges of an international pandemic. The parent organization to SODC, Special Olympics North Carolina (SONC), has canceled state-level events and competi­ tions since March 2020 due to the specific health vulnerability of the athletic population served by SONC. The organization has also canceled state-level events through the upcoming spring season, but allowed athletes to start training locally under specific safety crite­ ria at the beginning of the current Please See Grooms - Page B5 B2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - B3 Enter Weekly Chance to « $20 WEEKLY 1®" PRIZE and an Enterprise Record Cap $5 WEEKLY 2* PRIZE CONTEST RULES 1. Anyone can enter except employees of the Davie County Enterprise Record and their families. Only one entry allowed per person per week. All entries must be on originaJ newsprint or fax to 336- 751-9760. 2. Games in this week’s contest are listed in each advertisement on this page. Fill in the contest blank and submit or mail the entry to the Enterprise Record, P.O. Box 99, MocksviUe, NC 27028. 3. Weekly prizes are $20 & Cap for first place and $5 for second place. 4. In case of ties, the entrant who came closest to the total number of points in the tie breaker wins. If a tie stiU exists, awards will be divided equally among the winners. 5. Entries must be delivered to the Enterprise Record before 5:OOpm Friday each week. The office is located at 171 S. Main SL, MocksviUe, NC. 6. Winners wUl be announced following each contest. Decisions of judges will be final. A new contest wiU be announced each week. 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Congratulations to Leslie Gene Shelton who missed only one game to claim First Place. Second place went to Willie Gillam who missed only 2 games but needed the tie-breaker to fend off six others with two misses. NC State blocked a field goal in the closing minutes to topple Liberty from the ranks of the unbeaten. The Carolina Panthers gave former XFL star RJ. Walker his first NFL start and he brought home the win. Coastal Carolina kept on winning as they knocked off Appalachian in Conway, SC. Cl^son vs. Florida St. was postpoyied due to Covid-19. I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I II NAME:_____ I ADDRESS:. j DAY PHONE I 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. PHILCAR AUTOMOTIVE SPILLMAN’S HOME FUEL OIL CRENSHAW PAINTING CO. WOODMEN LIFE DAVIE JEWELERS WHITNEE’S NEW & USED VARIETY FRANK VOGLER & SONS MOSSY’S LAMBERT FUNERAL HOME 10.OURDAVIE.COM 11. ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE WINNER Tie Breaker Predict the total score in the following game. In cases of ties, the tiebreaker will be used to determine the winners Kansas City vs. Tampa Bay Total Points Scored NIGHT: Bfitries Must Be Received Befoi> 5 pm Friday I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I Continued From Page BI Reynolds. Then in a draw­ ing to determine the two, three and four seeds, assis­ tant coach Barry Whitlock plucked the two to give Davie home-field advantage in the first round. “It’s about time we beat those suckers,” llling said. “We stood toe-to-toe like a heavyweight bout and .slugged it out. It was a spe­ cial moment and a sweet victory.” Sophomore QB/tailback James “Cooter” Arnold rolled right looking for a receiver, reversed direction all the way across the field and gained 20 yards. After McClannon hit a streaking Brian Hunter for 38 yards, Arnold completed an 18- yard rainbow to Larry Hud­ son for a 7-0 lead. Light and Noble were the marquee players - Noble used his 6-5 frame to torch Davie with nine catches - but McClannon and Hunter stole the show. With Davie’s running game shut down, McClannon went 9 of 14 for 148 yards - 50 more yards than he had through 10 games. He pump faked and found Hudson, who beat Noble over the middle and caught a deflection off a linebacker’s fingers. The 33-yard score gave Davie a 14-10 halftime lead. In the third quarter, fresh­ man comerback Raeshon McNeil deflected a long pass, only to watch Noble grab it and gallop 77 yards to put North in front 17-14. Hunter (5-133 receiving) fielded a 48-yard punt and returned it 44 yards to set up a game-tying field goal by Kevin Winters. Then a North fumble resulted in a short TD run by Arnold. Hunter hauled in a 30-yard spiral from McClannon at the North 16, and another Winters field goal provided a 26-17 cushion. McClannon: “(Hunter and Hudson) made me look good, and we couldn’t do it without the offensive line (Justin Lanning, Zach Jakob, Justin Norsworthy, Matt Markland and Trent Young and tight ends Ted Randolph and Cody Ste­ phens).” llling: "From the start of the year, you would have never guessed (McClannon) would lead this team to vic­ tory against North Davidson in the last (regular-season) game.” The Black Knights had 506 total yards to Davie’s 293. They rolled into Davie territory on 10 of 16 pos­ sessions, only punted twice (Winters trotted out for eight punts) and converted 9 of 17 third and fourth downs. But Davie’s defen.se showed the guts of a burglar. Each time the game seemed to be slipping away, a courageous defender would come to the rescue. When the Knight.s reached the Davie 5 with Davie leading 7-0, Riddle and Derek Comatzer forced a field goal. Collins blocked a 34-yard field goal. Collins mashed Light on an option play, Brandon Pane recov­ ered the fumble and Davie scored three plays later for a 14-10 lead. With Davie clinging to a 23-17 lead. Light went to Noble - but Gareth White picked it off. McNeil intercepted with two minute.s left to all but seal it. Outside linebacker Tim­ my Redmond: “Dewayne played a heckuva game, and Raeshon’s first interception came at the right time.” llling: “Our kids just found a way to make plays and get takeaways.” Three days after endur­ ing the death of his grand­ mother (Lettie Brown) and mere hours after grieving at her funeral, Wophomore running back Justin Brown Billy Riddle breaks a long kickoff return. Riddle wraps up a Page ball carrier. ran for 131 yards, scored three TDs and sparked a 36-14 first-round win over McDowell. While Brown ran through the Titans to match his ca­ reer high in rushing yards, Arnold ran around them for 116 yards as Davie im­ proved to 6-6 with iLs first back-to-back wins of the season. On a bitterly cold night in Greensboro in the second round, Davie put on a show that defied description. Arnold and Brown com­ bined for 321 rushing yard.s. Hunter set the season re­ cord for receiving yards and the War Eagles produced a first-quarter explosion for the ages to send them to 36- 20 victory over Page. They reached the quarterfinals for the second time ever and climbed above .500 (7-6) for the first time all season. llling: “Man. I wa.s shocked. I was really shocked to see us come out and execute like that on both sides of the ball. Boy, we came to play.” The War Eagles were so dominant out of the gate that they outgained Page 205-7 in a first quarter that featured 114 rushing yards from Arnold. On the fourth play of the game. Hunter energized Davie with a third-and-10 reception. He caught Mc­ Clannon’s floater at the Page 15 and bolted to the end zone for a 37-yard score. On Davie’s second series, McClannon found Hunter down the left sideline for 27 yards and Arnold scored on the next play. Hunter finished with 103 receiving yards, giving the first-year Davie player 664 on the year. (Thadd Johnson had held the record of 657 from 1999.) llling: “If he’d been out here since his freshman year, he would have been an all-state receiver.” Hunter was only the be­ ginning of Page’s troubles. Arnold ran for 159 yards on 20 carries in tlK first half alone and scored three TDs in a span of 7:29 as Davie racked up a 29-0 lead in 12 minutes, five seconds. When Arnold (24-190 rushing) wasn’t zipping around the corner. Brown (21-131) was pounding between the tackles. Lanning: “(Coach Chad) Groover had us pumped up. He said: ‘Just think of the Bahamas and don’t think of the cold weather.’” The defenders who sti­ fled Page during the 29-0 start were Riddle, Pane, Sam Stovall, Kevin Bo­ ger, D J. Rice, Collins and Chris Hauser. Page’s 6-4, 202-pound quarterback completed his first pass with 5:05 left in the game, ending an 0-for-11 streak. McNeil had an INT for the third straight week. In the quarterfinals in Asheville, Davie was ran over by a juggernaut. A.C. Reynolds (12-1) won 42-0 and went on to capture the 4A title for the second time in four years. llling: “We ran into a buzzsaw. They smash­ mouthed right down our throat.” But the War Eagles, who rallied for the sixth non-los­ ing season in seven years and the 10th seven-win season in 47 years, were playing on house money. The 7-7 season proved to be more than anyone could have expected with so many sophomores in the lineup. llling: “It’s exciting. We’ve got a lot of young kids that gained great ex­ perience and got a taste of the big atmosphere of the playoffs.” For the second year in a row. Riddle was the No. 2 tackier. He delivered 117 - second to Rice’s 146 - despite missing two full games and virtually all of another with injuries. 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B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - B5 Abigail Reynolds hits. In middle, Ali Angell pancakes the ball. At right, Emma Hayes (3) sets for Kiah Mathis. - Photos by Mark and Tammy Floyd Whit’S our man! The Davie P4;13 10-under base­ ball team had a special guest at a practice - Whit Merrifield of Ad­ vance and the Kansas City Roy­ als. The players, from left: Jack Coates, Hayden Miles, Wade Ridenhour, Connor Comatzer, Sawyer Hall, Dawson Griffin, Silas Whittaker, Landon Norman, Jax­ on Whisenhunt, Gage Williams, Bowman Blakley, Wade Hefner and Easton Stanley. Hayes sets for Mathis. At right, Aimee Loj attempts a kill for the War Eagles, who opened the season with CPC wins over Reynolds and West Forsyth. Roars ... Loaded... Continued From Page BI we’ve focussed on winning the serving and pass game,” coach Amber Brandon said. “We want to be the most aggressive team in the con­ ference behind the service ; line, and we want to be the j most solid in serve-receive. ' We feel like if we can do those two things that we have enough good hitters to be a really good team.” Ali Angell and Abigail Reynolds got Davie off and running. “In the first set we were firing on all cylinders,” Brandon said. “Ali was 7 for 8 in kills. Abby went on a 13 serving streak. Abby had some really good swings. She’s really been working on her line shot.” The Demons have a new coach (Katie Powers) after going 2-21 and 0-10 in the CPC in 2019. ••• As good as Davie was in the opener, it was noth­ ing compared to the 25-11, 25-12, 25-22 win over the defending CPC champion. West Forsyth. “We have a solid team,” Brandon said after the home opener on Nov. 19. “We’re not a team that has a super- star, but we have a lot of great high school volleyball Ali Angell makes a pass. At right, Emily Garner hits for the varsity War Eagles. players. It’s a fun group to coach because the ball gets spread out.” The Titans suffered one CPC loss in 2019, and they swept all three meetings from Davie, including the championship match in the CPC Tournament. But ev­ erything clicked again as the War Eagles picked up a joyous victory. “(West’s coach) called her first timeout at 6-0 in the first set,” Brandon said. “What we’ve been working on in practice is starting really, really strong.” Senior setter Elizabeth Tilley and Reynolds, a ju­ nior, were both superb. “Elizabeth had a great match,” she said. “She was on varsity as a sophomore. I made the decision to bring her up during Lauren Grooms’ senior year just for her to work with Lauren in practice and leam from Lauren. Last year with Jes­ sica Crosby coming back and playing her senior year definitely cut into some of Elizabeth’s time. But she had a great night tonight. She went on a couple big serving runs. She had a good game defensively. She had strong leadership presence on the court and on the bench. “Abby had a huge game. Going into the season, I knew that was a kid that had to grow up real quick, and she made smart decisions. She got blocked early in one set and let it roll off her back and went right back to being aggressive. I’m excited to see her do that.” Another key; McKenzie Stakely’s ability to handle monster hits from 5-11 ju­ nior Clara LaRue. “West has a phenomenal outside hitter,” she said. “(LaRue) took some really big rips in the first set. We had a game plan for how JV volleyball earns high praise in opener By Brian Pitts Enterprise Record The first Davie High sporting event since March began with a bang as the JV volleyball team buried vis­ iting Reynolds on Nov. 17. The performance matched Amber Brandon’s suspicions regarding her young troops. “There’s tons of kids on the JV that have a lot of talent and potential,” said Brandon, the varsity coach who filled in for JV coach Brittani Steger, who could not attend the match. Reynolds has been an inferior Central Piedmont 16-751-3759 www.^ngellpaving.com Conference rival - yes, with the modified COVID-19 schedule, this was the con­ ference opener on the first day of the season. But this was a solid win for a cou­ ple of reasons: No. 1, this Demon squad was consid­ erably better than recent predecessors. No. 2, Davie had the challenge of playing with one sophomore and 10 freshmen. Davie has two sophomores but one of them, Camden Hurst, was out with an injury. “We had to shake off some nervous jitters in the first set,” Brandon said. “(It was) closer than a typical Reynolds match. Reynolds has a new coach and that was by far the best Reynolds JV team I’ve seen since I’ve been at Davie.” Not that the War Eagles weren’t in control. They won in two sets behind ef­ forts from freshman libero Hailey Johnson, freshman setter Lauren O’Connor and sophomore middle Grade Wilson. “The JV has a really good libero,” Brandon said. “I’m super excited about (Johnson). First contact is really the name of the game, and that’s what I’ve tried to build in my six years at Davie. When people think of Davie volleyball, I want them to think about an incredible passing team. We’ve had some really tal- efited kids the past couple of years, and it’s exciting to see Hailey continue in that pipeline of being a really good ball-control player. “(O’Connor) has quick feet to the ball. She has a good knack for the game. She has a good serve. It’s exciting to see another setter come into the pipeline with the ability to really grow as a player and be a great varsity setter in a couple years.” And then there was Wil­ son, who appears primed to make a meteoric rise. “Grade’s physicality has really improved in the last year,” she said. “She’s hit­ ting and serving with a ton of power.” Davie has a 12-match winning ftreak dating to 2019. we wanted to block her and defend her, and the kids executed it beautifully. In the first couple points of the game, McKenzie laid the ball right in the setter’s hands. We did a good job of getting their big hitters frustrated. McKenzie (also) had two big aces in a row.” Sophomore Kiah Mathis and senior Dyllan Everhardt were factors as well. “Kiah had a couple big kills at crucial moments,” she said. “The third set was by far the tightest set, and Dyllan came alive. She had two big blocks in a row.” Notes; Brandon ac­ knowledged the Titans were not at full strength. Senior setter Leila Landrum injured a knee during a 3-2 loss to East Forsyth in West’s opener. “West had a major injury,” she said. “I don’t want to take anything away from our kids, because they played phenomenal, espe­ cially in the first and second sets. But West had to change their offense. They were definitely a little off-bal­ anced the first two sets. I was proud of our kids for taking advantage of it.” ... Davie has a 35-win streak against Reynolds, 24 of which have ended in three sets. ... Brandon is 10-3 against We^ in her six years at Davie. Continued From Page BI hands of glue. He’ll stop on a dime, juke and make the defender look foolish. “He’s an ultimate com­ petitor,” Devericks said. “If you come up to jam him, he’s going to compete to run a great route. He’s going to compete to do a great release move. We don’t have to say anything to Jack about drops because he’s so hard on himself. Even if it’s a high ball or bad ball, he ex- fjects himself to catch every ball that’s thrown his way. We joke with him; "Jack, it’s OK. Don’t go home and run routes all night or call Chris (Reynolds, his brother and the QB at Charlotte) to come home and throw to you because you dropped one out of the 87 balls you got today.’ That’s just how competitive he is.” Carney is a Swiss Army knife. In one of the most unique seasons ever, he rushed for 1,257 yards, made 58 catches for 741 yards and scored 26 touch­ downs - as a sophomore, no less. He’s never seen a defender he didn’t want to run over. What’s more, he has a desire to improve. “He’s not satisfied, al­ ways looking to raise the bar for himself and everyone around him,” Devericks said. "He’s really improved in his speed category, going to Will Bradley (Sports Per­ formance) and working on his running form to improve some combine numbers and things of that nature. He’s a tremendous leader on and off the field in the way he carries himself. Man, like I said about Jack, what an ultimate competitor. When there’s something on the line, Tate is ready to go.” Despite missing his en­ tire freshman year with a knee injury, Maddox (46 catches for 521 yards) showed an abundance of talent as a sophomore. “He made plays,” De­ vericks said. “He caught out-routes and turned them into 15. Those things kind of go unnoticed, but those are huge in the course of a drive.” There are compelling pieces behind the three proven weapons. Zymere Hudson had some flash moments as a sophomore, making 22 catches and lead­ ing the group with a 15.7 av­ erage per catch. The junior has been turning heads in the much-longer-than-normal offseason. “I think he’s grown about two inches and he looks faster,” Devericks said. “In our study of film from last year, Zymere would make 20-yard catches. Now let’s make a move after you’ve caught it and turn those 20- yard gains into touchdowns. In the 7-on-7 league, out of the nine or lO contests we had, Zymere might have dropped one ball. I mean, he was really impressive.” Offensive coordinator Matt Gould added; “There were one or two (7-on-7) games where he just took over. You could tell they were focussed on Jack and Za’Haree and they forgot about Zymere and he would have four or five catches on the same drive. So we really think he could have a breakout year for us.” Look for Brodie Smith to be a useful piece in Febru­ ary/March. He was a solid JV freshman last year, and like Carney, he can play running back and receiver. “Brodie is going to get the ball in different spots,” Gould said. “He’.s learned three or four positions al­ ready so he can spell guys when we need somebody at different spxjts.” Chase Robertson could be factor. As a junior, he waited in the shadows. His number was called early in the season against Kannap­ olis, How did that turn out? He made a sensational catch in the end zone for a 27-yard score. Gould: “I definitely think Chase is going to help us.” Devericks; “Chase is sneaky fast and can make a big catch on you. (On the TD against Kannapolis), I remember saying in the headset: ‘He caught that?’ He was blanketed and some­ how came down with it. It reemphasizes to everybody on the team; Be ready. Your part can make a big differ­ ence in a game.” Preston Young is coming up from JV. He burned West Forsyth as a freshman and has gained confidence in the offseason. “He’s grown a lot,” Gould said. “He made some big catches. In the summer we were watching the West Forsyth JV game. The same route was open over and over and it was Preston every time. He had three or four catches over the middle in that one game.” Keep an eye on Coo­ per Smith, a junior playing football at Davie for the first time. Gould; “He hasn’t played but he looks natural at it. He looks like a natural under­ neath receiver who should be able to help us out. I think he’s friends with (offensive lineman) Spencer Williams and maybe Spencer got him to come out. He seems to be enjoying it and he’s catching on.” Devericks: “He started in the summer. He wanted to give it a shot, and I don’t think he's missed more than one or two days. He’s been a pleasant surprise. He’ll make a 12-yard curl catch and will make a big play for us somewhere down the line.” There are two more first- year players at receiver - ju­ niors Max Junker and Owen Byers. Devericks: “I’m looking forward to seeing what Max and Preston can offer to the team.” Gould: “Owen looks pretty good out there. He’s smaller but he seems to be pretty tough. He’s definite­ ly competitive. He gets all those guy.s going, so it’s been fun having him out there.” Seth Grooms with Richard Whitt (left) and Kenny Williams. Grooms ... Continued From Page BI fall season. Not one to miss an op­ portunity to hit the greens. Grooms and his Unified Partner Sandra Boyette be­ gan training at Pudding Ridge Golf Course to hone their skills and hopefully prepare for the 2021 SONC season. This mark.s Groom’s 19th year of golfing for SODC, Throughout this time. Pud­ ding Ridge has sponsored Grooms’s journey through 18 holes of athleticism, passion for Davie County and representation of the spirit of Special Olympics International as he prepares for his yearly journey to the SONC Fall Tournament. Numerous times. Grooms has earned recognition as a top golfer in his SONC di­ vision and medaled in gold. Grooms and Boyette’s last training session wa.s Nov. 6. Grooms arrived as he always does: with a smile on his face, unending gratitude and determination for a triumphant final day on the course. “Seth has been partici­ pating since he was 8 and he’s 39 now,” Boyette said. “Pudding Ridge ha.s been sponsoring him since he’s been golfing. Everybody has a special spot for Seth.” Wanting to find a way to recognize Grooms for his training season since it Grooms with cheerleaders Maddie Kulis (left) and Abby Hicks, along with Sandra Boyette (right). did not end with an SONC competition, Davie County Schools Athletics jumped at the chance to make Groom’s last training memorable. Cheer coach Angie Stage coordinated special appear­ ances of cheerleaders Abby Hicks and Maddie Kulis and Jordan Coner as the Ea­ gles mascot to congratulate Grooms on his season and present him with a com­ memorative picture of a soaring Eagle with the title of Excellence. A fitting motto for ar athlete that represents the definition of excellence in the goal of SONC — tc participate in the sharing of gifts, skill.s and friend­ ship — something Grooms was able to conquer and achieve this season despite the pandemic. Final score: Grooms 1 COVID-19 O. For more information on volunteering, coaching or participating in SODC email da\ie@ sone jiet. Hill wins cross country opener for North Davie boys The North Davie boys cross country team, led by overall winner Tyler Hill, won a season-opening meet at home on Nov. 17. Can­ terbury was second in the three-team meet. The Wildcats took four of the top five spots, including Ethan Lakey (third), Jack- Upcoming Games Tliesday, Nov. 24 Davie JV/varsity volleyball at home vs. E. Forsyth at 5/6:30 Tuesday, Dec. 1 Davie JV/varsity volleyball at Reagan at 5/6:30 South Davie JV/varsity volleyball at North Davie at 4 North Davie girls tennis at Canterbury at 4 North Davie cross country at home vs. S. Davie/Ellis at 4 Ellis girls tennis at South Davie at 4 Ellis cross country at North Davie at 4 Wednesday, Dec. 2 Davie cross country vs. Glenn/West Forsyth at Ivey Redmon at 4 Ellis voileyjtall at Summit at 4 son Sulecki (fourth) and Tanner Steinour (fifth). The top runners for South Davie’s boys were Silas Marion (second overall) and Aidan Szewczyk. The girls and boys ran together. The top runner for North’s girls was Alexis Marion. The Lady Tigers were paced by Emmie John­ son. The Ellis cross country teams opened with wins at Wesleyan Christian Acade­ my on Nov. 17. The Ellis boys, who scored 23 points, were paced by Jusin Sealey (sec­ ond place), Thomas Essie (third) and Brent Sealey (fifth). The rest of the Ja^ar boys included Luke Wayne (sixth), Logan Zuleger (sev­ enth), Ellion Gould (eighth), Ethan Driver (ninth), Adam Brown (10th) and Noah Shore (11th). Like the meet at N. Da­ vie, the girl.s and boys ran together. The victorious El­ lis girls saw Sarah Rajacich (14th), Brooke Miller (15th) and Addison Bost (16th) lead the way. Lanna Robin­ son (20th), Gwynyth Swan (21st), Kayden Richardson (22nd) and Lila Grey Moore (26th) rounded out the Lady Jaguars. Einstein aces Bermuda Run No. 3 Brandon Einstein, a ju­ nior on the High Point Uni­ versity men’s golf team, recently had a hole in one on No. 3 at Bermuda Run from 154 yards. It’s the second time he’s aced that hole. He had a slew of playing partners. The eight-some included Scott Comatzer, Nick Luffman, Nick Gray, //- Steve Wallen, Evan Parsons, Jeff Wilson and Joe Harpe. • ‘Interior cuvcL 'Exterior • ‘Pressure. ‘Washing FREE ESTIMATES • FULLY INSUREie B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 DAVIE COUNTV ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - B7 Society Baptist folks gather Saturday to deliver Thanksgiving dinner groceries to 85 area families. Taylor and Susan Dick­ erson get the family addresses of their deliveries from Johnny and Mary Elizabeth Nantz. Jamin Popejoy, Jacob Miles and son Jaxson, and Wes Muir put pumpkin pies in boxes. County Line Society Baptist members distribute food boxes By Shirley Thorne County Line Correspondent It's Thanksgiving week and County Liners are look­ ing forward to eating turkey ditmers, watching football games, hunting wild game, and shopping. Due to the deadly and highly conta­ gious coronavirus and its inreased spread; turkeys are smaller as families are urged to delay large gather­ ings, some beloved family members will be missing as they succumbed to the virus, and business closings have affected some family finances. As photos show. Society Baptist folks ensure 85 fam­ ilies on hard times will have a traditional Thanksgiving dinner. Church members greatly appreciate every­ one's support. Jacob Riggs, digital marketing specialist of the North Carolina Baptist Children's Homes, will be guest speaker at the 11 a.m. worship service Sunday, Nov. 29 at Society Baptist. As this is the time of em­ phasis and support for Bap­ tist children's homes across North Carolina, he will speak on the need, loving care, and other ministries provide to the children. Church members welcome others to this special ser­ vice. Other local churches have these service sched­ ules this week, but contact the church for any updates weather may require: • Calvary Baptist, no ser­ vices; • Clarksbury Methodist, outdoor Sunday worship at 10 a.m. and indoor "Book of John" Bible study at 7 p.m. Thursday, both ser­ vices with masks and social distancing; • Piney Grove AME Zion, outdoor Sunday wor­ ship at 10 a.m.; • Pleasant View Bap­ tist, regular indoor services Sunday and Wednesday; and • Salem Methodist, in­ door Sunday worship at 9:30 a.m. with social dis­ tancing and masks in the Claudine Bell holds list of addresses as daughters Susan Dickerson and Sherry Wilson and granddaughter Taylor Dickerson are ready to help de­ liver boxes. Kevin Henderson and friends ready to roll with a load of boxes to deliver. Dick Card makes space for boxes as Gene Tutterow hands them to him. sanctuary. All services for local W^ter Phipps gets ready to deliver boxes? churches will continue on­ line as previously stated. Upcoming communi­ ty events include a live "Christmas Nativity" drive-thru from 6-8 pan. Dec. 11-12 at Clarksbury United Methodist Church. Kevin Stroud has been recuperating at home since last week and will continue medical care on outpatient basis. Faye Stroud contin­ ues to rest at home while under treatment for cancer. Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessings upon Kevin, Faye, and other residents who are having health prob­ lems. Remember in prayer Douglas and Jennifer Cart­ ner and family of Ridge Road; her grandmother Ruby Smith died Sunday of last week. Also, remember in prayer Jerry and Hollie Rash and family of Olin; Jerry's mother Doris Rash died November 11; Jerry worked for and later oper­ ated West Davie Garage for many years after owner Ray Godbey retired. Continue to pray for the many families in our area affected by the coronavirus as this holiday time will be sad and stressful. Pray for our country as the count of infection cases passed 12 million last weekend; pray for our state as the rate of positive tests climbed above 8 percent ( preferred rate less than 5 percent). The virus affects everyone differently, but thousands of lives could be saved if everyone would care about others and just wear a mask and social distance. Here's wishing everyone a happy and safe Thanks­ giving. Call Shirley on 336-492- 511^ or email sdtlink@ hot- mat I.com. Marty and Dennis Link and Layla Card put fro­ zen turkeys in boxes of groceries. Dennis Link loads last box in trunk as Layla Card and he get ready to deliver boxes. Little Jaxson Miles helps dad Jacob carry boxes to car for delivery. • CLEMMONS t JZ SS I I I Iq I _J 33BJ' Call 704-737-4220 • Monday-Friday 8am-5pm Deadlines: Classified ads: Monday 3:00 pm; Legals: Mbnday noon Email: classads@salisbur'ypos1;.com OR place your ad online at: SaiisburyPost.com and click Didn’t receive a paper? Call 336-766-4126 [Place Classified Ad’ Mepchandise 48 Kitchen Master Compactor Baps 9X17X16 Fits Square canisters 980-234-5136 $50.00 Antique Mahogany Bedroom Suite Full size bed, dresser, chest of drawers and night stand. Call 704- 279-8874 after 6pm $150.00 AMANA Heavy Duty Dryver \White. tested, lint free, like new. 704-431-4557. $100.00 Decorative Ceiling Fans 2 Ceiling fans: 1 Large Pewter and 1 large dark wood. Beautiful. $100 each. 239-272-6597 DISPOSABLE WATERPROOF Men/ Women’s Extra Thick Diaper Pul- lups. Sizes: S. M. L & XL. 100 for $40. Call 980-330-3041. Everlast Punching-Kick Bag lOOlbs. with Mounting Bracket. Clean & Good Condition. $35.00. Davie-Mocks­ ville. Call Tom, 336-918-6448 FIREWOOD FOR SALE Approximately 3 tons for $175.00. Delivered 10 miles for free. Call 704-267-5499 FREE 3 Tab Bundles of Shingles Cleaning out & need ’em gone fast 704-640-0466 Frigidaire 30** Electric Range $75 Very good condition. No calls after 8pm. 704-633-1464 Frigidaire Refrigerator $225 Very good condition. No calls after 8pm. 704-633-1464 FREE Light Gray Vinyl Siding 40 pieces. 12ft. 704-640-0466 Generator 2500KW Generac generator 704-278-0022 $150.00 GoH Cart #4B Caps. Four for $20.00 704-213-6201 Golf Cart Cover $75 New 704-213-6201 Heavy Duty Washing Machine Excellent condition. $235.00 704- 431-4557 Public Notices Public Notices No. 1137911 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXECU- TORS for the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, late of Davie County, NC. this is to notify all persons, firms and corpora­ tions having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 02/17/2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. To­ day’s date 11/12/2020. GARY KIS­ ER. 1500 PHIFER ROAD. KINGS MOUNTAIN. NC 28086 AND MI­ CHAEL KISER. 930 WOODLAND DRIVE. SHELBY. NC 28150. as CO-EXECUTORS of the Estate of HORACE EDWARD KISER, de­ ceased, Fite #20E289. Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1143866 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE MOCKSVILLE TOWN BOARD FOR THE FOLLOWING ORDINANCE AND ZONING AMENDMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO THE REQUIRE­ MENTS of Chapter 160A-364 of the General Statutes of North Carolina and pursuant to Section 8-3.9.7 of the Mocksville Zoning Ordinance, that the Town Board of Commissioners will hold a PUB­ LIC HEARING at the Mocksville Town Hall located at 171 S Clem­ ent Street, Mocksville. NC at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, December 1, 2020 to hear the following items: Zoning Mao Amendment. The Board will review a request by CVB Partners to rezone ap­ proximately 17.858 acres from OSR Open Space Residential to GI General Industrial. The subject property is located at the end of Eaton Road and is further described as a portion of Davie County Tax Parcel J50000003207. All parties and interested citizens shall have an opportunity to be heard in favor of or in opposition to the foregoing changes. Prior to the hearing, all persons inter­ ested may obtain any additional information on the proposal by visiting the Development Services Department, 298 E Depot Street, Mocksville. N.C. between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336) 753-6050. Publish 11/19. 11/26 No. 1137126 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of ANITA MERLE JOHNSON,(a/k/a ONITA MERLE JOHNSON) late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estateto present writ­ ten claim to the unsersigned on or before February 5. 20z1 (beina Ditais&Pets & LIvestoc North Carotin North Carolina .L..U -H'lVH North Carolina Kehrinator 28x45 Freezer White, excellent condition. 704- 431- 4557. $150.00 Kirby Vacuum, $200 with all attachments. OBO 704-213-6201 LARGE THICK, WATERPROOF 30x30 inch pads for pets. Very thick. 150 for $40. Call 980-330- 3041 Live Edge Poplar 11ft 1 1/2" thick x15 to 22” wide 704-245-4192 $100 Large China Cabinet $85 OBO 704-213-6201 Microwave Kenmore large black counter mi­ crowave. Salisbury. 239-272-6597 $25.00 Mini Blinds 6 Mini Btinds-narrow window. 16" width, off white, like new, $10 each. 239-272-6597 $60.00 Power Washers Two Power Washers. 2500psi $125 Each 704-278-0022 Seasoned Firewood For Sale Split oak kept in shelter 6.5ft pick up trk bed. delivered / cash 704-495-5555 $75 Sleeping Santa Retro electronic animated snoring whistling body/motion. Mint conditiorV box. Clemmons. $55. 336-766-5096 Sliding Glass Door Vertical Blinds 3 door verticals, 1 beige. 2 off white cloth, like new. $45 each. 239-272-6597 $135.00 SOFA FOR SALE $1 Sofa with 2 cushions. $1. Call 831-524-4681 Well Pump 2.5hp Myers Well Pump. Used 1 week. 704-278-0022 $150.00 Public notices three (3J months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment This the J Roiet C/O I to the undersigned. Rojetta McBride FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street MocksviUe. NC 27028 Publish 11/05, 11/12. 11/19, 11/26 No. 1143060 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of NAN­ CY ELIZABETH SMITH HOWELL, deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them To the undersigned on or before the 19th day of February. 2021. said date being at least three months from the date of first publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All per­ sons indebted to said estate will glease make immediate payment > the undersigned. This is the 19 day of November, 2020. the same being the first publication date. Ronald Dean Howell, Personal Representative Estate of NANCY ELIZABETH SMITH HOWELL GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR., NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Es­ tate 161 South Main Street Mocksville. North Carolina 27028 Telephone: (336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/19. 11/26, 12/03. 12/10 No. 1139038 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of PAUL DAVID “COOTER” CORRELL, deceased, late of Davie Counfy, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them To the undersigned on or before the 17th day of February, 2021, said date being at least three months from the date of first publication of this notice, or this notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All per­ sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This 12th day of November. 2020. the same fc>eing the first publica­ tion date. Elaine C. Correll. Personal Rep­ resentative Estate of PAUL DAVID “COOTER" CORRELL GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK. JR.. NCSB#7866, Attorney for the Estate 161 South Main Street Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 Telephone:(2i36) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9S Publish 11/ 9909 1/12. 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1139579 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson Deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate or the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make irrkriediate pay­ ment. Domestic Pets 2 Guinea Pigs FREE to good home. Cages & all included. Call 980-248-0925 Free Puppies to Good Home Medium/large sized dogs, ali black. 704-433-2469 Notices Lost & Found FOUND: SMALL BLACK/GREY CURLY HAIRED MALE DOODLE MIX DOG IN KANNAPOLIS. 803-526-4387 Real Estate Land For Sale 8.03 Acres For Sale 800 block of Cana Road. Partially cleared & wooded. Perked. $75,500. 336-601-1755 or 336-993-6879 state Classified Nordi Carolina Applying for Social Security Disability or Appealing a Denied Claim? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc.. So­ cial Security Disability Attorneys. 1-888-989-4947! FREE Consulta­ tions. Local Attorneys Nationwide (Mail: 2420 N St NW. Washington DC. Office. Broward Co. FL (TX/ NM Bar.)] A-1 DONATE YOUR CAR TO UNITED BREAST CANCER FOUNDATION! Your donation helps education, prevention & support programs. FAST FREE PICKUP - 24 HR RESPONSE - TAX DEDUCTION 888-641-9690 ATTENTION DIABETICS! Save money on your diabetic sup­ plies! Convenient home shipping for monitors, test strips, insulin pumps, catheters and more! 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Receive up to $1.500 off, including a free toilet, and a lifetime warranty on the tub and installation! Call us at 1-855-393- 3307 or visit www.walkintubquote. com/nc. Wesley Financial Group, LLC. Timeshare Cancellation Experts. Over $50.000.000 in timeshare debt and fees cancelled in 2019. Get free informational package and learn how to get rid of your timeshare! Free consultations. Over 450 positive reviews. Call 844-213-6711 Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices Public Notices This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Anthony Gerald Watson SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Win­ ston-Salem, NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12. 11/19, 11/26, 12/03 No. 1139042 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Personal Rep­ resentative of the Estate of SAR­ AH BOGER JONES, deceased, late of Davie County. North Caroli­ na. this is to notify all persons hav­ ing claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 17th day of Feb­ ruary. 2021, said date being at least three 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. This 12{n day of November. 2020. the same being the first publica­ tion date. Sarah J Whitaker, Personal Representative Estate of SARAH BOGER JONES GRADY L. MCCLAMROCK, JR.. NCSB#7866. Attorney for the Estate 161 South Main Street Mocksville. North Carolina 27028 Telephone: (336) 751-7502 Fax: (336) 751-9909 Publish 11/12/20. 11/19/20. 11/26/20, 12/03/20 No. 1139640 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as CO-EXEC­ UTORS for the Estate of FLORA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY: aka, FLORA SMITH HOCKADAY. late of Davie County. NC. this is to notify all persons, firms and cor­ porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRUARY 17. 2021. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their re­ covery. All persons, firms and cor­ porations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate payment. Today’s date 11/12/2020. RICHARD D. HOCKADAY. 500 HILLCREST DRIVE. ADVANCE. NC 27006 and DEBORAH Y. CASS. 139 ELLIS LANE. AD­ VANCE. NC 27006, as CO-EX­ ECUTORS of the Estate of FLO­ RA MAE SMITH HOCKADAY. deceased. File #20E349. Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26. 12/03 No. 1141365 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu­ tor of the Estate of TOMMY RAY MENIUS late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 12, 2021 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Neil R. Menius C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams, Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street _ Mocksville. NC 27028 V Publish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26. 12/03 No. 1143263 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as the Umit- ed Personal Representative of the Estate of Esther Evelyn Gadberry. late of Davie County, this is to no­ tify all persons, firms and corpo­ rations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before Feb­ ruary 19, 2021 (being three (3] months from the first day of pub­ lication of this notice) or this no­ tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Es­ tate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 12th day of Nov., 2020. Carolyn Sales Sloan, Limited Per­ sonal Representative c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II. Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 11/19, 11/26, 12/03, 12/10 No. 1145062 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Co-Ad­ ministrators of the Estate of Eu- gene Wayne Mock, Sr. late of avie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the un­ dersigned on or before February 26. 2021 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corpora­ tions indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 26th day of Nov., 2020. Denise Mock Eugene Wayne Mock. Jr. Wiffiam Henry Mock C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams, Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville, NC 27028 Publish 11/26. 12/03, 12/10. 12/17 No. 1145516 NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND DEBTORS OF DAVID EUGENE MCCORD The undersigned, having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of David Eugene McCord, deceased, late of 800 North Ridge Court, Davie. NC. does hereby notify ail persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at the address below, on or oefore 26th day of February 2021. or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov­ ery. All persons, firms and corpo­ rations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment to the undersigned. This the 19th day of Nov., 2020. Christopher Todd McCord Administrator. of the Estate of David Eugene McCord Trest & Twigg, PLLC PO Box 608 Shallotte, North Carolina 28459 Telephone: (910) 575-7337 Publish 11/26, 1^03, 12/10. 12/17 No. 1136160 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as E^- utrix of the Estate of Bt i i Y S. BROOKS,(a/k/a BETTY L. SMITH) late of Davie County, this is to notify all oersons. firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 5. 2(321 (being three [3J months from fhe first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate paymenfto the undersigned. This the 5th day of Nov.. 2020. Ginger P. Bennett C/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS. LLP Brian F. Williams. Attorney at Law 284 South Main Street Mocksville. NC 27028 Publish 11/05. 11/12. 11/19. 11/26 No. 1147111 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as the Exec­ utor of the Estate of Kathleen Beck Barnhardt. late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present writ­ ten claim to the undersigned on or before February 27. 2(321 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Estate will please make immedi­ ate payment to the undersigned. This the 26th day of Nov.. 2020. Larry James Barnhardt. Executor c/o Henry P. Van Hoy. II, Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY. LLP Attorneys at Law 10 Court Square Mocksville. NC 27028 (336)751-2171 Publish 11/26, 12/03. 12/10. 12/17 No. 1139048 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Public Admin­ istrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry Deceased, late of Davie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2021. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate or the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020. Bryan C. Thompson Public Administrator of the Estate of Catherine West Fry SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem. NC 27101 (336) 725-8323 Publish 11/12, 11/19. 11/26, 12/03 No. 1140573 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT. late of Davie County. NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before FEBRU­ ARY 17; 2020. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corpiorations indebted to said estate are noti­ fied to make immediate payment. Today’s date 11/12/2020. TAMMY L. MYERS, 1445 COUNTY HOME ROAD. MOCKSVILLE. NC 27028, as EXECUTOR of the Estate of BETTY SUE SMITH LASHMIT. deceased^File #2020E354. Publish 1t7l2. 11/19. 11/26, 12/03 No. 1141367 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator, CTA of the Estate of Helen Beau­ fort Murphy. Deceased, late of Da­ vie County. North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before February 19. 2(321. or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate pay­ ment. This the 12th day of Nov.. 2020. Bryan C. Thornpson Administrator. (jTA of the Estate of Helen Beaufort Murphy SURRATT THOMPSON & CEBERIO. PLLC 210 South Cherry Street Winston-Salem. NC 27101 725-8323 blish 11/12, 11/19, 11/26. 12/03 (336): Publisl No. 1145524 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECU­ TOR for tne Estate of JOHN H. GRAVES. 761 DEADMON ROAD. MOCKSVILLE. NC 27028. late of Davie Cfounty. NC. this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before MARCH 3. 2021. This notice will be plead­ ed in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are noti­ fied to make immediate payment. Today s date 11/26/2020. DANIEL CARL CROTTS, DANIEL CARL CROTTS. as EXECUTOR of the Estate of JOHN H. GRAVES, de­ ceased. Fie #20E325- ATTOR­ NEY: Graham M. Ciarfton, 109 W. Council St.. Salisbury. NC 28144 Publish 11/26. 12/03, 12/10. 12/17 No. 1146666 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of MARY K. BAITY, late of Davie County. NC. this is to notify ail persons, firms and cor­ porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before MARCH 3. 2021, This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov­ ery. All persons, firms and corpo­ rations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay­ ment. Today’s date 11/26/2020. ROGER DALE POTTS, 33<X) CHINQUAPIN RD.. YADKIN­ VILLE. NC 27055, as EXECUTOR of the Estate of MARY K. BAITY, deceased. Fte #20E355. Publish 11/26, 12/03. 12/10, 12/17 CHECK OUT THE CLASSIFIEDS. WE ARE HERE FOR YOU! B8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - B9 L.J lie’.' ‘ 1■ 0 QyTo 0 Santa ShopA Ttavie Once again Santa Claus has made his annual shopping trip to Davie County in search of the best local • shops, businesses, and restaurants while accompanied by the Enterprise Record Qlves. Many of his friends were kind cnou^ to allow us to use photos from Santa’s previous shopping trips this year to help keep Santa and his elves safe from Covid-19. they prepared for the Christmas season. Skyline National Bank offers all the services he looks for in a bank including checking, saving, CD’s, loans, credit cards, and so much more. 9 Advance Christmas Parade CANCELED FOR 2020 For more information on the 2021 parade or Advance Fire Dept. Contact the Advance Fire Dept. @ 336-998-8181 Skyline National Bank 119 Gaither Street Mocksville, NC 336.477.7010 As usual Santa was overjoyed at all the wonderful businesses he found in our area. He took a trainload ' back to the North Pole but left plenty of-items for you. A I IR r I r I r Advance Christmas Parade Advanced Oral & Facial Surgery Animal Hospital of East Davie Caudeli Lumber Davie Discount Drug Davie Dog House DCCC, Mocksville Edward Jones Co. - Slayton Harpe Family Care Center of Mocksville Foster’s Jewelers Miller’s Restaurant MS Mobile Home Supply & Repair Osborne’s Tire & Automotive Philcar Automotive Rivers Family & Cosmetic Dentistry Ryan B. Addison, PJL - Attorney Skyline National Bank The Tire Shop The Vintage Sunflower Twins Upholstery Venezia Italian Restaurant Victory Arms & Munitions Weathered Rock Mrs. Claus just loves vintage furniture and she has found a few pieces that need re-upholstering. Fortunately Santa knows just the place to go. Twins Upholstery in downtown Mocksville sjjeciahzes in antique restoration. Young Henry and Hazel Brown posed with Santa while he was at the shop recently. Santa was please to find that Twins also can handle commercial or residential jobs large and small. They do slipcovers, sofas, ottomans, cushions, headboards, cornices, and more! Visit their website at www.twinsupholsteryinc.com or call them today. SkylineNationalBank.com Memberfoic rsss -TWINS UPHOLSTERY 31 Court Square, Mocksville, NC 336-751-5551 www.twinsupholdieryinc.com ' Antique Restoration Specialist Commercial & Residential Slipcovers, Pickup, and Delivery , 5162 U.S. Hwy. 158 Advance, NC 336-940-3701G - H 0 U S E Can For Free Esth^tas!114^* DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 - BllBIO - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 Santa Shopa Davie Santa Shopa Davie VFsbome’s Tire & Automotive carries all kinds of tires for whatever type of “sleigh” you may drive. On his recent visit Amanda Long and Kassidie McDaniel helped select the perfect tires for the snowy weather at the North Pole. Osborne’s offers tires from Cooper, Michelin, and Hercules. Santa knows they also provide Official N.C. Inspections and major and minor automotive repairs. In addition to autos they also provide tires for tractors and other farm equipment. Give Britt Osborne and his crew a call today to schedule your auto service. 1083 Salisbury Road Mocksville, NC (Appx. 1/4 mite from the old Davie High Schoo!) Teygan and Mayzie Ritchie were happy to show our JoUy Elf all around when he visited Weathered Rock Stone, Mulch and Recycle Yard. At Weathered Rock he found all sizes and colors of stone and mulch perfect for driveways, landscaping, patios, or just about anything you can think of. They also have fill dirt and topsoil too. They are a Yard Waste Recycle yard too which means they can take limbs, brush, concrete and asphalt to be recycled. They are located just off 1^40 at exit 168 just west of Mocksville. (336) 753-8090 ISTONEjUUllCHtandlRECYCLEYMmi DELIVERY AVAILABLE 336-492-5979 All Major & Minor Automotive Repairs * Safety & Emissions Inspections 1819 US Hwy. 64 West - Mocksville, NC (Exit 168 off I-40 beside Center Methodist Church) YARD WASTE RECYCLEYARD JC./ducation is one thing Santa Claus is very serious about. He encourages all of his elves to continue learning and expanding their minds. Santa is excited about all of the opportunities available at DCCC’s Davie Campus in Mocksville. On his recent visit he had a chance to meet some of the students enrolled in the Early College program. Here they pose for a photo with Santa in the college library. Santa learned the library is open to the public as well Mon-Wed 8am-5pm, Thurs 8am-9pm, and Fri 8am-2pm. Just another benefit the college is providing to Mocksville and Davie County. kjanta Claus is not ignoring his wisdom teeth! At Advanced Oral & Facial Surgery of the Triad he found that you can experience new standards for comfort and care. Santa was happy to see (1-r) (top) row: Karlee, Lori, Morgan, Heather, Dr. Wes Parker, Suzanne, (bottom) Megan & Myara who let him know that they offer treatments for Wisdom Teeth, Dental Implants, TMJ, Corrective Jaw Surgery, and Facial Cosmetic Surgery. Call today to schedule your appointment for the Holiday Break. It is the perfect time for students to have procedures done while they are out of school. Advanced Oral & Facial Sure FOLLOWING ALL CDC GUIDELINES Advanced Oral & Facial Surgery )VID-19. Teresa G. Biggersterff, DDS. MD D. Wesley Parker II, DDS, MD M-TTiurs. 8am-5pm Fri. 8am-4pm 122 East Kinderton Way, Bermuda Run, NC 27006 336-998-3300 www.aofstriad.com ▼ enezia Italian Family Restaurant in Advance offers some of the best Italian food in the area. Santa stopped in to pick up a few pizzas to feed the hungry elves back at the workshop and chatted with Ashley Morehead and her son Riot. Due to Covid-19 they are not currently offering their popular lunch buffet but do offer take­ outs for lunch Tuesday-Saturday starting at 11 am with dine-in available after 4pm. On Sundays they offer both take-out or dine-in all day from 11 am-9pm. The menu is available for download online at www.veneziaadvance.com. MS Mobile Home Supply & Repair < 2076 US Hwy. 601 S. (Ellis Center), Mogjtsville, NC * (336) 751-0037 The College of Davidson and Davie Counties< Davie Campus 1205 Salisbury Rd. Mocksville, NC 336-751-2885 <§lteiian (^^sttiurant www.veneziaaclvance.com 5273 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 27006 PH. 336-940-6787 Open TUi Take OutAvaii — Saturday - 11am-9pm Aff Day • Dine in 4pfTt-9pm Open Sunday • 11am-9pm /br both Take Out and Dine in When Santa is shopping for the firearms enthusiast on his list, he comes to Victory Arms & Munitions! Located in the old Ben Franklin building in Mocksville, Victory Arms & Munitions carries a wide variety of modem and older collectible firearms, military surplus, ammunition, and shooting accessories. With knowledgeable gunsmiths on staff. Victory Arms & Munitions can help diagnose and repair firearms on site. Looking to upgrade? Victory Arms & Munitions also buys and trades used firearms! Come on down and check out Mocksville’s newest gun and military surplus store! a- MV \ iTio\s, Lu: 1115 Yadkinville Rd. Mocksville, NC 336-936-9321 www.Victory-Arms.com i.Favie Discount Drugs in Cooleemee is a hub of activity for locals who rely on Pharmacist Jay Patel for their prescriptions and excellent friendly service. Jay continues to add new products to suit the need of his customers. Here he tells Santa about the new line of FURR pet supplies they carry. Davie Discount Drugs is also the perfect place to find: Vitamins, Essential Oils, Willow Tree Figurines, Greeting Cards, Spices, and Cooleemee Souvenirs. Come around early in the morning and you might even get catch up with the news of the day with the coffee gang. Now Offering: FLU, SHINGLES, & PNEUMONIA SHOTS No Appointment Needed! Davie Discount Drugs AH Major Third Party Insurance Cards Acx^eoted Cooleemee Shopping Center • Cooleemee, NC (336) 284-2537 jr DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26,2020 - B13B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 Santa ShopA Davie LM o.'ur Jolly Elf trusts the folks at PhilCar Automotive to work on his vehicles and you should too. P.E). Allen and his team offer friendly, courteous service including: auto inspections, brakes, tires, alignments, oil changes, major repairs or general maintenance. Here (1-r) Rick, Jared, Jason, Matthew, Frank, and P.D. chat with Santa about maintenance on hi.s classic sleigh reminding him that those harsh winters at the North Pole can really do damage if he doesn’t keep the sleigh washed. When Santa is ready for warmer weather P.Eh tells him they have just added a New 1234YF Freon Machine to handle the AJC service on cars 2015 and newer. Family Care Center of Mocksville Tammera Park, PA-CHealth System The Harris Building • 101 Wilkesboro St. • Mocksville (336> 753-0800 PliilCar Automotive & Tire 1628 US Hwy. 601 S., Mocksville (336) 751-1800 After Hours Towing #336-749-0475 email: philcar@yadtel.net Santa ShopA Davie Lwardjpnos ■» -iw j St - Oi * ft? inancial matters can overwhelm even the best of us and Santa Claus is no exception. He relies on Slayton Harpe with Edward Jones to help with his investment and retirement planning. During his recent visit he chatted with Slayton’s daughters Kathryn and Meredith about their Christmas wishes. Slayton and his whole family wish everyone a Merry Christmas and a Healthy, Happy New Year. Don’t fret about your financial planning. Schedule an appointment with Slayton soon and put your mind at ease. Edward J Slayton R. Harpe Financial Advisor MAKING SENSE OF INVESTING www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC 5539 U5. Hwy. 158, Suite 104 Advance, NC 27006 336-940-3150 AND BUILDING SUPPLIES 162 SHEEK STREET 336-751-2167 MOCKSVILLE’S COMPLETE BUILDERS* SUPPLY xVttomey Ryan B. Addison and Santa discuss laws on trespassing and breaking and entering prior to Santa’s big night. Addison’s office is located at 157 North Main St. in the rear of the building that formerly housed Courtside Sports. After checking some precedents Santa should be OK to enter homes with gifts since children send him a letter with their wish list and leave him cookies, milk, and a note on Christmas Eve, both of which could be considered an invitation to enter. In addition to assisting Santa with legal matters Addison’s office also provides legal services to the public in General Law Practice, Family, Criminal, Traffic Tickets, Wills, Estates, etc. THE LAW OFFICES OF RYAN B. ADDISON. P.A. www.attorneyaddison.com 157 N. Main Street, Downtown Mocksville, NC - 336-936-9067 yA.t The Vintage Sunflower in historic downtown Mocksville Santa shops for something truly unique. He is always sure to find something he wasn’t expecting. Such as antique glassware, old record albums (he saw an original Beatles one when he was there), wooden butter molds, books, signs, gently used toys from generations past. Penny Moxley and owners, Renee & Mark Howell were happy to show Santa a few of the recent additions in the store. The inventory is constantly changing so Santa stops in often. n /I’i / Antiques, Collectibles, and Repurposed 121 N. MAIN ST. • MOCKSVILLE, NC 27028 336-753-^700 /»(h A? oiks around the Advance/Bermuda Run area tell Santa Claus that the name may be “The Tire Shop’’ but owner Adam Ward and his crew do so much more. They also provide General Automotive Repairs, Wheel Aligrunents, Brake Repairs, Official N.C. Inspections and more. Of course the EXD sell tires from most major brands too! Schedule your appointment today and make sure your car or truck is ready for the upcoming winter months. You will find The Tire Shop conveniently located on Hwy. 158 near the intersection with Hwy. 801. 7\.nimal Hospital of East Davie’s Dr. Katelyn Ellis introduces Santa to George the Kitty while Dr. Emily Roberson tells our Jolly Elf more about the services they offer. They provide care for aU sorts of pets including dogs, cats, rabbits, ferrets, gerbils, guinea pigs, hamsters, and other assorted small pets. Dr. Emily and all of the staff wish everyone a very Merry Christmas! SlMlliaaLt BFOoodriah 5240 US Hwy. 158, Advance, NC 33(6-998-8139 ANIMAL HOSPITAL 5162 U5. Hwy 158 • Advance 940-3442 Full Service Veterinary Hospital Dogs • Cats • Rabbits • Ferrets • Pocket Pets www.eastdavievet.coni . W 11AZ91-1 Ol’ EAST DAVIE ■H— Santa ShopA Davie B14 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Nov. 26, 2020 lanta has learned over the years that the best places to eat are the ones that always have a crowd of locals who come back again and again. That is the case with Miller’s Restaurant in Mocksville. They offer breakfast, lunch, and dinner with lots of the traditional diner favorites. If the weather is cool you might try their homemade Chicken Stew or Vegetable Soup, and they have Quesadillas now as well. When they op>ened the doors back in 1952 they were serving Pimento Cheeseburgers. Now you find them in all the “trendy, upscale” eateries up and down the east coast. Generations of satisfied customers from Davie and the surrounding counties must be on to something and the full parking lot lets you know this is the place to eat! T Miller’s Restaurant — Since 1952 — 720 Wilkesboro Street, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2621 Follow us on Facebook! \\\\U///z-- LDC AL Santa Claus found many wonderful businesses right here in our own community. He encourages you to buy locally and support these businesses who give back to the community in so many ways. In these difficult times your support is appreciated more than ever! Remember to tell our advertisers you saw their ad in the DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRIZEz^ECORD Be Merry! SHOP LOCAL!