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Davie County Enterprise Record 3-24-2022
USPS 149-160 Number 12 Thursday, March 24, 2022 24 Pages 75¢ Let the games begin It’s not to late for Davie seniors to get in on the fun Popular Demand Pianist Mac Frampton at The Brock on Saturday 89076 3821260Page B8 Page 8 Get ready to rock those blues away.Davie Senior Services will host their Rock-a-thon after a two year hiatus due to the pan-demic. The event will be held at the Rescue House Church, 653 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville, Friday, March 25, from 5-8 p.m. The community is invit-ed to come out and support the Rock-a-Thon teams and en-joy the musical entertainment by Mel Jones and His Bag O’ Bones. Eight teams have been working diligently to not only decorate their rocking chairs, but to collect sponsors for their time rocking. Additionally, some teams will have raffle items available at the event. Tickets are $1 for one tick-et or $5 for six tickets. Raffle tickets can be purchased pri-or to the event at the Senior Services Main Campus or the night of the Rock-a-thon. The winners will be drawn near the end of the event. The Dog Wagon will be on site selling hotdogs, drinks, and chips. Mason’s Sweet Shoppe Ice Cream Cart will be selling ice cream for dessert.Admission is free and all activities inside will be free of charge. A donation box will be available for those who wish to support Senior Services. Proceeds will go to Davie Senior Services to provide ser-vices and programs to adults 55 and older in Davie. To learn more about the Rock-a-Thon, or any activities at Senior Ser-vices, call 336-753-6230. Mel Jones and his Bag-O-Bones will perform at the Davie Senior Services Rock-a-Thon Friday evening at Rescue House church. Rock those blues away Live music, games and more on tap for Friday rock-a-thon BoTyme is back Steve Boger and Bill Vaughn perform some classic country music, while Gerald “Bo” Mes- sick and Kandace Plott Boger have fun at the BoTyme Country Jubilee, held from 6:30-8:30 every Thursday evening at the Farmington Community Center. Admission is $3, musicians admitted for free. - Photos by Brenda Bailey Music every Thursday The 2022 Davie Chamber of Commerce Health Fair will be Thursday, March 31 at the Davie County Community Park, at 151 Southwood Drive, Mocksville. This free event will run from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. in conjunction with a blood drive hosted by OneBlood.The fair will bring vendors of healthy lifestyle products and services together to of- fer Davie residents a one-stop healthy lifestyle information experience. Participants will be offered access to information, direct interaction with medical service providers, and several free health screenings. “With healthcare costs on the rise and interest in per-sonal wellbeing at an all-time high, the 2022 Health Fair will provide residents with a great opportunity to take positive steps toward improving their health,” said Caroline Moser, chamber president.“The health of you and your family is important now more than ever, so plan to head to the Davie County Community Park on Thursday, March 31, to start your journey of healthy living.”For more information, contact the chamber at 336.751.3304 or email cham-ber@daviecounty.com.It is also sponsored by: Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Davie Medical Cen-ter, Allegacy Federal Credit Union, Mountain Valley Hos-pice & Palliative Care, Part-ners Health Management, and Davidson-Davie Community College. Health fair next Thursday at community park As of Monday, one student in Davie County Schools had Covid. A month earlier, that number was 36.Davie Board of Education members eased restrictions on students further at their meet-ing earlier this month. Masks are now optional not only in schools, but on buses.Schools Superintendent Jeff Wallace said he is proud of how the situation has been han-dled in the system - keeping students at the forefront when making all decisions.“I commend you all for your leadership, your courage,” he told board members. “What we’ve been through for the past two years ... to the staff, our children, our parents ... I thank you very much.”The Covid numbers in Da-vie increased slightly, going from 22 on March 14 to 29 on March 21. Town annexes mobile home park The Deer Run Mobile Home Park was annexed in to the Town of Mocksville earlier this month via a unanimous de-cision by town board members.The 101-acre addition will add $1.2 million in taxable property to the town, said Man-ager Ken Gamble.Maybe as important is the fact the annexation is contig-uous, meaning it adjoins land already in the town limits. It opens more areas for non-con-tiguous annexation, because only a percentage of the town’s total area can be used for non-contiguous annexations. Student Covid cases now 1 2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022Editorial PageIn The Mail ... Letters Welcome The Enterprise Record welcomes letters from its readers on topics of local, state, national or interna-tional issues. An effort will be made to print all letters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for gram-mar 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.barnhardt@davie-enterprise.com. The Literary Corner Renegade Writers Guild USPS 149-160 171 S. Main St., P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 751-2120 Published weekly by Salisbury Newsmedia LLC John Carr.....................................Publisher Mike Barnhardt............................Managing Editor Ray Tutterow...............................Advertising Director Brian Pitts....................................Sports Editor Mocksville Enterprise 1916-1958 Davie Record 1899-1958 Periodicals Postage Paid in Mocksville, NC 27028Subscription RatesSingle Copy, 75 Cents$32.03 Per Year In Davie CountyPOSTMASTERSend Address Changes to:Davie County Enterprise RecordP.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028 Cooleemee Journal 1901-1971 Oh where, Oh where, has that Covid gone? Re-elect Sheriff J.D. Hartman Please See Renegade ‑ Page 10 To the editor:I am writing to express my support for the re-election of Davie County Sheriff JD Hartman in 2022. I was Sheriff of Forsyth County from 2002-2018 and I now reside Davie County. I have known Sheriff Hartman for over 20 years, both during my tenure as a neighboring sheriff, and now as my sheriff in Davie County. During my time as sheriff, the Forsyth and Davie County Sheriff’s Offices often worked together to protect and serve our communities and to keep our citizens safe. Sheriff Hart-man was always a great partner and a true law enforcement professional in our fight against crime. I have observed him implement advancements in law enforcement technology, manage increased calls for service, and handle budget and personnel growth with skill and leadership. He is and always has been, a strong supporter of all the community organizations that make Davie County a great place in which to live and work. I know Sheriff Hartman will continue to keep Davie County safe and I enthusiasti-cally write to support him for re-election. Bill SchatzmanBermuda Run To the editor:Your March 17 writer states Putin would not have invad-ed Ukraine under Trump because he was afraid of Trump. Quite the contrary; Trump was so apologetic and enabling of Putin that the Russian would have been emboldened to aggression.Biden has achieved a remarkable diplomatic victory in assembling a wide coalition to sanction Russia and Putin with unprecedented punishment. Trump's continuing reflex was anti-cooperation, denigration of NATO and all other alliances, and incoherent, self-serving trade wars. Just last week, John Bolton asserted that Trump would have with- drawn from NATO had he won a second term. Trump was no leader - not a world leader nor an American leader.Econ 101 Refresher: "..more jobs open than ... people looking for work" is not symptomatic of a poor economy. It is indicative of a healthy economy with companies seek-ing employees to maintain or expand their businesses. It evinces a healthy labor market where workers can demand higher wages. This allows them to achieve a living wage, paying taxes, being consumers, and using less government subsidies - all with modest, sustainable inflation, as the la-bor market returns to equilibrium.Gerald L. (Jerry) Cohen, Advance Trump, not Biden, enabling of Putin The Onion SeedsBy Linda H. BarnetteI am proudly descended from long line of farmers. Be-fore modern times, most families owned land in varying sizes where they raised crops to feed their families. Farm life was hard work, but that was just the way it was. While the men grew the crops, the women raised their children, often several of them, and did all of the housework and cooking. Many memories of my dad’s father revolve around him as a farmer. He wore overalls every day except Sunday, and, along with his faithful white dog, Fluffy, went to the fields daily to plant, harvest, and get rid of bugs and weeds. He and Mama lived close to the Yakin River off Cherry Hill Road, and their lives were self-sustaining. They rarely went anywhere except for church on Sundays, so the farm was the entire scope of their lives.My dad was the first generation to leave the farm for the big city life of Cooleemee and Mocksville. After he and mother built our house on Church Street in 1948, he had a huge garden on the lot where my house is now. When I was growing up, I did not realize that he did that for any other reason beside the produce. Later I realized that he had a deep and abiding love for the earth itself. By planting he was carrying on the tradition of his forebears.One time after I was grown, I remember being in the gar-den watching him plant spring onions, always my favorite. He stopped long enough to share with me that the onion seeds were over 100 years old and had been in the family for at least that long. I wish that I knew the whole story, but we often don’t become interested in things until it is too late and the moment has passed. However, I know how proud he was of those seeds and the legacy of his ances-tors. By planting the seeds, he must have felt a connection to his dad and all the others who came before him. The truth of the seeds is that if you had them, you would not go hungry!! SueBy E. BishopWhile watching the Paralympics recently and reading about Women’s History Month, I am reminded of a dear friend and coworker from years past. But first, I want to say a little about each of these events. If you didn’t watch any of the Beijing paralympic win-ter games, you really missed out on some amazing athletic competitions. USA won six Gold, eleven Silver and three Bronze for a total of twenty. These athletes are so extraor-dinarily strong, brave and just unbelievable in what they do considering their physical limitations. March is Women’s History Month so if you see someone wearing purple a lot, they may be celebrating this fact. A little known tidbit I want to mention is the two highest IQ’s ever recorded (through standardized testing) both belong to women. Men don’t have anything over on us women, right? This month is designated to recognize women’s contributions to history, culture and society. The specific theme for 2022 is “Women Providing Healing, Promoting Hope.” The National Women’s History Alliance states that this theme is “both a tribute to the ceaseless work of caregivers and frontline workers during this ongoing pan-demic and also a recognition of the thousands of ways that women of all cultures have provided both healing and hope throughout history.”You don’t have to be a great athlete or have your name written down in the history books to be a hero. Ordinary people are all around us that do extraordinary things with-out us really paying attention. One such person I have known was Sue. She and I worked together as secretar-ies at a vocational rehabilitation office where we became steadfast friends and remained so until her death. She was not really ordinary when I think about it though. She was exceptional and a remarkable individual in so many ways. Sue was only 14 when she became paralyzed from the waist down from a car accident. Before the accident, she was a star basketball player. Being paraplegic did not stop her from participating in whatever she chose to do. She completed high school and additional training for secre-tarial work; she learned American Sign Language to be able to communicate with the deaf population she worked with. She was always an inspiration for other disabled in-dividuals. Sue was a determined independent person who was able to provide for herself for most of her life, getting married, working a full time job and in general living a good life. Unfortunately, after years of having to use a wheelchair, her health suffered and she was the one need-ing help. I believe my friend provided both healing and hope not only to the people she worked with but others as well even with her own personal struggles; she was one of those truly inspirational women that only looked ordinary. “The Spring Sky: Coma Berenices”By David R. Moore The constellation Coma Berenices is not spectacular, and it is small and dim, but it is easy to find. Look in the northeastern sky just left of the constellation Leo. Coma Berenices is named after Queen Berenice, the wife of the Egyptian Pharaoh, Ptolemy III. From mythol-ogy, the pharaoh was leading his troops in a fierce war, and Queen Berenice prayed to the gods for his safe return. So desperate to see him again, she promised to cut off all her beautiful hair for her husband’s safe return. After a year at war, he returned victorious, and true to her word, she cut off all her hair and dedicated it to the temple. However, a few days later, her cut hair went missing from the temple. Ptolemy was furious and decided to execute all the priests at the temple. However, some traveling Greeks familiar with the stars requested Ptolemy and his queen to go out that night to see a new pale cluster of light in the night sky. The Greeks convinced the royal couple that the gods believed her hair was too beautiful for a single temple to possess, and her hair belonged in the heavens for all to see. Thus the temple priests were spared from execution. Angels Among UsBy Stephanie Williams DeanNow and then, we get a beautiful image of what it means to be angelic – like that of an angel. We all know people who exhibit angel-like behavior. They engage in something so seemingly difficult that we can’t even imagine doing it ourselves. And for the simple reason that only an angel on earth could possibly have such unconditional love and for-giveness in their heart. Bob recently shared this heartwarming tale with me. The story tore at my heart the moment I heard it. In 1999, his teenage nephew went to prison – for murder. I was shocked. A quiet judgment followed. How many of us per- Oh where, Oh whereHas this Covid gone?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be?In a lab in ChinaOr a politician’s mind?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be? Out here in the country when our noses get runnyWe know it’s an allergy, tho’ that’s not too funnyThere’s no need for worry, no need for more testingJust keep working all day, and night is for resting Oh where, Oh whereHas this Covid gone?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be?In a lab in ChinaOr a politician’s mind?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be? That Covid it came in, and was sneaky like a foxAnd we quit our routines, and moved into a boxIt went away, then came back in big numbersUntil we realized, beauracrats think we’re dumber Oh where, Oh whereHas this Covid gone?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be?In a lab in ChinaOr a politician’s mind?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be? You know, I belived them, all those talking headsI believed their theories, in the words that they saidI believed in masks, in vaxes and my mindBut an honest politician, you’ll never find Oh where, Oh whereHas this Covid gone?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be?In a lab in ChinaOr a politician’s mind?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be? I drank six beers tryin’ to forget all this sufferin’Then sobered up and took a couple of BufferinThey say Covid is leaving, it appears that it’s trueBut nothing to hate makes many of us blue Oh where, Oh whereHas this Covid gone?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be?In a lab in ChinaOr a politician’s mind?Oh where, Oh whereCan it be? When Covid left us, along came that PutinHey, we don’t like him, that’s what we’re tootin’He’s mean and nasty, a bully for sureLike with Covid, for him there’s no cure My apologies to the late Buck Owens for murdering his song. You may remember it from the Hee Haw episodes.Phht! I’m gone.- Mike Barnhardt DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - 3 Presidential sites By Betty Etchison WestFor the Enterprise Many of you have been to the Amish country in Pennsylvania, and you may have even been to Lancast-er, Pa. If you visited Lan-caster, you probably had a good Amish meal and may have visited an Amish workshop, but did you visit the home of the 15th Pres-ident of the United States? The home of that Pres-ident, James Buchanan, is located at 1120 Marietta Ave. and is called Wheat-land. It is a large brick house which tells a great deal about Mr. Buchanan. That house is now owned and administered by the James Buchanan Foun-dation for the Preservation of Wheatland. It is open to visitors from April 1-Nov. 20 each year.James Buchanan lived in many places before he bought Wheatland in 1849. He was born in a log cabin in Mercersburg, Pa. That cabin has been moved a number of times from its site in Mercersburg. Now it seems to have found a permanent home. In 1952, it was bought by the head-master of Mercersburg Academy, and it now sits on a lot at that school. The one-room cabin is not open to the public but visitors are allowed to view the inside of the cabin through the windows. The original site of cabin in which Buchan-an was born is now marked by a stone pyramid in the Buchanan’s Birthplace State Historical Park on US 16, Mercersburg. The pyramid at the original site of the cabin was conceived by Harriet Lane, niece of James Buchanan.James Buchanan held many governmental po-sitions before he became President. He was a county prosecutor and then served in the Pennsylvania State Legislature. He was elected to the U.S. House of Rep-resentatives in 1820, and, while in Washington, he lived in boardinghouses. In 1831, he was chosen as Minister to Russia and rented legation headquar-ters. From 1834-1844, he served as a U.S. Senator and then as Secretary of State under President James K. Polk. During those years, he rented a furnished house in Washington, which was actually beside the house that was rented by former President John Quincy Ad-ams. James Buchanan then served as Minister to Great Britain, and, while on that assignment, lived at 56 Harley St. in London. It was while he was serving as Minister to Great Britain that he bought the house called Wheatland, which was his home from that time until his death except for the years 1857-1861 when he served as Presi-dent and lived in the White House.Buchanan, the only lifelong bachelor to serve as President, enjoyed liv-ing at Wheatland with his nephew, James Buchanan Henry, who served as his personal secretary, and his niece, Harriet Lane. When Harriet Lane became an orphan at the age of 11, she said that she wanted to live with her Uncle James. James happily accepted the responsibility of raising his niece. Buchanan sent Har-riet to private schools and gave her other opportuni-ties that were available to well-to-do citizens. Harriet grew up to be a charming young lady.When James Buchan- an was appointed Minis-ter to Great Britain or the Court of Saint James, his niece, Harriet, went with him to England. Harriet was presented to the Queen who was impressed by the charming young lady from the United States. Queen Victoria was so impressed that she gave Harriet the same rank as an ambassa-dor’s wife. This, of course, pleased Harriet and her Uncle James. Harriet was taken with all things Brit-ish and especially with the Queen and her husband, Prince Albert. That en-chantment, especially with royalty, can be seen when one visits Wheatland. When James Buchanan was elected President oin 1860 and was inaugurated in 1861, the country was in great turmoil over slavery and states’ rights. It would have seemed that James Buchanan, who had served in so many governmental positions, would have had the experience and strength to handle the situation. That was not the case at all. James Buchanan seemed to do nothing as the Union was falling apart around his feet. He left a note for the incoming President, Abraham Lincoln, which said,” If you are as happy, my dear sir, on entering this house as I am in leaving it and returning home [then] you are the happiest man in this country.” When the Presidents of the United States are ranked from most effective to least effective by histori- ans, James Buchanan ranks at or near the bottom.In spite of the fact the James Buchanan was not a successful President, he did serve the American people in many positions for many years and did so admirably. That service can be remem-bered as one visits Wheatland. Wheatland is a large, Fed-eral style house, which would be interesting to people interested in histo-ry even if it had not been owned by a former presi-dent. An interesting thing about the exterior of the house is that the shutters at the windows are paint-ed white on the first floor and green on the second floor. Some of the features of the house are hand-sten-ciled linoleum floors and deeply gouged symmetrical shaped found in the wood-work around the doors. One of the most interesting rooms in the house is that of Harriet Lane. It is feminine in every detail. It has a still operable Chickering piano and American-made rococo revival furniture. It is there that the portraits of Queen Victoria and her husband can found hanging on the wall. The room has armless sofas or tete-a-tetes which were designed to accom-modate the hoopskirts worn by the ladies of that period. Remember the house was built in 1848, which is over 150 years ago.James Buchanan lived at Wheatland after he left the White House in 1861 until his death in 1868. Harriet continued to live at Wheat-land until she was 36 years old, married a banker, and moved to Maryland. Har-riet, who had inherited the property upon the death of her uncle, never went back there to live after her mar-riage. She sold the house in 1884, and it remained as private property until 1935 when it was bought by the James Buchanan Founda-tion for the Preservation of Wheatland. That orga-nization still owns Wheat-land and allows people to visit the historic property. Wheatland was designated a National Historical land-mark in 1961. There are special Victorian Christ-mas candlelight tours held at Wheatland one week in December each year. President James Buchanan and his niece, Har- riet Lane. By Glenda SmithFor the Enterprise The Feb. 24 edition of the Davie County Enterprise Record included an article about a recently published brochure, “Piedmont Triad Mental Wellness Peer Support Groups.”At that time a proposal was made to the managing editor, Mike Barnhardt, that the Enterprise periodically publish articles relative to mental health. He immediately gave his approval. Therefore, Julie Whittaker, a friend and fellow mental health advocate, and I will contribute articles monthly.Julie is well-known in Davie and Forsyth counties for her long-time advocacy and knowledge of mental health. I am a retired educator (30 years in Davie and Forsyth counties) and lifelong resident of Davie County. Having lived mental health experience, I am able to relate to oth-ers who have or are facing challenges on that level. Julie has been a big influence and inspiration regard-ing my growth in mental health awareness, knowledge, advocacy, and action. We are grateful for this opportunity to share our insights with such a caring, compassionate community as Davie County.The first consideration in getting this column start-ed was the title. “Time to Talk” was chosen because it conveys what the column is meant to be. My approach to mental health discussions will be as a layperson with life experience who has a quest for knowledge, understand-ing, and sharing. However, research and input from peers, professionals, family, and friends will be interwoven in those discussions. Hopefully, readers will join in on the mental health conversations. Readers’ replies will be welcome. Ending the stigma means ending the silence. Caring can lead to sharing. Indeed, it is time to talk. Perhaps this has never been truer than now. The second consideration for this first column was the topic. For me, that became clear as I read the Feb. 24 newspaper. When I read the last paragraph, my heart sank. Far from thinking, “There is no such thing as recovery”, the opposite is the case. I consider myself, along with the majority of my peers, to be in recovery. So, I need to take this opportunity to briefly address the miscommunication.Being in recovery is not the same as being cured. Many individuals with mental health /brain disorder issues are able to live, work, learn, and participate fully in their communities. Recovery requires understanding oneself, managing behaviors, willpower, and determi-nation. My personal view of recovery is the ability to function independently and with self-control, with no thought of harm to oneself or others. For me, positive thinking, positive relationships, and having hope contrib-ute to reaching and maintaining recovery. Since much of this first column commentary has been introductory in nature, recovery will continue to be further addressed in the future.The uniqueness of this project has necessitated in-per-son delivery of the brochures. So far, distribution has included: Davie Medical Associates, Hillsdale Medical Associates, Family Care Center (Iredell Medical), Day-mark Recovery Services, Davie County Public Library and Cooleemee Branch, DHHS, sheriff’s department, several churches, and the YMCA. Numerous locations in Yadkin and Forsyth counties have also received copies of the brochure. Hundreds remain available if you or your organization could use print copies. The brochure, Piedmont Triad Mental Wellness Peer Support Groups, can be found by entering its title on Facebook. The spacing in the title is necessary. Copies may be printed from there. Three support groups in the brochure, not included in the Feb. 24 article, are: National Alliance on Mental Illness- NAMI NW Piedmont Connection Recovery Peer Support Group (Winston-Salem and other NC locations), First Presbyterian Church (downtown Winston-Salem), and Grace-filled Resilience (Lewisville). Descriptions of nine plus organizations are included on Facebook.Lastly, updates can be found at the Mental Health As-sociation website at triadmentalhealth.org and Partners’ website at partnersbhm.org. Until the next time ... all the best. Time to Talk about mental health Monthly column to focus on mental wellness (336) 751-2304 MILLEREQUIPMENTRENTAL SPRING IS HERE! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today!ForAll YourRental NeedsRANDY MILLER& SONS 295 Miller Road • Mocksville(336) 284-2826 • We Pump Septic Tanks • SEPTIC TANK SERVICE Septic SystemsFootingsLoader Work Skid Steer WorkTrencher WorkHauling StateCertifiedInspector NOTICE OF MEETINGOF THE DAVIE COUNTY BOARD OF EQUALIZATION AND REVIEW Pursuant to N.C.G.S. 105-322 the Davie County Board of Equalization and Review will meet as required by law. PURPOSE OF MEETINGTo hear upon request any taxpayer who owns or controls property taxable in the county with respect to the listing or appraisal of the taxpayer’s property. TIME OF MEETINGThe Board will convene for its first meeting on April 5, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. The Board’s tentative adjournment date will beApril 26, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. Request for a hearing must be received no later than the adjournment date which is tentatively scheduled for Tuesday, April 26, 2022 at 5:00 p.m. In the event of an earlier or later adjournment, a notice to that effect will be published in this newspaper. The agenda for the hearing of appeals which were filed in a timely manner will be posted online and in the office of the Assessor.LOCATIONDavie County Administration Building123 South Main Street, Mocksville, NC 27028 All requests for hearings should be made to:Jamon Gaddy, Clerk to theDavie County Board of Equalization and Review123 South Main Street, Mocksville, NC 27028Telephone: (336) 753-6140Email: taxreval@daviecountync.gov 1412585 James Buchanan’s carriage at the home he purchased, Wheatland, located in Lancaster, Pa. James Buchanan’s home located in Amish country Sunday, March 27th, 10am-4pm — Please BRING THIS AD to the show — VinylLPs45s78sMemorabiliaPicture Sleeves CDsDVDsBooksPostersMagazinesStereo Equipment I-40 to Exit 184Village Inn Event Center6205 Ramada Dr.Clemmons, NC 27012 For more information, contactRichard Hill: 336.978.7618Evon Hill: 336.978.4737email: RHill1944@triad.rr.com 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 132 Interstate Drive Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 MockBerothTire.com 12 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! OFFER VALID 03.01.22–04.18.22 Eligible tires: Purchase Alenza, DriveGuard or Potenza tires to be eligible for the $90 reward. Purchase Dueler, Ecopia or Turanza tires to be eligible for the $70 reward. Limit 2 per household. Participating U.S. stores only. Claim submission required. Certain restrictions apply. Void where prohibited. See BridgestoneRewards.com for details. Prepaid card is issued by The Bancorp Bank, Member FDIC, pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and may be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted. Prepaid cards are issued in connection with a reward. Prepaid card terms, conditions and expirations apply. All trademarks and brand names belong to their respective owners. Receive the $120 Prepaid Card when you make a qualifying Alenza, DriveGuard or Potenza tire purchase with any eligible CFNA credit card account. Receive the $100 Prepaid Card when you make a qualifying Dueler, Ecopia or Turanza tire purchase with any eligible CFNA credit card account. Prepaid Card cannot be used to pay any CFNA credit card balance. CFNA credit card subject to credit approval. Funding for this promotion is provided by the credit division of Bridgestone Retail Operations, LLC. The Bancorp Bank is not affiliated in any way with this credit card offer and does not endorse or sponsor this credit card offer. ©2022 Bridgestone Americas Tire Operations, LLC. All rights reserved. $GET UP TO + BACK BY MAIL ON A BRIDGESTONE VISA® PREPAID CARD WITH PURCHASE OF4 ELIGIBLE ALENZA,DRIVEGUARD ORPOTENZA TIRES WHEN YOU USE YOUR CFNACREDIT CARD 120 $90GET BACK BY MAIL ON ABRIDGESTONE VISA® PREPAID CARD WITH PURCHASE OF4 ELIGIBLE DUELER,ECOPIA ORTURANZA TIRES $100GET UP TO GET OR $30 WHEN YOU USE YOUR CFNACREDIT CARD $30 $70 1406036 This March, Davie Coun-ty Senior Services joins the Administration for Com-munity Living and senior nutrition programs across the country to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the na-tional Senior Nutrition Pro-gram. This article is the fourth in a 5-part series that high-lights the nutrition program at Davie Senior Services. Each weekday, Davie Senior Services hosts daily lunch at the main cam-pus on Meroney Street in Mocksville, called Congre-gate Meals, or the “Senior Lunchbox.” Starting at 10 a.m., there is a program of some sort – bingo, educa-tional speaker, music, corn-hole ... At 11 a.m., a meal is served that meets a third of the recommended daily allowance of nutrients. Even more than the meal and program, the Senior Lunchbox offers the added benefit of friendship and so- cialization. Newcomers are quickly welcomed into the group with a volunteer who will introduce them to oth-ers and help them settle in. “The participants in the lunch program are a lively, fun bunch who add a buzz of energy to Senior Services each day,” said Kim Shus-key, director. Recently, staff chatted with a few to discuss some of their experiences with the lunch program including in-sight into their favorite ac-tivities and meals offered, why they started attending, and what they enjoy most.Sarah Parks has been attending congregate lunch for about three or four years. She first heard about the program through friends. Sarah said the pro-gram has made a difference in her life. “I’ve met a lot of nice people and it keeps me from eating fast food.” Her favorite meals are the chick-en pie, meatloaf, and salads. Sarah enjoys bingo and the health seminars. Veronica “Ronnie” Knost has been attending the congregate program for about four years after hearing about it from her daughter. At first, she and her husband Bill attended. “It made Bill and I get up in the mornings.” Bill has passed, but Ronnie still at-tends. The program pro-vides he with socialization and friendship and gives her a reason to get up. Like many other clients, Ronnie told us that bingo is one of her favorite activities, and she also enjoys the health seminars and the opportuni-ties for exercise. For the Wooten broth-ers, the daily lunch pro-gram serves as a family outing. Eric Wooten started coming to lunch in Novem-ber of 2019. “Before that, I frequently came to the 10 a.m. program. I gradually decided to give the lunch a try.” Soon, his brother Bruce joined him and the two now attend almost ev-ery day. Eric loves the fact that the program allows him to cook one less meal each day. Their favorite meals are the meatloaf, the chick-en patty, and the turkey and stuffing because, according to Eric, “It’s like Thanks-giving.” One of their favor-ite programs was a series of astronomy seminars offered a while back.About five years ago, Bill Zimmerman’s daughter signed him up for the lunch program, and he has been coming since then almost every day. “I enjoy every-one that I meet. I love talk-ing to everyone that comes to lunch and the staff.” His favorite meal is hotdogs. “I like those a lot.” The meat-loaf and coleslaw are good too, he said. Bill’s favorite activities are playing bingo and cards with his friends.Barbara Thornton worked part time for Se-nior Services for about 22 years. She would often eat lunch at the center during that time, but after retiring in December of 2017, she continued to come not only to the events, but to lunch almost every day. “It keeps me active, and I really en-joy being with others.” The meatloaf is her favorite, and she enjoys the crafts that the center offers, and like so many others, she loves bingo.Ernest and Nellie Har-grove have been coming to Senior Services for lunch for about five years. “I was first introduced to the pro-gram by a friend of mine who really seemed to enjoy gathering with seniors and sharing a meal,” she said. That friend encouraged the Hargroves to attend, and they have been coming ever since. “It helps me by preparing a well-balanced meal. This helps me with meal preparation and keeps me out of the kitchen,” she said. The Hargroves favor-ite meal is spaghetti with meat sauce. They say it is “very tasty, seasoned, and nutritionally balanced.” The Hargroves enjoy all activi-ties offered before lunch. One seminar that stood out was the heart attack and stroke seminar offered re-cently. According to Nellie the seminar, “gave us the warning signs and informed us on what to do if we sus-pect a heart attack or stroke and how to take action im-mediately.” The Hargroves said the “congregate lunch at the Senior Center gives us an opportunity to social-ize, meet new friends, and learn and share with each other.”For those still a little uncomfortable getting out among crowds, Senior Ser-vices also offers the oppor-tunity to pick up five days of frozen meals every Mon-day. An activity packet is also distributed, filled with games, puzzles, exercise tips, health information, and other information relevant to older adults. At one time, nearly 300 older adults were taking ad-vantage of the frozen meal pick-up each week. Since Senior Services reopened the doors July 1, 2021, the frozen meal program has continued. Now, approxi-mately 70 seniors each week pick up five healthy meals and the activity packet.Gail and Gordon Stew-art started participating in the frozen meal program in late summer of 2020 during the COVID pandemic. Gail is appreciative of the program being offered in this manner, and shares with Senior Services that the pro-gram has made a significant impact in her life as it “pro-vides safety, ensuring we have access to food without having to worry about expo-sure. The frozen meals pro- Sara Parks,Ronnie Knost, Barbara Thornton and Bill Zimmerman enjoy lunch at the daily congregate meal setting at Davie Senior Services.Get it while it’s hot Meeting friends, bingo popular activities during lunch at senior services Ernest and Nellie Hargrove enjoysweet tea dur- ing the 10 a.m. program prior to the 11 a.m. lunch. vide convenience as it gives us a meal that is right at my fingertips, it is easy for me to prepare without expend-ing too much time and en-ergy.” Senior Services asked the Stewarts about their fa-vorite meals and activity kits, and Gail said: “Gor-don loves the word searches and hidden picture activi-ties – these help to keep our minds sharp. We love most all of the meals” and said chicken and dumplings and spaghetti are favorites.If you or someone you know is interested in the frozen meal pick-up or the daily on-site lunch program, contact Senior Services. The lunch program is free to anyone 60 and older upon completion of paper-work, but participants must reserve meals at least by noon the day before. Fro-zen meals must be reserved by 1 p.m. on the Thursday before pick up on Monday. Participants are eligible to participate in one program only – on-site or frozen meals.To see what the pro-gram is about, join Senior Services for “50 Years of Nutrition: Celebrate, In-novate, Educate” March 29 at 10 a.m. with activities, games, and more with lunch following at 11. All ages are invited. There will be games, food tastings, door prizes, and more. Reserve a spot by March 24. For more information, or to reserve a spot at the cele-bration, call 336-753-6230. Eric and Bruce Wooten enjoy the chef salad and a hot lunch together at Senior Services. www.ourdavie.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - 5 The Farmington Commu-nity Events Center and Na-ture Park has an endowment fund administered by the Davie Community Founda-tion that will provide sup-port for the organization as long as it exits.Thanks to a few of the members of the last class at Farmington High School (1956), which became the first class of Davie County High School (1957), the Acorn Fund started by Laura Mathis during her time as director, reached the minimum $5,000 needed to create a permanent endow-ment. Following the 50th an-niversary celebration in October, members of the class got involved to grow the Acorn into a source of permanent support. “This will be important in the fu-ture as funding sources for operations may change over time,” said Jane Simpson, president and CEO of the foundation.The Farmington Commu-nity Association Fund joins 34 churches and non-profit organizations that benefit from an endowment at the foundation. In 2022, checks totaling $282,565 will be sent to these organizations.The Farmington Com-munity Events Center and Nature Park has a part-time director, Melanie Forbes Cook, who has a full-time passion for Farmington. Cook and her board presi-dent, Allyson Sawtelle, have led the nine-member board to create a real com-munity asset in the center of the county. It now features a na-ture park with walking and mountain biking trails and practice area, picnic pavil-ion in the wooded area of the nature park, disc golf course, gym, event space, baseball field, and in the future, outdoor pickle ball courts.“If you too have a pas-sion for Farmington, you can get involved in several ways,” Simpson said. Send a donation to the association for immediate needs at 1723 Farmington Rd., Mocks-ville. To ensure its future success, add to the endow-ment at any time, in any amount. Checks payable to Davie Community Founda-tion with Farmington in the memo may be sent to the Foundation at PO Box 546, Mocksville. Gifts may be made online at www.daviefoundation.org/donate. Choose Farm-ington Community Asso-ciation Fund from the “al-locate” drop down. Or leave a bequest in your will to the endowment fund. Questions about leaving a bequest should be directed to Simp-son, 336-753-6903 or jsimp-son@daviefoundation.org.“If we all give a little, it can mean a lot for the future of the Farmington Commu-nity Events Center and Na-ture Park,” she said. A picnic pavilion and children’s playground are among the amenities at Farmington Community Events Center and Nature Park. KNOCK.KNOCK.Who’s there? KNOW With a Video Doorbell From Zirrus 336.463.5022zirrus.com Todd Barnhardt Infinity Insurance Group LLC 945 Yadkinville Rd Mocksville, NC 27028-2033 Todd@iignc.com 336-936-0023 Looking for savings on auto insurance? ERIE® insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed or operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1691NRL 2/15 Switching to ERIE will have you barking up the right tree. If you’re dog tired of paying too much for auto insurance, come on over to ERIE. You get exceptional coverage, outstanding service and great rates too. See what you might save. Call us for a quote today. Instinct tells us you won’t be sorry. 945 Yadkinville RoadMocksville, NC 27028(336) 936-0023 3844 Clemmons Rd, Ste. CClemmons, NC 27012(336) 645-8888 Some things just belong together Save when you insure your home and auto with ERIE. You can have superb insurance coverage, outstanding service, great rates and discounts too. Take advantage of ERIE’s multi-policy discount and we’re willing to bet your tail will be waggin’. Also ask us about ERIE’s other available discounts. Call us for a quote today. Discounts, rates and coverages vary by state and are subject to eligibility and applicable rates and rules. ERIE® insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed or operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1693 10/15 ERIE® Insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed to operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1691NRL 2/15 Two Locations to Best Serve You Endowment fund to help community center thrive There’s a Little Free Li- brary at the center. 18,000 SQ. FT. OF FURNITURE TO SHOP! 1063 Yadkinville Rd. (Hwy. 601) Mocksville (Beside Peebles & near Tractor Supply)Phone: (336) 751-1222 HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 10AM-6PM Specializing in Top Quality Furniture and Mattresses PRICES CUT!SALE!SAVE BIG! EVERYTHING MUST GO! — Mocksville, NC Location Only — HURRY IN FOR THE BEST SELECTION & VALUE! M OVING S A L E!! 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022Public Records Sheriff’s OfficeThe following are from Davie Sheriff’s Office re-ports.March 19: disturbance, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; disturbance, Shady Lane, Advance; domestic disturbance, Martin Luther King Jr. Drive,Mokcsville; larceny, Pardue Lane, Ad-vance; disturbance, Dan-iel Road, Mocksville; harassment, NC 801 N., Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 601 N., Mocks-ville; damage to property, US 64 W., Mocksville; fraud, Willow Creek Lane, Mocksville; disturbance, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; larceny, Calahaln Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 601 N., Mocks-ville; harassment, Pointe House Lane, Mocksville; disturbance, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; larceny, Sheetz, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; domestic dis-turbance, Dutchman Trail, Mocksville; noise compal-int, Hardison St., Mocks-ville.March 18: noise com-plaint, Camden Point Court, Mocksville; suspicious activity, NC 801 N., Ad-vance; suspicious activity, Rainbow Road, Advance; disturbance, Hospital St., Mocksville; disturbance, Pinebrook School Road, Mocksville; larceny, Gor-don Drive, Advance; sus-picious activity, Hearthside Lane, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, US 64 W., Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, Fonso Way, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Custom Drive, Mocksville; damage to property, Wyo Road, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Ijames Church Road, Mocksville; harassment, NC 801 S., Cooleemee; domestic dis-turbance, Pointe House Lane, Mocksville; distur-bance, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, E. Lexington Road, Mocksville.March 17: trespassing, Salisbury Road, Mocks-ville; trespassing, US 64 E., Mocksville; domestic assist, Government Cen-ter Drive, Mcoksville; burglary, Legion Hut Road, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Salmons Road, Mocksville; fraud, Juney Beauchamp Road, Advance; domestic as-sist, Howardtown Circle, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, NC 801 N., Bermu-da Run; domestic assist, Windward Circle, Mocks-ville; trespassing, Lake-wood Drive, Mocksville; harassment, Government Center Drive, Mocks-ville; harassment, S. Davie Drive, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Oak Valley Blvd., Advance; suspi-cious activity, E. Kinderton Way, Bermuda Run; sus-picious activity, E. Depot St., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Salisbury Road, Mocksville; disturbance, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run.March 16: suspicious activity, US 64 W., Mocks-ville; domestic disturbance, Center St., Cooleemee; domestic disturbance, US 158, Bermuda Run; distur-bance, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; larceny, Mill-ing Road, Mocksville; damage to property, Ceme-tery St., Mocksville; larce-ny, US 601 N., Mocksville; harassment, S. Clement St., Mocksville; fraud, Hank Lesser Road, Mocksville; assault, War Eagle Drive, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, Brockland Drive, Advance; suspicious activ-ity, US 64 E., Mocksville.March 15: disturb-ing the peace, Gwyn St., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Northridge Court, Mocksville; fraud, NC 801 N., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, NC 801 S., Cooleemee; ha-rassment, S. Davie Drive, Mocksville; fraud, Junction Road, Mocksville; fraud, S. Salisbury St., Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 601 S., Mocksville; burglary, Creekside Drive, Mocks-ville; larceny, Main Church Road, Mocksville.March 14: suspicious activity, Town Commons Drive, Mocksville; suspi-ciuos activity, US 601 S., Mocksville; disturbance, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; damage to property, NC 801 S., Mocksville; assault, I-40 MM 180, Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; damage to property, NC 801 S., Mocksville; ha-rassment, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; assault, Yadk-inville Road, Mocksville; domestic assist, Chal Smith Road, Mocksville; fraud, Harding St., Mocksville; noise complaint, Tatum Road, Mocksville; larceny, Gordon Drive, Advance; suspicious activity, Twin Cedars Golf Road, Mocks-ville; domestic disturbance, Howell Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Yad-kin Valley Road, Bermuda Run; domestic assist, Mill St., Mocksville; harass-ment, Ford Trail, Advance.March 13: domestic disturbance, NC 801 S., Mocksville; disturbance, Gladstone Road, Mocks-ville; larceny, Salisbury Road, Mocksville; do-mestic assist, Chal Smith Road, Mocksville; larceny, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Deer Run Drive, Mocksville; damage to property, Chal Smith Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Cor-natzer Road, Mocksville; trespassing, Duke Whittak-er Road, Mocksville; noise complaint, Windward Cir-cle, Mocksville; noise com-plaint, W. Kinderton Way, Bermuda Run; harassment, Westview Ave., Coolee-mee; suspicious activity, Legion Hut Road, Mocks-ville. ArrestsThe following were ar-rested by the Davie County Sheriff’s Office.March 19: Aaron Pat-rick Adams, 34, of Un-derpass Road, Advance, simple possession of mar-ijuana, shoplifting; Zach-ary Steven Adams, 41, of Underpass Road, Advance, assault on a law enforce-ment officer, resisting an officer, damage to property, DWI, shoplifting; Nathan-iel Chuck Spaugh, 27, of Daniel Road, Mocksville; failure to appear in court.March 18: Kendrick Terrel Simmons, 32, of High Point, failiure to re-duce speed, driving while license revoked not im-paired; Jessica Margaret Sites-Long, 35, of Radford, Va., resisting an officer, possession of marijuana paraphernalia, assault on a government official; Bri-an William Sweet, 19, of Tatum Road, Mocksville, possession of drug para-phernalia, simple posses-sion Schedule II controlled substance.March 17: Movell Olas-sis Daniels Jr., 28, of Clark Road, Mocksville, assault; Glenn Eubanks Jr., 41, of Center St., Cooleemee, failure to appear in court; Sherrie Renea Eubanks, 50, of Center St., Cooleemee, failure to appear in court; Ronald Earl Griffin, 66, of Granada Drive, Advance, failure to appear in court; Ronnie Dale James, 45, of Winston-Salem, cruelty to animals.March 16: Genann Srtoud Etchison, 51, of Williams St., Mocksville, possession of drug para-phernalia, resisting an of- ficer; Robin Eugene Foster, 46, of Clark Road, Mocks-ville, assault on a female; Michael Wilson Liven-good, 66, of Williams St., Mocksville, assault on a female; Adam Memije, 31, of Winston-Salem, failure to appear in court; Edith Castro Ramirez, 32, of Sunset Drive, Mocksville, school attendance law vio-lation; Paul Sheppard, 50, of turrentine Church Road, Mocksville, failure to ap-pear in court; Wayne Da-vid Treni, 52, of Woodburn Place, Advance, assault on a female.March 15: Kassie Mi-chelle Blackwell, 32, of Clark Road, Mocksville, assault; Matthew Joseph Chicoine, 40, of Richie Road, Mocksville, failure to appear in court, driving while license revoked not impaired, fleeing to elude arrest with a vehicle, fic-titious registration plate; Robin Eugene Foster, 46, of Clark Road, Mocksville, domestic violence preven-tion order violation; Stevie Kenneth Freeman, 33, of Junction Road, Mocksville, failure to appear in court; Ronald Jason Kinzer, 39, of Main Church Road, Mocksville, possession of drug paraphernalia, posses-sion of heroin; Amy Elaine Simerson, 35, of oventry Lane, Mocksville, felony probation violation; Jason Cathell Skipper, 46, of Clemmons, assault on a fe-male.March 14: Andrea Noel Ferrebee, 26, of US 64 E., Mocksville, failure to ap-pear in court; Debra Joann Spillman Hutchens, 58, of Woodleaf, injuury to prop-erty; Kortez Merlin Weeks, 24, of Salisbury, failure to appear in court.March 13: Desmon J. Torrence, 31, of Lexington, attempted breaking and en-tering, injury to property. District CourtThe following cases were disposed of during the Feb. 24 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge Carlton Terry. Prose-cuting: Eric Farr and Pearce Dougan, assistant DAs.- A. Castellanos Avalos, DWI, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 12 months, 48 hours community ser-vice, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, obtain substance abuse assessment/treat-ment-credit, $200, cost.- John Edward Briscoe, driving while license re-voked DWI revocation, $250, cost; driving left of center, dismissed per plea.- Cipriano M. Chiquito, failure to stop at stop sign/red light, $25, cost. - Philip Everette Coe, driving while license re-voked not DWI revocation, failure to maintain lane control, dismissed per plea; DWI, sentenced to 30 days active, 23 days credit, cost, $400 attorney fee.- James Michael Cole, misdemeanor child abuse, dismissed per plea; pos-session of marijuana more than one-half to one-and one-half ounces, sentenced to 120 days, suspended 12 months, do not use or pos-sess or be around anyone who uses or possesses il-legal controlled substanc-es, submit to warrantless searches and seizures for il-legal controlled substances, $1,000, cost.- Rokesha M. Daniels, speeding 86 in a 70, $50, cost; child not in rear seat, dismissed per plea.- Angel Flake, allowing a nuisance animal to run at large, $100, cost.- James Allen Graham, DWI, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 12 months, 24 hours active, credit for sub-stance abuse assessment, surrender license, not op-erate vehicle until licensed, $100, cost.- Peter Vaughan Had-ley, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, reduced to failure to notify DMV of address change, $50, cost, $270 attorney fee.- Marissa Haylie Jar-vis, DWI, sentenced to six months, suspended 12 months, 72 hours commu-nity service, obtain sub-stance abuse assessment/treatment, surrender li-cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, $300, cost, $270 attorney fee.- Jerry Dale Johnson Jr., assault on a government of-ficial/employee, sentenced to time served, do not com-mit any other crimes, cost, $400, attorney fee; mali-cious conduct by prisoner, dismissed per plea.- John Nathaniel Nick-els, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, sentenced to 120 days, sus-pended 12 months, $400, cost, $205 attorney fee.- Suketkumar J. Patel, speeding 91 in a 70, reck-less driving to endanger, dismissed per plea; DWI, sentenced to six months, suspended 12 months, 72 hours community service, obtain substance abuse as-sessment/treatment, surren-der license, not operate ve-hicle until licensed, $300, cost, $270 attorney fee.- Ross Weathers IV, fail-ure to wear seat belt, reck-less driving, dismissed.- Jennifer Marie Wilson, felony obtaining property by false pretense, reduced to solicitation to obtain property by false pretense, sentenced to 120 days, sus-pended 18 months, remain in treatment, $100, cost, $465 attorney fee; identity theft, second degree tres-pass, dismissed per plea.- Hue Yang, reckless driving, dismissed per plea; speeding in work zone more than 80 mph or more than 15 mph over speed limit, reduced to speeding 69 in a 60, $500, cost.Failure to Appear- Taylor Shay Brinkley, reckless driving.- Matthew Jose Chi-coine, speeding 77 in a 55, 4 counts driving while license revoked not DWI, failure to carry registra-tion, speeding in work zone more than 80 miph or more than 15 mph over speed limit.- Alexander D. Garner, 3 counts driving while li-cense revoked not DWI, reckless driving with CMV load permit, fictitious/altered title/registration, fleeing to elude arrest with vehicle.- Debra Spillman Hutch-ens, hit/run leaving scene of property damage.- Donald S. Raynor, DWI, misdemeanor child abuse, failure to yield left turn, child not in rear seat. AUCTION FRIDAY, March 25th • 10:00 AM Personal Property of Braxton R (Brack) Bailey (deceased) and Judith C Bailey 343 Riverbend Drive, Bermuda Run, NC 27006 DIRECTIONS: From Winston-Salem, Take I-40 West to EXIT 180A (Hwy. 801S, Bermuda Run Exit), Merge over two lanes to the left. GO THRU first stoplight. At SECOND STOPLIGHT, TURN LEFTonto Hwy. 158 East, Go approx. 11⁄2 miles, at Traffic Circle turn right into lane nearest Guard House. Tell guard you are attending the Bailey auction. Go straight ahead approximately 1/4 mile to the Club House. Park near the post office. Starting at 8:30 AM, there will be a golf cart & car to transport you to auction sale site and back to parking lot when you leave. *** YOU MUST USE THE HWY. 158 ENTRANCE TO BERMUDA RUN ONLY *** Gold Rounds - Silver Coins - Old Currency - Civil War, WWII Collectibles Stamp Collection - Sterling Flatware - Salt Glaze Pottery - Beer Stein Collection Jewelry - .410 Single Shot Gun - Black Powder Dbl. Barrel Pistol - Ammo NEW Generator - Elec. Pressure Washer - Hand & Power Tools Trolling Motor - Knives, Swords - Old Milk & Soda Bottles T F Bailey Whiskey Jug - Golf Clubs & Balls - Hundreds More Items Latest Info & Photos at www.auctionzip.com (Auctioneer ID# 3750) WRIGHT AUCTION SERVICE Roy Wright - Auctioneer • NCAL # 2120 336-403-8084 BERMUDA RUN - Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Davie Medical Cen-ter has received top honors from Business North Caro-lina magazine.The hospital was named the No. 1 Patient Pick, with a patient score of 91 per-cent in the magazine’s an-nual rankings of acute care hospitals with 50 or more beds. The rankings of 25 hospitals in the state are based on the percentage of patients who would recom-mend the hospital to others.“We are honored to re-ceive this recognition and we are proud to share it with all of our loyal pa-tients,” said Chad Brown, president of Davie Med-ical Center. “This award is just another example of the commitment from our entire team to constantly deliver high-quality, per-sonalized and compassion-ate care that exceeds the expectations of our patients and their loved ones.”The rankings are com-piled from the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems, a survey com-pleted by adult hospital pa-tients between 48 hours and six weeks after discharge. Patients like Davie Medical Center Sidnee Everhart of Mocksville has been named to the dean's list at the Uni-versity of the South for the Fall 2021 term. To earn a place on the list, a student must earn a minimum grade point aver-age of 3.625 on a 4.0 scale.She is the daughter of Arlene and Eddie L. Ever-hart of Mocksville.The University of the South, familiarly known as Sewanee, is an indepen-dent liberal arts college on 13,000 acres atop Tennes-see's Cumberland Plateau. Everhart earns honor Regular Hours: M-F 8:30-8 • Sat 8:30-1 • Sun 1:30-5 495 Valley Road • Mocksville • 336-751-2141 www.fosterdrug.com PARTICIPATING PROVIDER Veggie Straws 3 for $1 Limit 6 NEW FOR SPRING! Perfect for Decorating Your Yard & Home!• Garden Flags • Door Mats • Wind Socks Snack Size Bags Sea Salt or Zesty Ranch flavored DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - 7 NORTH CAROLINA - “It’s a miracle these State Restricted Bank Rolls even ex- ist. That’s why Hotline Operators are brac- ing for the flood of calls,” said Laura Lynne, U.S. Coin and Currency Director for the National Mint and Treasury. For the next 2 days the last remaining State of North Carolina Restricted Bank Rolls loaded with rarely seen U.S. Gov’t is- sued Silver Walking Liberties are actually being handed over to North Carolina resi- dents who call the State Toll-Free Hotlines listed in today’s newspaper publication. “National Mint and Treasury recently spoke with its Chief Professional Numis- matist who said ‘Very few people have ever actually saw one of these rarely seen Silver Walking Liberties issued by the U.S. Gov’t back in the early 1900’s. But to actually find them sealed away in State Restricted Bank Rolls is like finding buried treasure. So anyone lucky enough to get their hands on these Bank Rolls had better hold on to them,’” Lynne said. “Now that the State of North Carolina Restricted Bank Rolls are being offered up we won’t be surprised if thousands of North Carolina residents claim the maxi- mum limit allowed of 4 Bank Rolls per resi- dent before they’re all gone,” said Lynne. “That’s because after the Bank Rolls were loaded with 15 rarely seen Silver Walking Liberties, each verified to meet a minimum collector grade of very good or above, the dates and mint marks of the U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberty Half Dollars sealed away inside the State of North Carolina Restricted Bank Rolls have never been searched. But, we do know that some of these coins date clear back to the early 1900’s and are worth up to 100 times their face value, so there is no telling what North Carolina residents will find until they sort through all the coins,” Lynne went on to say. And here’s the best part. If you are a resident of the state of North Carolina you cover only the $39 per coin state minimum set by the National Mint and Treasury, that’s fifteen rarely seen U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberties worth up to 100 times their face value for just $585 which is a real steal because non state residents must pay $118 per coin which totals $1,770 if any coins remain after the 2-day deadline. The only thing North Carolina resi- dents need to do is call the State Toll-Free Hotlines printed in today’s newspaper pub- lication before the 2-day order deadline ends. “Rarely seen U.S. Gov’t issued silver coins like these are highly sought after, but we’ve never seen anything like this be- fore. According to The Official Red Book, a Guide Book of United States Coins many Silver Walking Liberty Half Dollars are now worth $40 - $825 each in collector val- ue,” Lynne said. “We’re guessing thousands of North Carolina residents will be taking the maxi- mum limit of 4 Bank Rolls because they make such amazing gifts for any occa- sion for children, parents, grandparents, friends and loved ones,” Lynne continued. “We know the phones will be ringing off the hook. That’s why hundreds of Hotline Operators are standing by to answer the phones beginning at 8:30 am this morning. We’re going to do our best, but with just 2 days 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.” Lynne said. The only thing readers of today’s news- paper publication need to do is make sure they are a resident of the state of North Carolina and call the National Toll-Free Hotlines before the 2-day deadline ends midnight tomorrow. ■ SPECIAL ADVERTISEMENT FEATURE Last State Restricted Silver Walking Liberty Bank Rolls go to North Carolina residents NC residents scramble to get last Walking Liberty Rolls North Carolina residents get first dibs on last remaining Bank Rolls loaded with U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberties dating back to the early 1900’s some worth up to 100 times their face value for the next 2 days NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY, 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. NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY, PO BOX 35609, CANTON, OH 44735 ©2022 NATIONAL MINT AND TREASURY. STATE DISTRIBUTION: A strict limit of 4 State Restricted Bank Rolls per NC resident has been imposed R1043R-5 ■ GOT ‘EM: Residents all across North Carolina who get their hands on these State Restricted Silver Walking Liberty Bank Rolls are definitely showing them off. That’s because they are the only ones known to exist. And here’s the best part, these Bank Rolls are loaded with U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberty coins some dating back to the early 1900’s and worth up to 100 times their face value so everyone wants them. Yes. These U.S. Gov’t issued Silver Walking Liberties were minted in the early 1900’s and will never be minted again. That makes them extremely collectible. The vast majority of half dollars minted after 1970 have no silver content at all and these Walking Liberties were one of the last silver coins minted for circulation. That’s why many of them now command hundreds in collector value so there’s no telling how much they could be worth in collector value someday. Are these Silver Walking Liberties worth more than other half dollars: How do I get the State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Rolls: North Carolina residents are authorized to claim up to the limit of 4 State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Rolls by calling the State Toll Free Hotline at 1-800-979-3771 Ext. RWB4445 starting at precisely 8:30 am this morning. Everyone who does is getting the only State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Rolls known to exist. That’s a full Bank Roll containing 15 Silver Walking Liberties from the early 1900’s some worth up to 100 times their face value for just the state minimum set by the National Mint and Treasury of just $39 per Silver Walking Liberty, which is just $585 for the full Bank Rolls and that’s a real steal because non state residents are not permitted to call before 5 pm tomorrow and must pay $1,770 for each North Carolina State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Roll if any remain. Why are so many North Carolina residents claiming them: Because they are the only State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Rolls known to exist and everyone wants their share. Each Bank Roll contains a whopping 15 Silver Walking Liberties dating back to the early 1900’s some worth up to 100 times their face value. Best of all North Carolina residents are guaranteed to get them for the state minimum set by the National Mint and Treasury of just $39 per Silver Walking Liberty for the next two days. How much are State Restricted Walking Liberty Silver Bank Rolls worth: It’s impossible to say, but some of these U.S Gov’t issued Walking Liberties dating back to the early 1900’s are worth up to 100 times the face value and there are 15 in each Bank Roll so you better hurry if you want to get your hands on them. Collector values always fluctuate and there are never any guarantees. But we do know they are the only North Carolina State Silver Bank Rolls known to exist and Walking Liberties are highly collectible so anyone lucky enough to get their hands on these Silver Bank Rolls should hold onto them because there’s no telling how much they could be worth in collector value someday. FACTS: If you are a North Carolina State Resident read the important information below about claiming the State Silver Bank Rolls, then call the State Toll-Free Hotline at 8:30 am: 1-800-979-3771 EXT: RWB4445 HOW TO CLAIM THE LAST STATE RESTRICTED BANK ROLLS NORTH CAROLINA - Once North Carolina residents got wind that North Carolina State Restricted Bank Rolls filled with Silver Walking Liber- ties dating back to the early 1900’s were being handed over, there was a mad dash to get them. That’s because some of these U.S. Gov’t issued silver coins are already worth hundreds in collector value. “It’s like a run on the banks. The phones are ringing off the hook. That’s because everyone is trying to get them before they’re all gone,” according to officials at the Na- tional Mint and Treasury who say they can barely keep up with all the orders. In fact, they had to impose a strict limit of 4 North Carolina State Re- stricted Bank Rolls. So, if you get the chance to get your hands on these State Restricted Bank Rolls you bet- ter hurry because hundreds of North Carolina residents already have and you don’t want to miss out. You see, the U.S. Gov’t stopped minting these Silver Walking Liber- ties in 1947 and there can never be any more which makes them extremely collectible. And here’s the best part. The rolls are unsearched so there’s no telling how much they could be worth in col- lector value. That’s why at just the $39 state mini- mum set by National Mint and Trea- sury it’s a deal too good to pass up. But you better hurry because these North Carolina State Restricted Bank Rolls are the only ones known to ex- ist and North Carolina residents are grabbing them up as fast as they can. That’s because they make amazing gifts for children, grandchildren and loved ones. Just imagine the look on their face when you hand them one of the State Restricted Rolls — they’ll tell everyone they know what you did for them. SILVER: one of the last silver coins minted for circulation RARELY SEEN : minted by the u.s. mint in the early 1900’s ENLARGED TO SHOW DETAIL: year varies 1916-1947 LAST REMAINING:minted in philadelphia, denver & san francisco 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 Are you thinking about cleaning out the garage, storage shed, or basement? Here are some tips for safely getting rid of un-wanted items around your house. Many of these items are considered house-hold hazardous waste, and should never be dumped on the ground or near a body of water, or poured down a sink, toilet or storm drain. Always check the product label first for disposal op-tions and guidelines. Contact the site listed or visit the website for specific instructions related to re-cycling. Some stores have daily item limits, fees as-sociated with some items or a purchase requirement, but most listed offer free recy-cling. Contact N.C. Cooperative Extension, Davie County Center, at 336-753-6100 with additional questions. The information below is also available on the web-site at davie.ces.ncsu.edu. Davie County Solid WasteAuto and rechargeable batteries, used motor oil, scrap metal, tires, appli-ances, quarterly electron-ics recycling. Remaining electronics recycling dates for 2022 are April 30, July 30 and Oct. 29, 8 a.m.-noon (336-998-6467).Forsyth County 3RC EnviroStationThanks to a new contract, Davie residents can take many of the items listed below to 3RC for disposal at no cost. 3RC accepts a variety of other items in-cluding antifreeze, mercury thermometers, paint thinner, various types of paint, etc. Davie residents will need to show proof of residence. The Mac Frampton Trio will perform at the Brock Performing Arts Center on North Main Street in Mocksville on Saturday, March 26 at 7:30 p.m. “Wherever he appears, Frampton’s show thrills and mesmerizes audiences, fi-nally bringing them to their feet,” said Sidniee Suggs, sponsoring Davie Arts Council executive director.Since the early ‘70s, Frampton has performed more than 4,000 concerts all over the globe. He has been soloist with many orches-tras, including the Boston Pops, Cincinnati Sympho-ny, Atlanta Symphony, and the St. Louis Symphony. He has teamed up with the likes of Glen Campbell, Roberta Flack, Victor Borge,and Ray Charles.“While every Frampton performance has its own unique character, the Brock audience can expect to hear a wide range of well known compositions,” Suggs said. “Frampton’s performance will demonstrate his funda-mental belief that music is a powerful form of commu-nication, often able to reach a listener on a deeper level than verbal expression. This was very true during his last visit to Mocksville to perform and why Brock patrons asked that the Arts Council bring him back.”This concert was origi-nally scheduled for Jan. 22 but due to an ice storm was rescheduled for this March date. Tickets are available by contacting the Brock’s Box Office (Monday-Friday noon-5 p.m. and one hour before performances. Learn more by calling 336-751-3000. The Mac Frampton Trio is back by popular de- mand for a performance at The Brock on Satur- You asked for it Popular pianist at The Brock Saturday evening Margaret Jo Brock reads the inspiration to open the March meeting of the Mocksville Garden Club. Jimmy Speas, representing the Carolina Dahlia Society, speaks on caring for and growing Dahlias. Judy Hinkley and Lillian Sharpe provide refresh- ments with a Saint Patrick’s theme. Mocksville Garden Club has been rotating the meet-ing location. Check the newspaper, Facebook, or call to make sure you go to the right location. The April meeting will be at the Davie County Library at 7 p.m. A program on soil testing is being presented by the Davie Home Extension.The club will hold its Spring plant sale on May 3 at the Farmer's Market in Mocksville to raise money for the scholarship fund. 1283416 Club members learn dahlia growing tips The club gives a $1,500 scholarship to a deserving student. If you know a col-lege or community school-bound student, pass the word. The web site for the scholarship application and details is at https://dchs.go-davie.org/student-services/scholarships. Applications are due May 1. On March 3, the club met at the First Presbyterian in Mocksville. President Al-lison Wiedeman welcomed everyone and Margaret Jo Brock read an inspiration on wrens.The program was present-ed by Jimmy Speas from the NC Central Dahlia Society. Speas gave a detailed and interesting presentation on Dahlias. He and his wife have grown dahlias and roses since 1993. Speas covered the planting and caring for Dahlias. He sug-gested purchasing Dahlias from Swan Island Dahlias in Canby, Ore., 800-410-6540. The dahlias are available now for spring planting. The local Central Caroli-na Dahlia Society will have its first sale May 14 with about seven vendors at the Home & Garden building of the W-S fairgrounds. Refreshments were pro-vided by Lillian Sharpe and Judy Hinkley. Margaret Jo Brock provided the door prize which was won by member Judy Rosser. The public is invited to all meetings. Contact Alli-son Wiedeman at 410-858-6846. Visit the website for a com-plete list of accepted items and guidelines for drop off (336-784-4300). Auto Fluids, Filters and BatteriesAdvance Auto Parts, AutoZone, O’Reilly’s, Walmart Tire and Lube, Tractor Supply.BatteriesLowe’s Home Improve-ment and Davie County Solid Waste (rechargeable only), Home Depot (lead acid and rechargeable), Bat-teries Plus Bulbs (all types).Cell Phones and ElectronicsStaples, Best Buy, Davie County Solid Waste quar-terly electronics collections, kiosk inside Walmart (cell phones only).Cleaning ProductsTry to use up cleaning and other products accord-ing to the label directions to avoid disposal, or give the product to someone to use.Light BulbsHome Depot (CFL bulbs only), Lowe’s Home Im-provement (all types except fluorescent), Batteries Plus Bulbs (all types).Ink CartridgesStaples, Best Buy.Latex PaintOpen paint can and al-low paint to dry in the sun. If there is too much excess paint in the can to dry out alone, add kitty litter or sand and then allow to dry in the sun. The paint bucket can be placed in the trash once all paint has dried up.MedicationFoster Drug in Mocks-ville, Davie Discount Drug in Cooleemee and the Davie Sheriff’s Department of-fer medication drop boxes. Medications can be pre- scription, vitamins, over-the-counter, etc., but no liquids. Do not flush medi-cine down the toilet unless specifically directed to by the product label. Seal in a plastic bag, add an undesir-able substance, such as dirt or cat litter and throw away in household trash.PesticidesUse according to label di-rections, or give to someone to use. Otherwise, save for Pesticide Collection Event held every odd year spring in Davie County at the Ma-sonic Picnic Grounds. Con-tact Cooperative Extension for details.Plastic Grocery BagsReturn to collection bin at stores.Plastic Plant PotsHome DepotScrap MetalR&R Metals Recycling Inc., Davie County Solid Waste.Yard WasteHome compost, Wallace Farm in Advance for Da-vie residents, compost site at Rich Park for Town of Mocksville residents only.Make DonationsDon’t throw useable items away; donate instead. Just HOPE, Storehouse for Jesus, Habitat for Human-ity Restore, and Goodwill are local options. This saves landfill space and helps a good cause.Recommendations for the use of services included in this article are for the conve-nience of the reader. The use of store names and services does not imply endorsement by N.C. Cooperative Ex-tension nor discrimination against similar services not mentioned. Household waste my be hazardous; dispose of it properly at these sites DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - 9 Limited-Time Offer 18-MONTH Certificate APY *0.75 % Allegacy is federally insured by NCUA. *APY: Annual Percentage Yield. The APY is 0.75% with a dividend rate of 0.75%. APY is effective as of 03.11.2022. Minimum opening deposit: $500.00. Member must maintain minimum balance of $500.00 to earn dividends. Early withdrawal penalty may apply. Fees may reduce earnings. An IRA certificate is available. IRA certificates can only be opened in a Financial Center. Offer is not available for businesses and non-profits. Limited-time offer that may be withdrawn or changed at any time without prior notice. ©2022. • $500 minimum • No maximum • IRA eligible We believe in providing smart alternatives for growing your funds. Right now, one of your best moves could be our limited-time offer 18-Month Certificate where you can earn 0.75% APY*. Open at any Allegacy Financial Center or online. Open today! allegacy.org/limited-time-offer 336.774.3400 ALL-22208 18-Month Cert_10x20.75.indd 1 3/9/22 2:53 PM 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 On March 17, participants in the Young at Heart ministry at Bethlehem United Methodist Church in Advance, celebrated St. Patrick’s Day by tour- ing Crossnore Communities for Children in Win- ston-Salem and Storehouse for Jesus in Mocks- ville. In keeping with their ongoing missions initiative, the group donated food and hygiene items to Storehouse. The tours were informative and participants found both are performing ex- cellent services in their communities. Young at Heart is an active fellowship, meeting and travel- ing regularly. Young at Hearts visit missions Continued From Page 2 know anyone serving time for murder – much less a fam-ily member? Yeah – I know. That kind of stuff happens to other people – not us. Chris had been convicted of killing a man in 1995 and received a 48-year prison term. While incarcerated, the boy initiated a unique service training program for dogs. The program was aimed at helping special needs children with behavioral and emotional issues. He was the first inmate to train a service dog and the first to train a dog to assist an autistic child. Chris received early release for being an ex-emplary inmate. A great story of turning one’s life around. While this was a touching tale, it’s not the real story I want to share. The heart twister came in a detail that fol-lowed. What happened to Chris later after he was released? Bob continued his story. Chris married a nun. Yep. That’s what my friend said. What? He married a nun? Exactly. That’s what I thought, too. Or maybe I should say it this way. A nun forgave, ac-cepted, unconditionally loved, and later married Chris. When I hear these true stories of such forgiveness and unconditional love – I get a bird’s eye view of the condition of my own heart – and the heart of others. How quickly we judge ourselves to be superior to others in so many ways. How many of us could love and marry someone with such a sordid past? I think to myself. Why can’t I be more like that nun? What is required of me to be more like her? I must be flawed. Far too often, I hear voices that say me, me, me – they scream of judgment, selfishness, and a lack of true love. “I don’t want anyone I have to take care of. They must have assets like I do. He must have an education and mon-ey saved. She’s got alcohol issues. He’s got health issues I don’t want to deal with. I’m not paying someone else’s way. He has too much baggage. I don’t want to marry someone with those issues. Next time, I’m going to be picky.”The comments go on and on. The Bible tells us we all stumble in many ways. On our best days, we stumble. Yet, we resent the ways other people aren’t perfect. Friends, this is conditional love. What’s in this deal for me? What do you bring to the table for me? Next time, I’ll choose someone better for me. And then there’s this jewel – God wants something better for me. God wants us to forgive, accept, and love – like Jesus did. When we truly love someone – it’s unconditional. The focus isn’t on ourselves but on the ones we love. Instead, the opposite of selfishness would be to ask oneself, how can I better serve and show unconditional love to the one I love? While so many of us couldn’t find it within ourselves to unconditionally accept, forgive, love, or marry, we see the true nature of an angel on this earth in the nun who marries a murderer. Renegade ... Writer Stephanie Williams Dean created this oil painting of an angel. Ann McGuire, NC Blue-bird Society Davie County coordinator, and Wanda Wooten were the guest speakers for the March meeting of the Advance NOW HIRING Apply in Person 251 Eaton Rd., Mocksville E.O.E. $14/hr. & up $500 Sign On Bonus Great Benefits • PAY & BonusesAll Shifts Available We’re Growing! Farms in Mocksville. Ce-dar House Farms produces organic vegetables, mush-rooms, strawberries and flowers. Wanda Wooten and Ann McGuire present a pro- gram on Eastern Bluebirds: Attracting Bluebirds to Your Garden. Garden Club. They gave an informative presentation about blue-birds with reasons for their decline and how to help bluebirds with a nest box. Visit www.ncbluebird.org. A business meeting fol-lowed the program.For the April meeting, the club will tour Cedar House Bluebird care topic of Advance Garden Club meeting Thomas S. Browder, DDSis accepting new patients! Park 158 Professional Centre 5380 US Hwy. 158 Suite 200 Advance, NC 27006 336.998.9988 www.browdersmiles.com Preferred Provider:HUMANADelta DentalCIGNAAmeritasASSURANTUnited HealthcareBLUE CROSS BLUE SHIELD AETNAMutual of OmahaSUNLIFEPrincipal LifeGUARDIAN 1256430 ourdavie .com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - 11Obituaries Local obituaries ONLINE www.ourdavie.com Sell it quickly in the classifiedsCall Today!704-797-4220 Joyce Robertson MaloneJoyce Robertson Malone, 95, passed away peacefully in Johnson City, Tenn. on March 3, 2022 at the home of her niece, Melissa Conner.Proceeding her in death was: her husband, James W. Malone Jr; her parents, Joe H Robertson and Mary Ter-rell Robertson; her brothers, Bill Robertson, CT “Scrip” Robert-son, Pete Armstrong, and Bob Robertson; a sister, Foy R. Mad-dox; and her niece, Tony Robert-son Banks.Surviving: her nephews, John Maddox, Richard Robertson, Ron Robertson, Mike Robert-son, Tom Armstrong, Mark Arm-strong, Drew Armstrong, Eric Armstrong; and her nieces, Pat Robertson Rice, Pam Robertson McCaskill, Julie Maddox Cain and Melissa Maddox Conner; and several great nieces and nephews who filled her last days with joy.Joyce was born in Bixby and after high school grad-uation in 1944 she attended Guilford College and then trained in cosmetology. She worked in her cousin Cleo’s Winston-Salem salon for several years.Joyce led a rich and full life. Because of her husband’s military career, she traveled all over. She lived in the Phil-ippines; Alaska; Washington DC; Wilmington; the island of Aruba; Lake Tahoe, NV; Estes Park and Denver, CO.In every place she lived, she always worked in office management positions, but she had many outside interests. She loved to cook and entertain especially with margaritas; her artwork was exhibited in juried shows receiving many awards; and her handcrafted pillows, quilts and afghans were treasured gifts. In addition, she was a wonderful let-ter writer and kept up with all her nieces and nephews.Joyce will be remembered for her magnetic person-ality. Her beautiful smile and twinkling eyes could light up any room and her wonderful laugh that came straight from heart signaled her joy and celebration for life. Many people, relatives and friends, benefited from her warm and generous caregiving nature. She will be missed by all.A committal service and interment will be held Satur-day, March 26 at 1 p.m. at the Bixby Presbyterian Church, 1806 Fork Bixby Road, Advance, with Pastor Pete Peter-son officiating. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be sent to: Bixby Presbyterian Cemetery Fund, 1806 Fork Bixby Road, Advance, NC 27006.Condolences: www.montevistafunerals.com. Jack Ronald HarrisJack Ronald Harris, 80, passed away Tuesday, March 15, 2022.He was born to James Roy and Gladys Galliher Harris on May 19, 1941 in Statesville. Mr. Harris graduated from Davie County High School and attended NC State Univer-sity. He served in the US Army during the Vietnam War. He was retired from JW Aluminum in Goose Creek, S.C. and owned Harris Video Productions. He is survived by: his wife, El-eanor Kurfees Harris; a daughter, Karen Harris Bryson (Michael);2 sons, Ronald Kurfees Harris (Stephanie) and David Jonathan Harris (Colleen); 4 grandchil-dren, Melissa Ann Bryson, Ame-lia Rose Harris, Jack Patton Har-ris, and Connor Jane Harris from Summerville, S.C.; and 2 sisters, Brenda Angell and Linda Angell of Mocksville.A gathering of family and friends will be held on Wednesday, March 23, 2022 from 6-8 p.m. at James A. Dyal Funeral Home, 303 S. Main St., Summerville, SC.In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to: Jack Har-ris Memorial Scholarship Fund at Trident Technical Col-lege, Leukemia Society of America, Dorchester Paws, or the charity of your choice. Addie L. Williams CarterAddie L. Williams Carter passed away on March 14, 2022. She was born on Nov. 8, 1930 to Opal Baity Latham and James Grady Latham in Davie County. A graveside service was held at 3:30 p.m. Friday, March 18 at Salem Moravian Graveyard (God’s Acre) with Rev. John Jackman and Rev. Chris Thore officiating. Addie is preceded in death by her husband, Ted L. Williams, and second husband, Ralph Car-ter. Surviving: her children, Bernie Williams (Kim), Kathy Barnes (Ralph), and June Coun-cil (Doug); grandchildren, Mi-chael Doub (Amanda), Jason Council (Tanya), Michael Wil-liams (Erika), Ashley Azmon, Kyle Doub, and Jonathan Williams; and great-grandchildren, Gavin Doub, Hallie Council, Willow Kimel, Mina Williams, Caden Doub, Cannon Doub. Memorials: Trinity Moravian, 220 E. Sprague St., Win-ston-Salem, NC 27127. Online condolences: www.hayworth-miller.com. William Alton ‘W.A.’ MyersMr. William Alton “W.A.” Myers, 85, of Everhart Road, Mocksville, passed away on Monday, March 14, 2022 at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist Davie Medical Center in Advance.He was born on April 18, 1936 in Forsyth County to the late Carl Conard and Thelma Elizabeth Blake Myers.Mr. Myers retired from Lex-ington Furniture and enjoyed be-ing outdoors and camping in the mountains. He loved spending time with his family and loved his grandchildren and great-grand-children dearly. Mr. Myers loved working on old cars and always had a good joke up his sleeve. He will be remembered as a loving husband, father, grandfa-ther, brother, and friend to many.In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by: his siblings, Melvin Myers, Gladys Myers, Barbara Doby, Louise Dunn, and Glenda Doby; and a grandson, Dustin Myers.Survivors include: his wife of 64 years, Grace Mae Doby Myers of the home; his children, William David My-ers, also of the home, Carol Poplin (Robert Thompson), Ricky Myers (Sandra), and Louie Myers (Jackie Frizzell), all of Mocksville; a brother, Kenneth Myers (Phyllis); 7 grandchildren, Crystal Mitchell (Jeff), Jody Speer (Brad), Tonya Martin (Wesley), Amy Myers (Robert), Craig My-ers (Jessica), Christy Myers, and Christopher Myers (Am-ber); 12 great-grandchildren, Devon Mitchell, Brittany Speer, Lynzie Martin, Makayla Martin, Lucas Mitchell, Caleb Speer, Nicholas Martin, Allie Myers, Vincent Ri-vera, Bradley Myers, Lakelyn Gibson, Savannah Myers; and 2 great-great-grandchildren, Kaydon and Grace West-moreland.A funeral service was conducted at 1 p.m. Friday, March 18 at Fellowship Baptist Church, with Rev. Wayne Swisher officiating. Interment followed in the church cem-etery. The family received friends Thursday night at the funeral home.In lieu of flowers, memorials may be considered for Steps of Faith Foundation, 31 W. 31st St. Kansas City, MO 64108.Online condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice.com. Glenn Wilson KoontzGlenn Wilson Koontz, 86, of Mocksville, died Wednes-day, March 16, 2022 at Gordon Hospice House in States-ville.He was born Sept. 7, 1935 in Davie County to the late Marshall Wilson and Laura Hasseltine Campbell Koontz. Glenn was a member of the NC National Guard for eight years, and had retired from Celanese. He was a member of N. Main Street Church of Christ and of Salem United Methodist Church. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by: his first wife, Nancy Shaver Koontz; son-in-law, Chuck Lakey; sisters, Elizabeth Woodward and Glenda Mosny; brothers, Charlie A. Koontz and Joe Koontz; sis-ter-in-law, Peggy Koontz; and brother-in-law, Bill Mosny.Survivors include: his wife, Nancy Ann Phelps Koontz; children, Scarlett Koontz Lakey and Wendell Wilson Koontz; stepdaughter, Teresa Johnson (Harold); broth-ers, John Koontz, Jack Koontz (Kay), and Arthur Koontz (Barbara); sisters-in-law, Betty Blakley and Jean Koontz; brother-in-law, George Woodward; grandsons, Clinton Lakey and Austin Lakey (Emily); stepgrandchildren, Timothy Johnson (Roxanne), Paul Johnson, Johnathan Johnson, Andrew Johnson, Daisy Cantrell, and Kayleigh Biggs; great-grandchildren, Ethan, Charlestyn, and Perry Grace; and stepgreat-grandchildren, Dakota McDowell and Melanie Ann Anita Johnson.A funeral service was conducted at 3 p.m., Sunday, March 20 at Salem United Methodist Church with Rev. Ellen Spruill and Pastor Matt Langfield officiating. The service is available to view on the Lambert Funeral Home website. Interment followed in the church cemetery. The body was placed in the church, Sunday from 1-3 p.m. The family received friends in the church fellowship hall fol-lowing the service.Please consider memorials to: Salem UMC Ceme-tery Fund, c/o Jack Koontz, 1444 Davie Academy Road, Mocksville, NC 27028; Gordon Hospice House, 2341 Simonton Road, Statesville, NC 28625, or N. Main Street Church of Christ, 605 N. Main St., Mocksville, NC 27028.Condolences: www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. Nettie Lee Clifton Turman, 99, of Statesville, died Saturday, March 12, 2022.•Ruby Jean Sheets Blackwelder, 89, of Wilkesboro, died Saturday, March 19, 2022. Death Notice The Davie County Dem-ocratic Party fundraising committee members are planning the annual Davie County Democratic Lead-ership Dinner for April 29 at Bermuda Run Country Club. This will be the first such dinner in several years due to the pandemic.Dr. Erma Jefferies, chair of the Davie County Dem-ocratic Party, recently an-nounced that Cheri Beasley, candidate for US Senate; Josh Stein, NC Attorney General; NC Sen. Paul Lowe, and Sheriff Bobby Kimbrough from Forsyth County have confirmed in-vitations to speak.Denise Hartsfield, retired district court judge, who recently announced her candidacy for Forsyth Dis-trict Attorney, will be the emcee. Other Democratic or un-affiliated candidates who have filed seeking judicial or other government offices in county, district or state, are encouraged to attend. They will have an opportu-nity to address attendees. A silent auction and a 50/50 raffle will be part of the evening’s activities.Democratic Party mem-bers are soliciting sponsors for tables and gifts for thea uction. Other details, such as cost, registration, and more information can be found at daviedems.com. Funds raised willenable the Davie Dem-ocratic Party to finance a headquarters rent for the upcoming 2022 midterm election. Proceeds will also be used to increase out-reach to the community.Jefferies urged everyone to secure seats early, since space is limited and asked for more volunteers to serve on the committee by visiting the daviedems.com website.In other business, Jef-feries invited all Davie Democratic Party mem-bers to the county conven-tion at the public library in Mocksville on Saturday, March 26, at 10 a.m. For those wishing to attend the convention via Zoom, in-formation can be found at daviedems.com. Serving Winston-Salem, Clemmons, and Surrounding Areas Davie Democrats plan dinner and county convention 118 Hospital st. • Mocksville, Nc 27028 • 336.751.6289 “Because you should want to see your dentist” Accepting Most Major Insurances | RiversFamilyDentistry.com Dr. Rivers’ Dental Tip of the Week Andrew J. Rivers, DMD “Always see your dentist or physician if you notice any irregularities in your mouth. spots, lumps, colored patch- es, swelling, pain, or numbness can all be signs of more severe disease.”1299206 12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean When in South Carolina for a weekend seminar, it was an organ that compelled me to attend Shandon Presbyte-rian Church. On the first Sunday of Lent, bells rang, chimes struck, and sacred notes filled the sanctuary. As the organist’s hands and feet glided across the keyboards, I closed my eyes – allowing the sounds to per-meate my mind fully. A swelling sense of pride came over me. I thought, this gorgeous instrument was made in my town.Tomasz Lewtak chose 15 acres of unspoiled countryside in Mocks-ville as the place to create these handcrafted, musical works of art. The first time I’d heard the organ play was several years ago – while attending an open house at Lewtak Pipe Organ Builders. At that time, the fingers of Shandon’s music director, Timothy Belk, graced the keys for the first time. Rich, warm tones resounded. Fol-lowing installation at Shandon, in Columbia, S.C., the organ had finally made it home. A dedica-tory ceremony was held on Nov 2, 2018. While attending the service at Shandon– I received a great message. Lent is about prepar-ing us to approach Easter – a time of healing. The remark-able thing about the Gospel is that it speaks to us where we are and how we are. Wherever we are, our “wilderness” is the scene – the place where we, too, can figure out what it really means to be in God’s business. What we do is impor-tant but also what we don’t do – when we don’t act, don’t care, don’t witness, and don’t love. The world needs each one of us to do – something. Today’s recipes encourage love and fellowship with friends in your home or theirs. Things need not be per-fect – we’re real people. Whether we always get things right or not – it doesn’t matter – as long as we do our best. We’re instructed to love God, love one another, and love our neighbors. Share delicious food, divine music, and sa-cred words with one another. Hospitality is important, and friendship is holy. Let those dinner bells ring. “What faith I have, I bring to join this tableWhat hope I hold, in Christ is taught and true;With brothers, sisters, I will share the blessingThe feast where God is making, all things new.” (from the hymn, When at This Table) CHURCH PEW CHICKEN IN SOUR CREAM¼ cup melted butter¼ cup all-purpose flour1 tsp. saltDash of pepper2 lb. chicken pieces PaprikaSauce:3 Tbsp. water1 tbsp. All-purpose flour¼ tsp. saltDash of pepper and paprika½ cup sour creamIn a saucepan, melt butter. In a mixer bowl, combine flour, salt, and pepper. Roll chicken pieces in mixture un-til coated. Dip chicken in melted butter and arrange skin side up in a baking dish. Sprinkle with paprika. Bake in a 250-degree oven for 1 hour and 15 minutes or until chicken is tender. Remove from pan and keep warm. For the sauce, to the drippings, add water. Blend in flour, salt, pepper, pa-prika, and sour cream. Bring to a boil while constantly stir-ring. Remove from heat and pour over chicken. SAINT’S APPLE SALAD6 oz. lemon Jello2 cups boiling water16 large marshmallows1 cup cold water1 can drained, crushed pineapple2 peeled, diced apples½ cup chopped pecansDressing2 beaten eggs1 juiced lemon¾ cup sugar½ pint whipped creamDissolve Jello in hot water. Add marshmallows, and stir until melted. Add cold water and mix well. Chill until it begins to thicken. Fold in well-drained pineapple, diced apples, and chopped nuts. Refrigerate. Serve topped with dressing. For the dressing, in a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Beat in juice from 1 lemon and sugar. Cook on medium heat until thickened while constantly stirring. Cool completely. Fold in whipped cream. GERMAN’S ANGEL PIE2 beaten egg whites1/8th tsp. salt1/8th tsp. cream of tartar½ cup sugar½ tsp. vanilla extract½ cup finely chopped nuts4 oz. melted German sweet chocolate3 Tbsp. water1 tsp. vanilla extract1 cup whipped creamIn a mixer bowl, beat egg whites with salt and cream of tartar. Add sugar a little at a time, beating well after each addition until stiff peaks form. Fold in vanilla and nuts. Spread into bottom of a greased 9-inch pie plate in the shape of a nest. Bake in a 300-degree oven for 50 minutes or until done. Completely cool. In a saucepan, melt choco-late with water. Completely cool. Add vanilla. Whip the cream. Fold whipped cream into chocolate. Mix well. Pour into shell, and chill for 3 hours. CHOIR LOFT COFFEE CAKE2 sticks softened, salted butter2 cups sugar2 eggs2 cups all-purpose flour1 tsp. baking powder¼ tsp. salt1 tsp. cinnamon1 cup sour cream1 tsp. vanilla extract1 cup chopped pecans½ cup raisinsCinnamon and sugar for toppingIn a mixer bowl, cream butter and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in flour, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon while alternat-ing with sour cream and vanilla. Fold in nuts and raisins. Mix well. Pour in pan and sprinkle with cinnamon and sug-ar. Bake in a greased and floured tube pan in a preheated 350-degree oven for 1 hour or until cake tests done. Allow to cool for 1 hour before removing from pan. PROMISE LAND APPLE PIE2 cups dried applesWaterSugar½ tsp. ground cinnamonDeep dish unbaked pie shellCustard:3 beaten eggs2/3 cup sugar¼ tsp. salt½ cup whole milk1 tsp. vanilla extractDot butternutmegIn a saucepan, place apples and add water to 1-inch above apples. Cook until apples are tender and water is absorbed. Season to taste with sugar and add cinnamon. Completely cool and spoon into bottom of deep, unbaked pie shell to form a layer about ½-inch thick. To prepare custard, beat eggs. Add sugar, salt, milk, and vanilla. Pour over apples. Dot with butter before baking. Bake in a 350-degree oven until custard is done. Sprinkle top of pie with nutmeg. FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT CAKE20 oz. drained, crushed pineapple1 can cherry pie filling½ box Duncan Hines yellow cake mix1 stick salted butter In a colander, drain pineapple. In a 9 x 13 baking dish, spread pineapple over bottom. Spread cherry pie filling evenly over pineapple. Spread ½ of cake mix evenly over pie filling. Pour melted butter evenly over cake mix. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven for 30-35 minutes until light brown, crusty, and done. WANDERING JESUS COOKIES1 cup salted butter1 ½ cup confectioners sugar3 beaten eggs4 cup all-purpose flour1 tsp. soda½ tsp. salt1 tsp. cinnamon, cloves, and nutmeg1 cup chopped dried fruit1 cup chopped nutsIn a mixer bowl, cream butter and sugar. Add eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly after each addition. Add flour, soda, salt, and spices. Mix well. Fold in fruit and nuts. Mix well. Roll and cut or drop by teaspoonful on a cookie sheet. Bake in a 375-degree oven until light brown. CHOCOLATE ANGEL PIE1 cup whole milk½ lb. marshmallowsPinch of salt2 oz. melted, cooled, unsweetened chocolate1 cup whipped cream1 tsp. vanilla extract½ cup chopped nutsFlaked coconutBaked and cooled pie shellWhipped cream/shaved chocolateIn a saucepan, add milk, marshmallows, and salt. Heat until marshmallows are melted. Cool completely. Fold in melted chocolate when cooled, whipped cream, and vanilla extract. Mix well. Fold in chopped nuts. Pour into a pre-baked and cooled pie shell. Sprinkle with coconut. Chill. Top with whipped cream and chocolate shavings. JUBILEE COFFEE CAKE½ cup sugar½ cup chopped pecans½ tsp. ground cinnamon2 pkgs. refrigerated biscuits1/3 cup melted butter12 oz. apricot or cherry preserves, dividedIn a bowl, combine sugar, nuts, and cinnamon. Sprin-kle ¼ cup mixture in a greased 9-inch tube pan. Cut each biscuit in half and roll into a ball. Dip each ball in butter. Layer in the pan in the following order: biscuit balls, re-maining cinnamon mixture, and ½ cup preserves. Bake in a 350-degree oven for 35 minutes. Invert on serving plate and top with remaining preserves. Serve hot. CATHEDRAL COOKIES½ cup melted, salted butter12 oz. melted, chocolate chips10 oz. colored miniature marshmallows1 cup chopped walnuts7 oz. flaked coconutIn a saucepan, melt butter and chocolate chips. Com-pletely cool. In a large bowl, combine marshmallows and nuts. Add cooled butter and chocolate chips. Mix. Divide mixture in half for 2 large rolls. Roll each in coconut. Wrap in waxed paper and chill for at least 24 hours. Slice to serve cookies. PEARLY GATES RICE DESSERT2 cups boiled, cooked white rice1 cup drained pineapple chunks24 ¼-inch cut marshmallows1 cup chopped sweet apples¼ cup sugar1 cup stiff whipped creamChopped nuts (optional)In a mixer bowl, combine cooked rice, pineapple, cut marshmallows, chopped apples, and sugar. Mix well. Re-frigerate at least 1 hour. Before serving, fold in cream. Sprinkle with nuts if desired. FEAST DAY DESSERT4 beaten egg whites1 ½ cups sugar2 tsp baking powder1 tsp. vanilla extract2 beaten egg yolks1 can sweetened, condensed milk½ cup fresh lemon juice2 tsp. lemon extract1 large Cool WhipIn a mixer bowl, beat egg whites. Combine sugar and baking soda and add to eggs a little at a time. Fold in va-nilla. Spread in a 9 x 13 baking pan and bake in a 250-de-gree oven for 1 hour. Completely cool. In a mixer bowl, beat eggs and add condensed milk, lemon juice, and lemon extract. Mix well. Fold in half of Cool Whip. Mix well. Spread over baked meringue. Cover with remaining Cool Whip. Refrigerate 4 hours or until firm. Tender chicken baked in rich sour cream sauce makes a delicious en- tree in Church Pew Chicken. Promise Land Apple Pie is filled with tender apples baked in a soft, buttery custard. Flavors of any apples or favorite mixed fruits combine well with whipped lemon dressing in Saint’s Apple Sal- ad. Let church bells ring – and dinner bells, too Framing Lumber Treated Lumber • Hardwoods Plywood • PPG Paints Cabot Stains Sikkens Stains Flooring • Sakrete Plumbing • Electrical Wood Furniture & More! Wood Shop& Building Supply Monday-Friday 7:30 - 5:30 Saturday 7:30 - 3:00 3301 Salisbury Highway, Statesville 704-872-3148 • lilshavers.com We Know Wood! If wood confuses you, call or come by...We’ll clear it up for you! DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - B1Sports By Brian PittsEnterprise Record The big time came calling when Davie’s varsity soccer team hosted Grimsley, and Corbin Kopetzky’s War Eagles answered. The Whirlies, ranked third in the state in all classifications ac-cording to MaxPreps, scored first, but Davie scored next and held its ground from there to get out with a 1-1 tie. By Brian PittsEnterprise Record The week of East Forsyth figured to be tough. For Davie’s varsity baseball team, it was too tough. Davie was swept, which can easily happen against an East team that is overflowing with ex-perienced talent. In the first game, held at Davie on March 15, pitcher Bayden Hazlip did all he could to prevent a 5-0 loss. It was hard to believe he could pitch better than he did in his first two outings, but he did just that. This was a 0-0 pitchers’ duel through four innings, with Braxton Stewart putting up zeroes for the By Brian PittsEnterprise Record One week after losing 5-4 to West Forsyth, Davie’s tennis team got back on track with a 5-4 win over Mt. Tabor on March 17. Three days before the pivotal match at Tabor, Davie had a breezy 9-0 home win over Parkland. Burke Rosenbaum (6-0, 6-0), C Crenshaw (6-0, 6-0), Bryce Bailey (6-0, 6-0), Seth Hill (6-2, 6-1), Jack Williams (6-1, 6-0), Aiden Froelich (win by default), Hayden Key/Slade Keaton (8-3), Froelich/Zach Hill (8-3) and Barrett Taylor/Sean Lane (win by default) had the wins against the downtrodden Mustangs. Then came the first Davie-Ta-bor showdown since 2017. “Most folks thought either Ta-bor or West was the team to beat in the league, so we knew going over there would be tough,” coach Shane Nixon said. “Add to that the fact that we were missing two starters to band concert stuff, and this was going to be tough.”Rosenbaum, Davie’s top seed, won with an incredible display. That the junior triumphed was hardly news; he has never lost in the CPC. The remarkable thing was the margin (6-2, 6-2) against Tabor’s Adam Cartwright. “Burke put on a clinic,” Nixon said. “The kid he played is so good. Tabor’s No. 1 hits it so hard and with so much pace. He and Burke know each other well and play together in doubles in tour-naments. Burke said to me before the match that he had never beaten Adam when it mattered. He played so well.”Senior C Crenshaw and Ta-bor’s No. 2 threw haymaker after haymaker. When the fierce battle was over, Crenshaw was a 6-4, 7-6 (7-5) winner. At No. 3, junior Bryce Bailey found himself behind 3-0 in the first set. He was unfazed, winning 6-3, 6-0. “C and Bryce both played ex-tremely well,” Nixon said. “Both guys had to fight through stuff. C was in a dogfight from the jump. He plays with such emotion, I knew once he got that first set that things were in good shape. “Bryce got off to the slowest of starts. But when I went to speak to him at the changeover, he just said, ‘I got this, coach.’ And boy did he. He won 12 straight games.”It was 3-3 after singles, the same score as the match against West Forsyth. But this time Davie prevailed in doubles. Rosenbaum/Crenshaw rolled 8-3, and Froelich/Bailey crushed Tabor 6-1 (retired). “When you win 5-4, you know By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Before last week, two War Ea-gles had homered in the five-year history of Davie’s baseball field. Carson Whisenhunt went deep in April of 2018 and March of 2019. Coy James, a varsity fresh-man, drove a pitch over the fence on March 2. The list is short because the dimensions are massive: 330 feet down the lines, 365 in the alleys and 390 to center. Yep, the move from Mando Field to 180 War Eagle Drive ended any chance for a cheap homer. A JV freshman became the third on March 15. Hunter Day-walt pulled a homer to left during an eventual 11-10 win over East Forsyth. At this moment, there had been 35 varsity home games since 2018. There had been three Davie homers in that span, compared to eight triples. This was the 27th jayvee game at Davie since 2018, and Daywalt became the first JV player to go yard. How cool is that? “I had been waiting on him to do it,” said coach Sam Wyrick, whose team ended last week with a six-game winning streak. “I knew he had the power to do it and it was a no-doubter. It was shocking because JV players don’t usually hit it out here because it’s such a big field. That got the momentum swung back our way. It was one heck of an experience.”The wild slugfest began with East scoring four runs in the top of the first. Davie answered im-mediately. Ty Goodson and Carson Queen ripped back-to-back triples. Then came Daywalt’s two-run homer. Craig McBride and Larson Stem followed with hits as Davie rallied to tie things at 4. In the second, Daywalt and McBride had hits as Davie took a 6-4 lead. It was 6-6 after the top of the fifth, but two errors, a walk and a hit batsman helped Davie regain an 8-6 lead in the bottom half. The seesaw action continued right to the end. In the top of the seventh, a three-run double keyed a four-run rally and a 10-8 lead for East. In the bottom of the seventh, Davie reached deep and managed to escape. After Goodson and Queen reached, Bentley Moody had an opposite-field single to right to tie the game at 10. The pitcher beaned Daywalt and East intentionally walked Will Wands to load the bases with one out. Wyrick called for a squeeze bunt. East too tough for Davie baseball visiting side. In the top of the fifth, the hugely gifted Xavier Isaac, who could get drafted come June, led off the game with an opposite-field dou-ble to left. But he was erased by a line drive to shortstop Coy James, who stepped on second to com-plete the unassisted double play. Hazlip faced just four batters in the second and third, when he struck out the side. East opened the fourth with a single. The runner stole second, but he was nailed trying to swipe third by Davie catcher Daniel Lawson as a bunt play backfired. Hazlip struck out the next two batters looking. In the fifth, Isaac came up with two on and two out. The 6-4, 240-pound senior who missed all of last season with an injury broke up Hazlip’s shutout bid with a run-scoring single. Steele Lee homered in the sixth to push East’s lead to 2-0. Davie came unraveled in the seventh, when Isaac belted a home run. Although Hazlip (2-1) wound up getting charged with three runs in 6.1 innings, he was outstanding while walking none and fanning eight. Of his 98 pitches, 72 were strikes. Among Hazlip’s sizzling num-bers for the season: Zero walks and 23 Ks in 17.1 innings. “Again, Bayden threw great,” coach Joey Anderson said. “He kept us in the game. He made some good pitches at tough times.”It was a riveting duel that was ultimately fruitless for Davie because the War Eagles couldn’t touch Stewart, who walked one and fanned 10 in a complete-game 2-hitter. Parker Aderhold had a hit and a walk. Jackson Sink had the other hit. Davie only had two chances to make something happen. In the first, Aderhold singled with one out, but he was caught stealing. In the second, Sink opened with a hit but he was gunned down trying to steal on a hit-and-run play. After Please See Tough - Page B5 Proving a point Soccer team ties third-ranked Grimsley Earlier in the week, Davie got a 0-0 tie against North Davidson. Both ties left the War Eagles in a giddy mood. “We’re making people uncom-fortable because we’re a team to watch,” the first-year coach said. Davie 0, ND 0The War Eagles were eager to see North again after losing the first meeting 1-0. The Davie de-fense came through with its fourth shutout as the visitors managed to leave with a tie on March 14. “The last 10 minutes of the game, we were firing shots left and right,” Kopetzky said. “We fixed our mistakes from the last game and played our game. North is a really good team.”The hero was Avery Yount, a junior who had a monster game at goalie. “Props to Avery,” Kopetzky said. “Last year I was their keeper coach. I told her if she worked on the high balls, she’d be hard to beat. She has inherited a very good defensive line, and she has worked on the high balls.”Yount had one save that was highlight-reel material. “She played unreal,” he said. “She saved one that a year ago would have had me worried. She tipped it over the back. It was one of the most beautiful saves I’ve ever seen in person.”Then there was a defensive line that is saltier than a concession stand pretzel. Freshman Jaden Sink, junior Emily Garner and sophomore Skylar Link were constants in the back, while soph-omore Kim Torres and junior Riley Almond split time at the other spot. “That back four is unreal,” he said. “Riley has been playing some right mid for us, but I put her back tonight and she did her thing and there wasn’t much getting through.”Davie 1, Grimsley 1Lexi Kulis drilled a critical shot, the defense delivered another impossible performance and Davie gave visiting Grimsley its first blemish in a tie on March 17. The Whirlies came in 6-0 with four wins over Central Piedmont Conference teams (1-0 over Mt. Please See Point - Page B4 Tennis stays in CPC hunt Please See Hunt - Page B5 Daywalt 1st JV to go yard at Davie Please See Daywalt - Page B5 Junior goalie Avery Yount makes a diving save for Davie. - Photos by Marnic Lewis Senior Katie Shupe pressures a passer. Catcher Daniel Lawson. B2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT A1 Pressure Washing & Gutter Cleaning also offers Handyman Services Bob Buchin started out with one small pressure washing machine and has now been in business 15 years. The business has grown to four trucks with complete equipment set up to take care of all Resi-dential, Commercial, Small Business and Churches with any maintenance, pressure washing, clean-up and/or handyman services. A1 Pressure Washing offers multiple services that include: • Houses • Decks • Roofs • Driveways • Church Steeples • Gutters • Install Gutters • Handyman Services A1 Pressure washing believes in supporting our small businesses and helping local businesses by recommending them whenever possible. A1 Pressure washing donated equipment, supplies, and volunteered to help clean up graffit that appeared up and down Cana Road in 2020. Bob worked right alongside the youth to clean up what had been spray painted on the bridge, signs, and a local business. Bob is a proud supporter of local sports and youth organizations including being a Booster for Davie High School Football, Booster for Davie County Little League, and he sponsors five different racecars: 2 full size racecars and 3 go-cart racers. In addition Bob and his business are huge support-ers of Veterans and are members of Rolling Thunder which are united in the cause to bring full account-ability for the Prisoners Of War - Missing In Action (POW/MIA) of all wars, reminding the government, the media and the public by our watchwords: “We Will Not Forget.” So, as you are looking around your house and no-tice you need some new gutters, need to have your driveway cleaned, or the sidewalk looks kind of dirty, just call A1 Pressure Washing at 336-940-4177 for your FREE ESTIMATE. We look forward to hearing from you. A1 is bonded and insured. Call TODAY To Put The BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT To Work For YOU! ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE! Tell Our Advertisers You Found Them in the BUSINESSSPOTLIGHT Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash “I specialize in small projects!” John Huneycutt, Owner 336-618-2425 huneycuttpainting@gmail.com Interior & Exterior Painting Handyman work, repairs, & carpentry Building new decks & refurbishing existing decks Home upgrades: flooring, tile, backsplash, & countertops Market readies & home improvement projects Pressure washing & basement clean-outs By Brian PittsEnterprise Record The Davie boys lacrosse team had struggled mightily in the Central Piedmont Conference before a thrill-ing win over West Forsyth. The Davie boys lost 18-8 at Reagan on March 8 and 20-13 at Mt. Tabor on March 11, falling to 0-3 in the CPC. Ryan Walton had half of Davie’s goals at Reagan. Kole Bilyeu, Sam Warner, Daniel Reichard and Cam-den Beck had one each, and Reichard had both of Davie’s assists. At Tabor, Walton had six goals, Beck three and Senior Za’haree Maddox was named to the All-Cen-tral Piedmont Conference team from Davie boys bas-ketball. Will Gray and Mon-ty Gray won player of the year and coach of the year. The rest of the all-con-ference team: East Forsyth’s Braxton Stewart and Matt Joines; Glenn’s Zion Dixon, Chol Adichol and Anthony Davis; Mt. Tabor’s Jamarius Peterkin, Finley Simmons and Shaarius Peterkin; Rea-gan’s Jalill Rogers, KJ Ford; and Reynolds’ Marc Raye Jr., Kenaz McMillian and Eli Calhoun. •••Making all-conference from Davie girls basketball were junior Somer John-son and sophomore Kenadi Gentry. East Forsyth’s La’Ni-ya Simes and Aaron Grier were named player of the CHAPEL HILL - The N.C. High School Athletic Association (NCHSAA) and the N.C. State Board of Education (SBOE) have signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) that will allow the association to continue to oversee the governance of high school Upcoming Games Wednesday, March 23Davie tennis at East Forsyth at 4:15Davie varsity soccer at home vs. East Forsyth at 6Davie golf at Pudding Ridge vs. Calvary at 3:30Davie JV/varsity softball at West Rowan at 5/7Thursday, March 24Davie tennis at home vs. Reagan at 4:15Davie track at Mt. Tabor at 4:30Davie golf at Meadowlands vs. Oak Grove at 3:30Davie boys lacrosse at home vs. High Point Central at 5Friday, March 25Davie boys lacrosse at home vs. Reynolds at 7:15Davie girls lacrosse at home vs. Reynolds at 5:30Davie varsity baseball at home vs. Reagan at 6:30Davie JV baseball at Reagan at 6North Davie baseball at WataugaMonday, March 28Davie JV/varsity soccer at Reagan at 5:30/7Davie golf at Salem Glen at 3:30Davie JV baseball at West Davidson at 5Tuesday, March 29Davie golf at Pudding Ridge at 3:30Davie boys lacrosse at East Forsyth at 7:15Davie girls lacrosse at East Forsyth at 5:30Davie varsity baseball at Mt. Tabor at 6 North Davie baseball at Wesleyan Christian AcademyWednesday, March 30Davie tennis at home vs. Mt. Tabor at 4:15Davie varsity soccer at Mt. Tabor at 6Davie varsity baseball at home vs. Mooresville at 7 Beck lifts Davie lacrosse past W. Forsyth Bryce Harnsberger two. Reichard and Nick Ruff had one apiece. Alex Speckin was responsible for four of Davie’s nine assists. Walton had three, while Bilyeu and Reichard had one. Walton, a senior who was averaging a shade over five goals per game at this point, is everything you could ask for in a scorer. “Ryan is a very skilled player,” assistant coach Corey Tilley said. “He has the ability to create offense from any part of the field. He is one of the best shooters I’ve coached and has great offensive awareness. He’s a true offensive threat who is always open no matter where he is. He moves just as well off ball as he does when he has it.”Despite having never played Davie lacrosse before this year, Beck, a 224-pound senior, has contributed in a big way. In fact, he was now second on the team with 11 goals, trailing Walton’s 26.“He’s a huge addition,” Tilley said. “He hit the ground running and is a great athlete. He’s a true gamer and a massive help to our young team.”•••The slide continued with a 20-6 loss at Reynolds on March 14. Walton had three goals, Beck two and Ty Car-ter one. Speckin and Walton had the assists. Davie 8, WF 7Things were grim in the early going. Not only had the War Eagles dropped four in a row, they were facing a 3-0 deficit to visiting West Forsyth on March 15. Then Davie caught fire, ripped off an 8-3 run and beat its biggest rival. “These guys showed up tonight,” Tilley said. “(Goalie) Wesley Brooks played really well. He made timely saves. Our defense (led by Chase Atkinson, Davin Kauserud, Landon Dingler, Nick Ruff and Camren Godbey) played their best game. I’m proud of all the guys.”It was a true team effort. Walton was held to one goal, but Beck picked up the slack with four, including the War Eagles’ final goal, which put them in front 8-6. “(Walton) got locked up and doubled and he strug-gled at first,” Tilley said. “But he was very mature in realizing they had his num-ber and he used it to open up some other guys.”Carter, Speckin and Re-ichard had the other goals. Bilyeu, Sebastian Bellomo, Warner, Harnsberger and Speckin had the assists. “Bryce won a big faceoff late that he turned into the typing goal by Daniel,” Tilley said. Notes: West fell to 3-5 overall and 1-3 in the CPC. Davie is 3-4, 1-4. ... Davie and West split last season. Davie’s 9-4 triumph marked its first ever win in the se-ries. West responded with a 14-4 romp in the rematch. ... Davie’s top three scorers for the season are Walton (30 goals), Beck (17) and Reichard (10). Speckin is dominating in assists with 17. Reichard and Walton are next with seven each. ... The Davie girls tumbled to 0-5 in the CPC with losses of 21-3 at Reynolds and 15-4 at home to West. Nicole Korczyk, Reese Tutterow and Grace Butler scored against Reynolds, and Kin-nah Chamberlain (two), Ava Rajacich and Butler scored against West. 13 War Eagles earn all-CPC honors year and coach of the year, respectively. The rest of the team: East Forsyth’s Natalie Axtell and Toyia Rooks; Reagan’s Amaya Glenn, Charlotte Craver and Emma Pendle-ton; Reynolds’ Abigail Rice, Destiny Thompson and El-liott Jessup; West Forsyth’s Abby Hunter; Parkland’s Justace Williams; Glenn’s Jordan Fisher and Alyssa Jessup; and Mt. Tabor’s Ava Hairston. •••Six seniors, two juniors and one sophomore made all-conference from Da-vie wrestling. They were seniors Lane Hill, Sam Collins, Ramiro Gutierrez, Collin Bailey, Isaac Webb and Jack Jarvis. Lawson Hire and Charlie Frye made it as juniors, and Hunter Testa made the list as a sophomore. •••Sophomore Earnhardt Harris of Davie boys swim-ming made all-conference by finishing second in the 100 butterfly. The boys swimmer of the year was West For-syth’s Logan McDonald. The swimmer of the year in girls was Reynolds’ Jane Fitzgerald. The boys coach of the year was West For-syth’s Sandy Thomerson. And the coach of the year in girls was Reynolds’ Car-oline Bronson. athletics in the state for the next four years. The member schools approved suspen-sion of the association’s articles of incorporation and bylaws in conflict with the MOU. “We are glad to be able to continue to govern and lead in the area of educa- tion-based athletics for the member high schools of our state,” said NCHSAA Com-missioner Que Tucker. “Our board of directors and I firm-ly believe that the NCHSAA is the best organization in our state for the governance and continued flourishing of high school athletics.” NCHSAA overseeing high school sports DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 ‑ B3 Little by little, the fox is edging closer to the chick-en house.North Carolina remains one of a handful of states that have yet to experience the joys of chronic wasting disease, a fatal neurological disease that affects white-tailed deer and other like animals.But it’s getting closer with the announcement by officials in Virginia that two more CWD-infected deer were harvested last fall in counties that border North Carolina. One deer taken in Floyd County, 28½ miles from North Carolina, test-ed positive, and a deer in neighboring Montgomery County also tested positive – the second such animal in that county. In 2020-21, a CWD-infected deer was confirmed in Montgomery County, just 33 miles from North Carolina.CWD is caused by ab-normal proteins, prions, that spread through a deer’s nervous system, causing brain damage that is always fatal. The disease is spread between deer through di-rect contest, through saliva, urine and feces or carcasses and body parts.The N.C. Wildlife Re- By Dan Kibler North Carolina’s white-tail deer herd has never had a confirmed case of chronic wasting dis- ease, but CWD in Virginia is getting closer to the border. - Photo by Dan Kibler sources Commission has ramped up its program to track CWD if it ever reaches North Carolina’s deer herd by taking tissue samples from more than 20,000 deer since 2000 – 7,000 deer since July 2021 – paying special attention to Alleghany, Rockingham, Stokes and Surry counties, which border the common-wealth’s affected areas. About half of the most-re-cent samples have been tested and no CWD has been detected.“These new CWD-pos-itive samples in Virginia highlight the importance of our surveillance efforts here in North Carolina,” said biologist Chris Kreh of Elkin, assistant chief of the Commission’s Wild-life Management Division. “We received a record number of deer samples from taxidermists, meat processors and hunters to bolster our ability to test more deer than ever be- fore for CWD…. I hope we don’t find that CWD is here, but if it is, I hope we find it as early as possible.”CWD moves slowly through a deer’s system, often taking almost a year-and-a-half before the deer starts to show signs. There is no vaccine, treatment or cure for the disease, which has been detected in 29 states and four Canadian provinces, the latest being Mississipp, which has tak-en radical steps to stem the tide of the disease in areas it has shown up, including changes in hunting seasons, hunting regulations – espe-cially concerning baiting of deer – and bag limits.East Burke eighth‑grader is aspiring Robin HoodThere is just no stopping Natalie Bell. An eight-grade stu-dent at East Burke Middle School who is the defend-ing national middle-school champion in the Archery in the Schools Program, defended her state title last month, posting the highest score of any of the 800 kids from 31 schools who par-ticipated in the tournament, held in Winston-Salem.Burke scored 298 out of a possible 300 points to easily win the girls’ mid-dle-school title, but her score beat all of the high-school competitors. Hudson Lentz of East Burke won the boys’ middle-school title with 283x300, and East Burke won the middle school team.South Caldwell won the high-school team title, with Alex Beard of Maiden win-ning the boys’ individual ti-tle at 280x300, and Abigail Clark of South Caldwell taking the girls’ crown with 277x300.Youth fishing eventThe Yadkin Valley Wild-life Federation will hold a free, youth trout-fishing event in Yadkinville on Saturday, April 2 at Yadk-inville Park, 6600 Service Rd., from 9 a.m.-noon. Hotdogs will be served.Fishing is open to all aged 15 and under, ac-companied by a parent or guardian. RSVP by phone or text to Don Stroud at 336-682-3456. Chronic wasting disease among deer creeping closer Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash 1200205 Zirrus formerly Yadtel in conjuction with the Davie County Enterprise Record Invite you to nominate an individual to be recognized as VETERAN OF THE MONTH A Veteran will be chosen from the entries and published in the Davie County Enterprise Record on the first Thursday of the month. sponsored by: Submit your nominationourdavie.com/veterans 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: 171 S. MAIN STREET • MOCKSVILLE, NC(336) 751-2120 ourdavie.com The Rise fifth-grade basketball team went 23-2 and won six of seven tournaments. The team includ- ed, from left: Bowman Blakley, Glen Greene, Wade Ridenhour, Ben Bost, Mason Driver, Reynolds Tomlinson, Whit Butler, Graham Weaver and coach Jay Weaver. Rise winning tournaments B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 Continued From Page B1Tabor, 2-1 over East For-syth, 1-0 over Reynolds, 2-1 over Reagan). Kopetzky loved it. It wasn’t a win, but it was a moral victory for a pro-gram that hasn’t enjoyed a winning season since 2008 and has suffered 12 straight losing seasons. “They’re not just No. 3 in 4-A, they are No. 3 in the entire state,” Kopetzky said after Davie moved to 3-1-2. “I told them: ‘They’ve beaten half our conference and they’re 6-0. So they can leave here 7-0 or they can leave here 6-1. My goal is 6-1.’ “The girls bought in. They played outstanding. We clogged the outside. That was their game plan. We made them play more central and it worked.”Grimsley took the lead when the wet ball slipped through Yount’s hands. “It took a skip off the ground,” Kopetzky said. “Avery bobbled it and it rolled into the goal. I told her that was on the field conditions. It was wet and soggy. That’s a hard ball to play in those conditions. I told her: ‘Hey, goals hap-pen. You’re not going to be perfect all the time.’”Yount would redeem herself later in the half. “She made up for the bobble,” he said. “They took a beautiful shot. It was the nicest save I’ve ever seen Avery have. She made a diving save and punched it over the bar. She was the player of the game.”It remained 1-0 through the rest of the half. “To even be in a game with a team like that, that says a lot for my assistants, for the girls and for the pro-gram,” he said. Davie’s counter punch came with around 20 min- utes to go. Grimsley was whistled for a handball in the box. Kulis took the pen-alty kick and converted the kind of goal that can help define a season. “I think people in Cool-eemee heard me tell Lexi that she was taking the PK,” he said after the junior notched her team-high fifth goal. “She played it left of the keeper. It was a beautiful shot. The keeper got a hand on it, but it went in anyway.” The defense extended its remarkable run. That’s two goals allowed in six games. Yount was joined in the back by Garner, Sink, Link, Torres and freshman Sarah Andrade. “Sarah got some quality minutes tonight,” he said. “She stepped up. She has improved as the season’s progressed. She played some right mid and made some really good runs and passes.” Point ... By Brian PittsEnterprise Record This is what makes sports the greatest reality show. There is no script and some-times no logic. Reagan’s softball team won 8-7 over Forbush, which beat Davie 3-2. Rea-gan played tough in a 6-3 loss to powerful East For-syth, which belted Davie 11-0. Davie and Reagan met March 15 in Pfafftown. Did the Raiders beat Davie for the first time? Not a chance. Davie romped 15-3 while putting up crooked numbers in five of seven at-bats and cranking three home runs. “We came out aggres-sive at the plate in the first inning. That set the tone,” coach Debbie Evans said. A five-run first saw Lon-don Dirks connect for a two-run homer, and three batters later, Ashley Bledsoe went Davie softball routs Reagan; sets HR record deep with one aboard. In a three-run second, Leah Grimes mashed a two-run shot, giving Davie three bombs in 14 at-bats. Davie pushed the mar-gin to 10-1 in the third, and Reagan was on its way to loss No. 23 to the War Eagles, who improved to 2-1 in the Central Piedmont Conference. Summer Simpson (3 for 5, 2 RBIs) and Carleigh Croom (3-4) led an 18-hit attack against two Reagan pitchers. Davie got two hits from Melanie Gobble (2-3), Sydney Dirks (2-5, double), L. Dirks (2-5, five RBIs) and Audrea Fowler (2-5). “They settled down,” assistant Fred Smith said. “Everybody was swinging for the fence early in the year. I’ve been telling them to be team hitters and put good swings on good pitch-es. Don’t try to hit every ball out of the ballpark. When they did that, they ended up hitting three out by taking good swings. Everybody on this team can hit long balls, but you typically do that when you’re not trying to.”Addie Hendrix was the winning pitcher, holding Reagan to one run over 4.2 innings. Riley Potts and Kaylyn Nuckols recorded the final seven outs. ND 14, Davie 12If you like offense, this was a true classic, with both teams holding three-run leads in the nonconference game at Davie on March 17. It was bittersweet for the War Eagles, who put up the most runs against North in eight years but fell short when North scored the game’s final two runs. “Both teams were hitting well and battling back and forth,” Evans said. “We got some timely, clutch hits throughout the game. We just came up a little short.” In the first, Davie wiped out North’s 3-0 lead with three runs, thanks to Simp-son’s two-run homer. In the fourth, Davie charged back from 9-6 down to 11-9 ahead. S. Dirks’ three-run double and McKenzie Mixon’s two-run single highlighted the rally. Simpson went yard for the second time in the fifth, tying the game at 12. North pulled out a fun, exhausting, dizzying game in its final at-bat. The No. 9 batter started the top of the seventh with a single. Another single followed, but the next two batters were retired. The cleanup batter, though, roped a two-run double to make it 14-12. Davie went down 1-2-3 in its final at-bat. The top three batters in the order fueled the Davie barrage. Gobble (3-4, three runs, double), Simpson (3-3, four runs, three RBIs, two homers) and S. Dirks (2-4, three runs, three RBIs, two doubles) accounted for eight of Davie’s 11 hits. North countered with 14 hits and three homers. In two games, Simpson raised her average from .266 to .434. Her first ho-mer was a bullet to left. Her second one was a blast to right-center. “She was really tuned in all night,” Evans said. “She’s seeing the ball well.”Even though there were 26 runs, it was a clean game. Both teams only made one error. It was the most runs an opponent has dropped on North in 183 games. (North lost 12-3 to Alexander Cen-tral in the 2014 playoffs.)“Hopefully this kind of game/competition will pay off for us later in the season or playoffs,” Evans said. Notes: North improved to 3-2. ... This was the first Davie-N. Davidson game since April of 2018. ... North has won eight of the last nine against Davie. Davie 15, Tabor 0The War Eagles set a program record for homers in a game at Mt. Tabor on March 18. Fowler went deep twice and S. Dirks, Mixon and Grimes left the yard as Davie whipped the low-pro-file Spartans in four innings. Fowler went 3 for 3 with three runs and three RBIs. Getting two hits were L. Dirks (2-3, double) and Grimes (2-3, two RBIs). The old record for sin-gle-game homers was four, which was done multiple times. Seven different War Eagles have homered a total of 12 times, led by Fowler’s three. Notes: Davie met Tabor for the first time since ‘17; its series winning streak is 32. ... Tabor fell to 1-4. ... Davie improved to 5-4, 3-1 in the CPC. Junior Emily Garner steals the ball. In middle, senior Christine Cao makes a steal. At right, junior Riley Almond steals it from Grimsley. Mya McGowan, Kim Torres and Jaden Sink congratulate Lexi Kulis (11). Sophomore Tru Koren dribbles past a defender. - Photos by Marnic Lewis Kim Torres makes a stop, while Riley Almond (13) collects the ball. B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 Continued From Page B1that, Stewart retired 15 straight, a streak that was interrupted by Aderhold’s seventh-inning walk. “Both teams were trying to be aggressive early (on the base paths),” Anderson said. “(Stewart) came right at us. He basically showed his hand and pitched a great game. He challenged us with his fastball, and we have to get better at making adjust-ments. We have to make adjustments in the middle of at-bats. We’ve got to get our hands quicker.”Notes: East improved its overall record to a modest 3-4, but make no mistake, it is a state title contender. Three losses came in a trip to Alabama by scores of 2-1, 3-2 and 2-0. ... Davie slipped to 3-3 overall and 2-1 in the Central Piedmont Conference. The win lifted East to 2-1 in the CPC. Losing StreakDavie’s offense did some nice things in the next two games, but things spiraled in other areas in losses of 13-5 at East and 10-8 to Alexander Central in a home nonconference game. Going into the game at East on March 18, the War Eagles were hitting a mere .231 with six extra-base hits in six games. They put up a season-high 10 hits, but five errors and 11 walks by three pitchers were too much to overcome. The top three batters in the order had two-hit nights. James singled and homered. (He has both of Davie’s long balls on the season, and the freshman ended the night with a .333 average.) Ty Miller had two singles. Davin Whitaker had two hits and three steals. In the six hole, Aderhold went 2 for 2 with a walk and two RBIs. “We turned a corner with our approach at the plate,” Anderson said. “I was very impressed how guys put great swings and shortened up on two very good pitch-ers (Lee, who was chased after the third, and Ethan Norby).”Against Alexander Cen-tral on March 19, Lawson (3-4, two doubles), Miller (2-4, three RBIs) and Whita-ker (2-2, walk, double, two steals) enabled Davie to out-hit an unbeaten opponent. The War Eagles, though, failed to put it all together, with three pitchers combin-ing for seven walks and the defense committing four errors. While the Cougars ran their record to 7-0, Davie’s overall mark dropped to 3-5. Tough ... Continued From Page B1a couple guys did things that helped even if they lost,” Nixon said. “Zach Hill and Key, two freshmen playing in their first real matches, made Tabor guys work hard, which made a difference in doubles. Aiden could have folded after a 1-6 first set, but he fought for every point. I love how Aiden just refuses to give in.”Notes: Davie is 5-1 over-all and 4-1 in the CPC “in what is supposed to be a rebuilding year,” Nixon said. “I’m pretty happy with where we are.” ... Rosen-baum, Crenshaw and Bai-ley are all 6-0 in singles. Rosenbaum and Crenshaw are 5-0 at No. 1 doubles. ... Crenshaw is 34-8 in his singles career, while Rosen-baum is 27-2. Hunt ... Continued From Page B1It didn’t work, but Moody wiggled out of a rundown and scored on the catcher’s throwing error. “They had a bad throw back to third,” Wyrick said. “We kind of got lucky, but I’ll take it.” Davie got two hits from Goodson (2-4, three runs), Moody (2-4, double), Day-walt (2-4), McBride (2-5, two steals) and Stem (2-4). Wands drew three walks. “There were ups and downs the whole game, but it was fun to be a part of,” Wyrick said. “Luckily, the bats were rolling. That’s the most hits (11) we’ve had, so I think everything is starting to click.”Davie 8, EF 4Davie completed the sweep of East in Kerners-ville on March 18. It was 4-4 before Davie took the lead for keeps in the fifth. Gray Collins, the courtesy runner for Dane Porter, stole third and went home on a throwing error by the catcher. With help from a walk, an error and a hit by pitch, Davie added insurance in the sixth. McBride sparked the three-run uprising with a bunt hit. The rally was capped by Daywalt’s two-run single. Davie overcame three er-rors because East committed twice as many. “We played OK,” Wyrick said. “We played through some defensive mistakes and got key hits when we needed them. It wasn’t pret-ty, but we got it done.”Tucker Hobbs was strong on the mound in a com-plete-game effort. All four East runs were unearned. “He did a great job,” Wyrick said. Davie got two hits from Moody (2-3, walk) and Mc-Bride (2-4). Davie 5, AC 4For the third time in five days, the War Eagles walked on the edge of a knife. For the third time, they found a way to keep the winning streak alive, scoring the tie-breaking run in the seventh in a home nonconference game against Alexander Central on March 19. For the longest time, it looked like Davie was going to cruise home. McBride worked five shutout innings, permitting just two hits and leaving with a 3-0 lead. Da-vie made it 4-0 in the sixth. But the Cougars got off the deck in a noisy top of the seventh, scoring four runs on two hits, two walks and a hit batsman. Undeterred, the War Eagles manufactured the clinching run in the bottom of the seventh. AC helped the cause by committing a one-out error on a McBride grounder and issuing a two-out walk to Wands. Then Chris Barringer was plunked by a pitch, loading the bases for Goodson, who jumped on the first offering and stroked a walk-off single. Daywalt (2-3, walk) and McBride (2-3) had four of Davie’s seven hits, and Daywalt picked up the win in relief. The lone loss for 6-1 Davie by one run to Carson. “That team has some sparkplugs,” varsity coach Joey Anderson said. “They don’t give up easy. They’re not going to quit. They’re going to keep playing.” Daywalt ... After averaging 31-over in the first three matches, Davie’s golf team found a groove at Maple Chase on March 15 behind Colby Moore and Cooper Drum, and carded their finest nine-role score in a while.Moore tied for fourth overall with an even-par 36. It was the third even score of his Davie career. Drum shot 37 to tie for ninth. It was his best show-ing as a War Eagle, topping the 3-over 38 he had last season at Pudding Ridge. Anderson Beliveau matched his best Davie round at 39. He was also 3-over at Oak Valley on March 8. When you add Sean Coates’ 42, the War Eagles were at 10-over 154. Davie was fourth for the second time in as many CPC meets, trailing Reyn-olds’ 138, Reagan’s 147 and West Forsyth’s 152. Mt. Ta-bor (170) and East Forsyth (182) rounded out the team scoring. 3 golfers break 40 Sophomore Ty Miller bats for Davie’s varsity. Junior Davin Whitaker throws from third. Junior Caleb Adkins and sophomore Braeden Rodgers pitch. Junior Jackson Sink makes a play at second base. In middle are Whitaker, Sink and Parker Aderhold. At right is Whitaker after hitting a triple. Sink throws to first. - Photos by Marnic Lewis Get it weekly With a subscription to the Davie County Enterprise Record Only $32.03 in Davie County Call Today! 336-751-2120 B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 Sheffield-Calahaln By Brenda BaileySheffield-CalahalnCorrespondent Birthday wishes to: Barbara French and Jack Keller on March 27; Ger-aldine Lambert on March 29; Madison Drye and Kim Gunter on March 30; and JD Powell and Betty Beck on March 31. If you would like a birthday or anniversary listed, please let me know.As many people have no-ticed this week as they trav-elled up and down Sheffield Road, the large trees in front of Community Covenant are gone. Some speculated that they must have been diseased before reading my article on Thursday. The trees came down to make room for new growth. A groundbreaking and worship service was held at Community Covenant on Sunday. The Rev. Keith Ledford welcomed every-one followed by reading from Psalm 119. The special hymns for the service were “The Church’s One Foun-dation” and “Let Us Build a House of Worship”. The service continued outside for the ground-breaking ceremony. Charles Baker shared history of the church prior to Ledford’s scripture and sermon. Todd Ellis, the general contractor spoke before the shovel-ing of the “symbolic” dirt. Community Covenant is planning to build an addi-tion to the existing struc-ture with a large narthex, restrooms and rooms for ministry. The church is at 1446 Sheffield Road and worship service is held each Sunday at 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m. There is a Prayer and Bible Study on Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Revival Services will be held at 7 each evening through March 27. Guest speaker is the Rev. Andrew Stroud and family.John Powell’s young mu-sicians, Fairfield Bluegrass, performed at West Rowan Grill on Friday. Thanks to Sue Clark for sharing the photo. Joe Mahaffey and NuHiWay will perform this Friday. Hope you can go out and support our local talent.Hotdog Saturday at New Union is Saturday from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. in the church parking lot. There will also be a bake sale and RADA cutlery and crafts for sale. Peanut butter eggs and co- Todd Elllis and Richard Williams are joined by the Rev. Keith Ledford as they began the shoveling of the “symbolic” dirt at Community Covenant Church’s groundbreaking ceremony on Sunday. Members and friends gather outside of the church for the event. Community Covenant breaks ground on addition Charles Baker, the Rev. Keith Ledford and John Williams take part in the groundbreaking ceremony on Sunday. Contractor Todd Ellis tells members what to expect during construction. At right, the groundbreaking ceremony begins. The crowd listens as folks such as Shirley Lewis take the stage at the weekly music jam at Farmington Community Center. Fairfield Bluegrass performs at the West Rowan Grill. conut eggs will be sale $1 each. The church is at Shef-field and County Line roads. The Men’s Group at New Union is selling whole Bos-ton Butts for Easter. The $40 includes dip; to be picked up Saturday, April 16 1-3p.m. For more information, con-tact Gary at 336-345-3672 or any member of the men’s group. New Union is selling tickets for a Mother’s Day basket which will be raffled on Thursday before Moth-er’s Day. Tickets are $10 each and can be obtained from me or other members of the fundraising com-mittee: Gary Allen, Nellie Reavis, Sandra Dyson and Lester Edwards. Sunday morning ser-vices have changed at New Union. A combined service will be held at 10 followed by Sunday School at 11. The Youth Group and Kid’s Night is held each Wednes-day evening from 6:30-7:30. Liberty Wesleyan will hold a yard sale Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.-3 p.m. to benefit the Kidz Minis-try. A time of prayer is held each Sunday at 9:30 a.m., followed by Sunday School at 10 and worship at 11. The Liberty Kidz family service meets Fridays from 6:30-7:30 p.m.Sunday School is held each Sunday at Ijames Bap-tist at 9:30 a.m. and the wor-ship service at 10:30. Team-KID for ages 3 years to 5th grade meets each Sunday evening from 4:30-6:30. Wesley Chapel UMC has the following TerriLynn nut products available: pecan halves and pieces, black walnuts and chocolate cov-ered raisins and peanuts for $12per one pound bag. Con-tact Kathy at 336-830-5123.A Military Court of Honor is being erected at the Farmington Communi-ty Center. To place a brick in honor or memory of a soldier or veteran, contact Kathy at 336-830-5123 or the center at 336-998-2912. A 4x8 engraved brick is $50 and an 8x8 engraved brick is $100. Installation is planned prior to Memorial Day.Prayer requests contin-ue for Bryan Swain, Jean Reavis, Johnny Naylor, Pat Moore, Hazel Smoot, Tim Keller, Junior Dunn, Betty Dameron, Tammy Keller, Naomi Wooten, Jeff Potts, Charles England, Greta En-gland, Lincoln Dyson, Bob Ellis, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bon-nie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Jane Tutterow, Milton Tut-terow, Nancy Peacock, Ger- aldine Lambert, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Caren Morgan, Helen Bulla, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Betty Richard-son, Fred Beck, Juanita Keaton, Jerry McDaniel, Yvonne Richardson and Su-zonne Stratton. Our sincere condolences to the families of Elizabeth Martin and Glenn Koontz.Please submit all news to brfbailey@msn.com, mes-sage me on Facebook or call 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thursdays.New LocationIn Mocksville“The Best that Heart and Hands Can Give” MOCKSVILLE CHAPEL NOW OPEN!953 Salisbury Road, Mocksville, NC 27028 • Ph:336-477-2086 Visit Our Website to find our Lexington & Winston-Salem Locations www.robertsfuneral.com 1109590 Cheryl V. Anderson Manager & Mortician DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 - B7 This scripture message brought to you by these businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. Truth shall spring out of the earth, and righteousness shall look down from heaven.(Psalm 85:11) B8 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022 By Carrie MillerDavie Senior Services Davie County Senior Games are back in action and better than ever.This year, the 29th Sea-son of Senior Games, start-ed with a record high num-ber of 142 registrants. The 0pening ceremonies was held at RISE Indoor Sports Complex in Bermuda Run on Tuesday, March 15, where Senior Services used almost all of the space and offered not only the open-ing ceremony, but several events and a special light-ing of the torch to officially open the games. The ceremonial program was led by Senior Games Coordinator Michelle Ellis, who made remarks on be-half of the staff and shared highlights of the upcoming season. She was followed with a welcome by Inter-im County Manger Mike Ruffin. County Commis-sioner, Benita Finney, sang the National Anthem, and Whitney Fitzsimons from Davie County Recreation and Parks led the group in the Pledge of Allegiance. Will Marklin, Mocks-ville mayor, shared the Spir-it of Senior Games and in-troduced the newest Senior Games Ambassador, John Bullins, who shared his ex-periences at Senior Games, why he was chosen as an ambassador, and how proud he is to represent Davie Se-nior Games. Ellis then read the Senior Games Creed. Carrie Miller, Silver-Arts coordinator and Se-nior Games co-coordinator, shared about SilverArts and how incredible it is that North Carolina not only represents sports figures but also takes the time to represent heritage, visual, performing, and literary arts, plus they recognize cheerleading. Davie County Senior Games has the Davie Dazzlers cheerleaders who have competed at the local level and won medals at the state finals.Lane Newsom and the RISE staff were recognized and shared the overview of the day, the flow, and the time of lunch. The games officially began when Ber-muda Run Mayor Rick Cross declared the official opening followed by the lighting of the torch and a ceremonial fun walk around the parking lot. Once the ceremony was complete, participants com-peted in basketball shoot, spincasting, softball throw, and football throw. RISE had activities set up for par-ticipants to enjoy between events such as pickleball and cornhole. The day concluded with a pizza lunch and awarding of medals. On Wednesday, March The Spirit of Senior Games is alive and well in the oldest participant, Nancy Tutterow, and the youngest participant, John Bullins. Dr. George Kimberly enjoys playing in the bas- ketball shooting event with his daughter, Bess Hatley. Carrie Miller and Bud Stroud stop for a photo op during the opening days of the Davie County Se- nior Games.Let the games begin There’s still time to participate as seniors show off skills Bermuda Run Mayor, Rick Cross, leads the way on the fun walk after lighting the torch.Kim Newsom participates in the Foot- ball Throw. Sue Allen loves participating in the basketball shooting. Barbara Chapman (left) throws the softball as far as she is able. Above are medal winners Roni Barney, Alice Monk, and Karen Umberger. At right, Marie Craig enjoys participating in cornhole. It’s smiles all around for Pickleball Mixed Doubles winners. A friendly group photo for all the winners in Pickleball Doubles. Please See Games ‑ Page B9 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD Thursday, March 24, 2022 ‑ B9 County Line Folks enjoy fellowship and breakfast cooked by the men of Piney Grove Church in honor of "Men's and Women's Day." Area business and ministerial leaders, from left: Wesley Deszerne, Chris Leckie, Harmony Mayor Daniel Matney, the Rev. John Phifer, the Rev.Dr. Cliff Wall, and the Rev. Clyde Parks also enjoy breakfast and fellowship. Continued From Page B816, Senior Games took over the gyms at the Davie Coun-ty Community Park for pickleball singles, doubles, and mixed doubles. Pick-leball is the latest fad, and Senior Services has been promoting new open play at the Brock campus and host-ing clinics. Senior Games will be held through May, so it is not too late to join. There will be events for everyone 50 or better and participants compete by age and gender categories. To participate in the athletic or artistic events, give Senior Services a call at 336-753-6230. It is never too late to try some-thing new. Winners Basketball Shooting: 55-59 - first, Mike West, Beth Safrit; second, John Bullins; 60-64 - first, Bess Hatley, Terry Thornett; second, Jan-et Foster; 65-69 - first, Rick Wagner, Connie Swartz; second, Kathy Cornatzerl third, Maria Hall; 70-74 - first, Karen Umberger; second, Alice Monk; third, Roni Barney; 75-79 - first, Charles Mashburn, Barba-ra Chapman; second, Kim Newsom; third, Richard Pierce; 80-84 - first, Gene Hinsdale, Alice Barnette; second, Doris Hinsdale; 85-89 - first, Bud Stroud, Sue Allen; 90-94 - first - George Kimberly. Football Throw: 55-59 - first, Beth Safrit, Mike West; second, John Bullins; 60-64 - first, Carolyn Sloan; 65-69 - first, Maria Hall, Gary Dai-ley; second, Connie Swartz; third - Kathy Cornatzer; 70-74 - first, Peggy Evans, Ron Garcia; second, Pat Foster.; third, Roni Barney; 75-79 - first, Lois Green, Charles Mashburn; second - Barba-ra Chapman, Kim Newsom; third, Richard Pierce; 80-84 - first, Alice Barnette, Mike Barnette; second, Doris By Shirley ThorneCounty Line Correspondent As photos show from the "Men's and Women's Day" breakfast fellowship at Piney Grove AME Zion Church, folks are enjoying the warmer days. Some lo-cal churches are planning Easter services and events. Calvary Baptist contin-ues to have only Sunday morning worship service until April.Upcoming events: fish fry and barbecue sandwich and plate sale sponsored by Piney Grove at 10 a.m. Sat-urday, April 2 at the V-Point Building; Easter Fun Day for children ages 3-3rd grade from 10 a.m.-noon Saturday, April 9, hosted by Society Baptist; Easter sunrise service followed by breakfast and worship Sun-day, April 17 at Pleasant View Baptist; and Easter sunrise service followed by Sunday school and worship Sunday, April 17 at Society Baptist.Our community extends its deepest sympathy to the family of Glenn Wilson Koontz, who died early Wednesday morning of last week at Gordon Hospice House of Statesville after a hard-fought battle with can-cer. The oldest son and the third of eight children, he was born in 1935 in Davie County to the late Marshall W. and Laura Campbell Koontz of Davie Academy Road. He attended Salem United Methodist Church with family and helped his parents with their diverse farming business. He gradu-ated from Cool Spring High School in 1953, where he was a bus driver and mem-ber of the Future Farmers of America, Glee, and Drama clubs. He served honorably in the US National Guard for eight years. In October 1953, he married the former Nancy Shaver; the couple settled on Davie Academy Road, reared children Scar-lett and Wendell, and joined in worship at Salem. After Nancy's death in October 1997, several years later Glenn married Nancy Ann Phelps; the couple made their home on Davie Acade-my Road and joined in wor-ship at Main Street Church of Christ of Mocksville.Retired from Celanese of Cleveland, he enjoyed spending time with family and enhancing the family place. A service celebrat-ing his life was held Sunday afternoon at Salem Method-ist; he was laid to rest in the church cemetery. We extend our deep-est sympathy to the family of Walter Thomas "Doc" Koontz, who died at home Sunday, Feb. 27. The second of three chil-dren, he was born in 1941 to the late Foley Thomas "Tom" and Nora McDaniel Koontz. He was reared on Ridge Road near Ketchie Creek, attended Salem Unit-ed Methodist with his fami-ly, and attended Cool Spring High School. In the late 1950s, the family moved to western Rowan County, and he graduated from West Row-an High School. He and his Piney Grove making plans for fish fry wife Charlene made their home in Rowan and reared daughter Deborah. Retired from Grinnell Fire Protec-tion of Cleveland; he also loved farming and owned Doc Koontz Stables, which was nationally known for world champion Tennessee walking horses. A service celebrating his life was held Tuesday, March 3 at Cleve- land First Baptist Church, where he was a member; burial followed in the Cleveland Town Cemetery. Rayford "Tink" McDan-iel continues to rest at home with palliative care. Carol Brazel remains in rehab at Accordius Rehabilitation Center of Winston-Salem. Betty Lou Richardson and Alice Waugh remain in re- hab at Davie Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessings upon Tink, Carol, Betty Lou, Alice, and others who are having health prob-lems. Pray for the Lord's comfort and support upon the families of Glenn and Doc as they deeply miss their loved ones. Continue to pray for the Ukrainian refugees and the Ukraini-ans fighting to save their democratic free country. Continue to pray for those affected by Covid-19 and its variants.For news and memories to share, please call Shirley on 336-492-5115 or email sdtlink@hotmail.com. Games ... Alice and Mike Barnette love playing in the Senior Games together. Ron Garcia wins the gold in football throw in his age group. Friends, Lois Green and Pat Gregory, waiting in line to participate in the football throw. Hinsdale, Gene Hinsdale; third, Judy Collette; 85-89 - first, Sue Allen, Bud Stroud; 90-94 - first, George Kim-berly. Softball Throw: 55-59 - first, Mike West, Beth Sa-frit; second, John Bullins; 60-64 - first, Carolyn Sloan; 65-69 - first, Rick Wagner, Maria Hall; second, Kathy Cornatzer; third, Connie Swartz; 70-74 - first, Alice Monk; second, Karen Um-berger; third, Carole Pierce; 75-79 - first, Kim Newsom, Lois Green; second, Richard Pierce, Barbara Chapman; third, Charles Mashburn; 80-84 - first, Mike Barnette, Alice Barnette; second, Gene Hinsdale, Doris Hin-sdale; third, Judy Collette.; 85-89 - first, Bud Stroud, Sue Allen; 90-94 - first, : George Kimberly; 95-99 - first, Nancy Tutterow.Spincasting: 55-59 - first, John Bullins; 60-64 - first, Carolyn Sloan; 70-74 - first, Roni Barney; sec-ond, Karen Umberger; third, Peggy Evans; 75-79 - first, Steve Evans, Lois Green.; second, Charles Mashburn, Barbara Chapman; 80-84 - first, Judy Collette; second, Sue Couch; third, Alice Bar-nette; 95-99 - first, Nancy Tutterow.Pickleball Singles: 55-59 - first, John Bullins; 60-64 - first, Terry Thornett; 70-74 - first, Alice Monk; 75-79 - first, Barbara Chapman, Charles Mashburn.Pickleball Doubles: 55-59 - first, John Bullins and Jeffery Hamilton; 60-64 - first, Gary Hatley and Charles Mashburn; second, Terry Thornett and Gary Dailey; 65-69 - first, Alice Monk and Cathy Wells; 70-74 - first, Charli Wilcox and Julie Fox, Ronald Seamon and Lester Key; second, Barbara Chapman and Roni Barney. Pickleball Mixed Dou-bles: 55-59 - first, John Bul-lins and Mary Anne Byerly; second, Jeffrey Hamilton and Sandra Boyette; 60-64 - first, Bess Hatley and Gary Hatley; second, Marie Wall and Terry Thornett; 65-69 - first, Gary Dailey and Ju-lie Fox; 70-74 - first, Peter Starks and Alice Monk;75-79 - first, Charles Mashburn and Barbara Chapman. 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 1328733 “Serving Davie County Since 1973” •Brakes • Tires • Batteries • Alignments • Scheduled Maintenance • Complete and Professional Auto Repair 1267651 New Pool & Spa InstallationCleaning • ChemicalsOpening & ClosingVinyl Liner Replacement Tommy Harris/Owner – Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (336) 284-4817Cell: (336) 909-4027 B10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022Dateline10B • THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022 DAVIE CO. ENTERPRISE-RECORD Public Notices No. 1405247 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Mabel D. Ritchie, aka Mable Dunn Ritchie, late of Davie County, NC, this is to no-tify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before June 8, 2022. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are noti-fied to make immediate payment. Today’s date 03/03/2022. Stephen M. Ritchie, 2356 Croydon Road, Charlotte, NC 28207, as Executor of the Estate of Mabel D. Ritchie, deceased, File #22E76. Publish 3/3/22, 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22. Public Notices No. 1414403 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of Edward Lewis Phillips, 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 June 29, 2022. 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. Today’s date 03/24/2022. Edward J Locke, 3805 Palmira Trail, Winston-Sa-lem, NC 27127, as Administrator of the Estate of Edward Lewis Phillips, deceased, File #22E104. Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1405247 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Mabel D. Ritchie, aka Mable Dunn Ritchie, late of Davie County, NC, this is to no-tify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before June 8, 2022. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said estate are noti-fied to make immediate payment. Today’s date 03/03/2022. Stephen M. Ritchie, 2356 Croydon Road, Charlotte, NC 28207, as Executor of the Estate of Mabel D. Ritchie, deceased, File #22E76. Publish 3/3/22, 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22. Public Notices Public Notices No. 1413764 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-trix of the Estate of CECIL GRAY ANGELL 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 June 24, 2022 (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 immediatepayment to the undersigned.This the 24th day of March, 2022.Barbara Jean AngellC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1414403 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of Edward Lewis Phillips, 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 June 29, 2022. 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. Today’s date 03/24/2022. Edward J Locke, 3805 Palmira Trail, Winston-Sa-lem, NC 27127, as Administrator of the Estate of Edward Lewis Phillips, deceased, File #22E104. Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 Notices Lost & Found Found intact male husky off of Providence Church Rd. Check Rowan Shelter page or Facebook lost pet pages. Terrier mix found in Rockwell. Contact 704-640-0270. Must prove ownership. Real Estate Land For Sale 45 Acres Home Site Cleared Has power, road, water, septic for 4 bedroom house, wood land and fields, owner financed, ready to build. Call Steve Allen 336-408- 5450. Merchandise Deals & Bargains 2 Rods & Reels $15 for both. 704-278-9527 Coke Collectibles $100 for entire collection. Call 704- 305-0631. Eight Track Tapes albums & cas- settes of 50’s/60’s rare collections of R&R, Soul, Doo-Wop, Beach, R&B, Oldies & Motown. $5 336-766-5096 Solid Wood Hutch Cabinet Top has 2-Glass lighted shelves, bottom has 2 drawers & 2 shelves. $50 704-305-0631 Whirlpool Large Capacity 4 cycle 3 temperature dryer, beige. Call 704-305-0631. $200.00 Employment Job Opportunities new today VeterinarianRequires at least a bachelor degree in Veterinary Sciences plus at least 5 year experience as a Veterinarian, or at least a master degree in Veterinary Sci-ences, plus license to practice veterinary medicine in NC. Mail resume to job site at 1243 Yad-kin Valley Rd., Mocksville, NC 27028, Attn: Mr. Emmadi. Auctions & Sales Garage Sales Clemmons Salem Glen Community Multi-Family Yard Sale. Saturday, April 2, 7am-12pm. Rain or Shine. Furniture, camping gear, toys, clothes, tools and much more. (Balloons identify participating houses.) ACROSS 1. Accounting pro 4. Elegant hotel name 8. (K) Becomes Julius Caesar for a few minutes 12. (K) Every one 13. Massage target 14. “Beat it, horsefly” 15. (K) Bubbly drink (2 words) 17. Pocket bread 18. Nerdy person 19. Singer up on a Swiss mountain, sometimes 21. (K) A Santa-led VIP 23. (K) Grapefruit’s coat 24. (K) 24 hours back 28. Put knuckles to a wooden door 31. (K) Boy Scout statement 32. (K) Finish off a pickle 33. Word processor command 34. (K) Dude relative? 35. Was quite logical (2 words) 37. (K) Member of a chess set 39. (K) Put a carrot in ranch 40. Refuse to help a gardener? 43. (K) Moan and ___ 47. Stage solo in an opera 48. Where to go on a big ol’ country farm? 50. Look closely 51. The U of CPU 52. Good time to have steak smothered in gravy 53. (K) Put in the right order 54. (K) Actions of a nervous foot 55. (K) Heart with “Mom” in the middle, in cool talk DOWN 1. (K) King or queen lying flat on a table 2. (K) Big piece of farm equipment 3. African flower used in lotions 4. Disorderly crowd 5. (K) It’s really, really cold 6. (K) Those people 7. Given no stars (2 words) 8. City in Colorado 9. (K) Kids 10. Huge bag 11. (K) Fly among the clouds 16. (K) Brushed choppers 20. Like weekend projects around the house 22. (K) Goes nuts (2 words) 24. 1954, for Denzel Washington (Abbr.) 25. (K) Hearing device 26. More turbulent, with pouring rain and thunder 27. (K) The big guy 29. (K) Website revenue source 30. Author known for “The Raven” 33. Duplication, briefly 35. (K) Cows say what? 36. (K) Places worth seeing on vacation 38. Eye-popping genre in a museum 40. (K) Parts of bottled sodas 41. Cookie option 42. (K) Sandwich filler, sometimes 44. Boot out of office 45. (K) It’s continental 46. (K) Like the happiest person in line 49. (K) Waiter’s reward PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER © 2022 Andrews McMeel Syndication syndication.andrewsmcmeel.com Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? Added up? Look for the answer in next week’s paper. Created by Timothy E. Parker March 28, 2022 The (K) Clues Are for Kids Double standard? 29-D) TWO Previous riddle answer: Fundraisers Saturday, March 26Hotdog Saturday, New Union Methodist, Sheffield/County Line roads, 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Hot-dogs, bake sale, RADA cutlery, peanut butter and coconut eggs. Saturday, April 9Community breakfast, Farm-ington Methodist, 1939 Farm-ington Rd., Mocksville, 7-10 a.m. Donations to support com-munity outreach projects. Menu: Pork tenderloin, sausage, sau-sage gravy, eggs, grits, stewed apples, biscuits, mixed fruit, breakfast casserold, coffee, OJ. Reunions Thursday, March 24Davie High Class of 1960, 11:30 a.m. for lunch at Marco’s Italian Restaurant, 1423-C Yadkinville Road, Mocksville (in front of Lowes). Wednesday, April 6 Class of ‘61 quarterly get-to-gether, noon, 801 Southern Kitchen and Pancake House, 218 NC 801, Bermuda Run. If plan to attend, call Kay at 336-998-6720 by April 4. Religion Saturday, April 9He Is Risen Celebration, 1-3 p.m.. Cornerstone Christian Church, 1585 NC 801, Mocks-ville. Free games, door prizes, food, egg hunt. Special Events Saturday, March 26Davie Democratic Party County Convention, 1 p.m., Davie Public Library, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville. Also available via Zoom ID 575 268 6408 Passcode 9QbeWM. Saturday, April 30Spring Fling Auto Show, Davie High, Farmington Rd., Mocksville, 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Shows, vendors, prizes, DJ, more. $5, $20 per vehicle en-try. Presented by Speedology Lifestyle Solutions, proceeds to school motorsports and Skills USA programs. tamsen-beroth@yahoo.com. OngoingTech Tuesdays, Davie County Public Library, 371 N. Main St., Mocksville. Get assistance with tech devices, 10 a.m.-noon and 2-4 p.m. Register for appointment: http://bit.ly/DCPLTECHJAZ. Learn more by calling 336-753-6033 or emailing jbaylor@daviecoun-tync.gov. Meetings Thursday, April 7Mocksville Garden Club, 7 p.m., Davie County Public Li-brary, 371 N. Main St. Program by Extension on soil testing. OngoingSheffield-Calahaln Vol. Fire Dept., Monday nights at 7.NAMI family support group for confidential support for fami-lies with persons with diagnosed mental illness. Via Zoom second and fourth Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m. missjulieysl@gmail.com. SeniorsFor more information on Davie Senior Services events, or to register, call 336-753-6230. The main campus at 278 Meroney St. is open Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-4 p.m. The health and fitness center at the Brock Recreation Center at 644 N. Main St. is open from 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday-Thursday, and 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Fridays. Friday, March 25Rock-A-Thon, 5-8 p.m., Rescue House Church. Rock in chairs for donations. Music by Mel Jones & His Bag O’ Bones. The Dog Wagon food truck. Friday, April 1April Fools Bingo, 1 p.m., sponsored by Kintegra Family Medicine. Monday, April 4Small Space Gardening, 10 a.m. with Susan Hawkins, Exten-sion agent. Focus on container gardening. Tuesday, April 5Blood Pressure Screening, 10 a.m.Dominoes, 1 p.m. April 7, 14, 21Introduction to Archery, 1-3 p.m., Camp Manna in instructor, Tim Jones. Bring own bow and yard chair. Thursday, April 7Senior Writing Group, 2 p.m. with Marie Craig. Friday, April 8Easter Party, 2 p.m.. Easter Bunny, games, snacks. Live Music ThursdaysBoTyme Jam, country, blue-grass and gospel music, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Farmington Com-munity Center, Farmington Road, Mocksville. $3, musi-cians admitted free. Thursday, March 24Ea$y Money, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Friday, March 25Dylan Smith and Angel Paez, 6 p.m.. The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Saturday, March 26 Choe Gravely, 11 a.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville.Mac Frampton, 7:30 p.m., The Brock Performing Arts Center, N. Main St., Mocksville. Sunday, March 27Southbound 77 Bluegrass, 2 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Sunday, April 3Jerry Chapman, 2 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Thursday, April 7SoundKraft, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Friday, April 8Poundcake, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Saturday, April 9James Vincent Carroll, 6 p.m. Tanglewood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run.Karaoke, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N, Mocksville. Sunday, April 10Wendy Wooten, 2 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Thursday, April 14James Vincent Carroll, 7 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. DAVIE CO. ENTERPRISE-RECORD THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022 • 11B Public Notices No. 1407496NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of THOMAS LES-LIE BLACKWELDER, SR. late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before June 10, 2022 (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 10th day of March, 2022.Audrey B. FreemanC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 No. 1404718 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF DAVIE 21 CvS 292 NOTICE OF SALE DAVIE COUNTY, A Body Politic and CorporatePlaintiff-vs- UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF CAROLYN S. SMITH, a/k/a MARY CAROLYN SMITH, BARBARA S. SANDERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BARBARA S. SANDERS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF BARBARA S. SANDERS, ROGER VINCENT MYERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF ROGER VINCENT MYERS, LARRY DEAN MY-ERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF LARRY DEAN MYERS, CLIFF BRADLEY MYERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CLIFF BRADLEY MYERS, NANCY HAYES, UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF NANCY HAYES, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF KATHY CAROL SMITH RIVERS, PAUL EUGENE RIV-ERS, BRENDA ROSETTE RIV-ERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BRENDA ROSETTE RIVERS, CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, a/k/a CYNTHIA SMITH ISAACS, UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, EMILY GAIL STEWART, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF EMILY GAIL STEWART, VIR-GIL KEITH SMITH, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF VIRGIL KEITH SMITH, DARRELL GRAYSON LUKE REVELS, JIMMY REVELS, CUSTODIAN, UNKNOWN ISSUE OF AMY LOURAE REVELS, a/k/a AMY LOURAE SMITH-REVELS, CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, a/k/a CYNTHIA SMITH ISAACS, Ad-ministrator, ALLIED FINANCIAL SERVICES, Lienholder, a/k/a ALLIED FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC.DefendantsUnder and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Davie County, North Carolina, made and entered in the action entitled DA-VIE COUNTY, A Body Politic and Corporate Plaintiff vs. UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF CAROLYN S. SMITH, a/k/a MARY CAROLYN SMITH, BARBARA S. SANDERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF BAR-BARA S. SANDERS, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF BARBARA S. SANDERS, ROGER VINCENT MYERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF ROGER VINCENT MYERS, LARRY DEAN MYERS, UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF LARRY DEAN MYERS, CLIFF BRADLEY MYERS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CLIFF BRADLEY MYERS, NANCY HAYES, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF NANCY HAYES, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF KATHY CAROL SMITH RIVERS, PAUL EUGENE RIVERS, BREN-DA ROSETTE RIVERS, UN-KNOWN SPOUSE OF BRENDA ROSETTE RIVERS, CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, a/k/a CYNTHIA SMITH ISAACS, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, EMILY GAIL STEWART, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF EMILY GAIL STEWART, VIRGIL KEITH SMITH, UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF VIRGIL KEITH SMITH, DAR-RELL GRAYSON LUKE REV-ELS, JIMMY REVELS, CUSTO-DIAN, UNKNOWN ISSUE OF AMY LOURAE REVELS, a/k/a AMY LOURAE SMITH-REV-ELS, CYNTHIA JUNE ISAACS, a/k/a CYNTHIA SMITH ISAACS, Administrator, ALLIED FINAN-CIAL SERVICES, Lienholder, a/k/a ALLIED FINANCIAL SER-VICES, INC., Defendants, the undersigned commissioner will on March 29, 2022 at 1:30 PM 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:Beginning at a stone in Glenn Smith line, W. D. Smith corner; runs N. 5 E. 12.50 chs. to a stake, thence N. 86 W. 15.20 chs. to a stake, in S.R. Smith’s line; thence S. 5 W. 12.30 chs. to a stone, thence S. 86 N. 15.00 chs. to the beginning, containing 191/4 acres more or less, and being Lot No. 1 in the division of G. W. Smith’s Home Place.Said property being described as the FIRST TRACT in Deed Book 38 at Page 297 of the Davie Coun-ty Registry, and also being known as Parcel 14 of Davie County Tax Map No. D-6.Save and Except the acreage conveyed by the following deeds; DB50-473; DB78-375; DB 59-441; DB62-120; DB 64-108; DB 144-689; DB 144-691; and DB 144693.Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey.Also being identified as Parcel ID# D600000014, Davie County Tax Office. Address: 768 Rainbow RdThe 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 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 9 day of February, 2022.Richard J. KaniaCommissionerCapital Center82 Patton Avenue, Suite 500Asheville, North Carolina 28801(828) 252-8010 VALUE $22,470.00Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22 No. 1410570 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Virginia F. Rose, aka Virgina Lee Rose, Virginia Finney Rose, 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 June 22, 2022. 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 03/17/2022. Linda Rose Dixson, 4822 Sterling Brook Lane, Winston-Salem, NC 27103, as Executor of the Estate of Virginia F. Rose, deceased, File #2022E000090. Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22. Public Notices No. 1407856NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons, firms and corpora-tions having claims against TER-RY ANN NELSON, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, are hereby notified to present them to Christie M. Nelson and Michael P. Nelson, as Co-Admin-istrators of the decedent’s estate, on or before June 10, 2022, in care of the undersigned’s attorney, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the above-named Co-Administrators.This the 10th day of March, 2022.Christie M. Nelson and Michael P. Nelson, Co-AdministratorsEstate of Terry Ann NelsonSteven W. Arrington, Esq.The Arrington Firm, P.C.P. O. Box 4753Greensboro, NC 27404Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 No. 1402954 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA COUNTY OF DAVIE IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION 20 CvD 362 DAVIE COUNTY, A Body Politic and CorporatePlaintiff-vs- UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF SADIE MILLER CHAFFIN, UN-KNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF JANET CHAFFIN BURLINSON, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF S. H. CHAFFINDefendantsNOTICE 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 DA-VIE COUNTY, A Body Politic and Corporate Plaintiff vs. UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF SADIE MILL-ER CHAFFIN, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF JANET CHAFFIN BURLINSON, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF S. H. CHAFFIN, De-fendants, the undersigned com-missioner will on March 29, 2022 at 1:30 PM offer for sale and sell for cash, to the last and highest bidder at public auction, at the courthouse door in Davie County, North Carolina in Mocksville, the following described property lying in Davie County, North Carolina and more particularly described as follows:BEGINNING at a point in the Northwest corner of the herein described tract, said point being located in the right-of-way mar-gin of S.R. 1306 (Sheffield Road) and the Southwest corner of Tract 7; thence with the Southern line of Tract 7, South 86 deg. 20 min. 09 sec. East passing through an iron at 30.95 feet, for a total of 1,186.04 feet to an Iron Pipe Found in the Northeast corner of the herein described tract and the Western lien of Mrs. T. W. Tutterow, Jr.; thence with Tutterow’s Western line South 03 deg. 06 min. 16 sec. West 564.81 feet to an Iron Pipe Found, said iron pipe being locat-ed North 74 deg. 19 min. 07 sec. West 32.74 feet from an iron pipe which is located North 86 deg. 34 min. 32 sec. West 275.77 feet from an Iron Pipe Found; thence with the Northern line of Ben F. Pow-ell (Deed Book 54, Page 456 and Deed Book 86, Page 23) North 86 deg. 52 min. 05 sec. West passing through a Pinched Pipe Found at 155.54 feet, for a total of 475.0 feet to an iron in Powell’s Northwest corner; thence with Powell’s West-ern line South 13 deg. 22 min. 54 sec. East 811.94 feet to an iron in the Southeast corner of the herein described tract, said iron being lo-cated North 77 deg. 10 min. 26 sec. East 218.93 feet from N.C.G.S. Station “Center RM 1” N.A.D. 83 (N=794,834.03; E=1,515,647.41); thence with a curve to the left North 88 deg. 16 min. 04 sec. West having a radius of 987.0 feet, a length of 286.90 feet and a chord distance of 285.90 feet to a Nail in the centerline of the road in Highway 64’s right-of-way, said Nail being located North 60 deg. 25 min. 07 sec. West 122.86 feet from N.C.G.S. Station “Center RM 1” N.A.D. 83 (N = 794,894.72; E= 1,515,540.50); thence within the right-of-way margin of S.R. 1306 (Sheffield Road) and the Eastern line of Sheffield Park as set forth in Plat Book 4, Page 98, North 29 deg. 30 min. 44 sec. West 500.65 feet to a Nail; thence continuing with a curve to the left North 24 deg. 24 min. 27 sec. West having a radius of 1,317.39 feet, a length of 377.46 feet, a chord distance of 376.17 feet to a point; thence North 15 deg. 06 min. 48 sec. West 338.43 feet with the Eastern line of Tract 1; thence continuing with the Eastern line of Tract 1 with a curve to the left North 12 deg. 45 min. 02 sec. West, having a ra-dius of 2,417.39 feet, a length of 205.92 feet, and a chord distance of 205.86 feet to THE POINT AND PLACE OF BEGINNING, contain-ing 21.84 acres, more or less, as surveyed by Alfred F. Williams, Professional Land Survey, on December 14, 1995, and revised on August 22, 2000, Job Number 951232.Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey.Also being identified as Parcel ID# G20000005501, Davie County Tax Office. Address: Sheffield RoadThe 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 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 14 day of February, 2022.Richard J. KaniaCommissionerCapital Center82 Patton Avenue, Suite 500Asheville, North Carolina 28801(828) 252-8010 VALUE: $194,990.00Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22 No. 1407496 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of THOMAS LES-LIE BLACKWELDER, SR. late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before June 10, 2022 (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 10th day of March, 2022.Audrey B. FreemanC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 Public Notices No. 1413766 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Co-Ex-ecutors of the Estate of SAMUEL WELLMAN BECK late of Davie County, this is to notify all per-sons, firms and corporations hav-ing claims against said estate to present written claim to the under-signed on or before June 24, 2022(being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this no-tice), or this notice will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 24th day of March, 2022.Teresa Shuler GroomsKathy Ratledge DrumMorris R. RatledgeC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1407159 STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT DIVISION COUNTY OF DAVIE 20 CvD 247 COUNTY OF DAVIE, A Body Poli-tic and Corporate, Plaintiff, -vs- UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF L. A. EATON, a/k/a LEWIS A. EA-TON and UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF HENRY S. CAINNOTICE OF SALE Defendants. Under and by virtue of an order of the Dis-trict Court of Davie County, North Carolina, made and entered in the action entitled DAVIE COUNTY, A Body Politic and Corporate Plain-tiff vs. UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF L. A. EATON, A/K/A LEWIS A. EATON, UNKNOWN HEIRS AT LAW OF HENRY S. CAIN, De-fendants, the undersigned com-missioner will on March 29, 2022 at 1:30 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 Carolina in Mocksville, the following described property lying in Davie County, North Carolina and more particularly described as follows:TRACT I:LOT NO. 4, allotted to Mattie Clark in the deed recorded in Book 47, Page 626, with metes and bounds as follows: BEGINNING at a stake, corner of Lot No. 3 runs North 2 East 24.00 chains to a stake in Smith line; thence East 2.70 chains to a stake in Smith line; thence South 2 West 24.00 chains to a stake in old road; thence West with old road 2.70 chains to the beginning, containing 6 3/4 acres, more or less.LESS AND EXCEPT a one acre portion thereof conveyed to Willie Leroy Beasley and wife by deed recorded in Book 75, Page 74, said exception having metes and bounds as follows: Beginning at an iron stake located in the south-ern margin of an old road, the same being the southwest corner of Lot No. 4 allotted to Mattis Clark under the division of the lands of Jordan S. Eaton recorded in Book 47, Page 626, in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Davie Coun-ty, North Carolina, and running thence along the western line of Lot No. 4 North 2 deg. East 248 feet, more or less, to an iron stake located in the western line of Lot No. 4; thence a new line East par-allel with the old road 178.20 feet, more or less, to an iron stake lo-cated in the eastern line of Lot No. 4; thence along the eastern line of Lot No. 4 South 2 deg. West 248 feet, more or less, to an iron stake located in the southern margin of an old road; thence along the southern margin of the old road West 178.20 feet, more or less, to the point of Beginning.Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey.Also being identified as Parcel ID# D5-000-00-010, Davie County Tax Office. Address: Off Fawn LaneTRACT II:LOT NO. 5 allotted to L. A. Eaton in the deed recorded in Book 47, Page 626, with metes and bounds as follows:BEGINNING at a stake, corner of Lot No. runs North 2 East 24.00 chains to a stake in Smith line; thence East with Smith line 1.50 chains to a stone; thence South 2 West 11.00 chains to a stake; thence East 2.70 chains to a stake; thence South 2 West 13.00 chains to a stake in old road; thence West with old road 4.50 chains to the beginning, containing 6 3/4 acres, more or less.Subject to easements, restrictions and rights of way of record, and matters of survey.Also being identified as Parcel ID# D5-000-00-011, Davie County Tax Office. Address: Off Fawn LaneThe 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 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 anupset 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 1 day of March, 2022. Richard J. KaniaCommissioner600-A Centrepark DriveAsheville, North Carolina 28805(828) 252-8010 Tax Value Lot 1 : $45,700.00 Lot 2: $59,130.00Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22 No. 1407856 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS All persons, firms and corpora-tions having claims against TER-RY ANN NELSON, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, are hereby notified to present them to Christie M. Nelson and Michael P. Nelson, as Co-Admin-istrators of the decedent’s estate, on or before June 10, 2022, in care of the undersigned’s attorney, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the above-named Co-Administrators.This the 10th day of March, 2022.Christie M. Nelson and Michael P. Nelson, Co-AdministratorsEstate of Terry Ann NelsonSteven W. Arrington, Esq.The Arrington Firm, P.C.P. O. Box 4753Greensboro, NC 27404Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 Public Notices No. 1407175NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Robert Joe Corne-lius, late of 162 Redland Road, Davie County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at 110 Brook Hill Court, Advance, North Carolina 27006, on or before the 10th day of June 2022, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 1st day of March 2022. Laken Moxley, Atty o/b/o Norman Eugene CookExecutor of the Estate of Robert Joe CorneliusLaken Moxley, Attorney at LawP.O. Box 971, Yadkinville, NC 27055 Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 No. 1412410 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS 2022-E-80 Having qualified as Co-Adminis-trators of the Estate of Patricia Jill Taylor Andrade, deceased, of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to pres-ent them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June, 2022, being three months from the first day of 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 the 24th day of March, 2022.Dylan James Andrade, Co-Administrator883 Milling RoadMocksville, NC 27028Drew Anthony Andrade, Co-Administrator186 Watergate DriveAlexis, NC 28006Piedmont Legal Associates, PALynne Hicks, Attorney for EstateNC Bar # 011125124 West Depot StreetMocksville, NC 27028336-751-3312Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1409071 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Jean Wallace Dan- iel late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpo- rations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before June 10, 2022 (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 4th of March, 2022. Sandra Jean Daniel Depuew, 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 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22. No. 1414543 DAVIE COUNTY SCHOOLS – VIRTUAL SCHOOL INVITATION TO BID Sealed Single Prime bids for the renovations to the Virtual School Building (original DCHS Media Blg) will be received by Davie County Schools in the conference room at the Central Davie Cam- pus, 220 Campbell Road, Mocksville, North Carolina until 2:00 p.m. on Thurs- day, April 21, 2022. Sealed bids will be publicly opened after the 2:00 deadline on Thursday, April 21, 2022 in the conference room at the Cen- tral Davie Campus, 220 Campbell Road, Mocksville, North Caroli- na. The work includes General, Structural, Plumbing, Mechani- cal, Electrical and Site work to be constructed under a Single Prime Contractor. The extent of the work is shown on the drawings & speci- fied in the project manual. The project consists of the com- plete renovation of 30,120 sf of classroom and office renovations to the existing building, formerly the DCHS Media Arts Building. The building is located at 1200 Hwy 601 South, Mocksville, NC. Bidding documents, drawings and specifications may be examined in the office of Fuller Architecture. Pdf’s of the drawings and specifi- cations will be made available to all bidders via a shared Dropbox folder. Each proposal must be accom- panied by a Bid Deposit of cash, certified check or a fully executed Bid Bond payable to the Davie County Board of Education in an amount of five percent (5%) of the gross amount of the proposal exe- cuted in accordance with and con- ditioned as prescribed by North Carolina General Statute 143-8- 129 as amended. If the successful bidder fails to ex- ecute the contract within 60 days after the award or fails to give sat- isfactory surety as required by law, the above deposit will be retained by the Davie County Board of Ed- ucation. All contractors are hereby notified that they must be properly licensed under the laws of North Carolina governing their trades. A Payment and Performance Bond will be required each in the sum equal to 100% of the Contract Sum. No Bidder may withdraw his bid within 60 days after the scheduled closing time for receipt of bids. Bidders shall use complete sets of Bidding Documents in prepar- ing Bids. Neither the Owner or the Architect assumes responsibility for errors or misinterpretations re- sulting from the use of incomplete sets of Bidding Documents. A Pre-Bid meeting will be held for all interested bidders and vendors at 9:30 a.m. on Thursday, the 31st day of March, 2022 at the proj- ect site located at 1200 Hwy. 601 South, Mocksville, North Carolina, 27028. As part of the meeting we will discuss and present Preferred Bid Alternates. Contractors are hereby notified that the Davie County Board of Education has a verifiable ten (10) percent goal for the participation by minority businesses in the total value of work for which the con- tract is awarded in order to follow North Carolina G.S. 143-128. Mi- nority percentages will not be the basis for selecting the low bidder. All minority businesses are en- couraged to participate in bidding this project. The Davie County Board of Ed- ucation reserves the right to re- ject any or all bids and to waive non-material informalities. Publish 3/24/22 Public Notices No. 1413791NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-tor of the Estate of Paul Frederick Boger, Sr. late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before June 24, 2022 (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 16th of March, 2022.Paul Boger, Jr. and Chucky Bo-ger, Co-Administratorsc/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at LawMARTIN & VAN HOY, LLPAttorneys at Law10 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028(336)751-2171Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1410799 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS 2022-E-97 Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of James Brownlow Hicks, deceased, of Davie Coun-ty, 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 June, 2022, being three months from the first day of publication of ths notice, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt-ed to said estate will please make immediate payment to the under-signed.This the 17th day of March, 2022.Gregory Scott Hicks, Executor3257 US Hwy 158Mocksville, NC 27028Piedmont Legal Associates, PALynne Hicks, Attorney for EstateNC Bar #011125124 West Depot StreetMocksville, NC 27028336-751-3312Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1410802 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS 2022-E-98 Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Mattie Sue Wood Hicks, deceased, of Davie Coun-ty, 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 June, 2022, being three months from the first day of publication of ths notice, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt-ed to said estate will please make immediate payment to the under-signed.This the 17th day of March, 2022.Gregory Scott Hicks, Executor3257 US Hwy 158Mocksville, NC 27028Piedmont Legal Associates, PALynne Hicks, Attorney for EstateNC Bar #011125124 West Depot StreetMocksville, NC 27028336-751-3312Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1407266 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as the Co-Admin-istrator’s of the Estate of Georgie Jacqueline Young, AKA Jackie B. Young, 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 June 17, 2022, 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 immediatepayment.This the 10th day of March, 2022.Bobby R. Young, Jr., andJoseph Brown Young,Co-Administrator’s of the Estate ofGeorgie Jacqueline Young AKAJackie B. Young, deceasedC/O Bryan C. ThompsonFREEDMAN THOMPSON WITTCEBERIO & BYRD, PLLC210 South Cherry StreetWinston-Salem, NC 27101(336) 725-8323Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 No. 1407825 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Mary Ann Wren aka Mary A. Wren aka Mary Ann Wolfe Wren, late of Davie County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said dece-dent to exhibit them to the under-signed at the office of their attor-ney at 110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300, Winston-Salem, NC 27103-1958, on or before the 10th day of June, 2022 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This 10th day of March, 2022.David C. Wright, III, ExecutorEstate of Mary Ann Wrenc/o Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker LLP110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300Winston-Salem, NC 27103Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker, LLPPublish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 No. 1404040 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Will of Benjamin Frank Fulton, a/k/a Benjamin F. Fulton, Benja-min Fulton, Ben Frank Fulton, Ben F. Fulton, Ben Fulton, late of Ad-vance, Davie County, North Caro-lina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and cor-porations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at One West Fourth Street, Suite 1200, Winston-Salem, NC 27101, on or before the 1st day of June, 2022, or this notice will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 3rd day of March, 2022.JAMES E. GRIFFEY, EXECUTOR OF THE WILL OF BENJAMIN FRANK FULTONEdward W. GriggsWomble Bond Dickinson (US) LLPOne West Fourth Street – 12th FloorWinston-Salem, NC 27101Publish 3/3/22, 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22 No. 1410717 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Will of James W. Eubanks, a/k/a James Warren Eubanks, James Eubanks, Jim Warren Eu-banks, Jim W. Eubanks, and Jim Eubanks, late of Advance, Davie County, North Carolina, the un-dersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at One West Fourth Street, Suite 1200, Win-ston-Salem, NC 27101, on or before the 17th day of June, 2022, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the under-signed.This the 17th day of March, 2022.PATRICIA S. EUBANKS, EXEC-UTOR OF THE WILL OF JAMES W. EUBANKSEdward W. GriggsWomble Bond Dickinson (US) LLPOne West Fourth Street – 12th FloorWinston-Salem, NC 27101Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1407175 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Robert Joe Corne-lius, late of 162 Redland Road, Davie County, North Carolina, the undersigned does hereby notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned at 110 Brook Hill Court, Advance, North Carolina 27006, on or before the 10th day of June 2022, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 1st day of March 2022. Laken Moxley, Atty o/b/o Norman Eugene CookExecutor of the Estate of Robert Joe CorneliusLaken Moxley, Attorney at LawP.O. Box 971, Yadkinville, NC 27055 Publish 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22 Public Notices No. 1413682 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: 334 America Cruz 467 Mitchell Mayfield 376 Thomas Parker 412 Robert Roberts Household Items NO PERSONAL CHECKS ACCEPTED Public Sale Dates April 1, 2022 at 12:00 Noon 124 Eaton Road, Mocksville (336) 751-2483 Publish: 03/24/22 No. 1410197 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-tor of the Estate of JIMMIE ZACH OSBORNE 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 June 17, 2022 (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 immediatepayment to the undersigned.This the 17th day of March, 2022.Zachary Harrison MasonC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1402907 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Admin-istratrix of the Estate of JOHNNY WAYNE BUMGARNER late of Davie 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 June 3, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of thisnotice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Allpersons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 3rd day of March, 2022.Joyce Elaine BumgarnerC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/3/22, 3/10/22, 3/17/22, 3/24/22 No. 1407918 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Claude R. Horn, Jr. 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 June 10, 2022 (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 3rd of March, 2022.Herny Horn, Executorc/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at LawMARTIN & VAN HOY, LLPAttorneys at Law10 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028(336)751-2171Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1410526 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of MARTHA NEIL WHITE WHITAKER late of Davie County, this is to notify all per-sons, firms and corporations hav-ing claims against said estate to present written claim to the under-signed on or before June 17, 2022(being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this no-tice), or this notice will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 17th day of March, 2022.William Allen Whitaker C/O FLEMING &WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22 No. 1410972 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned, having quali-fied as Executor of the Estate of the late MICHELLE ANNE DA-VIDSON of Davie County, hereby notifies all persons, firms, and cor-porations having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before June 17, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 17th day of March , 2022.DARRY W. DAVIDSON142 Oak Tree DriveMocksville, NC 27028WADE H. LEONARD, JR.Attorney at Law34 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028Publish 3/17/22, 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4//22 No. 1412405 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS 2022-E-79 Having qualified as Administra-tor of the Estate of Douglas Ray Long, deceased, of Davie Coun-ty, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 29th day of June, 2022, being three months from the first day of publication of this notice, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt-ed to said estate will please make immediate payment to the under-signed. This the 24th day of March, 2022.Joseph A. Long, Administrator633 Deadmon RoadMocksville, NC 27028Piedmont Legal Associates, PALynne Hicks, Attorney for EstateNC Bar # 011125124 West Depot StreetMocksville, NC 27028336-751-3312Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 No. 1413791 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-tor of the Estate of Paul Frederick Boger, Sr. late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the undersigned on or before June 24, 2022 (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 16th of March, 2022.Paul Boger, Jr. and Chucky Bo-ger, Co-Administratorsc/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at LawMARTIN & VAN HOY, LLPAttorneys at Law10 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028(336)751-2171Publish 3/24/22, 3/31/22, 4/7/22, 4/14/22 B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, March 24, 2022