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Davie County Enterprise Record 6-09-2022
USPS 149-160 Number 23 Thursday, June 9, 2022 24 Pages 75¢ Camp Cognition Children have a place to have fun and make things while learning Arrested Brothers caught after stealing mother’s vehicle 89076 3821260Page 9 Page 7 By Mike BarnhardtEnterprise Record Jason Lawrence almost didn’t apply for that job with the Davie County Clerk of Court just over 10 years ago.He had applied for a federal job in the past, and knew the piles of paperwork that would have to be filled out was just too cumbersome.But friends persisted, and Rob Taylor, assistant district attorney, encouraged him to take the plunge.Lawrence remembers that job interview with now retired clerk, Ellen Drechsler. He told her he would like to have her job some day. She wrote that in her notes.Last week, Lawrence was sworn in as the newest Da-vie County Clerk of Court, replacing Cindy Harris, who By Mike BarnhardtEnterprise Record BERMUDA RUN - Readers here now have an easier way to check out materials from the Davie County Public Library.A kiosk-type locker system opened last week at the David-son-Davie Community College site at 120 Kinderton Blvd., next to town hall.The project didn’t just hap-pen. One, the library needed a location. Two, the machine cost $45,000. Three, volun-teers were needed to be on site when open.The library found a willing partner in the college, and li-brary director, Derrick Wold, obtained an ADAPTS grant from the State Library of North Carolina to pay the cost. Civ-ic groups are stepping up to be there when the lockers are open.“The whole idea was con-nectivity,” Wold said at a grand opening celebration last week sponsored by the Davie Cham-ber of Commerce. “We felt like this was the best way to pro-vide a service to a community that needs it.”His long-term goal would be to get machines in other un-der-served parts of the county. The Bermuda Run kiosk will be open Monday-Friday, noon-4 p.m. Materials can be dropped off at any time.Any Davie County Public Library member will be able to use the lockers. To do so, re-serve books through the library website. Library staff will as-sign a specific locker that will hold those books on reserve. Go to the locker and scan your library card. The assigned locker door will open and your books will be waiting for you. Take your receipt so that you know when the books are due back. Those books can be re-turned at any time thanks to an outdoor-accessible dropoff box.‘It gives us the opportunity to provide a service and show there is a desire and a need to have a physical library pres-ence in the Bermuda Run/East Davie area,” Wold said. “This provides a template to provide service to underserved commu-nity members in Davie Coun-ty.”Keith Beck, chair of the ex-ecutive committee of the cham-ber, praised Wold for stick-ing with the project through multiple hurdles. He was also Davie County Public Library Director Derrick Wold demonstrates how a new remote locker system works during the grand opening of the lockers in Bermuda Run last week. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt Technology to the rescue Library offering remote service in eastern Davie Judge Lori Hamilton applauds and wife Katie hugs after Jason Lawrence is sworn in as Davie County’s newest clerk of court. - Photo by Mike Barnhardt Lawrence sworn in as newest clerk of court had served since Drechsler’s retirement. She plans to retire in September. Lawrence will serve in this capacity until after the November election. As the only candidate, he will likely be sworn in as the elected clerk in December.“I like the idea of public of-fice. I feel like everything I do, even outside of here, I like be-ing in that leadership position. And I’ve always been interest-ed in the law.”A few days into the job, and Lawrence, who said he entered the job with no expectations, was pleased.“I love it here. I love all the people I work with,” he said. “Everybody here knows what they’re supposed to do, and they do it.“There’s still a lot I have to Moxie will perform dance music of the 60s, 70s and 80s at a free show on the square in Downtown Mocksville from 7-10 p.m. Saturday.Bring a chair for seating. Concert on the Square this Saturday By Mike BarnhardtEnterprise Record Davie County is a step clos-er to establishing a new process for approving solar facilities prior to the Aug. 3 moratorium expiration.County Planner Andrew Meadwell told county commis-sioners that the planning board - which devised the new rules - believes that the county has reached its peak in the number of acreage used for such facil-ities.He said the county has no applications or inquires on file concerning new solar develop-ment.One problem identified by planners is that the companies that build such facilities often change hands. Of the eight Solar rules a step closer to reality Please See Solar - Page 7 Please See Lawrence - Page 4 Please See Library - Page 4 2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 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 let- ters, provided they are not libelous, vulgar or in poor taste. The editor reserves the right to edit letters for grammar and for space. Letters should include the name and address of the writer and a signature. A telephone number, not to be published, is requested. Have letters in the newspaper office no later than noon Monday of the week to be published. Enterprise Record P.O. Box, 99, Mocksville, mike.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 Please See Renegade ‑ Page 2 Stronger gun control needed ‘Gun control’ shouldn’t be considered as dirty words To the editor:Once again, I am sickened and totally disheartened by the recent mass murders at the grocery store in Buffalo and those of the schoolchildren and their teachers in Uvalde, Texas. These events could have been prevented, or at least ameliorated, but for the inaction and ineptitude of our elected representatives.It is clear that the majority of Americans support stron-ger gun control measures. It is crystal clear that enacting them is a large part of stopping the violence to which we have become all too inured. Each time this kind of slaugh-ter occurs, be it in a church, school, grocery store, mall, or wherever, we are appalled and horrified. We, the people, call for change, but our elected representatives do nothing. I am sick of their inaction, and I am calling for change. I implore them to stand up and do the right thing, to do something now.I know I am not the only citizen who wants these chang-es made. I am sick and tired of hearing about the 2nd Amendment. If the Founding Fathers could be here today, I seriously doubt they would agree with the current egre-gious misinterpretation of their words. If we do not make changes to the gun laws in this country, these tragedies will continue to occur. We will have no one to blame but our-selves, and, more to the point, no one to blame but our elected officials.I propose and support that the age for legal purchase of a firearm be raised to 21.I propose and support expanded background checks for all who seek to purchase a firearm. I propose and support that assault weapons such as AK-47s and AR-15s be banned nationwide, as well as large-volume ammunition magazines. These are weapons of war, and any right-minded person has absolutely no need to own or use one outside of the battlefield. Should they feel so led, they might consider joining the National Guard.I propose and support expanded security in all school buildings by way of single-access entry, locking classroom doors, and on-site security personnel during all school hours.I am cognizant of the role mental health plays in these horrendous actions. However, I find it inconceivable that our leadership seriously thinks that mental health care re-form is all that is required, as well as increased security in schools. What next? Metal detectors in church? I can’t believe our citizenry is willing to live with the results of our intransigence on this issue. It seems reasonable to me to suggest that removing, insofar as possible, the mecha-nisms by which these crimes are committed is a necessary concomitant measure.The law-abiding gun owners of the United States are re-ally going to have to tolerate more stringent restrictions to their right to own and bear arms. This should not be a burden too heavy to shoulder. Saving the lives of their children, grandchildren, neighbors, and fellow Americans should be worth it to them and to us all.Thank you for your time and attention to this critical matter. It could impact any one of us any day.Kathleen ThornettMocksville Small PlatesBy Marie Craig On my recent birthday, my grandson took me for lunch at Lizard’s Thicket in Columbia, S.C. This is a popular chain of restaurants near the center of the state. When I lived there, I always enjoyed going to one of them. The menu had a unique item, “Small Plates.” The next sentence explained that children or adults could order this size. So, I had a slice of ham about 9 square inches and two small servings of vegetables. It was the perfect size to enjoy and not feel overstuffed. It cost $5.10, a bargain these days. It seems that most places you go, you are served enough food for two or three people. It’s no wonder that so many people are overweight. Many years ago, we lived in a small town where the resi-dents all knew each other. There was a senior woman who had inherited a huge fortune, and she had remarried. We would see them at a restaurant where they would order one plate of food and an empty plate. At the time, being judg-mental and inexperienced, I would think that she was too stingy to buy him a meal. But now I know that as you get older, you don’t need as much to eat. I guess they were just not hungry enough to need two plates of food.Perhaps the concept of large plates and huge amounts of food carries over into the world of possessions. One of my pet peeves is the vast number of storage units to house peo-ple’s extra junk and belongings. They don’t need this stuff; they could just downsize and save the money of storing which can reach several hundred dollars rent each month. Years ago, I went backpacking several times. As I re-searched how to travel light, but still have the necessary equipment and necessaries, I read about a strong, husky hiker who cut off part of his toothbrush handle to reduce weight in his pack. This is pretty extreme, but it might help us to remember that each thing we own or carry adds up to the total weight and size of our load, whether it be on our back or crammed into our bulging home. This also affects the amount of money we spend outright or add to our credit card. Advisors for personal weight control say to always choose a smaller plate to use at home. They say it encour-ages you to eat less. As children, we were told, “Clean your plate.” Maybe we are still minding our parents when we get a huge plate of food and feel honor-bound to eat ev-erything. As prices increase and scarcity of food products increases, we may be forced to eat on small plates. Of Water, Family and GratitudeBy Julie Terry Cartner“We don’t have any water.” Words I hate to hear, but words that help engender appreciation for the element we often take for granted.I can’t tell you how many times that day I started to do something that involved water, from as simple as washing my hands to watering the plants, taking a shower, wash-ing dishes, or doing laundry. I’d head towards one faucet to turn it on, remember, then walk away, only to turn to another one. We absolutely take our water, one of the most vital elements of life, as a matter-of-fact occurrence. Turn a faucet, and voila, instant water.It’s probably good, to occasionally lose water; it’s sort of grounding, a reminder that we should appreciate the simple things.When you live in the rural areas of the world, you rely on well water rather than city water, and sometimes things happen. Primarily we have no water when we have no power, and those two items coincide with someone hitting a power pole, ice storms, and/or other serious weather in-cidents. It doesn’t happen frequently, and, if it’s weather related, we’re usually prepared. But this time there’s a problem with the well.It wasn’t the first time in our almost 30 years living here, so we knew what to do, but on a very hot, sunny Memorial Day, it wasn’t what we wanted to do.After a long, hot, sweaty day of mowing, raking, tether-ing, and baling hay, the last thing anyone wanted to do was deal with a well on the blink, but that’s where family steps in. I won’t bore you with the details of repairing our well; suffice it to say it involves pulling the whole contraption out of the ground, finding the break, repairing it, then feed-ing the lines back into the ground. Yesterday, if involved two tractors and six people.And that takes me to my second point. Family. In this case, everyone who helped was actual family, various in-laws who helped haul water into the house in buckets so we could flush toilets and water animals, combined with more in-laws who helped pull, repair, and replace the lines. Other times family can be more loosely defined as a com-munity of people, related or not, who are willing to help one another.Regardless, part of being human is to care for others, to help others in need. Our humanity is what makes us more; more than creatures just struggling for survival. The Covid years have been hard on so many levels, and they’re not over yet. Covid continues, as do the repercussions of the lives we’ve had to live. But, as much as I wish Covid had never happened, and as much as I fervently wish it would go away, I can look at Davie County and be proud to live in a community that does take care of each other. Without naming any specific organizations, people have, and con-tinue to, help in a myriad of ways.And so, my points. When we lose the very basic things we need, as in water, we remember to appreciate them when we get them back. And when there’s a need, people step up. We see it all the time in the news, people coming forward when others are in need. Our humanity is what makes us who we are. That’s what family, be it nuclear or universal, does. People. Family. Community. And finally, Gratitude. We’ve all seen it; people so overwhelmed with appreciation for others’ help, they can barely express their feelings in words, powerful to both the giver and the re-ceiver. Our reminder that above all, we are people with souls; we care. In the words of George Bernard Shaw, in Pygmalion, “The great secret…is having the same manner for all human souls; in short, behaving as if you were in Heaven, where there are no third-class carriages, and one soul is as good as another.” A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed. Oh, if it were only that simple.I’ve always supported the Second Amendment to our Bill of Rights. I still do.But we have to do something.I understand the feelings of my friends who say the only way you’ll take their guns is “out of my cold, dead hands.” The Second Amendment says so.I understand the feelings of my friends who say that military-style assault weapons need to be outlawed. “They don’t need them for hunting.” Those who wrote the Second Amendment couldn’t have dreamed of an assault rifle.Both sides are right, that’s why the debate will go on for perpetuity. I think that most Americans - myself included - are somewhere in the middle and remain, for the most part - silent. The first side to this debate is to look at it from the other person’s point of view. Don’t think of those with opposing views as inferior. Don’t call them “Trumpers” or “Snow-flakes.” Don’t go into a tirade about Biden or Trump or Obama or Harris.Just think about the issue at hand.Should an 18 year old legally be allowed to walk into a store and walk out the same day with an assault rifle?I don’t have the answers here. But we have to do some-thing. Thoughts and prayers just aren’t getting the job done. There is hope, but that, too, is just a word.It makes me wonder what our founding fathers were thinking when they wrote the Bill of Rights. It was inspired by Thomas Jefferson, written by James Madison. Jefferson was probably overseeing his Virginia estate, complete with hundreds of slaves tending to the animals and fields and cooking and cleaning. Hmmm. As written, the Bill of Rights includes all people. Were the slaves to be given the same rights? Women, too, were somewhat of second-class citizens at the time, sort of seen as being owned by their fathers or husbands. It’s just the way it was. Did the Bill of Rights pertain to them, too? Heck, it was the 1920s before women were even allowed to vote.Yes, things were different back in the day. Our fledgling new country relied on an armed citizenry to help protect themselves and their new government. Even back then, there was debate about whether gun regulations should come from the federal government or individual states. It’s scary these days to think about what a well-armed mi-litia could do. Back then, it was don’t fire until you see the whites of their eyes because of the crudeness of the weapons. Nowadays, the shooter doesn’t really even have to look, just aim in the general direction and start firing.The tragedy in Uvalde, Texas is bringing the debate back to the forefront, as it should.Gun control are dirty words in these parts. Take this gun, then another, then another until there are none left. We’ve got to get out of that way of thinking, just as we’ve got to get out of thinking that all guns are bad and should be banned. Neither extreme point of view will do any good to help prevent what happened in Uvalde from happening again.Folks, government got us into this mess, and I’m not confident that with our divisiveness these days, that it has even the slightest chance of solving the problem. There’s just too much name calling and false claims out there.The hope lies with us.We’ve got to learn - again - to respect one another, even if the person has a differing view.We’ve got to find a way for our young people to get this same view of respect. Bullying starts at a young age, and it can send young minds into a spin. And it makes for adult bullies. We hear them all of the time.We’ve got to put our faith into something much more powerful than a government.We are “We the People.” Let’s act like people again.- Mike Barnhardt DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 3 Presidential sites When the temperatures reach into the 90s as they did last week, more than people seek ways to find relief. Pam Keen of Mocksville sent in these photos of Polly the pig who is, of course, wallowing in mud. It’s the favorite way for a pig to cool off, right? As for Ms. Shirley the chicken, the water dish provides a full body cooling off. And yes, it’s OK if a chicken drinks the water they bathe in. By Betty Etchison WestFor the Enterprise Unfortunately, Wil-liam McKinley suffered the same fate as did Presi-dent Abraham Lincoln and President James Garfield. President McKinley was visiting the Pan-Ameri-can Exposition in Buffalo, N.Y., when an anarchist approached him as he was shaking hands with a line of supporters. When Mr. McKinley attempted to shake the as-sassin’s hand, which was covered by a handkerchief, he was shot. The President was se-verely injured, but his greatest concern was for his wife who was almost an invalid. He whispered to his secretary who was trav-eling with him, “My wife ... be careful ... how you tell her ... oh be careful!” At that time President McKinley had only served six months of his second term.Mrs. McKinley’s re-action is described in the book, “First Ladies” by Betty Etchison West: “First Lady Ida McKinley reacted bravely when he received the news. She showed strength beyond belief as she sat by her husband’s bedside for the eight days hoping for his recovery. Resident William McKin-ley died from an infection on Sept. 13, 1901.”There are a number of sites connected to some Presidents of the United States. Not so with William McKinley. There are only two and both are in Canton, Ohio. McKinley was born in Niles, Ohio. His birth-place, which was used in a number of ways af-ter the McKinley family moved, was destroyed by fire. Many years of his life McKinley lived in hotels - none of which seem to be designated as a McKinley site. Only Canton, Ohio, has sites connected to Pres-ident McKinley.McKinley, who grew up in Ohio, went to school there. He finally entered Allegheny College but dropped out. He taught school for a while before becoming a postmaster. At the beginning of the Civil War, McKinley did what thousands of young men did. He joined the Union Army. He moved through the ranks. He was a private when he entered the army, and, by the end of the war, McKinley was a brevet Major. He was asked to stay in the army, but did not. He had decided that he wanted to be a lawyer. He spent a year working in a lawyer’s office before en-tering Albany Law School in New York State. The next year, 1867, he passed the bar examination and was admitted to the Ohio Bar. William McKinley, Ohio born and bred, chose an Ohio town, Canton, as the site of his first law of-fice. He may have chosen that town because his sister taught school there.After moving to Canton, William McKinley met a vivacious young lady at a picnic and learned that she was working at her father’s bank. The young lawyer found many reasons to visit the bank, not because he had a lot of money, but, because he was fascinated with the young teller. That fascination seemed to work two ways and soon the couple realized they were deeply in love. They were married in 1871 and were very happy. Their first child, Katie, who they loved so deeply, died when she was 3. They had another daughter, Ida, who died when she was 5 months old. Ida’s mother also died. Ida was so over-come with grief that she was never well after that. In fact, she was almost an invalid. That is the reason that President McKinley was so concerned about telling his wife that he had been shot. The following explains the McKinley connection to Saxton house. After he became a lawyer, Mr. McKinley got interested in politics. He was a good speaker and immediately gained attention. He was elected to Con-gress. When he was not liv-ing in Washington, he and his wife would live with her family at their home, Saxton House. Also, at one time McKinley had his law office in Saxton House, thus that structure is closely connected to the 25th Pres-ident of the United States. The book, “Cabins, Cottages, and Mansions “by the Benbows, says this about the Saxton House. “Today, the Saxton House in owned by the National Park Service, which leases the building to the Stark County Foundation, a local civic and cultural organi-zation which uses a portion of the building for office space. As befits the ances-tral home of a first lady, a first ladies’ library is being planned for the building. The age of the house is unknown, however, specu-lation is that the house could have been built around or before the marriage of Ina McKinley’s parents in 1846. It is a three-story structure, whose six chim-neys were rebuilt. It fea-tures a large warp-around porch, a black walnut spiral staircase leading from the reception hall to the sec-ond floor ballroom, and the original mahogany doors, baseboards, and moldings. It has 12 open fireplaces and its basement features attractive stone and brick work, heavy timber lintels and archways. Today, the beautiful building stands as the only surviving private residence linked to the slain presi-dent whose administration ushered America into the 20th century and a new era of American involvement in world affairs as a global power.”The other site connect-ed to President McKin-ley is the huge McKinley Memorial which actually near the Saxton House. It is the place where Wil-liam McKinley, his wife, Ida, and their two little girls, Katie and Ida, are in-terred. The information at the site says that memorial was paid for by donations. Much of the money was donated by the children of America who donated their pennies. It is a fitting tribute to a man who did much for his country and who was killed in such a cruel way. The feeling of the peo-ple in this country was probably influenced by the loving way that Mr. McKinley treated his in-valid wife. The people had noted his devotion to Ida through the years. While he was governor, every day at 3 p.m. Mr. McKinley would go outside and wave his handkerchief at the win-dow where his wife would be sitting in the hotel suite where they lived. It did not matter what the governor was doing, when the three o’clock hour arrived, he carried out that ritual.This attention was also displayed after William McKinley was elected President. Even though she was not well, the First Lady wanted to attend White House functions such as dinners. The president al-ways had his wife seated beside him at White House functions. If Ida began to have a seizure, Mr. McKin-ley would simply cover her face with a large napkin. When the seizure passed, he would uncover the face of his wife as if nothing had happened. This behavior on the part of the president was noticed by the Ameri-can people as were the pol-icies which he initiated. The huge McKinley Memorial which was built with donated money in-dicates that the American people, including children, President William and wife Ida McKinley. President McKinley lived for a while in his wife’s family home, The Saxton The president, his wife and two children are in- terred at his memorial. really honored their fallen leader. If you plan to visit the Sexton House in Can-ton, Ohio, you should call 330-452-0876 or 330-4455-7043 for information because the hours of oper-ation are different during winter and summer. 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! Only two sites associated with President McKinley 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 Continued From Page1pleased with the cooperation between the li-brary, town, college and local civic groups.“It’s great to see these facilities being used in a lot of different ways,” said Dr. Darrin Hartness, college president.“We are very appreciative of Derrick Wold’s proactive initiative to provide extend-ed access of library services to the Bermuda Run/East Davie area. The Town looks for-ward to partnering with DDCC and the Davie County Public Library to provide volunteers to staff the kiosk area. It’s a great testament to fully leveraging the resources of multiple agencies,” said Lee Rollins, Bermuda Run Town Manager.“On behalf of Bermuda Run and eastern Davie County, we thank you,” said Mayor Rick Cross. “I hope we gets lots of custom-ers.” Continued From Page 1learn, and there’s big changes coming down the road. No two days are ever the same.“I am proactive and a team player who supports my team members. Like any good coach, I believe my success is measured by the performance of my team. I lead by ex-ample and do my best to make sure my team has the tools they need to suc-ceed.”A business and mar-keting graduate of UNC Charlotte, Lawrence and his family moved to Da-vie some 13 years ago after he wife was trans-ferred to a business in Clemmons. They looked from Davie County to Lewisville to Winston-Salem to Kernersville.They chose Davie.“We liked what we saw here. We could have gone anywhere. We’ve loved it and never regretted it.”Davie County, Law-rence said, is the perfect place to raise a family.He hopes to make the county’s residents proud, especially the ones who had faith in him and cast ballots in his favor.“It’s humbling,” he said. “I’m grateful for the opportunity. There’s a sense of pride in the num-ber of folks who showed up to vote for me. I want to make them proud.” A minute of your time could change a local fam-ily’s life.Family Promise of Davie County is in the running with eight other non-profits for a $10,000 award from Triad Kids Dental’s Caring-4Community Awards.That $10,000 could pre-vent homelessness for 20 Davie families, she said. Since opening in 2017, FPDC has served more than 1,000 parents and children through shelter, transitional housing, and emergency fi-nancial assistance. “Our mission is to help families experiencing homelessness and low-income families achieve sustainable independence through a community-based response. We help families through the provision of shelter, financial assistance, and case management,” Foster said. “An additional $10,000 would allow us to assist many more families.“It takes maybe 30 sec-onds to vote and you can vote as much as you'd like, even multiple times a day. Thirty seconds or even five minutes of your time could change the trajectory of a child's life.” Votes can be cast online through June 16 at https://triadkidsdental.com/car-ing4community-voting and you can vote as many times you want. Enter your name, email, and select Family Promise of Davie County in the drop-down menu.The national image for Family Promise includes faces of people helped in Davie County, including local director Lisa Foster (top right). Local non-profit in the running for $10,000 award Lawrence ... Jason Lawrence poses with members of his staff after being sworn in as clerk of court. Superior Court Judge Lori Hamilton issues the oath of office. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt Lawrence with sons Jackson, Daniel and Andrew and wife, Kati. Davie Library Director Derrick Wold mans the scissors as community members hold the ribbon marking the library’s Bermuda Run opening. Davie County Chamber board chair, Keith Beck, and Alyson Morse, membership services, speak at the ribbon cutting ceremony. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt Library ... DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 5 Renegade ... Continued From Page 2Water, Family. Gratitude. Humanity. These might seem disparate entities, but we need them all, and all are part of what makes us human. Recurring NightmareBy Gaye HootsThe recent school shooting in Texas is every parent’s worst nightmare. Most schools are secured with locked doors and protected by a resource officer, but it was re-ported the locked door had been propped open by a teacher, eliminating the protection. I found conflicting reports on the resource officer; he did not engage the shooter as pre-viously stated, and there is nothing currently on where he was or what he did. An alarm system could be installed on the doors that would sound a loud alarm and automatically lock all doors unless the door is opened with a computer override.The cry for gun control is another issue, and I see no reason to purchase an assault weapon. The shooter was de-scribed as having been bullied because he wore pants that were too short, etc. He was also referred to as a bully him-self. His father admits to being absent from the boy’s life, and he had moved in with his grandmother, whom he shot when she tried to stop him. He had dropped out of school, and worked at Wendy’s, which enabled him to purchase the guns.There is no report of him being in the mental health sys-tem, but the bullying was a clue. Because of my experi-ence in mental health, and the school system, I believe this should have been addressed. When a child wants to drop out of school that also needs to be addressed, and every ef-fort made to help them finish school, by means of tutoring, computer classes, etc. It is almost impossible to support yourself with less than a high school education. A child carrying this much anger around should attract attention. In January 2019, the Da-vie County Hospital Foun-dation ended operations and transferred its assets to the Davie Community Founda-tion for the Davie County Hospital Foundation Fund and the Davie County Hos-pital Foundation Scholar-ship. Applications for Health-care Scholarships closed June 1, however; the appli-cation for Healthcare Grants is open and due June 30.The Davie County Hospi- Two of the articles I read surprised me with the informa-tion that more people died from injuries inflicted by fists and feet, than by guns. This was fact-checked as accurate. The other was that the school shooters were under twenty-one years of age. Their anger may be directed at the school because of perceived injustices suffered by the shooter.I believe there should be a screening process when guns are purchased. Any healthy individual should be able to buy one, but they should be vetted. Mental health is the issue and is far more prevalent than most people realize. There are few families untouched by some form of mental illness or addiction.Last week as I was having my hair done by a stylist I had never met before, I mentioned that I was a retired psy-chiatric nurse. I may stop telling people I worked in the mental health field because this happens often, and there are few resources for those who do not have insurance. She told me that she has panic attacks and ADHD, which was mainly under control because she took meds. Her husband was diagnosed as bipolar, and she was worried that he was not taking his meds, had quit his job, and she was afraid he would end up like her brother who was schizophrenic and had panic attacks, and died as the result of a fist fight in a bar. When a shooting happens, the media is a circus of those blaming one thing and then another. The fact remains that 19 innocent children and two teachers died in a school that should have been secured but was not. There is much criti-cism of how the responding officers handled the situation and a scramble to try and clean this up.The focus should be on all the things that we can do to prevent this in the future. We all have children we love in the school system. What can we do to protect them? Every issue needs to be addressed, mental health, gun control, school security, and officer training. It is not one or the oth-er but all the above, and it is our children’s safety at stake. Apply for healthcare, Pearl grants this summer tal Foundation Fund accepts applications for Healthcare projects in the areas of Well-ness and Prevention; Access and Awareness; and Men-tal Health and Behavioral Health. Selections are made by a committee comprised of the chair of the Davie County Board of Commis-sioners, president of Davie Medical Center, and a com-munity member, currently Avalon Potts.In 2021, the Davie County Hospital Founda- tion Fund awarded $36,009 for projects that improve healthcare in Davie County. Grants for medical care for low-income and uninsured residents, financial assis-tance for Davie cancer sur-vivors, pickle ball and bas-ketball courts at Farmington Community Center to keep residents active, and a com-munity mental health initia-tive through Smith Grove UMC were all approved. The committee looks for-ward to considering new projects in 2022, said Jane Simpson, foundation presi-dent and CEO.In addition to healthcare projects, Pearls of Empow-erment applications are open with a deadline of Aug. 1. The Pearls of invite nonprofit organizations to apply for grants that directly benefit women and/or chil-dren of Davie County. The goal is to empower Davie nonprofits to provide as-sistance and/or services for these two critical groups in ways they have been unable to in the past. Pearls of Empowerment Programs/Projects must fo-cus on: Abuse of Women and Children; Housing for Women and Children; Childcare and Transporta-tion for Women and Chil-drenBoth applications may be found on the Davie Commu- nity Foundation website at www.daviefoundation.org. 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All rights reserved. 132 Interstate Drive Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 MockBerothTire.com 12 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 2, 2022Public Records Land TransfersThe following land transfers were filed with the Davie Register of Deeds, listed by parties involved, acreage, location and deed stamps purchased, with $2 representing $1,000.- Michelle Slusher to John B. Roberts, 3.9 acres, Mocksville Township.- John B. Roberts and Karen Roberts to Paul Eh-rlich, 3.9 acres, Mocksville Township, $807.- Torri I. Stapleton to Michael A. Stapleton and Torri I. Stapleton as co-trustees, 143 acres, Clarksville Township.- Elizabeth Carlton Sim-mons to M5 Investments, 1 tract, Bermuda Run, $770.- Kaytlin Hanna Bled-soe to Evelyn Garcia, 1 acre, Clarksville Township, $32.- Wallace Jerry Hare and Donna J. Hare to Christo-pher Scott Hare, tracts, Je-rusalem Township.- Jerry Wayne Rob-ertson and Rebecca jean Brown Robertson to Marleanne Line Close and Matthew Edward Close, tract, Underpass Road, Ad-vance, $870.- Ricky A. Stanley and Janet L. Stanley to Nils Edward Gerber and Karen Draper Gerber, 2 tracts, $544.- Rosa White Arnold and Jimmy Arnold to Ta-batha Ann Mayfield, .41 acre, Jerusalem Township, $14.- Jessica S. Bracken and Jordan Kiel Bryant to Glen E. Stanley Jr. and Debra M. Stanley, 1 lot, Myers Park, Mocksville, $274.- Doug Carl Jacobs and Jamie Jacobs to Christo-pher S. White and Meghan White, 1 lot, Forest Glen, Mocksville, $1,056.- Aaron E. Craver and Carmen S. Craver to Bry-an C. Jann and Rachel L. Jann, 30.01 acres, Mocks-ville Township, $1,700.- Patricia Lancaster and James Nelson Lancaster to Kimberly Dula, 1 acre.- Lisa M. Salinger and Darren M. Salinger to Aar-on Gray Simmons, tract, $170.- Roger Lee Byerly and Misty Lynn Byerly to CMH Homes, 1 lot, Chest-nut Way, $110.- Angela P. Nestor and Timothy B. Nestor to Hol-ly King Prillaman, 1 con-dominium, Kinderton, Ber-muda Run, $357.- Sarah Wolfe Goodman and Douglas Jewett Good-man, Teresa Wolfe Plain and David Marshall Plain, Timothy William Wolfe and Jacqueline Keegan Wolfe, Gregory Alexander Wolfe (and as executor of estate of Dayton Clark Wolfe) to Richard Cary Es-tes, 1 villa, Bermuda Vil-lage, $350.- Sharon C. Boger and Ken Boger, Mark A. Cope and Cynthia Cope, David A. Cope and Freida Cope, and Timothy G. Cope and Darlene Cope to Lisa Hill, 1.5 acres, Andrew Road, Advance, $120.- Seth Michael James and Amanda Dawn James to Mcihael Keith James, 1 lot, Jerusalem Township.- Estate of Sadie Jones, Gloria LaVon Jones, and Carnell Jones Jr. and Char-lene C. Jones to Gloria La-Von Jones, 3 lots, Jerusa-lem Township.- Gloria LaVon Jones, and Carnell Jones Jr. and Charlene C. Jones to Delton Properties, 3 lots, Jerusalem Township, $20.- Joshua Paul Draughn to David Bean, tract, Mocksville Township, $365.- Billy Ray Cornatzer and Sonja Cook Cornatzer to Donald Edward Miller, 1 lot.- Donald Edward Miller to Patrick Walsh and Mi-chele Kabei Walsh, 1 lot, $230.- William F. O’Neal and Ruby S. O’Neal to Franklin L. O’Neal, tract.- Dale G. Wall and Earl Douglas Wall to Angela Wall Mauldin and Timothy Shane Mauldin, 2.76 acres.- Terry Martin and Don-na Martin to Jeffrey Sme-jkal and Lori Smejkal, 1 lot, Myers Ridge, Shady Grove Township, $1,130.- Vivian Marion Cook to Richard Brian Cook, and Howard Craig Cook, 5.08 acres, Clarksville Town-ship.- House Farmers to Are-na Builders Associates, 2 lots, Heidelbert Subdivi-sion, $260.- Robert K. Gildea and rosa Elizabeth Gildea to Jonathan D. Anderson, 2 lots, North Ridge, Mocks-ville, $570.- Marc Kevin Crouse, executor of estate of Carol A. Crouse to Brigitte Mor-gan and Samuel Morgan Jr., 1 lot, St. George Place, Bermuda Run, $850.- William W. Stanaland III and Joy W. Stanaland to James Shivers and Shel- ley Shivers, tracts, Fulton Township, $2,400.- Nicholas T. Luffman and Christine N. Luffman to Matthew Todd Harrell and Laura Harrell, 1 lot, River Hill Subdivision, $1,265.- Glenn N. Schenk and Patricia M. Schenk to Jor-dan Dline, .3 acre, Mocks-ville Township, $100.- WJH to Christopher F. Groff and Marcela G. Groff, 1 lot, Elisha Creek Ridge, Mocksville, $494.- Daniel L. Warnstaff and Cynthia B. Warnstaff to Third Generation Homes, 1 lot, Pudding Ridge, Farm-ington Township, $125.- Colonial Estates to Daniel Longtin and Mi-chelle Longtin, 1 lot, Co-lonial Estates, Mocksville, $60.- Annna Arslan to Paul Davis Breedlove Jr. and Debbie L. Breedlove, 14.53 acres, Farmington Township, $340.- Alliance Development of the Carolinas to John Robert McCoy and Allison Sell McCoy, tracts, $980.- House Farmers Arrow-head to Arena Builders As-sociates, 1 lot, Arrowhead, $130.- Madaline Marshall Hire and John R. Hire Jr. to Madeline Alana Mar-shall, 3 acres, Howardtown Circle, $90.- Walter Douglas Orrell to Binny Ralph Orrell Sr. and Virginia S. Orrell, 1 acre, Hillcrest Drive, Ad-vance.- Binny Ralph Orrell Sr. and Virginia S. Orrell to Walter Edward Orrell, tract, Hillcrest Drive, Ad-vance.- Caleb Whittington to Opendoor Property Trust I, 1 lot, Ridgemont, Mocks-ville, $419.- George S. Calhoun and Patricia Calhoun to Betty Darlene Blake, 1 acre, Je-rusalem Township, $21.- Chuck Shmayel and Andree` Shmayel to Dipen-kumar Patel and Paragi Jariwala, 1 lot, Sawgrass at Oak Valley, Advance, $1,480.- Alvin Scales and Cas-sandra Mason and Alfred K. Mason Sr. to Aisling Real Estate Solutions, 1 lot, Craftwood, Mocks-ville, $176.- Scott A. Berry and Cynthia Berry to Sonia E. bonilla and Ivan Gonzalez Cruz, 1 lot, Rebecca Acres, $472.- U.S. Land Authority to Jason Hawks and Jean Campbell, 1 lot, Jerusalem Township, $200.- WJH to Piyush Puro-hit, 1 lot, Elisah Creek Ridge, Mcoksville, $504. ArrestsThe following were ar-rested by the Davie County Sheriff’s Office.June 4: Crystal Lynn Bosley, 36, of NC 801 N., Advance, failure to appear in court on felony charge; Derrick Allan Brown, 53, of Main Church Road, Mocksville, larceny; Keith Andrew Daniels, 42, of Kannapolis, failure to ap-pear in court.June 3: John Nathan-iel Nichols, 51, of James-towne Drive, Mocksville, disorderly conduct.June 2: Tyler Hunter Willis, 20, of Dogwood Lane, Mocksville, assault.June 1: Katelynn Dan-ielle Thurmond, 20, of S. Angell Road, Mocksville, assault on a government official.May 31: Jacob Cathell Hawks, 23, of Winston-Sa-lem, felony probation vio-lation; Shery Holgen, 52, of Ijames Church Road, Mocksville, assault; Aaron Wesley Johnson Jr., 46, of Statesville, obtaining prop-erty by false pretense, con-spiracy to obtain property by false pretense.May 30: Shamaran Le’Cole Clodfelter, 26, of Baltimore Road, Advance, possession of methamphet-amine; Leslie Scott Swan-son, 40, of Yadkinville, failure to appear in court.May 29: David Lee Mullins Jr., 44, of Caravan Lane, Mocksville, injury to property; Nichlas Jerrone Watson, 30, of NC 801 N., Advance, possession of marijuana. Sheriff’s OfficeThe following are from Davie County Sheriff’s Of-fice reports.June 4: assault, Watt St., Cooleemee; suspicious activity, Wilkesboro St., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Pointe House Lane, Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Ijames Church Road, Mocks-ville; assault, Jerusalem Ave., Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Shady Lane, Advance; domestic disturbance, LaQuinta Drive, Advance; harass-ment, Redmeadow Drive, Advance; disturbance, Feezor Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Main Church Road, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, US 158, Advance; disturbance, US 158, Advance; larceny, Foster Dairy Road, Mocks-ville; damage to property, Calvin Lane, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Indus-trial Blvd., Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 64 E., Mocksville; larceny, US 601 S., Mocksville; damage to property, Cedar Forest Lane, Mocksville; larceny, Madison Road, Mocksville; larceny, Cov-entry Lane, Mocksville; larceny, Swicegood St., Mocksville; damage to property, I-40 EB, Ber-muda Run; domestic dis-turbance, Hardison St., Mcoksville; disturbance, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, I-40 EB, Mocksville; lar-ceny, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville.June 3: larceny, Yadk-inville Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Riverbend Drive, Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, Blevins Road, Yadkinville; suspicious activity, Milling Road, Mocksville; larceny, Deadmon Road, Mocks-ville; harassment, US 601 S., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Pinebrook Drive, Mocksville; fraud, Willow Creek Lane, Mocksville; harassment, McCashin Lane, Mocksville; larce-ny, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; larceny, Cam-den Point Court, Mocks-ville; domestic disturbance, Swicegood St., Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, US 601 N., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; bur-glary, Juney Beauchamp Road, Advance.June 2: suspicious activity, Sheffield Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 601 S., Mocks-ville; trespassing, Juney Beauchamp Road, Ad-vance; suspicious activ-ity, Granada Drive, Ad-vance; suspicious activity, Brookside Lane, Advance; larceny, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Boyce Drive, Mocksville; harassment, US 158, Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Harvest Way, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Jessica Trail, Mocksville; disturbance, Gladstone Road, Coolee-mee; harassment, Yadk-inville Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Junc-tion Road, Mocksville; burglary, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; larce-ny, Camden Point Court, Mocksville; noise com-plaint, Ashley Brook Lane, Mocksville; domestic as-sist, Patti Lane, Mcoks-ville; fraud, Oak Tree Drive, Mocksville; distur-bance, LaQuinta Drive, Ad-vance; trespassing, Imperi-al Lane, Advance; larceny, US 158, Advance; harass-ment, Camden Point Court, Mocksville; disturbance, Junction Road, Mocksvile; damage to property, Bing Crosby Blvd., Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, Court Square, Mocksville; harassment, Quality Drive, Mcoksville; suspicious ac-tivity, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; noise com-plaint, Pointe House Lane, Mocksville; runaway, US 64 W., Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Hobson Drive, Mocksville.June 1: suspicious activity, S. Davie Drive, Mocksville; disturbance, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; disturbance, Hawkins Valley Lane, Mocksville; disturbance, Duke Whit-taker Road, Mocksville; ha-rassment, US 158, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Salisbury St., Mocksville; larceny, Swicegood St., Mocksville; fraud, Govern-ment Center Drive, Mocks-ville; fraud, Custom Drive, Mocksville; harassment, NC 801 N., Advance; suspicious activity, Farm-ington Road, Mocksville; sex offense, M&D Lane, Mocksville; burglary, NC 801 S., Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Glory Ct., Advance; domestic distur-bance, Underpass Road, Advance; trespassing, Madison Road, Mocks-ville; suspicioius activity, US 64 E./Garwood Rd., Mocksville.May 31: trespass-ing, Daniel Boone Trail, Mocksville; harassment, NC 801 S., Advance; dis-turbance, Concord Lane, Mocksville; domestic dis-turbance, Sheffield Road, Mocksville; harassment, Old Towne Drive, Ber-muda Run; disturbance, Granada Drive, Advance; harassment, Vogler Road, Advance; domestic dis-turbance, Michaels Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Camden Point court, Mocksville; suspi-cioius activity, Cornatzer Road, Mcoksville; sus-picious activity, Whitney Road, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Coun-ty Line Road, Harmony; larceny, Westridge Road, Advance; fraud, US 158, Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, Old Mill Road, Advance; fraud, US 158, Bermuda Run; harass-ment, Government Center Drive, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Cedar Brook Lane, Mocksville; fraud, Turrentine Church Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, I-40 EB, Mocks-ville; fraud, Whitney Road, Mocksville; disturbance, McCullough Road, Mocks-ville; larceny, NC 801 S., Mocksville; assault, US 601 N., Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Crabtree Road, Mocksville.May 30: harassment, Danner Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Coun-try Lane, Mocksville; nui-sance complaint, Whitney Road, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Fork Bixby Road, Avance; suspicious activity, Northridge Court, Mocksville; damage to property, Four Corners Road, Mocksville; larce-ny, Allen Road, Mocks-ville; damage to property, Milling Road, Mocksville; disturbance, NC 801 S., Mocksville; assault, Pineville Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Baltimore Road, Advance; larceny, Hemlock St., Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, E. Lexington Road, Mocksville.May 29: suspiciuos activity, Golfview Drive, Bermuda Run; damage to property, N. Hiddenbrooke Drive, Advance; disturb-ing the peace, Oak Valley Blvd., Advance; distur-bance, NC 801 N., Bermu-da Run; fraud, E. Lexing-ton Road, Mocksville; sex offense, Cornatzer Road, Advance; suspiciuos ac-tivity, Fox Run Drive/US 158, Mocksville; harass-ment, Meadowview Road, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 158/Livingstone Road, Mocksville; larceny, US 158, Advance; suspi-ciouos activity, S. Main St., Mocksville; domestic as-sist, NC 801 S., Advance; suspicious activity, Whita-ker Road, Mocksville; ha-rassment, Blevins Road, Mocksville; nuisance com-plaint, Dutchman Trail, Mocksville; disturbance, Sheffield Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Scottsdale Drive, Advance. 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 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 NEW ITEMS! Stainless Steel Straws, Grip & Twist Jar Openers, Crumb Catcher USB Desktop Vac., Soap’N’Suds Soap Sheets, & MORE!Each Only $5.99 or Less! Assorted Flavors LANCE SNACKCRACKERS4 for $1 Limit 8 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 7 District Court By Mike BarnhardtEnterprise Record Two brothers were ar-rested last week after one of them damaged their moth-er’s car - then stole it the next day and drove it until it caught on fire.Davie Sheriff J.D. Hart-man said the first call came in on May 31, a disturbance call on Underpass Road in Advance in which Aar-on Patrick Adams, 34, was ramming his vehicle into his mother’s vehicle in the driveway.“Upon arrival, Aaron was attempting to attach a trailer hitch to his Jeep Continued From Page 1companies given permits for solar sites on some 600 acres of Davie land, six have already changed own-ership.“That was a concern of the planning board. We don’t know who we’re deal-ing with when it comes to potential risks ... like the de-commission. Who’s going to be your dancing partner at the end of the night, that sort of thing.”The new rules will re-quire much more of the companies, including envi-ronmental impact analysis and state permits before ap-plying for a rezoning. Any such requests re-ceived would have to go through two planning board meetings, as well as two county commission meet-ings.“These are very com-plicated,” Meadwell said. “The pressure to make a decision that night, in some cases, was unbearable.”There would also be requirements of the so-lar company to advise the county of ownership chang-es, to regularly prove that it meets all county, state and federal requirements.The county is expected to vote on the new proposal either at the board’s July or August meeting. Solar ... Fundraisers Saturday, June 11Breakfast, Farmington Meth-odist, 1939 Farmington Rd., Mocksville, 7-10 a.m. Pork tenderloin, sausage, gravy, eggs, grits, stewed apples, biscuits, mixed fruit, breakfast casserold, coffee, OJ. Donations support church ministries. Reunions Thursday, June 23Davie High Class of 1960 lunch, 11:30 a.m., 801 Southern Kitch- en, 218 NC 801, Bermuda Run. Saturday, Oct. 8Davie High School Class of 1982, 40th-year reunion, 7-11 p.m., The Farm at Oak Hill, 186 Kent Lane, Mocksville. $40 per couple, $25 per person, paid to DHS Class of ‘82, c/o Shelia Walker Stanley, PO Box 601, Mocksville. Details to be on class Facebook page. Religion June 12-16Vacation Bible School, Yadkin Valley Baptist, 1324 Yad-kin Valley Rd., Advance, 6-8 p.m. for grades K-12. Theme: Kookaburra Coast: Awsome Adventures in God’s Glory. Transportation available. 336-470-3301. June 20-22Vacation Bible School, First Baptist of Cooleemee, 204 Mar-ginal St., 6-8 p.m., for ages 3 to 12. Theme: Hay Day: Growing in Friendship with Jesus. Friday, June 24Tim Zimmerman and the King’s Brass, 7 p.m., First Baptist Church, N. Main St., Mocksville. The following cases were disposed of during the May 12 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge Wayne L. Michael. Prosecuting: Eric Farr and Pearce Dougan, assistant DAs.- Justin E. Alexander, speeding 98 in a 70, sen-tenced to time served, $10 jail fee, $362.50 attorney fee; reckless driving, dis-missed per plea.- Anthony John Azar, speeding 81 in a 45, reck-less driving, dismissed per plea; driving after consum-ing under age 21, prayer for judgment continued.- Hunter Lucas Boggs, speeding 86 in a 70, pos-session of open container/consuming alcohol in pas-senger area, dismissed per plea; DWI, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 18 months, 24 hours community ser-vice, credit for substance abuse assessment, surren-der license, not operate ve-hicle until licensed, limited driving privilege, interlock installed, $100, cost.- Michael Wayne Bo-swell, DWI, sentenced to 120 days, credit for 76 days, obtain substance abuse as-sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until li-censed, $465 attorney fee.- Bryan Mark Brown, speeding 91 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $50, cost.- Derrick Allan, misde- meanor larceny, sentenced to time served, cost, $30 restitution to Circle K.- Anagely Chavez, speed-ing 98 in a 70, dismissed per plea; reckless driving, $600, cost.- Johnathan W. Cor-natzer, DWI, sentenced to 60 days, suspended 18 months, 24 hours commu-nity service, credit for sub-stance abuse assessment, surrender license, not op-erate vehicle until licensed, limited driving privilege, $100, cost; reckless driving, dismissed per plea.- Jonathan N. Gadson, assault on a female, sen-tenced to 75 days, suspend-ed 18 months, do not as-sault/threaten/harass victim, $25, cost, $270 attorney fee, $20 install fee.- Catherine E. Godbey, driving while license re-voked DWI revocation, sen-tenced to time served, $270 attorney fee.- Sara Rebecca Ham-by, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, $195 attorney fee.- Crystal Dawn Horne, misdemeanor probation vio-lation, probation terminated unsuccessfully; first degree trespass entering/remaining on premises, sentenced to time served, $205 attorney fee.- Quameshia L. James, DWI, sentenced to 12 months, suspended 18 months, 30 days active, obtain substance abuse as-sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until li-censed, $100, cost, $367.50 attorney fee; misdemeanor child abuse, dismissed per plea.- Michael J. McCaffrey, felony aid and abet break-ing and entering, reduced to misdemeanor aid and abet breaking and enter-ing, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 18 months, 24 hours community service, CBI classes, have no con-tact with victim, $25, cost, $367.50 attorney fee; felony aid and abet breaking and entering, reduced to misde-meanor aid and abet break-ing and entering, sentenced to 45 days at expiration of previous sentence, suspend-ed 18 months.- Ron Leonard McK-night, misdemeanor larceny, sentenced to 120 days, sus- pended 18 months, do not go to any WalMart, $270 attorney fee.- Jamie Scott Perkins, probation violation, proba-tion revoked, sentenced to time served.- Joshua S. Ramseur, misdemeanor larceny, sen-tenced to 120 days, sus-pended 18 months, obtain substance abuse assess-ment, CBI classes, have no contact with victim, $25, cost.- Savannah Lynn Spry, driving after consuming un-der age 21, prayer for judg-ment continued, $260 attor-ney fee.- Harold P. Spurling, pos-session of stolen vehicle, dismissed per plea in Gas-ton County.- Kendra Jeta Tatum, fail-ure to maintain lane control, dismissed per plea; driving while license revoked not DWI, reduced to failure to notify DMV of address change, $25, cost.- Lori Jacobs Waller, pos-session of drug parapherna-lia, misdemeanor probation violation, dismissed, $140 attorney fee.- Samuel Lucas White, possession drug parapher-nalia, sentenced to time served, $205 attorney fee. May 19The following cases were disposed of during the May 19 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge Mary F. Covington. Prose-cuting: Pearce Dougan and Eric Farr, assistant DAs.- Chase Davis Ammons, speeding 95 in a 70, reduced to 79 in a 70, $500, cost; reckless driving, dismissed.- Tanner C. Bassett, felo-ny larceny, reduced to mis-demeanor larceny, injury to personal property, assault on a female, sentenced to 150 days, credit for 25 days, cost, $627.50 attorney fee; conspiracy to commit felo-ny larceny, dismissed.- Juan Hermenegild-Cor-rales, DWI, sentenced to 2 years, suspended 18 months, 30 days active, credit for substance abuse assessment, surrender li-cense, not operate vehicle until licensed, do not use alcohol while on probation, $1,000, cost.- Jesse James Dalton, simple possession of a Brothers arrested after 2nd run-in with police Aaron Adams Zachary Adams and hook up a trailer in the yard,” Hartman reported. “He and Zachary fled the scene, but officers were not able to chase.”Officers were still at the mother’s residence when the suspects drove by a few minutes later. The chase was on.Officers followed the two on Underpass Road, when Aaron drove the Jeep through a cable on the side of the road near the river. Officers lost them in the woods.The next morning, depu-ties were back at the moth-er’s home, when it was reported that Aaron had re- turned, kicked in the back door, taken car keys and left in the mother’s vehicle.“Deputies located both subjects down the road and placed Aaron under arrest,” Hartman said. “Deputies located the Jeep on the side of a steep embankment near the dam at the river.”The vehicle was seized under North Carolina’s “Run and Done” law.Zachary was allowed to drive his mother’s vehicle back to her house, at her re-quest, but it caught fire and was destroyed. Hartman re-ported the vehicle did not have any oil.It turns out that the trail- er Aaron had been attempt-ed to hook onto had been reported as stolen earlier in the morning. It was returned to the owner.Aaron Adams, 34, was charged with fleeing to elude arrest, a probation vi-olation, 2 counts of failure to appear in court, resisting an officer, unauthorized use of a vehicle and bereaking and entering. He was taken into custody in lieu of a a $63,000 bond.Zachary Steven Adams, 41,was charged with felony larceny and possession of stolen goods. He was tak-en into custody in lieu of a $2,000 bond. schedule VI controlled sub-stance, $25.- Joshua Brian McFad-den, felony fleeing to elude arrest with a vehicle, re-duced to misdemeanor flee-ing to elude, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 18 months, 50 hours community ser-vice, surrender license, not operate vehicle until li-censed, CBI program, do not use alcohol, $800, cost; reckless driving, driving while license revoked not DWI, dismissed.- Dustin Troy Provost, driving while license re-voked DWI, prayer for judgment continued, cost; possession of stolen goods/property, dismissed.- Laurie Robin Raffles, reckless driving, prayer for judgment continued, cost.- Efrain A. Villatoro, speeding 127 in a 70, dis-missed; reckless driving, $1,500, cost.- Davis Kent Whitney, speeding 110 in a 70, dis-missed; reckless driving , $1,000, cost.- Kevin David Wollman, speeding 127 in a 55, dis-missed; reckless driving, $1,700, cost.Dateline Special Events Saturday, June 18Women’s Self Defense Class for teens and adults, 9-11 a.m., Davie Community Park, Southwood Drive, Mocks-ville. Learn self defense tech-niques and confidence builders. Sponsored by Davie Center for Violence Preention. Visit website or call 336-753-6150. Monday, July 4Town of Cooleemee July 4th celebration. Parade, 10 a.m., entrants line up at school be-ginning at 9. Followed by free watermelon, large slip and slide, and hotdog and drink sales at Zachary House. OngoingSmith Grove Farmer’s Mar-ket, Saturdays, 1-3:30 p.m., Smith Grove Methodist, 3492 US 158, Mocksville. Local produce, eggs, metas, honey, plants, baked goods, handcraft-ed gifts, food vendors, kids activities, music, non-profit booths. Visit Facebook or Ins-tagram.Tech 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.BoTyme Jam, country, blue-grass and gospel music, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Thursdays, Farm-ington Community Center, Farmington Road, Mocksville. $3, musicians admitted free. Meetings 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. SeniorsAll of the following events are sponsored by Davie Senior Ser-vices. For more information 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. MondaysAfternoon card games, new program, 1 p.m. First Monday, Uno; second, Skipbo; third, Rook; fourth, Rummy; fifth, Crazy Eights. TuesdaysEmail basics, 10-11 a.m. With Davie Public Library. Friday, June 10Armchair Adventures - Ha-waii, 1-3 p.m., enjoy informa-tion and tastes of Hawaii.Crafternoon - Stencil Tote Bag, 2 p.m., public library. Materials provided. Tuesday, June 14Coffee & Caregiving, 10 a.m., for caregivers.Novant Health Seminar, 10 a.m., info on a health topic.Got Plans? Advanced Care Planning Workshop, 1 p.m. with facilitator from Hospits/Palliative Care. Wednesday, June 15Basket Weaving, 1 p.m. with instructor Cheryl Tilley, $15. Will make picket fence basket. Thursday, Jun 16Senior Book Club, 12:30-2 p.m., Davie County Public Li-brary with Genny Hinkle. Monday, June 20Monthly Movie, 1 p.m. Tuesday, June 21Bingo, 1 p.m., sponsored by Prevette & Son Plumbing. Thursday, June 23Good Health Club, 1 p.m. Learn healthy eating tips, share recipes. Led by Stacey Southern, nutrition program coordinator. Friday, June 24Grandparensts & Me, 2 p.m., Bring grandchildren or great-grandchildren for story and a craft. Monday, June 27What’s Cooking: Fads and Helpful Hacks, 1 p.m. Cook-ing demonstrations, home tips, demonstration of kitchen or cleaning gadgets and more. Tuesday, June 28Coffee & Caregiving, 10 a.m., a time for caregivers to interact. OngoingBrock Senior Steppers, starts Jan. 3 at Brock Gym, open 8-10 each morning and other times with no programs. Register and count steps for monthly and yearly prizes.Line dancing via Zoom, Wednesdays, 9:30 a.m. with Vickie Spivey. 55 and older.Yoga class via Zoom, Mon-days, 11 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. with Kim Crawford. 55 and older.Coffee & Caregiving, Tues-days 10 a.m. via Zoom. In-teract with other caregivers, ask staff member Kelly Sloan questions. Open to caregiv-ers of all ages. Live Music Thursday, June 9Michael Chaney, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.SoundKraft, 6:30 p.m.. O’Cal-lahan’s, Downtown Mocksville. Saturday, June 11Karaoke Night, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Moxie, free concert On The Square in Downtown Mocks-ville, 7-10 p.m.Russell Henderson, 11 a.m., The Station, Downtown Mocks-ville.James Vincent Carroll, 6 p.m., Tanglewood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Thursday, June 16James Vincent Carroll, 7 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Josh Tenery, 6:30 p.m., O’Cal-lahan’s, Downtown Mocksville. Friday, June 17Darrell Hoots, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Thursday, June 23Dalton Allen Music, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Megan Doss, 6:30 p.m. O’Cal-lahan’s, Downtown Mocksville. Saturday, June 25Summer Lovin’ Fest, 4 p.m., with music and vendors, The Station, Downtown Mocksville.SoundKraft, 6 p.m., Tangle-wood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Thursday, June 30SoundKraft, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Saturday, July 2Marvelous Funkshun/The Tonez, 6-9:30 p.m., Davie County Community Park. Free. 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 The Young at Heart group from Bethle- hem United Methodist Church in Advance enjoyed another mystery trip on May 26. As the day unfolded, participants were treated to a tour of the Paul Ciener Botanical Gar- dens in Kernersville, led by Master Gar- dener Bill Bodsford. Afterwards, the group traveled to High Point where they toured the studios and newsroom of WGHP Fox 8 TV. VP Kevin Daniels and News Anchor Cindy Farmer gave an in-depth description of this operation. Young at Heart ended the day with a meal at Big Ed’s Chicken Pit in High Point. This restaurant has received numer- ous awards for its fried chicken, chicken wings and other dishes. Mystery tour for gardens & chicken Employeeowned Established in1921 Globalmanufacturer Scan to viewour currentvacancies Hiringnow RANDY MILLER& SONS 295 Miller Road • Mocksville(336) 284-2826 • We Pump Septic Tanks • SEPTIC TANK SERVICE Septic SystemsFootingsLoader Work Skid Steer WorkTrencher WorkHauling StateCertifiedInspector (336) 751-2304 MILLEREQUIPMENTRENTAL SUMMER IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today!ForAll YourRental NeedsDid you know? The Davie County Enterprise Record is now available via an e-edition, an exact replica of the printed version but on your computer or mobile device. • The Davie County Enterprise Record is also available to read online. Be the first to catch up on the daily news, obituaries and more. www.ourdavie.com DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 9 Camp Cognition will return this year with four weeks of sessions focus-ing on different areas in the STEM field. Last summer was a suc-cess with children learning about the design process engineers go through when designing and constructing, said Joey Davis, who leads the camps for Cognition.Through a partnership with Ashley Furniture, campers were given the op-portunity to engage in card-board engineering to create their own mini-golf courses and railcars. “By learning the engi-neering process, campers were able to use their cre-ativity and develop prob-lem-solving skills,” Davis said. “This year, even more opportunities to build and learn are available at Camp Cognition.”“Racing Into Summer” begins on Monday, June 20. This week will focus on STEM in the racing indus-try. Campers will design their own race car out of recycled materials that will be pow-ered by the air from a bal-loon. The week of June 27 will be “Out of this World.” Par-ticipants will use cardboard engineering to build their own spacecraft to launch into space. “Coasting Along” will begin July 11 and will fo-cus on beaches, boats, and ocean life. Campers will be challenged to make a boat out of recycled material that will stay afloat and race in the water. The final week of camp, “Fire Away,” will begin July 18. This week, campers are tasked with building a cata-pult that will launch a water balloon in the air to hit a target. Each session of camp will include crafts to take home, games to play, and hands-on science experiments related to the theme that week. Camps will be held Mon-day-Thursday. The morning session for rising second grade to rising fourth grade will be held from 9-noon and the afternoon session for rising fifth graders to ris-ing eighth graders will be from 1-4. Camp registration fee is $75 per camper each week. “All children should have the opportunity for STEM learning, so financial aid scholarships are available to offset the cost of camp,”he said.Reach out to info@cog-nitiondavie.org for an ap-plication. Cognition Davie is at 119 N. Salisbury St. in Mocksville. Visit cognition-davie.org to register. Call 751-1045 to learn more. Do you need help paying for Medicare prescription drugs? Extra Help is available for those who qualify, but you have to apply. Visit our website: daviecountync.gov/528/SHIIP OR Contact: Davie County Senior Services 278 Meroney Street Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 753-6230 Or come see us at one of our three convenient locations. (Bermuda Run, Mocksville, or Yadkinville) Call us today!336.463.5022 ANY NEW MOBILE PHONE$1,000 OFF With eligible trade-in for any unlimited or shared AT&T plan that we offer. Qualified new or existing customers. New line required. $1,000 credit divided over 36-month installments. Offer may not be combined with any other promotion. See store for details. Only from Or come see us at one of our three convenient locations. (Bermuda Run, Mocksville, or Yadkinville) Call us today!336.463.5022 ANY NEW MOBILE PHONE $1,000 OFF With eligible trade-in for any unlimited or shared AT&T plan that we offer. Qualified new or existing customers. New line required. $1,000 credit divided over 36-month installments. Offer may not be combined with any other promotion. See store for details. Only from Luke Hankins, Colby Addison, Drew Smith, and Alex Hirata enjoy playing in the train they built during last year’s Camp Cogniton. Ava Gary, Madisyn Polk, and Nathan Nukols pose with their final product. Ethan Diemer adds finishing touches to his cardboard engineered mini- golf course. Camp Cognition gearing up for summer of fun 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 This scripture message brought to you by these businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. For thou art my rock and my fortress; therefore for thy name’s sake lead me, and guide me.(Psalm 31:3) DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - 11Obituaries Local obituaries ONLINE www.ourdavie.com Sell it quickly in the classifiedsCall Today!704-797-4220 Vickie Tarue (Seagle) DanielVickie Tarue (Seagle) Daniel, 84, of Mocksville, passed away on May 29, 2022, at Piney Grove Nursing and Reha-bilitation Center in Kernersville.Vickie was born on May 2, 1938, in Davidson Coun-ty, daughter of the late James Luther Seagle and Johnsie Elouise (Rudisill) Seagle. She was also preceeded in death by: a broth-er, Jimmy Ray Seagle and a sister, Shirley Althea Lowdermilk.In life, Vickie attended school at Hasty High School. She was an out-going lady who went from adven-ture to adventure. She did this and that, loved to travel, and spent many hours on the beach. Vickie leaves behind to cherish her memory: her loving husband (one day short of 48 years), Ervin Gray Daniel of Mocksville; 2 sons, John Lee Smith Jr. (Daphne) of Cherokee, and Marvin “Marty” Smith (Twyla) of Mocksville; a stepson, Randall Daniel (Debbie) of Flor-ida; a daughter, Edie Lorraine Smith of Mocksville; a step-daughter, Wanda Beck (Charles) of Tennessee; a brother, Johnny Ovid Seagle of Salisbury; a sister, Ava Kay Ellis (JR) of Yadkinville; her grandchildren, Vickie Harrington, Christopher Ellis (Carin), Cynthia Ellis Newsome (Spen-cer), Keri Smith (James), Jessica Smith, Johnathon Smith (Anna), Jason Allen and Jamie Smith; and great-grand-children, Christopher and Ryan Wensil, Gwendolyn, Sela, and Smith Ellis, Marious, Elias, and Alexander Newsome, Brayden and Reece Smith, and Rosemary Salazar.On Wednesday, June 1, a visitation was held at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville from 6-7 p.m., followed by a memorial service officiated by Spencer Newsome.In lieu of flowers, please consider a donation to: Well-care Hospice of Advance, 5380 US 158 Suite 210 Ad-vance, NC 27006.Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville are honored to serve the family. Marion ‘Carl’ BarberMarion “Carl” Barber of Cooleemee passed away on Saturday, May 28, 2022 at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Hospital in Winston-Salem. Carl was born on Nov. 24, 1939 in Rowan County to the late Earl and Lena Barber of Cleveland, NC. He was also preceded in death by: a brother, nephew, daughter, grand-son, great-grandson, brother-in-law and sister-in-law.Carl was a member of Cooleemee Presbyterian Church and a former member of Lebanon Lutheran Church of Cleveland. He retired after 35 years at Ingersoll Rand in Mocksville. After retiring he worked part-time at Coolee-mee Hardware Store for two years. Carl enjoyed reading western books, listening to country bluegrass and gospel music, and driving his truck. Carl is survived by: his loving wife of 51 years, Di-ane Hampton Barber; a daughter, Sandy; a son, Steve (Melissa); several grandchildren and great-grandchildren; 2 sisters-in-law, Joyce Spillman of Cooleemee and Dot Vanzant of Kannapolis; 3 brothers-in-law, Jimmy (Susan), Johnny, and Kenny Hampton of Cooleemee; and his favor-ite cat, Midnight.A visitation was held at Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville on Tuesday, May 31 from 6-8 p.m. A grave-side service was on June 1 at 11 a.m. at Legion Memorial Park in Cooleemee. Rev. Shelby Harbor officiated.Memorials: Cooleemee Presbyterian, PO Box 27, Cooleemee, NC 27014; or Victory Baptist, PO Box 686, Cooleemee, NC 27014.Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville are honored to serve the family. Donald Gray DobyDonald Gray Doby, 79, of Mocksville, NC, entered his heavenly home on June 3, 2022.Don, as he was lovingly known as, was born on Feb. 9, 1943, in Forsyth County, son of the late Louie Coe Doby and Nellie Bertha (Hall) Doby. He was also preceded in death by his son, Teddy R. Doby. In life, Don chose a career in golf course maintenance. He worked in grounds keeping for many years until he retired. Don was a Christian man and was a member of Fellowship Baptist Church. In the fall of 1962, Don married the love of his life, Lena Rebecca (Spaugh) Doby in Da-vidson County. With their union they raised 5 beautiful children. Don leaves behind to cherish his memory: his loving wife of 59 years, Rebecca Doby of Mocksville; his 4 children, Nellie D. Frank of New Mex-ico, Theresa D. Sample-Anderson (John) of Iowa, Gro-ver J. Doby (Audrey) of Mocksville, and Louie G. Doby (Karen) of Advance; his siblings, Ruby Bingham (Eddie) of Mooresville, Bill Doby (Betty) of Mocksville, Grace Myers of Mocksville, and Lorretta Porter of Alabama; 14 grandchildren; and 14 great-grandchildren.On Tuesday, June 7, a visitation for Don was held from noon-1 p.m. at Fellowship Baptist Church, followed by the funeral service, officiated by Pastor Wayne Swisher. Davie Funeral Service of Mocksville is honored to serve the family.Faye Evans SprouseFaye Evans Sprouse, 82, of Clemmons, passed away Friday, June 3, 2022 at the Kate B. Reynolds Hospice Home. Faye was born in Davie Coun-ty on Nov. 15, 1939. She worked for Piedmont Aviation for 43 years retiring in 2004. Faye never met a stranger, loved her family and friends and was the sweetest and kindest person you will ever meet. She was preceded in death by: her parents, Seymour Evans and Ruby Evans; and her beloved dogs, Maggie and Angus. She is survived by: her hus-band, Edgar Sprouse; a son, Tim-othy Plott (Tina) and children Tyler, Gabe and Jack; a step-daughter, Brenda Sprouse (Steve) and daughter Savannah; a brothe,r Mark Evans (Brenda); and 2 great-grandchildren. A funeral service was conducted at 2 p.m. Wednesday, June 8 at Clemmons Moravian Church by Rev. Christo-pher C. Thore. Burial followed in Forsyth Memorial Park. The family received friends from 6-8 p.m. Tuesday, June 7 at Hayworth-Miller Kinderton Chapel. In lieu of flowers, donations in Faye’s memory can be made to: Humane Society of Davie County. The family would like to thank the staff of Forsyth Medical Center and the Kate B. Reynolds Hospice Home for their care of Faye over the last several months. Online condolences: www.hayworth-miller.com. Dr. Annette Luther SherdenDr. Annette Luther Sherden, 1953-2022. Annette was kind, thoughtful, smart, compassionate, generous; always in motion. Overall, she lived to help oth-er people. In particular, she enjoyed spending time with the young and the old, the infirm and the healthy. She volunteered with fourth graders who needed enrichment as well as the Girl Scouts. She shared her love of horses with a gener-ation of children, many of whom took their first ride on her horse Ladybug. Not only did they learn to ride, but they learned what it takes to care for the horses, in-cluding cleaning the stalls and the horses themselves. She loved the common people more than the elite. Annette was her high school valedictorian and held two Ken-tucky track records. She then went to SMU, where she studied fine arts as an organ ma-jor and played varsity basketball. Thereafter, she moved directly to medical school at the University of Texas and became a beloved gynecologist and obstetrician. Through-out her medical career she served the indigent and em-ployed, providing high quality medical care to all. Annette was my wife and best friend. I loved her and she loved me. We hiked in the mountains together, read together, talked together on every eclectic subject in de-tail, and agreed on almost everything. She will be greatly missed by all who knew and loved her. Love, JohnA memorial service will be conducted at 2 p.m., Sat-urday, June 18 at Lambert Funeral Chapel. Also, we will have some immuno-compromised guests so, in keeping with Annette’s cautious, conscientious approach to good health, John kindly request’s all in attendance be masked.The service will be available to view on the Lambert Fu-neral Home website. The family will receive friends at the funeral home following the service.Online condolences: www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. REAL ESTATE Sold Saturday, June 18 • 10:00 AM Land for Sale in Davie County-122.22 +/- acres on Glasgow Ln., off Hepler Rd. Mocksville, N C 27028. Land will be sold in 3 tracts: tract 1 104.14+/- acres ID 5850303910- tract 2 5.60+/- acres ID 5850502414- tract 3 2.48 +/- acres ID 5759593984- Deed book 95 Page106. Terms of the Real Estate: $10,000 required day of sale of final accepted bid price. Closing 30 to 45 days. Property sold as is. All inspections and due dilligence should be completed prior to bidding at the auction. AUCTION Liquidation of Hepler Brothers Dairy Inc. 127 Glasgow Ln., Mocksville, NC 27028 Sale Conducted By: BOSTICK AUCTION SERVICE NCAFL# 6273Auctioneer: Arthur Bostick NCAL# 1365 Realtor: Eva Bostick NCREL# 52786 191 Jones Rd., Mocksville, NC Ph: 336-492-5992 TERMS: Payment due in full day of Auction by Cash, Credit Card or Checks. NO OUT OF STATE checks. A 3% service charge on all credit card purchases. 7% Sales Tax will be collected. Announcements made day of auction takes precedence over all other written material. Everything sold AS IS WHERE IS. For more info & photos visit: www.bostickauction.com A Memorial Service for Sylvia Stroud Smith (April 6, 1939 - September 12, 2021) will be held at Clarksbury Methodist Church 924 E. Memorial Highway Harmony, NC Saturday, June 11, 2022 10:00 a.m. A reception will follow in the church hall For more information please email her daughter Jenny Cline at jnjcline@comcast.net 1442499118 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 “If you don’t have access to a tooth- brush, try chewing sugar free gum after meals. it will increase salivary flow both neutralizing acidity in the mouth and washing away bacteria.”12992061267651 SMITH GROVEFarmers Market Every Saturday • May – October • 1-3:30 PM Smith Grove UMC 3492 U.S. Hwy. 158 • Mocksville, NC 27028 Products from local Farmers and Artisans Visit with Community Agencies on-site each week Food Vendors • Musicians • Kids Activities (Tobacco and Alcohol Free Campus) Death NoticeSusan Lynn Landreth Van Almen, 71, of Ad-vance, died Sunday, June 5, 2022. 12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean Find more recipes atwww.ourdavie.com By the time June rolls around, swim season has officially opened – and so have our griddles and grills. The holiday ushers in a laid-back style of entertaining. That's where I spent the last weekend in May – poolside at an old-fashioned cookout at Sapona Golf Swim and Ten-nis Club in Lexington. Simple, premium beefy burgers and hotdogs were served hot off the grill with a few sides. A tray of assorted oatmeal, chocolate, and peanut butter cookies was enough to satisfy anyone's sweet tooth. Davie County is uniquely situated and centrally located. We border many small towns and larger cities – usually no more than 25-minutes in any direction. We have sev-eral options for swimming – state and county parks, public pools, country clubs, and lakes with boat rentals. Your family can even rent a hotel room and enjoy almost ex-clusive pool use all day. I've done it – and we took our electric grid-dle with us. I advocate supporting our own county's resources first. Beyond that, residents have an ad-vantage – easy access to a plethora of additional options. When I was a kid – pools weren't so common. Fortunate-ly, Mom's friend had one – we'd pack a sandwich lunch and spend hot days cooling off in the water. Occasionally, we headed to pub-lic pools. There was at least one swim session at day camp after horseback riding. On holidays, Mom's large family met at a state park where we spent the day grilling out and swimming in a lake. I want to encourage you to swim and exercise in water. As we get older, pool exercise is one of the best things we can do for our bodies. Water acts as a form of resistance, putting less stress and pressure on our joints. Water exer-cises help reduce arthritis and joint pain, increase flexibil-ity and balance, and help decrease bone and muscle loss. Plus – it just feels great. I have an 83-year-old friend who hadn't stepped foot in a pool in 30 years. I encouraged her to get in – and oh, how she loved it. Sometimes we have to push ourselves past our comfort zones. Pool exercise might not be on the top of your workout plan – but it's a great alternative to a gym. We want to take care of the place where the Holy Spirit dwells. Our bodies are holy. And a healthy body provides us the vehicle from which to do God's work. In the Bible, our bodies are referred to as temples. In 1 Corinthians 6: 19-20, Paul asked, "Do you know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, who you have received from God? You are not your own. You were bought at a price. Therefore honor God with your body." (NIV) God created our bodies – and He cares about how we take care of them and how we use them. We don't want to make a god from our quest to be healthy or obsess over how we look physically. Our priority is serving God and living out the purpose God has for each of us. And we can do a better job of serving with a functioning and healthy body. Take care of yourselves, friends. Get out this sum-mer, and enjoy the waters. Your body will thank you for it. GRILLED CHEESEBURGERS½ tsp. Kosher salt and black pepper1 lb. ground sirloin½ cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese4 thick slices red onion4 split whole wheat buns2 Tbsp. ketchup1 Tbsp. sriracha chile sauce¼ cup premium mayonnaiseFresh spinach leavesSliced picklesIn a bowl, mix sirloin and ½ tsp. salt and pepper. Shape meat into 1/8th-inch patties. In the center of each patty, press your thumb to form a slight indentation. Season meat again with salt and pepper. On a medium-high grill, grill 4 minutes on one side until charred. Flip and cook 2 min-utes on other side. Divide cheese on each patty. Cover and cook 2 minutes until cheese is melted. While cooking, grill onion slices for 4 minutes or until lightly charred and ten-der on both sides. Grill buns 1 minute with cut side down until toasted. In a bowl, combine catsup, chile sauce, and mayonnaise. Top bun bottoms with meat patties, then on-ion slices, spinach, and pickles. Spread bun tops with mayo mixture. Yield: 4 burgers. HOT CHEESEBURGERS WITH PEPPER JACK1 ½ lb. ground sirloin1 cup shredded Pepper Jack cheeseFreshly ground black pepper3 Tbsp. chopped cilantro½ tsp. cuminSalt and freshly ground black peppermayonnaiseLettuce, sliced fresh tomatoes, and jalapenosIn a bowl, combine sirloin with cheese, cilantro, and cumin. Loosely shape into 4 patties that are ¾ -inch thick. Season with salt and pepper. Grill for 10 minutes while turning once over medium heat. Serve on toasted buns. CHEESY BEEFY BURGERS1 beaten egg1 ½ lbs. ground chuck¾ cup fine bread crumbs1/5 tsp. garlic powder2 tsp. smoked paprika¼ tsp. salt and freshly ground black pepperThinly sliced Havarti cheeseIn a bowl, beat egg. Add ground beef, bread crumbs, garlic powder, paprika, and salt and pepper. Form the meat mixture into thin patties. Place cheese in center of patty, leaving ½-inch margin. Place another patty on top of cheese. Press sides together all the way around to form a burger. Grill approx. 5 minutes per side or according to your desired doneness. CHILI GRILLED CHEESES WITH CHUTNEY1 ½ cups shredded sharp cheddar cheese1 ½ cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese1 minced jalapeno pepper2 Tbsp. minced cilantro3 Tbsp. peeled, minced fresh gingerSalt and freshly ground black pepper8 Sour dough bread ½-inch slicesSalted butterIn a large bowl, combine cheeses, jalapeno, cilantro, and ginger. Season with salt and pepper. For the chutney, in a skillet, heat oil and cook onion 5 minutes or until softened. Salt and pepper. Add vinegar, sugar, and ginger. Cook while occasionally stirring for 2 minutes. Add mangoes and red pepper. Cook over high heat for 5 minutes while stirring until mixture resembles chutney. Set aside and al-low to cool. Season with salt to taste. For sandwiches, brush 1 side of all bread slices with but-ter. Arrange buttered side down on grill. Top with cheese mixture and chutney. Put bread slice on sandwich, butter side upward, and grill 3 minutes on each side. Allow to cool 2 minutes and then cut into halves. Yield: 4 MANGO-ONION CHUTNEY 1 Tbsp. olive or canola oil1 minced onionKosher salt and freshly ground black pepper¼ cup white wine vinegar1 Tbsp. sugar1 Tbsp. peeled, minced fresh ginger2 chopped ripe mangoes¼ tsp. crushed red pepperFor the chutney, see above recipe. GRILLED STUFFED DOGSAll beef wienersArtisan mustardCheddar or favorite cheeseSauerkrautLean thin baconStrips of dill pickleCut a long slit lengthwise in a wiener to form a pocket. Keep seam intact. Brush with artisan mustard. Add a thin strip of cheddar cheese and tablespoon of sauerkraut. Spi-ral wrap bacon around wiener and secure with toothpicks. Grill until bacon is brown and crispy. You can also stuff with a thin dill pickle, if desired. CLASSIC GRILLED CHEESE SANDWICHES4 ½-inch thick slices country bread3 Tbsp. garlic olive oil4 oz. thinly sliced smoked mozzarella1 thinly sliced fresh tomato1/3 cup fresh basil leavesFor each grilled cheese, brush 1 side of bread with oil. On the other side of bread, arrange cheese, tomato, basil, and cheese. Top with bread slice and place on a medium-hot grill – oil side down. Brush tops of each sandwich with oil. Cook 5 minutes on each side or until evenly toasted. FRESH WATERMELON SALAD2 cups ½-inch pieces seedless watermelon1 cup 1/2-inch pieces peeled, seedless cucumber4 thinly sliced green onions2 cups trimmed watercress¼ cup chopped fresh cilantro2 Tbsp. balsamic vinegar1 ½ Tbsp. vegetable or olive oil2 tsp. peeled, minced fresh ginger1 ½ tsp. grated lemon peel1 minced garlic cloveIn a bowl, combine watermelon, cucumber, green on-ions, watercress, and cilantro. For dressing, in a bowl, combine vinegar, vegetable oil, fresh ginger, lemon peel, and garlic. Mix well. Pour over watermelon mixture and toss to coat. Chill. TORTELLINI PASTA SALAD 2 cups chopped celery2 pressed cloves garlic1 tsp. chopped basil1 tsp. chopped thyme1 tsp. chopped oregano½ cup premium mayonnaise ½ cup extra virgin olive oil¼ cup red wine vinegar1 ½ tsp. Dijon mustard1 tsp. sugar½ tsp. salt and ground black pepper13 ¾ oz. drained, chopped artichoke hearts 13 oz. drained, chopped sundried tomatoes20 oz. pkg. cheese tortelliniIn a bowl, combine celery, garlic, basil, thyme, oregano, mayonnaise, olive oil, vinegar, mustard, sugar, and salt/pepper. Mix well. Combine chopped artichoke hearts and sundried tomatoes. Gently fold into salad. Mix well. Fold in prepared tortellini. Mix well. Refrigerate. CHERRY TOMATO BAKE 24 oz. cherry tomatoes2 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil1 tsp. salt1 tsp. freshly ground black pepper1/3 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese1/3 cup finely chopped parsleyIn a baking dish, pour olive oil. Add tomatoes and turn to coat thoroughly. Salt and pepper. Sprinkle cheese evenly over top. Top with parsley. Bake tomatoes in a 400-degree oven for 10 minutes or until swelling but not split. Turn oven to broil and cook 2 minutes until tomatoes begin to split and cheese begins to brown. GERMAN POTATO SALAD10 medium potatoes1 lb. diced, cooked bacon1 Tbsp. all-purpose flour¼ cup vinegar¾ cup water¼ cup sugar1 tsp. salt1 chopped onionChopped parsley or chivesIn a pot, boil potatoes with skins. In a skillet, fry bacon until crisp. Remove the bacon with slotted spoon, drain on paper towels, and crumble. To the bacon grease in skillet, add flour, vinegar, water, sugar, salt, and onion. Mix and bring to a boil for 8 minutes. Remove from heat and cool. Into a bowl, pour the vinegar mixture. When potatoes are cool, peel and slice. Gently fold the sliced potatoes and bacon into vinegar mixture. Mix well. Sprinkle top with chopped parsley or chives when serving. TWO BEAN BAKE FOR COOKOUT2 Tbsp. melted, salted butter1 lb. ground sirloin2 Tbsp. prepared mustard2 tsp. cider vinegar1 cup catsup½ cup water1 envelope dry onion soup mix2 lbs. Bush's pork and beans in tomato sauce1 lb. drained light red kidney beansIn a skillet, melt butter. Brown meat and crumble. Drain any fat off. In a bowl, combine mustard, vinegar, catsup, water, and dry onion soup mix. Gently fold in beef and beans. Mix well. Pour into a 2 ½-quart baking dish. Bake in a 400-degree oven for 30-40 minutes or until bubbly. CANDIED DILL PICKLES3 cups sugar2/3 cup cider or tarragon vinegar2 Tbsp. mixed pickling spices1-quart dill picklesIn a saucepan, combine sugar, vinegar, and pickling spices. Bring to a boil for 1 minute, stirring until sugar is dissolved. Remove from heat. Drain jarred pickles, and discard juice in which they were packed. Cut pickles in ¼-inch slices and repack in the empty jar. Strain out pick-ling spices from sugar syrup. Pour warm syrup over pick-les. Store in refrigerator for 7 days. MUD HENS½ cup softened salted butter1 cup sugar1 whole egg2 egg yolks1 ½ cup all-purpose flour1 tsp. baking powder¼ tsp. salt1 cup chopped pecans½ cup semi-sweet chocolate pieces2 beaten egg whites1 cup brown sugarIn a mixer bowl, cream butter and sugar. Beat in the whole egg and 2 egg yolks. Beat in flour, baking powder, and salt. Mix well. Spread batter into a well butter greased and floured 9 x 13 pan. Sprinkle top evenly with nuts, chocolate pieces, and marshmallows. In a mixer bowl, beat egg whites until stiff. Fold in the brown sugar. Spread over top of cake. Bake in a preheated 350-degree oven for 30-40 minutes. Cool and cut into bars. Left, this vintage Two-Bean Bake recipe calls for beef and two types of canned beans. Above left, Hot Burgers with Pepper-Jack Cheese gives you heat and kick. Above right, Classic Grilled Cheese sandwiches on the grill. And at right, For cookouts, simple cookies are best - like a stack of Old Fashioned Peanut Butter cookies. Summer time, and the food it is grillin’ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - B1Sports By Brian PittsDavie Enterprise Record Davie tabbed one of the hottest young coaches in the area to fill the position as head coach of the boys basketball program. Josh Pittman, who guided Winston-Salem Prep to 24 straight wins last season and has a .677 winning percentage in his seven-year career, was named the Davie coach on May 26. “From talking with friends, I heard about the Davie job com-ing open, and it just felt right to go in and interview and just put my name in the hat and see what happens,” Pittman, 45, said. “With God’s blessing, everything turned out OK.”As an AAU coach with Team/BOND, Pittman has coached a handful of Davie players in recent years. “A few of my AAU kids played at Davie - Owen McCormick and Michael Walton,” he said. “And I Burton exploded onto the scene in ‘82 New coach a proven winner dealt with Brooks (Johnson) and Landon King a little bit as well.”The Winston-Salem native had a remarkable career as a player at East Forsyth High and UNC Asheville before a 17-year run as a professional player overseas. He hung up his sneakers in 2014 and took a year off to figure out what he wanted to do in his next career - teaching and coaching. His coaching career began at Carter G. Woodson, a charter school in Winston, in 2015. “I was substitute teaching while I was working on my (teaching) license and my master’s degree,” he said. His first Woodson Eagles squad went 14-16 in 2015-16. “We start-ed off a little slow because we had kids who were just learning to play,” he said. There was a dramatic turn-around in 2016-17 as Woodson Please See Coach - Page B5 By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Kannapolis had already bagged two wins over Rowan County when Mocksville’s Sr. Legion baseball team hosted the Towelers on May 29. By Brian PittsDavie Enterprise Record Going into the Mocksville Sr. Legion’s second game of the day on May 28, Post 174 was 0-4, had gotten outscored by 32 runs and there was no compelling reason to believe anything would change against Hamlet. Concord hammered Mocksville 17-1 in the first game of the day; then Hamlet drubbed Concord. Believe it or not, Mocksville beat Hamlet going away, 12-5, the win snapping a nine-game losing streak dating to last summer. “Hamlet beat Concord so bad it was unreal,” coach Charles Kurfees said. “They had a couple of major league scouts here look-ing at a boy from Hamlet. They are good, but we found a way to beat them. They are really good. I was shocked.”The game, though, could not have started much worse for Mocksville. After the first two batters were retired in the top of the first, Hamlet used a homer, an error, a walk and a double to stack up a 3-0 lead. At this point, the season’s running score was an unsightly 55-21. But then it was as if Mocksville had a bite of Snickers, and it turned its frown upside down. It answered Hamlet’s three-run first with a three-spot of its own in the bottom half. Parker Aderhold, Blake Little and Dan Loyd all scored on passed balls to tie the game. Hamlet regained the edge in the second, scoring two more two-out runs. Making matters worse, Mocksville was stranding baserunners. In the second, Parker Simmons and Christian Brown had singles but were left on the bases. In the third, Ryan Thiel, Jaylin Gwyn and Lawrence Hancock loaded the bases, only to see their team come up empty. The explosion that Mocksville desperately needed came in the fourth. After Simmons, Logan Allen and Brown all walked, Aderhold stroked a single. Then came two-run doubles from Little and Loyd. The top three batters in the order - Aderhold (2-3), Little (2-4, two RBIs, double) and Loyd (2-3, two RBIs, double, walk) - com-bined for six hits and five RBIs. Gwyn (2-4) and Simmons (2-2, two RBIs, two walks) also had multiple hits. Brown went 1-3 with a walk. By rolling up 11 hits and putting up crooked numbers in the first, fourth and sixth, Mocksville Legion stops slide Whitaker cuffs Kannapolis Cole Whitaker and Mocks-ville - get this - won convincingly over Kannapolis, 9-4. It was Post 174’s second straight win after an 0-4 start. “Now we’ve won two games and we beat two darn good teams, too,” coach Charles Kurfees said. Whitaker came out of the blue with a six-inning mound perfor-mance. Kurfees gave the ball to the Davie sophomore, and the kid more than answered the bell. It was an awesome sight after he only pitched 12 innings in nine relief appearances for the varsity War Eagles this spring. Assistant coach Todd Bumgar-ner said he’s confident Whitaker is going to be a mainstay for Davie in 2023 and 2024. Kurfees was blown away by his performance. It was By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Third in a series on the 40-year anniversary of the 1982 Mocks-ville Legion baseball team. After about 10 days of practice, the 1982 Mocksville players were jacked up for the return of Ameri-can Legion baseball at Rich Park. But no. Mother Nature had a smirk on her face.The May 20 opener at 7:45 against visiting Lexington was rained out. Four days later, a road game against Concord was rained out. Two days later, a road game against Rowan County was rained out. Two days later, a home game against Statesville was rained out. The skies finally cleared and Jeff Burton exploded onto the scene. Consider the Burton mo-ments in the first 15 days of the season: • Two home runs against Lex-ington, along with getting the win in relief. • A home run against Thom-asville, and also seven dominant innings on the mound. • A homer against Lexington and a nine-inning performance on the bump to lift his record to 3-0 through five Mocksville games. • Another homer, this time against Mooresville. Burton not only was the win-ning pitcher for the first three Mocksville wins, he had four dingers in six games. This was awesome. Burton’s one and only season in Mocksville produced many mem-ories, including a present that was waiting for the players when they showed up for the first practice. The present was silver and green, leaning against the dugout fence. Please See ‘82 - Page B2 Please See Cuffs - Page B4 Please See Stops - Page B4 Umpire Brett Stowe looks in as Blake Little slides into home in a Senior Legion game. - Photo by Regina Whitaker Davie’s new coach, Josh Pittman, has 122 wins in 7 years. The old grandstand was full as always for an American Legion game in 1982 B2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 Continued From Page B1“When we got to the first practice, there was a row of Easton bats,” said Burton, who clubbed 12 homers in 1982 for West Forsyth and won Central Piedmont Con-ference Player of the Year. “I remember them - they were silver with green letters. There were probably 15 of them. I remember going to the first practice and I was hitting them over the light poles. Coach (Ron) Morgan says: ‘Jeff, I never knew you had that kind of power.’ I said: ‘Well, I didn’t either. New bats and new balls do great things.’”Easton’s B5 Pro Big Bar-rel bat, which was dubbed the “Green Easton,” was born in 1978. “If you had a Green Easton, you had something,” shortstop/leadoff man Barry Whitlock said. “Daddy (Sonny Kurfees) and James Hugh (Edwards) went over to Bocock’s (Bo-cock-Stroud Company in Winston-Salem) and they bought all those bats,” current Mocksville coach Charles Kurfees said. “Well, somehow or other they broke right in the middle of the season. Bocock’s couldn’t get any more bats. Well, they were raising hell and said we’ve got to have bats. The handles have broken on these. I know they got bats from North Davidson High School. I don’t know where else they got them from, but they got a bunch of bats so they could finish out the season.”Nine days after the origi-nal opener was washed out, Mocksville debuted on a Saturday night at Lexing-ton’s Holt-Moffitt Field. In the sixth inning, No. 3 batter Burton and Mike Wilcox blasted back-to-back mam-moth homers against Marty Phillips. Burton’s fourth hit of the game was a towering homer in the ninth. Whitlock rapped three hits, including a triple, as Mocksville romped 11-5. Burton took over on the mound in the sixth and blanked Lexington over the final four innings. “You’d want Burton on your team,” Kurfees said. “He would fight a rattle-snake.”“I remember seeing Jeff pitch for the first time,” said pitcher Dan Riddle, who has lived in Raleigh since 1988. “He was not a big guy, but now he threw hard. He real-ly put a lot into his pitches. I remember the grunt he used to have.”Burton, who lives in Midway, can distinctly re-member the first homer. “We were behind and we had two runners on with no outs,” he said. “I called timeout and went and talk-ed to Morgan. I said: ‘You want me to bunt?’ He said: ‘Why?’ I said: ‘To get the guys over.’ He said: ‘No, I want you to swing.’ About two pitches later, that’s when I hit the first home run.”“He must have hit it over that left-field bank,” Whitlock said. “He was righthanded and he didn’t hit to opposite field - I’ll tell you that.”Evening thunderstorms wiped out games against Mooresville and Statesville, and after being idle for seven days, Mocksville’s second game was against Joe Ferebee’s juggernaut - Rowan County - at Newman Park. Rowan players are taught from their first day that winning is sewn into their uniforms, and they smacked Mocksville 11-6 as ace lefty Tim Kirk racked up 10 strikeouts. Rowan catch- er Tony Myers slammed a three-run homer in the first to set the tone. Wilcox and Steve Hardister had two hits each in defeat. “That dang Tim Kirk,” said Hardister, who has lived in Roanoke, Va., since 1989. “He was a hecku-va pitcher. He proved it. He went on and played at (North) Carolina, and I think he played with Pittsburgh and maybe the Braves in the minors. He had this tailing, cut fastball that would come in the middle of the plate and cut off the outside of the plate. Then he would jam you with a slider to the inside. So he would keep you guessing.”Two days later in the much-anticipated home opener, Mocksville held a 3-1 lead through six behind two-hit efforts from cleanup man Wilcox, Burton and No. 7 stick Scott Vogler. Whitlock had all three runs. But in the seventh, Moores-ville’s Tim Horton turned the game upside down with a grand slam. Mocksville would lose 7-3, ruining ex-ceptional defensive outings by Whitlock and catcher Kenny Riddle. Mocksville was 1-2, but a serious surge would begin the next night against visit-ing Thomasville, which was coached by Davie County native Dub Potts, who was the architect of the Tommies in 1977. He guided Thomas-ville for seven years before moving back home and beginning his Davie County education career in 1984. “It was exciting, espe-cially when you got the opportunity to come to Da-vie County where they had good fan support,” Potts, 73, said. “Mocksville and Rowan were the best two places to go. We would almost as soon go away to play as we would stay home because we didn’t have much of a crowd. And Mocksville would pay us to come over here and play them. We worked that out pretty quickly because I was pretty much a one-man show at Thomasville - and Thomasville’s a football town - and Mocksville had a complete organization.”Burton hurled seven strong innings and Whit-lock collected three hits as Mocksville cruised 9-1 over Thomasville. Johnson worked the last two innings in relief, and Wilcox and No. 6 batter John “Boomer” Bivins provided two hits apiece. Two days after going seven innings, rubber-armed Burton went nine at home against Lexington. He shook off solo homers by Duane Hughes and Keith Wilson and ran his record to 3-0. As if that wasn’t enough, Burton launched a three-run homer in the fifth as Mocksville cruised 11-4. Todd Cassidy had two hits, Randy Taylor had a two-run hit during a six-run seventh, and Whitlock, third baseman Hardister and right ‘82 ... Please See Legion ‑ Page B3 Rusty Daniel takes a mighty swing. Lawn chairs pack the hill with lawn chairs to follow the return of American Legion baseball in ‘82. Coach Ron Morgan throws batting practice. Dan Riddle congratulates Steve Hardister for his home run. At right, Lefty Stewart hits during practice. It’s a home-run swing by Mike Wilcox. Scott Vogler records an out at first base. John “Boomer” Bivins connects on a pitch. The coaches were Morgan (left) and Dan Marion. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 ‑ B3 Continued From Page B1fielder Bivins shined in the field. Burton’s star kept rising one night later at Moores-ville, where he slammed his fourth homer in six games to help Mocksville win without strain, 8-2. Wilcox doubled and tripled. But the biggest offensive game belonged to Whitlock, who had three hits, including a bases-loaded double. “Through high school, Big League and Ameri-can Legion, I didn’t play with any better than Barry,” Bivins said. “He was a cut-up, but not once the game started.”The winning pitcher at Mooresville was D. Riddle, who was still throwing in the eighth when the game was stopped by rain. After graduating from Davie in 1983, the 6-2 righthander played at UNC Charlotte in 1984-85. “I really didn’t know anything in high school,” he said. “It was grab it and throw it as hard as you can. After (playing at Charlotte for two years), I didn’t see my baseball career matur-ing, so I made the decision to quit that and move on to academics (as a Computer Science major). Overall it was a great experience. My sophomore year was the year we had an immense amount of talent. Nine guys on that roster played in the minors, two made the Legion ... majors (Stu Cole and Jeff Johnson) and two guys end-ed up umpiring in the majors (Fieldin Culbreth and Eddie Bean). So 11 people off that roster made it to the pros. We were stacked.”D. Riddle spent two summers with Mocksville. There was one wacky, sur-real night when he struck out 18 and walked 12. “I must have thrown 250 pitches,” he said. “I threw a split finger and at the time I didn’t know how to control it. It was hard to hit. UNC Charlotte came to see me that night. I don’t know what their take on that was. At that age, I’m like: ‘Hey, I had 18 strikeouts.’ But their opinion was probably: ‘Yeah, but good gosh, you had 12 walks. You can’t do that at the college level.’”After six games, Mocks-ville’s offense was hum-ming, with six batters hitting north of .400. But Post 174 was subdued by Rowan arms Terry Goodman and Randy Bell. Whitlock and Wilcox banged out two hits, but Rowan was too much, winning 7-2. On the bright side, John-son, a Davie sophomore, blanked the first-place op-ponent in front of a large home crowd for the first four innings. He had a two-hitter going, but Rowan seized control in a five-run fifth, an avalanche that was aided by Mocksville errors. “JJ was very deceptive,” D. Riddle said. “When he took the mound, he came right at you. I mean, he dared you to hit him, and he had a good breaking pitch.”Mocksville recovered quickly. One night later at Finch Field in Thomasville, it was Hardister’s turn to shine. The other stalwart from West Forsyth pitched marvelously and also pro-vided the offensive energy in a 4-3, 10-inning win. “I was pretty pumped for Legion ball,” Hardister said. “I was really tickled to get to come. Me and Jeff would get together and carpool for practice and games. We were both working summer jobs, so we would finish work, meet up and drive out to the park. There was a sense of family. Everybody was welcomed in. The Whit-lock family was really great to me. I remember going to Miller’s after games - open face steak sandwich with fries and a Cheerwine.”In the second, Bivins knocked in Wilcox. Hardis-ter carried that 1-0 lead into the seventh, when Thom-asville rallied to tie. In the ninth, Cassidy and Burton set the table with singles. The next batter was Hard-ister, who showcased a flair for the dramatic on more than one occasion in ‘82. He blasted a two-run double to right-center to put the visitors ahead 3-1 lead. In the last of the ninth, Potts’ club fought back with three hits, including a homer, to force another tie at 3. If it weren’t for a nifty double play, the Tommies likely walk it off. With two outs in the 10th, Burton and Wil-cox reached on errors. The fifth batter, Hardister, came through again with a hit that plated Burton with the deci-sive run. D. Riddle got the win in relief, and outfielder Lefty Stewart contributed by making a diving catch in the eighth. “All those boys were good that came from out of the county to play,” Bivins said. “We didn’t know them from Adam’s housecat.”Hardister was a football/basketball/baseball athlete at West Forsyth and made all-conference twice in base- ball. After the summer of ‘82, Hardister played college baseball. He spent two years at Montreat, then played on the first two teams in UNC Asheville history (1985-86). He was a third baseman/first baseman/pitcher for the Bulldogs. “I had a really good junior year,” he said. “I thought I was going to be the next Ron Cey. My senior year wasn’t too good hitting. I did a lot of pitching, but by that point, my major league dream had vanished.”“Steve was always a clutch hitter,” said Chris Mackie, a former longtime Sports Editor of the Clem-mons Courier. “He was great.” After pulling out the tense battle at Thomasville, Mocksville was rolling, a 4-1 stretch and a 10.8-runs-per-game attack vaulting it into second place in the sev-en-team Southern Division. And things were about to get even better. “The practices were tough,” Bivins said. “They were not a piece of cake. So I think by the time we went through all of those practices together, we were gelling as a team. “One thing they’d do, James Hugh or somebody would be hitting at home plate and as a fielder you were at the backstop - nail-ing fungos as hard as they could hit it, knocking the (crap) out of the ball.” Next week: Part IV. 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 BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT The BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT- An AFFORDABLE marketing choice! To Advertise On This Page Call: FORSYTH County (336) 766-4126 • DAVIE County (336) 751-2120 Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash 1380 Yadkinville Road • Mocksville, NC (Across from Lowes Home Improvement on Hwy. 601) New Wash Equipment! • Best Quality Soaps & Waxes • Best Vacuums in Town • Car Care Vending Research the Effects of Pollen on Your Car’s Paint. 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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. B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 Continued From Page B1 overcame its second five-er-ror game of the day. Coming in, Mocksville was giving up 16.2 runs per game. Darren Shore stopped the bleeding with a six-in-ning effort on the hill. He only permitted four hits, one earned run and offset three walks with eight strikeouts. After surrendering five runs in the first two innings, he settled down and held Ham-let to one hit from the third through the sixth, a strong performance that dropped his ERA to 1.90 across two starts. In his first mound appear- Continued From page B1the kind of showing Mocks-ville direly needed to back up No. 1 arm Darren Shore in the rotation. “Cole was tough,” Kurfees said. “I mean, Kan-napolis has got a good team, but Cole pitched his butt off. It was great to see him pitch like that. If he can keep pitching like that all summer and get better as we go ... because he didn’t get a lot of innings during high school. He’s proved that he can pitch. Look at Kannapolis. Their 1-6 guys are as good as it gets, and he was able to mow ‘em down. “Their first batter hits one off the dang wall; it didn’t start off like it was going to be a very good night. Cole got his confidence built up and he competed. He knew he had to compete, and he did, and we played good behind him.”Logan Allen paced the offense with two hits. “We really worked hard yesterday before we played,” Kurfees said. “We put in a real good practice and we competed our butts off.”Rowan 19, Mocksville 7A home game against Rowan County on June 1 was reminiscent of Mocks-ville’s first four games when it gave up 52 runs to Mat-thews, Randolph and Con-cord. There was simply noth-ing Mocksville could do as Rowan scored at least one run in all seven at-bats while collecting 20 hits and taking Cuffs ... Stops ... The first four games were dismal for the Mocksville Sr. Legion baseball team. Post 174 lost by 10, 12, 14 and 16 runs. Even though it wound up being lopsided, Mocksville competed hard in the season opener, a 13-3, six-inning home loss to Matthews on May 21. With Darren Shore throwing well, Mocksville trailed 4-2 after five innings. But the floodgates opened in the Matthews sixth, when the visitors erupted for nine runs. Mocksville’s chances were doomed by four errors. Shore gave up four runs in five innings, but only two were earned. Five of Mat-thews’ seven runs against reliever Jackson Sink were unearned. “We played really good for five innings,” coach Charles Kurfees said. “There was a lot of excite-ment. Man, it really felt like the old days. It was a lot of fun. There was a decent crowd. Some of those kids had never played in front of a crowd that big.”Lawrence Hancock, a sophomore from Davie, was the offensive leader with two hits in three at-bats, including a double. Post 174 got one hit from Blake Little (1-3), Dan Loyd (1-3, double), Logan Allen (1-1, double), Parker Simmons (1-2, walk) and Cooper Bliss (1-2, double, walk). Matthews doubled Mocksville in hits (14-7) and made zero errors. Two Losses To RandolphOne night later, Mocks-ville got trounced at Ran-dolph County, 17-5. Three nights later at home, Mocks-ville absorbed another beat-ing from Randolph, 18-4. Kurfees considers Ran-dolph as close to unbeatable as a Legion team can be. “They may not lose a game,” he said. “I’m sur-prised the fence is still standing the way they hit it. They are pretty durn stacked, and they don’t even have the Randleman (High) kids yet. Randleman’s cen-ter fielder is going to play for them and he’s supposed to be the real deal.”In the first meeting, Lit-tle (2-4) and Loyd (2-3) had two hits each to pace Mocksville’s 10-hit attack. Getting one hit were Parker Aderhold (1-3), Allen (1-2), Nick Howell (1-1), Major Bryant (1-1), Jaylin Gwyn (1-2) and Christian Brown (1-1). Hancock was walked three times. Mocksville did not get on the board until it was 17-0, scoring four of its runs in the seventh. Randolph, meanwhile, piled up 15 hits. “I saw the third- or fourth-longest home run I’ve ever seen,” Kurfees said after the home loss. “They are good. I can’t say any-thing bad about my boys.”Assistant coach Todd Bumgarner added: “It’s been a tough deal; we’re young and inexperienced. We’re trying to see who can do what. It doesn’t help that Randolph is freaking loaded.”Concord 17, Mocksville 1Mocksville fell to 0-4 and watched its losing streak expand to nine dating to 2021 in a home game on May 28. This was the first of two games on the day. “They beat us like a drum,” Kurfees said of Concord. Mocksville had more er-rors (five) than hits (four) as it allowed 11 unearned runs. Aderhold (1-3), Shore (1-2), Gwyn (1-1) and Allen (1-2, walk) had the home team’s hits. advantage of four errors. “They rolled out twen-ty-some players, and we weren’t very good tonight,” Kurfees said. “We’re going to keep doing the best we can do.”Most of Mocksville’s seven hits came from Parker Aderhold (2-5, two RBIs, double) and Dan Loyd (2-2, walk, hit by pitch). Blake Little (1-5, two RBIs, dou-ble), Ryan Thiel (1-2, two walks) and Christian Brown (1-2, walk) had one each. DC 5, Mocksville 1In the Southern Division opener at Davidson County on June 3, Post 174 never had a chance - even with Shore on the hill, even with an error-free defense. Davidson scored four runs - all with two outs - in the first inning, and Mocksville (2-6 overall) never threatened to erase the deficit. Shore was tough his last four innings, scattering four hits and only allowing one run. In the second, Jackson Sink (single) and Parker Simmons (walk) reached, but Mocksville came away empty-handed. In the fourth, Blake Little and Ryan Thiel had hits, but again Mocks-ville couldn’t push anything across. Its lone run came in the sixth, when Thiel walked and scored on Sink’s double. Mocksville had five hits, including two from Sink (2-3). Getting one hit were Little (1-3, walk), Thiel (1-2, walk) and Lawrence Hancock (1-2, walk). ance of the season, Little shut the door in the seventh. “Shore did well,” Kurfees said of the Starmount junior. “He is a bulldog. And our catcher made a big differ-ence in that game. Thiel (a junior from Mt. Tabor) really kept Darren focussed. He’s got the job there.”Notes: This was Mocks-ville’s first win since a 12-4 decision over Kannapolis on July 5, 2021. “Getting that first win was good,” Kurfees said. ... A daring Hamlet runner stole home against the righthanded Shore. “I kept telling them he’s going to steal home,” Kurfees said. “Bam - he was in there.” Legion off to rough start Upcoming Games Wednesday, June 8Mocksville Sr. Legion baseball at High Point at 6Mocksville Jr. Legion at West Forsyth Green at 5:30Mocksville Jr. Legion at West Forsyth Blue at 7 Thursday, June 9Mocksville Sr. Legion baseball at home vs. Davidson at 7Friday, June 10Mocksville Jr. Legion baseball at home vs. Davidson at 7Sunday, June 12Mocksville Sr. Legion baseball at Greensboro at 7Monday, June 13Mocksville Jr. Legion baseball at Kannapolis at 7Tuesday, June 14Mocksville Jr. Legion baseball at Davidson County at 7Wednesday, June 15Mocksville Jr. Legion baseball at West Rowan at 7 Parker Aderhold hustles down the line for the Mocksville Senior Legion. At right, Blake Little slides on a close play at home. Little runs down the line, then has a chat with coach Todd Bumgarner. At right, Cole Whitaker winds up for a pitch. - Photos by Regina Whitaker Whitaker fields a bunt. Catcher Ryan Thiel congratulates his pitcher. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - B5 Continued From Page B1went 23-5, losing in the state semifinals. “The second year I had some kids trans-fer in and the program took off,” he said. After losing six seniors to graduation, Pittman had to rebuild in 2017-18. The Eagles still managed a win-ning record at 16-12. “I still thought it was a great year because we were young,” he said. “We only had one senior that year. Most of them were freshmen and sophomores. We ended up pulling off some big wins. We ended the year winning four out of five.”Pittman decided to take a new job in 2018. He took over at Lexington High and the Yellowjackets went 18-10 in 2018-19, tying for sec-ond in the conference. That season ended in the second round of the 2-A playoffs. They took things up a notch in 2019-20, going 22-6 and tying for first in the league. Lexington bounced North Surry and Hibriten in the playoffs. Mountain Heritage stopped Lexington in the third round. Everyone played a con-densed schedule in 2020-21 because of COVID. An already short schedule got even shorter for Lexington, which finished 4-6. “We had a lot of freshmen and soph-omores on varsity,” Pittman said. “I felt like we were go-ing to close out strong, but we had a COVID case and they shut down the season.”Pittman moved to Win-ston-Salem Prep in 2021, and his amazing coach-ing success continued. The Phoenix went 25-3 and By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Caleb Martin’s first sea-son with the Miami Heat came to an end when Boston beat Miami in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference finals, but Martin hopes 2021-22 was the first of several sea-sons in South Beach. “I want to be here (in Miami),” he said on May 31 in his exit interview. “I got better here. I feel like my team and staff believe in me and feel I’ll get better here.”Martin’s third year in the NBA was a feel-good story. In August he was cut after two seasons with the Charlotte Hornets, forcing the Martin twins to go their separate ways for the first time in their lives. (Cody Martin averaged 7.7 points, 4.0 rebounds and 2.5 assists for the Hornets this season.). A few weeks later, Caleb signed with Miami on a two-way contract. All he did was become one of the NBA’s best play-ers to ever play on a two-way contract. He did so well that Miami converted him to a standard contract in February. He averaged 9.2 points, Benefit Golf TournamentThe second benefit golf tournament for Karl “Krazy Legs” Swartz will be June 17 at The Revival Golf Course at the Crescent in Salisbury. The cost is $260 for a four-some. Lunch will be provided at noon with tee time at 1:30. Donations are welcome to help raise money for Swartz’s power chair. Contact Randall at 336-970-3350. Davie Girls Basketball CampThe Davie girls basketball camp will be July 25-28 from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. for kindergarten-eighth graders. The cost will be $75 per camper if registered by June 25; $100 after. Register on the Davie Schools website and click “buy event tickets.” For more information, contact coach Lindsey Adams at adamsl@davie.k12.nc.us. Davie Soccer CampThe Davie soccer camp will run July 18-20 from 8-11:30 a.m. for rising third-eighth graders, girls and boys. The cost is $60 iby July 1; $80 at the door. For more information, con-tact coach Corbin Kopetzky at kopetzkyc@davie.k12.nc.us. Davie Wrestling CampThe Davie wrestling camp will be held July 18-22 from 8 a.m.-noon with two divisions - third-fifth graders in one and sixth-12th graders in another. The cost is $75 if you preregister and $100 at the door. For more information, contact coach Perry Long at longp@davie.k12.nc.us. Davie Softball CampThe Davie softball camp will be June 13-14 from 6-8:30 p.m. The cost is $50 until May 4; $75 after May 3. Register on the Davie County Schools website by clicking “buy event tickets.” Walk-up registration will be available. For more information, contact Nathan Handy at handyn@davie.k12.nc.us. 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 Losing weight is about more than just dieting. It’s about making changes to your lifestyle that result in a better, healthier version of the amazing person you already are. At Family Care Center of Mocksville, we work with you to help you create a plan that is sustainable and realistic, offering support and guidance every step of the way. Put your trust in us. You’ll be glad you did. Family Care Center Kaleah Hendren, FNP-C 336.753.0800 fccmocksville.com Weight management?We can help Coach ... Sports Briefsreached the 1-A semifinals, where they lost 72-66 to eventual state champion Hayesville, which squeaked out the title game in over-time against Chatham Char-ter. Pittman’s seven-year re-cord is 122-58. “At Winston-Salem Prep, everything was great,” he said. “We made a historic run, especially with a lot of people telling me that it wasn’t a great job to take. I thought if I could have kids just buy-in, play a certain style and adjust to the per-sonnel that we have that we would be OK. The kids did those things and it was a perfect run for us.”Why did Pittman leave a juggernaut program? There are several reasons. “I’ve always heard noth-ing but great things about Davie,” he said. “It’s one high school in the county, so you don’t really have to worry about chasing kids and people trying to recruit your kids after you put the work in and stuff like that. So it was an amazing op-portunity.”Pittman lives in Lex-ington and speaks fluent Spanish. “I think I’ll teach a class of African American Stud-ies and I’ll help out with the ESL Department (En-glish as a Second Language) because I’m licensed in Spanish and ESL,” he said. “Being overseas and playing in those Spanish-speaking countries, I kind of picked up the language on my own and self-taught myself to read and write and speak the language. Then when I came home, it was just sitting down and passing the Spanish practice and the ESL practices.”The War Eagles went 13-11 last year under Bruce Wallace, marking their fifth straight winning season. But Za’haree Maddox, Zymere Hudson and Blake Walser were seniors, and people are expecting a decline in 2022-23. Pittman is well aware of the challenge he’s facing. “I know we lost nine se-niors,” he said. “I’m trying to get locked in with Davie and get in the gym when the dead period is over, so we can get to work and start developing our skills and get prepared for this upcoming year. I want to see what we’re doing and what we need to work on and make sure we’re extremely com-petitive this first year. Get these guys accustomed to playing big minutes in big games and then from there take off. “A lot of people are tell-ing me we’re going to have to rebuild and all that. Hey, it is what it is. I trust in God to handle everything and I trust in the kids to buy-in. I’ve talked to a couple of kids and they’re already excited. No matter what, I think we’re going to learn, we’re going to get devel-oped and we’re going to compete. And to me that’s the most important thing, and then winning will take care of itself.”Caleb Martin happy with progress in Miami 3.8 rebounds and 1.0 steals - all career highs - across 60 regular-season games, in-cluding 12 starts. His shoot-ing percentages were solid - 50.7 percent on field goals, 41 percent from 3-point range and 76 percent from the foul line. His biggest highlight was scoring 28 points, hitting six 3s and grabbing eight rebounds in a Dec. 8 game against Milwaukee. Martin did play a smaller role in the postseason, which was not unexpected. In 17 playoff appearances, he averaged 4.5 points and 2.2 rebounds in 12 minutes of playing time. Now Martin is an im-pending free agent; free agency beings July 1. He sure hopes Miami signs him to a new deal. Since he quickly became a fan favorite and constantly drew praise from coach Erik Spoelstra, it would be surprising if he’s not back in Miami in October. “I feel like I can be one of those guys that fluctuates whatever a team needs from me,” he said. “If you need a guy to come off the bench, bring energy and do that stuff, I can do that. I feel like I can step in and start. It doesn’t matter what the role is and what a team needs from me, I feel like I can fill that void. My game has expanded shooting-wise, being more efficient and consistent. I feel like I took big steps and I feel like I’m only going to take larger steps going forward. “I feel like once I got here, I knew pretty quickly that these are my type of guys - mentally, the work ethic and to every aspect in this organization. (Miami) is the place for me. That’s what it’s felt like since I got here.” Tell us what you think with a letter to the editor Details Page 2 Josh Pittman is coming off his best year, a 25-win, state-semifinal run at Winston-Salem Prep. He played pro ball for 17 years. B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 By Carrie MillerDavie Senior Services The Davie County Silver Spirits basketball team has been participating in Senior Games since 1995.For 27 years, Sue Allen, Rachel Howard, and their teammates Alice Barnette, Vickie Frye, Lois Green, Charlotte Miller, Mary Newton, and Candy New-som with coach, Vanessa Carter, have stayed togeth-er to play basketball for your Davie County Senior Games. The Silver Spirits have played not only at the lo-cal level, but at the North Carolina State Finals in Ra-leigh where they have won over 20 gold medals. Over the years, these ladies have given demonstrations for college basketball games including a special demon-stration at a Charlotte Hor-nets game. This team has also won the National Se-nior Games gold and won gold in the Huntsman’s World Games in Utah. This year, the Davie County Silver Spirits filled the Brock Gym on May 23 at 6 p.m. for a game of 3 on 3 basketball against Pied-mont Plus.the Davie County Silver Spirits is only one team. It is the desire of the Silver Spirits to encourage other senior aged adults, men and women, to participate in the basketball event at the local games. To encourage others, Dr. George Kimberly enjoys a game of table tennis under the eye of judge,Mike Garner. At right, Frosty Prim and Eddie Hubbard Jr. play a round. they share this quote: “We don’t stop playing because we grow old. We grow old because we stop playing.” To learn more about the basketball team, register to attend the Basketball and Softball Team Interest Meeting scheduled for Sept. 28 at 2 p.m. at the Senior Services Brock Campus.On Tuesday, May 24, the Davie Senior Games Table Tennis players came out to play games of singles, dou-bles, and mixed doubles. Competition was all around and balls were flying every-where. To officially close the 2022 Senior Games Sea-son, the final event was the Senior Games Closing Cer-emony and SilverArts Fol-lies. The event started with an art show in the multipurpose room at Senior Services where each person could see the details of the artwork created by the Silver Artists. Each person who entered the room had the chance to vote for their favorite piece – anything from quilting to acrylic painting to wood-carving to literary pieces. The winner of the Best in Show voted on by her peers was Doris Hinsdale with her flower garden handstitched quilt. Following the voting, the Davie Dazzler Cheerleading Squad performed their cheer and danced to the song “Roll Back the Rug (and Dance)” by Scooter Lee. The Davie Davie Senior Games a ‘blast’ in 2022 Dazzlers are excited to rep-resent Davie County at the state finals this Fall. If you are 50 or better and interest-ed in cheerleading, register for the upcoming Cheer-leading Team Interest Meet-ing on Monday, Sept. 12 at 4 p.m. at the Senior Services Brock Campus.Winners• Basketball Team: first, (75-79), Silver Spirits.• Table Tennis: Sin-gles: (60-64), first, Carolyn Sloan; (65-69), first, Frosty Prim; (70-74), first, Alice Monk, Lester Key; second, Karen Umberger, Wayne Randleman; third, Pat Fos-ter; (75-79), first, Barbara Chapman, Eddie Hubbard Jr.; (80-84), first, Judy Col-lette; (85-89), first, Kay Lloyd; (90-94), first, George Kimberly.• Table Tennis Doubles: (65-69), first, Kathy Cor-natzer & Pat Foster; (70-74), first, Alice Monk & Karen Umberger. • Tennis Mixed Doubles: (70-74), first, Karen Um-berger & Dan Rhoads; sec-ond, Alice Monk & Wayne Randleman; third, Judy Col-lette & Lester Key.• Cheerleading: first, Da-vie Dazzlers.As one can tell, this Se-nior Games season has been nothing but a blast. From Bermuda Run, to Mocks-ville, to Cooleemee, your Davie County seniors are staying active, healthy, and loving the fun.Davie County Senior Services would like to thank the Senior Games Ambas-sadors: Alice Barnette, Bud Stroud, Roni Barney, Mary Hall, Lois Green, Peggy Ev-ans, Ted Freshwater, Vickie Frye, Sandi Winston, and John Bullins for leading the Senior Games each year. Thank you to the fol-lowing locations for allow-ing and supporting Senior Games: RISE Indoor Sports Complex, Davie Coun-ty Recreation and Parks, Creekside Lanes, Davie County High School, Ad-venture Landing, Charlotte Motor Speedway, Coolee-mee Recreation Center, Ber-muda Village, Camp Man-na, Davie Family YMCA, Davie County Public Li-brary, and Pudding Ridge Golf Course. Special thank you to Davie County High School, Food Lion 601 South, and Davie Construc-tion for sharing volunteers. Senior Services hopes each and every one of you 50 or better will make plans to join them next season for the 30th year of Da-vie County Senior Games.Check out several upcom-ing Senior Games and Sil-verArts activities such as Art Classes, Quilting, Ping Davie Dazzlers: Sandi Winston, Hazel Dillard, Kay Stevenson, and Ina Beavers cheer for the Davie County Senior Games Cheerleading event Davie County Silver Spirits in action at the basketball tournament event held at the Brock Gym! Doris Hinsdale wins Best of Show, chosen by her peers, for her hand stitched quilt. Kay Lloyd and Judy Collette pose for a photo af- ter an intense table tennis match. Pong Fun Day, Grands Cornhole, Senior Writing Group, Bocce Clinic, Bowl-ing Lunch, and more.If you have any ques-tions, contact Senior Ser-vices at 336-753-6230. Davie County Silver Spirits basketball team with coach, Vanessa Carter. Kathy Cornatzer, Pat Foster, Alice Monk, and Karen Umberger all smile with their gold medals after playing Table Tennis Doubles. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - B7 Brandon A. Durham of Mocksville is an All-Amer-ican member of the archery team at the University of the Cumberland in Williamsburg, Ky.He’s also a national champion.The school claimed its first outdoor national cham-pionship this year, and Durham was a big part of that team. He earned All-American honors in the fixed pin division in archery, and placed sixth in the nation two weeks ago in Chula Vista, Calif.The Cumberland team was undefeated this year, winning the NAIA Mid South Conference and nation-als in 3D, indoor and outdoor archery.A 2019 graduate of Davie County High School, he is a rising senior at Cumberland majoring in business administration and strategic commnuications. He is the son of Robin and Todd Durham of Mocksville.Brandon Durham is an All-American member of the national champion archery team at the University of the Cumberland in Kentucky. Durham earns All-American archer title HATTERAS – About 40 years ago, I first met Steve Hissey, who owns The Pel-ican’s Roost, a tackle shop in this tiny, Outer Banks fishing village.Married about a year, I vacationed with my wife and new in-laws in Buxton, a fishing village just down the road, hard by the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, but I did all my searching for fishing information and buying of tackle and bait in Hissey’s converted gas sta-tion on NC 12.The latest visit started with a handshake across the counter, the declaration that I was finally retired, and Hissey’s claim that he’d retire when they found him “lying down on my back” behind the counter.Such is the life of a guy who lives and dies with how well puppy drum are biting in the Pamlico Sound or how well whiting are bit-ing in the surf at Ramp 55 down at the end of the is-land.I called Hissey every Thursday morning, nine months out of the year, for 22 years in a past job as outdoor editor for the Winston-Salem Journal. He provided the fishing re-port for his end of the Out-er Banks, and his reports were rarely, if ever, wrong. That’s what you get when the guy on the other end of the phone likes to fish as much as he likes to sell bait and tackle.And that’s sort of how a former hospital administra-tor from Baltimore wound up on the Outer Banks, the thin ribbon of sand that sep-arates the Pamlico Sound from the Atlantic Ocean. Hissey, 71, related that his Outer Banks connection was at Catawba College in Salisbury, where he gradu-ated in 1972.“I went to college with Bob Eakes of the Red Drum Tackle Shop, who was from here,” Hissey said. “I’d go home with him and go to Cape Hatteras and pitch a tent and fish. He called me in 1977 and said he’d just gotten the lease on the tackle shop and wanted me to manage it.“I had been a billing su-pervisor at Johns Hopkins and Baltimore City Hos-pital, making $4 an hour. I knew that to get any-where, I’d have to go back to school for a master’s (degree) and learn all that computer stuff. Then Bob called me, and I thought, ‘I can go back to school and learn all that computer stuff, or I can go to Hatteras and work in a tackle shop and fish.”Hissey chose the latter.“I had a ‘68 Corvette and a Jeep CJ and $4 or $5 thousand in the bank. I thought I was in high cot-ton,” he said. “I was Bob’s first employee.”Hissey established him-self in the tackle business quickly. After a year at the Red Drum in Buxton, he was approached by Ray Couch, who had leased the tackle shop to Eakes.“He said there was an old gas station, the Monitor Mart, that was owned by the Odens. He was look-ing for someone to man-age it, and he started me at $300 cash a week. We were open 6 to 11, seven days a week,” he said. “My wife, Connie, was making subs at a sandwich shop, and I talked her into helping me. Then, the Odens wanted to lease it to me.”Hissey jumped at the chance. In addition to fuel, the old Monitor Mart had been converted into a con-venience store, and he rec-ognized that gas, beer and bread would draw people into his tackle shop. He priced his regular gas at 2 cents a gallon cheaper than the competition, which drew the ire of the locals, and renamed the store The Pelican’s Roost.“There were always a lot of pelicans around, and they’re fishermen, so that’s sort of why I named it,” he said.A year later, he con-vinced his brother, Dave, younger by 2 years, to leave a job in High Point and become his partner in the tackle shop.The Pelican’s Roost was quickly established as one of the go-to places on Hat-teras Island for fishing info, bait and tackle. It didn’t hurt that the Hissey broth-ers developed a reputation as excellent fishermen, pa-pering the walls of the shop with big-fish citations from the N.C. Division of Ma-rine Fisheries – especially cobia. The shop did a boom-ing business until Mother Nature stepped in in 2003. That’s when Hurricane Is-abel arrived, a few days after Labor Day. Carrying winds of 105 mph, it struck Hatteras directly. A 25-foot storm surge flattened hous-es everywhere and cut a 1,000-yard breach in the is-land between Hatteras and Frisco, a village about 5 miles to the east, up NC 12.I remember an aerial photo taken several days later that ran on the front page of the Journal. It showed the breach, and some of the devastation. I examined the photo care-fully, looking for my favor-ite tackle shop. I remember relief when I found it, when it appeared unharmed, shouting out to my wife from the kitchen table that The Pelican’s Roost had survived.Uh, no.“I knew sooner or later, it being on a slab, that it was gonna happen,” Hissey said. “We were there 26 years, then the back wall blew out and everything wound up back in the sound. The insurance com-pany refused to cover it; they said it was wind dam-age. Yeah, not the 25-foot storm surge, but the wind. I got $12,000, and we had $60,000 in stock. And the Odens decided not to re-build.”The Pelican’s Roost ceased to exist for a cou-ple of years. Hissey went to work building furniture at All Decked Out, a local business, then he worked a year in maintenance for a local real estate compa-ny, Midgett Realty, trou-ble-shooting problems with rental cottages it managed.Soon, however, the Midgetts figured out that Hissey might be more valu-able in another job. They owned Teach’s Lair Marina near the Hatteras-Ocracoke ferry docks and offered Hissey a chance to take over the Marina’s tackle shop.“Connie was working the cash register at the Pi-rate’s Chest (a gift shop) on Ocracoke, and Midgett asked me to take over the tackle in 2005,” he said. “So I co-managed the ma-rina with Dave.”One day, Hissey said, he was picking up a box, a heavy one filled with mul-let, when he hurt his back.“I crushed a disk in my back. I was in bad shape. So I filed workman’s comp, and after I got back, they let me go,” he said. “I took the money from my work-man’s comp settlement and opened this place up again. A lot of my old customer’s from Teach’s came here.”Hissey and his wife run the place, which is in a building on NC 12 about a mile from the original Peli-can’s Roost. He works the afternoon shift seven days a week, She works the morn-ing shift. He’s been build-ing custom fishing rods for years, and that’s become a lynchpin for the business these days. He has no plans to retire. He’ll quit working the day they have to carry him out on a gurney.And he’ll love every minute of it, especially afternoons when some of his regular customers pull chairs up to the count-er, pop open cans of beer, share pork rinds and dis-cuss the day’s events.And fishing. Always fishing. Steve Hissey builds a fishing rod at his store in Hatteras. - Photo by Dan Kibler Living the good life at Hatteras tackle shop Four members and two coach-es from the Davie County 4-H Shooting Sports Club are headed to Grand Island, Neb. to com-pete in the 4-H National Shooting Sports Championships June 26-July 1.Rebekah Walker will be mak-ing her third appearance shooting Muzzleloader. She competed in Air Pistol in 2019 and Smallbore Pistol in 2021. Naomi Hellard will be making her second trip out to Nebraska to compete in Shotgun. She was on the NC 4-H Hunting Skills Team last year. Dallie Lakey and Ethan Durham will make their first trip to the nationals. Ethan will be competing in Smallbore Pistol and Dallie will be joining Naomi on the Shotgun Team, along with Grace Marshall who is on the team but competes in 4-H for Da-vidson County. Dallie, Naomi and Gracie are coached by Jimmy Staley. Ethan is coached by DC 4-H instructor, Maurice Walker. Staley has been coaching the NC 4-H Shotgun Team since 2018 and Walker the Smallbore Pistol Team since 2019. 4-H shooting sports members headed nationals Dallie Lakey, Gracie Marshall and Naomi Hellard are ready to represent their 4-H teams.1200205 Ethan Durham and Rebekah Walker will be among the competitors in Nebraska. B8 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 North Carolina had more than 4,000 students compete in 13 state-wide Junior Mu-sic Festivals sponsored by the National Federation of Music Clubs for 2022. The Wake Forest Dis-trict, which includes stu-dents from Lewisville, Pfafftown, Advance, Clem-mons and Winston-Salem had 486 entries. Winners in the upper level events of pi- ano, voice and strings con-tinued on to the NFMC state finals st UNCG. Local students, one from the Music Studio of Lynne Spach (Clemmons), and two from the Music Studio of Teresia Ann Queen (Ad-vance) brought home five state recognitions. Beginning in 2022, a Sacred Music Piano Solo Scholarship was added to the list of 19 scholarships offered annually by the NC chapter of NFMC. This new scholarship is an en-dowment given to NCFMC and sponsored by Allen and Teresia Queen. Kate-lynn Beadle was the 2022 scholarship winner and Jef-frey Lyons received a cash award as first runner up. • Katelynn is the daugh-ter of David and Jeanette Jeffrey Lyons, Katelyn Beadle (double winner) and Elizabeth Hamilton won awards through the Wake Forest District of the National Federation of Music Clubs Junior Music Festival. Students bring home music competition awards Beadle and is homes-chooled and a rising high school freshman. She at-tends The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in Clemmons, where she is able to share her talents on the organ and piano for wor-ship. Her winning NFMC competition music included “Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing” and “My Faith Looks Up to Thee.” She received a winning score of 100 on both her local Wake Forest event, as well as her UNCG state finals event. Katelynn was invited to perform at the prestigious NCFMC Winner’s Recital held in May in Statesville with other winners from across NC. Katelynn’s other inter-ests include: playing the guitar and ukulele, reading, writing, journaling, draw-ing, swimming, archery and building things. She loves trying new things and learn-ing everything new that she can. She especially enjoys any outside activity and learning about animals.• Jeffrey earned the first runner up spot for the new Sacred Music Piano Solo scholarship and received a cash award. He is the son of Mike and Karen Lyons and is a rising senior at West Forsyth High School. Jeffrey is an active mem-ber of Clemmons Presby-terian Church, their youth group and is a youth church musician, often playing for Sunday worship services. In addition to music, Jef-frey enjoys playing golf and tennis and plays on the West Forsyth High School Men’s Tennis Team. He is also a member of West Forsyth’s Key Club, Men’s Service Club, Speech and Debate Club, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and sings in the school chorus.Hymn playing is anoth-er of the many NFMC state finals categories. There are five classes in this category and two local students won two of the five classes.• Elizabeth Hamilton is a student of Lynne Spach, and won the highest level of hymn playing categories offered by NFMC - the John and Jonsey Queen Level V NFMC Hymn Playing event and state title for 2022. Her winning competition music included: “And Can It Be” and “How Deep the Father’s Love.” She is homeschooled and just completed her 10th-grade year. Elizabeth is the daughter of Kevin and Kris-ten Hamilton and attends Grace Free Presbyterian Church. In addition to playing the piano, Lizzie’s inter-ests include violin, running on track and cross country teams, reading and writing. She is a long time mem-ber of NFMC and just this year also earned her 30 point cups in the events of Piano Solo and Hymn Play-ing. Thirty point cups rep-resent six years of earning a score of superior in each event. • The Carolyn Jones Summerlin State Hymn Playing award and state ti-tle were won by Katelynn Beadle for the level of Class II. Her winning selections were: “When I Look Into Your Holiness” and the contemporary “Mighty to Save.” She is a four-year mem-ber of NFMC and has pre-viously earned five NFMC gold cups and was the 2021 1st runner up for the state title in Class I hymns. Katelynn competes in many NFMC events, including: Piano Solo, Piano Concer- Or come see us at one of ourthree convenient locations. (Bermuda Run, Mocksville, or Yadkinville) Call us today! 336.463.5022 ANY NEW MOBILE PHONE $1,000 OFF With eligible trade-in for any unlimited or shared AT&T plan that we offer. Qualified new or existing customers. New line required. $1,000 credit divided over 36-month installments. Offer may not be combined with any other promotion. See store for details. Only from 1460956 Please See Music ‑ Page B9 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD Thursday, June 9, 2022 ‑ B9 Ten members of the Ad-vance Garden Club met at the Healing Garden at No-vant Clemmons Medical Center to remove fall and winter plantings and replace them with spring plants. Karen Barnum, Jacque-lyn Bargoil, Patti Brennan, Jan Davis, Cheryl Gray, Susan Hayworth, Angela Hodges, Pat Mitchell, Di-ane Poindexter, and Sharon Murphy came ready to plant with digging equipment, gloves, trash bags, buckets, and kneeling pads (if need-ed). Flowers were delivered for the spring planting and the women completed the project by noon. Jan Davis plants Lantana in the healing garden at Novant Clemmons Medical Center. Pat Mitchell, Advance Garden Club president, plants Lantana in a raised bed in front of the Infusion Center. Karen Barnum and Cheryl Gray container planting. Sharon Murphy is almost finished planting Lantana in her area Cheryl Gray is ready to begin working in the rose garden. Club members helping with the project, from left: seated - Sharon Murphy, Jan Davis, Pat Mitchell; standing - Angela Hodges, Jac- quelyn Bargoil, Cheryl Gray, Diane Poindex- ter, Karen Barnum, Patti Brennan. Not pictured: Susan Hay- worth, photographer. Advance club brightens garden at Clemmons Medical Center 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 113 Marketplace Drive, Mocksville, NC 27028www.mocksvillefamilydentistry.com (336) 753-6630 CALL NOW FOR AN APPOINTMENT 1328851No Insurance? No Problem! Join CapCares Membership Club at Mocksville Family Dentistry Lifetime Activation Fee Covers First Month Call Us Today for Details and Pricing Child, Adult, or Perio Memberships available to suit your needs Voted Davie County’s Best Dentist Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash Continued From Page B8to, American Patriotic Folk Songs, Music Theory as well as the two categories in which she was named the state winner for 2022.• Jeffrey was named as the second runner up in the Class IV Peggy Robinson Matthews Hymn Playing Cup for 2022. He has earned 10 gold cups representing excellence in music from the NFMC and won the state titles in Hymns Class I and II in 2019 and 2020. His competition music for 2022 included: a gospel favorite, “Rain Down” and Michael W. Smith’s “Great is the Lord.” Jeffrey will be attending college in the fall of 2023 and will be seeking a major in Environmental and/or Political Science.Katelynn and Jeffrey are members of the Music Stu-dio of Teresia Ann Queen, whose studio has been a 16-year member of NFMC, the largest nonprofit organi-zation in America promot-ing and supporting Ameri-can music, performers and music education since its founding in 1898. To learn more about the NFMC on the national and state levels, visit www.nfmc-music.org. Music ... www.ourdavie.com B10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 SUBSCRIBE to theEnterpriseOnly $32.03 Per Year Call Today!336-751-2120 County Line Virginia Gaither Harmony High ‘45 J.C. Seamon Cool Spring High ‘47 Cecil Cartner Cool Spring High ‘47 Mildred Stroud Cool Spring High ‘47 Jeanette Stroud Cool Spring High ‘47 Frances Koontz Cool Spring High ‘48 Merita Peacock Cool Spring High ‘48 Lawrence Cartner Cool Spring High ‘48 Elizabeth ‘Lib’ Godbey Cool Spring ‘48 By Shirley ThorneCounty Line Correspondent Piney Grove folks ap-preciate the large number of folks who came and sup-ported their cruise-in.High school graduates today look forward to the 12th grade and graduation, then furthering their educa-tion, or getting a job. But, perhaps some students who were expecting to graduate in 1946 were disappointed to learn they would gradu-ate in 1947 as North Caro-lina requirements for high school graduation were changed from 11 grades to 12 grades. Virginia Gaither (Jones), who graduated from Harmony High in 1945, was perhaps one happy relieved young lady. Here's hoping you enjoy this news "flash-back" of County Line high school seniors in 1947 & 1948 plus Virginia in 1945.Our community extends sympathy to the family of Jerry Mikle "Fuzzy" Camp-bell, who died Sunday of last week. He was born in Iredell County in 1950 to the late Boyd and Nellie Moose Campbell. He graduated from North Iredell High in 1968 and studied business at Catawba Valley Techni-cal Institute. A veteran of the US Army, he honorably served in the Vietnam War. In 1970 he married the for-YARD SALE Saturday, June 11 8am-2pm 122 Sunset Drive, Mocksville, NC Household Items and Clothing ALL ITEMS PRICED JUST $1.00 EACH! ACROSS 1. (K) Get twisted from heat 5. (K) It’s smaller than a bus 8. (K) Face feature 12. Maker of PCs and tablets 13. Pie ___ mode (2 words) 14. (K) “Crazy” in El Salvador 15. (K) Saturn satellite 16. Zip or zilch 17. (K) Large bunch (2 words) 18. (K) Place to order a BLT 21. Music staff note after fa 22. Babysitter’s nightmare 23. Bay window variety 26. (K) Overblown view of oneself 27. When doubled, a lively dance 30. Got an eyeful at the mall? (2 words) 33. (K) Negative prefix 34. (K) Pick out and pay for 35. Bandage consisting of a pad and belt 36. Santa ___ winds 37. (K) Article that many people read? 38. Seller of many ties 44. (K) Small equine 45. (K) “... ___ the ramparts ...” 46. (K) New York’s 5-Down 47. ___ for (picks) 48. (K) Worker cleaning a plate with a little broom 49. Disney’s queen of Arendelle 50. (K) A very disorderly room 51. (K) “My country, ___ of thee ...” 52. “Bill & ___ Excellent Adventure” DOWN 1. Hospital section 2. Massage target 3. (K) Attachment to your fishing rod 4. (K) Kept saying wonderful things about 5. (K) Ear section 6. Settled on a branch 7. (K) City in North Carolina 8. (K) Envelope feature 9. (K) What you need to bury a rock 10. (K) An idol 11. “Believe it or ___” 19. Aftershave relative 20. (K) Uses a plane or sander 23. (K) Have among your possessions 24. Brazil tourist city 25. (K) Hotel relative 26. (K) Powerful suffix 27. PC brain 28. “For ___ a jolly good fellow” 29. (K) Things that pop up on websites 31. Don’t just leave hanging in the closet (2 words) 32. First word in many recipes 36. Deep void or 9-Down 37. Waterproof coverings 38. (K) Optimism 39. (K) “A Bug’s Life” heroes 40. Prefix for “half” 41. Marine eagle 42. (K) Part of a lemon 43. Nay opposers 44. Half of a cheerleader’s prop? PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER © 2022 Andrews McMeel Syndication syndication.andrewsmcmeel.com Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? It works best when tired? Look for the answer in next week’s paper. Created by Timothy E. Parker June 13, 2022 The (K) Clues Are for Kids Creature with a lot inside? 41-A) SLOTH Previous riddle answer: mer Phyllis Barnhardt; the couple settled on Vaughn Mill Road at Stroud Road and reared daughters Lisa and Cherie. Suffering from heart problems, he received a heart transplant in 2010. He enjoyed outdoor activ-ities such as golfing, fish-ing, and hunting. A service celebrating his life was held Sunday afternoon at New Hope Baptist Church, where he was a faithful member and served as chair of the deacons; he was laid to rest with full military honors in the church cemetery. We send get-well wishes to Mike Cartner, who was hospitalized last week at Wake Forest Baptist Medi- cal Center and is recuperat-ing at home. Andy Cartner is recuperating with physical therapy at home. Rayford "Tink" McDaniel continues to rest at home with palli-ative care. Tommie Ross and Alice Waugh remain in rehab at Davie Nursing and Rehabilitation Center. Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing and blessings upon Mike, Andy, Tink, Tommie, Alice, and others who are having health problems. Remember in prayer Eddie and Denise Cartner Sloan and Elizabeth Williams Foster; Eddie's fa-ther and Elizabeth's brother Joe Sloan, cabinet-making business owner, died at his Remembering high school graduates from the 1940s home in Olin Wednesday of last week.For news and memories to share, please call or text Shirley on 336-492-5115 or email sdtlink@hotmail.com. Our community news will again honor all students who graduated, earned a professional certificate, or received an honor or award the past year. If you did or know of someone who did; please call, text, or email details and/or photo. The following cases were disposed of during the May 13 session of Davie DWI Court. Presiding: Judge B. Carlton Terry. Prosecuting: Steve Boone, assistant DA.- Jose Jesus L. Beltry, DWI, no license, dismissed.- Thomas Coy Hurst, consuming alcohol age 19/20, dismissed; driving after consuming under age 21, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 12 months, credit for substance abuse assessment, not operate ve- hicle until licensed, $100, cost; DWI, dismissed.- Drew Randall Latham, DWI, dismissed; driving after consuming under age 21, sentenced to 30 days, suspended 21 months, ob-tain substance abuse assess-ment, not operate vehicle until licensed, $100, cost.- Joseph T. Watson, DWI, sentenced to 12 months, sus-pended 18 months, 7 days active, obtain substance abuse assessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, $500, cost.- Dionicio R. Yanes, DWI, sentenced to 12 months, suspended 18 months, 7 days active, ob-tain substance abuse as-sessment, surrender license, not operate vehicle until licensed, $400, cost, $400 attorney fee; failure to com-ply with license restrictions, dismissed. DWI Court DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 - B11 Estate Sale Fri. 6/10 & Sat. 6/11 8am 119 North Wentworth Ln. Mocksville Everything must go, items in- clude: Collectibles, Furniture, Kitchenware, tools, clothes, din- nerware, Christmas decorations and much more Mocksville, 403 Milling Road Multi-Family Yard Sale, Sat. 6/11, 8am-2pm. Lots of stuff! Baby and kid items, baby/boys clothes, household items, tools, new Pam- pered Chef items, toys. Come on out, something for everyone! Mount Zion Community Church 113 Mill St., Mocksville Community Yard Sale, Sat. 6/11 8am-noon. Household goods, clothes, some small sppliances, jewelry, LOTS of stuff! Whether you are selling or buying, BROWSING OR CREATING, looking or booking... CLASSIFIEDS HAS IT ALL! Place Your Ad Today! 704-797-4220 Public Notices No. 1444935 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Martha Thom-as Nayder 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 August 19, 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 10th of May, 2022.Catherine Nayder Richardson, Executorc/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at LawMARTIN & VAN HOY, LLPAttorneys at Law10 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028(336)751-2171Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22 No. 1450873 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BERMUDA RUN TOWN COUNCIL TO CONSIDER THE PROPOSED FY 2022-2023 BUDGET NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on Tuesday, June 14, 2022 at 6:00pm the Bermuda Run Town Council will hold a Public Hear-ing to receive public comment re-garding the proposed Fiscal Year 202202023 Budget. The public hearing will be held at the Bermu-da Run Town Hall, 120 Kinderton Boulevard, Suite 100, Bermuda Run, North Carolina 27006The proposed budget is available for public review at www.townofbr.com . A copy of the budget is also available for public review at the Bermuda Run Town Hall. Proposed Budget Summary General Fund:Revenues $1,934,000Expenditures $1,934,000Gate Operations Fund:Revenues $674,600Expenditures $674,600Utilities Fund:Revenues $530,850Expenditures $530,850Additional information is available at the Bermuda Run Town Hall weekdays from 9:00am – 5:00pm or by telephone at 336.998.0906Publish 6/2/22, 6/9/22 No. 1449261 PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE BUDGET HEARING AND POS-SIBLE BUDGET ADOPTION FISCAL YEAR 2022-2023 TOWN OF COOLEEMEE BUDGET The Town of Cooleemee’s pro-posed 2022-2023 Fiscal Year Bud-get was presented to the Coolee-mee Town Board on May 16, 2022. The proposed budget is balanced at $465,350.00The proposed budget includes a property tax rate of .42 cents per $ 100.00 if property valuation. A copy of the budget proposal is available in the Town Hall at 131 Church St, Cooleemee, N.C. during normal business hours of 8:00 a.m. until 4:30 p.m., Monday - Friday. A public hearing will be held at 6:00 p.m., June 13, 2022, in the Board Room at the Cooleemee Town Hall, 131 Church St, Cool-eemee, N.C., to receive public comments, either oral or written. All citizens are welcome to com-ment on the budget proposal at this time. Following the Public Hearing, the Board may or may not take action on the proposed budget. Aaron ThiesClerk/Finance Officer336-284-2141Cooleemee, N.C. Publish 6/2/22, 6/9/22 Public Notices No. 1446580 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Nellie Faye Graley, 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 be-fore August 26, 2022, or this No-tice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment.This the 19th day of May, 2022.Bryan C. Thompson Executor of the Estate of Nellie Faye Graley, deceased FREEDMAN THOMPSON WITT CEBERIO & BYRD, PLLC210 South Cherry StreetWinston-Salem, NC 27101(336) 725-8323Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22 No. 1457409 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administra-trix of the Estate of Eva Michael Cruse, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to Caroline L. Whitson, Ad-ministratrix, c/o Warren E. Kasper, Esq., Kasper & Payne, P.A., P.O. Box 687, 3626 Clemmons Road, Clemmons, NC 27012, on or be-fore the 16th day of September, 2022, or this notice will be plead-ed in bar of their recovery. All per-sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment.This the 8th day of June, 2022Caroline L. Whitson, AdministratrixAttorney Warren E. KasperKasper & Payne, P.A.P.O. Box 6873626 Clemmons Road,Clemmons, NC 27012Publish 6/9/22, 6/16/22, 6/23/22, 6/30/22 No. 1446303 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator of the Estate of Gerald Stephen Smith, 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 August 26, 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 immediate pay-ment.This the 19th day of May, 2022.Angela Smith AndersonAdministrator of the Estate ofGerald Stephen Smith, deceasedC/O Bryan C. ThompsonFREEDMAN THOMPSON WITT CEBERIO & BYRD, PLLC210 South Cherry StreetWinston-Salem, NC 27101(336) 725-8323Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22 No. 1448789 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Co-Executors of the Estate of W. Graham Lynch, III (aka Walter Graham Lynch, III, Walter G. Lynch, III, Graham Lynch), late of 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 the office of their attorney at 110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300, Winston-Salem, NC 27103-1958, on or before the 26th day of August, 2022 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their re-covery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This 26th day of May 2022.Katherine Lynch Currie,Co-ExecutorAnne Lynch Wright, Co-ExecutorEstate of W. Graham Lynch, IIIc/o Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker LLP110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300Winston-Salem, NC 27103Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker, LLPPublish 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22, 6/16/22 Public Notices No. 1458341 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Robert Allen Vandiv-er Jr., 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 September 14, 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 06/09/2022. Robert Allen Vandiv-er III., 228 Ijames Church Road, Mocksville, NC 27028, as Exec-utor of the Estate of Robert Al-len Vandiver Jr., deceased, File #2022E000152. Publish 6/9/22, 6/16/22, 6/23/22, 6/30/22 No. 1444512 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Ex-ecutrix of the Estate of DORA ELIZABETH LEONARD, 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 August 19, 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 19th day of May, 2022.Ella L. PhillipsC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22 No. 1449480 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Ad-ministrator, CTA of the Estate of OSCAR LEE KOONTZ, 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 August 26, 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 26th day of May, 2022.Elaine Koontz SnowC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22, 6/16/22 No. 1452040NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHaving qualified as Executor of the Estate of Jacqueline A. Mick-iewicz, 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 26th day of August, 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 26th day of May, 2022. Michael A. Mick-iewicz, Executor Estate of Jac-queline A. Mickiewicz, c/o Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker LLP 110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300, Win-ston-Salem, NC 27103. Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker, LLP.: 05/26/22, 06/02/22, 06/09/22, 06/16/22. No. 1448152 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Exec-utrix of the Estate of LOUISE S. Blackwelder aka BERTHA LOU-ISE BLACKWELDER, 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 August 26, 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 26th day of May, 2022.Linda B. HarpeC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22, 6/16/22 Public Notices No. 1460882NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHaving qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of ELSIE S. COLE, aka, ELSIE SURRATT COLE, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor-porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 09/14/2022. 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. To-day’s date 06/09/2022. MAYNARD A. SURRATT, 288 RABBIT FARM TRAIL, ADVANCE, NC 27006, as EXECUTOR of the Estate of ELSIE S. COLE, deceased, File #2022E000163. Publish: 06/09/22, 06/16/22, 06/23/22, 06/30/22. No. 1447362 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of Albert Ervin God-win, aka Ervin Albert Godwin, 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 Au-gust 24, 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 05/19/2022. Ivey Ve-itch, 365 Quarry Road, Woodleaf, NC 27054, as Administrator of the Estate of Albert Ervin Godwin, deceased, File #22E197. Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22. No. 1456946 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Donna McCoy Shrewsbury, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before September 7, 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 06/02/2022. Timothy Craig Mc-Coy, 264 Pleasant Acre Drive, Mocksville, NC 27028, as Exec-utor of the Estate of Donna Mc-Coy Shrewsbury, deceased, File #2022E000218. Publish 6/2/22, 6/9/22, 6/16/22, 6/23/22. No. 1448016NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHaving qualified as ADMINIS-TRATOR for the Estate of ASH-TON GABRIELLE BROWN, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor-porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 08/24/2022. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corpora-tions indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay-ment. Today’s date 05/19/2022. CHRISTINA HEINER STUCKEY, 375 GWYN ST., MOCKSVILLE, NC 27028, as ADMINISTRATOR of the Estate of ASHTON GA-BRIELLE BROWN, deceased, File #2022 E 000198. Publish: 05/19/22, 05/26/22, 06/02/22, 06/09/22. No. 1452961NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Cyrette H. Sanford 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 Sep-tember 2, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of pub-lication of this notice) or this no-tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corporations indebted to said Es-tate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 24th of May, 2022. Lash Gaith-er Sanford, Executor, c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law, MAR-TIN & VAN HOY, LLP, Attorneys at Law, 10 Court Square, Mocksville, NC 27028, (336)751-2171. Pub-lish: 06/02/22, 06/09/22, 06/16/22, 06/23/22. No. 1452953NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Exec-utor of the Estate of Joan M. Whisenant 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 September 2, 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 24th of May, 2022. Fred W. Whitaker, Executor, c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law, MARTIN & VAN HOY, LLP, Attor-neys at Law, 10 Court Square, Mocksville, NC 27028. (336)751-2171. Publish: 06/02/22, 06/09/22, 06/16/22, 06/23/22. No. 1444651 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Co-Adminis-rators for the Estate of Alexis Sky Bolduc, 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 August 24, 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 05/19/2022. Todd Bolduc, 203 Four Corners Road, Mocksville, NC 27028 and Tracie Staples Bolduc, 203 Four Corners Road, Mocksville, NC 27028, as Co-Ad-ministrators of the Estate of Alex-is Sky Bolduc, deceased, File #2022E000188. Publish 5/19/22, 5/26/22, 6/2/22, 6/9/22. No. 1458341 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Robert Allen Vandiv-er Jr., 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 September 14, 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 06/09/2022. Robert Allen Vandiv-er III., 228 Ijames Church Road, Mocksville, NC 27028, as Exec-utor of the Estate of Robert Al-len Vandiver Jr., deceased, File #2022E000152. Publish 6/9/22, 6/16/22, 6/23/22, 6/30/22 Public Notices No. 1461038NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATEUNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust exe-cuted and delivered by Marnie K. Naylor, dated the 3rd day of April, 2003, and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina, in Book 475 at Page 115 and because of default in the payment of the in-debtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the under-signed Substitute Trustee will ex-pose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale in the County Courthouse of Davie County, in the city of Mocksville, North Car-olina, at 11:00 AM on June 21, 2022, all that certain parcel of land, more particularly described as follows: IMPROVEMENTS: House and lot/Condominium/or Lot LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Tract #1: BEGINNING at an iron stake in G.L. Hartman’s line; thence East 5 degrees South with Hartman’s line, 177 feet to an iron stake, A.C. Cornatzer’s corner; thence South 10 degrees West with Cornatzer’s line, 105 feet to an iron stake Mrs. Annie Bailey’s corner; thence West 5 degrees North with Annie Bailey’s line, 176 feet, 9 inches to an iron stake, corner of cotton gin; thence North 11 degrees East with the Cotton Gin line, 103 feet and 2 inches to the BEGINNING, corner, containing 65 poles, more or less. For further reference see deed re-corded in Book 24, Page 269, in the Davie County Registry Tract #2: BEGINNING at a stone Noah Robertson’s corner; run-ning South with Noah Robertson’s line 160 feet to a stone, A.C. Cor-natzer’s corner; thence with Cor-natzer’s line 90 feet West to Mrs. W.A. Bailey’s line; thence North to G.L. Hartman’s line 160 feet; thence East with the road or al-ley way 80 feet, the BEGINNING corner containing nearly 1/3 of an acre, more or less. Being the iden-tical property as that conveyed in Deed recorded in DB 24, Page 270 in the Davie County Registry. The foregoing described tracts are the identical property described in a deed dated August 21, 1972 from Mamie M. Myers, widow of J.A.C. Myers to Eugene Myers and Mary Lethia Robertson re-corded in DB 87, Page 483, Davie County Registry, and said descrip-tion is set forth as of prior to the date of said deed. ADDITIONAL POSSIBLE STREET ADDRESS FOR REF-ERENCE PURPOSES ONLY: 124 Old Mill Road, Advance, NC 27006 NOTICE & DISCLAIMER: THE LISTED STREET ADDRESS MAY BE INCORRECT AND IS STATED HEREBY FOR INFORMATIONAL AND REFERENCE PURPOSES ONLY. THE SUBSTITUTE TRUST-EE MAKES NO CERTIFICATIONS OR WARRANTIES THAT SAID STREET ADDRESS IS ACCU-RATE OR CORRECT. IT IS EACH POTENTIAL BIDDER’S DUTY TO DETERMINE WITH HIS/HER OWN TITLE EXAMINATION THAT SAID STREET ADDRESS IS CORRECT AND MATCHES THE ABOVE LEGAL DESCRIPTION. THE ABOVE LEGAL DESCRIP-TION DESCRIBES THE PROP-ERTY BEING SOLD AND SHALL BE CONTROLLING. PRESENT RECORD OWNERS as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds not more than 10 days prior to posting the notice are Marnie K. Naylor and Spouse, if any. Trustee may, in the Trustee’s sole discretion, delay the sale for up to one hour as provided in NCGS §45-21.23. In the event that this sale is one of residential real property with less than 15 rental units, an order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to NCGS §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Su-perior Court of the County in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the prop-erty pursuant to a rental agree-ment entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agree-ment upon 10 days’ written no-tice to the landlord, but no more than 90 days, after the sale date contained in the notice of sale, provided that the mortgagor has not cured the default at the time the tenant provides the notice of termination. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effec-tive date of the termination. Should the property be pur-chased by a third party, that per-son must pay the tax of forty-five (45) cents per One Hundred Dol-lars ($100.00) required by NCGS §7A-308 (a)(1). This sale is also subject to any applicable county and/or state land transfer and/or revenue tax, and the successful third party bidder shall be required to make payment for such tax. The property to be offered pursuant to this notice of sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS, WHERE IS”. Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the Deed of Trust/Se-curity Instrument, or both, being foreclosed, nor the officers, direc-tors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either Trustee of the holder of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale, and any and all responsibilities or liabilities aris-ing out of or in any way relating to any such condition expressly are disclaimed. This sale is made sub-ject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, land trans-fer taxes, if any, encumbrances of record, including prior Deeds of Trust. The Substitute Trustee reserves the right to require a cash deposit or certified check made payable to the Substitute Trustee (no person-al checks) for five percent (5%) of the purchase price or seven hun-dred fifty dollars ($750.00), which-ever is greater, at the time of the sale. The sale will be held open for ten (10) days for upset bids as by law required. Following the expira-tion of the statutory upset bid peri-od, all remaining amounts are due immediately. If the Trustee is un-able to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser is the return of the deposit. Reasons of such inability to convey include, but are not lim-ited to, the filing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the sale and rein-statement of the loan without the knowledge of the Trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the Trustee, in their sole discretion, if they believe the challenge to have merit, may de-clare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser will have no further remedy. This the 31st day of May, 2022. The Caudle Law Firm, P.A., Substitute Trustee By: David R. Caudle President & Attorney at Law State Bar Number 6075 4311 School House Commons #139 Harrisburg, NC 28075 http://www.caudlelawfirm.com 22-SP-34 Publish 6/9/22, 6/16/22 No. 1460882NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHaving qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of ELSIE S. COLE, aka, ELSIE SURRATT COLE, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and cor-porations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 09/14/2022. 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. To-day’s date 06/09/2022. MAYNARD A. SURRATT, 288 RABBIT FARM TRAIL, ADVANCE, NC 27006, as EXECUTOR of the Estate of ELSIE S. COLE, deceased, File #2022E000163. Publish: 06/09/22, 06/16/22, 06/23/22, 06/30/22. Employment Job Opportunities QST INDUSTRIES NOW HIRINGOperations, Manufacturing, Warehousing & Clerical. Com-petitive pay, complete vacation and holiday package. Health, dental, eye & life insurance. Contact Tony Phelps 336-936-8504 for additional information. E.O.E Merchandise Deals & Bargains 18 acres of Spring Hay & Field FREE for cutting. Lake Myers area in Davie County. For more info call Stephen, 336-817-0142, leave a message. 7.5 New Christmas Tree w/ 1200 lights. $225 Call 704-680-3114 or 336-816-1479 Black Walnut Epoxy Coffee Table 704-232-0881 $500 Floor Lamp Very heavy, like new. $85 704- 680-3114 or 336-816-1479 GE DRYER White Dryer. Works good. Good condition. Text 704-213-0299 $100 Notices Lost & Found Found Orange Cat Collar tag reads “Henry Phillips on Peeples Street” 704-636-0619 Real Estate Lots new today Building Lot for Sale Nita Avenue, Stanleyville, NC. 3/4 acre (roughly). 336-945-2240 or 336-703-7926 for more info. Public Notices Public Notices No. 1461038 NOTICE OF SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEE’S SALE OF REAL ESTATE UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF the power and authority contained in that certain Deed of Trust exe-cuted and delivered by Marnie K. Naylor, dated the 3rd day of April, 2003, and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Davie County, North Carolina, in Book 475 at Page 115 and because of default in the payment of the in-debtedness thereby secured and failure to carry out and perform the stipulations and agreements therein contained and, pursuant to demand of the owner and holder of the indebtedness secured by said Deed of Trust, the under-signed Substitute Trustee will ex-pose for sale at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the usual place of sale in the County Courthouse of Davie County, in the city of Mocksville, North Car-olina, at 11:00 AM on June 21, 2022, all that certain parcel of land, more particularly described as follows: IMPROVEMENTS: House and lot/Condominium/or Lot LEGAL DESCRIPTION: Tract #1: BEGINNING at an iron stake in G.L. Hartman’s line; thence East 5 degrees South with Hartman’s line, 177 feet to an iron stake, A.C. Cornatzer’s corner; thence South 10 degrees West with Cornatzer’s line, 105 feet to an iron stake Mrs. Annie Bailey’s corner; thence West 5 degrees North with Annie Bailey’s line, 176 feet, 9 inches to an iron stake, corner of cotton gin; thence North 11 degrees East with the Cotton Gin line, 103 feet and 2 inches to the BEGINNING, corner, containing 65 poles, more or less. For further reference see deed re-corded in Book 24, Page 269, in the Davie County Registry Tract #2: BEGINNING at a stone Noah Robertson’s corner; run-ning South with Noah Robertson’s line 160 feet to a stone, A.C. Cor-natzer’s corner; thence with Cor-natzer’s line 90 feet West to Mrs. W.A. Bailey’s line; thence North to G.L. Hartman’s line 160 feet; thence East with the road or al-ley way 80 feet, the BEGINNING corner containing nearly 1/3 of an acre, more or less. Being the iden-tical property as that conveyed in Deed recorded in DB 24, Page 270 in the Davie County Registry. The foregoing described tracts are the identical property described in a deed dated August 21, 1972 from Mamie M. Myers, widow of J.A.C. Myers to Eugene Myers and Mary Lethia Robertson re-corded in DB 87, Page 483, Davie County Registry, and said descrip-tion is set forth as of prior to the date of said deed. ADDITIONAL POSSIBLE STREET ADDRESS FOR REF-ERENCE PURPOSES ONLY: 124 Old Mill Road, Advance, NC 27006 NOTICE & DISCLAIMER: THE LISTED STREET ADDRESS MAY BE INCORRECT AND IS STATED HEREBY FOR INFORMATIONAL AND REFERENCE PURPOSES ONLY. THE SUBSTITUTE TRUST-EE MAKES NO CERTIFICATIONS OR WARRANTIES THAT SAID STREET ADDRESS IS ACCU-RATE OR CORRECT. IT IS EACH POTENTIAL BIDDER’S DUTY TO DETERMINE WITH HIS/HER OWN TITLE EXAMINATION THAT SAID STREET ADDRESS IS CORRECT AND MATCHES THE ABOVE LEGAL DESCRIPTION. THE ABOVE LEGAL DESCRIP-TION DESCRIBES THE PROP-ERTY BEING SOLD AND SHALL BE CONTROLLING. PRESENT RECORD OWNERS as reflected on the records of the Register of Deeds not more than 10 days prior to posting the notice are Marnie K. Naylor and Spouse, if any. Trustee may, in the Trustee’s sole discretion, delay the sale for up to one hour as provided in NCGS §45-21.23. In the event that this sale is one of residential real property with less than 15 rental units, an order for possession of the property may be issued pursuant to NCGS §45-21.29 in favor of the purchaser and against the party or parties in possession by the Clerk of Su-perior Court of the County in which the property is sold. Any person who occupies the prop-erty pursuant to a rental agree-ment entered into or renewed on or after October 1, 2007, may, after receiving the notice of sale, terminate the rental agree-ment upon 10 days’ written no-tice to the landlord, but no more than 90 days, after the sale date contained in the notice of sale, provided that the mortgagor has not cured the default at the time the tenant provides the notice of termination. Upon termination of a rental agreement, the tenant is liable for rent due under the rental agreement prorated to the effec-tive date of the termination. Should the property be pur-chased by a third party, that per-son must pay the tax of forty-five (45) cents per One Hundred Dol-lars ($100.00) required by NCGS §7A-308 (a)(1). This sale is also subject to any applicable county and/or state land transfer and/or revenue tax, and the successful third party bidder shall be required to make payment for such tax. The property to be offered pursuant to this notice of sale is being offered for sale, transfer and conveyance “AS IS, WHERE IS”. Neither the Trustee nor the holder of the note secured by the Deed of Trust/Se-curity Instrument, or both, being foreclosed, nor the officers, direc-tors, attorneys, employees, agents or authorized representative of either Trustee of the holder of the note make any representation or warranty relating to the title or any physical, environmental, health or safety conditions existing in, on, at, or relating to the property being offered for sale, and any and all responsibilities or liabilities aris-ing out of or in any way relating to any such condition expressly are disclaimed. This sale is made sub-ject to all prior liens, unpaid taxes, special assessments, land trans-fer taxes, if any, encumbrances of record, including prior Deeds of Trust. The Substitute Trustee reserves the right to require a cash deposit or certified check made payable to the Substitute Trustee (no person-al checks) for five percent (5%) of the purchase price or seven hun-dred fifty dollars ($750.00), which-ever is greater, at the time of the sale. The sale will be held open for ten (10) days for upset bids as by law required. Following the expira-tion of the statutory upset bid peri-od, all remaining amounts are due immediately. If the Trustee is un-able to convey title to this property for any reason, the sole remedy of the purchaser is the return of the deposit. Reasons of such inability to convey include, but are not lim-ited to, the filing of a bankruptcy petition prior to the sale and rein-statement of the loan without the knowledge of the Trustee. If the validity of the sale is challenged by any party, the Trustee, in their sole discretion, if they believe the challenge to have merit, may de-clare the sale to be void and return the deposit. The purchaser will have no further remedy. This the 31st day of May, 2022. The Caudle Law Firm, P.A., Substitute Trustee By: David R. Caudle President & Attorney at Law State Bar Number 6075 4311 School House Commons #139 Harrisburg, NC 28075 http://www.caudlelawfirm.com 22-SP-34 Publish 6/9/22, 6/16/22 CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU! B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, June 9, 2022 Rejoice will be performing at Community Covenant Church on June 15.Fred and Judy Beck celebrate their 50th anniversary. Yvonne Richardson, Earl Ratledge and Tom Cornatzer enjoy the music on Thursday. The BoTyme Jubilee wel- comed a newcomer, Holden Barnes to the jam session. And at right, Maynard Surratt is back, shown performing alongside Steve Boger at the jam. These flags flying at New Union were to honor those that made the ultimate sacrifice for our great country. At right, New Union members stay busy serving hotdogs on Saturday. Sons of South performed at West Rowan on Friday. By Brenda BaileySheffield-CalahalnCorrespondent Birthday wishes to: Da-vid Kimmer on June 12 and Jennifer Ann Barney and Greg Gobble on June 15. Happy anniversary to those couples celebrating an anniversary this week: Harold and Valerie Bumby on June 10; Josh and Jenni-fer Moody on June 12; and Doug and Renee Holland on June 15. If you would like a birthday or anniversary list-ed in this column, please let me know.Fred and Judy Beck were surprised with a 50th anni-versary celebration at the Sheffield-Calahaln Com-munity Center on Sunday by their daughters, Jenni-fer Moody and husband, Josh and Michelle Shaver and husband, Robert. The guests were served barbe-cue and all the fixings, iced tea and cake. Fred and Judy were married June 3, 1972. Congratulations on the 50 years and wishing you many more. You’re a beautiful ex-ample of a happy marriage.Rejoice, a ladies quartet from Allegheny Wesleyan College in Salem, Ohio will share music at Community Covenant Church on June 15 at 7 p.m. These young ladies travel on weekends during the school year in addition to a January and Summer tour. Community Covenant is at 1446 Shef-field Road, Mocksville. They invite everyone for a wonderful night of Chris-tian music and fellowship. Community Covenant Church invites you each Sunday for worship at 10:45 a.m. and 6 p.m., and prayer and Bible study on Wednes-days at 7 p.m. Chief Gary Allen and other members of the Shef-field-Calahaln VFD wel-come visitors, and the fire station is open Monday-Fri-day from 8 a.m.- 4 p.m. If interested in becoming a firefighter or know some who is, call 336-492-5791.Sunday School is each Sunday at Ijames Baptist at 9:30 a.m. and the worship service is at 10:30. Pastor Ruth is continuing his mes-sages on the End Times at the 10:30 service. Bible Study on the Book of Dan-iel is each Sunday evening from 5-6. TeamKID for ages 3 years to 5th grade meets each Sunday evening from 4:30-6 in the fellow-ship hall. Vacation Bible School at Ijames Baptist will be July 17-22 from 5:30-8:30 each evening.The BoTyme Country Jubilee is still going strong each Thursday from 6:30-8:30 p.m. at the Farming-ton Community Center on Farmington Road with a mixture of country, blue-grass and gospel music. Admission is $3 at the door, but musicians are admitted free. There is coffee, drinks and packaged food for pur-chase. Hope to see you this Thursday.Rick Lowe on fiddle, Connor Lambert on man-dolin, Franklin Rash on up-right bass, Michael Souther on banjo and Greg Aber-crombie, members of Sons of the South performed to a crowd at West Rowan Grill on Friday. These are talent- ed musicians who perform bluegrass and gospel mu-sic. Gaining Ground will perform this Friday. The Catawba Bluegrass Band is scheduled for June 17. My sincere thanks to Sue Clark for sharing photos each week of the bands. The next Hotdog Satur-day at New Union is sched-uled for June 25 from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. in the church parking lot. There will also be some baked goods and RADA cutlery for sale. The church is at Sheffield and County Line roads. Hope to see you there.New Union has a com-bined worship service at 10a.m. each Sunday fol-lowed by Sunday School at 11. Everyone is welcome. A time of prayer is held at Liberty Wesleyan Church each Sunday at 9:30 a.m., followed by Sunday School at 10 and Worship at 11. The Liberty Kidz family service meets Friday evenings from 6:30-7:30. Everyone is wel-come at all services.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, Charles England, Greta England, Lincoln Dyson, Bob Ellis, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Jane Tutterow, Milton Tutterow, Nancy Peacock, Geraldine Lambert, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Caren Morgan, Helen Bulla, Rowan Fay, Paul Beck, Juanita Keaton, Jerry McDaniel, Yvonne Richardson, and Suzonne Stratton. Our sincere con-dolences to the Vickie Dan-iel family and the Steve Smith family.Please submit all news to me at brfbailey@msn.com, message me on Facebook or call me at 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thurs-days. Reach your audience wherever they are:on desktops/laptops, tablets & smartphones. Put your message in front of your potential customers today! Call 336.751.2120to learn more! Reach Potential Customers While They Are Online WithTARGETED DIGITAL MARKETING Sheffield-CalahalnCouple surprised on 50th wedding anniversary 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