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Davie County Enterprise Record 9-22-2022USPS 149-160 Number 38 Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 24 Pages 75¢ Touch a Truck Carnival and more on tap Saturday in Downtown Mocksville Not an officer 89076 3821260Page 9 Page 9 Man arrested after impersonating detective Arrr! Pirates invade Downtown Mocksville It was Pirate Party Day Saturday, sponsored by the Downtown Mocksville Collaborative. Dozens of youngsters - many clad in their pirate best - walked the plank, searched for treasures - and as shown at right, walked the plank. Some appear to be more worried about the “sharks” than others. Above, Elle King helps her children, Graham and Lincoln-Huck, visit the Cognition area to deco- rate treasure chests for their trek through down- town l. For more photos, please turn to page 8. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt By Mike BarnhardtEnterprise Record Jack Williams wants to help other young people dealing with diabetes.Madelynn Keller wants to recognize people for the small things they do to make life bet-ter for others.Sean Lane wants to create cards to give to others with positive messages and quotes.All three are the newest Respect Ambassadors for the Davie Respect Initiative; and all are Davie High School stu-dents. They received $1,000 to help bring their ideas into the community.Bermuda Run Mayor Rick Cross presented the awards on behalf of the initiative in a cer-emony at the town hall.“When I have time with folks like these three young people, it gives us hope for what the fu-ture will hold,” Cross said.Dr. Stephen Leighton came up with the idea in 2017 af-ter moving to Davie County. Jack Williams is an ambassador for the Davie Respect Initiative and the Juvenile Diabetes Research Founda- tion. - Photo by Savannah Ivey, Davie High intern Respect ambassadors ‘give us hope’ “We started to think, what’s a way we can make it even better than it already was.” The Davie Respect Initiative was born, and has been giving out those $1,000 awards multi-ple times a year. It was about that time that Leighton heard that young peo-ple didn’t recognize how they could make a difference. “We decided to tap into those young folks in Davie County.” The awards go to Davie residents age 12-21. Apply at www.da-vierespect.com.“It’s all about great ideas be-ing put into practice,” he said. “The money is an incentive.”•“It’s giving me the opportu-nity to do something I really enjoy, which is crafting and making cards,” Sean Lane said. “And spreading respect throughout the community.”Lane already has made a few cards, and designed others, and is working on finding the peo-ple who would most benefit from receiving a card. “The cards share positive messages and quotes, encour-aging recipients to care for oth-ers. The cards are all designed and created by me, with love.”He hopes others will join him in his Cards for Kindness campaign.“My project is all about en-couraging others, of all ages, to show respect to their commu-nity. My cards are made with the intention to sprout the mo-tivation to be kind, considerate, and maybe even to inspire to create a project of their own,” Lane said.He truly believes in respect.“I’ve seen how a person’s attitude and the little things that they do can be the most impactful form of respect,” he said. “Being empathetic and considerate are great ways to show respect to your commu-nity.”It works both ways, he said. “Receiving respect can feel ful-filling and joyful. The feeling Please See Respect - Page 9 By Jim BuiceEnterprise Record BERMUDA RUN - How much interest was there in a rezoning request involving a potential 270-unit apartment complex on 19 acres between Kinderton Village and the Lowes Foods shopping center?Well, the Bermuda Run Town Council knew well in advance that Town Hall wouldn’t come close to handling the antici-pated crowd, so last Tuesday night’s meeting was moved to Calvary West’s church audito-rium.And the residents of Kinder-ton Village, united in wearing green shirts, holding protest signs and sending a steady stream of protesting voices to the podium to state their oppo-sition during a public hearing, got the verdict they wanted.After a two-and-a-half hour meeting, they loudly cheered when the council voted 5-0 to deny the proposed conditional rezoning request – finding the amendment is not consistent with the town’s Comprehen-sive Plan and does not consider the action to be reasonable and in the public interest, that the proposal is not consistent with the desired character of the surrounding community, and that the density will adversely impact the adjacent neighbor-hoods. Council says no Bermuda Run apartment plans nixed Please See Apartments - Page 4 2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022Editorial Page 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 YOUR NEWSPAPER Three Ways There are three ways to enjoy the Davie County Enterprise Record each week. • Subscribe to the print edition for only $32.03 per year • • Subscribe to the online version of the newspaper and learn what’s happening a lot sooner • • Check out the e-edition. It’s like reading the newspaper page for page but online• www.ourdavie.com 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 Judge, Pujols should be household names The Coronation ChairBy Linda H. BarnetteKnowing that Charles III will soon be crowned the next ruler of England, I thought that perhaps an article about the history of the Coronation Chair is an appropriate topic of interest to some folks. The chair was commissioned by King Edward I in 1296 to contain the coronation stone of Scotland, which was cap-tured from the Scots af-ter a battle. It was named King Edward’s Chair af-ter Edward the Confessor and used to be kept in his shrine in Westminster Ab-bey.The chair is high-backed, designed in the Gothic style. It was built between 1297 and 1300 and is the oldest dated piece of furniture made by a known artist named Wal-ter of Durham. Since the 1300’s all English monarchs have been seated in this chair at the time of coronation except for Mary II. Although the chair was at one time painted and gilded, only a few pieces of foliage and birds are still visible. At the bottom are lions which symbolize kingship.Only 2 times in history was the chair moved. One was for a ceremony in Westminster Hall for the induction of Oliver Cromwell as Lord Protector and again during WWII when for safety reasons it was moved out of London.Now the chair sets on a base in St. George’s Chapel and is moved to the place of coronations near the high altar of the Abbey.I remember watching the crowning of Queen Elizabeth in 1953 and eventually got to see the Crown Jewels, in-cluding her crown, in the Tower of London. I also plan to watch the coronation of Charles III at some point after the Queen’s funeral. I have always been fascinated by the customs of England and by all of the royal pomp and cir-cumstance. We are seeing much of it now with Elizabeth II’s death. .As my friend from England once said to the graduates at Queens College, “It is the ceremonies of life that make us civilized.” ReflectionsBy E. BishopAs summer fades and autumn begins, it is a great time to reflect back on what has taken place over these past several months and to contemplate what lies ahead. The begin-ning of the new year was a rough start after our family lost a loved one and then many in the family catching that dreadful virus. However, we were fortunate enough to get through those trying times to get a new start with only a few mishaps along the way. Mishap, misfortune or you could call it a disaster. With-out my brother’s guidance this year, my gardening efforts were pathetic. I didn’t have him telling me what I should do every step of the way. My written instructions from his mentoring sessions were followed but somehow the weath-er and my ambition didn’t cooperate. It’s good we don’t have to rely on food from our garden like our ancestors did. The one good thing to be proud of was the abundance of sunflowers we had planted.Other accomplishments to celebrate during this time in-clude one niece learning to drive a tractor her daddy had left her and growing the biggest watermelons (to give away) just as he had done, another making jam from figs and muscadines her daddy had grown and along with the third, making sure their mother is well loved and cared for. Other happenings included a quick trip with my sister to New Jersey for her to pick up two cats that our ill cousin can no longer care for; this is a true testament that family is important. And, yet another important thing to mention is that we have a wedding to plan for that will take place in the new year. Summer vacations are over, a new school year begins, routines get back to normal and many of us may see fall as something to savor. It is a season of harvest and thank-fulness, changing colors, cooler weather, a time for festi-vals and just in general, a beautiful time of year. Don’t rush it like it seems all retailers do. Let’s enjoy it. Go to those apple festivals; take a ride through pumpkin growing territory and check out our local Cherry Hill Farms that won’t disappoint you with their assortment of pumpkins and other products. Although my harvest (from the garden) was not that great this year, I’m grateful I can still look forward to try-ing again next year. The ground is waiting to be turned over for the winter and I have the seeds saved. Maybe, I’ll even try a watermelon patch. Tending the VineyardBy Stephanie Williams DeanFrom one season to the next, there’s work to be done in a vineyard. Soil preparation, setting the plants and vines, good planting practices, the trellis and posts, insect con-trol, fertilization, and pruning – all are essential to good fruit quality and production of adequate fruit on the vines. When fruit quality is low and vines wane – more food is needed.That’s true for all of us, too. There are times we need more food – of a spiritual nature. We are a constant work in progress – not fully grown or of the finest quality – not yet mature or ready for picking. We don’t just blossom where planted – we must work on ourselves, from the inside out – feeding, filling, and refilling our Spirit with nourishment. And we have to pay attention to where we’re planted – our environment and that with which we surround our-selves. It might feel like much work, but Spiritual work will produce what we need most – peace and joy. And we’ll do more good work for our Father.John 15 reads, “I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener, He cuts off every branch in me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful.” (NIV) A new season’s approaching – it’s a good time to check the vines in our vineyards. There’s not a better time to tend to them, so we have more fruitful branches. Speaking of new seasons, there’s an old Suzy Bogguss love song called “You Change Just like The Weather.” The lyrics go like this:The wind is blowing from a new directionYou’re thinking ‘bout going, I knowIt’s been a long season, and hard on our affectionsBut that’s no reason to let goYou change just like the weatherBut the weather you know will always changeIf you stay it’ll get betterWherever you go, it’s bound to rainSo put on your jacket and stand your groundLove’s gonna have its highs and lowsIf we turn and face it, the wind will come aroundYou don’t have to chase it when it blowsSo if you’re living through a “winter” period of your life – don’t waiver and stand strong. We don’t need to chase the wind. Turn and face them – focus on your spiritual growth. Find your peace – and regain your joy. Keep doing your good works. Sometimes, it is difficult to decide what to write in this space. Sometimes, the mind goes blank - or to everything in my life other than writing and editorial or a column. You know the difference: an editorial is commentary on real events; a column is commentary on life. Both are made up.Just so you know.Regular readers know that most of the time, my mind goes from here to yonder and back again, kind of like a squirrel on the highway.The topic of discussion this week started with the last thing I heard on the radio before heading into the office at the absolute last second I had to pen this rambling diatribe. The morning radio bozos I listen to (I’ll not give the station or name of the show, the word bozos should be enough.), were talking about how football crazy Americans have be-come.They’re right. And as they pointed out, baseball is going by the wayside.I like a good football game, especially those college guys, and we’ve had some doozies this year. Being an Ap-palachian fan is like having a heart test every week. But baseball has always been my favorite sport as a fan. I love college basketball, especially when the games are close, but I don’t plan my day to watch a game as I do with baseball. The thing is, I’m a one-team baseball fan.It brings me to the point of what those radio bozos were saying. Baseball and baseball players don’t get the credit they deserve.Even I don’t like to watch a baseball game on TV that doesn’t involve my team. A close game in any other sport can get my attention. I’m a baseball fan, but only a fan of one team. I really don’t have favorite teams in other sports, including college, although I find it fun to root for a par-ticular team on a certain day.So what is the problem with baseball? It’s too slow for TV. Exciting and fun in person, but too slow for TV. And although Major League Baseball is taking steps to speed up the game and make it more TV exciting, it won’t work. An inning will still be able to last an hour (For those who don’t know, a baseball game includes 9 innings, pack a pillow.)Baseball should be the top news in sports publications and on sports TV right now, but it isn’t. Pennant and play-off races are in full swing. The New York Yankees’ (Wait a few seconds while I get a bad taste out of my mouth.) Aaron Judge is on the verge of breaking one of the great-est records of all time - Roger Maris’ 61 home runs in a single season (Without performance enhancing substances, as far as we know.). That’s pretty big, but I’ll bet there’s not many people who aren’t baseball fans who even know who Aaron Judge is, much less what he’s about to accomplish.The name LeBron James, on the other hand, is recog-nized everywhere. I read earlier this year that LeBron James has more Twitter followers than all Major League Baseball players combined. That says it all.Albert Pujols, who most thought would have retired years ago, is on a tear. He’s hot. Most of you probably didn’t know, but he’s a baseball player - way beyond his prime but still hitting homeruns - and is nearing 700 of them for his career - most of which was for the St. Louis Cardinals. That’s a lot of homeruns.Remember Babe Ruth (Of course you don’t, but you do know who he is and what he did.) hit 714 homeruns. That’s a feat that will never be repeated. It’s the greatest baseball statistic of all time, because Babe Ruth hit his homeruns while getting his fill of beer, hotdogs and cigars. Now that’s an accomplishment. Maybe they should put an asterik beside his name in the Hall of Fame to let the world know. Imagine what he would have accomplished if he had the luxuries today’s players enjoy. My guess is he would have failed. He did what made him happy, what’s wrong with that?Is it the media’s fault that baseball and baseball players don’t get the credit they deserve? Maybe it is, or maybe it isn’t. (You fans of all 3 million sports that also don’t get the credit they deserve please stay quiet, I’m only writing about these 3.). But I do know that on Saturday, I’ll be looking for the best college football games on TV.- Mike BarnhardtP.S. This is a column. Or at least I think it is. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - 3 Presidential Sites Time to Talk about mental health By Julie WhittakerFor the Enterprise The National Alliance on Mental Illness, NAMI, offers supports to persons and families coping with mental illness within local communities via trained volunteers. Residents of Davie have access to these supports through NAMI NW Piedmont, NC. Families learning to cope with an ill family member may benefit from attending these free programs.NAMI Family Support Group is a peer-led support group for any adult with a loved one who has experienced symptoms of a mental health condition. Gain insight from the challenges and successes of others facing similar ex-periences.NAMI’s support groups are unique because they follow a structured model, ensuring everyone has an opportunity to be heard and to get what they need.• Free to participants• Designed for adult loved ones of people with mental health conditions• Led by family members of people with mental health conditions• 60-90 minutes long and meets weekly, every other week or monthly (varies by location)• No specific medical therapy or treatment is endorsed• ConfidentialBy sharing your experiences in a safe setting, you can gain hope and develop supportive relationships. This group allows your voice to be heard and provides an op-portunity for your personal needs to be met. It encourages empathy, productive discussion, and a sense of communi-ty. You'll benefit from other’s experiences, discover your inner strength, and empower yourself by sharing your own experiences in a non-judgmental space.NAMI Family Support Group will help you:• Aim for better coping skills• Find strength in sharing experiences• Not judge anyone’s pain• Forgive ourselves and reject guilt• Embrace humor as healthy• Accept that we cannot solve every problem• Understand that mental health conditions are no one's fault and can be traumatic experiences” For a more comprehensive education on coping with mentally ill family members, NAMI offers the NAMI Family to Family Course.NAMI Family-to-Family is a free, 8-session educa-tional program for family, significant others, and friends of people with mental health conditions. It is a designated evidenced-based program. This means that research shows that the program significantly improves the coping and problem-solving abilities of the people closest to a person with a mental health condition.NAMI Family-to-Family is taught by NAMI-trained family members who have been there, and includes pre-sentations, discussions, and interactive exercises.NAMI Family-to-Family not only provides informa-tion and strategies for taking care of the person you love, but you'll also find out that you're not alone. Recovery is a journey, and there is hope.The group setting of NAMI Family-to-Family pro-vides mutual support and shared positive impact—expe-rience compassion and reinforcement from people who understand your situation. Sharing your own experience may help others in your class. In the program, you'll learn about:• How to solve problems and communicate effectively• Taking care of yourself and managing your stress• Supporting your loved one with compassion• Finding and using local supports and services• Up-to-date information on mental health conditions and how they affect the brain• How to handle a crisis• Current treatments and therapies• The impact of mental health conditions on the entire family”NAMI NW Piedmont offers Family Support Group meetings via Zoom, on the 1st and 3rd Mondays 7-8:30 pm, (in person Monday meetings may become available soon) and the 2nd and 4th Tuesdays 6-7:30 pm of each month. In addition, the Family-to-Family Course is of-fered at least annually, and if we have facilitators avail-able twice a year. Email admin@naminwpiedmontnc.org to request meeting notifications. You can visit NAMI NW Piedmont, NC or follow on Facebook https://www.face-book.com/NAMI.NWP.NC to stay abreast of opportunities. There is support for family members By Betty Etchison WestFor the Enterprise If you live in Davie County and want to vis-it a site connected to the 40th President of the Unit-ed States, Ronald Reagan, you can visit his boyhood home in Dixon, Ill., 809.8 miles from Mocksville. If you are willing to travel a greater distance, you can visit the Reagan Presiden-tial Library and Grave in Simi Valley, Calif., 2,451.1 miles from Mocksville“What young person in this town is most likely to become the President of the United States?” If that question had been asked in any of the string of towns in which Ronald Reagan lived as he grew up, Ron-ald’s name would probably not have been mentioned. Why? Because Reagan, who was born in 1911, grew up in a poor family, a family which had limited opportunies for improving its lot in life. Ronald Reagan’s father, a shoe salesman, was an alcoholic, who could not keep a job, so the Reagan family kept moving. Mr. Jack Reagan, Ronald’s fa-ther, believed that each move would improve the family’s financial situa-tion, but even though they moved from Galesburg to Chicago on to Dixon, the family’s situation did not improve. If we fast forward to 1980, we see that Ronald Reagan should have been named the youth most likely to become Presi-dent. Reagan made the old saw—“anyone in the Unit- ed States can grow up to be president”-- a truism.” That paragraph was taken from the book, “Glimps-es of the Presidents of the United States of America and Presidential Places,” by Betty Etchison West, and is used here because really presents an accurate picture of Ronald Reagan’s early life. The house at 816 S. Hen-nepin Ave. in Dixon, Ill., is the house which served as the Reagan home for the longest period of time and which Reagan seemed to consider his boyhood home. Mr. Reagan went back to that house when he was president and had a meal in the dining room. A local lady had made a cake for Mr. Reagan, but the president’s chefs did not want him to eat any-thing that they had not prepared. Mr. Reagan was determined to have a piece of that cake. He ultimately won and enjoyed his local-ly made cake. That house in Dixon is open to the public and it looks both inside and out much like houses in Davie County which were built and filled with furni-ture of that period. Maple-shades in Davie County is one of those houses. The Reagan Dixon House is ad-ministered by the Ronald Reagan Home Preservation Foundation and you can get information by calling 815-288-5176.Reagan grew up in Dix-on and went to school there. He was a popular student in high school, and he worked during the summers as a lifeguard at Dixon’s River-side Park. He was evidently a good lifeguard because he is credited with rescu-ing more than 70 people from the river’s current. After graduating from high school, Ronald enrolled in Eureka College. He held several jobs there to make the money to pay for his tuition, etc. One job was that of a radio announcer. He was evidently a good announcer because after college he got a job as an announcer at a radio station and finally began to do the play by play of ball games. He was invited by a ball team to travel with them to California. He went, and, while he was there, a friend arranged for him to have a screen test. He not only was able to get a screen test; he was given a contract. He made a number of movies, the most memorable of which is probably “Knute Rockne, All American.” It was from that movie that he got the nickname, “Gip-per”.In 1941, Reagan mar-ried actress Jane Wyman. The couple had one daugh-ter and they adopted a son. Reagan spent time in mili-tary service during World War II. After the war, he resumed his acting career and also became the Pres-ident of the Screen Actors Guild. He was evidently so busy that he did not re-alize that his marriage was in trouble, but, in 1949, his wife sought a divorce, which was granted. Reagan was greatly troubled by the divorce, but slowly recov-ered as he stayed busy with making movies and par-ticularly with the job with the Screen Actors Guild. In fact, it was through his Screen Actors Guild job that he met Nancy Davis.Nancy Davis was an ac-tress. She was troubled be-cause she began to receive literature from the Commu-nist Party. All of this was happening when Sen. Mc-Carthy was sure that there was a communist under every rock in this country. Ms. Davis was advised to talk to the President of the Screen Actors Guild, who should be able to help. She reached out for his help and he was able to handle the problem. That contact was also the beginning of one of the country’s great love affairs. Reagan took things slowly because he was upset about the failure of his first marriage, but Nancy Davis and Ronald Reagan were finally mar-ried in 1952. For the rest of Mr. Reagan’s life he and his wife were a strong team even after he was elected President in 1980. The following is anoth-er chapter from the book, “Glimpses of the Presi-dents of the United States and Presidential Places,” which describes the final phase of the Reagans life: “After serving two terms, Mr. Ronald Reagan left office in 1989. He and his wife, Nancy, returned to California to live out their retirement years. Mr. Rea-gan wrote a sad letter to the American people on Nov. 5, 1994 in which he revealed that he had Alz-heimer’s disease. He lived for about 10 more years at his home with his wife caring for him. He died on June 5, 2004, and the 40th President was laid to rest at a beautiful spot near the Ronald Reagan Library in Simi Valley, Cali. The for-mer president’s wife, Nan-cy, lived 12 more years. She died on March 6, 2016, and was laid to rest beside her husband.” The graves are on what appears to be a mountain ledge. One can look from the grave sites far to the west and see the Pacific Ocean. That is the spot that the Reagans chose for their graves and it is an outstand-ing one. The graves them-selves are covered with marble slabs.If you are willing to travel three times the dis-tance to Dixon to visit a Reagan site, you will be much rewarded by a visit to the Ronald Reagan Presi-dential Library in Simi Val-ley. That library is excellent in every way. From the time that you begin the long drive up the mountain to the library and see presidential flags flying from every pole, you will be happy that you made the trip. The exhibits iare out-standing and represent ev-ery phase of Mr. Reagan’s life. Both the former pres-ident and his wife worked hard on that library and it shows because it tells the Reagan story well. In the museum, you will even see the suit that was cut off of Mr. Regan when he was shot. There is a piece of the Berlin Wall that Mr. Reagan demand-ed that Mr. Gorbachev tear down on the grounds. Attached to the library building is a huge hanger which holds the Air Force One Airplane which Mr. Reagan used when he was president. The Helicopter One that was used by Mr. Reagan is also there. You can actually climb into the airplane—which will be the only time that most of us will be on Air Force One. The Reagan Presidential Library is indeed outstand-ing, and a visit there will be rewarding experience for anyone interested in presi-dential history. Ronald and Nancy Reagan helped design the Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valey, Calif., considered one of the best presidential libraries. A visit to the Reagan library reveals a lot about the Presidential couple; Reagan on the phone aboard Air Force One. Travel to Ill., then to Calif. to learn about Reagan Antiques and Collectibles 121 N. MAIN ST. MOCKSVILLE, NC 27028 336-753-8700 Hours: Wed & Thurs 11-6, Fri 11-7, Sat 10-4 All Framed Art Work, Mirrors, & Clocks20% OFF Sale Ends Oct. 31, 2022 4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Continued From Page 1“My fear was that the re-zoning would be approved and that it would destroy our community as we know it today,” said resident Paul Dixon who spoke against the project, which was initi-ated by RLM Development, doing business as Homes Urban, in the spring calling for rezoning part of an over-all tract totaling 64.7 acres from Commercial Mixed (CM) to Village Mixed (VM) for the multifamily residential units.It was met by over-whelming opposition from the Kinderton Village com-munity with concerns re-lated to high density, water runoff, traffic, noise and forever changing their tran-quil way of life.After the Planning Board voted to recommend denial of the request in its April meeting, the petitioner then decided to withdraw its ini-tial rezoning request on the day of the council meeting in May before regroup-ing and coming back with numerous changes to the original plan – including a revised rezoning request for Village Mixed Conditional District Plan (VM-CD).The Planning Board voted 5-1 to again deny the latest proposal in its August meeting.Developer Robert Mor-gan, speaking on the merits of the Class-A multifamily apartments with 270 units on 19 acres (14.2 units to the acre) in nine 45-foot tall buildings, said that the pro-posed project has evolved over the recent months in response to the community.He stated that Village Mixed with conditions is an appropriate use for the site and appropriate for current and future land use plans while being consistent with the town’s Comprehensive Plan - with buildings scaled consistently with the exist-ing Kinderton Village con-dominiums to go along with first-class amenities, includ-ing a clubhouse, resort-style Bermuda Run residents fill the Calvary West auditorium to express their opposition to a conditional rezoning for an apartment complex behind Lowe’s Foods. - Photos by Jim Buice Mike Brannon (right) makes the motion to deny the proposed rezoning request as other members of the Town Council look on. The residents react to a speaker during the public hearing. Apartments ... swimming pool, dog park and full-time staff.Morgan also pointed out that rental housing is a nec-essary part of every com-munity and that this kind of residential community will provide an additional type of housing that is in demand.Sally Burnette McGuire of the Hillsdale Real Es-tate Group, which owns the property, discussed how many times the Homes Ur-ban plan has been revised to address the concerns of the Kinderton Village residents – from buffers to storm-water to the location of the buildings.However, starting with resident Chris Bryant talk-ing about nearly 1,200 peti-tion supporters against the project to resident Lynn Cole, the last speaker – and all those in between – Kinderton Village would not be deterred.“The collective intellect of a 1,000 outweighs even the best intuition of the five who will vote on this matter tonight,” Bryant said. “This vote will be a catalyst, but in the end it has far less to do with the result of a parcel of land than it does in con-firming that our town gover-nance is intact, in touch and in tune with the voters that elected it. This vote will de-termine the legacy of Ber-muda Run.”Dean Warren, president of the Kinderton Village Single Family HOA, said he was representing 416 households and asked coun-cil members if they felt like they were voted into their positions by the people to represent the majority of the town of Bermuda Run.“If you are not for the people, then who are you representing and why?” he asked.Chad Hedgepeth said that the entire problem can be summed up in a single word: “Density.”Others made reference to the recent addition of over 200 apartments just across the interstate at Comet Ber-muda Run and that this is the third request for apart-ment complexes in the town in three years.Still others asked if this was all about bringing in additional revenue for Ber-muda Run.Only one individual who spoke during public com-ments had an opposing opinion. John Ferguson, the town’s first mayor and a resident in the community since 1975, said he’s been around a long time but that “we have to have growth, and we have to take care of all citizens. We cannot discriminate against people who are renters. I would recommend you folks take a very serious consideration on this vote.”Finally, with the closing of the public hearing and Mayor Rick Cross turning the matter over to the coun-cil, Mike Brannon made the motion recommend- ing denial, breaking down his decision based on four stated components – not consistent with the town’s Comprehensive Plan, not reasonable and in the pub-lic interest, not consistent with the desired character of the surrounding commu-nity, and the density will ad-versely impact the adjacent neighborhoods.Brannon said that it then came down to the town it-self and the people of the town, and through that lens, the result for him was to deny the amendment.Council member Heather Coleman then seconded the motion before further discussion from the board members.That included a lengthy comment from Melinda Szeliga, who said she and council members have lis-tened and done their re-search since Day One, but she may have been “prob-ably the most difficult per- son on this council for you to convince that this is a bad thing” because she once lived in the Comet Bermu-da Run apartments, made friends with her neighbors there and thought the apart-ments were beautiful.However, Szeliga also shared before the ensuing 5-0 vote to deny that “some-times we do need to be care-ful for what we wish for. I am fearful for the commer-cial development than can go there. You could have someone come in and take down all those trees, not giving you any buffer at all. You’re going to be looking at the back of the grocery store and those power lines. I think that is going to be much more negative to your property values than if you have a natural buffer to pro-tect you. But based on what you’re saying and what you’re sharing and your passion this evening, I truly feel like I have no choice but to go with what is being proposed and to also vote to deny the rezoning.”McGuire, who is also a longtime resident of the community, added that as a member of the land own-ership group, she has been accused of trying to make a quick dollar on this project but denied that was the case.“Realistically, it would be likely easier for us to sell this parcel to someone else under the current zoning re-strictions,” she said. “And that’s not a scare tactic. It’s just a simple truth, but with conditional rezoning allow-ing all of us to know exactly what the project parameters will be before building com-mences is an insurance pol-icy that protects our com-munity. Under the existing restrictions, any prospective buyer who wants to use the property under the cur-rent zoning ordinances can proceed at their discretion without community input.” 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! Framing Lumber Treated Lumber • Hardwoods Plywood • PPG Paints Cabot Stains Sikkens Stains Flooring • Sakrete Plumbing • Electrical Wood Furniture & More! Wood Shop& Building Supply Monday-Friday 7:30 - 5:30 Saturday 7:30 - 3:00 3301 Salisbury Highway, Statesville 704-872-3148 • lilshavers.com We Know Wood! If wood confuses you, call or come by...We’ll clear it up for you! Big Lots will open its newest store at 1063 Yadk-inville Road in Mocksville on Sept. 24. Offers will be available each day during the grand opening weekend, and scratch-off cards with the potential of up to $250 off a purchase will be given to the first 100 customers each day. Opening is at 8:45 a.m. Saturday, and the store will be open Monday-Sunday from 9 a.m.-9 p.m.“We’re thrilled to be bringing the Big Lots expe-rience to Mocksville with the opening of our new-est location,” said Bruce Thorn, Big Lots president and CEO. “We’ve put a lot of thought into the layout, design and visual appeal of the store to elevate the shop-per experience and help our customers live bigger and better.”Big Lots includes furni-ture, seasonal decor, kitch-enware, pet supplies, food items, laundry and cleaning essentials and more. Big Lots open here on Saturday Follow us on Facebook Davie County Enterprise Record DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - 5 There are many Da-vie residents who wish to change the lives of students by investing in their educa-tion through scholarships administered by the Davie Community Foundation.“These are important investments by generous people who understand the value of education,” said Jane Simpson, foundation CEO and president.“There are other gener-ous people in Davie County who choose to invest in our community through the foundation but do it in a much broader way. These donors create Community Funds. Whether the fund is unrestricted in its use or limited for use in a specific area of interest, they are the most important investments community members can make in Davie County. “Because the foundation board can use the distribu-tion of earnings from these funds to make ever chang-ing grants to agencies, or-ganizations, and projects in our community, they can vary as the needs and oppor-tunities change over time.“Community Funds are especially important in times of emergency as we saw in March 2020 when COVID-19 struck. Be-cause the distributions are directed by the foundation board, they were able to direct $50,000 to create the Davie County COVID-19 Relief Fund, joined by the Mebane Charitable Founda-tion which matched another $50,000 and community members also contributed.” Grants from the fund could be made immediately to non-profit organizations hit hard by COVID. Sud-denly the support for agen-cies had stopped, but the need for their services had exploded. “In those very uncertain times, the foundation was able to respond quickly ul-timately granting $125,920 to agencies and non-profit organizations,” she said. “This was only possible be-cause of the generosity of community members who had created Community Funds for Davie.”Who are these donors? “We will meet them over the next month or two. You will recognize many of their names and faces as they are your friends and neighbors. They share a common goal of providing lasting support for their community.”• Ken and Betty Dwiggins grew up in Davie County. They returned in July 1997 after Ken retired from more than 35 years of service to Ford Motor Co. Ken want-ed to share his talents with the community he loved as a child. He was quickly re-cruited and given the task of reorganizing the foundation that had been incorporated in December 1988 as the Davie County Foundation.Ken, along with then board chair, Joan Carter, set the foundation in motion to follow the model of commu-nity foundations through-out the state and country. They spent months meeting with colleagues from other community foundations to understand their business model and learn more about the legal aspects. They ul-timately decided that the missing piece was a staff person who would nurture and grow the foundation over time. On April 1, 2003, the board hired Simpson as the foundation’s first staff. She was later named President and CEO of the organiza-tion as Ken stepped away.They established the Ken and Betty Dwiggins Fund. The distributions from their fund’s earnings have been combined with those of other Community Funds to make investments in schools and organizations for the last 13 years.Because the fund is en-dowed, invested perma-nently, grants will continue to be made from the fund in Davie County forever. “Thank you, Ken and Betty, for your vision and your generosity,” Simpson said. “You are truly Davie County philanthropists who have given of your time, your talents, and your trea-sure to help our community.Thank you.”To learn more about the Davie Community Foun-dation contact Simpson at (336) 753-6903 or jsimp-son@daviefoundation.org or visit www.daviefounda-tion.org. Ken Dwiggins Foundation investments to help Davie students for years Start earning with Bank OZK today! *Annual Percentage Yield (APY) effective as of the publication date. Offer applies to new CDs only. $1,000 minimum deposit to open and is required to earn stated APY. Penalty for early withdrawal. IRA CD is subject to eligibility requirements. Offer not available to Public Funds, brokers, dealers and other financial institutions. Fees could reduce earnings. Offer subject to change without notice. Offer good at locations in Davie County, NC only. ** IRA CD must be opened in person and cannot be opened online. ozk.com І Member FDIC Visit one of our Davie County locations or open an account online at ozk.com.** 8 month CD or IRA CD Special 13 month CD or IRA CD Special 21 month CD or IRA CD Special 2.20 2.75 3.00 % % % APY * APY * APY * 336-751-HELP 24 HOUR CRISIS LINE OUR SERVICES INCLUDE: 24-Hour Crisis Line Assistance Filing Protective Orders Crisis Counseling Domestic Violence & Sexual Assault Information Emergency Shelter Assistance Support Groups 6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022Public Records Building PermitsThe following building permits were issued and are listed by applicant, type of construction, estimated cost, and location.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $172,125, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- Dick Anderson Con-struction, single family dwelling, $1,200,000, Yad-kin Valley Rd., Advance.- Neil Street Builders, interior upfit, $60,000, Bayberry Place, Bermuda Run.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $197,700, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- Single wide manufac-tured home, $89,000, Deer Run Dr., Mocksville.- Single wide manufac-tured home, $93,000, Deer Run Dr., Mocksville.- Southeastern Pools NC, swimming pool, $86,497, S. Madera Dr., Mocksville.- Gloria Plummer, deck, $3,000, Canton Rd., Ad-vance.- Robert Rizzotto, de-tached garage, $32,000, Arrendal Ct., Mocksville.- Daniel Windsor, de-tached garage, $25,000, Ol-lie Harkey Rd., Mocksville.- Barry Grubb, reno-vation, $23,000, County Home Rd., Mocksville.- Jason Gager, renova-tion, $15,000, Main Church Rd., Mocksville.- Paul Breedlove, pole shed, $73,500, Double A Trail, Advance.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $222,900, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $219,675, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $172,125, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $219,675, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $236,100, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $197,700, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- Cindy Shepherd, met-al building, $40,000, Bean Rd., Mocksville.- Trent Adams Proper-ties, single family dwelling, $1,120,000, Whipporwill Rd., Mocksville.- Jose Segovia, renova-tion, $30,000, County Line Rd., Harmony.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $172,215 Highland Ave., Mocksville- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $222,900, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $222,900, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $219,675, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $236,100, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $172,215, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- Jason Wyatt, shed, $10,735.08, Lantern Dr., Advance.- Groundworks North Carolina, (Tarheel Base-ment Systems), renovation, $10,200, Lakeview Rd., Mocksville.- Heather Link, renova-tion, $20,000, Honeysuckle Lane, Mocksville.- Square Investments, renovation, $7,500, Jas-mine Lane, Mocksville.- Guilford Steven John-son, patio cover, $22,000, Hillcrest Dr., Advance.- Jonathan Estep, single wide manufactured home, $114,000, Adams Rd., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $236,100, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $222,900, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- Century Homes & Renovations, renovation, $25,000, James Way, Ber-muda Run. - Brent Carlton, single family dwelling, $102,808, Ridge Rd., Mocksville. - True Homes, single family dwelling, $184,286, Sherwood Ct., Advance.- Helmsman Homes, single family dwelling, $161,100, Pepperstone Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $236,100, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- D.R. Horton, single family dwelling, $222,900, Culloden Dr., Mocksville.- CMH Homes, double wide manufactured home, $210,000, Greenhill Rd., Mocksville.- Khristen Mears, single family dwelling, $495,000, Claude Ratledge Rd., Mocksville.- Clearwater Devel-opment, swimming pool, $50,000, Jericho Church Rd., Mocksville.- Renewable Energy De-sign Group, solar panels, $14,250, Rainbow Rd., Ad-vance.- Zach George, work-shop shed, $18,000, Bing-ham & Parks Rd., Advance.- Band of Brothers Con-struction, deck, $28,162.50, Pepperstone Place, Mocks-ville.- Darin Ferguson, de-tached garage, $29,900, Cedarwood Place, Mocks-ville.- Randy Grubb Con-struction, garage, $68,000, Sheffield Farms Trail, Har-mony.- Band of Brothers Con-struction, deck, $82,099, Peoples Creek Rd., Ad-vance.- Magic Pools, swim-ming pool, $42,450, Essex Farm Rd., Advance.- Greg Parrish Builders of NC, single family dwell-ing, $550,000, Old Dutch Rd., Advance.- Smith & Company Custom Homes & Remod-eling, renovation, $36,000, Meadow Ridge Dr., Mocks-ville.- The Improvement Store, deck, $14,030, Wills Rd., Advance.- Clayton Homes of Statesville, off-frame mod-ular home, $217,000, Ralph Ratledge Rd., Advance.- Adam Casstevens, single family dwelling, $110,000, Calahaln Rd., Mocksville.- Landon Swisher, single family dwelling, $268,000, Howardtown Rd., Mocks-ville.- Smith & Company Custom Homes & Remod-eling, deck, $29,790.08, Becktown Rd., Mocksville.- Ryan Noble Construc-tion, shop/barn, $120,000, Riverview Rd., Advance.- Jason Gager, work-shop, $50,000, Main Church Rd., Mocksville.- Infinity, upgrade to ex-isting cell tower, $28,000, Spillman Farm Trail, Mocksville.- Shelton Construc-tion General Contractors, pre-engineered building, $450,000, Peoples Creek Rd., Advance.- Calvin Construction Services, install retaining walls, $104,178, East Lake Dr., Mocksville.- Chris Kenne-dy, install metal siding, $11,350, 1166 Yadkinville Rd., Mocksville.- Manuel Ojo de agua Flores, metal building, $150,000, Milling Rd., Mocksville. ArrestsThe following were ar-rested by the Davie County Sheriff’s Office.Sept. 17: Michael Au-gustus Merritt, 21, of US 601 N., Mocksville, tres-passing, larceny.Sept. 16: Sean Nicho-las Allen, 28, of Williams Road, Advance, probation violation, domestic vio-lence prevention order vi-olation.Sept. 15: Jerry Dale Johnson Jr., 42, of Davie St., Cooleemee, assault; Nathan Alexander Mills, 25, of Troutman, injury to property, assault; Christo-pher Eugene Phyillips, 39, of Hobson Drive, Mocks-ville, attempted larceny, attempting to obtain prop-erty by false pretense; Scott Legrande Whittaker, 40, of Duke Whittaker Road, Mocksville, domestic vio-lence protectition order vi-olation.Sept. 14: Cody Vance Ebright, 26, of Singleton Road, Mocksville, assault on a female; Cynthia Dale Edwards, 50, of Four Cor-ners Road, Mocksville, cruelty to animals; Robert Alexander James, 21, of LaQuinta Drive, Advance, probation violation.Sept. 13: Demetrius McKinley Brown, 29, of Patricia Way, Mocksville, larceny by employee, larce-ny of chose in ation; Kolby Ryan Lowe, 19, of Coving-ton Drive, Advance, felony possession Schedule IV controlled substande, im-personating a law enforce-ment officer, first-degree burglary; Mickey Wayne Roseman Jr., 27, of Cum-mings Lane, Mocksville, intercering with jail fire system; Luther Alan Stan-ley, 45, of Cricket Lane, Advance, larceny; Desmon J. Torrence, 31, of Lex-ington, domestic violence prevention order violation; Jason Caleb Wishon, 20, of Mallard Road, Mocksville, aiding and abetting, felony conspiracy.Sept. 12: Shawn Eric Baughyman-Skrabut, 33, of Mocksville, malicious conduct by a prisoner; Ter-ry John Cutich, 40, of US 64 W., Mocksville, pos-session of drug parapher-nalia; Dakota Lee Handy, 25, of Germanton, failure to appear in court; Willie Ray Hawkins Jr., 53, of Salisbury, reckless driving, fleeing to elude arrest with a vehicle; Robert Alexan-der James, 21, of LaQuinta Drive, Advance, breaking and entring; Rodney Dee Meadows, 44, of Salisbury, giving false report to po-lice; .Sept. 11: Antonio Ju-wan Clement, 25, of Eric Road, Mocksville, maintaining a vehicle or dwelling for a controlled substance, possession mar-ijuana paraphernalia, pos-session with intent to sell marijuana;Anslo Merrell Fowler Jr., 51, of Hickory St., Cooleemee, assault; Michael Odell Hinson, 40, of Cherry St., Mocks-ville, assault on a female; Tayla De’Asia Tucker, 22, of Cherry St., Mocksville, assault; Mandy Alma-Lee Wood, 45, of Woodleaf, lar-ceny, driving while license revoked. Sheriff’s OfficeThe following are from Davie County Sheriff’s Of-fice reports.Sept. 17: noise com-plaint, Tifton St., Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, Valley Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Rolling-wood Drive, Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 601 N., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Leisure Lane, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 158, Bermuda Run; harassment, Salisbury Road, Mocksville; run-away, Watt St., Cooleemee; trespassing, Sunflower Trail, Mocksville; larce-ny, Duard Reavis Road, Mocksville; larceny, Baity Road, Mocksville; assault, Cemetery St., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Northridge Court, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Cornatzer Road, Advance; suspicious activity, US 601 S., Mocksville.Sept. 16: larceny, Coo-per Creek Drive, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Salisbury Road, Mocks-ville; harassment, N. Main St., Mocksville; harass-ment, Bailey Road, Ad-vance; harassment, US 64 E., Mocksville; ha-rassment, Center Circle, Mocksville; disturbance, N. Hiddenbrooke Drive, Advance; harassment, Cor-natzer Road, Advance; tres-passing, Boxwood Church Road, Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Duke St., Cooleemee; fraud, Custom Drive, Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, Gladstone Road, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, Liberty Church Road, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, E. Lexington Road, Mocks-ville; domestic assist, Lib-erty Circle, Mocksville; domestic assist, Sunset Circle, Mocksville; sus-picious activity, US 158, Advance; harassment, Will Boone Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 601 S., Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Ginny Lane, Advance; harassment, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Yadkinville Road, Mocks-ville; disturbance, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; domestic disturbance, Fred Lanier Road, Mocksville; runaway, Main St., Cool-eemee; domestic distur-bance, Glory Court, Ad-vance; larceny, Yadkinville Road, Mocksville; larceny, Milling Road, Mocks-ville, fraud, Gildan Drive, Mocksville; DWI, Market-place Drive, Mocksville; harassment, Government Center Drive, Mocksville; suspicious activity, US 64 E., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Dulin Road/US 158, Mocksville; harass-ment, US 601 N., Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Hilton Road, Advance.Sept. 14: suspicious activity, Redskin Way/US 158, Mocksville; noise complaint, W. Kinderton Way, Bermuda Run; ha-rassment, Southland Way, Advance; larceny, Coo-per Creek Drive, Mocks-ville; fraud, Bridle Lane, Advance; domestic dis-turbance, Calvin Lane, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, Copperfield Drive, Mocksville; fraud, Bonkin Lake Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Hilton Road, Advance; domestic dis-turbance, Singleton Road, Mocksville; fraud, Govern-ment Center Drive, Mocks-ville; larceny, Dr. Slate Drive, Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, NC 801 S., Advance; larceny, Hilton Road, Advance; runaway, Hobson Drive, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Main St., Cooleemee; suspicious activity, Madison Road, Mocksville.Sept. 13: larceny, Funder Drive, Mocks-ville; disturbance, Guine-vere Lane, Mocksville; sex offense, Patti Lane, Mocksville; harassment, Quality Drive, Mocks-ville; domestic assist, Clark Road, Mocksville; harass-ment, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; disturbance, Cemetery St., Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, US 64 E., Advance; larceny, Cross St., Cooleemee; domes-tic disturbance, Dusty Hill Road, Mocksville; fraud, Government Center Drive, Mocksville; trespassing, Speer Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Canyon Road, Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Junction Road, Mocksville; dam-age to property, Green St., Mocksville; domestic dis-turbance, Dogtrot Road, Mocksville.Sept. 12: suspicious activity, US 64 E., Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, US 601 N., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Main Church Road, Mocksvilel; suspicious activity, Oak Tree Drive, Mocksville; disturbance, Sheffield Road, Harmony; suspicious activity, NC 801 S., Cool-eemee; suspicious activity, Culloden Drive, Mocks-ville; trespassing, Cable Lane, Mocksville; distur-bance, Granada Drive, Ad-vance; suspicious activity, No Creek Road, Mocks-ville; disturbance, US 601 S., Mocksville; suspicious activity, Joe Road, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Oakshaire Court, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, aNo Creek Road, Mocks-ville; runaway, US 601 S., Mocksville; larceny, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; suspicious activity, Bethel Church Road, Mocksville; disturbance, Lakewood Ave., Mocksville; suspi-cious activity, S. Salisbury St., Mocksville; damage to property, larceny, Yadk-inville Road, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Arren-dal Coiurt, Mocksville; suspicious activity, Stroud Mill Road, Harmony; as-sault, Farmington Road, Mocksville; damage to poperty, Baltimore Downs, Advance; fraud, Govern-ment Center Drive, Mocks-ville; suspicious activity, Boxwood Village Drive, Mocksville; suspicious ac-tivity, US 158/Baltimore Road, Advance.Sept. 11: suspicious ac-tivity, Kae Lane, Mocks-ville; disturbance, Watt St., Cooleemee; trespassing, Lonetree Circle, Advance; domestic disturbance, Wan-dering Lane, Mocksville; missing person, Richie Road, Mocksville; domes-tic disturbance, Hickory St., Cooleemee; diswtur-bance, Cooper Creek Drive, Mocksville; domestic dis-turbance, Sandy Lane, Advance; domestic assist, Cherry St., Mocksville; assault, Bermuda Village Drive, Bermuda Run; ha-rassment, US 158, Bermu-da Run; larceny, NC 801 S., Cooleemee; disturbance, NC 801 N., Bermuda Run; domestic disturbance, Cherry St., Mocksville. 1. 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Davie County Enterprise-Record 1 4 9 1 6 0 Sept. 8, 2022 Weekly 52 $32.03 Postal Customer 336-751-2120PO Box 99, Mocksville, Davie County, NC 27028-0099 PO Box 4639, Salisbury, Rowan County, NC 28145-4639 John Carr - PO Box 4639, Salisbury, Rowan County, NC 28145-4639 Mike Barnhardt - PO Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028-0099 Salisbury NewsMedia PO Box 4639, Salisbury, NC 28145 X Davie County Enterprise-Record September 8, 2022 5,350 5,350 471 454 1,947 1,920 1,999 2,057 4,417 4,431 23 22 47 47 4,464 4,478 886 872 5,350 5,350 98.95% 98.95% 109 109 4,526 4,540 4,573 4,587 98.97% 98.97% X 09/22/22 Sept. 8, 2022John Carr, Publisher 24 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 “I specialize in small projects!” John Huneycutt, Owner 336-618-2425 huneycuttpainting@gmail.com Interior & Exterior Painting Handyman work, repairs, & carpentry Building new decks & refurbishing existing decks Home upgrades: flooring, tile, backsplash, & countertops Market readies & home improvement projects Pressure washing & basement clean-outs DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - 7Superior Court District Court The following cases were disposed of during the Aug. 22 session of Davie Superior Court. Presiding: Lori I. Hamilton. Prosecut-ing: Rob Taylor, Ina Stanton and Alan Martin, assistant DAs.- Amanda Sue Abshire, felony probation violation, dismissed, $140 attorney fee.- Wendy Star Bruton, felony obtaining property by false pretense, reduced to misdemeanor aid and abet common law uttering, sentenced to 120 days, sus-pended 24 months, TASC program, submit to drug testing, $1,250 restitution, cost, $660 attorney fee.- Britani Leann Charles, misdemeanor pro-bation violation, probation terminated; felony proba-tion violation probation ex-tended two months.- Phil Jay Heyne, first de-gree rape, sentenced to 192 The Davie County Nick-els for Know-How Referen-dum will be held on Thurs-day, Nov. 17. “There will be one poll-ing station in the county lo-cated at the County Exten-sion Office,” said Colleen Church, Davie Extension director. “Our office moved Sheriff’s deputies are still looking for the suspect who fled in a vehicle on Sept. 12, abandoning it not far from Cornatzer Elemen-tary School, causing a tem-porary lockdown. He then fled on foot.At approximately 2:27 p.m., deputies attempted to stop a stolen white Toyota Rav4 on the 2900 block of US 601 S., Mocksville. The vehicle had been reported stolen from Greensboro on Sept. 1. The driver fled from dep-uties and failed to stop for blue lights and siren, report-ed Sheriff’s Chief Deputy Brian Jacobs. Deputies pur-sued the suspect to the Lake Louise and Hickory Hill area of Davie County. The vehicle was located at the end of Lakeview Road and the driver fled on foot. With the help from the community, the suspect was identified as Anthony Quinn Strickland, white male, to 240 months, submit DNA sample, obtain psychologi-cal counseling, have no con-tact with victim or her fam-ily, register as sex offender for remainder of natural life, cost. Appealed.- Jolynn Samantha Hicks, felony cruelty to animals, sentenced to 6 to 17 months, suspended 60 months, re-port evaluation for mental health, submit DNA sam-ple, do not possess any pets while on probation, $5,000 restitution, cost; 10 counts felony cruelty to animals, unauthorized use of vehicle, dismissed per plea.- Hunter Chase Poteat, 2 counts third degree sex exploitation of a minor, dis-missed by court.- Casey Aaron Prevette, felony obtaining property by false pretense, dismissed.- Arnie Preston Rabon, 3 counts felony larceny of vehicle parts, dismissed per plea. - Louise Alexander Sher-rill, driving while license revoked not DWI revoca-tion, driving while license revoked DWI revocation, dismissed.- Michael Wayne Shoff-ner, possession of a firearm by a felon, sentenced to 14 to 26 months, suspended 24 months, submit DNA sam-ple, obtain substance abuse assessment, cost.- Kristen Ashley Smith, felony larceny from the person, felony probation violation, reduced to misde-meanor probation violation, probation revoked, $172.50 attorney fee. Failure to Appear- Tyquis Jaqon Butler, at-tempted robbery with a dan-gerous weapon, possession of a firearm by felon.- Steven Jay Magness, sexual battery, second de-gree forcible sex offense. The following cases were disposed of during the Aug. 18 session of Davie District Court. Presiding: Judge B. Carlton Terry. Prosecuting: Eric Farr and Pearce Dou-gan, assistant DAs.- Christopher B. Bur-gess, injury to property, dis-missed, prosecuting witness failed to appear, state’s mo-tion to continue denied.- Antonio Juwan Clem-ent, simple possession of schedule VI controlled sub-stance, dismissed in the in-terest of justice.- Marshall Floyd Cook, expired registration, ex-pired/no inspection, speed-ing 116 in a 70, dismissed per plea; reckless driving, 10 hours community ser-vice, $1,000, cost, $20 in-stall fee.- Andrias Arther Cote, probation violation, proba-tion terminated unsuccess-fully, $140 attorney fee.- Patrick Donavon Ev-ans, simple possession of schedule VI controlled substance, possession of marijuana paraphernalia, dismissed per plea; driving 50, last known address of Greensboro. There are ac-tive warrants for Strickland for injury to real proper-ty, felony flee/ elude arrest with motor vehicle, and possession of a stolen motor vehicle.Residents can send infor-mation to the Davie County Sheriff’s Office by call-ing 336-751-6238, email at Sheriff@dcsonc.com or leave tips at dcsonc.com. Anthony Strickland Deputies still looking for suspect who ran near Davie school The Davie County Pub-lic Library will be closed on Thursday, Sept. 22 so that Duke Energy crews can re-place electric poles.This includes the Davie County Historical and Ge- nealogical Society meeting that night, which has been rescheduled for Sept. 29 to hear Marcia Phillips talk about her book on Shallow Ford, as well as show some rare artifacts. Library closed Thursday over the summer and is no longer on Main Street be-side the courthouse. We are now in the Annex Build-ing at 642 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville.”Church said the referen-dum is being held to let us-ers and producers of feed or fertilizer decide if they wish to continue the self-assess-ment program. This pro-gram has been in place since 1948, and the law requires that a new referendum be held every six years. A 2/3 favorable vote will mean that growers are willing to continue to assess themselves to support agri-cultural research and educa-tion. The assessment is 15 cents per hundred pounds on feed and fertilizer pro-duced in North Carolina.The funds, about $1.4 million annually, are col-lected by the N.C. Depart-ment of Agriculture and Consumer Services and then allocated by the NC Carolina Agricultural Foun-dation's 148 volunteer board of directors to support agri-cultural research and exten-sion projects at N.C. State University benefitting agri-culture in North Carolina. For more information on the referendum, call the Davie Extension office at 336.753.6100. Nickels for Know-How Davie farmers to vote in Nov. 17 referendum while license revoked not DWI revocation, reduced to failure to notify DMV of address change, $100, cost.- Billy Ray Greer, second degree trespass, commu-nicating threats, sentenced to 45 days, suspended 12 months, have no contact with victim, cost.- Thomas Masten Grif-fin, driving while license revoked not DWI, giving fictitious information to of-ficer, expired registration, expired/no inspection, pos-session of open container/consuming alcohol in pas-senger area, failure to wear seat belt, dismissed per plea; speeding 85 in a 70, reduced to improper equip-ment, $50, cost, $140 attor-ney fee.- Cory Dustin Holleman, misdemeanor probation vio- lation, 2 days active, proba-tion terminated upon com-pletion, $91.25 attorney fee.- Chase Alan Johnson, misdemeanor probation vi-olation, probation extended two years.- Danielle R. Jones, ani-mals creating a public nui-sance, guilty.- Corey Alexander Mock, assault on a female, sentenced to 75 days, credit for 19 days, $107.50 attor-ney fee.- Jonathan David Reeves, assault on a female, dis-missed, prosecuting witness failed to appear, state’s mo-tion to continue denied.- Charles Ari Smith, speeding 94 in a 70, prayer for judgment continued; reckless driving to endan-ger, dismissed per plea. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON REQUEST FOR ANNEXATION 1515917 The public will take notice that the Town Board of the Town of Mocksville has called a public hearing at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, Oc- tober 4, 2022 at the Mocksville Town Hall, 171 South Clement Street, Mocksville, North Carolina, on the question of annexing the follow- ing described territory, requested by petition filed pursuant to G.S. 160A-31: Metes and Bound Description: Exhibit ALegal Description TRACT 1: BEGINNING at an axle, Kermit Allison corner in Agnes F. Hamp- ton line (see Book 64, Page 457) and running thence East 5.90 chs. to a cement block (formerly a hickory free); thence South with Ker- mit Allison line 5.60 chs. to a cement block, Kermit Allison comer in Dwiggins line; thence North 69 deg. East 7 chs. to a cement block; thence East with Barneycastle line 22.50 chs. less 257 feet to an iron, southwest corner of Dwiggins Cemetery Plot; thence North 01 deg. 12 min, 20 sec. West 50 feet to an iron, northwest corner of said cem- etery lot; thence North 77 deg. 00 min. East 165.37 feet to an iron in the western right of way of U.S. Hwy. 64; thence North 29 deg. 18 min. 30 sec. West 762 feet with said highway right of way to an iron, Summers comer; thence in a southern direction with Summers line 72 feet to a maple tree; thence North 84 deg. 49 min. 20 sec. West with Wharton and Garrett Estate line 1754.96 feet to an iron, Brice Garrett estate corner in Agnes Hampton line; thence South 12 deg. 03 min. East 585.42 feet TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING, containing 40 acres, more or less, and being a portion of those lands described in deed from William Powell and wife, A. M. Powell, to Lonnie Dwiggins and wife, H. M. Dwiggins, dated July 6, 1942, and recorded in Book 40, Page 583, Davie Registry. TRACT 11: BEGINNING at an iron in the southern right of way margin of US Hwy. 64, Mrs. Lillian Elam northeast comer and running thence with said right of way North 89 deg. 41 min. East 421.48 feet to an iron; thence South 16 deg. 22 min. West 135.70 feet to an iron; thence South 6 deg. 02 min. West 44.91 feet to an iron; thence North 80 deg. 16 min, 30 sec. West 1 10 feet to an iron; thence South 4 deg. 08 min. West 16. to feet to an iron; thence South 88 deg. 42 min. 30 sec. West 23.64 feet to an iron; thence South 0 deg. 58 min. West I I .92 feet to an iron; thence South 75 deg. 28 min. East 89.20 feet to an iron in the east margin of Hospital Street right of way; thence with said right of way South 2 deg. 30 min. West 184.40 feet to an iron; thence South 85 deg. 59 min. 40 sec. West 314.42 feet to a concrete monu- ment; South 5 deg. 02 min. West 163.80 feet to a stone; thence North 82 deg. 42 min. 45 sec, West 740.06 feet with Mrs. B. R. Steelman to an iron; thence Notth 4 deg. 39 min. 10 sec. East 307.18 feet to an iron; thence North 89 deg. 21 min. 40 sec. East 697.68 feet to an Elm tree; thence North 3 deg. 49 min. 30 sec. East 268.43 feet TO THE BE- GINNING, containing 9.84 acres, more or less, as surveyed January, 1974. Legal Description County Parcel I40000006501 NC Pin 5738260930 Subject to easements and restrictions of record. Written and oral comments are encouraged at Mocksville Town Hall, 171 South Clement Street, Mocksville, NC 27028, (336) 753-6702 or ltrivette@mocksvillenc.gov Persons requiring special accommoda- tions or auxiliary aids and services may contact Mocksville Town Hall at 753-6700 at least 72 hours in advance of the meeting to request assistance. By: Lynn Trivette, Town Clerk NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON REQUEST FOR ANNEXATION 1515919 The public will take notice that the Town Board of the Town of Mocksville has called a public hearing at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, Oc- tober 4, 2022 at the Mocksville Town Hall, 171 South Clement Street, Mocksville, North Carolina, on the question of annexing the follow- ing described territory, requested by petition filed pursuant to G.S. 160A-31: Metes and Bound Description: Exhibit ALegal Description BEGINNING at an axle at a fence corner in the northern boundary line of land owned now or formerly by James E. Speer (Deed Book 146, Page 424), said axle also being located in the southwest corner of the subject property; thence from said axle and place of Begin- ning running with the eastern line of land owned now or formerly by James E. Speer (Deed Book 59, Page 650) North 04-41-52 East 307.19 feet to an l” existing iron located in the southwest corner of land owned now or formerly by Elva G. Elam (Deed Book 306, Page 545); thence from said iron running with the southern line of said Elam North 89-24-22 East 696.88 feet to a placed iron located in the southeast comer of the property of said Elam; thence continuing the same line North 89-24-12 East 236.48 feet to an iron; thence turning and running with the western line of land owned now or formerly by Mary Helena J. Boger (W B. 2003-E-252) South 04-05-29 west 121.91 feet a 1.25” existing iron; thence running with the southern line of said Boger North 89-56-40 East 1 16.20 feet and crossing Hospital Street, a private drive, to a 2” existing iron; thence running with said drive South 02-29-36 West 104.16 feet to an existing iron; thence turning and crossing said drive South 87-18-59 West 12.80 feet to an unmarked point in the center of said drive; thence continuing across said drive South 85-59-47 West 18.02 feet to a rebar; thence continu- ing with said line and running with the northern line of property owned now or formerly by Dewey C. Redmond (Deed Book 171 , Page 271) South 85-59-47 West 283.55 feet to a 3/4” existing iron located in the northwestern comer of said Redmond; thence run- ning with the western line of said Redmond South 05-00-53 West 1 16.04 feet to a 2” existing iron in the southwestern corner of said Redmond; thence continuing and running along the western line of land owned now or formerly by Dewey C. Redmond (Deed Book 62, Page 346) South 02-27-36 West 49.07 feet to an existing iron lo- cated in the northeastern corner of said Speer (Deed Book 146, Page 424); thence running along the northern line of said Speer (Deed Book 146, Page 424) North 82-33-57 West 741.80 feet to the point of BEGINNING, and containing 71442 acres as shown on that cer- tain survey entitled “Plat of Survey for Jane D. Hudspeth” prepared by Tutterow Surveying Company dated June 7, 2004, drawing num- ber 9704-3, reference to which is hereby made for a more particular description. TOGETHER WITH a 50-foot non-exclusive easement for access, in- gress, regress and utilities over and across the following tract: Be- ginning al an axle located on the eastern side of Hospital Street, a private drive, and along the southern right-of-way of U.S. Highway 64 running South 16-28-06 West 135.62 feet to an existing iron at a walnut tree; thence continuing and running South 05-37-1 1 West 44.91 feet to a placed iron; thence running and crossing said drive North 81-21-15 West 50.07 feet to an unmarked point of easement; thence turning and running North 05-37-1 1 East 47.01 feet to an unmarked point of easement; thence continuing and running North 16-28-06 East 125.33 feet to an unmarked point of easement lying along the southern right-of-way of U.S. Highway 64; thence turn- ing and running North 89-43-32 East 52.21 feet along the southern right-of-way of U.S. Highway 64 to the point of BEGINNING, as shown on that certain survey entitled “Plat Map Jane D. Hudspeth Property, “prepared by Tutterow Surveying Company dated June 24, 2004, Drawing Number 9704-3B, reference to which is hereby made for a more particular description. This easement shall be appurtenant to, and run with the title to land described above. Legal Description County Parcel I400000065 NC Pin 5738166513 Subject to easements and restrictions of record. Written and oral comments are encouraged at Mocksville Town Hall, 171 South Clement Street, Mocksville, NC 27028, (336) 753-6702 or ltrivette@mocksvillenc.gov Persons requiring special accommoda- tions or auxiliary aids and services may contact Mocksville Town Hall at 753-6700 at least 72 hours in advance of the meeting to request assistance. By: Lynn Trivette, Town Clerk NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE MOCKSVILLE TOWN BOARD FOR THE FOLLOWING ORDINANCE AND ZONING AMENDMENTS 1515913 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, PURSUANT TO THE REQUIRE- MENTS of Chapter 160D-601 of the General Statutes of North Carolina and pursuant Chapter VIII Land Use Art. 3 Zoning Sec- tions 8-3.3.3, 8-3.3.5, 8-3.8.3, 8-3.8.60 of the Mocksville Zoning Ordinance, that the Town Board of Commissioners will hold a PUBLIC HEARING in the Town Hall located at 171 S Clement Street, Mocksville, NC, at 6:00 p.m. on Tuesday, October 4, 2022 to hear the following items: Zoning Text Amendment 2022-04. The Board will review a text amendment to the Zoning Ordinance in Chapter VIII, Article 3 Zoning Section 8-3.3.3 Overlay Districts Zoning Text Amendment 2022-05. The Board will review a text amendment to the Zoning Ordinance in Chapter VIII, Article 3 Zoning Sections 8-3.3.5 Table of Uses Zoning Text Amendment 2022-06. The Board will review a text amendment to the Zoning Ordinance in Chapter VIII, Article 3 Zoning Sections 8-3.8.3 Accessory Dwelling Unit, Attached or Detached Zoning Text Amendment 2022-07. The Board will review a text amendment to the Zoning Ordinance in Chapter VIII Article 3 Zoning Sections 8-3.8.60 Residential Building, Multi-Family; Townhouse All parties and interested citizens shall have an opportunity to be heard in favor of or in opposition to the foregoing changes. Prior to the hearing, all persons interested may obtain any ad- ditional information on the proposal by visiting the Mocksville Town Hall, 171 S. Clement Street, Mocksville, N.C. between 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336) 753-6702. 8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Vote for Kati! BEST REALTOR VOTE ONLINE at www.ourdavie.com/contests/readerschoice22 Employeeowned Established in1921 Globalmanufacturer Scan to viewour currentvacancies Hiringnow The Pirate Party Saturday in Downtown Mocksville brought lots of children - parents and grandparents in tow - to town for games, con- tests, giveaways and lots of pirate-themed fun, all sponsored by the Downtown Mocksville Collaborative. Above, a couple of pirates start their stroll, and another waits in line at Main Street Brokers for some balloon art. Below, participants pick a prize at Albania Hair Chic, and Dottie Graham of Skyline Bank, collaborative member and event organizer, admires a pirate. Bottom right, pirates take advantage of the photo opp and treasure hunt at The Station General Store and Taproom. - Photos by Mike Barnhardt Pirates just want to have fun DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - 9 Continued From Page 1of receiving respect encour-ages the golden rule: Treat others the way you want to be treated. Being treated with respect empowers oth-ers to demonstrate respect.”It doesn’t take a lot of effort, either. “Showing re-spect for others is hardly ever big, or heoric. The little things, like holding the door open for someone, can show respect. Giving a simple compliment, or even sharing a conversation with someone shows that you re-spect and care for them.”•Madelynn Keller is start-ing the “Creating Commu-nity Column,” working with the online student newspa-per The Weekly Talon to highlight respect acts by staff, students and clubs in the Davie County School System. She will start a Google Form for nomina-tions.“Every Creaving Com-munity Column would be requested to be presented to every elementary, middle and high school classroom, encouraging respect in the community and highlight-ing those who have been actively demonstrating re-spect.”The goal? “I hope to help Looking for some fami-ly-friendly fun? Look no further than Cognition’s Carnival and Touch-A-Truck Saturday, Sept. 24 from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. in Downtown Mocks-ville. This event will provide the opportunity for fami-lies to experience some of Bulldozers, trucks, tractors and other types of vehicles will be on hand for people of all ages to enjoy at the Cognition Touch a Truck and Carnival Saturday in Downtown Mocksville.Touch a Truck Carnival, exhibitions to be part of Cognition event Saturday the fun and engaging ac-tivities Cognition offers all year long. The grassy lawn next Cognition on Salisbury Street will become the “midway” with fair-themed games and con-tests. Inside the building, the space will be trans-formed into an “Exhibition Hall” where families will be able to browse STEAM-related projects entered by local kids. There will also be other family-friendly entertainment like face painting, music, and a ma-gician.Have a hands-on, up-close experience with all types of vehicles. “Touch-A-Truck will provide a unique opportu-nity for children of all ages to explore many types of vehicles – public service, emergency, utility, trans-portation, recreational, farm, construction, and other cool trucks – all in one place,” said Jessica Huyett, Cognition site di- rector. The Touch-A-Truck showcase will be held across the street in the Town Hall parking lot and along Salisbury Street. “We first brought Touch-a-Truck to Davie County in 2019 as part of our capital campaign to open Cognition. After a couple of years, we are excited to bring this engaging, fam-ily-friendly event back,” said Cammie Webb, board president.Learn more and pur-chase tickets online at bit.ly/cogcarnival. Admission is $20 for a family of four ($3 each additional guests) and $6 for individuals. Respect ... people in our community feel seen and heard because even the smallest acts of respect can have the big-gest impacts on people’s lives. Those who make life in Daive County enjoyable deserve to be recognized in all that they do. I have heard countless stories of burnout in the wake of the coro-navirus pandemic and our community could really use uplifting stories, that despite hardships, the kindness of others will prevail.”Keller continued: “Liv-ing in a close, tight-knit community such as Davie County, I have been on the receiving end of respect and kindness from neighbors, family members, teachers and peers. Respect isn’t as simple as being kind. “Respect is what makes life liveable and enjoyable. Everybody needs to be recognized. It is the small things that make other peo-ple happy. We need to focus more on the positives and less on the negatives. That’s what will bring us all to-gether.”•Jack Williams was diag-nosed with Type 1 diabetes in October of 2018. Now, he’s not only a Davie Coun-ty Ambassador for Respect, Respect Initiative winners Maddie Keller, Sean Lane and Jack Williams with Bermuda Run Mayor Rick Cross. - Photo by Mike Barnhardt he’s a youth ambassador for the Juvenile Diabetes Re-search Foundation.He said he is lucky: he had loving families with resources, families that supported him through his diagnosis, and through the death of his father just prior to his freshman year in high school.“Unfortunately, many students in our school sys-tem may not currently have access to the resources that I had,” he said. Williams recalled a friend going through the same situation with diabetes, but with dif-ferent results. “This was deeply saddening for me be-cause I knew that he didn’t have the same access to the educational resources and equipment I had, which was causing him to be falling be-hind.”He wants to work with adults and the school chil-dren to identify and make sure those with diabetes get the help they need.Williams plans to start a peer support group, find resources for families with children with diabetes, and print a monthly pamphlet with up-to-date resources to be distributed in the com-munity.“This resource would extend important opportu-nities in the community to families that are especially in need,” he said. “I believe that a network of resources for the management of dia-betes would significantly benefit those in our school system who are currently struggling with the ins and outs of bodily health after being diagnosed with dia-betes.”Like the others, Williams understands respect.“When respect is shown throughout our commu-nity, the individual that receives that act of kind-ness or respectfulness is generally more likely to pass it on to others. A person who is demon-strarting respectful behavior to those in their community will become a role model to their community and their peers.” 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 A man pretending to be a sheriff’s detective ran away with a victim’s medication before being caught last week.On Sept. 7 at 8:07 p.m., Davie Sheriff’s deputies re-sponded to a residence on Dutchman’s Trail in Mocks-ville, to a reported larceny. The victim reported a young male came to the door and knocked, and the male stated he worked for the sheriff’s office and was a detective. “The male stated that he needed to verify the name on the victim’s medi-cine bottle and the male took the medicine bottle and ran off,” said Chief Deputy Brian Jacobs. Then, real deputies began to circulate the area and lo-cated video footage from a local business. The suspect was identified as Kolby Ryan Lowe, 19, of Advance. Lowe was charged with 1 count 1st degree burglary, and 1 count of possession of schedule IV and 1 count misdemeanor impersonat-ing an officer. A second suspect was identified dto be with Lowe during the larceny. Ja- son Caleb Wishon, 20, of Mocksville, was charged with 1 count felony con-spiracy, 1 count felony aid and abet, and 1 count mis-demeanor aid and abet.Lowe was placed in Da-vie County Detention Cen-ter under a $50,000 secured bond. Lowe has a court date of Sept. 22, in Davie District Court. Wishon was arrested by Forsyth County Sheriff Office and placed under a $25,000 secured bond. Wis-hon has a court date of Oct. 20, in Davie District Court. Man impersonating officer steals drugs 10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 This scripture message brought to you by these businesses who encourage you to worship at the church of your choice. Let us not be weary in well doing: for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not.(Galatians 6:9) DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - 11Obituaries Local obituaries ONLINE www.ourdavie.com Bobby Joe SmithMr. Bobby Joe Smith, 81, of Mocksville, died Wednes-day, Sept. 14, 2022 at N.C. State Veterans Home in Salis-bury. He was born Nov. 27, 1940 in Yancey County to the late Oval Boyd and Evelyn Hazel Stiles Smith. Bobby was a veteran of the U.S. Army and attended Eatons Baptist Church.In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by a broth-er, Harold Smith.Survivors include: his wife of 55 years, Thanna Riddle Smith; a brother, Jackie Smith (Toni); ssis-ters-in-law and brothers-in-law, Marty Smith, Jessie and Charles Sowder, Judy and Paul Smith, Christine Humphrey, George Linville, Jo-Anne, Maurine, and Janice Riddle; and several nieces and nephews. A memorial service will be conducted at 7 p.m., Fri-day, Sept. 23 at Eatons Baptist Church with Dr. David Gilbreath officiating. The family received friends at the church immediately following the service. The service will be available to view on the funeral home website. A graveside service will be conducted at 1 p.m., Saturday, Sept. 24 in McIntosh Cemetery in Burnsville, with Rev. Stacy Elkins officiating.In lieu of flowers, please consider memorials to: Eatons Baptist Church, c/o Brenda Hunter, 188 Pudding Ridge Road, Mocksville, NC 27028; Alzheimer’s Association Eastern NC Chapter, 5171 Glenwood Ave., Ste. 101, Ra-leigh, NC 27612; or William R. Davie VFD, PO Box 934, Mocksville, NC 27028.Condolences: www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. Rita Miller HoganRita Miller Hogan, 64, Hilton Head Island, S.C., went home to be with Jesus on Sept. 9, 2022. She was the daughter of Herman and Christine Car-ter Miller of Advance. She attend-ed Davie High and graduated from Appalachian State University. She owned Rita Hogan Accounting Ser-vices on Hilton Head.She is survived by: her 2 sons, Tommy and Adam Hogan; daugh-ter-in-law, Tiana (Tommy); sister, Tina and Gary Gardner of Califor-nia; niece and nephew, Julie and Dylan Gardner of California; aunt, Cleo Bertini; and many loving cous-ins who she loved dearly. Her father preceded her in death. She was loved by so many people including her family, friends and clients. She was always helping someone and was such a giving person. She will be greatly missed. Her warmth and compassion will always be remembered and cherished by everyone who knew her.She loved her Lord and grew up in Bethlehem Method-ist Church and later baptized in the Baptist Church in S.C.Funeral service will be held at Bethlehem Church, Red-land Road, Advance, on Saturday, Sept. 24 at 2 p.m. Visi-tation at 1 p.m. in the sanctuary.In lieu of flowers, memorials may be made to the: American Cancer Society or donor’s choice. Mary Frances Cope SpaughMrs. Mary Frances Cope Spaugh, 83, of Mocksville, died Saturday, Sept. 17, 2022 at Novant Health Forsyth Medical Center in Winston-Salem. She was born Sept. 3, 1939 in Davie County to the late Howard Taft and Mary Jane Forrest Cope. Mrs. Spaugh was a member of Turrentine Baptist Church. She had retired from Lexington Fur-niture.In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by: her husband of 54 years, Harvey Lee Spaugh; and numerous siblings.She is survived by: her son, Tracy Scott Cope (Christy) of Mocksville. A funeral service will be conducted at 11 a.m., Satur-day, Sept. 24 at Lambert Funeral Chapel with Rev. Fred Carlton officiating. The family will receive friends at the funeral home one hour prior to the service. The service will be available to view on the funeral home website. In-terment will be in Westlawn Gardens of Memory in Clem-mons.Condolencs: www.lambertfuneralhomenc.com. Death NoticeMr. Donald James Boothby, 76, of Mocksville, died Thursday, September 15, 2022 Sadie Mae Head Snipes BurtonMrs. Sadie Mae Head Snipes Burton, 90, formerly of Hobson Drive, Mocksville, passed away Sunday, Sept. 18, 2022.She was born on July 5, 1932, in Davie County, to the late Robert Lester and Mary Belle Barnes Head.Mrs. Burton had a heart for people, often insisting that her guests eat and eat more. She en-joyed spending time with family, especially during birthdays and holidays, and wanted them to call her daily. Mrs. Burton loved country and gospel music, fre-quented the Grand Ole Opry, and loved Elvis. Christmas was her favorite holiday and could often be seen watching Christmas and Hallmark movies. In earlier days, she enjoyed camping and attending concerts. She loved the color red and red roses. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by: her first husband, Worth Alexander Snipes; her second husband, Don Burton; 3 brothers, Johnny Head (Frances), James Head (Roxie), Bobby Head (Carol); and a son-in-law, Elton Cranfill.Survivors include: her 4 children, Marquietta Goforth, Sheila Renee Young (Kim), Trina Cranfill, and Regina Allen (Mike); 9 grandchildren, Angela Potts, Marquietta Braverman, Jeremy Young (Susan), Jaime Wilkie (Keith), Julie Shinault (Timmy), Sabrina Norman (Carlos), Greg Cranfill (Carrie), Jody Dillard (Jamie), and Logan Allen; 18 great-grandchildren, Alexandria Nutting, Justin Potts, Tyler Potts, Gabriel Young, Matthew Young, Gavin Gauntt, Kaleb Gauntt, Collin Wilkie, Alyssa Thomasson, Riley Shinault, Braydon Shinault, Adrian Cranfill, Domenyk Wilkes, Adysen Norman, Eve Norman, Zachary Cranfill, Haley Riddle, and Christian Hart; 7 great-great-grandchil-dren, Alaina Nutting, Isabella Nutting, Elijah Potts, Liam Potts, Noah Potts, Paxton Fletemier, and Elijah LaMott; and many nieces and nephews.A funeral service will be conducted at 1 p.m. Thurs-day, Sept. 22 at Eaton Funeral Chapel with Rev. James Ward officiating. Interment will follow in Legion Memo-rial Park in Cooleemee. The family will receive friends for two hours prior to the service at the funeral home.The family would like to extend a special thanks to Well Care Hospice, Meals on Wheels, Novant Health For-syth Medical Center, and Amelia Craver, P.A. for the won-derful care Mrs. Burton received in her final days.In lieu of flowers memorials may be considered for Well Care Hospice, 5380 US-158 Suite 210, Advance, NC 27006.Online condolences: www.eatonfuneralservice.com. 1107 Yadkinville Road (Located near Post Office and Badcock Furniture)(336)751-7949 TODAY NAILS Professional Nail Care for Ladies & Gents NEW: Shellac in French Tips Specializing in Gel Nails, Pink & White, Acrylic. Too Many Gel Colors to Choose From! • Hand Designs! • Toe-Nails Cut for elderly too! • Too many shellac & SNS colors to choose from! Walk-Ins Welcome GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE! 20% OFF if you buy over $50.00 in gift certificates! Serving Winston-Salem, Clemmons, and Surrounding Areas 118 Hospital st. • Mocksville, Nc 27028 • 336.751.6289 “Because you should want to see your dentist” Accepting Most Major Insurances | RiversFamilyDentistry.com Dr. Rivers’ Dental Tip of the Week Andrew J. Rivers, DMD “as many as 800 prescription medictions can cause dry mouth and increase risk for tooth decay. Be sure your dentist knows what you are taking.” 779075 Friday, September 236:00-8:00 P.M. Call with questions: 336.998.8306 FORK BAPTIST CHURCH FELLOWSHIP HALL 3140 US Hwy. 64 East, Mocksville, NC MEAL PROVIDED Bible Study, Crafts, Games Invite a Friend! Kindergarten - 5th Grade 12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Bless Your Spoon By Stephanie Williams Dean Robert Bolt's title for a play, “A Man for All Seasons,” was borrowed from Robert Whittington's description in 1520 of the Chancellor of England, Sir Thomas More. The play portrayed More as a man of principle who ordinary people loved. The literary reference describes a hero – a man who re-mains true to his beliefs despite pressure or influences. I'm reminded of my friend, Nathan Smith.The season's about to change – light, breezy fall winds chase summer's heels. But Nathan doesn't waver. On these cool crisp mornings, he can be found tending his vine-yard.Recently, Nathan and I leisure-ly strolled through multiple rows of trellis entwined with twisted grapevines – plucking those ten-der sweet grapes straight from the vine. I was like a bird – eating and spitting discarded seeds and hulls as we walked.Nathan grows 15 types of sweet muscadines –the South's grape. Large clusters of plump, bronze, pink and red grapes hang from the vine to which they cling for life. I feel the same sense of peace that Nathan does– amongst a web of tangled vines. While the gentleman farmer grows a variety of grapes, he's one of a kind. He's different from most folks. Nathan credits his ways to his upbringing. As a youth – he was always in church. His parents were regular church-goers – every Sunday. As a result, Nathan's not a man whose conscience and morals bend to prevailing attitudes or trends of the day. He remains faithful to his principles – his life is still much about the church. "I don't think my morals have changed – that keeps both-ering me – trying to change the church bothers me."On earning perfect attendance pins, Nathan proudly shared, "They used to give a certificate, and then they start-ed giving pins – I have 61 of those. I attend everything I can."Like grapes that cling to a vine – Nathan holds on to words found in his Bible. Throughout life, the book has served as his guide. He continues to enjoy teaching the Bible in Sunday school class, as he has for 65 years. Nathan readily admits he's been tempted throughout life's more difficult seasons– everyone has been. "Things like that happen every week – maybe every day. You're always tempted with something or another," he said.But Nathan believes it's essential to make wise decisions on our most challenging days – the winters of our lives. "I have self–control. I just don't believe some things are right. I believe in the Bible, and that's what keeps me going. Some people don't believe in the Bible – some parts they do, and some parts they don't. We can't just pick and choose what we want to believe."I'm reminded of scripture from Romans 12:2 that reads, "Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be trans-formed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God's will is – his good, pleasing and perfect will." (NIV)Nathan's been happily married to his bride, Peggy, for 41 years. He lovingly tends to her needs. He attributes marital contentment to being as much about looking the other way when things go wrong as getting along well – saying, "You have to ignore things a lot of times." Patience is a virtue. In being a good man, Nathan benefited from a good role model – a strong father and husband to his mother. He gives credit to his daddy for helping mold the boy into the man he is today. Good boys grow up to become good men."Well, I was raised by a good daddy – and he taught me a lot of things. If I did something wrong, he would tell me about it. My dad never gave me a spanking or a whipping, but when he told me something, I knew that's what I was supposed to do." Strong fathers are influential leaders in our households. When Nathan was a little boy, his father was in the fire department in Greensboro. Davie County was their home, but his daddy drove from here to there each day. Later, his father ran a Greek restaurant for a while – he was a good cook. In later years, he became a farmer, mason, and build-er of barns. As a result of his father's experiences, Nathan admitted, "I can do most any kind of work."Nathan's father taught him many jobs – a strength that helped him in almost all his work experiences. "The first job I ever had that made any money, I worked for Will Reynolds, and Mr. Reynolds paid me 25 cents an hour – that was what I done. I helped him." At home, his mom and dad were both excellent cooks. His father was a hunter and a trapper. "We ate a lot of squir-rels and rabbits." Nathan's momma was a homemaker – an important role while her husband was out working. She took care of their home and most of the cooking. Born in Davie County in 1936, Nathan still considers himself a simple farm boy – even if he's 86 years old. To him, being southern means collecting stuff – old stuff. "I've got all the toys I ever had when I was little except for a few my girls tore up. I'm different from everybody today. I don't have a computer and don't want one."Being counted on is important to Nathan. "If someone asks me to do something, if I can do it, I'll do it. I try to help people all I can. I try to tell the truth – being reliable – it's pretty hard for some people to do. Some people I deal with aren't reliable, and some are really great. I like good people."Reflecting on his life, what makes Nathan the proud-est are his young uns, his wife, and the good lives they've lived. On friends and neighbors, he shared, "I'm proud of my neighbors and friends. I have a lot of good friends who've helped me since I got old."Nathan believes living the good life is getting along with and helping other people – living a good Christian life the best he can. Recently, someone bought 40 lbs. of grapes and paid Nathan twice what he charged. They said he didn't charge enough – so they paid more. People recognize good people – and the Spirit recognizes Spirit. Nathan gives sage advice on getting through life. "I try to avoid all these things coming up in the world today. You just don't know what's going to happen day to day– but just do the best you can do each day." "Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life that the Lord has promised to those who love him." James 1:12 (NIV)As we walked and talked, I warned Nathan of diffi-cult questions I might ask – a few he might have to think about. His grin gave away a subtle sense of humor. "Well, I haven't had to think in a long time." Such is this quiet, precious, and humble man. He's a hero in my book. A man for all seasons. NATHAN'S MUSCADINE PIE1-quart muscadineswater1 cup sugar1 ½ Tbsp. fresh lemon juice2 Tbsp. all-purpose flour1/8th tsp salt1/8th tsp. ground cinnamon1 uncooked 9-inch pie shell2 Tbsp. melted, salted butter Remove pulp from muscadines and set aside. In a sauce-pan, boil hulls in enough water to cover for 30 minutes or until tender. In another saucepan, add pulp and sugar and cook 15 minutes. Mash through a sieve to remove seeds. Drain hulls and combine them with pulp. In a bowl, com-bine lemon juice, flour, and salt to form a paste. Add paste to pulp. Fold in cinnamon. Mix well. Pour into uncooked pastry shell. Cut another pastry into strips. Cross strips over top to form basket weave. Bake in a 400-degree oven for 15 minutes. Reduce heat to 325-degrees and bake until crust is browned. Brush top with butter and sprinkle large granule sugar evenly over top. Serve with whipped cream. (From All About Muscadines, etc. by William Ison) MUSCADINE GRAPE CAKE4 beaten eggs1 Duncan Hines yellow cake mix1 box instant vanilla pudding1/3 cup melted, salted butter1 ¼ cup hulled, seeded muscadine juiceGlaze1 ¼ cup confectioner's sugar¼ cup muscadine juiceIn a mixer bowl, beat eggs. Add yellow cake mix and pudding while alternating with butter and grape juice. Mix well. Bake in a well-greased and floured tube pan in a pre-heated 350-degree oven for 40-50 minutes or until tests done. Allow cake to cool only for a few minutes. For the glaze, in a saucepan, combine sugar with juice. Heat while stirring until smooth. While cake is still warm, makes holes in top, and evenly pour glaze over top. FRUIT SALAD TOSS14 oz. pineapple tidbits 2 Tbsp. reserved pineapple juice2 beaten egg yolks1 Tbsp. vinegar1 Tbsp. sugarDash salt1 cup fruit-flavored yogurt16 oz. drained pear slices11 oz. drained mandarin oranges1 cup seeded, halved red grapes½ cup pitted dates½ cup flaked coconutDrain pineapple and reserve 2 Tbsp. syrup. In a sauce-pan, combine reserved syrup, beaten egg yolks, vinegar, sugar, and salt. Cook while constantly stirring until thick-ened and coats a spoon. Allow to completely cool and stir in yogurt. In a bowl, combine pineapple pears, oranges, grapes, dates, and coconut. Gently fold in dressing until it thoroughly coats. Cover and refrigerate 4 hours. CHICKEN SALAD WITH GRAPES4 cups cooked, chopped chicken15 oz. drained pineapple tidbits2 cups halved red grapes11 oz. drained Mandarin oranges2 cups chopped celery1 cup toasted slivered almonds½ cup premium mayonnaise½ cup sour cream2 Tbsp. fresh lemon juice½ tsp. salt¼ tsp. freshly ground black pepperIn a bowl, combine chopped chicken, drained pineap-ple, halved seedless grapes, drained oranges, and toasted almonds. Gently toss until mixed well. In a mixer bowl, combine mayonnaise, sour cream, lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Very gently fold mayo mixture into chicken and fruit mixture. Cover and refrigerate. Keep refrigerated. SALAD OF GREEN GRAPES AND BROCCOLI 2 cups halved green grapes1 lb. fresh broccoli florets3 sliced stalks celery8 cooked, crumbled slices baconToasted slivered almonds1 cup premium mayonnaise½ cup sugar1 tsp. white vinegarIn a bowl, combine grapes, broccoli, and celery. Gently mix well. In a mixer bowl, combine mayonnaise, sugar, and vinegar. Gently fold mayonnaise mixture into fruit mixture and gently toss to evenly coat. Refrigerate covered for 4 hours. Before serving, sprinkle with bacon bits and toasted almonds. Keep refrigerated. Nathan and Peggy Smith enjoy strolling through their vineyard of muscadines. A cluster of plump, tender, and juicy muscadines picked straight from the vine are ready for eat- ing. Nathan Smith gets much peace and sense of joy from the daily tending of his muscadine vines. With a basketweave crust, Nathan’s Muscadine Pie tastes delicious and makes a pretty presen- tation, too. The Muscadine Man Nathan Smith finds peace among the grapevines DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - B1Sports By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Davie’s running back tandem, Markel Summers and Taye Mad-dox, both rushed for 100-plus yards. A Davie defender was in the Reynolds quarterback’s face much of the night. That’s the good part from a 37-13 win over the visiting Demons in Friday’s Central Piedmont Conference opener. Here’s the bad: The War Eagles couldn’t get the passing game go-ing. They were outgained 319-303 in total yards by a subpar team. They let Reynolds hang around in the first half. They gave up 165 receiving yards to one guy.Coach Tim Devericks was less than ecstatic because this won’t get it done against East Forsyth, Reagan, Mt. Tabor, West Forsyth and Glenn. While Reynolds (1-3 overall) suffered its third loss in a row, Da-vie’s second straight win evened its record at 2-2. “We had lack of execution on offense,” coach Tim Devericks said. “We were missing blocks and throwing to the wrong people. We had wrong routes, not making the Coach not happy with sloppy win right reads. Defensively, we were putting our heads in the wrong gap and missing tackles. That’s not going to get it done in the CPC.”In the first quarter, Davie had first-and-goal at the 5, but it had to settle for a 24-yard field goal from Palmer Williams. Eli Branham intercepted Reynolds QB Lane Albright at the Davie 39, but Davie failed to capitalize, losing a fumble three plays later. Reynolds gave to the ball to running back Jaylin Murry on third-and-1, but Justin Hayes and Matty Warner buried him 4 yards behind the line, and Reynolds shanked a punt for 12 yards, giving Davie great field position. Then Maddox went 50 yards in two plays to put Davie up 10-0. While Summers’ productive run-ning was no surprise - he averaged 93 rushing yards in the first three games - this was the coming-out party for Maddox, who came in with eight carries for 24 yards. The junior and first-year Davie player’s speed is something to behold. His ability to squirt through tight spaces and launch into breakaway speed makes him a constant threat to go the distance. “I think missing two years and not being around the game (has made Maddox hungry),” Dever-icks said. “Some of these guys who Please See Sloppy - Page B4 By Brian PittsEnterprise Record The North Davie soccer team is an inspiring story. The Wildcats had a meager 4-67-2 record from 2013-19. In coach Daniel Gamble’s first year in 2019, they went 0-12 and got outscored 94-1. Last year they started 0-3 but finished 4-8, getting outscored by a combined 21-2 in four meetings against Canterbury and Wesleyan. But look now. The Wildcats are 6-0, which marks the best start and the lon-gest winning streak in 18 years. The 2004 team went 11-0 behind Michael Rowe’s 24 goals. They didn’t play especially well at South Davie on Sept. 13, yet they still blew away the Tigers 4-0. North scored twice in each half. The goals came from Ethan Christie, Max Rappaport, Hunter Stephens and Manny Perez. Dylan Cassetta and Stephens had the assists. South remained winless at 0-3. “We really did not play that good,” Gamble said. “Our touches were just off. But our defense was solid. Sheer will pushed through on the offense.”•••Back on Sept. 8, North took a major step forward with a 5-4 win over Wesleyan Christian Academy. The latest statement win came on Sept. 14, when the Wildcats raced in front and held off visiting Can-terbury 2-1. “They have normally whupped By Brian PittsEnterprise Record When Davie’s relentless tennis team tightened its grip on first place during a road win over Reynolds on Sept. 14, the biggest moments belonged to No. 3 Tru Koren and No. 6 Bailey Aderhold. Both showed resiliency and battled back for tiebreaker victo-ries. Koren dropped the first set to the same opponent that beat her on Aug. 22, but she ended up on top in a 4-6, 6-4, 10-6 slugfest. Aderhold dropped the first set to the same opponent that beat her last month. She rallied for a 3-6, 7-5, 10-3 win because why the heck not. The unbeaten War Eagles are playing with a ton of confi-dence, and they buried Reynolds 7-2 after eking out a 5-4 decision in the first meeting. “(In the first meeting), we had to win that in doubles,” coach Collin Ferebee said. “It was 3-3 going into doubles. (This time) we actually won the match before doubles started.“Tru lost last time and was on the verge of losing this time. She turned it around, so that was big. In the back half of last season, she turned it on and was beating Please See North - Page B6 North soccer off to historic start Tennis team stays hot Please See Hot - Page B7 By Brian PittsEnterprise Record This was a put-up-or-shut-up match for Davie’s varsity volley-ball team. There’s a fierce battle for second place in the Central Piedmont Conference, and the War Eagles could ill afford to lose at West Forsyth on Sept. 13. They put up. “I thought this is the moment we’ve got to get this thing turned around,” coach Amber Brandon said after Davie rallied for a 25-21, 11-25, 10-25, 25-18, 15-8 win. Last year the War Eagles went 22-5 and shared first place, and they started 2-0 this year. But the luster was gone when Davie trav-eled to Clemmons. They had lost five of seven. It looked like it was going to be a coin-flip match, and that’s exactly what it was. There was one common opponent in East Surry. Davie lost in five sets to East; West beat East in five sets and the Titans were riding a 5-1 run, with the only loss during that stretch coming against unbeaten Reagan. Davie looked good in the first set. “We changed our warmup strat-egy,” Brandon said. “I thought: ‘How can we get going and play better a little faster?’ We won the first set and I felt really good about that. We did some things that we had been working on really, really well.”The second and third sets, though, were ugly for the War Eagles. “It felt like nothing was going right for us,” Brandon said. “We weren’t very good from the ser-vice line. We were flat. We had some kids who had been playing really well all season struggling at a level that I had not seen them struggle. West Forsyth is always the hardest gym for us to play in. It’s very, very different than our gym. It’s low rafters and that’s something we don’t ever have to worry about at practice. So I think it was a combination of things. The weight and the pressure of that game maybe got to some of them, especially some of the seniors. After the second set, we made a lineup change. Clearly, it didn’t work in the third.”When Davie faced deficits of 4-2 and 5-3 in the fourth set, it was borderline cooked. “The fourth set started kind of the way the second and third end-ed,” she said. “I’m thinking: ‘What are we going to do tomorrow? What’s the next step?’” Volleyball earns gritty comeback win at West Please See Gritty - Page B3 Junior running back Markel Summers scores one of his three TDs on a pass from Ty Miller. - Photos by Samatha Godbey Reynolds gets flagged for a late hit on sophomore receiver Braddock Coleman. Kiah Mathis takes a big swing. - Photo by Kaylee Lewis B2 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Now Offering Congratulations to this week’sFOOTBALL CONTEST WINNERS! First Place = $20.00 to Patricia H. SheltonSecond Place = $5.00 to Aaron Naylor A tip of the Pigskin Prognosticator cap to Patricia H. Shelton who claimed First Place this week with only 2 missed games. Coming in a close Second Place was Aaron Naylor who missed 3 games and was closest in the tie-breaker to edge out a couple others for the money.Davie County got a win over Reynolds last week and travels to East Forsyth this Friday. UNC had a week off and takes on Notre Dame this Saturday. Wake Forest survived a tough Liberty team and will face Clemson this week. Appalachian hosted ESPN’s College Game Day last week & needed a “hail Mary” miracle against Troy but faces a stong James Madison team this week. The Carolina Panthers host New Orleans Sunday in hopes of their first win. Notre Dame vs. UNC CONTEST RULES Anyone can enter except employees of the Davie County Enterprise Record and their families. Only one entry allowed per person per week. All entries must be on original newsprint or fax to 336-751-9760. Games in this week’s contest are listed in each advertisement on this page. Fill in the contest blank and submit or mail the entry to the Enterprise Record, P.O. Box 99, Mocksville, NC 27028.The first entrant of the season correctly predicting the outcome of all games in a week will receive a bonus of $200. One Bonus Prize awarded per season. Weekly prizes are $20 for first place and $5 for second place.. In case of ties, the entrant who came closest to the total number of points in the tie breaker wins. If a tie still exists, awards will be divided equally among the winners. Entries must be delivered to the Enterprise Record before 5 pm Friday each week. The office is located at 171 S. Main St., Mocksville, NC. Winners will be announced following each contest. Decisions of judges will be final. A new contest will be announced each week. Enter Weekl y f o r Your Chance t o WIN! $200 BONUS PRIZE For the Season’s 1st Perfect Entry! $20 WEEKLY 1ST PRIZE $5 WEEKLY 2ND PRIZE 1. Davie vs. East Forsyth 2. Clemson vs. Wake Forest 3. Duke vs. Kansas 4. James Madison vs. Appalachian 5. Notre Dame vs. UNC 6. Florida vs. Tennessee7. Arkansas vs. Texas A&M 8. Marshall vs. Troy 9. Indiana vs. Cincinnati 10. Western Carolina vs. Samford 11. New Orleans vs. Carolina (NFL)13. Detroit vs. Minnesota (NFL)14. Baltimore vs. New England (NFL)12. Buffalo vs. Miami (NFL) DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 ‑ B3 The N.C. Wildlife Re-sources Commission pub-lished the sites where deer heads will be collected this season for chronic wasting disease testing throughout eight counties in Northwest North Carolina.Hunters in the Primary Surveillance Area and Sec-ondary Surveillance Area around a spot in north-ern Yadkin County where two CWD-positive deer have been discovered in the last 10 months will be required to submit tissue samples for testing during the blackpowder season for deer (Nov. 5-18) and the first 9 days of gun season (Nov. 19-27). Hunters may voluntarily submit a tis-sue sample from any deer killed during any part of the 2021-22 season.A total of 17 taxider-mists and deer proces-sors will accep samples in Stokes, Surrey, Forsyth, Davie, Yadkin and parts of Wilkes, Alleghany and Iredell counties. The Com-mission has located anoth-er 15 freezers throughout those counties where hunt-ers can submit samples: the head of the deer, bagged and left with a completed data tag, which is provided. Freezers will be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week; processors and taxi-dermists will be accepting deer samples on different schedulesThis season, it will be illegal to transport parts of deer killed in the SSA ar-eas out of those areas, with a few exceptions noted on the commission’s website (www.ncwildlife.org/Hunt-ing/Chronic-Wasting-Dis-ease/Get-My-Deer-Tested). It will be illegal to trans-port parts of deer killed in the PSA (an approximate circle with a radius of 5 miles from the area the two infected deer were killed) into the SSA without the head being double bagged and taken directly to a CWD Cooperator in Yad-kin or Surry counties.Here are the meat pro-cessors and taxidermists who will accept samples:• Alleghany Meat Cen-ter, 2440 US 21, Sparta, 336-602-4808;• Wilson Taxidermy, 2539 S. Center Church Rd., Thurmond, 336-835-1187;• D&D Taxidermy, 2206 Pardue Circle, Ronda, 336-957-6675;• Reavis Skull Works, 176 Pennington Rd., North Wilkesboro, 336-469-1357;• Knight’s Taxidermy, 1203 Walter Summers Rd., Westfield, 336-403-0473;• Arrowhead Taxidermy, 1105 Woodbury Rd., King, 336-970-0298;• Hilltop Deer Process- ing, 1030 Hilltop Farm Rd., Walnut Cove.• Rich Dobson Taxider-my, 128 Forest Oaks Dr., Dobson, 336-401-0356;• One for the Wall Taxidermy, 381 Rock Hill Church Rd., Ararat, 336-374-8655;ˆWoman’s Touch Taxi-dermy, 1185 Bryant Mill Dr., Ararat, 336-648-2140;• Animal Tracks Taxi-dermy, 107 McCoy St., Kernersville, 336-399-7200;• Renigar’s Taxidermy, 725 Rolling Court, Kern-ersville, 336-473-3794;• Farmington Meat Pro-cessing, 135 Nikkis Way, Farmington, 336-998-7092;• Mike’s Processing, 155 Hog Jam Dr., States-ville, 704-873-0386;• Wild America Taxider-my & Deer Processing, 301 Oak Hollow Rd., Union Grove, 704-929-2341;• Gary Myers Taxider-my, 2152 Flint Hill Rd., East Bend, 336-712-5952;• Fisher Farms Process-ing, 4225 Old US 421 E, Yadkinville, 336-469-3680;• Swaim’s Skull Mounts, 1306 Lone Hickory Rd., Yadkinville, 336-468-0750.Here are the locations where freezers will be available for sample drop-offs:• Glade Valley Mar-ket and Grill, 4580 US 21 South, Glade Valley;• Mountain View Hard-ware, 4511 Rock Creek Rd., Hays;• Francisco VFD, 7100 N 89 West, Westfield;• Betty’s Outdoors, 3701 NC 89 East, Walnut Cove;• Devotion, 110 Devo-tion Estate Way, Dobson;• New Earth Company, 475 CC Camp Rd., Elkin;• Robby’s, 457 N. Main St., Mount Airy;• Red Oak Outfitters, 108 Lola Lane, Pilot Moun-tain;• Siloam Recycling Cen-ter, 116 Hamilton Way, Si-loam;• Webster Brothers Hardware, 2700 Hwy 66, Walkertown;• Drop Tine Archery, 100 Webb Way, Advance;• Richmond Hill Nature Park, 4641 Law School Rd., East Bend;• Rockford General Store, 104 Old Rockford Rd., Rockford;• Yadkinville Shell, 700 S. State St., Yadkinville.Chronic wasting disease is a transmissible neuro-logical disease that affects white-tailed deer and oth-er cervids, including elk, moose and caribou. It is al-ways fatal. It is transmitted by bodily fluids.State-record swordfishThis has truly been a year for state-record salt-water fish, with the N.C. Division of Marine Fish-eries recently certified an-other monster – this time, a state-record swordfish.Cary Carney of New-port boated the 504-pound, 8-ounce fish about 55 miles off Morehead City on Aug. 21. He was fishing aboard the Willow B, captained by his son, Brandon. The fish came out of 1,300 feet of water.Carney’s fish was 104 inches long (fork length) and had a 53-inch girth when weighed in at EJW Outdoors in Morehead City.Carney used albacore belly for bait and was fishing a 6-foot Crowder DDS80 rod paired with a Daiwa MP3000 reel filled with 65-pound test. The reel is normally used for deep-drop bottomfish-ing and is powered by an electric motor, but Carney hand-cranked the fish be-cause the reel had a blown fuse. The fish would have been ineligible for a state record had Carney used the reel’s electric motor fea-ture. This 504.8 lb. swordfish was taken off Morehead City. - Photo courtesy NC Division of Marine Fisheries Record swordfish reeled in off Morehead Continued From Page B1 With Davie staring down the barrel of the first loss to West since 2019, with Davie in jeopardy of falling to fifth in the standings, it circled the wagons. Everything changed when Hailey John-son went to the serving line. The gritty War Eagles won the fourth and fifth sets. They moved into a tie for third. They beat the Titans for the fifth straight time. Johnson, Gracie Wil-son, Mikaylah Hutton, Kiah Mathis and Lauren O’Con-nor made all of that possible. “Hailey went on a serv-ing run that got us back in the game,” Brandon said. “We got a couple of good swings out of the middle from Gracie that got us the lead, fired our kids up and gave us some new life. One change to the lineup in the fourth was putting Mikaylah in as an outside Gritty ... and moving Kiah back to the middle, which is where she played her first three years on varsity. Mikaylah gave us a burst on the outside. She saw some balls go down that we hadn’t seen hit the floor.”O’Connor was lights-out in the fifth.“We had the momentum on our side and the kids wanted it,” Brandon said. “Lauren went on a heck of a serving run in the fifth set (eight straight points). West Forsyth called a timeout and Lauren came out of the tim-eout and got an ace, which is always a big momentum thing in volleyball. From there, we commanded the fifth set.”Notes: When the day ended, Reagan was 5-0 in the CPC, followed by East Forsyth at 4-1, Davie/Reyn-olds at 3-2 and West at 2-2. ... Brandon improved her amazing record against West to 14-3. ... Davie breezed to a 25-7, 25-3, 25-5 win at Parkland on Sept. 15. The Mustangs (0-11, 0-6 CPC) have a 30-match losing streak, and they’ve dropped all 33 sets in 2022. ... Da-vie’s JV lost 25-19, 25-23 to West. “We played hard, but West just outhustled us,” coach Tabatha Lyons said after the JV slipped to 3-4, 3-2. “We got stuck in a few rotations too long with some serve-receive struggles.” Senior Emma Hayes bumps it over the net. At right, she pushes it. Davie entered the week tied for third in the conference. Junior Caroline Lakey hits. At right, senior Gracie Wilson gets a stuff block. - Photos by Kaylee Lewis B4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Reynolds 0 7 0 6 – 13Davie 3 14 14 6 – 37First QuarterD - Williams 24 FG, 4:27. Second QuarterD - Maddox 21 run (Williams kick), 8:51. R - McMillian 34 pass from Albright (Calhoun kick), 4:10. D - Summers 13 run (Williams kick), 1:59. Third QuarterD - Summers 2 run (Williams kick), 9:27. D - Summers 11 pass from Miller (Williams kick), 3:17. Fourth QuarterR - McMillian 9 pass from Albright (pass fail), 9:25. D - Deal 10 pass from Miller (kick fail), 7:09. TEAM STATISTICS R DFD 16 20 Rushing 46-118 37-226Passing 201 77C-A-I 15-29-1 8-14-0Punts 5-24 4-43F-L 3-1 1-1Penalties 8-75 8-753rd conv. 4-15 3-8INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSReynoldsRUSHING - Ray 14-62, Murry 13-43, Albright 15-25, Holmes 2-8, Williamson 1-4, team 1-(-24)PASSING - Albright 15-29-1-201RECEIVING - McMillian 10-165, Pearce 2-11, Murry 1-15, Murphy 1-6, Majette 1-4Davie RUSHING - Summers 20-118, Maddox 10-112, Miller 7-(-4)PASSING - Miller 8-14-0-77RECEIVING - Smith 2-25, Summers 2-7, Coleman 1-15, Argueta 1-11, Deal 1-10, Froelich 1-9 have played all the time take that for granted. Taye wasn’t able to play for a while and he missed it. He missed being around these guys in the game and also being around it and being a part of something. And he’s not going to take it for granted anymore.”On the ensuing posses-sion, the Demons overcame sacks by Warner and Jerred Alexander and drove 85 yards despite facing two fourth-down situations. Se-nior Kenaz McMillian, who was superb with 10 catches for 165 yards, made a tre-mendous catch for 33 yards on third-and-11. Albright eluded a sack from Mason Shermer and found Murry for 15 yards on fourth-and-4. On fourth-and-12, Albright rolled left and threw a 34-yard strike to McMillian to cut Davie’s lead to 10-7. Albright, a sophomore, came out hot, hitting 11 of his first 14 passes for 130 yards. He did cool off to finish 15 of 29 for 201 yards. “They’ve got a dynamic receiver,” Devericks said of McMillian. “Sometimes we spooked (Albright) and he made plays with his feet. Credit to him; he’s a good athlete.”Davie answered with a 71-yard drive. Summers and Maddox ran past and through the Demons for all eight plays, resulting in a 17-7 halftime lead. Al-though the outcome never seemed in doubt, Devericks wasn’t satisfied at the break. “Our lack of execution allowed them to stay in the game longer than they should have,” he said. Reynolds gift wrapped a TD for Davie when a snap went over the punter’s head. Davie took over at the Reyn-olds 2 and scored to make it 24-7. That’s all it took to cement Davie’s 12th win over Reynolds in 13 tries. While Miller only man-aged 77 passing yards af-ter averaging 198 in the first three games, Summers/Maddox kept drives mov-ing. Summers rolled up 118 yards and three TDs on 20 carries. Maddox exploded for 112 yards on 10 tries. “They’re going to run hard no matter what the scoreboard says,” Devericks said. “That’s two guys that are going to give everything they’ve got every play. I’m super proud of their effort.”Meanwhile, the defense got two tackles for loss from Brandon Wood, Warner and John Stokes and two sacks from Stokes. “We were switching be-tween three- and four-man fronts and penetrating gaps or creating matchups that were favorable for us,” De-vericks said. Alexander is a junior out- Sloppy ... side linebacker who plays with his hair on fire. “You don’t find many as hard-nosed as him,” Dever-icks said. “Jerred is going to give everything he’s got every play. If he gets it wrong, he’s going to come back and try it again until he gets it right. That work ethic is helping him make plays on Friday nights.”Another major positive on defense has been Bra-nham, a junior safety who collected 13 team-high tackles in the win at North Davidson. “Eli is a cerebral play-er, and he’s improved his athleticism and his reads from studying film,” Dever-icks said. “From Week 1 to where we are right now, it’s tremendous improvement.”Notes: Brysen Godbey, a standout wrestler, re-turned from injury against Reynolds. The linebacker made his junior debut in the fourth quarter and made four tackles. ... Junior Grey Deal’s first varsity catch was a 10-yard TD in the fourth. “Some guys have to realize, when someone gets an opportunity, they might catch somebody’s eye,” Devericks said. ... Williams had a nice night punting. He averaged 43 yards on four punts, including a bomb of 56 yards. For the year, he’s achieved touchbacks on 12 of 19 kickoffs. ... Mc-Millian, who caught 10 of Albright’s 15 completions, was 51 percent of Reynolds’ offense. ... Sophomore cor- The Stats nerback Landon King, who was injured against West Rowan, was on the sideline in a wheelchair. He had knee reconstruction surgery on Sept. 12. That’s a big loss for Davie in two sports (football and basketball). ... Davie will be a massive underdog in Kernersville Friday at 7:30 p.m. East Forsyth is 4-0 overall and 1-0 in the CPC. Its wins: 49-38 over Northwest Guilford, 47-0 over Rolesville, 59-7 over South Iredell and 37-3 over Reagan. Last year East belted Davie 59-21. Davie is 2-10 against East, including six straight losses. By Brian PittsEnterprise Record Elliot Gould stole the show in the Davie JV foot-ball team’s 21-8 win at Reynolds in the Central Piedmont Conference open-er on Sept. 15. The freshman not only got an interception at the Davie 8, he took over at running back in the second half and churned as if he was an experienced runner. The INT came in the second quarter when Davie was only ahead 7-0. “That was a crazy inter-ception,” defensive coor-dinator Blaine Nicholson said. “That was one of the better interceptions I’ve ever seen.”Leon Bradshaw, who has become a star at receiver, filled in at running back in the first half. But he got a lit-tle dinged up late in the half and Davie, which led 14-0 at halftime, didn’t want to take any chances of injuring him worse. So they turned to Gould, who did one heck of a job despite not ever playing the position in a Davie practice. “Elliot is just really, re-ally good,” Nicholson said. Gould does it all in JV win “In the second half, because of some things that hap-pened, he went to running back. He’s probably our best DB, but he led the team in rushing and he’s never lined up in practice to take a snap at running back. They coached him up during halftime.”Gould broke runs for 12, 8, 8, 19 and 30 yards and finished with 15 carries for 89 yards. We note again: All that came in one half. “He made some real-ly good cuts,” Nicholson said. “He really should have scored.”Nicholson kept raving about Gould. “He’s a really coachable guy and he just goes wide open no matter where you put him,” he said. “He’s a safety by trade - in the long run he’s going to be a really good safety - but he’s been asked to play corner, running back and he plays all these spots on special teams. And everywhere you put him, he makes plays. He always does what’s best for the team and he’s a great athlete. And he is not afraid of contact.”Bradshaw built on his stellar season, catching seven passes for 92 yards, including a pair of touch-downs. Jamarius Pelote threw three TDs in all, in-cluding a 47-yard hookup with Ethan Driver. Pelote went 9 of 18 for 145 yards, including a completion to David Patton. “Leon is such a weapon out wide,” Nicholson said. “He’s elite on JV.”The defense was rock solid, holding Reynolds out of the end zone until garbage time. Landon Waller had a second-quarter INT as Davie (3-1 overall) ran its winning streak to three. “We got it done in the red zone multiple times,” Nich-olson said. “They had it in the red zone three times and didn’t score (until the fourth quarter). They swarmed to the ball really well.” There are tougher games coming, for sure, but there were encouraging signs ev-erywhere on defense. “They were double-team-ing some guys, so some guys didn’t make the same plays that they had been - but new dudes stepped up,” Nich-olson said. “(Outside line-backer) Christian Boswell had been playing sparingly, but he had a great game. (Linebacker) Luke Wayne got a lot of snaps and made some key stops. Waller had a good game at outside linebacker. (Defensive end) Billy Krause has been con-sistently good. (Free safety) Colson Sink is getting better every week. He’s fitting on the run really well.” 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 FALL IS COMING! Bobcat, aerator, core plugger & more for rent today!ForAll YourRental NeedsMarkel Summers hurdles a defender from Reynolds in the Central Piedmont Conference opener. Junior linebacker Jerred Alexander sacks quarterback Lane Albright. Speedster Taye Maddox finds nothing but green grass. At right, cornerback Junior Romero breaks up a long pass. Justin Hayes (2) and Summers celebrate a touchdown. - Photos by Samatha Godbey DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - B5 Seth Grooms implores Corbin Scott (left) and Clyde Scott to rev their bikes. The motorcycles made a return Friday at War Eagle Stadium. The cheerleaders get the crowd fired up. At right is senior dancing boot Reagan Brooks. - Photos by Samatha Godbey Cheerleading coach Angie Stage slingshots T-shirts toward the Davie Crazies. At right is junior dancing boot Kadence Bogard. Freshman safety Gavin Reese stands with injured Landon King. Drummers, from left: Jack Williams, Noah Smith and Ethan Price. Contact Laura Messick (336) 972-7621References provided upon request Dyslexic Tutoring Services — est. 2013 — Does your child struggle with Reading and Spelling? Has your child been diagnosed with dyslexia? I am a Wilson Language Certified Tutor and can help. 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 B6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Continued From Page B1up on us pretty bad, so it was good to beat them,” Gamble said. Hector Rodriguez, with an assist from Rappaport, scored in the first two min-utes. Then Stephens depos-ited a goal that was assisted by Rodriguez. It remained 2-0 through the rest of the first half, although North could have had more breath-ing room. “We controlled probably 90 percent of the first half,” Gamble said. “It was prob-ably the best we’ve played yet. They would just congest the goal so much and that slowed everything down for us. We kept pounding away at it, we just couldn’t get the ball to go in because there was nowhere for it to go.”The Cougars regrouped and cut the margin in half. “In the second half, they made some adjustments, we came out a little flat, and (Canterbury’s goal) was just an amazing shot,” he said. “There was nothing we could do about it.”The end was stressful for North, which lost defender Cassetta to injury. “A couple of our starters got injured in the game, so we ended up playing more defensively toward the end,” he said. “In the last two minutes, one of our main defensive players (Cassetta) got injured and had to come out. It was kind of a scram-ble and it ended up being a lot more stressful than it needed to be.”The Wildcats should soon clinch their first win-ning record since 2009. Six players have at least three goals, led by Rodriguez’s nine. Kellan Wiles and M. Perez have six each. Christie and Stephens have four and Rappaport three. “We’ve got a lot of good scorers,” Gamble said. “A couple of our second-string guys have scored. We’ve built this depth over a couple of years, so we’re getting to enjoy the fruits of it.”Stephens is North’s greatest assist man in mem-ory. He already has 10, or seven more than the next guy. “He’s a good passer and he’s unselfish,” Gamble said. “Sometimes he prob-ably should be selfish be-cause he’s got that great left foot. Overall, we’re passing the ball good and assisting each other.”Ellis 4, Summit 1To say the Ellis soccer team bounced back from its opener would be an under-statement. Nine days after a dismal 9-0 loss to North Davie, the Jaguars pounded out a 4-1 home win over Summit on Sept. 15. “This was a big win after losing to North,” coach Su-san Jones said. “We spent the last week working on defense and moving players to new positions, and all their hard work paid off. So today’s game was a reboot and new start our boys need-ed mentally to show them what they can do.”Eric Martinez led the way with two goals. Osiel Romero and Santiago Ma-ganda also scored. Brandon Hernandez had an assist. “Eric played beautiful-ly,” Jones said. “Osiel and Santiago are names you will be hearing again. These two are quite talented and very quick. They really stepped up and embraced the moves we made in putting them back as mids instead of front strikers. This also had a huge impact on how well we played defensively com-pared to the first game.”Jones made a lot of changes after the first game. Austin Eggers, Sea-ger Brooks and Hernandez validated the moves. “We moved three key players to the defensive line after our first game, and it made a huge im-pact immediately,” she said. “Two of these boys (Eggers and Brooks) moved from midfield to the defensive line, and their speed and aggressive play was sound and tough and just what we needed. Brandon moved back and played sweeper, not only helping create a wall but also pushing the ball upfield offensively. He did an amazing job getting it to our strikers.”Also give credit to goalie Nathan Harding, who had four saves. “Nathan played his first game as goalie and played fearlessly,” she said. North ... For the sixth year in a row, Erie Insurance was awarded “Highest Satisfaction with the Auto Insurance Purchase Experience” by J.D. Power. Erie Insurance received the highest numerical score in the J.D. Power 2013–2018 U.S. Insurance Shopping Studies. 2018 study based on 15,689 total responses, evaluating 20 providers, and measures the experiences and perceptions of customers surveyed between April 2017 to January 2018. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ERIE® insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed to operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1803JDP 7/18 Others may claim they’re the greatest, but our customers continue to rate ERIE the highest. Go to erieinsurance.com to find an agent or get a quote. Five Years in a Row 945 Yadkinville RoadMocksville, NC 27028(336) 936-0023 3844 Clemmons Rd, Ste. CClemmons, NC 27012(336) 645-8888 Two Locations to Best Serve You Some things just belong together Save when you insure your home and auto with ERIE. You can have superb insurance coverage, outstanding service, great rates and discounts too. Take advantage of ERIE’s multi-policy discount and we’re willing to bet your tail will be waggin’. Also ask us about ERIE’s other available discounts. Call us for a quote today. Discounts, rates and coverages vary by state and are subject to eligibility and applicable rates and rules. ERIE® insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed or operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1693 10/15 Erie Insurance received the highest numerical score in the J.D. Power 2013-2018 U.S. Insurance Shopping Studies. 2018 study based on 15,689 total responses, evaluating 20 providers, and measures the experiences and perceptions of customers surveyed between April 2017 to January 2018. Your experiences may vary. Visit jdpower.com. ERIE® Insurance services are provided by one or more of the following insurers: Erie Insurance Exchange, Erie Insurance Company, Erie Insurance Property & Casualty Company, Flagship City Insurance Company and Erie Family Life Insurance Company (home offices: Erie, Pennsylvania) or Erie Insurance Company of New York (home office: Rochester, New York). Not all companies are licensed to operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information. S1803JDP 7/18 New Pool & Spa InstallationCleaning • ChemicalsOpening & ClosingVinyl Liner Replacement Tommy Harris/Owner – Over 30 Yrs. Exp. Home: (336) 284-4817Cell: (336) 909-4027 Senior ProfileCatching up withJohn Stokes (football)When you were growing up, what did you want to be? An NFL player.The biggest pet peeve I have is when: People are hypocritical.What’s the funniest moment in your sports career? When coach Bum told us we were microwaved tator tots.What’s the proudest moment in your sports career? My first varsity bump.If you could turn back time and witness one event, what would it be? Any of Jesus’ teachings.Who is the funniest teammate? Gavin Taylor.Which teammate is happiest after a win? Justin Hayes.Athletes I most admire: Chase young, Geo and Tim Tebow.Interesting fact about myself: I love Jesus.What I like most about Davie High: The great teachers like Ms. Dunn.If I could do one thing better, it would be: Run/pass reads.Person I’d most like to meet (dead or alive): Ryan Reynolds.Fantasy job: College coach.I can’t live without: Air. Post-high school ambition: I hope to attend a four-year university to study in teaching and teach history. Hunter Stephens, Max Rappaport and Ethan Christie celebrate Rappaport’s goal. Alex Serrano plays center mid. At right, Stephens makes a pass. Stephens, Josh Baker and Serrano walk to the sideline after warmups. The Wildcats are riding North’s longest winning streak since 2004. 1484 Hwy. 64 West, Mocksville, NC 336-751-3372 “Serving Davie County Since 1973” NOW HIRING Experienced Automotive Technicians Pay Based on Experience & Ability DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - B7 Continued From Page B1everyone. “Bailey did the exact same thing. She was on the verge of losing; she flipped it around. (Koren and Aderhold) turned it from 3-3 to 5-1. The first time they were rusty; they were a little nervous. They admitted to me afterwards that they were anxious (on Hot ... Golf tournament for Davie girls basketballThe second-annual Davie girls basketball golf tourna-ment will be held at Pudding Ridge on Nov. 11, $85 for an individual and $260 for a four-man team. Contact coach Lindsey Adams at adamsl@davie.k12.nc.us or call 336-751-5905 extension 5210. Davie varsity falls at E. Forsyth Missing three starters due to sickness, Davie’s varsity soccer team lost 4-1 at East Forsyth on Sept. 12. East, which beat Reagan 1-0, improved to 3-2 overall and 2-0 in the Central Piedmont Conference. Davie, which got its goal from Karson Yount, fell to 2-8, 0-2.JV soccer loses to EFDavie’s JV soccer team lost 3-1 at East Forsyth. Roger Luna scored, but the War Eagles stumbled to 1-5-2, 0-1-1. Middle school volleyball resultsSouth Davie volleyball won 2-0 over visiting North Davie. But two days later, South (4-2) lost at Millennium Charter. North (2-4) stopped a four-match losing streak when it defeated Canterbury at home. Ellis (3-2) beat vis-iting Summit in two sets. The Davie cross country team made its second trip of the season to Charlotte’s McAlpine Park for the Hare and Hounds Invitational on Sept. 17. Over 70 teams from North and South Caro-lina, Georgia, Tennessee and Florida were represented. After racing this course three weeks earlier, the War Eagle harriers were anxious to see how much they had improved. Davie runners claimed 21 personal-record times among 29 finishers. A total of 39 schools competed in the boys var-sity, and the young Davie squad secured third. A se-nior-laden Lincoln Charter team took home the cham-pionship trophy with 67 points. A veteran Sun Valley team was runner-up with 123, while a Davie team with two sophomores and two freshmen among its five scorers was next with 164. The five Davie scorers all recorded personal-record times over the 5k distance.Owen Sulecki paced the War Eagle effort with a fourth-place finish in a field of 315 finishers. His time of Emerson Vanzant added to her terrific senior season when Davie’s golf team played at Salem Glen on Sept. 12. She shot 2-over 38 to finish fourth out of 33 players. It was the third time she’s shot 2-over or better in six tries. The day also saw a break-through for Kate Sakai, who finished 10th with a 48 after carding 50-plus in her first four rounds. It was the No. 2 score in Sakai’s two-year Davie career, one stroke behind the 47 she recorded at Bermuda Run West last AUCTION THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th • 9:00 AM Personal Property of Robert & Carolyn Cook Cornelius (Deceased) 162 Redland Road, Advance, NC Kubota RTV - Honda 300 ATV - JD 425 Zero-Turn Mower - JD 235 Riding Mower - Utility Trailers - Log Splitter - Knives - Guns - Ammo - Rhino Gun Safe - Int’l Farmall 140 Tractor - 1 pt. Hitch Equip. - Cook’s Wrecker Sign - Coins - Old Bottles - Bernina Serger, Embroidery, & Sewing Machines - Appliances - Vintage Singer Featherweight Sewing Machines - Brown’s Mule Tobacco Cutter - LOTS MORE COLLECTIBLES! Early Buyer’s Registration on Tuesday, September 27th from Noon til 2pm. NO PREVIEWS ON TUESDAY Latest Info & Photos at www.auctionzip.com (Auctioneer ID# 3750) WRIGHT AUCTION SERVICE Roy Wright - Auctioneer • NCAL # 2120 336-403-8084 Upcoming Games Wednesday, Sept. 21Davie JV/varsity soccer at West Forsyth at 5:30/7Davie tennis at Reagan at 4:30Davie cross country at Ivey Redmon Park at 5 Ellis football at Ledford at 4:30North Davie football at South Davie at 4:30Thursday, Sept. 22Davie JV football at home vs. East Forsyth at 6:30Davie JV/varsity volleyball at Reynolds at 5/6:15South Davie girls tennis at Summit at 4:30South Davie volleyball at Summit at 4:30South Davie boys soccer at Summit at 4:30Ellis soccer at home vs. NCLA at 4:30Ellis volleyball at home vs. NCLA at 4:30North Davie boys soccer at home vs. Watauga at 4:30North Davie volleyball at home vs. HP Christian at 4:30North Davie girls tennis at home vs. Summit at 4:30Friday, Sept. 23Davie varsity football at East Forsyth at 7:30Monday, Sept. 26Davie JV/varsity soccer at Parkland at 5:30/7Davie tennis at Mt. Tabor at 4:30Tuesday, Sept. 27Davie JV/varsity volleyball at home vs. E. Forsyth at 5/6:30Davie golf in CPC meet at Maple Chase at 4South Davie volleyball at Phoenix Academy at 4:30South Davie boys soccer at Phoenix Academy at 4:30South Davie cross country at Wesleyan at 4:30Ellis soccer at Canterbury at 4:30Ellis volleyball at Canterbury at 4:30Ellis tennis at Canterbury at 4:30Wednesday, Sept. 28Davie JV/varsity soccer at home vs. Glenn at 5:30/7Davie tennis at home vs. West Forsyth at 4:30Ellis football at South Davie at 4:30North Davie boys soccer at home vs. Summit at 4:30North Davie volleyball at home vs. Summit at 4:30North Davie football at Millennium Charter at 4:30North Davie cross country at Canterbury at 4:30 Sports Briefs Sakai has breakthrough October. When the sopho-more works out the kinks, she’s going to be solid. “It was really cool to watch,” coach Bob Donley said. “Kate’s confidence is beginning to grow a little each match.”While West Forsyth (even 108) and Reagan (114) led the way, Davie (38-over 146) turned in its best score of the year. The other team scores: Mt. Tabor 173, Reynolds 169, East Forsyth 206, Parkland 196, Glenn 200. •••Davie did not fare as well the next day at Maple Chase. Vanzant shot 7-over 43 to finish sixth overall and Sakai had 50, although she did sink an 18-foot putt to birdie a par-4. Davie was third for the fourth time in four confer-ence meets. The scores: Reagan 1-under 107, West 122, Davie 151, Tabor 159, Reynolds 168, East 190, Parkland 196, Glenn 207. “The scores were up for this match, with only four golfers under 40,” Donley said. “The primary reason was how fast these greens were. We played at Salem Glen on Monday and the greens were still healing from behind punched, so they were pretty slow. It was a difficult adjustment for ev-eryone except Reagan, who plays this course every day.” Aug. 22) because it was the first conference match. This time they had the confidence of beating West (Forsyth), they had the confidence of being undefeated halfway through the season, and they just took care of business.”No. 1 Elliot Newsome (6-0, 6-0), No. 2 Karlie Quinn (6-2, 7-5) and No. 5 Leslie Newsom (6-4, 6-1) had the other singles wins as Davie extinguished the Demons’ six-match winning streak. Quinn/Koren’s 9-7 win at No. 1 doubles was electric. Newsome/Newsom cruised 8-3 at No. 2 as Davie soared to 7-0 overall. “You’ve got to give cred-it to No. 1 doubles,” Ferebee said. “Karlie wasn’t feeling good and they were down pretty much the whole set. They got down 6-7 and then won the next three games.”The War Eagles are 5-0 in the Central Piedmont Conference, comfortably ahead of Reynolds and West Forsyth, both of which are 5-2. Their winning streaks are a very cool thing to behold. 16:59 was a personal-best effort by 31 seconds after clocking his previous best of 17:30 the prior week. Tyler Hill knocked 26 seconds off of his previous best to claim 10th place in 17:10. Thomas Essic continued the PR parade with a 16th-place finish in 17:20, 26 seconds better than his previous best. Ethan Lakey grabbed 31st in 17:35, a new PR by 30 seconds. Logan Zuleger rounded out the scoring at 122nd in 19:17, 11 seconds better than his previous best. Rounding out the Davie fin-ishers were Jackson Sulecki in a new PR of 20:07 and Will Allard in 20:39.•••The varsity girls finished 24th of 42 schools. Lexi Marion and Gracie Spicer led the way as each recorded huge PRs in the field of 300 runners. Marion placed 23rd in 21:21, an improvement of 35 seconds off of her pre-vious fastest time and over 90 seconds faster than she had run on this course three weeks ago. Spicer improved her all-time best mark by 24 seconds as she crossed the line in a time of 21:50 for 46th place. Isabel Kittleson was Davie’s third runner as she finished in 24:31. Raelyn Lankford was next in 25:01. Emilia Marks was the final Davie scorer with a time of 28:11 as she edged out teammate Clara Phelps, who recorded the same time. Stella Frye (28:37) was the remaining Davie runner. •••The Davie girls had two competitors in the JV race. Reily York (33:17) and Maggie Smith (36:31) com-pleted their first high school cross country 5k race.In the boys JV race, Davie dashed to 13th place among 41 schools. Leading the way was freshman Brayden Kistner, who shaved 48 sec-onds off of his previous best effort. His time of 19:59 was good for 66th out of 498 fin-ishers. Noah Shore recorded a personal best of 20:48 as the second Davie runner to cross the line, just a second ahead of Aric Boles (20:49). Hayden Key’s eight-second PR saw him cross the line in 20:54. Caswell Moore turned in a 33-second PR Cross country runners clock 21 personal bests Their regular-season streak is at 21, and their conference streak (17) is three from the program record. “My name is attached to it, but it’s the parents and the players who do this work,” Ferebee said. “The parents bring them to me with such great attitudes and willing-ness to learn. It’s a testament to how hard they work for the seniors to go from 6-9 and 5-7 to going 14-1 (last year) and currently 7-0.”Notes: Quinn and New-som are both 7-0 in singles. Newsome and Aderhold are 6-1. Koren is 5-3 and Sarah West Marklin 4-3. ... Quinn/Koren are 6-0 at No. 1 dou-bles. Newsome/Newsom and Marklin/Aderhold are 4-1 at Nos. 2-3 doubles. with a time of 21:00. Chris Devicenti notched a 28-sec-ond PR in 21:08. Adam Brown was next in 21:32, and he was followed Slade Keaton (21:47) and Jackson Shook, who had a nice debut race in 21:58. Wade Bomar turned in an excellent effort as his time of 22:02 was an improvement of 1:25. Rounding out the Davie effort were Jacob Hannah (23:30), Jacob Patton (PR of 26:43) and Tristen Rissew (27:00). “We could not have asked for a better effort than we got today,” said coach Rob Raisbeck. “Jeff (Jones) and I were really pleased with the performance of the entire team. Our varsi-ty boys, in particular, just crushed it out there. Each of our top four had PR’s of 25-30 seconds, as did our top two girls. We have been training really hard the last three weeks and then eased up after Tuesday so we had three days to recover for this race. We raced on this course three weeks ago and just about everybody on the team ran significantly fast-er today. We have a lot of young runners, at least half of the team being freshmen, but they didn’t let their inex-perience get in the way. We ran aggressively and with confidence, which we love to see. “We have one invita-tional left - Oct. 1 at Ha-gan Stone Park in Guilford County. Then we pivot to the championship part of the season with the CPC in mid-October. We are excited to watch this young team continue to improve.” SIGNS - ADVERTISING - COLLECTIBLES Saturday, Sept. 24th @ 10 AM Leinbach Auction Gallery 9497 N. NC Hwy. 150, Clemmons, NC 27012 — Doors Open at 9 AM — Absolute Gas, Oil Americana, Advertising Collectibles, and More! Porcelain Signs (ESSO, GULF, SHELL, SINCLAIR, AAA), Antique Gas Pumps, Coca-Cola Collectibles, Vintage Tin Cans, Artwork – ETC! Payment Terms: LIVE FLOOR BIDDERS PAY NO BUYER’S PREMIUM! Pay with Cash – Check – Visa – MasterCard – Debit Card Absentee and phone bids add 20% Buyer’s Premium. NC SALES TAX WILL BE COLLECTED. 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! Check out our section of New Products including Gel Beads, Sanitizing Wipes, & Brillo brand Cleaners and Drain Opener. Choose from a variety of scents including: Lavender & Camomile, Clean Linen, and Chery Blossom99¢ ea. Limit 4 AssortedSCENTED GEL BEADS B8 ‑ DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 By Carrie MillerDavie Senior Services Davie County Senior Games participated once again in the annual Pied-mont Senior Champions Tour alongside Piedmont Plus Senior Games and Yad-kin Valley Senior Games. These events are coordi-nated as a practice for the upcoming N.C. State Finals in September and are typi-cally held the week before Labor Day. This year, Yadkin Valley Senior Games hosted Mini Golf at Hardy’s Custom Golf in Mount Airy, Davie County Senior Games host-ed Cornhole in the Brock Gymnasium, and Piedmont Plus Senior Games hosted Davie County participants pose with competitors from Piedmont Plus Senior Games and Yadkin Valley Senior Games following the PSCT competition, a prelude to the state finals. John Bullins and Bud Stroud enjoy playing cornhole against one another at the PSCT. Alice Monk and Robbie Jackson win first place for Davie County at Mini Golf. TO OUTLAST TRAVEL MORE 110$ GET UP TO * TOTAL SAVINGS Offer valid 9/14/22 – 10/4/22 via Visa® Reward Card1 or Visa® Virtual Account2 after online submission* with the purchase of four new select MICHELIN® passenger or light truck tires. ($70 tire rebate on all tire lines, plus $40 bonus rebate on MICHELIN® Defender®2 tires only.) * Reward Card or Virtual Account eligibility is limited to tire purchases from participating dealers only. See redemption instructions handout for complete offer details. Void where prohibited. 1 Michelin Visa® Reward Card is issued by The Bancorp Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and can be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted. No cash access. The Bancorp Bank; Member FDIC. The Bancorp Bank does not endorse or sponsor and is not affiliated in any way with any product or service offered by Michelin. 2 Michelin Visa® Virtual Account is issued by The Bancorp Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and can be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted online. No cash access. The Bancorp Bank; Member FDIC. The Bancorp Bank does not endorse or sponsor and is not affiliated in any way with any product or service offered by Michelin. Copyright © 2022 Michelin North America, Inc. All rights reserved. FEATURINGTHE NEW MICHELIN ® DEFENDER ®2 TIRE DESIGNED TO OUTLAST TRAVEL MORE 110$ GET UP TO * TOTAL SAVINGS Offer valid 9/14/22 – 10/4/22 via Visa® Reward Card1 or Visa® Virtual Account2 after online submission* with the purchase of four new select MICHELIN® passenger or light truck tires. ($70 tire rebate on all tire lines, plus $40 bonus rebate on MICHELIN® Defender®2 tires only.) * Reward Card or Virtual Account eligibility is limited to tire purchases from participating dealers only. See redemption instructions handout for complete offer details. Void where prohibited. 1 Michelin Visa® Reward Card is issued by The Bancorp Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and can be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted. No cash access. The Bancorp Bank; Member FDIC. The Bancorp Bank does not endorse or sponsor and is not affiliated in any way with any product or service offered by Michelin. 2 Michelin Visa® Virtual Account is issued by The Bancorp Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and can be used everywhere Visa debit cards are accepted online. No cash access. The Bancorp Bank; Member FDIC. The Bancorp Bank does not endorse or sponsor and is not affiliated in any way with any product or service offered by Michelin. Copyright © 2022 Michelin North America, Inc. All rights reserved. FEATURINGTHE NEW MICHELIN ® DEFENDER ®2 TIRE DESIGNED 132 Interstate Drive Mocksville, NC 27028 (336) 753-8473 Hours: Mon. - Fri. 7:30 - 5:30 MockBerothTire.com 12 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU! OFFER VALID 07.27.22 - 08.13.22 1 Receive $70 off 4 eligible Bridgestone tires or $60 off 4 eligible Firestone tires purchased between July 27 and August 13, 2022. Limit 2 per household. Participating retailers only. Not combinable with other offers. Void where prohibited. Other restrictions, fees, and taxes may apply. Discount given at time of purchase and is on pretax amount. See store associate for details. 2 Receive the $100 or $90 savings when you make a qualifying tire purchase with any eligible CFNA credit card account. CFNA credit card subject to credit approval. Funding for this promotion is provided by the credit division of Bridgestone Retail Operations, LLC. ALENZA AS ULTRA • DUELER H/L ALENZA • DUELER H/L ALENZA PLUS DUELER H/L 422 ECOPIA • ECOPIA EP422 PLUS • ECOPIA H/L 422 PLUS • WEATHERPEAK DESTINATION A/T2 • DESTINATION LE2 • DESTINATION LE3 • DESTINATION X/T FIREHAWK AS • WEATHERGRIP ELIGIBLE TIRES 100$INSTANT SAVINGS 1 GET UP TO $70 $60WHEN YOU BUY A SET OF 4 ELIGIBLE BRIDGESTONE TIRES WHEN YOU BUY A SET OF 4 ELIGIBLE FIRESTONE TIRES WHEN YOU USE YOUR CFNA CREDIT CARD2$30 CV Boots & Axles • Batteries • Transmission Service • Air Conditioning Service Oil Changes • NC Inspections • Exhaust & Emissions • Heating & Cooling Shocks & Struts • Brakes • Tune-Ups • Belts & Hoses • 4-Wheel Alignments Don’t Be Fooled by a Price Quote! Make Sure It Includes These Items! All of our Prices Include Mounting, Balancing, and FREE Rotation for the Life of the Tires. (with purchase of 4 new tires) Roni Barney focuses on Mini Golf.Davie seniors gear up for state competition Sue Couch and Peggy Evans are proud of their cornhole wins for Davie County. Bowling at Creekside Lanes in Winston-Salem. This tri-county tourna-ment is for the best of the best to come out and com-pete for the coveted trophy. Davie County won the first day with the top men and women’s scores: Rob-bie Jackson and Alice Monk taking the lead. The second day of com-petition, Peggy Evans and Sue Couch took the lead for Davie. After the first two days of competition, Davie County was in the lead, followed by Yadkin Valley, and then Piedmont Plus. Davie came from behind and landed the first place spot in bowling, as well. For more information on how to become involved in the Davie Senior Games, contact Senior Services at 336-753-6230. Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash SHOP LOCAL DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 ‑ B9County Line Folks enjoy a delicious barbecue dinner at Society Baptist Church homecoming celebration last Sunday. By Shirley ThorneCounty Line Correspondent Pleasant View Bap-tist Church will celebrate homecoming Sunday, Sept. 25. After Sunday school at 10 a.m., Pastor Brandon Gwaltney will bring the message at the 11 a.m. ser-vice. There will be a cov-ered-dish dinner. Church members invite all former members and friends to bring a basket of good food and fond memories to share as they celebrate the church anniversary.Salem United Methodist Church will also celebrate homecoming this Sunday. There will be a special sing-ing service at 10 a.m. with Pastor Jesse Teal bringing the message at the 11 a.m. service. Church members invite former members and friends to bring a basket of good food and fond mem-ories to share at the dinner following the service.Upcoming community events: 176th Harmony Hill Camp Meeting, Wednesday, Oct. 5-Sunday, Oct. 9, at the Harmony town square; Pastor Appreciation Day Sunday, Oct. 9 at Calvary Baptist; homecoming Sun-day, Oct. 9, at Piney Grove AME Zion; and homecom-ing Sunday, Nove. 6 at Cal-vary Baptist. Our community extends sympathy to the family of Stephen Edward Nantz; who died late Thursday night, Sept. 8 at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. After a courageous battle with cancer the past year, he was undergoing diagnostic tests for a possi-ble new treatment when he unexpectedly suffered fatal heart failure. The younger of two chil-dren, he was born in 1974 in Iredell County to John and Mary Elizabeth Thorne Nantz, formerly of Ridge Road. He was reared in Harmony and attended So-ciety Baptist with his fam-ily. As a child, he enjoyed spending time with his Grandma Thorne on Ridge Road when his parents were at work. He attended Har-mony School, graduated from North Iredell High in 1992, and earned a bache-lor’s of business adminis-tration from UNC-Charlotte in 1996. Stephen began his professional career with Ryan Homes of Charlotte and was new home oper-ations manager with Lake Mist Homes. In 2011 he married the former Alys-sa Somers of Iredell; the couple initially made their home in Sherrills Ford and later built a new home on Lake Norman in Moores-ville in 2020. A Carolina fan since a child, he enjoyed boating and golfing. A fam-ily burial was held Monday morning in the cemetery of Society Baptist, where he was a member; a celebra-tion of his life was held that afternoon at Beulah Baptist in Iredell.We send get-well wishes to Nannie Lue Hollar, who is now a patient at Gordon Hospice House of States-ville. Eva Campbell has improved and is recuperat-ing at home. Jap Johnson is recuperating at home. Eddie Porter has improved and has been recuperating at home with physical therapy since Thursday of last week. Al-ice Waugh remains in rehab at Davie Nursing and Reha-bilitation. Join us in prayer for the Lord's divine healing upon Nannie Lue, Eva, Jap, Ed-die, Alice, and other resi-dents who are having health problems. Pray for the Lord's comfort and strength upon our family in the death of my nephew Stephen. Re-member in prayer Odean and Brenda Bell; his moth-er Mary Jurney Bell died Thursday of last week.For news and memories to share, please call or text Shirley on 336-492-5115 or email sdtlink@hotmail.com. Homecomings Sunday at Salem, Pleasant View By Lt. Deborah LeightonFor the Enterprise Are you looking for a way to serve your community? Join the Sugar Valley Composite Squadron for an open house on Tuesday, Sept. 27, at 6:30 p.m. to learn the possibilities with Civil Air Patrol, an auxiliary of the U.S. Air Force. Civil Air Patrol squad-rons are active in communi-ties across the United States, training youth, ages 12-18, Members of the Sugar Valley Composite Squadron Color Guard present- ing the Colors at the Farmington Military Court.ACROSS 1. Org. that pilots pilots 4. (K) Flightless Aussie birds 8. (K) Trade 100 marbles for a PS5, e.g. 12. (K) Ghost’s scream 13. Like bulldogs 15. Speakers 17. (K) Football cushions 18. Took a seat again 19. 1953 Alan Ladd Western 21. Sheeps’ chatter 23. (K) Achieve through work 24. Home territory, in slang 25. (K) Signature creator 28. Store event to clear out stock (2 words) 31. Grass you can carry on your shoulder 32. (K) Reddish- orange baby newts 33. (K) Snake’s hello 34. (K) Places 35. (K) Ice cream holders 36. (K) Dice shape 39. (K) Radish part 40. Stress to a fault 45. Says, “You can do it” 46. (K) Prefix with “violent” or “fiction” 47. Titled English lady 48. (K) The castle’s crocodiles live here 49. (K) Zeus or Thor, e.g. DOWN 1. (K) Initial preschool group? 2. (K) “May I have sprinkles, ___?” 3. (K) Looked for differences 4. Chopin piece 5. Department in Kohl’s 6. (K) Prefix with “corn” 7. Cul-de-___ 8. (K) Construction crews’ workplaces 9. Tries to win over 10. Something you can feel but not see 11. (K) “Hey!” sound 14. Glass water holder 16. Miraculous biblical food 19. (K) Min. parts 20. Ring over an angel 21. Hits a baseball without swinging 22. Pendulum’s paths 24. (K) 27th U.S. president 25. (K) Van Gogh’s “The Starry Night,” e.g. 26. (K) “What ___ is there?” 27. Famous Scottish loch 29. (K) Finds another purpose for 30. Waves at buzzing pests 34. By itself (2 words) 35. (K) California has a long one 36. 80s’ telephone part 37. Iris’s place 38. Skyscraper support 39. Large South American bird 41. Fall flower 42. (K) WNBA athlete 43. (K) Home to many wild animals 44. Drop the curtain PREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER © 2022 Andrews McMeel Syndication syndication.andrewsmcmeel.com Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle? Park where an aardvark might park it? Look for the answer in next week’s paper. Created by Timothy E. Parker September 26, 2022 The (K) Clues Are for Kids Retirement state? 39-A) REM Previous riddle answer: and adults in skills based on the core values of integ-rity, excellence, respect and volunteer service. CAP’s three primary missions are aerospace education, cadet programs and emergency services.CAP squadrons offer op-portunities for 12-18 year olds to learn about aero-space education, train in search and rescue skills, develop leadership skills, work as a team, and train in physical fitness. CAP offers National Cadet Special Ac-tivities, designed to explore civilian and military aero-space careers, provide flight training, and enhance emer-gency services skills.Senior members and ca-dets are trained in search and rescue techniques, op-erating on the ground and in the air, and participate in CAP sponsored missions, as well as offering support to local and federal agencies in search and rescue efforts, disaster relief, and humani- tarian services.The Sugar Valley Com-posite Squadron meets in the Blue Hangar, Sugar Valley Airport, 249 Gilbert Road in Mocksville. The open house begins at 6:30 with a model rocket launch, drone demonstration, flight simulators, and more. For more information, call, Leighton on 336-409-5086or follow on Facebook @nc052. Open house Tuesday with Civil Air Patrol B10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022Dateline 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 Tell Our Advertisers You Found Them in the BUSINESSSPOTLIGHT Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash Gilbert Grounds Management, LLC Year Round Seasonal Services with 30 Years of Experience Kevin Gilbert born a Davie County native, has tak-en great pride in establishing Gilbert Grounds Man-agement LLC. Kevin has 30 years of experience in residential and commercial grounds maintenance. The business is insured and bonded with the best equipment to handle your lawn care needs. Kevin is a family man who has the help of his son Gary Gilbert to work aside him. He has three children, two step children and three grandchildren. His goal is to build a business on quality, honesty and hard work to pass on to his family. At Gilbert Grounds Management they are all about 3 simple principals: care, cost, and equip-ment. They CARE about the clients and the needs of their residential homes or businesses. Gilbert Grounds Management’s top priority is your projects. They’ve invested years of hard work into pleasing people. They match a service plan to fit your bud-get and with the rising costs they will stay fair and reasonable for the working family. Let them handle your account today. You can add them on Facebook @ Gilbert Grounds Management to view the quality of their work. Many forms of payment are accepted via check, paypal or cash. Gilbert Grounds Manage-ment only has the best equipment rolling off their trucks. They will come prepared to handle all your lawn care needs and will take the time to listen to make sure the job gets done right. Gilbert Grounds Management offers a variety of grounds services for your resident or business. Services include the following: - Lawn maintenance - Weed control - Trimming of bushes and small trees - Annual pruning - Rock beds - Pine needles - Mulching - Aeration, seeding, fertilization Kevin Gilbert also enjoys racing full time at Bow-man Gray Stadium in the street stock division. He is currently top 10 in the point standings this sea-son. He also enjoys coaching his Skywalkers team in youth basketball for the Davie County Parks and Recreation. He has led two of his teams to champi-onships in his 6 years of coaching. He is all about heart and hustle. Beat the heat this summer! The hotter it is, the better we like it. Give us a call today for that perfect yard. Contact Kevin at (336) 488-0874 or find them on Facebook @ Gilbert Grounds Management. Residential and Commercial Grounds Maintenance YEAR ROUND SEASONAL SERVICES Call TODAY To Put The BUSINESS SPOTLIGHT To Work For YOU! ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE! TO ADVERTISE CALL: Davie 336-751-2120 Forsyth 336-766-4126 Fundraisers Saturday, Sept. 24Fall Festival, New Union Church, Sheffield/County Line roads, 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Vendor space available, 336-837-8122. Saturday, Oct. 8Community breakfast, Farm-ington Methodist, 1939 Farm-ington Rd., 7-10 a.m. Pork tenderloin, sausage, gravy, eggs, grits, stewed apples, biscuits, mixed fresh fruit, breakfast casserole, coffee, OJ. Donations to church ministries. Reunions Thursday, Sept. 22Davie High Class of 1960 will meet for lunch, 11:30, Mocks-ville Family Restaurant, 1122 Yadkinville Rd. Friday, Sept. 23Davie High Class of ‘72 50th-year reunion, The Farmhouse at Gemini Branch, 3320 NC 801 N., Mocksville, social 4:30-6:30, photo, 6:45, meal, 7. Casual. $35 per person before Aug. 31, $45 after. Contact Dwayne Smith, 336-940-8125. Saturday, Sept. 24Davie High Class of ‘62, The Farm at Oak Hill, Mocksville, social hour at noon, lunch at 1. Call Larry Smith, 336-905-9015. Sunday, Sept. 25Beck Reunion, for ancestors of Thomas Jefferson Beck and Matilda Smith Beck, cov-ered-dish lunch at 1 p.m. at Bear Creek Baptist Church. Relatives and friends invited. Friday, Sept. 30Davie High Dancing Boots reunion celebrating 51 years, home football game. Dinner on Oct. 1. Contact Beverly@burton.net, or Shanna.romani@cra-venk12.org, or check Facebook at Davie High Dancing Boots 1972-present. Saturday, Oct. 1Davie High School Class of ‘66 reunion, 5 p.m., Eaton’s Baptist fellowship hall, Eatons & Richie roads, Mocksville. Wednesday, Oct. 5Davie High Class of ‘61 quar-terly get together, 1 p.m., 801 Southern Kitchen & Pancake House, 218 NC 801, Advance. RSVP by Oct. 3 to 336-998-6720. 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 Thursday, Sept. 22Bluegrass Church, Eaton’s Baptist, 430 Eatons Church Rd., Mocksville, 6 p.m. Hot-dogs and sides. Music from a band, a short blessing from the pastor, and then a jam session. Sunday, Oct. 2Homecoming/Friends Day, First Baptist of Cooleemee, 10:30 a.m. with Pastor Rev. Allen Mullins and The Pow-ell Family from Zebulon, fol-lowed by covered dish lunch. Special Events Tuesday, Sept. 27Rocket launch, drones, flight simulators part of open house for Civil Air Patrol Sugar Val-ley Composite Squadron, 249 Gilbert Road, Mocksville. 6:30 p.m. 336-409-5086. Member-ship open to youth, age 12-18, and adults. Saturday, Oct. 15Shredding Event, 9 a.m.-noon, Bermuda Run Town Hall, 120 Kinderton Blvd. by Bermuda Run Garden Club. $5 per brown grocery bag or equivalent size box. Cash only. Proceeds to Davie County charities. Meetings Thursday, Sept. 22Davie Historical & Genealog-ical Society, 7 p.m., History Room at Davie County Public Library, N. Main St., Mcoksville, 7 p.m. Hear from author Marcia Phillips about Shallow Ford. Rare artifacts to be on display. SeniorsAll events are sponsored by Davie Senior Services. For more information or to register, call 336-753-6230. The main cam-pus 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, computer basics, 10-11 a.m. With Davie Public Library. Thursday, Sept. 22 Fall Prevention Seminar with Dr. Megan Collins, learn how to make falls less likely.Good Health Club, 1 p.m., with Stacey Southern, nutrition site coordinator. Learn eating tips, share recipes, light exercises. Friday, Sept. 23End of Summer Dance, 1-3 p.m., Brock Campus, with music by DJ Carrie. Monday, Sept. 26What’s Cooking: Foods, Fads & Helpful Home Hacks, 1 p.m., learn home tips, gadgets, see demonstrations. Tuesday, Sept. 27Theatre Club, 1 p.m. with Mike Garner, discuss productions to attend as a group. Wednesday, Sept. 28Basketball & softball team interest meeting, 2 p.m., Brock Campus. Age appropriate teams available for men and women. Thursday, Sept. 29Bocce Clinic, 9:30 a.m., Davie Community Park. Learn rules, tips. Friday, Sept. 30Senior Center Month Show-case Party, 2 p.m., Interactive with refreshments. Monday, Oct. 3Powerwalking/racewalking demonstration, 2 p.m., Brock Campus. Tuesday, Oct. 4Blood Pressure Screening, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 5A Matter of Balance with Me-gan Collins, learn strategies to manage falls, 1-3 p.m.Grandparents & Me, 3 p.m., bring young ones for story time and craft. Co-sponsored by SmartStart. Thursday, Oct. 6American Mahjong, 1-4 p.m., with Kathy Ryckman, learn to play the new game to stimulate cognitive performance.Senior Writing Group, 2 p.m. with Marie Craig. 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, Mondays, 11 a.m. and 12:15 p.m. with Kim Crawford. 55 and older.Coffee & Caregiving, Tuesdays 10 a.m. via Zoom. Interact with other caregivers, ask staff mem-ber Kelly Sloan questions. Open to caregivers of all ages. Live Music Thursday, Sept. 22James Vincent Carroll, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Darrell Hoots, 6:30 p.m., O’Callahan’s, Downtown Mocksville. Friday, Sept. 23Hawthorne Curve, 6 p.m., Tanglewood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Saturday, Sept.24Whiskey Mic, 6 p.m., Tangle-wood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Tuesday, Sept. 27Shoulder 2 Shoulder, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocks-ville. Thursday, Sept. 29Casey Noel, 6-9 p.m., Tangle-wood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Friday, Sept. 30Dave Ray Cecil, 5:30 p.m. RayLen Vineyard & Winery, US 158, Mocksville. Saturday, Oct. 1Lauren Light, 6-9:30 p.m., Davie Community Park, South-wood Drive, Mocksville.Down the Mountain, 6-9 p.m., Tanglewood Pizza, US 158, Bermuda Run. Sunday, Oct. 2Wendy Wooten, 2 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Thursday, Oct. 6Josh Tenery, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Friday, Oct. 7Taylor Mason, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville.SoundKraft, 5:30 p.m., RayLen Vineyard & Winery, US 158, Mocksville. Sunday, Oct. 9Red Umber jazz, 2 p.m., RayLen Vineyard & Winery, US 158, Mocksville. Thursday, Oct. 13Darrell Hoots, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Friday, Oct. 14Darrell Hoots, 7 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Thursday, Oct. 20James Vincent Carroll, 7 p.m. 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville. Friday, Oct. 21Coia, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 - B11 Public Notices No. 1514676 NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION DAVIE COUNTY, NORTH CAROLINA The statewide general election will be held on Tuesday, November 8, 2022. Polls will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m. on Election Day. One-stop early voting will be held at the following locations from Thursday, October 20, 2022, to Saturday, November 5, 2022: • Davie County Board of Elections Office at 161 Poplar Street, Suite 102, Mocksville, NC 27028 • Bermuda Run Town Hall at 120 Kinderton Blvd. Suite 100, Bermu-da Run, NC 27006 • JerusalemVolunteer Fire Dept. at 7185 NC Hwy. 801 South, Mocks-ville, NC 27028 All sites will be open the follow-ing days and times: Begins: Thursday, October 20, 2022 Ends: Saturday, November 5, 2022 Open: Monday – Friday 8:00 am – 7:30 pm Open: Saturday, November 5, 8:00 am – 3:00 pm Absentee ballots will be mailed to voters who have requested them beginning September 9, 2022. A voter can fill out an absentee ballot request at votebymail.ncsbe.gov, or by filling out a re-quest form provided by the board of elections. The request must be received through the website or by the Davie County Board of Elec-tions by 5 p.m. November 1, 2022. In the general election, voters will select candidates for U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives, N.C. General Assembly, state and local judges, district attor-ney, and county offices. The voter registration deadline for this election is 5 p.m. Friday, October 14, 2022. Eligible indi-viduals who are not registered by that deadline may register and vote at any early voting site during the early voting period. New reg-istrants will be required to provide documentation of their residence. Questions? Call the Davie County Board of Elections Office at 336-753-6072 or visit us at https://www.daviecountync.gov/93/Elec-tions Gary A. LeBlanc, Chairman Davie County Board of Elections Publish 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22, 10/13/22 No. 1514083 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS FOR THE FOLLOWING ZONING AMENDMENTS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pur- suant to the requirements of Chap- ter 160D-602 of the General Stat- utes of North Carolina and Section 155.251 of the Davie County Code of Ordinances, that the Davie County Board of Commissioners will hold a Public Hearing in the Commissioners Meeting Room in the Administration Building locat- ed at 123 S. Main Street, Mocks- ville, NC on Monday October 3, 2022 at 6:00pm to hear the fol- lowing requests: Zoning Map Amendment 2022- 06. Blackwelder Investments, LLC has applied to rezone approxi- mately 105.5 acres from Residen- tial 20 (R-20) and Residential Agri- cultural (R-A) to General Industrial (G-I). The subject properties are located at 148 Cana Rd and 2254 US HWY 601 N. The properties are further described as Davie County Tax Parcel G300000076 and G300000077. The public is invited to attend the hearing at which time there will be an opportunity to be heard in favor of, or in opposition to, the above items. As a result of the pub- lic hearing, substantial changes might be made in the advertised proposal, reflecting objections, debate and discussion at the hearing. Additional information is available at the Development & Facilities Services Department on weekdays between 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at (336) 753-6050. Adam Barr Planning Department Publish: 09/22/22, 09/29/22. Public Notices No. 1507120 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF NORA M. BAILEY, DECEASED The undersigned, having hereto-fore qualified as Executor ofthe Estate of Nora M. Bailey, de-ceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, hereby notifies all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said estate to present them to the under-signed on or before December 8, 2022, or this Notice will be plead-ed in bar of any recovery thereon. All persons, firms and corpora-tions indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 8 day of September, 2022.Dennis R. Bailey, ExecutorEstate of Nora M. Bailey, De-ceasedc/o Brandon K. Jones, Esq.Carruthers & Roth, P.A.Attorneys & Counselors at Law235 North Edgeworth StreetPost Office Box 540Greensboro, North Carolina 27402Publish 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22 No. 1512611 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Arthur A. Munguia (aka Arthur Armando Munguia, Jr.; Arthur A. Munguia, Jr.; Arthur Armando Munguia; Arthur Mun-guia), 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 my attorney at 110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27103-1958, on or before the 22nd day of December, 2022, or this no-tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 22nd day of September, 2022.Claudia L. Barrett, Executor Estate of Arthur A. Munguiac/o Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker, LLP110 Oakwood Drive, Suite 300Winston-Salem, NC 27103-1958Craige Jenkins Liipfert & Walker, LLPPublish 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22, 10/13/22 No. 1503007 A RESOLUTION DECLARING THE INTENT OF THE TOWN COUNCIL OF BERMUDA RUN TO CONSIDER THE CLOSING OF PEACH TREE EXTENSION (WINMOCK ROAD) WHEREAS North Carolina Gen-eral Statute 160A authorizes the Town Council to permanently close public streets and alleys; and WHEREAS, the Town has re-ceived a request to close Peach Tree Ext. (Winmock Road) locat-ed between NC Hwy 801 and Ivy Circle. The surrounding properties are owned by Ariston Place LLC; and WHEREAS the Town Council considers it advisable to conduct a public hearing for the purpose of giving consideration to perma-nently closing the aforementioned street right of way. NOW, THEREFORE BE IT RE-SOLVED BY THE TOWN COUN-CIL OF THE TOWN OF BERMU-DA RUN, NORTH CAROLINA: Section 1. That a public hear-ing will be held at 8:30 a.m. on September 27, 2022, in Council Chambers located at 120 Kinder-ton Blvd, Suite 100 Bermuda Run, North Carolina, to consider an order to permanently close said street right of way. Section 2. The Town Clerk is hereby directed to publish this Resolution of Intent once a week for four (4) successive weeks prior to the Public Hearing in the Davie Enterprise. Section 3. The Town Clerk is hereby further directed to transmit by Registered or Certified Mail, to each owner of property abutting on said street right of way, a copy of the Resolution of Intent, and shall cause a notice of the Public Hearing to be prominently posted in at least two places along the street. Section 4. This Resolution of In-tent shall become effective upon its adoption and approval. Adopted and approved this the 23th day of August 2022. Rick Cross, Mayor Town of Bermuda Run Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 Public Notices No. 1509194 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of MICHAEL AUS-TIN NEELY 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 December 15, 2022 (beingthree [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediatepayment to the undersigned.This the 15th day of September, 2022.Constance B. CallC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22 No. 1513329 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Cindy L. Sullivan 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 De-cember 22, 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 14th of September, 2022.Stephanie F. Lawter, Executorc/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law MARTIN & VAN HOY, LLPAttorneys at Law10 Court SquareMocksville, NC 27028(336)751-2171Publish 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22, 10/13/22 No. 1515334 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administra-tor for the Estate of Jose Luis Ramirez Cisnero, aka Jose L. Ramirez, aka Jose Ramirez, aka Jose Cisnero, aka Jose L. Ramirez Cisneros, 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 Decem-ber 28, 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 09/22/2022. Gladys Flores Rebolledo, 539 Mountview Drive, Mocksville, NC 27028, as Administrator of the Estate of Jose Luis Ramirez Cisnero, aka Jose L. Ramirez, aka Jose Ramirez, aka Jose Cisnero, aka Jose L. Ramirez Cisneros, deceased, File #22E263. Publish 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22, 10/13/22 No. 1504251 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor of the Estate of Joyce Ann Childress, deceased, late of Davie County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to Mr. Fred P. Flynt, III, Executor, c/o George A. “Trip” Payne, Esq., Kasper & Payne, P.A., P.O. Box 687, 3626 Clemmons Road, Clem-mons, NC 27012, on or before the 9th day of December, 2022, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebt-ed to said estate will please make immediate payment.This the 31st day of August, 2022Fred P. Flynt, III, ExecutorAttorney George A. “Trip” PayneKasper & Payne, P.A.P.O. Box 6873626 Clemmons Road,Clemmons, NC 27012Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 No. 1505504 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as the Adminis-trator, CTA of the Estate of Robert Jay Gladfelter, Deceased, late of Forsyth 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 Decem-ber 15, 2022, or this Notice will be pleaded in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said deceased. All persons indebt-ed to said estate will please make immediate payment.This the 8th day of September, 2022.Bryan C. ThompsonAdministrator CTA of the Estate of Robert Jay Gladfelter, deceased FREEDMAN THOMPSON WITT CEBERIO & BYRD, PLLC210 South Cherry StreetWinston-Salem, NC 27101(336) 725-8323Publish 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22 Public Notices No. 1504270 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of Jerleen B. Adams, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before De-cember 7, 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 09/01/2022. Darla Smyers, 245 Mason Drive, Mocks-ville, NC 27028, as Administrator of the Estate of Jerleen B. Adams, deceased, File #2022E000337. Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 No. 1508225 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Co-Executors for the Estate of Janice Laverne Beauchamp Hicks, 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 Decem-ber 20, 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 09/08/2022. Richard C. Hicks, 383 Junie Beauchamp Road, Advance, NC 27006 and Susan B. Hicks, 127 Legacy Drive, Advance, NC 27006, as Co-Ex-ecutors of the Estate of Janice Laverne Beauchamp Hicks, de-ceased, File #22E347. Publish 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22 No. 1512803NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-tor of the Estate of Ervin Godwin AKA Albert Ervin Godwin late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the un-dersigned on or before December 22, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corpora-tions indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 13th of September, 2022. Vickie Fer-guson, Executor, c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law, MARTIN & VAN HOY, LLP, Attorneys at Law, 10 Court Square, Mocksville, NC 27028, (336)751-2171. Pub-lish: 09/22/22, 09/29/22, 10/06/22, 10/13/22. No. 1513969 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDI-TORS Having qualified as Exec-utrix of the Estate of MARY LEE CLARKE, 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 DECEMBER 22nd, 2022, or this Notice will be plead-ed in bar of their right to recover against the estate of the said de-ceased. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im-mediate payment. This the 22nd of SEPTEMBER 2022. Debra Anne Schmitt Executrix of the Estate of MARY LEE CLARKE c/o Robin-son & Lawing, LLP 110 Oakwood Dr., STE 200, Winston-Salem NC 27103 Publish 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22, 10/13/22 No. 1500441 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Execu-tor of the Estate of EHAB ATEF BAHGAT 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 December 1, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediatepayment to the undersigned.This the 1st day of September, 2022.Ahmed Atef BahjatC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 No. 1509194 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS HAVING QUALIFIED as Executrix of the Estate of MICHAEL AUS-TIN NEELY 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 December 15, 2022 (beingthree [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice), or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms, and corporations indebted to said estate will please make immediatepayment to the undersigned.This the 15th day of September, 2022.Constance B. CallC/O FLEMING & WILLIAMS, LLPBrian F. Williams,Attorney at Law284 South Main StreetMocksville, NC 27028Publish 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22 Transportation Motorcycles & ATV’s 1991 Honda Nighthawk 750 34k miles, $2,000 OBO, in Salis- bury. 973-879-7273 Public Notices Public Notices No. 1500954 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Betty G. Richardson, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before De-cember 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. To-day’s date 09/01/2022. Norman C. Richardson, Jr., 124 Stone Creek Drive, Statesville, NC 28625, as Executor of the Estate of Betty G. Richardson, deceased, File #2022E000332. Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 No. 1508933 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Executor for the Estate of Freida T. McCray, 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 De-cember 21, 2022. This notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov-ery. All persons, firms and corpo-rations indebted to said estate are notified to make immediate pay-ment. Today’s date 09/15/2022. Gordon E. McCray, 8335 River-walk Drive, Clemmons, NC 27012, as Executor of the Estate of Freida T. McCray, deceased, File #2022E000346. Publish 9/15/22, 9/22/22, 9/29/22, 10/6/22 No. 1507433NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHaving qualified as EXECUTOR for the Estate of GRADY LEE MCCLAMROCK, SR., late of Da-vie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpora-tions having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before 12/14/2022. 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 09/08/2022. GRADY LEE MCCLAMROCK, JR., 482 MCCLAMROCK RD., MOCKS-VILLE, NC 27028, as EXECU-TOR of the Estate of GRADY LEE MCCLAMROCK, SR., deceased, File #2022 E 000311. Publish: 09/08/22, 09/15/22, 09/22/22, 09/29/22. No. 1510262NORTH CAROLINADAVIE COUNTYNOTICE TO CREDITORSHAVING QUALIFIED as Executor of the Estate of Ann N. Rich late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons, firms and corporations having claims against said Estate to present written claim to the un-dersigned on or before December 15, 2022 (being three [3] months from the first day of publication of this notice) or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons, firms and corpora-tions indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned. This the 8th of September, 2022. Fredrick A. Rich, Executor, c/o Henry P. Van Hoy, II, Attorney at Law. MARTIN & VAN HOY, LLP, Attorneys at Law, 10 Court Squar, Mocksville, NC 27028. (336)751-2171. Pub-lish: 09/15/22, 09/22/22, 09/29/22, 10/06/22. No. 1504270 NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having qualified as Administrator for the Estate of Jerleen B. Adams, late of Davie County, NC, this is to notify all persons, firms and corpo-rations having claims against the said decedent to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before De-cember 7, 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 09/01/2022. Darla Smyers, 245 Mason Drive, Mocks-ville, NC 27028, as Administrator of the Estate of Jerleen B. Adams, deceased, File #2022E000337. Publish 9/1/22, 9/8/22, 9/15/22, 9/22/22 Auctions & Sales Garage Sales Mocksville, 2057 Junction Rd. Multi-Family Yard Sale, Fri. 9/23 & Sat. 9/24 8am-1pm. Ammo, furni- ture, clothes, toys & more. Mocksville, 234 Pepperstone Dr. Garage/Moving Sale, Fri. 9/23 & Sat. 9/24 8am-3pm. Various tools, golf clubs & fishing gear. Webb’s Yard Sale Ridenhour Arbor 1042 Center St. Cooleemee Yard Sale, Fri. 9/23 @ Sat. 9/24 8am-12noon. Women & men’s clothing, furniture, odds & ends. Merchandise Deals & Bargains 2-Spinning Rods & Reels $25 for both. 704-278-9527 2 Black End Tables 2 black end tables in excellent condition. 980-892-2715 $40.00 4-Bait Casting Rods & Reels $25 each. 704-278-9527 42” Round Pedastal Picnic table w/ 2 benches. $35. 704-279-4719, leave message 5 piece Bedroom suite Dresser/mirror, full bed, chest of drawers, nightstand. $275 704- 279-4719, leave message. Black Dale Earnhart Leather Jacket Large, still in good condition. If in- terested call 704-920-8246 $50.00 Electric Treadmill $75 704-279-4719, leave mes- sage. Epoxy Table Tops 704-232-0881, text for picture $500. Free upright piano 704-857-3399 For Sale Axe, shovel, ladder, staff, & ply- wood. $15 each. 704-640-0466 FREE Furniture & Portable Dishwaser Chest of drawers, small dresser, 2-end tables & Whirlpool Portable dishwasher, older model, but good condition. Call or text 704-957- 0590, no calls after 10pm. Google Nest Thermostat New in box. $50. 704-630-9286 Golf Cart Body ONLY New Paint Blue Marble Club Car Precedent Body.704-920-8246. China Grove $350.00 Kitchen bench Tan bench, good for kitchen or living room. In excellent condition. 980-892-2715 $60 Record Albums The Greatest Coun- try Music of all times (country strings) 4 albums/Ranklin Mint certified. Mint condition $50. 336-766-5096 Mowing Trailer Ramps & lights included, good condition. $500. 336-546-7408 Men’s Clothes 14 2XL casual & dress lg.sl. shirts, 10 ties, size 56 cashmere/wool light weight jacket, grey trousers, 5 khaki slacks, 42-46x31. 239- 272-6597 $100.00 Red Microwave In good condition. 980-892-2715 $30 Sunbeam Grillmaster Grill 2-burners, plus side burner. $100. 704-630-9286 Samsung TV and Tv stand combo ‘40 TV color in excellent condition with black TV Stand. 980-892- 2715 $120.00 Tropitone Aluminum Table and Chairs 42 inch table sling chairs $450 call 336-816-1479 B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, May 26, 2022 1710 Jake Alexander Blvd W Salisbury, NC 28144 (704) 773-8655 www.facebook.com/Everydayyardsalestore Everyday Yardsale Store Hrs: Mon. - Sat. 9am - 5pm Specialize in small appliances & cleaning supplies Deals & Bargains Oak Dresser Solid oak. $480. 336-546-7408 Quart Canning Jars $8/dozen.704-298-4089 Deals & Bargains Family of Porcelain Dolls $100 704-209-1664 George Foreman Electric Grill Gently used. Personal size. Call 980-330-9613 $15.00 Deals & Bargains 2-Samsung Phones Perfect condition. $480. 336-546-7408 2-Wigs $50 704-209-1664 2-Zebco 33 Rods & Reels $25 for both. 704-278-9527 7.5 New Christmas Tree w/ 1200 lights. $225 Call 704-680-3114 or 336-816-1479 Cedar Glider 704-232-0881 $500 James Bond 007 1950s vintage, Sean Connery 33”x51” beach towel. Perfect condition, never been used or washed. $80 336-766-5096 English Walnuts FREE. 704-298-4089 Floor Lamp Very heavy, like new. $85 704- 680-3114 or 336-816-1479 Garage Sales Woodleaf, 1615 Powell Rd Multi-Family Yard Sale, ONE DAY ONLY Sat. 5/28, 7am-4pm. Raising money for summer trips! Clothes, shoes, bags, furniture, home goods, books, plants and technology! Merchandise Deals & Bargains 1972 Ford Pinto 2000 engine & c4 transmission. Runs but both need rebuilding. $250. 704-857-7186 2-Pair Brand New High Heels Size 9.5 & 10. $50 704-209-1664 Auctions & Sales Garage Sales Ridenhour Arbor Center Street Cooleemee Webb Yard Sale Yard Sale, Fri. 5/27 8am-1pm & Sat. 5/28 8am-noon. Men’s and women’s clothes, other good buys. Salisbury Rowan Co. Fairgrounds County Wide Antique & Yard Sale Fri. May 27 & Sat. May 28 8am-4pm & Sun. May 29, 9am-4pm. Over 150 booths. Fairground full of anything from yard sale items to antiques. For info, call 704-425-9838 RAIN OR SHINE! 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 Houses, Decks, Driveways Gutter Cleaning, Roof Wash 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!ACROSS 1. (K) Talk to each other 5. Sharpen an ax blade 9. Place for Hemingway’s Old Man 12. Feeling fit and healthy 13. (K) “What do you ___ there?” 14. (K) Simple grain 15. (K) One thing to sail to 16. One of several on a bulleted list 17. Not “to,” but ___ 18. Printed and glazed cotton fabric 20. A sacred hymn 22. (K) Bonfire residue 23. (K) One way to be seen in the dark 25. (K) Came in first 27. (K) Shrek is one 29. Wading bird of warm regions 33. What “You can do it!” is 36. (K) Root ___ float 37. “American ___” (TV show) 38. (K) “___ day now!” 39. (K) Facial blemishes 41. (K) Biggest heater you’ll ever need 43. Swindler’s cohort 46. Friendship by mail (2 words) 49. Tween age 50. (K) Flow sluggishly 53. (K) Worst part of an apple to eat, you’d think 54. “Are,” way old 55. (K) Geometry class answer, sometimes 56. Collected charity 57. (K) “The Tigger Movie” character 58. Boat’s central structure 59. (K) An annoying bug is one DOWN 1. “That dress is tres ___!” 2. Corn beef dish 3. Coalition 4. (K) Young adults 5. Someone dazzlingly skilled in a field 6. (K) Thing blown off in the wind, sometimes 7. (K) Adam and ___ 8. (K) Something a drummer is responsible for 9. (K) Thing to lie or sit on 10. Marquis subordinate 11. (K) Smallest component of an element 19. Commandment word 21. (K) Type of suit that gets wet 23. (K) Elementary school division 24. (K) Toy company that’s all blocked up? 25. (K) What a spider makes 26. (K) Single number 28. Beam with your face 30. Old descriptor for a tall, skinny guy 31. Place with room service, maybe 32. (K) Pig’s home with a mud floor 34. Type of exam with no writing 35. (K) “Anybody ___ coming to the worm race?” 40. Robe relative 42. (K) Open, as a toothpaste tube 43. (K) One of trillions in the sky 44. (K) Last person standing in an action film 45. (K) “Spider-Man: ___ the Spider-Verse” 46. Sound, as big bells 47. (K) Muscular items, for many 48. “___ we forget ...” 51. Rock in stores? 52. Last letterPREVIOUS PUZZLE ANSWER © 2022 Andrews McMeel Syndication syndication.andrewsmcmeel.com Can you find the answer to this riddle within the solved puzzle?You, long agoLook for the answer in next week’s paper.Created by Timothy E. Parker May 30, 2022The (K) Clues Are for Kids Get from yesterday? 7-D) GOT Previous riddle answer:FundraisersSaturday, 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.ReunionsSaturday, 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 per-son, paid to DHS Class of ‘82, c/o Shelia Walker Stanley, PO Box 601, Mocksville. Details to be on class Facebook page. ReligionSunday, May 29George and Minnie Campbell Day, Shiloh Baptist, 544 E. Depot St., Mocksville, 11 a.m.June 5-8Vacation Bible School, Ea-tons Baptist, 6:30-8:30 each evening. For kids age 3-12. Concurrent adult class. 336-655-9656.Special EventsFriday, May 27Strawberry Jam canning workshop, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., Extension Center, downtown Mocksville. $15. Reserve spot by May 23, 336.753.6100.Saturday, June 4Tea Party, Dulin Methodist, 897 Dulin Rd., Mocksville, 2-4 p.m. Put on party hat and joing the free fun. Write to church and tell them how many will attend.ThursdaysBoTyme Jam, country, blue-grass and gospel music, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Farmington Com-munity Center, Farmington Road, Mocksville. $3, musi-cians admitted free.DatelineOngoingSmith 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.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.Thursday, May 26Good Health Club, 1 p.m. with Stacey Southern, nutrition coor-dinator. Learn health eating tips, share recipes, light exercises.Silver Arts Follies: Senior Games Closing Ceremonies, Awards, 6 p.m. Performing arts entrants and cheerleaders to perform. Silver Arts on display.Friday, May 27Move It or Lose It, 10 a.m., with Allegra Tucker from Da-vie Health Dept. Learn how to incorporate more movement in everyday life, learn benefits.Thursday, June 2Senior Writing Group, 2 p.m. with Marie Craig. Learn to im-prove writing skills.Friday, June 3Golden Anniversary Party, 1 p.m., for all couples married for 50 years or more. Luncheon with music by Benita Finney.Tuesday, June 7Blood Pressure Screening, 10 a.m.Wednesday, June 8Papercrating Extravaganza, 1 p.m. Bring own supplies, no formal instruction.Thursday, June 9Scams & Frauds Seminar, 10 a.m., with John Brown, outreach and policy advisor with NC Dept. of Justice.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.Live MusicThursday, May 26Aaron & Ellen, 6:30 p.m., sum-mer music kickoff at O’Calah-an’s, Downtown Mocksville.Whiskey Mic, 6 p.m.. 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Saturday, May 28Jason Leake Band, 7 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville. Anwarotti Live, 4-7 p.m., Summer Lovin’ Concert Series.Nick Branscome, noon, Raylen Vineyards & Winery, US 158, Mocksville.Sunday, May 29Sydney Rose, 2 p.m., The Sta-tion, Downtown Mocksville.Thursday, June 2Adam & Avery, 6:30 p.m., O’Callahan’s, Downtown Mocksville.Darrell Hoots, 6 p.m., 601 Burgers & Brews, US 601 N., Mocksville.Friday, June 3COIA, 6 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville.James Vincent Carroll, 5:30 p.m., Raylen Vineyards & Winery, US 158, Mocksville.Saturday, June 4SoundKraft, 6 p.m., The Sta-tion, Downtown Mocksville.Sunday, June 5Nick Branscome, 2 p.m., The Station, Downtown Mocksville.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.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. Thanks to support from the community, Johnson Insurance has awarded a $10,000 donation to Cog-nition, a local organization dedicated to providing an interactive space that pro-motes exploration, learning, and innovation with the goal of investing in current and future generations. The $10,000 will help fund Cognition’s staff de-velopment and upgrading internal software systems. Cognition recognizes that an organization is only as strong as its people and wants to ensure that they will be led well for years to come by devoting to profes-sional training, said Jessica At the ceremonial check presentation, from left: Akilah Cameron, Liberty Mutual territory manager; Jessica Yarbrough, Johnson Insurance vice president of operations; Jessica Huyett, Cognition site coordinator and Becca Lard, Cognition education center manager. Huyett, Cognition site coor-dinator. Jessica Yarbrough, vice president of operations of Johnson Insurance, origi-nally received a $5,000 do-nation for Cognition thanks to a submission process with Liberty Mutual and Safeco Insurance through the 2022 Make More Hap-pen Awards. A story of the local part-nership was featured on the official Make More Hap-pen microsite, www.agent-giving.com/Johnson-In-surance-Services, where an additional $5,000 was raised by conducting a local awareness campaign for the nonprofit. Cognition gets $10,000 grant B12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, Thursday, Sept. 22, 2022 Sheffield-Calahaln By Brenda BaileySheffield-CalahalnCorrespondent Birthday wishes to: Ton-ya Reeves on Sept. 23; Lar-ry Dyson and Elijah Atkins on Sept. 24; Sue Gobble on Sept. 26; Wendi White on Sept. 28; and Naomi Wooten and Alisa Allen on Sept. 29. Happy anniversary to Chris and Tonya Reeves who will celebrate Sept. 25.The Fall Festival at New Union Church is Saturday from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. There will be hotdogs, homemade ice cream, a bake sale, ven-dors, a silent auction, music and more. The church is at County Line and Sheffield roads. Bring a lawn chair and spend the day. There is a playground for children.The Sheffield-Calahaln Volunteer Fire Dept. 20-Gun Bingo will be Nov. 12 at 5 p.m., including a meal, 20 games of bingo, side raf-fles and door prizes. Tickets are $50 each afrom any fire-fighter. Contact Gary Allen at 336-345-3672 or Mitch at 336-909-1422. The Center BBQ will be Vote in at least five categories to be eligible to win a $50 gift card Online voting only. No purchase required. See contest page for full rules. VOTING PHASE: SEPTEMBER 12 – 26(Users can vote once each day during the period) www.OurDavie.com/ReadersChoice22 Oct. 1 from 8 a.m. until sold out,by the pound or sand-wich, fries, slaw, hotdogs, pork skins and whole uncut shoulders. Check out Center BBQ on Facebook.Liberty Wesleyan’s homecoming is Oct. 16 at the 11 a.m. worship service. Special guest speaker will be Pastor David Rollins.Joe Mahaffey and NuHi-Way will perform Friday at West Rowan Grill.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, Chester Reeves, Hazel Frye, Yvonne Ijames, Bonnie Gunter, Ed Livengood, Milton Tutte-row, Nancy Peacock, Ger-aldine Lambert, Betty Beck, Sue Gobble, Helen Bulla, Paul Beck, Juanita Kea-ton, Jerry McDaniel, Lynn Hicks, Betty Godbey, Ted Adams, Emily Brown, Mike Branham, Marsha Tutterow, Eddie Porter, Jimmy Ball, Curtis Player and Suzonne Stratton. Submit all items to brfbai-ley@msn.com, mes-sage me on Face-book or call me at 336-837-8122 no later than noon on Thurs-days. New Union Fall Festival this Saturday These folks enjoy country music on Thursday evening at the Farmington Community Center. Shirley Lewis, Charlie Salem and Randy Hauser are a hit at the Meatlocker on Mondays.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 Cheryl V. Anderson Manager & Mortician Rick Lowe, Connor Lambert, Franklin Rash, Michael Souther and Greg Abercombie, members of Sons of the South perform a bluegrass tune. Steve Boger performs at Farmington.