09-September|4
Davie Favors A Division
Of Hie Piedmont Triad
CouncilOf Government
I'*Day For Fishing!Junior Brindle of Cooleemee and son, Tommy, take advantage ol the holiday
from work and school to do a little fishing. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
By Doug Livengood
The Davie County board of com
missioners unanimously went on record
Tuesday as favoring a division of the
Piedmont Triad Council of Governments
(PTCOG). And the commissioners are
going to ask Governor Hunt to split the
PTCOG.
Davie County, along with Forsyth,
Surry, Davidson, Rockingham,
Guilford, Randolph, Caswell and
Alamance counties and most of the
towns and cities within these counties,
presently make up the state’s Planning
Region G, which the PTCOG was formed
to serve.
Stokes and Yadkin counties were
members of the PTCOG until July 1,1978
when they left the organization because
of administrative disputes with the staff
of the PTCOG.
The PTCOG develops regional, long-
range plans for land use, water quality,
solid-waste management, open spaces,
law enforcement, airports and housing
for Its region and member governments.
The PTCOG also administers the
state’s human services programs in the
region, including food for the elderly,
family planning, emergency medical
services and job training.
It provides technical advice to cities
and counties that do not have full-time
planners. And it also reviews and
comments on applications from local
governments-for federal'and stale
money.
Governor Robert Scott set up 17
multicounty planning regions in 1970.
Cooleemee Gets County
Wide EAS On Friday
D A V IE C O U N T Y
The Cooleemee Telephone Exchange
will be connected into Yadkin Valley
Telephone Membership Corporation’s
Ctounty wide local calling network
Friday, September 8, 1978, Cooleemee
subscribers will be able to dial the
Advance, Ijames and Mocksville
telephone exchange areas on a local call
basis by dialing directory listed num
bers. (Mocksville Telephone Exchange
is owned by Central Telephone Com
pany.) The new service will give
Cooleemee Exchange telephone
- «iljscrlbers access to county-wide ex-
iShded area service.
lAdvahce ahd^'Ijames telephone ex-
oiiange subscribers can dial local calls
to Cooleemee telephones by dialing
directory listed numbers.
A new telephone directory listing
(jooleemee subscribers and dated
September, 1978 has been delivered to
all Yadkin Valley Telephone Mem
bership Corporation subscribers in
Davie County. The new directory in
cludes instructions for local call dialing
into the Davie County wide network.
Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership
(Corporation purchased the Cooleemee
Exchange from Western Carolina
Telephone Company, May 15,1978. Since
Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership
Corporation purchased the Cooleemee
Exchange, party line service has been
eliminated. The Cooleemee Exchange
provides a, private line service to 1029
residences and businesses in the
Cooleemee Area of Davie and Rowan
counties.
September 2, 1978, Yadkin Valley
Telephone Membership Corporation
merged the Davie Exchange Into the
Advance Exchange and all Davie
County subscribers previously served
from the Davie Exchange are now
Advance Exchange subscribers. The
Davie Exchange (493) is no longer in
service.
Davie County is now served by four
telephone exchanges; Advance (998),
Cooleemee (284), Ijames (492),
Mocksville (634). All telephones served
by these exchanges in Davie County are
included In the county wide calling
network.
$7.50 Per Year In North Carolina
$10.00 Per Year Out Side North Carolina THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978
24 PAGES
Single Copy 15 cents
John T. Brock of MocksvUle was
elected 1st vice president of the North
Carolina Association of County At
torneys at the annual summer meeting
held at Atlantic Beach in August. E.B.
(Borden) Parker of Wayne County was
elected president; Bobert Hunter of
McDowell County, 2nd vice president;
and Joseph S. Ferrell, assistant
director, Institute of Government, was
elected secretary and treasurer. These
officers will be Installed at the annual
conference of the North Carolina
Association of County Commissioners to
be held in Asheville.
Mrs. Jerry Anderson will serve as this
year’s United Appeal Chairman for the
annual United Way fall campaign which
wlll begin October 15. A goal of $48,566
has been set by the board of directors for
funding in 1979 with agencies accepted
as follows:
Davie County Arte Council, $4,500.
Davie Art Guild, $1,000.
Davie County Rescue Squad, $5,000.
Davie County Chapter, Assoc, for
Retarded Clticens $6,500.
Cooleemee Recreation Assoc., Inc.,
$3,700.
Tarheel Triad Council, Girl Scouts,
$5,000.
Davie County 4-H Fund, $2,620.
Co^natzer Community Recreation
Assoc., $1,000.
Farmington Community Recreation
Assoc., $1,000.
Uwharrie Council, Boy Scouts of
America, $5,000.
William R. Davie Boosters Club, $500.
Davie County Chapter, American Red
Cross, $3,700.
Davie County Little League Baseball
Assoc., $2,500.
Davie County Chapter, American
Field Services, $975.
Davie County Firemen’s Association,
$200.
Emergency Relief Fund of Davie
County United Way, $1,000.
Change Recommended
For Zoning Of Airports
Davie Has 7th Lowest Tax Rate In State
According to COUNTY LINES
magazine, "unofficial figures
compiled by the North Carolina
Association of County Com
missioners indicate that 51
counties (in North Carolina) held
their countywide tax rate at the
1977-78 level, and 20 counties
lowered the rate (seven of them,
including Davie, due to
revaluation). However, the other
21 counties raised Ihe rate."
Greene County "forged to the
number one spot" among counties
this year with a tax rate of $1.34,"
said the magazine. The “biggest
increase" in the tax rate among
counties came in Forsyth, where
the rate went up from S2 cents to
81'j cents.
The magazine reported that only
six counties, Polk, with the lowest
rate ot 36.1 cents, and Alleghany.
Randolph, Beaufort, Brunswick
and Clay, had lower tax rates then
the 44 cents rate adopted this year
in Davie. Lest year the rate was 66
cents in Davie.
Mrs. Diane Anderson
.. . chairman
N.C. United Way and Agencies, $4,371.
Mrs. Anderson announced the
following chairmen for the fall
(continued on page 2)
By Doug Livengood
The Davie County Planning Board has
recommended to the Davie County
Board of Commissioners that the
county’s zoning ordinance be amended
to permit airporte to be zoned under a
conditional use classification in a
residential-agricultural area.
Under the present zoning ordinance,
airports must be zoned in a heavy in
dustry classification.
The planning board made its
recommendation after studying the
issue of the classification of airports in
the zoning ordinance at its August 30th
meeting.
Actually, the planning board had been
asked by the board of commissioners
early last month to study a recom
mendation from the commissioners
themselves that the zoning ordinance be
amended to permit airports to be
classified under a conditional use.
The commissioners will now hold a
public bearing, probably next month, to
decide definitely if the zoning ordinance
I will be amended concerning airports.
All of this complicated series of legal
maneuvers was precipitated earlier this
I summer when the owners of Twin Lakes
■ Airport in eastern Davie County
I petitioned the commissioners to have
I the airport rezoned from its present
Iresidential-agricultural (R-A) and
[residential (R-201 status to the heavy
1 industrial classification to comply with
I the zoning ordinance.
When the airport was establishnd the
Icwwly did not have a zoning ordinance
land when the zoning ordinance
adopted a few years ago the airport was
allowed to remain in a residential-
agricultural area as a nonconforming
business
In order to be able to expand the
facilities at the airport the airport
owners must first have the airport
property brought into compliance with
the zoning ordinance which requires
airports to be classified as heavy in
dustrial areas. y
Many of the property owners near
Twin Lakes Airport are opposed to the
property being rezoned to a heavy in
dustrial area and they presented the
county commissioners with a petition
several weeks ago expressing this op
position.
It was after the commissioners
received this petition that they decided
that a conditional use classification for
airports in the county zoning ordinance
would be the best way to protect tbe
interests of both sides involved in the
Twin Lakes dispute.
By allowing airports to be classified
under a conditional use permit in the
zoning ordinance, only an airport,
subject to any conditions set forth by the
Davie County Zoning Board of Ad
justment, can then be allowed to occupy
a site designated for airports.
But under the present zoning or
dinance which requires airports to be
classified as heavy industrial areas any
number of a variety of heavy industrial
businesses can also occupy a site zoned
for an airport once the zoning has been
approved.
Reflections These golfers are much too involved in (heir каше to notire the beauty reflected
in the Lake at Hickory HiU Golf and Country tiuo on rxonday during (he Labor
Day festivities which marked the official cloch-^ of «uromertime activities.
(Story on Page IB)
Since then, discussion about splitting
Region G has come up periodically.
Proponents tor splitting Region G
have consistently argued that the region
Is too large, with such counties as
Alamance and Caswell in the eastern
part of the region having very little in
common with such counties as Davie,
Surry, Forsyth and other counties in the
western part of the region.
These same proponents for splitting
the region have just as consistently
advocated splitting Region G hito two
regions--a western and eastem region-
with Davie, Forsyth, Surry, Yadkin and
Stokes forming the western region.
Governor Hunt created a new Local
Ciovemment Advocacy Council and
asked it to make recommendations to
him on the future of regionalism and on
the Region G question.
In July the chairman of the Davie
County board of commissioners, Glenn
Howard, and fellow commissioner Jerry
Anderson joined with Mocksville Mayor
R.C. Smith and numerous other elected
officials from northwest North CaroUna
to travel to Raleigh and request the
Local Government Advocacy (Council to
spilt the PTCOG.
But when the Advocacy (luncli wound
up its study of regional councils a couple
of weeks ago It made no recom
mendations to the governor about
changing the boundaries of Region G.
Tne Advocacy Council did, however" '
outline a procedure under which any
local government could petition
Governor Hunt to change regional
boundaries.
Under the procedure outlined by the
Advocacy Council, a request from a
local government to split a planning
region would have to be submitted to the
governor at least six months before July
1 (the beginning of the fiscal year for
most governments) and would not take
effect until July 1. The governor would
have 90 days to act on the request,
during which time he would hold a
hearing for all the local governments
that would be affected.
Following the outlining of this
procedural recommendation to Hunt for
changing the boundaries of a planning
region, scores of elected officials and
other interested persons interested in
splitting Region G attended a meeting
August 29 in Dobson in Surry County to
Included in those^ attending the
Dobson meeting were Davie County
commissioner Jerry Anderson, Davie
County manager Ron Vogler and
MocksviUe Mayor Smith. ■ -..... •'
James S. Humphreys, a Winstont.-:
Salem attorney representing some of
those persons interested in splitting the
region, told those present at the Dobson
meeting that “If we want this done some
decisive and quick action Is needed.”
Humphreys passed out a sample
resolution that he suggested the elected
officials take back to their respective
governing boards for official action
before being forwarded to Governor
Hunt.
It was this sample resolution which
the Davie County commissioners
unanimously adopted Tuesday af
ternoon.
The resolution read as follows:
“Whereas, the Davie County Board of
O>mmissioners believes that the best
interest of Davie County would be
served by membership In a regional
planning group which included the
following municipalities: Forsyth,
Surry, Stokes, Yadkin and Davie, and
the cities and towns therein;
“Now, therefore, we hereby resolve
that a new regional planning group be
created by the Governor of North
Carolina in which the following
municipalities are members: Forsyth,
Surry, Stokes, Yadkin and Oavie; and
“The Davie County Board of Com
missioners further resolves that, if such
a regional planning group is estabUshed
under appropriate legislation, Davie
C!ounty would become a member of such
(continued on page 2)
Civil Preparedness
Survey To Be Made
A team from the State Civil
Preparedness Division will be in Davie
County Wednesday September 6,1978 to
begin a survey aimed at determining the
protection that area structures can
privide for people against various
wartime and extreme weather hazards.
The two-member team of engineers,
headed by Clayton Saucier and assisted
by David Shope, is based in Raleigh.
This team, trained in protection
analysis of buildings and structures, wlU
conduct the survey for the next few
weeks, with the results of the survey to
be released In the near future.
This will be a resurvey of the county,
according to Jesse A. Boyce, Jr.,
C^rdinator, Mocksville-Davle County
Civil Preparedness agency, who will
coordinate the local work of the State
Survey Team. The original survey was
conducted more than ten years ago.
The work of the team fits into a con
tinuing effort of the defense civil
)repaiedness agency, the national civil
defense agency, headquartered in the
Pentagon to survey structures in
communities near or adajacent to the
most likely high risk nuclear attack
target areas in North Carolina to
determine which structures have
facilities for congregate care as well as
fallout radiation protection in the event
people have to be relocated during a
period of intern!«tiom I, as well as
providing faUoi protection for the
County's resident population, Boyce
said.
Davie County is considered a low-risk
host area for relocatees from the
Winston-Salem high risk area, ac-
I'lii'ding lo Boyce
2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISH RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1978
Public Festivities lliis W eekend
Boxwood Real Estate Affiliates With Century 21
Century 21, the nation's largest real
estate marketing firm, has announced
ths affiliation of Boxwood Real Estate
Company as a member of their
organization.
In making the announcement, Danny
Correll, president of Boxwood Real
Estate commented “we hope to offer
more professional service to the public
we serve by attending the Century 21
(raining programs and seminars offered
to North'Carolina and the nation,”
“As the largest real estate marketing
firm in the country, Century 21 will
enable us to offer our clients what they
deserve, a well trained and complete,
professionally oriented program,"
Grand opening festivities will be held
at the office on Salisbury Street,
Saturday, September 9, from 10:00 a.m.
until 6:00 p.m. and on-Sunday, Sep
tember 10, from 1:00 p.m. until 5:00 p.m.
Century 21, officials from the regional
office in Charlotte will be on hand for the
occasion. Door prizes will be awarded to
lucky registered particpants and helium
filled balloons and growth charts given
to the children. Refreshments will be
served to all. There will also be a
drawing for Century 21 T-shirts.
Through the Century 21 program,
Boxwood Real Estate will offer a
nationwide referral program and a
complete photo portfolio of listed homes
will be available.
John R. Tice, regional director of
Century 21 said, “we’re delighted to
welcome this outstanding company to
our organization, and they will provide
an excellent, well-established level of
real estate services to this area.”
“With over 6,500 members firms, each
on idependently owned and operated,”
said Tice “Century 21 offers the home
buyer and seller the neighborhood know
how of professional sales people,
throughly trained in modern real estate
practices,”
“Along with your new local affiliate, I
would like to express my appreciation to
this community for acceptance of the
Century 21 concept.”
Boxwood Real Estate Company,
previously known as Swicegood Real
Estate Company, was purchased by
Danny Correll in May of 1978. The firm
was originally organized in 1971 by
Jerry Swicegood and moved to its
present location on Salisbury Street in
1974.
Mocksville town commissioner
Patricia Latta has sought to clarify
some remarks attributed to her in last
week’s Enterpris^Record story about a
new ordihance going into effect in
locksville prohibiting dogs from
unning at large.
The story said that “Board memt>er
Pat Latta informed her fellow com
missioners (at the August 1st board
meeting) that she had been told by
ounty officials that the Davie County
animal control officer would also assist
he town police department in enforcing
he new dog ordinance.”
According to a tape of the meeting.
United Fund
(continued from pagel)
camapign which will begin with a ICick-
Off Breakfast to be held Saturday,
October 7.
Breakfast Ca>airmen-Gail Kelly and
Carmen Walker.
Publicity-Al Wooten, Conrad Blalock,
Alice Barnette.
Industry-Richard Beck, Mary
Forrest.
Businesses-Frank Bahnson.
Financial Institutions-Diane Snipes,
Ruth Foster
Davie County Schools-Betty West.
Professionals-Kathy Spargo, Allen
Martin, Jr.
Clubs-Frances Beck.
New agencies being funded for 1979
are Davie Art Guild, Cornatzer Com
munity Recreation Association., Inc.,
WUliam R. Davie Boosters Club, and
Smergency Relief Fund of Davie
bounty United Way. The Emergency
Relief Fund is being organized to take
he place of the Emergency Assistance
Fund of the Dept, of Social Services
which is not being funded this year.
commissioner Latta told the other
commissioners that "We have met with
them (county officials) to try to work out
something because we felt by us having
an ordinance we needd to make sure
that is was enforcibie. . .”
She added, “We were told the dog
warden would pick up any dog that he
was alerted to” and further, said Latta,
“I got the impression that we would
have his (county dog warden's) fuil
cooperation.”
But Latta said this week that she
wanted to clarify her remarks and
“make it clear” that she and the other
town commissioners do not expect the
county dog warden to play any more
active role in picking up stray dogsin the
town than he has played in the past.
“We would expect the county dog
warden to do what he’s done in the past
and that’s to pick up a dog when he’s
called to pick one up. We don’t want the
county to think that we passed anew
ordinance and expect them to enforce
it,” Ijitta said Monday.
She emphasized that the com
missioners adopted the ordinance with
the belief and intention that the town’s
police department would have primary
repsonsibility in enforcing the new
ordinance and that this responsibility
would not be expected to be borne by the
dog warden by increasing his duties
because of the ordinance.
“We want as good a relation with the
county as possible and we don’t want
them lo think that we’re trying to put a
lot of extra responsibility on them,”
concluded Latta.
Fresh peas should squeak
when the pods are rubbed to
gether. Store them unshelled
in vour refrigerator.
"The Century 21 Gang” are the “Nel^il>orhood Professionals of
Boxwood Real Estate (%mpany of Salisbury Street, Mocksville. They
are: (L-R ) Breena Oliver, 11, Chad Correll, 2, Philip Oliver, 7, and 13-■ r)year-old Ronald Grubb. (Photo by Jim Barringer
Division Of PTCOG Favored
Danny Correll, Sheila Oliver and Sandra Shelton of Boxwood Real
Estate, make preparations for the grand raening festivities marking
their affiliation with Century 21. (Photo by Robin Carter)
Commissioner Latta Clarifies Remarks On Dog Ordinance
(continued from page 1)
a regional planning group; and
“The Davie County Board of Com
missioners further resolves that a copy
of this resolution be sent to the (Jovernor
of North Carolina as a petition for him to
create the regional planning group
described hereinabove.”
County commissioner Anderson told
his fellow commissioners Tuesday that
he did not believe that the counties in
Region G and the PTCOG’s staff would
ever again be able to work together
harmoniously after so much publicity
has been given to a possible splitting of
the region.
“It would be kind of like a wandering
wife. She could come back, but things
just aren't going to be the same,”
humorously remarked Anderson.
Board chairman Howard urged the
other commissioners to vote for the split
in Region G because he said Forsyth
County was waiting for other western
counties in the region to make a move
toward a split liefore Forsyth would
come'out in favoHof a split'.''\ ^
“I feel like if we're goinC^thrdtigb'With
the thing (the split) then we’ve got to
add our strength to the counties that
have done made the decision (to call for
a split) in order for the counties that
have not made that decision to use as a
guide. I do feel like the decision that we
make will determine Forsyth's coming
out,” reasoned Howard.
Observers of the maneuverings
necessary to bring about a splitting of
Region G have long contended that the
governor would not approve the split
unless Forsyth was included in the
western region of the two new regions
which would be formed.
County manager Vogler told the
commissioners Tuesday that those
persons who planned the strategy
planning meeting in Dobson on August
29 gave the impression to those at
tending the meeting that Forsyth County
officials are in favor of a splitting of the
region.
County commissioner Anderson said
he also believed that Forsyth County
officials favor a split because they have
been silent on all of the speculation that
they favor a split. He said that he
thought Forsyth officials would have
denied the rumors that they favor a split
if they were not true.
No representatives of the city of
Winston-Salem, the town of Kernersville
or the county of Forsyth attended the
meeting at Dobson because they were
not invited.
The day after the Dobson meeting,
however, the Winston-Salem papers
quoted Mayor Wayne Corpening as
saying “You know what my stand is (on
a split). The governor makes the
decision on where we go. You don't
outguess the governor or an vbody else. I
K rOUR FUU SERVICE
\ DRUG STORE!!!
Foster-Rauch
Druq.
Bill FOSrfR BOB RAUCH
Hemslered Phuiinucisb
Wilkesboro Street Mocksville ,N.C.
Phone 634 2141
Local DAV
Holds Cookout
Twenty members of the
Frankie D. Howard, Chapter
No. 75 of the Disabled
American Veterans and DAV
Auxiliary Unit 75 of Davie
County hosted a cookout at the
VA HospiUI in Salisbury.
Friday, August 18.
Sixty patients were served
one hundred hot dogs and one
hundred hamburgers with all
the trimmings, potato chips
and cold drinks. Activities of
this kind, which are con
sidered by the staff of the
hospital as therapuetic, are
made possible by the
generosity of the people of
Davie County during the
organization’s fund raising
projects.
One of the projects will be a
bake sale, Saturday, Sep
tember 9th at Heffner's Land
of Food and Lowe's. Proceeds
from this sale will be divided
equally between the DAVA
and Cystic Fibrosis Foun
dation.
There will be an un-official
meeting Monday, Sept. 11 at
7:30 p.m. al the Holy Cross
Lutheran Church. The regular
meeting will i>e September
2Sth.
don’t want to get into this presuming
things like this.”
The same Winston-Salem papers
noted that Fred D. Hauser, the chair
man of the Forsyth County Board of
Commissioners, could not be reached
for comment, but that he had recently
said that he thinks the PTCOG region
should not be split.
The question was also discussed at
Tuesday’s meeting about whether
Davidson County would join a new
western region of Region G is the
present PTCOG is split.
Commissioner Anderson re{x>rted that
it was revealed at the Dobson meeting
that Davidson would be invited to join
the new region if it wants to.
But chairman Howard expressed the
belief that Davidson would not want to
join the new western region, especially
if Da vie County is already in that region.
Howard has consistently noted for
months that relations between Davidson
and Davie counties have l>een cool
because of the opposition from Davidson
' .to the proposed Perkins Nuclear Station
»in Davie.
In fact, in January, Howard made the
statement that “I don't want to be in
there (a new region) with them
(Davidson)” because of their opposition
to the Perkins plant.
It was also (Minted out Tuesday that
Wilkes County has been investigating
the possibility of joining a new planning
region which might include Davie and
the other counties making up a new
western region of Region G.
Wilkes is presently a member of
Planning Region D, which region has
been in almost constant turmoil for
more than a year now over ad
ministrative squabbles with the staff of
the planning region’s COG and the
government officials of the various
counties in the region.
County manager Vogler did tell the
commissionersTuesday that the leaders
of the Dobson meeting gave the im
pression to those attending that meeting
that the governor “would give a good
fair hearing” to the request of those
counties wanting to split Region G.
At press time Tuesday night the
Mocksville town board was expected to
at least discuss the possibility at their
Tuesday night meeting of joining the
movement of governments asking for a
split in Region G.
After returning from Dobson, Mayor
Smith of Mocksville said “I feel like the
town board will possibly take a position
Tuesday night on this question. It’s just
been tossed about long enough now and I
think it’s time the issue was settled.”
Davie Man Injured In
Charlotte Airplane Crash
A Davie County man was one of two
persons injured last Thursday when
their twin- ngineplane crashed on
takeoff at Douglas Municipal Airport in
Charlotte.
Kenneth R. Potts, 19, of Advance and
Gary W. Berrier, 31, of Stanfield were
treated In the emergency room of the
Charlotte Memorial Hospital following
the crash. Potts was later released and
returned to iiis home in Davie County.
The plane, an eight-seat Piper Navajo,
was destroyed when it went down in a
field near tbe end of a runway.
Witnesses said one man was un
conscious when he was pulled from the
wreckage by a bystander, while the
other was conscious but bleeding.
The plane, owned by Southeast Air-
motive Corp. of Charlotte, apparently
lost power in one engine when it at
tempted to take off shortly before 5 p.m.
Witnesses to the crash said one
propeller was not turning when the
plane lost altitude and hit a tree.
Deborah Early, a spokesman for
Southeast Airmotive, said both men on
the plane were experienced pilots for the
company. She said the aircraft was on a
training flight, with one pilot teaching
the other about the plane.
Firemen were called to the scene and
sprayed foam on the plane, which broke
into four pieces, but there was no fire.
Brined PicUes
Brined pickles are fermented in salt
water for three weeks, freshened m
water and canned in jars in a com
bination of vinegar, salt water and
spices.
Carolina Review
by Jerry Mobley
DECISIVE YEAR. . .Gov. Hunt’s
symbolic statewide television address
this week is an indication of how
decisive the coming year might be in
public education.
Innovations of great magnitude (both
in practice and in cost) have been made
over the past couple of years for the
benefit of N.C. students and this is the
first year for Tarheels to see any real
effects.
Competency testing tops the list and
will most assuredly receive the most
attention. No one really knows how
many students will fail or the cost of
proposed remedial education~but the
concept is here to stay.
This fall will also be the first year for
teachers and administrators to have the
background and guidance of student
achievement tests. The tests were
issued to all students in designated
grades last year and should give the
teachers much more insight for group
placement and study plans for in
dividuals.
In addition, the effects of reduced
classroom sizes, the primary reading
program, more intense vocational
training, statewide kindergartens, “free
enterprise” offerings, and expanded
services for gifted children, should all be
felt in the coming year.
INDIAN REPORT. . .A special com
mittee of the Indian Affairs Commission
is expected this week (Thursday) to
make recommendations on how ti im
prove relations between the Indians of
Robeson County and the N.C. Highway
Patrol.
'The committee report is the latest
aspect of longstanding accusations that
the Patrol uses unwarranted force and
frequently, brutality, in its treatment of
the Lumbee Indians in the Lumberton-
Pembroke area.
Unfortunately, the committee did not
investigate specific incidences of un
necessary violence by the Patrol but
instead, according to committee
member Jane Patterson, “did attempt
to consider specific ways to improve
what is essentially a bad situation”
between the Indians and patrolmen.
The committee study, initiated in late
June will be given first to the full
commission meeting and then for
warded to Secretary of Crime Control
and Public Safety, Phil Carlton. Carlton
will make the final decision on im
plementation of any committee
recommendations.
MORE CHURCH-STATE. . .The rift
between a group of fundamentalttt
churches and the state continued to
escalate last week.
The latest in a series <
occurred recently when 10 ch
operated day-care centers decided not Jb
comply with state licensing
requirements.
The N.C. (3iild Day Care
Commission has threatened to
court injunctions to close the centers if
compliance with the licensing
regulations are not met.
Under state law, all day-care centers
in N.C. are required to meet minimiim
standards relating to building codes,
sanitation, and fire prevention.
The churches insist that the licensing
is further encroachment upon their
religious territory. They have alio
balked the state concerning minimum
requirements for church schools as well
as payment of unemployment taxes for
teachers in the schools.
A court decision is expected at any
moment over the argument of minimum
requirements in the schools.
PCB VALUABLE. . .Last week’s In
dictments against 3 N.Y. men for
dumping hazardous PCB chemicals on
N.C. roadsides brought sighs of relief
from across the state.
But the PCB is still with us and no
doubt will cost every bit of the |2.5
million estimated for cleanup. Fw-
thermore, chemical samplings of ;iif-
fected areas indicate that small
amounts of the chemical were spread
about by the wind.
Still, the situation seems to be under
control and state officials are nbw
working to eliminate any dangers the
chemical might present.
If the PCB is effectively ( and safely)
removed, the criminal spills m i^t
prove to have been helpful.
Should the spills cause a serious and
concerted effort by state officials to
review and initiate new guidelines for
the safe manufacture, use, and trán-
sport of hazardous chemicals, then it
will be a lesson well-Ieamed..
Ice Cream Spoup
An ice cream scoop makes removing
rock hard ice cream from its cartón i
easy. It also shapes the ice cream into
attractive balls for serving. Use tfie
scoop, too, when you want to make even
portions for salads, mashed potatoes-'or
sandwich fillings.
Wayne Seay Again Being
Sought By Authorities;
Faces Suit In Louisiana
Forsyth County authorities are once
again searching for Winston-Salem
financier Wayne Seay.
Seay, who ha^ been charged in For
syth with enibezzling money from two
companies he directed, was also
recently named as a defendant in a civil
suit filed in Louisana’s 2lst Judicial
Curcuit Court in Tangipahoa Parish.
Seay is the businessman with whom
numerous Davie County investors have
been involved with during recent years
in a scheme to manufacture a machine
that can convert raw garbage into
animal feed.
He has been charged by many of these
local investors with misuse of their in
vestor funds in this venture.
Regarding the Louisiana suit, under
Louisiana’s long-arm statute, a sum
mons was sent to the Forsyth County
Sheriff’s Department July 13 to be
personally served on Seay, Since
receiving the summons, deputies have
been unable to locate the financier.
According to information in the
summons. Rush E. Lassiter of Port
Saint Lucie, Fla., has sued Seay in
connection with a contract the two made
in 1976. The suit names Seay, Sanilator
Corp. and Intercapital Corp. as
defendants.
Sanilator and Intercapital are the
companies formed by Seay to
manufacture and sell the machines
designed to convert garbage into animal
feed.
The suit says that Lassiter held three
patents to the garbage conversion
process and that Seay agreed to buy all
rights to the machine and the process in
a complicated transaction under three
separate contracts.
"He was supposed to pay me f 10,000 at
first-which he did.” Lassiter said last
week. "Then he was supposed to sell
some real estate to help pay the bank
loans I had. He didn’t do a thing about
that and he never paid me the rest of the
money he owed me.”
Lassiter, who lived in Louisiana when
the contracts were signed, said Seay
reneged on monthly payments of $2.000
and a lump-sum payment of $30,000 due
last December. “In cash, stock,
payments and patents, Wayne Seay h|a
cost me at least $500,000,” Lassiter sai^.
Sanilator and Intercapital, the
companies named in Lassiter’s su^,
were formed by Seay to organize tHe
garbage-recovery business. Sanilatqr
processing machines and Intercapi^l
was to provide the financial and con
sulting services for the operation,
It has been reported that at lea$t
$420,000 was raised for the project,
although no processing machine h|is
been completed. Many thousands of
those dollars came from Davie County
investors. ■'
Seay and his partners have entered
into contracts with at least tyirp
manufacturing companies to develop a
prototype processor, but Seay’s com-
paines have left both contracts un-
fulfulled.
Although Seay has apparently mov^
from Winston-Salem, authorities theire
have been unable to locate him. One
source has said that Seay now lives in
Oklahoma.
A check with telephone listings in
Oklahoma City revealed that Seay has
an unpublished number there. , ’
It has also been previously reported
that Seay offered Sanilator franchise
for sale in Oklahoma City earlier this
year. The Oklahoma Securities Coiij-
mission issued a cease-and-desist order
against Seay's businesses there last
April. ;;
Seay is scheduled for trial soon on the
embezzlement charges in Forsyth
County. Ernest J. Daniel, an SBI agent
who investigated Seay's businesses, hj$s
been ill, but is expected to be able to
tesify later this month.
Seay and a former business partner,
Robert T. McLawhorn of Hickory, were
County Grand Jury with embezzling
money from Forsyth investors in a
venture called American Marketing
C^rp. Inc., a real estate investment
project the two operated in the early
'70s.
D A V I E C O U N T Y
124 South T ’ain Street
Moclvsvillo.N.r,.
Published every Thursday by the
DAVIE PLBLISHING COMPANY
MOCKSVILLE
ENTERPRISE
1016-I95B
DAVIE
RECORD1899-195C
COOLEEMEE
JOURNAL
1906-1971
Gordon Tomlinson.....................Editor-Publisher
Becky Snyder
Director o f Advertisiiii;
.Second rjais Postage Paid in ^^ot•|ls\^Ue, N. C. 27026
Sl'RSCPIPTION PATES
$7.50 per year in North Carolina: $10.00 per year out of ittte.
Single Copy 15 cent*
DAVIK COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - 3
O P E N F R I D A Y N I G H T T I L 8 : 3 0 P . M .
HEIRESS
HOSIERY
ASSORTED STYLES
Usually'1.00-'1.59
2 0 %
O OFF
PERFECT PEAR
HOSIERY
ASSORTED STYLES
Usually 99* To ^2.49 %3 OFF
UDIES
ROBES
Usually *18.00
*1 4 .8 8
b r e e z y c o a t s , d a s h i n g s c a r f s . . . f o r J r s .
Warm wool blends in two popular versions, each with a long
knit scarf to wind around the neck for extra warmth or let fly
dramatically to catch a fashion breeze. Sizes 5 to 15.
Pea coat In spiffy navy melton with grey scarf. . . 54,88
Softened trench of flannel with fly front. Grey with grey or oatmeal
with.taupe scarf.. .64.88
54.88«64.88
O N E G R O U P
BOYS JEANS
FAMOUS NAME
FIRST QUALITY
GREAT BUY
SIZES 8-16
Original Price 41.00
SALE
O N E MEN'S-BOYS-CHILDRENS
CANVAS OXFORDS
Usually *6.00 $4 .8 8
O N E G R O U P
BOYS SHIRTS
ASSORTED STYLES
Values to *6.00
*2 .4 4
A N D
’ 3 . 4 4
BOYS NYLON
QUILTED
JACKETS
SLIGHT IMPERFECTIONS
POLYESTER FIBERFILL
ASSORTED COLORS
great BUY
*14 .8 8
L A D IE S
NYLON JACKETS
LIGHTWEIGHT UN LIN ED
ASSORTED COLORS
SIZES S-M-L
*5 .8 8
S M A L L G R O U P
LADIES GOWNS
BROKEN SIZES
2 5 %
OFF
O N E C R O U P
LADIES SHAWLS
AND SCARVES
Values to >11.00
SALE
4 0 r.
o OFF
S M A L L G R O U P
JUNIOR SLACKS
Values to *19.00
5 0 r.O OFF
" H E IR E S S "
STRETCH
BIKINIS
NYLON STRETCH FABRIC
WITHCOnON SHIELDS
FOR EXTRA COMFORT
ASSORTED STRIPES
ONE SIZE e - i
Usuady 9 1 5 8
*2.00 I
O N E G R O U P
MEN’S SLACKS
SOLIDS AND FANCIES
NOT ALL SIZES
Usually no.bo to >22.00
*5 .0 0< °
* 1 0 .8 8
S A L E ! W in tu k 'O rlo n ® y a rn s
4 -p ly all p u rp o s e b y C a ro n '
88«usually 1.29
Solid colors: 4 oz. ik e in t. . . Om bre: 3>/: oz. skeins
For knitting, crochet . . . easiest care blend for all wash and-
wearables. Jum bo skeins guaranteed machine washable
and dryable. Non-aliergenic. Never needs shaping: that s
because you’re working with 1 0 0 % DuPont O rlon» acrylic.
Beautiful colors. Get in on the savings!
•Du Pont Certification Mark
GIRLS
KNIT TOPS
ASSORTED COLORS
Usually’3.50 to 7.00
’ ’ • « « ”4 .8 8
ONEGROUP
GIRLS NYLON
QUILTED JACKETS
SLIGHT IMPERFECTIONS
POLYESTER FIBERFILL
ASSORTED COLORS
GREAT BUY
* 1 4 .8 8
CORDUROY SUITS
The pinwalecoroijroy vetted suit-f#shion new* for bigm enoir
campus! Our version tailored in 100% cotton with that lu«ury-(eel
that suggests quality. Two-button coat with canter-vent, two lower
patch and (lap pockets. Great-fitting slacks in the popular twlt-
loop flare model. 4-pocket vest to match with adJuttaUe strap lor
precise fit. Leather-look buttons keynote wanted camel and
other Fall colors. 36 to 46.
usually $75 59.88
4 - DAVIE COUNTY liNTFiRPRISn KHCORD. THURSDAY. SUPTEMBER 7, 1<)78
Descendants O f Th e C lem ent Slaves
From Slavery To Prominence
By Kathy Tomlinson
Prom slavery to prominence, so rose
the descendants of Albert Turner
Clement of Mocksville. Down the path
of time they wallced, overcoming the
cultural prejudices of their grand
father’s era, to reach astounding levels
of national appreciation.
It has been our endeavor over the past
three weeks to trace the lives of the
Clement family which orglnated from
slavery in Davie County.
Through a meeting last month of
Albert Turner Clement’s grandchildren,
Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson, Ruth
Clement Bond.andgreat grandchild Jane
Clement Bond Howard, our curiosity
was aroused to a level that compelled us
to seek out the history of this family.
Through our efforts we hav6 gained an
insight into a time in Davie County and
the South that is long lost. . .the era of
plantations and slavery.
The quick passage of time has left us
unable to compile a complete genealogy
of this family, but certain facts cannot
be ignored.
Jesse A. Clement born December 6,
1808 owned a plantation in Davie with
the main house located on what is now
Maple Avenue Extension, andhad in bis
possession a certain number of slaves.
His brother John, prominent for his
presentation of the 1836 bill to form
Davie County, was also a large plan
tation owner. His home was located on
what is now Twin Brook Farms.
On one or both of these two plan
tations, Albert Turner Clement was a
slave. Bom August 26,1834, he lived in
slavery until the Civil War brought
freedom. It is recorded that he could
read and write, uncommon for this era.
However thereare reports of Jesse A.
Clement having a school for slaves on
his plantation. It is also acknowledged
'throu^ the descendants of Jesse A.
Clement that Albert Turner Clement’s
jiisfer, Bettie Neely, was a known slave
in his possession.
* John Clement’s plantation was larger
■than his brother’s andjoined the Ar
chibald G. Carter plantation on what is
now 601 South just outside of
Mocksville. Albert Turner Clement’s
wife, Evelina Carter was a seamstress
here.
John Clement, who served as the first
Clerk of Court in Davie County, died of a
stroke at his desk in 1845 at the age of 50.
Freed in 1865, Albert Turner Clement
andhis wife and six children lived in a
house which is still standing on Camp
bell Road in North Mocksville. He
remained here untilhis death in 1902,
and is buried In the Did Methodist
Cemetery on Milling Road
An ordained minister himself, his only
son George Clinton, followed his father’s
religious beliefs and became bishop of
the A.M.E. Zion Church in 1916.
Two children of the late George C.
Clement andhis wife Emma Williams
Clement, Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson
and Ruth Clement Bond, returned to
Davie Last month in an effort to find out
about their heritage in Davie. They
were accompanied by his grand
daughter, Jane Clement Bond Howard.
Learning of the Clement-Gaither
Reunion h(!ld yearly in Mocksville from
a cousin, the late Mary Gaither Meeks,
they traveled from Louisville, Kentucky
and Washington, D.C. to trace their
past.
Dr. Abbie Jackson, the eldest of
George Clement’s seven child and today
a spry and vital 80-year-old, remembers
Davie County as it was in the early
1900’s.
“I was born in Salisbury," she said,
“and moved to Louisville, Kentucky in
1900. We moved to Charlotte, N.C in 1904
where the family remained until our
father was declared a Bishop by the
church in 1916.
“It is between the years of 1900-1916
lat my father and mother returned to
locksville for family vfeits." ,
“We came as often >as possible to
attend the “Picnic" in Aiigust. One has
to consider that transportation at the
turn ot the century was not as it is today,
and the trip from Charlotte was a long
Si
one."
"I can remember the “Picnic," and
the overwhelming abundance of food. It
was a fun day, she laughed, "when my
parents presented us to all of our
relatives in Davie County."
“We were always the center of at
tention simply becuase my family was
the one that had traveled so far to attend
the celebration."
“I also have a vivid remembrance of
my grandfather, Albert Turner
Clement’s home in north Mocksville.”
“I was probably the only grandchild
he ever saw due to his death on March 3,
1902."
“He wore a white beard very similar
to that of Ulysses S. Grant,"
“My grandmother, Evelina, cooked
from a fireplace, and I can still smell the
aroma of sweet potatoes and corn in the
husk baking in the embers."
Ruth Clement Bond, 74, also has
memories of her grandfather’s home.
“My most vivid memory," she said,
walking over the presently populated
area where the house still stands, “Is
how open the arei was then."
•There wasn’t a house around, and 1
would play in the apple orchard in back
of the house."
“I would eat apples until I was sick,
fascinated by the abundnace of an or-
liard. I had always eaten apples bought
from a store, so that thenatural quantity
overwhelmed me as a child of eight
years old.”
“I can also remember crossing a gully
and stream in the back yard in order to
follow a path to our nearest neighbor's
home.”
The trace into the family’s past is a
natural curiosity for Albert Turner
Clement's great granddaughtet. Jane
Clement Bond Howard. A historian by
profession, she is a graduate of Sarah
Lawrence College in" Bronxville, N.Y.
and has an M.A. degree from the
University of Birmingham, England.
Ms.Howard is currently preparing her
PhD. dissertation in French history for
If a slave of Jesse A. Clement, it is possible that their grandfather, Albert
Turner Clement helped to build this house. Located In the center of his plan
tation, the house still stands at the end of Maple Avenue Extension and was of
interest to the Clements and Gaithers during their visit to family landmarks.
Historic Jesse Clement House Is For Sale
The historic Jesse A. Clement house in
Mocksville has been placed for sale on
the open market by the Clement heirs.
Local historians believe the house is
one of the two or three oldest homes in
MocksvUle.
' Unitl a few weeks ago, the Historic
Preservation Fund of North Carolina
had an option to purchase the house and
surrounding land. But when that option
expired the Clement heirs decided to
offer, the house and land for sell to the
general public.
The Historic Presevation Fund had
sought ’“to acquire the (Gement)
property and resell it to a sympathetic
buyer who (would) agree to restore and
preserve it under protective covenant-
s." ' ■ . .
; ;HoweVâ!!,i according |d)'Hugli4^eW„
the Mocks\dlle, realtor whose aiEÎcncy is
riow attempting to sell the propertyi tl?e
Clement heirs have placed no restrictive
or protective covenants or conditions on
the sale of thé property.
Larewdid saythat if the Preservation
FSind does find a buyer for the property
who will agree to restore the house
under the Fund’s restrictive covenants,
then the house must be sold to the
Fund’s buyer before being offered to any
other buyer.
The price of the house and 13.8 acres of
surrounding land has been set at $50,000.
' Hie present access to the house
from Maple Ave. But the land that goes
with the house extends from Maple Ave.
to Lexington Rd., with 345 feet of road
frontage on Lexington Rd.
Larew said the house has survived in
its almost original condition since it was
built in the I800's, with few basic
structural changes or major
replacements having occurred.
“I would like to see the house
preserved and not torn down.-1 certainly
wouldn't want to see the property
subdivided into lots and sold off. This is
an important piece of our local heritage
and an important exanr.pie of the ar
chitecture of the period it was built,”
said Larew.
According to^ local tradition, the
Clement house was built in 1828, but no
oneseen^ to know forjcertain when the
hoijse was constructed.
' The home contains a variety of brick
construction, with the front and east
walls laid in Flemish bond and the rear
and west walls laid in common bond.
This vairety extends to the chimneys,
with one completely recessed and the
other partially recessed. The double
portico is believed to be a later addition,
however.
The interior features point to a late
Federal early Greek revival period.
The house has a central hall, with the
staircase rising at the back. It contains
one' large and two smaller rooms
downstairs and four rooms upstairs,
each with its own fireplace.
Here again, one finds a variety of
original wood carved mantels, with no
two exactly alike. All of the rooms in the
house have original flooring, tall
baseboards, plaster walls, four paneled
doors and wooden ceilings.
Jesse A. Clement, the first owner of
thehouse, was aprominent citizen in his
day. He helpedfomi the Yadkin Plank
Road Co., and his name appears as
trustee on a large number of documents.
Although at age 53 he was liot exempt
from military service, he commanded
Company F, the Davie “Gray," and
fought in some of the ferocious battles'of
the Civil War. ;
Two of his sons became physician«> -
One of them. Dr. Baxter Clegg Clement,v
continued to live in the family,
homeplace after his father died in 1876
and his mother died in 1891.
Dr. Baxter Clement died in 1927, but
his wife, “Miss Lina," who was 20 years
his junior, continued to live in the house
until her death. It is “Miss Lina’s"
grandchildren, Charles Clement Hines
and his sister, Barbara, and Ann'
Qement Ridenhour and her brother,
B.C. Clement Jr., who are now the heirs
of the property and wish to sell it.
The house is presently occupied by
tenants.
he Universityof London, England.
While here Mrs. Howard said, her
brother. Dr. George Clement Bond,
anthropologist with the Columbia
Univeristy in New York City, would
probably come to Mocksville for a more
in depth search into the genealogy in the
near future.
The descendants of Albert Turner
Clement have attained national pr-
minence in their lifetime His son.
Bishop George C. Clement and wife
Emma Williams Clement, who was
National Mother of the Year in 1946,
passed on their strong conviction of
achievement to their children.
Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson has been a
staunch leader in the A.M.E. Zion
Church and has held every position
possible for a women in its workings;
the late Dr. Rufus Early Clement was
President of Atlanta State University;
Ruth Clemen tBond headed the English
department at theUniversity of Liberia,
andhas done work in Afghanistan,
Tunisia and Algeria ; thelate Frederick
Albert Clément was a Civil Engineer
and headed the science department at
West Virginia State College; George
Williams Cletnent is assitant to the
President of Mammoth Life Insurance
Company in Louisville, Kentucky; the
late Reverend James Addison Clement
was a Lt. Colonel in the U.S.'Army ; and
Dr. Emma Clement Walker a Paulkner-
Hemmingway scholar.
The accomplishments of this family
are many, and it brings pride to us 1-1 knowing- that- it is here they began.
, iThrough their inquisition into, tiie past
we have not only gained an insight into
their lives, hut more importantly we
have recaptured a glimpse of Davie
County’s beginnings.
Our bodies age and die becoming the
dust of the earth, butthe memories and
deeds left behind by each of us are in-
finte. From our lives descendants can
learn of the past and piece together the
puzzle of their heritage.
It is through the roots made by each of
us that our descendants will survivie,
continuing to build on the achievements
of those long gone.
Gene Gaither of Route 7, IMocksville meets his cousin, Jane Howard for
the first time. It was through the Clement-Gaither Reunion held In
: August that this meeting was made possible.
Jane Clement Bond Howard, historian by profession, was enthralled by
her visit to Davie County. (Photos by Roofn Carter)
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Smith
and Mr. and Mrs. E C. Smith
l>f Apex, N.C. left on Sunday
.afternoon August 27 for the
B.C. Smith’s cottage “Tula
iVista" near Boone. They
;returned on last Thursday.
■t1>ey reported a very nice
trip. They said the mountain
.'breezes were wonderful and
tfluite refreshing. It was in-
Ideed a change from the heat
'Wave we have been having
i1>ere.
! Miss Debbie Lashley of
iCuUowhee College spent last
¡weekend with her parents Mr.
>and Mrs. Charles Lashley.
L Miss Margaret Brock had
¡as her visitors last Tuesday,
iMr. Bryce R. Holt and Mrs.
tAddie Williams of Green-
(Cboro.
Farmington News
iv Smith Mrs. B.C^ock Sr. who is Ellis. Mr. iMrs. B.C^rock Sr. who is
now a patient in the Davie
County Hospital is slowly
improving at this time.
Mr. and Mrs. George
Hartman of Mocksville and
Mrs. Nell Lashley and Miss
Margaret Brock were dinner
guests of Mrs. Marjorie
Scholtes in Winston-Salem
last Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Steelman
Spillman celebrated their
62nd wedding anniversary
last Sunday, Sept. 3 by having
lunch at the Clemmons Kit
chen with relatives. Those
present for this occasion were
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harding
and daughters, Connie and
June; Mr. and Mrs. Wilburn
Spir -J.".; Mrs. Gilmer Ellis
an>i mile grandson, Howard
Ellis. Mr. and Mrs. Spillman,
may you spend many more
happy years together.
Mr. and Mrs. John Hartman
and daughter Peggy were last
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Guy B. Hartman and
family in Charlotte.
Please call this number 998-
3349 if you have any news
items to contribute to the
Davie Enterprise for the
Farmington News.
KalalUy Kale
The iuiaiuy rate on the
nation's highways since 1955
has fallen from 6.34 deaths
per 100 miUion vehicle miles
to 3.25 deaths by the end of
1977, according to the U.S.
Department of Tran
sportation.
F o u r C o r n e r s
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Fleming have returned home
from Ohio after visiting his
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Langston
visited L. S. Shelton Sr.
recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Grady Beck
and Greg have returned home
after spending several days at
Myrtle Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Von Shelton
and children. Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Shelton and children
and Tom Anderson were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Shelton.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Craft
attended the Fashion show in
Charlotte last week end.
Mark White visited Eddie
Gray Sapp last Sunday af-
iinoon
Republicans To Have
Covered Dish Supper
The Davie Ck>unty Republican Party
Executive Committee in conjunction
with the Davie County Republican
Women's Club will have a covered dish
supper Monday night September 11.
1978, at 7:00 p.m. at Shelter No. 2 Rich
Park. Immediately following the supper
there will be an auction sale and
everyone is asked lo bring items for
sale.The Oavie County Republican
Executive Committee will meet at 8:00-
p.m. immediately following the supper
at the Davie County Courthouse.
This is an open meeting and ail
Republicans are invited." said Bill
Seaford, secretary. Davie G.O.P.
"Th e tillieit of all peopi« are
thoM who do fooliih thing«
to fhow off." Vauvenarguer,
Memories of long ago was brought back to Dr. Abbie Clement Jackson
and Ruth Clement Bond on a visit to the old Neely House off the Camp- •
bell Road. Shown above discussing some of these old memories are
(left to right) Jane Clement Bond Howard, Dr. Jackson, Mrs. Bond,
Gene and Magdalene Gaither.
Around And About
VACATIONING IN MICHIGAN
Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Earnhardt of Route 7 Mocksville are spending a week
visiting Mrs. Bamhardt’s sister, Mrs. Irene Trexler of Lansing, Michigan.
While away the Bamhardt’s plan to visit Niagra Falls and the Amish country in
Pennsylvania.
VACATION AT WHITE LAKE
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Salmons and Rhonda, Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Lankford and
Jeffrey, Debbie and Michael Singleton, Mr. and Mrs. Denny Cartner Todd and
Craig spent this weekend vacationing at White Lake. They had a wonderful
time.
FORMER RESIDENTS SPEND TWO WEEKS IN
EL SALVADORE, C.A.
Dale and Betty Smith of Surfside Beach, S.C., formerly of Davie County spent
two weeks in El Salvadore, Central America, where they installed date
processing equipment In the AV Ceramics Corp. plant in that country. They are
both employed by the parent corporation in Myrlte Beach. While there, they
enjoyed some sight seeing and also visited the country of Guatamala.
VISITS PARENTS
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith of Monroe, and sons, Erran and Brent attended Ihe
East Carolina and Western Carolina football game at Greenville, N.C.
Saturday, prior to visiting their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Smith at their
home on the Yadkinville Road.
r e n t A N E W 1978
by the day, week or month
LTD II Granada
*Lo w Daily Rentals
*A ir Conditioning available
*Rent neweit Model Fordi-
Ali lizst and modeli.
Phone TOLL FREE from
Winston-Salem 722-2386
Mojrtjnajoi^re^^
RENT-A-CAR
For Cars, Trucks and
Saviiigs Bucks See...
Reavis Ford, Inc.
Highway 601 North N.C. Dealer MocksviUe, N.C. 27028 Licentt
Phone 634-2161 241B
EJ
И
DAVIE COUNTY KNTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - 5
Bluegrass
Music Festival
To Be Held Here
Saturday
Davie Youth Encounters will sponsor
a Bluegrass Music Festival Saturday,
Sept. 9th from 2:30 p.m. until 9:30 p.m.
It will be held at the Masonic Picnic
Grounds, behind the Brock Building, in
Mocksvllle, N.C.
Providing music for the afternoon will
be John Allen and The Little River
Boys, the Golden Keys and Wildwood
Grass. Buggy rides, balloons, and “T ”
shirts will be available.
Admission for those over 12 will be $2;
ages six through twelvell and children
under six admitted free. All proceeds
will benefit Davie Youth Encounters, a
Community Based Alternatives
Program. This program utilizes adult
volunteers matched on a one to one basis
with troubled youth ages ten through
seventeen. Youth Encounters provides
organized recreational and educational
activities throughout the year.
Come and join your friends for an
afternoon of fun and music. Rain date
will be Saturday, Sept. 16th.
Getting
Ready
■
Preparing a banner for the Blue Grass Festival to be held Saturday are Student
Council members ( I to r) Lonnie McCullough, Beverly Byrd, Tracey Stapleton»
„ , Lynette Bouchard, program chalman,
(second from right) gives advice on the banner’s d(
George Kontos and Dwayne Parks.
Carter)
m chai_____
loto by Robin
Tenor To Give Concert At
Library IVIonday Evening
Three Health Hazards Emerging,Experts Say
September 10-17 Is PubUc Health
Week In North Carolina. To mark
the week, which carries the theme
"Life and Living," health
departments around the state have
planned a series of events designed
to bring public health services to
the attention of North Carolinians.
These events may include health
fairs, tours of the department,
special clinics and exhibits.Contact
the Davie Health Department fur
information about Public Health
Week activities or for information
about services the department
provides the community year-
round.
By Richard Blerck
As society changes, do so people’s
lifestyles, and, consequently, their
environments, customs and habits.
Sometimes these changes include new
practices that lay the human body open
to Invasion from various parastles, said
Dr. John Larsh, a parasitologist at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
HIU.
Larsh said North Carolinians should
be aware of three emerging health
hazards, two of which are attributable in
some degree to new or different prac
tices or habits.
Two of the parasites are glardla,
which Is contracted by drinking con
taminated water and lives In the in
testinal tract; and trichomonas, now
considei^ to.be a form of venereal,
disease. Both of these are protozoa
(one-celled animals);
The third parasite is visceral larva
mlgrans, a roundworm that has begun to
receive national attention as a health
problems only recently.
“Recent attention has been focused on
glardla cysts in drinking water as the
source of large outbreaks of infections,”
said Larsh, chairman of the department
of parasitology of the School of Public
Health.
“This source was first suspected from
studies of Infected patients returning
from trips to the Soviet Union. . .Later,
ildemlcs occurred in cities in the
inltesd States with modern drinking
'ater treatment systems, so It Is ob-
^ous that certain procedures for
purifying water do not eliminate giar-
фа.”
-One likely cause of glardla in the
Onlted States, Larsh said, is “the mass
exodus to the outdoors. Outbreaks have
'occurred among campers in remote
uninhabited areas." The campers, he
said, evidently drank water from lakes
or streams contaminated with giardla
from the excrement of wild animals.
Once lodged in the Intestinal tract,
glardla can damage the Intestinal
surface, causing persistent diarrhea,
Larsh said. “If untreated, this can, in
Ume, cause serious complications,” he
said.
He recommends that outdoor en
thusiasts who obtain drinking water
from streams or ponds to boil the water
or use a water-treatment chemical
known to be effective, such as Halazone.
Tbe other protozoan that is causing
Increasing problems Is trichomonas, a
parasite of the vagina and In males of
the urethral canal, Larsh said.
“Attention has been forcused for
the most part on gonorrhea, which has
reached epidemic proportions,” he said.
“But infections in America produced by
trichomonas during 1977 have been
estimated at 2 million.”
“'Larsh said trichomonas in females
Süuses severe Itching, bimiin); sen-
;^tions and a distressing, persistent
discharge. In males, he said, it causes
;)[nild infections with periodic white
discharge.
^'¿"Although the infection sometimes
pan be acquired by other means, it is
jww considered to be primarily a
Veneral disease,” Larsh said. “Changes
sexual behavior In America in recent
years, and undoubtedly the ready
availability of the pill, have caused a
progressive increase. .
' Infected males sometimes are not
aware they are carrying the disease, he
laid.
Infections with trichomonas can be
iTMted by a prescription drug, he said.
Visceral larva migrans probably has
teen around for a long time, but has
^ n the subject of national publicity
only recently, Larsh said.
' It is a roundworm that lives in the
Intestinal iracUofdogsandcaU. "The
Ibmale worm releases eggs that occur in
the stools of the animals,” Larsh said,
'^^en the infected animal passes stools
ppto the soil in a shady, moist area, the
eggs in the stools will develop within a
ftw weeks and contain a small im
mature worm (larva)." .
.^IThe eggs live long after the stool has
' lintegrated and easily deposit <>n the
gersof children playing, for exan p>t*.
I in SAiuiboxee.
Damage to the body is caused when
large number of these tiny worms
congregate In the liver and other tissues.
“The liver is greatly enlarged, lung
damage causes problems in normal
breathing and eye damage can cause
blindness,” Larsh said.
The best way to prevent visceral larva
migrans is to take measures to “Insure
that play areas are kept free of the eggs.
. .,” Larsh said.
“Adequate screening or fencing to
keep out dogs and cats, and protective
covers over sandboxes when not in use
have proved to be satisfactory."
"Tenderneu is passion in re
pose." Joseph Joubert
The Rev. James Thaddeaus Lochridge
Jr., tenor, will give a concert at the
Davie County Library on Monday
evening, Sept. llth, at 8:00 o’clock. He
will be accompanied by Miss Louise
Stroud, local piano teacher and organist
at First Baptist Church, Mocksvllle.
The Rev. James Lochridge was born
in Winston-Salem but when he was ten
years of age, the family moved to the
Philippine Islands, where his parents
are still serving as Baptist missionaries.
Mr. Lochridge received his Bachelor
of Music degree at East Carolina
University, Greenville, N.C. in 1971 and
was ordained to the ministry that year.
He served in the U.S. Air Force from
1972-1974. He received his Master of
Church Music degree from New Orleans
Baptist Theolbglcal Seminary in 1976.
Mr. Lochridge is currently serving as
Minister of Music at First Baptist
Church, Mocksvllle. He was Co-
Founder and is President of Lighthouse
Evangelistic Ministries, Inc. He is
married to the former Belinda Harris of
Durham and they have two children.
He has traveled extensively and has
performed on three continents. He has
released four albums of sacred music.
He is also a composer and arranger. He
has appeared on numerous TV and radio
programs both in the Philippines and the
U.S.
Included in the program will be a
Bach solo cantata in German, Dvorak
Biblical songs, French and Italian
numbers by Hue and Verdle, an Aaron
Capland number and one of Mr.
Lochrldge’s own compositions as well as
one of his arrangements of a familiar
tune and a closing selection by
Beethoven.
Rev. Janies Lochridge
In one number, in addition to the piano
accompaniment, the cello will be added.
The cellist, Blair Baldwin, Is a senior at
Davie High School. Coming from New
York, he now resides with his parents in
MocksviUe. He is a member of the
sanctuary and Youth Choirs of First
Baptist Church, Mocksvllle, and a
member of Breakthrough, a music
ensemble sponsored by Lighthouse
Evangelistic Ministries, Inc,
The concert is free to the public and
one of a series of concerts sponsored by
the Davie 0)unty ArU Council. A
reception will be held at the close of the
program.
MOCKSVILLE FURNITURE &APPLIANCE
NO. 2 COURT SQUARE MOCKSVILLE, N.C
ALL FREEZERS
REDUCED
W e a r e O v e r s t o c k e d
15CuJ)icFt. * 2 9 9 * ^
20 Cubic Ft. < 3 4 9 9 5
25C.bicft *3 9 9 «
O N L Y
Ì6 CU. FT. UP RIGHT
FREEZER o n l y ' 2 9 9
95w/t
C O LD W A T ER , C R U S H ED IC E OR
C U B ES TH R O U G H T H E D O O R
T F F -2 2 R W
21.6CU.FT. NO-t:ROST
REFRIG ERATO R-FREEZER
• Automatic Icemaker
replaces Ice as you use It.
• 6.64 CU. ft. freezer.
• Energy saver switch can help
reduce cost of operation.
• Adlustable, tempered glass
cabinet shelves.
• Adlustable Porta Bln door
shelves.
• Rolls out on wheels.
$ 3 9 9 9 5
QUAUTY 2-SPEED WASHER
BUILT “ ■
• U rge Capacity Basket
• Two Speed (In tlmer) :
• ¿Ingle Water tJevel
• Warm Wash and Rinse
Temperatures
• Two Cycles — Normal and
Gentle
• Porcelain Enamel Top, Tub,
Basket & Lid
• Green Dot Quality Tested
• Unbalanced Load Control
System
$
O N LY
2 7 9 **
fRtt Ice Maker Hook Uо with
Purchase ot Refriaerator
COMPLETE
L I N E
O F G . E . T . V . ' s
TW O A P P LIA N C E S IN ONE...
D O U B LE C ä N V E N IE N C E l
13.6 CU. FT.
REFRIG ERATOR-FREEZER
• 3.79 cu. ft^freezer.
• TWO Ice 'n Easy trays under
protective package rack.
• Automatic defrosting In re
frigerator section.
• TWIn vegetable bins.
•Coll-free back.
• Only 3054" wide, 64" high.
TB-uaw
O H V 4 * 3 7 9 « s .
FEATURING
T S S ä ^ A l I e ^
It gives y o u that g re a t Zenith
co lo r picture a uto m a tlca llvl
Think of It as a TV control room in your set! It controls the color picture
... correct^ the color picture... 30 times a second aulomatlcallyl
The BRAQUE *J2322E
Transitional styled console. Casters.
_ Beautiful simulated Antique
N I Y .
6 6 9 2
W/T
The quality goes in before the nam e goes oit*
COLOR T.V.
The WEBER • J29»PN
Early American styled console.
Simulated Knotty Pine wood-gtain
linitri. Casters. Brilliant Chromacolor Picture Tubs. 100% Solid-State
ChaMl*. Power Senuy.
• 6 6 9 * ? / T
CONSOLE STEREO
The LORCA • fModel JtISP
Mediterranean Styling. With
6-Track Tape Player. Beautiful
simulated wood cabinet,
„graine d Pecan finish.O N L Y
4 3 9 ? s
ш м и т
« а н ю А ш о ю к п
0UT8TANDINQ COLOR PERFORMANCE . . . IN A TRIM, COMPACT SIZE
PMOONAI.
U ? 7 5 9 î *
Ш E DELIVERY
' The TRUUBua • JzsMH
Early American styled console. Beautiful simulated
Maple wood'orain finish. Features EVG-Electronic
Video Guard Tuning and Color Senuy for that great Zenith color picture automatlcallvl
3 6 9 **
raws) 8ENTRV 8У8Т6М
Tlw S TC EN 'JIS IO
—Trim , compact
color portable for
easy room<to>
room portability.
Handsome charcoal color finish. Solid-state chas
sis and tuning system. Brilliant Chromacolor In
line picture tube. Power Sentry Voltage Regulating
System.
6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1978
g r e a t f o r a o r i l l o u t
BEEF EATER FRANKS
FRANKS
CHUCK ROAST
STEW BEEF
GROUND BEEF
U SD A CH O ICE
CHUCK ROAST
TENDER CUBED
FAMILY STEAK
$ « 4 9LB.1
VALLEYDALE CHUNK STYLE
BOLOGNA
LB.
HOLLY RIDGE
SLICED
8 9
BACON
$ 1 19
LB.
I
FRESH PICNIC SHOULDER
PORK ROAST
I
LB.
7 9 .
A R M O U R WAFER THIN SLICED
SMOKED MEATS
4 9 /
3 O Z .P K G .
I
i
I HEFFNERS O W N
H O M E M ADE FRESH
PORK SAUSAGE ^ 1
I $
Embers Charcoal
5 Lb.
Bag Bag
All Flavors
Hawaiian Punch can
★ Save 12*
M &M Plain-M &M Peanut-
SAVE 30c
Quaker^nMant Grits\
In Envelopes 14*
0
■ On
E X T R A
IS&H Green Sltamps|
with this Coupon and Purchaia of
One $9.95 or More Food Order
I ' NOTE: Limit of one Food Bonui Coupon with each order jj
Good Only at Heffner’s through |
SEPTEMBER 13,1978 J IMPORTED .PORCELAIN CHINA
i B b v s l
C la s ^ Mugs
OR MATCH INQ
' Dessert.
# Plate«;
w a d D a i^»1.79
Forever Yours - 3 Musketeers ■
Snickers-Milky Way « ^Candy ’ 1 **
1 Lb. Fun Size -A Save 10*
PUREX
LAUNDRY DETERGENT!
7 9 *
★ SAVE 20*
GIANT SIZE
(EACH)
MUG OR
PLATE
“Total Shopping" Value
3 - w 1-No Limit Speciiils
2 Valuable Tiadmi;
c C A 1 \ № ^ Stamps
3 Discount Prices
LAUNDRY BLEACt^
GALLON
5 9 *
Y:- ¿i.
★ SAVE 20*
{
L A N D
lllO H T T O R E86 B VE
O U A N T ITIES
HEFFNeR'S PRICBS
Peanut Butter 3 Lb. Jar
Food Giant
Sweet Mixed Pickles 22 oz. size
Shasta Assorted Flavors
Canned Drinks 120*. cans
I Assorted Flavors.
Shasta Drinks 34 Oz. Bottle
20 Count
Gallon Size Bags
Ziploc
Plastic Bags
f S n irT ip T llu In r'* " " * '" " ^ " " '" '^ ''^
1 Chum Salmon 7»4 Oz. Fiat can
Chum Salmon 'I’aiican
Osage
I Whole Pimento 7 Oz. Size
I Armour's
Treet 12 Oz. Can
*1.49
O P p Q Q n i ^ P s l l i ^ ^
Armour's
Sliced Diy Beef ■^o^can
T3Iefflo^5n5enia!inv7Beerw7Riu8hrooiiM
- ■ 29 0z.Si«. I 9 9
Discount
Price
*2.09
69*
6/99'
39'
77*
69*
‘1.33
63*
99
NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS
Assorted Scents Solid Room Deodorizer
Glade Solid Deodorizer 6 oz. size] 39
YOU
SAVE.
DELTI
34*I
16*.R*
4'»
1 0 *
16 1
16'
28'
2 0 '
SAVE 26c
CRISP TASTY
,v
16'RADISHES "W
2 0 '
6 O Z . P K 0 .
1 0 '1 0
10 LB. BAI
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1978 -
GREER HALVES
PEACH HALVES
2% SIZE CAN _
KRAFT'S
M ACARONI
NES CAFE INSTANT
INSTANT COFFEE
10 OZ. SIZE
•k SAVE 50*
KELLOGG’S FRESH CRISP
CORN FUKES
18 OZ. SIZE
■k SAVE 10*
★ SAVE 14*
GREER PURE
APPLE SAUCE
303 CANS ^
$
★ SAVE 24*
1
4
BEEF
2 9
POST
HONEY COMB CEREAL
120Z.PKG. 7 9 "
★ SAVE 18*
HORMEL'S
VIENNA SAUSAGE
2 50Z.CAN
№ * " *
POTTED MEAT
2 30Z.CAN
if SAVE 12*
Dentyne or Trident
Chewing Gum
lOPack • I 1 9
Hall MenthoLyptos
Cough Drops
3Ô Count' I * ii ■:
5 9 "
7'/4 OZ. PKG.
SAVE 40c
SEALTEST
LIGHT AND LIVELY
CHATHAM CHUNK
k
I
I
Draino
12 Oz. Size
65"
if Save 22*
Toilet Bowl Cleaner
Vanish
12 Oz. Size 7 Q ^
★ Save 26* ^ ^
SAVE 16c
DOG FOOD
^ “ ★SAVE 40*
PURINA’S BEEF
PUPPY CHOW
i c SAVE 50
Gains Burgers
Dog Food
180z. 6 3 ^
★ Save 12*
f t O ^
i c SAVE 20* j j ^
KOZY FROZEN
CAKES “ « s r
$ 1 0 9
★ SAVE 50*
BIG 2 LITER SIZE
SHASTA
H O O EP O Sn
"Total Shopping“ Value
3 l-N o Limit Specials
^ | \ i 2-Ualuable Trading
c r V \ | \ U G S Stamps
3 Discount Prices
IROOM TISSUE
4 ROLL PACK
★ SAVE 20*
i i L
IRIC RINSE
$ 1 4 948 OZ. SIZE ^
★ SAVE 50*
)EODORANT SOAP
iL SOAP 2
★ SAVE 25*
IRPOSE
kLER
fATOES
9 "
I
BATH SIZE BARS
SO LID H EADS
LETTUCE
Furniture Polislier
Gloss and Toss
H E f F N C R 'S P R IC e $
Lysol
Wet Ones
Qad Wrap Extra Wide
Plastic Wrap 150 Foot Roll
G U d W ra ^ !a r^
Sandwich Bags
Glad Wrap
Sandwich Bags
Glad Wrap
Heavy Weight Trash Bags
For Your Dishwasher
Cascade
Liquid Dish Detergent
Ivory Liquid
" T y S o T ™ " "
Liquid Disenfectant 12 oz. size
For Floors
Favor Wax
one
Anti Freeze
b J. betergent
Gallon
Palmolive Liquid o*. notue
12 Count
8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978
Arts Alive Since 7 5 Festival To Present Many Surprises
(oonh »h.> ««« _________J ^The Davie County Arts Council's
meeting on August 28, 1978 was a bee
hive of activity and ideas pertaining to
the upcoomlng ‘Arts Alive Since '75"
festival this September 16,1978, On-the-
Square in Mocksville.
Doris Carmen, chairperson of the
locations committee, is hurriedly
booking up choice spots for artists and
craftsmen. The booths will be situated
around the square and along US 158
through Mocksvillc, beginning near the
Junction of 64 and 158 continuing on to
Belks parking lot. The spots are filling
up fast, so send your application to the
Davie County Arts Council office today
or call 634-3112. The deadline for ac
cepting applications is September 8,
1978.
The concessions chairperson, Roberta
Goodwin, tickled taste buds when she
mentioned homemade Ice cream, hot
dogs, hamburgers, and homemade
baked goods provided by Art Council
members. There will be ample supplies
of soft drinks and, of course, hot coffee
to go along with homemade apple pie.
Cafe tables will be situated under the
willow oaks for comfort.
Preston Badget and his special events
committee have scheduled Glenn
Howard and R.C. Smith to display their
antique cars. Allen Martin, of
Mocksville, has offered to show his
treasured Corvalrs.
There will be horse and buggy rldes-
free of charge~and compliments of Tom
Hauser.
, Frances Wainrlght of Indian Trails,
North Carolina will be on hand sketching
'portraits is pastels. Francis Green will
teach the fine points of surveying and
Alvin Richardson, of Mocksville, will
provide a first hand lesson(or two) on
the art of horse shoeing..
"We have a fabulous “plddler" joining
us from Salisbury. Mr. Bill Bost, an
accomplished whittler and story teller,
has offered lo do a IltUe of both for us al
the Festival. His knife and hands are arl
In motion. Something that Is a must to
see, said Valerlé Sloglck, chairman of
. the publicity committee.
“Preston even called President
Jimmy Carter-since the President
planned to be as near as Ashvllle that
day. Low and behold Preston failed. As I
understand it Senator Sam's stories take
too long to tell and the President felt
Iwth events couldn't be squeezed into
one day. So the story goes. These are
just a few of the many special events
planned for the extravaganza,” con
tinued Ms, Sloglck,.
The entertainment committee has
lined up several feature attractions for
the day. The State National Guard Band,
the Davie County High School Band, and
Dancing Boots will perform.
“We have had firm commitments
Irom the Turrentine Trio, dance groups,
doggers, musical groups, the ROTC
drill team to mention a few. Steven
Fields, a student at Davie High and
talent winner himself, has graciously
offered his ser ices as master of
ceremonies. Doug Bales, of Mocksville
and affiliated with WXII, will be one of
the qualified Country Western-
Bluegrass judges. Harper Van Hoy, of
Union Grove, nas also donated his tíme
and talent to the Bluegrass competition judging, said Ms. Sloglck.
-
The Arts Council Is full of surprises
and this year is no exception. James
Donaldson, of Salisbury, has illustrated
a delightful festival-theme coloring book
for this special occasion. It should be a
one-of-a-kind treasured item.
The second surprise puts Davie
County in T-shirt territory through the
talented efforts of Elspeth Webster.
Mrs. Webster created two designs-one
for the children and one for the children
at heart. The child’s design depicts a
festival flair of clowns. The adults
design Is a graphic play on Davie County
and the words “ArU Alive Since 75".
Both T-shirts are pleasing to the eye and
will please the wearer. The coloring
book and T-shirts will be available for
sale starting September l, 1978 at the
Davie County Arts Council office and at
the Festival.
Included in the varied and Interesting
sights and sounds of the day will be
WDSL, the sound of Mocksville.
Broadcasting will continue live
throughout the day.
"How can anyone afford not to be "On-
the-Square" In Mocksville, September
16, 1978? There will be something for
every taste and personality-from
shoeing horses to disco dancing. Don't
miss it!”, said Ms. Sloglck.
Festival Coloring Book Created By James Donaldson
A unique souvenir for children at
tending this year’s "Arts Alive Since
‘75” festival will be a coloring book
illustrated by James Donaldson, a
member of the Davie County Arts
Council.
James has created a festival theme
coloring book with children in mind,
often times using suggestions from his
young daughter, Shelley. Each page Is
filled with clowns and balloons, ice
cream cone treats, street scenes, and
your usual end-of-the-day tired festival
goers. These happy pages are waiting to
be brought to life by young Imaginative
minds, reliving their day at the Arts
Festival. A caption is found under each
illustration to add more enjoyment for
the enthusiastic artist at work,
Mr, Donaldson lived the early part of
his life in the Piedmont of North
Carolina, He presently makes his home
in Salisbury, North Carolina with his
wife, Margaret and daughter, Shelley.
He began his formal art education at
the Tyler School of Art in Philedelphia.
In the mid 60's Donaldson was com
missioned by Paul Jones to do an
exhibition which included portraits of
prominent Afro-Americans, past and
present in the fields of history, civil
James Donaldson with page from festival coloring book.
rights, and the arts. This exhibit
traveled to Thailand, Bankok, and
numerous other places. It now belongs
to the private col ectlon of Paul Jones of
Washington, D.C.
After this commission. Bishop
William Jacob Walls of Yonkers, N.Y.
commissioned Donaldson to do a mural
which Included the “Life of Christ”
through painting.
In 1976, Donald was selected to be a
“Third Century Artist,” by the North
Carolina ArU Council In Raleigh.
Donaldson’s most recent ac
complishment occurred In March, 1977
through a commission by Alex Haley to
promote his painting ased on the movie
and book "ROOTS” written by Haley.
Today Mr. Donaldson has returned to
teaching and is presently associated
with the Davie County School System.
His spare moments are devoted to art
and the expansion of his promising
career. These are but a few of James
Donaldson’s many accomplishments.
“We are proud to have Mr. Donaldson
in our membership and that he has so
willingly shared his talent with the
citizens of Davie County,” said Valerie
Sloglck, chairperson of the publicity
committee.
“The festival coloring book wlll be on
sale at the Davie County Arts Council
office and at the “ArU Alive Since '75”
festival. Stop by and have James
Donaldson autograph your coloring book
personally, On-the-Square In
Mocksville, Saturday, September 16,
1978. lU going to be a great happening,”
said Ms. Sloglck.
Superintendent Receives
Info On Exit Documents
James E. Everidge, superintendent
for the Davie County Schools has
received information from the
Department fof Public Instruction
regarding graduation exit documenU.
Regulations resulting from the Com-
were adopted
the State Board of Education at iU
August meeting.
According to SUte School Superin
tendent Craig Phillips, the Board
adopted policies and other regulations
concerning documents issued to
studento when they leave school.
In the newly adopted regulations
graduation is defined as satisfactory
completion of all sUte and local course
requlremenU and achievement of a
passing score on the N.C. Competency
Test. StudenU who meet these two
liremenU will be eligible to receive
a diploma. A certificate will be Issued to
those studenU who complete all state
and local course requlremenU, but who
fail to achieve a passing score on the
N.C. Competency Test. A transcript will
be Issued to all studenU receiving either
the diploma or the certificate. “The
transcript may be Issued to the student
by any procedure as determined by the
local school within a reasonable period
of time,” said Phillips.
“Local boards of education will have
responsibility for designing their
diplomas and certificates, and are urged
to Insure that the diploma and cer
tificate are easily recognized as dif
ferent documents and that the cer
tificate in no way indicates
graduation,” Phillips added. An ad
ditional polcly adopted by the State
Board clarifies the responsibility of
local boards of education for providing
remedial instruction for those who have
not passed the Competency Test by the
last month of the year in which their
class graduates. These studenU will be
entitled to remedial instruction and
additional opportunities to Uke the test
until they are 21 (maximum school age
is defined in G.S. 115-163). ,
Baby Food
If a baby food is labeled "high meat
dinner,” It must contain at least 26 per
cent meat, “meat and broth” product
must be at least 61 per cent meat.
“VegeUble and meat” on the label
means the product, contains a minimum
of 8 per cent meat.
The above map shows the location of the various displays for the Arts Festival.
ALL ABC PERMITS
S P EC IA LIZES JN P R IM E RIBS O F B E E F
A N D O T H E R F IN E S T EA K S A N D A
V A R IE T Y O F D ELIC IO U S S EA FO O D S .
TUESDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 5 PM 7il...
OWNER & OPERATOR:
RICKEY EVERHART
ASSISTANT MANAGER:
JIVYGREGORY_____^ |
C o u n t r y B o y s
B a r b e c u e
AT GREASY CORNER
INTERSECTION 801 & 601
Fresii Flounder ah you can Eat
I I
I
I
I Steak Plate
I 9 Oz. Hamburger
1 * 2 . 0 0
• WITH COUPON I j
I I I
I Coupon Good Thru 9-10-7^ I
2 .5 0
WITH COUPON
I ! CouponGoodIhru9-10-78 I
Cliopped Barbecue
Small French Fries Medium Drink
■1I
• l í H O
W ITH
COUPON
Coupon Good
Thru 9-10-78
Glasscock Clan To Gather Sunday
The annual gathering of the
Glasscock family will be held
Sunday, September 10,1978 at
the Center Community
Building. Everyone is
requested to wear Scottish
type clothing.
All ladies to age 35 are
asked to bring a dish con-
Uining fish and ladies over 35
are asked to bring a dish
containing an oat or barley
product.
Activities for the day are as
follows:
12:45 p.m.-Welcome by
Norman Forrest, President
1:00 Lunch
1:15 Judging of Special
dishes
2:10 Princes Green Hills
Contest for girls age 6-11
2:20 “Our Ancestors" by
Mary Spillman
2:40 Hammer Toss Contest
for boys and girls age 12-17 by
Norman and Carol Forrest
2:30 Loch junp contest for
boys age 6-11 by Elmer and
Nancy Allen
2:50 Caber Toss contet tor
ages 18 and over by Virgil and
Chris Chris Wyatt
Silver dollars will be
awarded to winners of con-
tesU.
Bowles Reunion
The annual Bowles Reunion
will be held Sunday, Sep
tember lOth at Oak Grove
Fellowship Fall.
Lunch will be served at 1
o’clock.
All relatives and friends are
invited to attend and to bring
a well filled basket.
Blackwelder Reunion
The annual Blackwelder
reunion will be held Sunday,
September 19, at tbe William
R. Davie Fire Station.
All relatives and friends are
invited to attend and bring a
well filled basket.
Junction
RÉSeRVATÍONS FOR:
* SPECIAl. rABTtBS* GBOW MEETiNG«* WEDDINO VARTISS
U.S. 70 EAST AND 801 SOimi
B A R B ER , NC
P H O N E 278-4591
Reservations Requested,
But Not Required.
< v .
Mrs. Michael Ray Evans ... was Rebecca Mae Vogler
Vogler-Evans Vows Are Spoken
, . Miss Rebecca Mae Vogler, daughter
'' * of Mr. and Mrs. Naylor Sheek Vogler of
Advance, North CaroUna and Michael
Ray Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. WendaU
Evans, Rt. 1, Ashe , N.C. were united in
marriage Saturday, September 2, at 3
o’clock in the afternoon at Advance
United Methodist Church. The Rev.
Alec Alvord officiated at the double ring
ceremony.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Ms. Ruth Latham, organist
and Ms. Debbie Wesley, soloist.
The bride, given in marriage by her
father, wore a gown of quiana and
Venise lace. The sheer yoke bodice was
embrodiered with seed pearls and lace
andher a-Une skirt extended into a
chapel train. The finger-tip mantiUa
was edged in matching lace. She
carried nosegay of yeUow roses, baby’s
br^th, «(bite daisies, with greenery and
Victorian streamers.
Mrs. Joel KimbaU of China Grove was
her sister’s matron of honor.
Bridesmaids were Mrs. Meliene Bowden
of Raleigh, bridegroom’s sister; Miss
Melody Lee of Charlotte and the
bridegroom’s sister, Miss Tammy
Evans of Ash, N.C.
The honor attendants wore gowns of
soft silesta in iced banana. They were
designed with lace yokes and butterfly
sleeves. The skirts were softly gathered
and sashed at the waist with a self belt.
They wore daisies in their hair and
carried nosegays of daisied and yeUow
roses.
Best man was the bridegroom’s
father. Ushers were Larry and Tim
Evans, of Ash, brothers of the
bridegroom and Joel KimbaU of China
Grove. Tim Vogler was acolyte.
Miss Jennifer Frye kept the guest
Three Couples
Win Free Vacations
Three Davie County couples have wuii
free vacations as courtesy of Daniel
Furniture and Electric Company of
Mocksville and Hotpoint.
James G. Atwood Sr. of Rt. 2
MocksvUle won a vacation for two at
Gatlinburg.
Mrs. Judy Bailey of Rt. 7 MocksviUe
was the winner of a vacation for two at
Pinehurst.
Colon Spry of Rt. 2 was the winner of
the vacation for two at MyrUe Beach,
S.C.
Vacations must be taken between
September lOtb and November I4tb,
1978. The vacations at each spot wiU be
paid for two people which includes 2
nights loding, breakfast and dinner for
two days, plus 125 traveling expenses.
register.
The bride is a 1974 graduate of Davie
County High School and attended
N.C.S.U. She is presently enroUed in a
nursing program at ForsyUi Technical
Institute in Winston-Salem.
The bridegroom graduated from West
Brunswick High School in 1974 and
attended N.C.S.U. He graduated
. fromCape Fear Technical Institute ^nd
is employed as an electronics servicer at
Bobby Teague’sT.V. in Winston-Salem.
After a wedding trip, the couple wUl
make their home in Winston-Salem.
CAKE-CUTTING
Mr. and Mrs. Naylor S. Vogler of
Advance, honored the couple with a cake
cutting at the Advance Community
BuUding, Friday evening foUowing Uieir
wedding rehearsal at the church.
Guests included the honorees, the
wedding party, and famUy and close friends.
Miss Daniel Honored
At Bermuda Run
Dr. and Mrs. Bob M. Foster and Dr.
and Mrs. Victor Andrews, Jr. were hosts
at a dinner at Bermuda Run Country
Club Friday evening, September 1,
honoring Miss Margaret Ann Daniel
andher fiance, Ted Harris, of Winston-
Salem.
The bride-elect’s table was marked by
a house fern dedorated with white
wedding beUs and was given to the
couple at the end of the meal.
A gift of china in their chosen pattern
was presented to them by the hosts.
A four course dinner was enjoyed by
the special guests which included the
bride-elct’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William Daniel the bride-elect’s sister.
Miss Barbara Daniel and her fiance.
Bob Burchard of McLean, Va., the
bride-elect’s grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. T.J. CaudeU and Miss Holly An
drews.
Smith Grove To Have
Community Meeting
Smith Grove Community Develop
ment Center wUI hold its annual meeting
Sunday, September 17, at 2 p.m.
At this meeting five people wUl be
voted on to run for the board of direc
tors. Anyone wishing to run for this
office must sign a form Uiree days prior
to September 17th. Forms may be ob
tained from Phyllis Williams.
PIcklei
After processing pickles, wipe the jar
with a clean, damp cloth and label with
the name of the product and the date.
O'Brien-Schubert Concert In
Miniature Sunday Afternoon
Janet Schumacher O’Brien of High
Point, wUl give a Concert in Miniature at
Uie Davie County Library on Sunday
afternoon, September 10, at 3:00 p.m.
Her program will include a group of
French songs, two operatic arias, and a
group of Irish folk songs. She wlU be
accompanied by Louise R. Schubert of
High Point.
Mrs. O’Brien had her first voice lesson
at the age of two with Madame Ella A.
Toedt, for many years head of the Voice
Department of the Institute of Musical
Art and later affiliated with the JuUliard
Foundation in New York City, From
Uien until her graduation from high
school, she studied with her mother,
Mrs; Sarah Weida Schumaker, in Berea,
Kentucky, Upon her graduation, Mrs.
Obrien was offered and accepted a six-
year private scholarship in voice by
Mme. Toedt. During those years in New
York City she also studied dramatics
with Mafestro Enzo Serafinl; harmony
and sightsinging with Mrs. Ada M.
FMsher, also of the Institute of Musical
Art; and French, German, and Italian at
the Bertlitze School of Languages.
Subsequently, Mrs. O’Brien studied
voice for four years at the Cleveland
Institute of Music with Madame Nevada
Van der Veer, Head of the Voice
Department there.
Mrs. O’Brien has given two voice
recitals in New York’s framed Town
HaU, and has sung inWinston-Salem,
Jamestown, ThomasviUe, Greensboro,
High Point, Lexington, MocksviUe as
well as in New Jersey, Kentucky, Ohio,
Minnesota and Indiana. In adcUtion to
her voice recitals, she has sung roles in
both opera and oratorio; sung over radio
stations WTAM, WGAR, and WHK in
aeveland, Ohio; WFIN in Findlay,
Ohio; and WNBC, WHOM, WNYC,and
WFUV-FM in New York City; and ap-
pearedin the Cleveland Summer Or
chestra.
For almost three-years-sh» served-as-
soloist at the largest Christian Science
Church in Cleveland, Ohio, Uie Fourth
Church of Christ, Scientist. She has also
sung at numberous other churches in the
Triad and in New York City including St.
Mark’s in the Bowery.
Mrs. O’Brien has combined two
careers, one in music and th other in
engineering. In addition to her musical
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, IQ78
Janet Schumacher O’Brien
studies, she earned a Bajchelor oi
Mechanical Engineering Degree and a
Master of Nuclear Engineering Degree
from New York University in New York
City. She is a Registered Professional
Engineer inNorth Carolina and has
taught engineering technology subjects
for four years at Davidson County
Community College, and for the past
seven years at Guilford Technical In
stitute.
She was recently made an Honorary
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina
by Lieutenant Governor Green for her
years of service to Uie state. She is
presently serving as secretary of the
High Point Citizens Advisory Council
which advises the High Point City
Council.
__Mrs. O’Brien’s accompaniest is Mrs.
Louise S. Schubert, a piano teacher and
Craft Association
To Meet Tuesday
The Davie Craft Association wiU meet
Tuesday, September 12, at 7:30 p.m. in
the National Guard Armory in
MocksviUe. The purpose of the meeting
is to finaUze plans fo for Uie ninth annual
Davie Craft Comer scheduled for Oc
tober 27 and 28.
All exhibiting and associate members
are urged to attend.
Jeticho-Hardison Club
To Have Ladies Night
Jercbo-Hardison Ruritan Club
will have Ladies Night, Tuesday, Sep
tember 12th at 7:30 p.m. at the Ruritan
buUding.
A special program has been planned
for the guests. The Fashion Shop of
MocksviUe wiU have charge of the
program, which wUl feature a fashion
preview of Autum clothes.
Library Piano Fund
Workers Hear Report
Workers for the Davie County Library
piano fund meeting Tuesday evening at
the call of Mike Hendrix, campaign
director, heard reports that the goal of
$3000 for the first week of the campaign
had been surpassed.
Initial gifts of $100 to $250 from in
dustries, firms, stores, clubs, and in
dividuals had brought in over $2,000 in
cash, and pledges of over $1,000, it was
reported by David Fergusson,
Librarian. About 400 names of persons
and groups remained to be solicited by
approximately 50 volunteers, who ex
pect to complete the campaign ap
proximately ^,000 by September 14.
Mrs. George W. Martin presided at Uie
rally launching the public campaign.
Patrick Hicks, artist in residence, gave
a selection of music from the piano,
already in p^ce in the multipurpose
room of the library, and refreshments
were served. Mr. Hendrix assigned
names to workers and promised a
victory celebration September 15.
Impaired Hearing
Imparled hearing can be described as
Uie invisible handicap-according to the
Belton Crusade for Hearing Con-
servation-because unlike the victim of
paralysis of bUndness, there is no
wheelchair or white cane to point out the
hard of hearing persons’s problem.
accompanist in High Point. She studied
piano for seventeen years with Elmer C.
Steuk, a Leschetizky exponent, and also
trained in organ. For nine years she was
the church organist at the Trinity
Methodist Church in Sandusky, Ohio,
and has done extensive recital ac
companying in High Point and in Ohio.
Both Mrs. O’Brien and Mrs. Schubert
are members, of the Musical Art Club of
High Point, a federated Music Gub.
The O’Brien-Schubert concert in
miniature on September 10 is free to the
public and is one of a series of concerts
sponsored this season by the Davie
County Arts Council. A reception will be
held at the close of the program.
Billy Hamm, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Hamm of Route 3, MocksvUle,
celebrated his 2nd birthday Tuesday,
August 29th with a party at his home.
Helping him enjoy the celebration were
his brothers. Steven and Jody, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert King and Cynthia, Mr. and
Mrs. David Maynard and Jan and JUi
MarshaU.
Arnold and Nancy Harpe announce
Uie birth of their first child, Joseph
Henry, on August 26,1978. He weighed 8
lbs. 1 oz. and was 21 '■k inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. James Henry Plott Jr.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph H. Harpe
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Horn of Salisbury
Street, Mocksville announce the birth of
a daughter, Amy Lynette, born August
24th at the Davis Hospital in Statesville,
N.C.
At birth the baby weighed 7 lbs. and 15
ounces.
Grandparents are Howell Reavis of
YadkinviUe, and Mrs. Hazel Horn of
Mocksgille.
Mrs. Horn is the former Wanda
Reavis of YadkinvUle.
tewart
Stewart - Dwiggins Vows Are Spoken
Miss Barbara Arlene Stewart and
David Franklin Dwiggins were united in
marriage Saturday, September 2, 1978
at 2 o’clock at Concord United Methodist
Church, Route 4, Mocksville. The
pastor, the Rev. Kenneth Eller of
ficiated at Uie double ring ceremony.
A program of wedding music was
presented by Randy Boger, soloist, and
Mike Hendrix, organist.
The bride is the daughter of Wright
Stewart of Route 6, MocksviUe. She is a
1978 graduate of Davie County High
School and is employed at Monleigh
Garment Company.
The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Dwiggins of 714 Gamer
Street, Mocksville. He is a 1976 graduate
of Davie County High School, is at
tending Rowan Technical Institute and
is employed at Mocksville Motor
Company.
The bride was given in marriage by
Mr. Robah Epps of Roxboro, N.C. She
wore a formal gown of white bridal satin
overlaid with organza, lace and seed
pearls and designed with a fitted bodice,
high lace neckline and long sleeves wiUi
wide lace cuffs. The skirt Uiat extended
into a long flowing train was enhanced
with an organza flounce and lace Iwrder.
Her two-tier, waist length veil was white
iUusion with lace and seed pearls at
tached to a Venice cap. She carried a
bouquet of yeUow roses, white daisies,
and baby’s breath.
Mrs. Melissa Allen of MocksviUe, was
her sister’s matron of honor. She wore a
floor length dress of pale yellow dotted
swiss featuring pink, green and yeUow
designs.
Bridesmaids were Misses Cathy and
Local Student Named
‘Univeisity Scholar"
Lynda Ruby of MocksviUe is among
169 students who have earned distinc
tion as “University Scholars” for the
1978-79 academic year at Susquehanna
University in Selinsgrove, Pa.
This tiUe is earned by students wiUi a
cumulative grade-point average of 3.25
or better on a 4.0 scale. If the students
maintain these averages Uirough the
senior year, they will graduate with
honors.
The “University Scholars” wUl be
cited during Convocation ceremonies
opening Susquehanna’s 121st academic
year on Sunday , Sept. 10, at 7 p.m. in the
university’s Weber Chapel Autidtorium.
Ruby, a junior accounting major, is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Grodon
Ruby of Rt. 4. Southwood Acres,
Mocksville, and á graduate of Belvidere
High School, N.J.
Patty Dwiggins, sisters at the
bridegroom, and Miss Kim Foster of
Mocksville. They carried long stemmed
yellow mums. Child attendants were
Misses Tammy and Becky Stewart, the
brides sisters. The bridesmaids and
child attendants dresses were identical
to that of the honor attendants. AU the
attendants dresses were made by Mrs.
Elsie Nail of Route 4, MocksvUle.
Lester Dwiggins was his son’s best
man. Ushers were Mike Dwiggins,
brother of the bridegroom, ^ndy
Draughn, and Chuck Lakey, all of
MocksviUe.
Acolyte was Wade Stewart, the bride’s
brother.
Miss Karen Lane of Route 4,
MocksviUe, presided al the register.
Mrs. Carlene Speaks directed the
wedding.
FoUowing a wedding trip to Myrtle
Beach, S.C. the couple will be at home on
Route 4, MocksviUe.
REHEARSAL DINNER
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Dwiggins were
hosts to a rehearsal dinner Friday
evening, September 1st, in the
FeUowship hall of the church for the
wedding party, relatives, and close
friends of Uie couple.
The menu included ham biscuits, fried
chicken, potato salad, green beans and
corn, sliced tomatoes and canteloupe,
cherry yum-yum, carrot cake, pound
cake, soft drinks and tea.
RECEPTION
Immediately foUowing the wedding a
recepUon was held for the couple and
their guest in the FeUowship hall of the
church.
The wedding cake was three tier
decorated with yeUow roses with white
hearts and yellow sugar bells and
displayed a miniature birde and groom
under an arch of pink silk flowers.
Served with the cake was yellow fruit
punch, mints and nuts.
Concai d Methodist To
Have Ice Cream Supper
Concord United Methodist Church is
sponsoring an ice cream social Satur
day. September 9th from 9:30 a.m. until
2:30 p.m. at the church.
There will be lots of homemade cakes
and the ice cream will also be homeade.
A donation of the individual’s choice can
be made for the refreshments.
Proceeds will go to Uie church.
Drying Trays
Never use galvanized screen on food
drying trays. The acid reaction may be
dangerous and the food will be
darkened.
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STUDIO LOCATED ON
STORE’S PARKING LOT
GUARANTEED BY
PRITCHARD PHOTOGRAPHY
FOSTER - RAUCH
€ AQ>i DRUG CO.
w iu ts B O R O S T .
Mocksville, NC
(Plus 50* Handling Fee) • No Age Umit , Groups SamePrice
Photographer
Steve Pritchard
Will Be AvaUable.........
F O R 2 D A Y S O N L Y
Friday and Saturday
11:00 a.m.* 6:00 p.m.
SEPT. 8 ■ 9
• ’3.S0 Down, Balance When
Photos Delivered
• 6En,mi4,TW04xS'sand 8 GIFT SIZE FOR ONLY *5.00 MORE
THE ROWAN AND DAVIE COUNTIES
School of Dance Arts
Now Accepting 19 78 Fall Enrollments!!
C L A S S E S T O B E H E L D A T
Cooleemee Recreation Center...
— COME BY AND REGISTER—
Saturday, September 9
10:00 A.M. Until 2:00 P.M.
Beginners Through Advancef* - Ages 5-Adults!
.Tap.Ballet.Clogging. Jazz
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10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISH RECORD. THURSDAY, SliPTEMBER 7, 1978
Piano
Committee
Committee members organizing tlie project of tlie purchase of a piano for №e
Davie County Public Library are (I to r) Brook Martin, David Fergusson, Dr.e County Public Lib ra ^ are (1 to r) Brook Martin, David Fergu
Henry Sprinkle and Louise Stroud (seated). Th ^ia n o has been exnibited and
used In a series of concerts held at the library. The concerts are sponsored by
the Davie County Arts Council (Photo by Robin Carter)
Babies Influence Parents As Much
As Parents Influence Babies,Says Dean
By Carol Boren
Babies influence parents just as much
as parents influence babies.
“Parents have been so trained in this
country to assume they are shaping the
child. But in any human relationship,
both people change each other,” says
Dr. Ira J. Gordon, Kenan professor and
Deanof the School of Education at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
HiU.
“The whole idea,” he says, “is to say,
‘Look the baby is doing things to you as
well as you doing things to the baby,’
Parents must look at each baby's
behavior and who each baby is rather
than assuming they can make that baby
who they want, because they can’t.
“Parents also need to be prepared for
the fact that raising children is not all
roses and sweetness,” Gordon says. “If
parents get anxious and tired, it’s
normal.”
Based on experiments, conducted in
Gainesville, Fla.,‘ Gordon 'has formed
what he calls the "Pour P’s” of early
parent-child development; ping pong,
passion, perserverance and patience.
These stages are discussed in Gordon’s
latest child development book-“Baby to
Parent , Parent to Baby,”
If the four P’s are observed, he says
the parent can leam much about the
child and be able to respond effectively
to the child. And, a child also can
achieve a positive approach to the world
during the first year of life.
During a ping pong activity, Gordon
explains, baby and parent are especially
attentive toward one another. They
participate in games Uke playing party
cake in which everyone wins.
Eye-to-eye contact or mutual gazing
helps parent and child convey the
message of love. Gordon says that
mutual gazing is a crucial element of
expression of passion between parent
and infant.
Perseverance in parent-child
relationships is another necessity,
(jordon believes that baby-sustained
behavior or perseverance is critical
throughout Ufe. Parents must leam to
allow a baby to get interested in
something and stay with it without
disrutpion, unless is might harm the
child.
The behavior from a chUd’s point of
view is always sensible, Gordon says.
Parents must leam to be patient with
the child's expression of his in
dividuality.
(Gordon explains that these four P's
occur throughout the child’s first year
and aU of famiiy Ufe, and that each child
responds at a different rate.
Gordon syas he would not want anyone
to read a book on parenting and assume
that every bit of behavior is critical, or if
the parent does one thing wrong, the
child is doomed.
“Parents should not view the chUd’s
age or any other single factor as the
clrtical variable, because a child
develops at his or her own individual
rate. For example, some parents might
say that the baby should be smiling
because he is 3-months-old, but that isn’t
always the case,” Gordon says.
“Once a parent understands that the
baby develops at his own rate, the
parent can escape guilt feelings they
might otherwise have,” Gordon says.
“If parents get those guilt feelings, they
tend to 1» immoderate in their treat
ment of their child. They may smother
and overwhelm the chUd.”
“I think you have to maintain a sense
of balance and a sense of humor about
child-raising. No one thing, short of
violence, that you do to the child is going
to be that significant,” he says.
“One element in chUd abuse is caused
by the parents' lack of understanding of
this pattern. Parents may demand too
much from their children and punish
them because they can't perform,”
Gordon syas.
During the initial year of develop
ment, a child needs to begin establishing
a sense of competency, Gordon says.
Parents can strengthen this, he says, by
learning when to step in and out of the
child's action with the environment.
Children who lack this autonomy are
often raised by doting parents.
“Children should be able to grow
without the love relationship changing.
The personal relationship changes so
that the child becomes your peer. You
each share together ideas and plans.”
Gordon's new book, “Baby to Parent,
Sara Bowles Wall At
UNC School Of Nursing
Sara Bowles WaU of Durham has
begun her first year of clinical training
at the University of North CaroUna at
Chapel HiU School of Nursing.
The new class of 157 rising juniors
includes 14 men and 21 registered
nurses. One hundred twenty students
are transferrring from other parts of the
UNC-Chapel HUl campus and 37 wiU be
coming from other colleges and
universities.
The undergraduate curriculum of the
School of Nursing, which leads to a
bachelor of science degree, prepares
students to become professional nurses,
competent in practice and with the
educational background for continued
learning.
More than 1,200 students have
received baccalaureate degrees from
the UNC-CH School of Nursing since it
first admitted students in 1951.
She is the daughter of Juanita R. and
the late John C. Bowles, Sr. of Durham
and is married to Tim Wall son of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy A. WaU of MocksvUle.
Parent to Baby”, represents 10 years of
work in which the parent-child in
teractions during the first year of child
development were observed. Ap
proximately 225 low-income famUies in
GainesvUle, Fla., took part in the
research, which was part of a project
sponsored by the Fund for the Ad
vancement of Education ot the Dept, of
Health, Education and Welfare.
Gordon also attributes his experience
and observations, he has written a total
of 10 books and co-authored three others.
Gordon came to UNC-CH in 1977,
Previously he spent 21 years on the
College of Education faculty at the
University of Florida at GainesviUe.
Since 1965, Gordon has conducted
several research projects supported by
grants from the U.S. Office of
Education, National Institute of Mental
Health, Office of ChUd Development,
U.S. Children’s Bureau and the Fund for
Advancement of Education.
Some of his early education stupes
have included infant stimulation,
parent-child transactions and infant
competence, imrpving the development
of culturally disadvantaged children
and studies of socio-emotional
development.
EMT’s Urged To Attend
Training Sessions
All local emergency medical
technicians both professional and non
professional are urged to attend the
meeting and training session scheduled
for 7:00to9:00p.m. Friday Sept. Bat the
B.C. Brock BuUding in MocksviUe.
Many of the EMTS of this area at
tended Uie initial meeting on August 18
and decided to continue meeting on a
monthly basis. A permant location and
meeting night have not yet been
established.
The Sept. 8 meeting will donsist of
organizational discussions, short lec
tures by Jaci Krause and Jerry Cope on
pertinent subjects, and practice in CPR
and other Emergency Medical
Techniques.
All certified and formerly certified
EMTS are welcome to attend.
Call Jerry Cope at 284-4322 for in
formation.
Dried Foods
All dried foods deteriorate to some
extent during storage which can range
from 6 months to a year depending on
Uie kind of food. To keep nutritional
losses to minimum, vegetables and
fruits, especially carrots, onions and
cabbage, should be used in a reasonable
length of time.
B U Y O N E H A M
O R S A U S A G E B I S C U I T ,
G E T O N E F R E E
We're serving old-fashioned country ham and sausage biscuits. And there's more
on our menu, including apple danish, orange juice and coffee with free refills.
Bring in this coupon below, and get our free Breakfast Bonus.
BUY ONE HAM OR SAUSAGE
mSCUIT, GET ONE FREE
WITH THIS COUPON, GOOD Til 10:30 Д.М.
Offer Good Only At Hardee’s Of MocksviUe Hiru Haideei
S E P T I M B E R 1 6 , 1 9 7 8
The place that brings you back.
we REseRve тне Й10М7 TO
L I M I T o u A N T m e s i
THURSDAY - SATURDAY
S U P E R B A C K - T O - S C H O O L
S A V IN G S !
St. Regis 200 Sheet S C H O O L S P E C IA L S
NOTEBOOK PAPER
«_____ _ NOW ^ P A C K S
Г Limit 2 Pacits P le a se ^ fo r
M OW
SCHOOL BOX
2 2 «
Large Assoilment
THROW PILLOWS
$ 4 19 Our
I4 0W I Regular Ч.77
1-Shelf Portable Wooden
BOOK RACK
$
N O W
1.99
No.5136Plig.Of3 40 Sheet St. Regis
SUBJECT BOOKS
N O W
BIc Disposable
LIGHTER
3 9 ^
N O W 8 8
Pck.0fl0
BALL POINT PENS
MOW A A C
Blue Ink W W
No. 28-1
Mobilité High Intensity
DESK LAMP
80z. C R O W N ’S P A N I R Y
BREYERS YOGURT
Assorted Flavors 29 Pantry Items Available At
^ Peters Creek, Old Town, Hanes
^ Mall,Clemmons, Stanleyville
& King
ENTER THE
Gillette
^ i i i s s c S i m a r k a ^ e c i a l s
RO ADS TO RICHES SWEEPSTAKES
Entry Blanks Available At All Crown Drugs
9 Ounce
ADORN HAIR SPRAY
Ч .2 9
TAME CREAM RINSE
1 16 Ounces
Я NOW
NOW
TONISILKWAVE
COLLECTION
w’ 1.5 9
EARTH BORN
SHAMPOO
8 Ounce O O ^
NOW w w
L 2 9 « a o o G A S H R E F U N D
ADORN HAIR SPRAY
8 Ounce 5 Ч
Non-Aerosol ■ e W #____
From Gillette
By Mail With Proofs Of Purchase From Any
Four Of These Fine Productse Products к
END^F-THESUMMER
Photo Processing
S P E C I A L !
B R I N G Y O U R F IL M T O C R O W N D R U G S
A N D P A Y
O N L Y
Crown
W ill Guarantee
YOU W ILL LIKE
YOU
Prints
OR WILL
Refund
YOUR
M oney
Prints Must Be Surrendered At
Time of Return
Developing and Printing
xp. 126 or 110 Color Prir
iim.
'oreign Film Excluded.
For Developing and Printing
20-exp. 126, UO or 135
Color Print FUm.
Foreign Film Excluded
•OFFER EXPIRES
SEPT. 9, 1978
, 788-2032 УТиГ.У.Г 679-8844__
924-9131 766-9156
969-6826768-9320
Mrs. Wanda Neal Is Local Representative Of AAA
Mrs. Wanda Neat of Route 1, Advance,
announces her appointment as Mem
bership Sales Representative of Davie
County for th Carolina AAA Motor Club.
Moving from Gastonia to Advance,
this Is the first time that the
organization has had a representative
In this area. Working out of her home,
she will be in charge of membership
recruitment In the Davie and Rowan
County area.
The Triple A Motor Club, a nationwide
organization, has been in existence since
1902. The firm has been active in the
establishment of school safety patrols,
the enactment of high school driver’s
educational programs. and has
represented motorist’s interests in all
levels of the government.
Members of the Motor Club are offered
emergency road service, personal
travel planning service, legal defense
reimbursement, free tour books, ball
bond protection, personal travel ac
cident insurance, and trip guarantee
relmbusement. They also give $200 theft
reward protection, and through the 400
representatives in 90 foreign countries,
the club can act as a world travel
agency.
Gray’s Exxon and Andy’s Union 76,
local service stations, have been
designated as emergency stations
available to serve Triple A members.
’The motor club has an 18 million
membership nationwide, and the North
and South Carolina regional office is
located in Charlotte.
People In this area interested In
further information about Triple A
Motor Club are urged to contact Mrs.
Neal at 998-21S6.
MrsjW|gda^Neal^
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1978 - II
Local Aflatoxin Testing Station Opens At Cleveland
The N.C. Department of Agriculture
has announced the opening date for two
aflatoxin testing stations in piedmont
North Carolina.
According to State Agriculture
Commissioner James A. Graham, the
laboratories will open on September S in
Bonlee and September 11 in Salisbury,
with operating hours from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m., Monday through Friday. ’The
testing service will provide information
on the levels of aflatoxin, if any, in the
corn sn that farmers can make
decisions on selling the corn or using it
on the farm.Graham stated that the believes the
1978 com crop will show a smaller in
cidence of the mold-produced toxin than
last year. "There appears to be an
established link between stress con
ditions In corn and the presence of
aflatoxin,” Graham said.
“Last year, where crops were exposed
to the stresses of drought and pest in
festation. we found some aflatoxin;
however, the weather has been kinder to
us this yvai. and we hope to see a cleaner
crop," he said.
State Chemist, Dr. William Y. Cobb,
has recommended that all farmers
evaluate their com before harvest. "A
visual check should be made on shucked
corn gathered from various parts of the
field. If a greenish-yellow mold Is found
on the kernels or between the kernels,
aflatoxin may be present," Cobb said.
For more accurate information on the
presence or absence of aflatoxin, far
mers should collect samples for testing
at an NCDA laboratory. Cobb outlines
the following methods for gathering test
samples; 1) Pick two bushels of ears
ndoi
ent the crop as compU
possible. Hand shell, mix well, and take
randomly throughout the field to
represent the crop as completely as
a ten pound sample; or 2) Combine
several swatches through the field and
probe the shelled corn in several places
in the collection bin to get a ten pound
sample.
In either case, the sample should be
taken to the laboratory as rapidly as
possible, not to exceed four hours after
shelling.
Cobb urged all farmers to bring In
their samples by 4 p.m. to assure that
their com would be tested the same day
for the most accurate results.
The Piedmont Research Station Is
located on the Sherrills Ford Road west
of Salisbury near develand. Ken Jones
(704-278-2824) is in Charge.
Also, the N.C.D.A. Constable
I..aboratory on'Reedy Oeek Road In
Raleigh is available to farmers from any
part of the state.
Five stations opened in the
southeastern part of the sUte on August 23.
Rest Areas Are Getting A Face Lift
I'*»
Rest areas along North
Carolina’s highways are
getting a face-lift, Including a
fresh coat of paint In designer
colors, improved lighting,
additional sidewalks and new
toilet fixtures.
Tom Bradshaw, Secretary
of the North Carolina
Department of Tran
sportation,said work began in
late July to renovate 41 older
facilities of the State’s 57 rest
areas on Interstate highways
and primary roads. The state
Board of Transportation
approved an expenditure of
$500,000 of maintenance funds
July 14 to make the facilities
more attractive and to
replace or repair damaged
equipment.
“Most of the rest areas
were built around 20 years
ago," Bradshaw said, "and
are badly in need of repair.
Not only will this program
inprove the appearance of
these facilities, but it also will
mean that travelers will get
more service and added
convenience from them."
“We feel we are preserving
the Investment we already
have in these structures by
repairing damaged Items and
replacing others which have
deteriorated with age."
When the majority of the
rest areas were built in the
late SO’s and early 60’s, the
federal government was not
paying for the cost of con
structing such facilities, the
transportation secretary said.
Most of the rest areas on
Interstate highways in North
Carolina were built with state
funds prior to 1963, Bradshaw
said. “Thus, these facilities
were constructed on a rather
basic scale in relation to
today’s rest area design
■ coiicepts. But they have
-^served their purpose well and
> now we are going to update
^ them and extend their useful
life.”
Bradshaw noted that
tourism is now the state’s
third largest industry. "A
traveler’s first, and perhaps
' only, stop in North Carolina
. may be at a rest area. By
making these facilities more
attractive and functional, we
can create a favorable im
pression on out-of-state
visitors as well as provide
needed services for all
motorists."
The original bright green
and pink colors are being
replaced by safari-tan and
cocoa-brown, or “earth
colors.” New wood siding will
. be installed at some units,
while existing paneling at
others will be stained.
“We feel these changes will
give the rest areas a more
contempary look and make
them more harmonious with
their natural settings," the
transportation secretary said.
To assist travelers, in
formation displays are to be
added to the rest areas. Some
of the items to be included are
a transportation map of the
state and orientation sheets
describing the motorist’s
location and attracitons in the
surrounding area.
Bill Johnson, head of the
transportation department's
Division of Highways’ Land
scape Unit, which is over
seeing the rest area face
lifting program, said the
facilities currently are being
painted.
“Most of the work inside the
buildings will be done in the
fall and winter months when
the tourist traffic is lighter,"
he said. “Some of the rest
areas will be closed for about
a week while the repairs are
completed. We will finish this
phase as rapidly as possible
to minimize inconvenience to
motorists."
Johnson said the rest areas
would remain open while
outdoor projects proceed,
including establishment of
lawns, additions of sidewalks
and lighting, and renovation
of water and sewage systems.
The entire face-lifting
program is scheduled to be
completed next July.
In addition to changing the
face of the rest areas, these
improvements will make the
facilities a nicer place for
travelers to refresh them
selves for the continuation of
a safe trip.
Alcohol Information Report
By:WILLIAM F. WEANT, M.S.
ALCOHOLISM EDUCATION CONSULTANT
ALCOHOL AS A FOOD-A
food is any substance con
sumed to nourish and sustain
the body and ite growth and
helth maintenance. A variety
of foods is required to provide
heat energy and contribute
the building elemente termed
protein, minerals, and
vitamins. Most foods provide
more or less of each of these
substances.
The excess usable con
tributions to the body made by
a food are storable for use
when needed later. Refined
sugar, as in candy, is a food
because it can be stored in the
body and used to produce
protoplasm and enregy for
muscular work and body heat.
But in comparison with fruits,
vegetables, and meat, candy
has been referred to as
“empty calories.’’ Alcohol
represents not only “empty
calories" but also “toxic
calories.”
Alcohol is not classified as a
food in medical dictionaries.
As soon as alcohol is absorbed
into the bloodstream, the body
attempts to get rid of it by the
process known as oxidation or
burning. This process might
furnish a large part of the
body’s energy needs if it were
not that thedrugging effecte of
alcohol on mental and
physical processes offset any
advantage that might come
from its use. Consequently,
these harmful effecte keep it
from being classified as a food
by physiologists. While
alcohol does carry a value in
calories, they cannot be
stored for future use. Other
resources of the body must be
used to replace the losses due
to the effecte of alcohol upon
the nervous and muscular
systems.
(This is the forty-fifth in a
series of articles about
“alcohol” provided by Bill
Weant, Alcoholism Education
Consultant with the Tri-
County Mental Health
Complex. These articles are
designed to create un
derstanding about sensible
drinking, alcohol abuse, and
alcoholism in our society. If
you have a queston con
cerning alcohol that you
would like answered in a
future column, phone 634-
2195.)
I 4 -H News I
Preston Badgett of P,B.’s
Hobby Shop attended the
Monday, August 28th meeting
of the Qarksville 4-H Club
held at the William R. Davie
Fire Department.
Mr. Badgett helped the 10
members and two leaders
with the paint hydrocal ar
ticles that they had chosen.
Pan Beck, the club’s leader,
called the meeting to order.
Rita White served kool-aide
and cookies for the evening’s
refreshmente.
The club would like to thank
Mr. Badgett for his in
teresting visit. The meeting
was adjourned at 9 p.m.
Renee Bracken
A queen termite has been
known to lay eggs for 50
years!
W e c a r r y J o h n s - M a n v ille
f ib e r g l a s s s h in g le s .
A s a d v e r t is e d o n T V
You ve probably seen the commercials. They
feature J-M shingles made Mrith fiber glass
inside them for extra long roof life. And for an
extra good value for your roofing dollar. And lor
maximum fire resistance The commercials are
right: They re great shingles. And we ve got
them in stocl< now.Joiim.Mtiniiw
IfSI
Mocksville
Builders Supply
Mocksville, N.C. Phone 634-5915 721 S. Main St.
A u t h e i i t í c E n g l i ^
S t o n e w a r e .
F r e e . F r o m ] № & T
English Stoneware is something special. Matde the
w ay it’s been made for over 150 years. B y han(i. B y
craftsmen.
Potters take the clay from their native Englantd and
fashion it into distinctive shapes. Each piece is individually
dipped in a glaze.Then hand decorated by a talented artist.
A ll this care does make an elegant (difference, recog
nizable in subtle variations from piece to piece.
B y saving at Branch Banking and Trust Company, you
can get your first three-piece place setting free.
Th a t’s a hand-crafted cup, saucer and dinner plate
free,just for depositing $25 or more, in a new or existing
B B & T Regular Savings Account at any B B & T office.
12 piece
snack set for îbur.
Each snack set consists of a coffee mug, soup/
cereal bowl and a salad/luncheon plate. It’s icieal
for snacks,breakfasts and light lunches.
W hen you deposit $500.00 in a new
or existing B B & T Savings Ac(;ount,
you m ay purchase this twelvè-piece
snack set for four for only $31.75.
26f»ece
service for Sour.
Entertain the idea of having
enough Stoneware for a dinner
party this evening:four dinner
plates, four cups, four saucers, four
bread and butter plates, four soup/
cereal bowls, a 1.5 quart casserole
dish w ith lid, an oval platter, a sugar
bowl w ith li(j,and a cream pitcher.
T h e y can all be yours for only
$65.00.Sim ply deposit $1,000 in a new
or existing B B & T Savings Account.
A nd entertain.
Almost
lalostart.
Th is Stoneware had its
I origin in Belper, England,
which is near the origin of
another famous story Th a t
_ _ of Robin H(X)d. Sherwood
Forest and Nottingham are
*' A j’-'st a short distance aw ay
Here, craftsmen have
passed the secrets and skills
of their art from father to son to grandson. Establishing a
tradition of unsurpassed hand-craftsmanship.
Each piece of Authentic English Stoneware is hand-
formed by craftsmen, glazed by hand, and the decorations
are painted on by skillful artists.
T h e result is beautiful in ;i'i h'jiiest, natural w a y
Matdiingcon^^eter —
lueces at^)eciail
lonvprices.
W hen you make a savings deposit
of $25 or more, you m ay purchase
completer pieces at special
low prices. For example,
additional three-piece
place settings are only
$6.49 each. A nd you may
pay for your purchases
with cash, check or Master
Charge. W hichever is most convenient.
If you’ve ever priced Authentic English Stoneware,
and it’s only available in the finest stores, you know that
B B & T ’s offer is a remarkable value.
Beaoity ciocsrit have to
befra^gile.
Authentic English Stoneware is as practical as it is
pi-etty. You can do things with this Stonewai'e that
you’d never think possible.
You can use it in a regular or microwave oven. You
can freeze in it. You can put it in the dishwasher.
A nd yet, it will look like new after years of this kind
of hard use.
T h is Stoneware is so strong that the supplier gives a
limited two-year w arranty W hich you can pick up at any
B B & T office.
your ccdlectiotY
. today
Sto]) by any B B & T office today and get your
fii'st place setting of Authentic English Stoneware
free with a deposit of $25 (jr more in a new or
existing savings account. A nd while you’re
\ at the bank, pick up a ajinpli mentary
copy of our fully-detailed
brochure.
Authentic English
Stoneware is something
nice to have. A nd B B & T
is offering you a nice
w ay to get it.
B B & T
BRANCH BANKINO ANO TRUST C0MPM4Y
12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978
DEAR CHUCK: It'i > pad
for its dirty tricks.
front yard looked like a cow pasture. Then a
tbout the mothball remedy. I tried it, and it
McLOUD.OKLA.
Who Mid the teen yean are tbe happieit? For Abby’i
ew booklet “What Teeoacert Want to Know," writ*
Abby; 132 Laiky Dr., Beverly HUli, CaliL 90212. Eneloie
II and a long, stamped (28 cenUI, aeU-addressed envelope,
please.
Polly's pointers
In a sticky
situation
DEAR POLLY— 1 would like to put new appliques in the bottom
of my bathtub. After much pulling and struggling I finally got the
old ones off but cannot remove the marks they
left. 1 have tried cleansers, gasoline, razor
blade, etc. but still the marks persist. I wonder
if any of the readers have solved this problem
-MRS. R.O.M.
DEAR MRS. R.O.M.— Perhaps one of tbe
following letters from our readers will be of
somehelp.-POLLY.
DKAH POLLY—To remove the stubborn
sticky substance left from price stickers, etc.
do not scrape and possibly scratch the surface.
Just squirt with lighter fluid.and it will wipe
right off with a facial tissue or paper towel.—
CRAMER MRS. K.W.S.
DEAH J’OLLY— When purchasing a new car there is always a
price sticker on the side rear window and I have a simple way to
remove this. Wet a paper towel until dripping and place over the
sticker. Over the towel put two layers of plastic wrap and rub
until they lit smooth on the window. Leave overnight and the
next morning grab one corner and peel off in one piece. Save the
price list loyiQur records.— MRS. E.R.N.
DEAR P if iiL X -- and Mrs. E.S. — A quick and eaiy way
to remove Mato from cans is to use a seam ripper such as
most women keep In their sewing klU. Place the point
under tbe bottom edge and slide upward. Do this as near
the label seam as possible so you do not cut into the coupon.
- VICKIDEAR POLLY - When using a paper shopping bag with
handles put a large grocery bag inside to double the bag's
strength. This is especially goM when children tote things
back and forth to school. — M.J.M.
DEAR POLLV — Save empty shaker Jars from
seasonings and use when dusting flour in your cake pans or for sprinkling fillings for pastry.
To add something different to a non>iced cake sprinkle a
mixture of one part cinnamon to two parts sugar on the
greased pans instead of flour. — KARENDEAR POLLY — Do tell Wanda that I make beautiful
place mats with old greeting cards. I cut a 12-inch>wide
piece of self adhesive plastic and place the cards on this
plastic. Never overlap them. Placing in odd shapes makes
them more attracUve. Cover with clear self adhesive
plastic cut a bit larger than the place mat so about one-half
Incb can be brought to the back side of №e mat. I use such
mats every day. Christmas cards make roost attractive mats to use during the holidays.— VIOLA . .
il send you one of her signed thank-youPoUy will -------- ,------------- - - - ---------- .
newspaper coupon clippers if she uses your favorite
Pt^ter, Peeve or Problero in her column.
Dear Abby
Her kids should
not be heard
DEAR ABBY: i ve been dating Ethel for over a year. She's a
beautiful 35-year-old divorcee with three children. The oldest Is
10. I'm 44 and have never been married. The
2 f
roblem is Ethel's kids. One hour is about all
can take ot them— then they start getting on
my nerves. If il weren't for those kids. I’d grab
lithel in a minute because she's everything a
man could want in a woman.
I suppose we could send her kids to camp
in the summer, but how about the rest of the
time? Boarding schools, maybe? But It will be
years before the two youngest will be old
enough to go.
Ethel is pushing for marriage, and I
honestly hate to let her go. She says she's not
VAN BUREN going to wait around for me much longer.
What should I do?CHUCK
deal. II you can't stand
Ethel's kids, say goodbye to EtEel. And look for a woman
who (a) has no children, (hi has grown children, or |c) Is
unbearable.
DEAR ABBY: You were very generous to suggest to
DESPERATE IN DENVER that the reason her husband
had lost interest in sex could be due to a physical or
psychological disorder. Nine times out ot 10 it’s neither. I’ve
been through this myself and so have many other wives.
When a husband reaches 40, he gets bored and restless, so
in order to prove that he’s still a “man," he reassures himself
by making it with other women.
My husband was always “too tired" for me. There was
nothing wrong with him physically or psychologically, but
he was having an affair with his best friend's wife, so he
pretended that he had lost interest in sex. The truth was, he
had lost interest in ME! With others he was very much alive
and able to function.
I am interested to know how many other letters you
received like this.
UNTOUCHED IN W ENATCHEE
DEAR UNTOUCHED: The number ot “other letters"
amountod to an epidemic!
DEAR ABBY: A lady who is a co-worker of mine wears
the same dress for a week or two without changing. When
she does change her dress, she wears that one for another
week or two straight.
I’ve worked with her for several years, and this same pat
tern has persisted throughout that time.
She is single and makes a decent salary, so there’s no ex
cuse for having such a limited wardrobe. There are several
of us who would like to bring it to her attention. Is there
some tactful way to do this without offending her?
SICK OF TH E SAME DRESS
DEAR SICK: II she's clean, and her dress is clean and
tidy, because you and others are “sick ot the same dresa" is
haraly a legitimate reason lor her to buy more clothes. Even
though she's single and makes a “decent" salary, outsiders
can know nothing of her financial obligations.
DEAR ABBY: My problem is my ex-wife. We were mar
ried for less than two years, never had any children, and
then were divorced. That was 10 years ago, but she is still
-calling herself “Mrs. Sidney Feinbohm."
' It is causing a lot of confusion because I am married again,
-and my wife is constantly being confused with the ex-Mrs.
"Sidney Feinbohm. To make matters worse, my ex-wife and
.my present wife have charge accounts at many of the same
stores, and my wife gets bills that should have gone to the
other Mrs. Feinbohm.
Is there any way I can force my ex-wife to quit using my
name and take her maiden name back? She has still not
remarried.
ONE WIFE TOO MANY
DEAR ONE; There can be only ONE “Mrs. Sidney Fein-
bohm" at a time. After your divorce, your ez-wife became
“Mrs. her fín t name Feinbohm.” II she isn't aware of this,
have your Uwyer inform her officially in a letter.
DEAR ABBY: In reply to DOGGONE MAD, who objected
to the neighbor's dog doing its dirty tricks on his lawn: In
order to discourage dogs from coming over on your proper
ty, just sprinkle a package of mothballs on the area that the
dog has chosen for its dii
One year our
friend told me about
workedi
SAVE UP TO -YOUR
c o o ic c m c E
BEA-
S U P E R M A R K E T
■OUNTYPAPn
TOWELS
un
WITH ONl FlUID SUItR SAVtK GAUD OffEU 0000 THRU sen. 9,1978
La rg e
3 Roll 4 9
MWa»
WITH ONC FIllED SUPER SAVER CARO OfrtR 0000 THRU SEPT. 9,197«
KRAFT PARKAY
OLEG
3 9
1 -Lb .
4 Ctrl'.
WITH ONE miED SUPER SAVER CARD OfPER GOOO THRU SEPT. 9,1978
un»
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These unidentified golfers tee off on the number 10, par four hole at Hickory Hill Country Ciub
during the Labor Day Scotch Foursome which was just a part of the many activities marking the
end of summer.
O f S u m m e r
Like many area residents, members
of Hicltory Hill Golf and Country Club
enjoyed the last summer fling with an
entire day of activities on Labor Day.
Golf, tennis, football, volleyball,
swimming or just sitting under a shade
tree - there was something for each and
everyone.
Beginning with a breakfast for the
golfers at 8:30 a.m., there was a full day
of activities. Immediately following the
breakfast 92 golfers teed-off for the
mixed Scotch Foursome tournament,
which was won by Kenny and Linda
Jordan and Jerry and Vicky Hendricks
who shot a 10 under par 62.
A tennis tournament is in progress
now at Hickory Hill and some of the
participants chose the day to play their
match.
Many youngsters got their exercise
with a game of touch football and
volleyball.
And there were those who preferred a
day of swimming or just relaxing
around the pool.
Labor Day officially closes the season
to summer activities and reminds us
that fall is not far away. This family fun
day was apparently a huge success
which ended with a cookout for
everyone.
Mrs. Linda Jordan tends the flag for husband, Kenny, who sinks a putt to put his team ten under par
(62) to win tiie Labor Day tournament.
Swimmers and sun-bathers enjoyed the final day before the pool is closed for the winter.
P A v m c o u i ^ r
Feature IB September 7 ,1978
Story by Marlene Benson - Photos by James Barringer
A
Miss Jaiiiri* Kaudi and Mrs. Vickie Fleming (left) gel a workout on the tennis court while volleyball (center) and loiu li iooilwll (■ . ii'. i "re tlie order of the day for some of the teenagers.
2B IMVIC COUNTY liNTHRPRISI- RfcCURD. rilURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1978
Mabel’s Little Puppets--A Tradition
■ I U n e n i l o l A n v < lla t> tf t
By Marlene Benson
As Mrs. Annie Lois Grant of the Davie
County Hospital Auxiliary, assisted
Mrs. Linda Dull wilh the boxing of hand-
)uppets made by Mrs. Dull's mother-in-
aw, the late Mrs. Mabel Dull, it was a
sad - yet Joyous occasion.
These little puttets played a big role in
the life of Mabel Dull, a very devoted
auxiliary member. For'years, Mabel
has made them for the auxiliary to give
to each child admitted to Davie
Hospital.
The puppets were almost made into
real little people by the special touch of
the talented Mrs. Dull. She took a great
deal of pride with each of every puppet
and no two were ever exactly alike.
Careful not to soil or wrinkle them
before the little patients received them,
Mrs. Dull kept them neatly on a bed until
she boxed them for the auxiliary. When
she died a few weeks ago, there was a
bed full of the attractive little puppets.
ready for use by the Hospital Auxiliary.
There were also a few other little
animals and trinkets in her home like
those she would make to be sold on the
auxiliary cart. Her devotion to the
Hospital Auxiliary was evident in that
"he contributed over 250 different Items,
in addition to the endless hours she so
freely gave.
During special times of the year, such
as Eater, Mabel made each patient a
personal crocheted Easter basket as a
tray favor ... and at Christmas, she
would make a holly red and green felt
napkin ring.
Mabel enjoyed brightening the day of
the little patients with her hand-made
puppets and although she is no longer
with the auxiliary, her contributions will
not soon be forgotten. The last supply of
puppets have been picked up by the
auxiliary and will be used as they have
in years past and the tradition of
Mabel's little puppets will be carried on.
Other volunteers will continue to make
them, but whether they will share the
same enthusiasm remains to be seen ...
and Mabel will always be remembered
by the staff of Davie Hospital and the
auxiliary members for her generous
contributions over the years.
•♦I
Guard Gets New Commander waitBoyiewns
Puppets!Mrs. Annie Lois Grant, (left) of the Davie County Hospital Auxiliary assists
iMrs. Linda Dull, daughter-in-law of Mrs. Mabel DuU, in boxing the hand pup
pets for the children in the hospital.
Two-Day Sportsman Drag Event This Weeii Volunteer Tutors Are
Sought For Laubach
Reading Program
Mike Boyles of Rural Hall, making an
appearance for the first time In several
races In his familiar "Charlie Brown"
Chevy, captured the super-stock event
at Farmington Dragway last Friday
" night. Boyles defeated one of the track's
- leading money winners this season,
Kenny Melton of Hlllsvllle, Va. to collect
$200.00. Melton was in a Camaro and
picked up $100.00 Boyles had posted a
number of victories In the “Charlie
Brown" Chevy but recently bad not been
driving It since he was driving tem
porarily for another team. Steve
- Johnson of Winston Salem was top
super-stock qualifier with an elapsed
time of 7; 51 seconds In his Chevy sitting
right on the national record. Johnson
however went out In early rounds before
he got to the finals.
The pro-modified division victory
■ went to Darrell Gaither of Winston
Salem when he put down Don Plemmons
' of CHemmons to pick up $100.00. David
• Hines of Winston Salem won the “B"
bracket ET race when he defeated
David Boggs of Farmington. The “C"
bracket ET win went to Tommy
Byrrows of King for his thrld straight
Farmington victory when he defeated
Frank Moore of Greensboro. Ninety-two
cars were entered.
Track officals announced that a two-
day sportsman drag event will take at
Farmington on Sept. 8 and 9th. Included
on the entry list are the hot rail
dragsters and the “BB" Funny Cars,
some of which competed in the IHRA
National Title Series race there ren-
cently. Current IHRA Pro-Comp leader
Butch Osmon of Leavlttsburg, Ohio,
along with Ray Weaver of Seville, Ohio,
Butch Kernodle of Virginia Beach, Va.
in a Funny Car and Bunny Brukett, well
known female Funny car star are
already entered.
Jimmy R. Plummer
SenringWith Navy
Navy Boiler Technician Fireman
Apprentice Jimmy R. Plummer, son of
Betty S. and Frank L. Plummer of Route
450 B, Mocksville, N.C., has completed
the Basic Boiler Technician Course.
During the course at the Naval
Training Center, Great Lakes, students
received instruction in the use of hand
tools, the operation and maintenance of
shipboard pumps, and the operation of
boilers and other engineering
machinery. In addition, they were in
troduced to the types of engineering
duty watches that Boiler Technicians
stand aboard ships.
He joined the Navy in January, 1978.
Adults, teacher, former teachers'and
high school students are needed "as
volunteer tutors to attend a Laubach
Reading Workshop In Statesville next
week, September 12,13,14 at Monticello
Baptist Church at 7:00 p.m. Mrs.
Carolina Bentley will be the teacher.
Aubrey Walker, who is heading the
program of volunteer tutors to assist
youngsters in reading skills, said those
trained In this workshop should plan to
devote approximately two hours per
week inhelping youngsters in the lower
elementary grades in reading skills.
Some will be working in the local
schools while others may elect to work
in some other convenient setting.
This schedule will provide the
required 10 hours necessary to complete
the course and to qualify each one
participating for a certificate. Ad
ditional information can be secure by
contact Aubrey Walker at his office, 873-
4372 or at home, 873-4067
2LT James W. Campbell took com
mand of Detachment 2, Compancy C, 2d
Battalion (Mechanized) 120th Infantry,
North Carolina Army National Guard in
Mocksvllle Friday, September 1st.
Lt Campbell spent two years on active
duty with the U.S. Army and served one
of the two years in Viet Nam. He was
released from the Army In' 1968 and
joined the N.C. National Guard In
February 1975. He attended the North
Carolina Military Academy from
August 1975 to August 1976. LT Camp
bell was Commissioned on August 23,
1976 and attended the Basic Officer
Course at Fort Bennlng, Georgia In 1977.
LT Campbell has served as a Rifle
Platoon Leader, Weapons Platoon
Jeff Barker Wins
More Baseball Honors
Jeff Barker, Pfeiffer College’s hard
hitting first baseman from Mocksvllle,
has added yet another honor to his
impressive list. He has been named to
an honorable mention on the 1978 NAIA
All-America baseball team, according
to the summer edition of the NAIA
News.
Barker, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lonnie Barker of Mocksville, batted .456
for theyear to capture the All Carollnas
(inference batting crown. He finished
tenth in the nation in the NCAA Division
n.
Last spring he was named to the All-
District team and was chosen by the
Greer.jboro Daily News as first
baseman on the All-State squad, which
is chosen from players from all colleges
within the state.
Lt. James W. Campbell
Leader and Company Executive Officer
of Company B. 2d Bn (M) 120th Infantry
In Lexington, N.C.
LT Campbell Is presently attending
Davidson Community College in
Lexington, N.C. and will graduate next
spring.
He is married to Jeannle Campbell
who is the former Mrs. Jeannle Varner.
They have two children Mike 11 and
Michelle 6 and live on Westdale Avenue
in Lexington, N.C. LT Campbell Is
employed by Bruel Builders Supply
C\>mpany in Lexington as Lumber Yard
Foreman.
LT Campbell is taking the place of ILT
Jim Cummo of Winston-Salem who will
be appointed a position in the 312th
Medical Evacuation Hospital unit In
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Several Medals At
AAU Swim Meet
Walt Boyle Sr., 54, of Bermuda Run,
recently returned from the 1978 AAU
National Long Course Masters’
Swimming Championship held August
30-Sept. 2 at Brown Univ. at Providence,
R.I. where he won several medals as a
participant in the meet.
Swimming in the 50-54 year age group,
Boyle placed 3rd In the 1500-ifteter
freestyle, 6th in both the 200-and 400-
meter freestyles, 8th in the 100-meter
freestyle and 9th in the 50-meter
freestyle.
Boyle was swimming against hun
dreds of participants entered in the
event, many of whom are former
Olympic medal winners.
He regularly swims as a member of
the Winston-Salem YMCA Masters’
Swim Team.
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER
J S ! ^
1Ó 12Á.M ;
W H EN A K
A O W ILL»-
0EITÛNE HEáRINn àtti M w re
FOSTER DRUG COMf^ANY
634-'2l41
Some consider it bad luck to let vour shadoM/ fall on a tree.
T K S -ÎR a C Q S S K O P
■THE ESS E N C E O F E V E R Y P IC T U R E IS IT S F R A M E "333 Salisbury Street
Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Telephone (704) 634-5661
Cu^ro/h(=/¿ (ule Hot’e
L<Jt HA\JS 0"ur-T I t uJíll <3€ ë/^^y to
PiNiT) ^ e c f i u j e U JÊ ‘tfe íaJ 7-«e
itH lie^y-cvNOoD - yeu^ C J. I
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A u jH o L t. oP / h o n t ^ j ü ù v)/JD íT ír ír s
To oÇfc-d. you (WKTeJ Tc cet
TcaeTHtQ. ytitíVt tj't Aid To
corvie PiAy /y,ñr% rtMt) "J". »4
/ ,rV * 3>’.s c o u w r } r l U e p r c c j P c if
oioMTH oP 'SCPre/nâei?. 'Th í * úíjcou»jt <íi.j-o
T C T H c
uie Po(ÍU.'^/<~l3 ro yrii 'Seot-^!
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p. f /o TT> fe
— / c TC' I e -^ o S t~ h
U L (í(\k . Woí-ioWyJ" fb'nen'/M eV ^Í>a a
Loses 128 Pounds
T h a n k s t o H e a t t h y C o n w a y D i e t
When this photo was
taken, Mrs. Delores War
ren had already lost 113
pounds in just II
months. She has since
lost another 15 pounds.
The now slim Mrs. War
ren, who loves to dance
and is attending beauty
school says. "I had never
been able lo stick to a
diet and could never
have done il wilhoul the
Cunway program."
The Conway weight re
duction program con
sists of three main elements:
• A balanced, 1000 calorie diet that includes all food
groups and exceeds ihe established nutritional re
quirements for adults,
• Weekly educalional leminarii ihal deal with the
physical, nutritional and emotional causes ol over
weight.
•The Forever Slim plan for permanently niuintain-
ing slimness.
oooooooooc
N E W M E M B E R S - S A V E $5 .0 0
Bring thU coupon with you to any meeting
lUled and you will save $3.00 off the Initial
Registration Fee of $6.00 and Weekly Seminar
Fee of $3.00. Pay only $4.00 Instead of $9.00.
Offers expires Friday, September 22. 1978.
S>oo«<«n>o«ooooooo«<M>o<K»oo«>«<«>oo«oootte
W e e k ly In s ig h t-M o tiv a tio n S e m in a rs
-M^MW^'-Tuesdayg, 7.00 P.M.
Saligbu^'-Thurtda’ 8. 7:00 P.M.
Happy Traveler Inn. h. Innes Si.
Statesville -Mondays. 7:30 P.M.
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church.
465 Hartness Road.
Rfyibiratiuii $6.00 plus Wtvklv ScMiinars $3.ÜÜmm OIET INSTITIITE-No Fist ReqaitMl
COUNTRY MARKET
Located in the Ellis Center on Highway 601
Midway between Cooleemee and Mocksville
FRIDAY & SATURDAY SPECIALS!!!
Frozen French Fries C o /.n
1 2 - 1 ’/4 LB. Baas, 15 lbs. Per Case Lb.JO .oU
Choice T-Bone Steaks.......................LB. 5 2 .1 9
Choice Sirloin .....................................L B .$ 1 .8 9
Lean Cube Ste ak .......................5 lbs.for $ 7 .9 9
100% Pure Lean C c o o
Ground B e e f .....................5 lbs. fo r> ^ *^ V
Hamburger P a ttie s............10 Ib. box $1 2 .9 0
Country Market Sa u sa ge ..................LB. $ 1 .0 9
W e have beef for your freezer by the quarter, half,
whole, or any cuts you prefer. W e do slice ham s
and process beef for the public.
- P H O N E 6 3 4 - 2 3 1 2 -
O U R N E W H O U R St
8:00a.m.'5t00p.m. Mon.-Wed.>TI
8:00 a.m .>12:00 Noon Sat.
(Closed Tuesday)________
rl.
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS!!!!
Bill E. Broadwa,__Fred 0. EJJis-Owner
WATCH FOR THE OPENING O F A NEW BUSINESS IN THE
FRONT PART O F OUR BUILDING SOON!!!
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - 3B
Davie Meets Trinity Here Friday Night In Conference Game
Davie County defeated West David
. son, 20^, at the Davie High Stadium last
Friday night in a non-conference liigh
school football game. It was the season
opener for both teams.
The War Eagles tall led only 137 yards
in total offense, but the defense held
West Davidson to 104.
The Green Dragons look first blood in
the battle when Coleman David scored
on a 37-yard pass play,
Davie County roared back to score
twice in the first quarter, though, and
the War Elagles, never lost the lead.
Brent Burton scored on a 6-yard run and
Steve Fleming later retumed a punt 80
yards for the second touchdown,
Scott Pralt scored the War Eagles’
final touchdown on a six-yard run in the
final period. Lonnie Wilson then crossed
the foal line on the two-point cinversion.
Davie County was charged with 100
yards in penalties. West Davidson was
penalized 20 yards.
Davie again plays at home this Friday
night at 8 p.m. against North Piedmont
Conference opponent Trinity which lost
14-S in its contest with Ledford last
Friday,
John Gardner
...out for year, knee surgery
F irst D ew ni
Ruihino У ш г й ш м Р«>|1П9 Yêrd»Q9
P u m b iM Lo tt V â fd » P »n «N i«d
S T A T IS T IC SDêVfW.
0 4 •
I U 47
i \ Vf-4 -l 4 -I-I
. IN D IV ID U A L L I A O I R S .
„ O a vldto n : B uiti
Î^ M . C o u n tv : W h ite k tr 4 ^ .
burton P r ê t t n i .
W . D a vM M fi 4 0 « • - 4DtVlvCMntv 12 0 0 I - »W D — D avid 37 p a n from B u lh (ru n
fa lltd )
D C - Burton 4 run (Kick fallad)
D C - Fla m in g N puni ralurn (kick
fallad)
D C — Pratt 4 run (W ilton run )
little League Football
Teachers Night is Sept. 9
The Davie County Little League
Football Association will observe their
first Teacher Appreciation Night,
Saturday, September 9th at 6 p.m, at the
Davie High School Football field.
Teachers will be admitted free on
Saturday night and an award will be
presented to the school with the highest
percentage of teachers in attendance.
This year the William R. Davie
players will be playing with the Oilers
since they did not have enough players
to field a leam of their own.
Since there are only five teams this
year, there will be only two games
played each Saturday night. The first
game will begin at 6 p.m and the second
at 7 p.m. In the first game the Cowboys
will play IheTrojans; and the OUers will
play the Chiefs at 7 p.m.Coach Kennedy briefs Monte Wilson.
Andrew “Punky” Kure,Jr. has spent
his entire life either in ,on,under,or over
salt water, A grandson of the original
founder of Kure Beach, Hans
.Kure,Punky can’t remember when he
^ wasn’t able to swim,
‘ He happened on a haul seine operation
once by accident and earned his first
.money for an outboard motor. He and
his father built his first boat, an eight
footer. His motor was an BLTO, a
powerful 'A horsepower ,about the size of
- a man's fist. With Kure Pier to fish and
dive from and the boat and motor to play
with, his childhood was one huge wet
land happy splash.
] Joining the Marines in World War II,
’Jie was assigned to the wing detachment
on a light cruiser,again staying near salt
'water. After the war, he used the G,I,
'■ bill to learn flying,
? Today ,Kure is a 20 year veteran pilot
with over 30,000 flying hours as a
commercial fish spotter,logging 142S
I: hours last season alone.
-> Fish spotters leave before day each
morning, flying in and around until they
spot fish, leading their ships to the
, location, and directing the netting of the
fish by radio and loudspeaker.Whlle the
c" ships mop up the operation, the spotter
returns lo shore, refuels, takes a short
break, and back lo sea agaln,He spends
10 lo 14 hours in the air each working
> day, claiming “sundown Is the best part
of the day."
'They fish for menhaden, a non-euible
fish rich in oil,an oil that is used in over
Z 200 products. Including cosmetics.
« An experienced scuba diver with
Z hundreds of hours underwater, Kure has
•>' successfully made the sea both work and
X' play. He has a vast knowledge of wrecks
^ along the coast.
» In reply to some questions, he said;
V "Fish are easily spotted from the air,
compared to surface spotting. We find
the school and bring our boats lo ll. We
then direct the purse seine boats in
> circling the school. In 20 years. I’ve
V spotted thousands of schools. The
largest was in the 50's off core banks,
W^en first seen, the school was no larger
than a car top. We knew it was deep and
tightly knit. In 138 fathoms of water,
they were kicking mud off the bottom.
They eventually spread to a school
roughly a mile in diameter. Forty boats
fished sic days in the orie school with no
change In size. Fifteen of these forty
boats caught 26 million in the first. Iwo
days. Multiply It out and you’’ll get some
idea of the vast quantities in the sea,”
“There are just as many fish today as
there ever was,” he continued,
“Cautches are down per person for
reasons we have previously discussed.
Catches are down in certain areas
because of geographical changes, oour
lower bay Is a good example. When I
was a kid, there was 35 feet of water In
the “Crlbbln”’. Today, you have lo lilt
the outboard to get through it. It’s
simple. For the past 30 years, the bay
has been filling up and is no longer a fish
feeding or breeding ground.
“The most beautiful sight?
Eslhetically I’d have to say the morning
sunrise. Nothing could compare with l l .
Otherwise, it's seeing the Iwttom of the
ocean in a hundred feet of water. It
happens occasionally. Seeing the many
wrecks is fantastic and mind boggling.
As you know, there has been a major
shipwreck off the north Carolina coast
every 60 days for over 400 years.
Sometimes the water Is so clear, I can
even spot lobster pots, see torpedo tears
in the side of ships, and spot individual
fish, all in minute detail, at 800 feet. Il's
an unbelieveable, giant , live
Marineland."
Fisherman, sailor, pilot, diver
"Pinky" Kure surprised me with his
answer to my next question; "What are
your most pleasant fishing memories?"
He answered: "The 3-4 years you and
I helled around fishing together, ex
perimenting, diving, playing with no
pressures"
By golly, they are mine too.
Andrew “Punky" Kure............my
friend.
■'The buiy have no lime for
teari," Byron
•Coach Kennedy Has Mixed Emotions Over Win
’ Fowler
big plays on defense’
By Doug Livengood
Joey Kennedy, head varsity football
coach at Davie County High School, had
mixed emotions after his team’s win
over West Davidson last Friday.
On the one hand, the Davie coach
expressed his pleasure with what he
termed “the fact that we did go after
them (West Davidson) In terms of
hitting, with Kenny Moore and Mike
Walton and some of the oilier defensive
players getting in some good sticks.”
Kennedy added that he and the other
Davie Coaches “were pleased with our
punt return game and the fad lhal we
came from behind In the game to
eventually dominate the game and win
it.”
However, Kennedy noted on the other
Brent Burton
...“played well both ways
hand that he was displeased with his
team’s performance Friday night “in so
far as we had two fumbles, an in
terception, a blocked kick and far, far
too many penalties and missed
assignments,”
In addition, he commented that he was
displeased "because it took our offense
too long to get unlracked and we made
too many mistakes on offense which
cost us a couple of scores.”
5ome of the players whom Kennedy
mentioned as having played a good
game against West Duvidson were Steve
Fleming, who caught three passes and
scored a touchdown on a punt return;
Doug Fowler, “who made some big
plays on defense"; Mike Walton, “who
had a good overall game on both offense
Mike Walton
...“good overall game’
and defense” ; and Brent Burton, “who
played well both ways and had one in
terception and scored one touchdown.”
Davie had gone into the West
Davidson game with a host of injuries.
But Kennedy reported that the Davie
players “did not pick up too many in
juries In Ihe game, just a couple of little
minor bruises and bumps,"
Coach Kennedy did say Monday af
ternoon after the game that his all-stale
offensive tackle candidate, Rex Allen,
would miss Friday night’s game with
Trinity because he is still recuperating
from a preseason Injury,
And Kennedy reported that running
back and linebacker John Gardner
would miss the entire season because of
surgery required on his knee Iasi week
Steve Fleming ...“outstanding game’
as the result of a preseason Injury.
Regarding this week’s battle wllh
Trinity, Kennedy said that Trinity “has
also had its share of injury problems this
year," However, “we expect Trinity to
be much healthier than when they lost to
Ledford last week," he added,
“Trinity has two outstanding runners
in Creasey and Rush, Creasey has bMn
injured, but we expect him to play
against us,” said the Davie coach,
“Besides having a good passing and
running game Trinity also has a good,
steady defense led by their defensive
end Ricks and their defensive tackle
Stepp,” concluded Kennedy,
Davie Girls Volleyball
Team Practices For Opener
The Davie High School girl's
volleyball team began practice last
week with 22 girls trying out for the
team's opener September 14 at Trinity.
Only four teams will compete in the
North Piedmont Conference because of
a lack of interest according to Davie
coach Ailene Steelman, The four teams
are Davie, Asheboro, Thomasvllle and
Trinity. Last year Davie finished third
in the conference with a 7-8 record.
The lack of interest hurts the Davie
tcarn because the girls have very little
knowledge of vollyeball when they reach
high school, Steelman said. “We need lo
have more training techniques taught in
the elementary grades,'' Steelman
added.
Deanna Thomas, the NPC Most
Valuable Player in 1977, and Mary
Gardner should play key roles on this
years leam Steelman said. She also said
that the team was hurt by the loss of
Wanda Beal and Pete Wengler.
Of the 22 girls who began practice, five
were returning lellermen and nine were
freshmen.
Vanessa Smith, a student teacher
from Catwaba College will assist
Steelman with coaching duties.
The North Piedmont Conference
schedule for 1978 is a's follows;
Tar Heel Gun Club
To Hold Skeet Shoot
The Tar Heel Gun Club in Advance
will sponsor the thirty-ninth annual N.C,
Stale Closed Skeet Championship
competition Sept. 22, 23, and 24.
Th^ shoot Is a registered tournament
and will be conducted according to the
1978 NSSA rules. Only residents of
North Carolina who are current paid up
members of the NSSA are eligible to
compete. Classifications will include
Lady, Junior, Sub-Junior, Seniors, Sub-
Service, Husband and Wife, Parent and
Child, Novice, Military, Two-Man and
Five-Man Team.
The tournament will begin at 10 a.m.
on Sept. 22.
'The North Carolina Skeet Association
meeting will be held at the Ramada Inn
at 8 p.m. on Sept. 22. Club delegates,
state directors and officers of the NCSA,
and all members of the association are
urged to attend the' open business
session.
For contestants wanting to camp on
the site, trailer space and water and
electrical hookups are available. Motel
reservations are available at Ramada
Inn West in Clemmons.
Advance registration may be made
through the Tar Heel Gun Club, Rt. 2,
Advance, N.C. 27006.
Registrations received prior to Sept.
18 will be confirmed.
Sept. 12, at Thomasville; Asheboro vs
Trinity, Trinity vs Thomasville, and
Thomasville vs Asheboro; Sept, 14, at
Trinily-Davie vs Asheboro, Davie vs
'Trinity, and 'Trinity vs Asheboro; Sept,
19, al Asheboro-Davle vs Thomasville,
Davie vs Asheboro, and Asheboro vs
Thomasville; Sept. 21 at Davie-Trlnity
vs Thomasville, Trinity vs Davie, and
Davie vs Thomasville; Sept. 26 at
Thomasville-Trlnity vs Asheboro,
Thomasvllle vs Trinity, and Asheboro vs
Thomasville; Sept. 28 al Trinlly-
Asheboro vs Davie, 'Frinlly vs Davie,
and Asheboro vs Trinity,
Oct. 3 at Asheboro-'Thomasvllle vs
■ D»vie,' 'Asheboro vs Davie, and
Thomasvllle vs Asheboro; Oct. 5 at
Davie-Thomasville vs Trinity, Davie vs
Trinity; and Thomasville vs Davie; Oct.
10 at Thomasvllle-Davie vsAsheboro,
Davie vs 'Thomasvllle, and Asheboro vs
'Thomasville; Oct, 11 at Asheboro-
Trinity vs Asheboro; Oct. 12 al
Thomasvllle-Davle vs Trinity and
Trinity vs 'Thomasville. All games start
at 4 p.m.
Bowens Dairy
Win Tournament
Bowens Dairy won the recent Bullard
Invitational Softball Tournament held in
Cornatzer. There were eleven boys team
in the tournament, Bowens Dairy went
undefeated.
A strong Foster Drug team finished
second with Gray's Exxon, third.
Leading hitter in the tournament was
Ronnie Led/ord of Foster Drug. He went
13 tor 17 at the plate. He also won the
homerun trophy with eight homeruns.
‘There was a total of 78 homeruns hit
during the five day tournament in
cluding 29 by the Bordens team.
Members of the Bowens team in
cluded: Charles Blackwood, Barry
Curlee, Paul Ijames, Roger Pilkenton,
Coy Sheets, Rick Lagle, Ron Bivens,
Ken Shore, Donnie Smith, Cecil Hut
chison, Melvin Allred and manager,
Robert Wisecarver.
Garland Bowens sponsored the team.
Pledmorit
standings,
schedule
“Looking for Mr. Goodbar” has been
■ making the rounds of both theaters and
boojc stores for the past year. Before the
1978 football season at Wake Forest
University winds to an end in November
new head coach John Mackovic may pen
a new book or movie script entitled
"Looking for Mr. Goodpasser”.
The fortunes of Wake football in the
season ahead hinges on Mackovic fin
ding the right individual to fill the
quarterback assignment of opening
the Deacon attack. This Saturday night
he'll gel a look at several possible main
characters when he makes his coaching
debut against the Virginia Cavaliers al
Groves Stadium.
When introduced to the Deacon faith
ful for the first time last season, it was at
halftime of the Wake-UNC basketball
game at Memorial Coliseum and he
said, “We're going to have an exciting
team to watch next year. We'll probably
pass as much as these two teams shot
the ball in the first half.” 'That sent
everyone scurrying lo the halftime slat
sheet to see that Wake and Carolina had
shot 66 times prior to intermission.
Now, there’s no way Young John will
literally be held to that statement but
there's one thing for sure in the Deacon
camp as the opener looms, the Deacons
will throw the ball in 1978, and they'll
throw the ball often, from anywhere'on
the field, at any lime, in any situation.
Thus, the need for Mr. Goodpasser.
The frontrunner enternlng fpll
workouts was junior Ken Daly who still
holds down th starling slot entering the
Virginia game. But he's been
challenged by no fewer than six other
candidates, four of those are freshmen,
untested to the fire of collegiate football,
but each possessing strong arms. Daly
entered Wake Forest as a pass-oriented
quarterback from Cherry Hill, N.J..suw
little action as a freshman, broke his
ankle and was redshirted his sophomore
season. Last year he saw little action
again with Mike McGlamry holding the
top spot with Bob Hely seeing most of
the back-up duties.
But this past spring Daly emerged
under the guidance of Mackovic to
complete 19 of 28 attempts for 186 yards
in Ihe spring game. Unitl he is beaten at
the spot it is his as long as he gels the job
done. The quarterback spot is critical to
every team. From that position must
can take command and do the critical
things needed lo move an offense. With
the Mackovic System the sport is even
more cilical because of the reliance on
the veer and the emphasis on throwing
the ball.
There should be few problems for the
Deacons at wide receiver wllh a bevy of
speedsters Including Eddie Wright and
Kenny Duckett plus the new ullllzallon
of James McDougald as a receiver out of
thebackfleld. Syd Kllson will hold down
the starling tight end spot for the
Deacons entering the season. With good
size 6-S, 230 pounds, he has good hands
and will be a factor.
What happens if Daly falters? Fresh
men Landon King, David Kass, and
David Webber stand in the wings along
with upperclassmen Jay Venuto and
Jim Cappon, Take Daly and Blend all
the physical characlerlstlcs and
abilities with the remaining quar
terback corps and you could have one of
the greatest quarterbacks in collegiate
football history. Each has strong polnU
and each has weaknesses.
Who is “Mr, Goodpasser"? Right
now he looks like Ken Daly. He must be
able lo throw often and accurately. He
must be able to run the deceptive veer.
He must have the savvy ablllly lo read
defenses. And he must lead the way
John Mackovic believes a club must be
led, by action and word, and wllh the all-
important positive mental approach
Mackovic stresses.
He's there somewhere and Mackovic
and Deacon fans will find out Saturday
night against Virginia's Cavaliers,
Girls Softball Tournam ent
There will be a girls invitational
softball tournament al Bullard Field in
Cornatzer, September 15, 16 and 17th.
Any teams wishing lo enter may call
Alvin WhiUker 998-4675 or Luther Potts,
998-8420.
The wingi of a tmali hum
mingbird can beat »eventy
timei in a lecond.
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4В DAVIE rOUNTY ENTIiRPRISU RliCORD. THURSDAY, Sl-l’TUMBER 7, 1478
Wilkins Hospital Pharmacy Plans October 1st Opening
Wilkins Hospital Pharmacy located at
¿he Intersection of Hospital and Gwyn
Streets, is slated to open for business
October 1.
Owned and operated by Bill Collette of
Mocksville, the 1,000 square feet facility
rill feature a fully stocked, full service
pharmaceutical department with a
traditional counter for walk In service
and a drive-through window.
The added feature of a drive-through
•>window is a new trend In prescription
Service for Davie allowing people the
convvenlence of remaining in their car
while their prescription is being filled.
The store will also feature a snack
bar, patient aids, greeting cards and
magazines.Located beside the Davie Family
^Medical Center, Collette, owner and
pharmacist cited “our main priority will
lie to offer convenience, speedy service,
;$nd discount prices to the majority of
bick people in Davie,”
(1 “We offer a complete pharmaceutical
{service with the utmost ease of con-
venience.”
Collette is also the owner of Wilkins
trruWet^LL
>.Wb
ВШ Collette, manager of Wilkins
Hospital Pharmacy.
Drug Store, Mocksville’s oldest drug
store, located on Court Square,
The new facility which will be open
during office hours of the Davie Family
Medical Center only, will refer all after
hour prescription service to the main
store.
Collette’s father, Roy Collette who
was owner and manager of the store
until May of 1978 when sold to his son,
will manage the main store where
services will not be altered by the
opening of the new facility.
The construction of a drug store on the
Hospital Street site was not a recent
decision made by the Collettes,
The lot was purchased by Roy Collette
in 1953 as the projected site of a drug
store,
“Our main purpose is to seve the
public,” said Bill Collette, “and through
our new location I feel that we will be
able to better serve the people through
the new store’s convenience and fully
equipped facilities..
Featuring a drive-through window for prescription service, Collette
check.s the efficienc.v of the device, (Photos by Robin Carter)
Mrs. Ruby Markland To Head Mental Health Campaign
Bill Collette, owner of Wilkin’s Hospital Pharmacy, looks at his newly constructed facility.
Mrs. Ruby Markland of Advance has
been named Mental Health Bellringer
chairperson for the October 1978
campaign, announced Ludie H. White,
President of the Mental Health
Association in North Carolina,
“The Mental Health Association is the
largest citizens’ voluntary advocacy
organization in the United States
Older North Carolinians Face Problem With Eating
'By Kathy Cunningham
'Of the 414,000 people over age 65 living
in North Carolina, a majority may not
be getting the right nutrients, or
adequate amounts of nutrients,
'’“Many older people just lose interest
in. eating,” says nutritionist Mildred
Kaufman of theUniversity of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. “When their
families leave home or they lose a
si^use, suddenly they find themselves
cooking for one.’
'Kaufman, an associate professor of
nutrition in the UNC-CH School of Public
Health, says that because many older
people have less energy, they don’t want
to be bothered with cooking or they can’t
make it to the store to buy food because
of the difficulty of transportation.
l>luB, she adds, supermarkets rarely
make packages for only one person.
Besides living alone, older persons
also can lose their appetite because of
changing taste buds, dental changes,
emotional problems and diets
prescribed by doctors.
But even if an elderly person is hungry
and diet-conscious, he may still have a
hard time meeting his nutritional needs.
One reason why it’s so difficult is
because no one knows what the needs of
the elderely really are, says John An
derson, professor and acting chairman
ot nutrition at the UNC-CH School of
Public Health,
“ Recommended dietry allowance
charts show that the same nutrients are
needed for persons age 51 and above as
those needed for younger adults,”
Anderson says.
But there is reason to believe, he
adds, that older people may need
different amounts of nutrients than
younger people. For instance, older
people have higher incidences of
osteoporosis (deterioration of bone
mineral), which indicates that they
probably need more calcium, he says,
‘ ‘But we can only make ‘guesstimates’
about the nutritional needs of the elderly
because so very few studies have been
conducged,''.he says. ,
This lack of data only addi to the a'ge-
old problem of feeding the aged.
Meal Sites
Under Title VH of the 1965 Older
American’s Act 31 meal sites are set up
across North Carolina to bring older
people together and to feed them one hot
meal per day The law requires that the
e meal provide one-third of the person’s
daily nutrient requirements.
“Congregate meal sites are very
popular,” Anderson says. “It’s a place
where people can socialize and even get
some health care,” The sites are located
in community buildings, churches,
senior citizens centers and other
facilities.
“North Carolina is so advanced in
implementing the facilities it has across
the state, but it is low-base in terms of
availability of money and counseling,”
he adds. According to the Division of
Aging, the number of elderly people
eligible for the program far exceeds the
available funds.
This summer the School of Public
Health sponsored a continuing education
conference on nutrition and the older
adult that brought together nutritionists
from the Southeast and guest speakers
to discuss these problems and possible
solutions.
Susan Schlffman, associate professor
of medical psychology at Duke
University, told the conference that
along with old age comes a decline in the
senses of taste and smell. This comes
from the beginning of the deterioration
process in the brain. The olfactory
cortex is tbe first part of the brain to
deteriorate, Schiffman said, and this is
where the senses are located.
too strong for the average-age person to
eat, but for an elderly person it make
him feel like he can eat again, Schiffman
said, “And they do prefer those things
they taste and smell better,” she
added.
Unlike the popular myth, food habits
can be changed late in Iife,said Dr,
Neige Todhunter, former dean of home
economics at the University of Alabama
and now visiting professor at Van-• ■ Apossible solution to the prebtaro, sh¿ derbuUt.University said, is using odorants in 'the
paration of foods for the elderly,
^hiffman is already experimenting
with the use of odorants in a Methodist
retirement home in Durham andhas
found an increase in the preference of
food.
After adding ordorants, food may be
Saundra Veach Joins
The U.S. Air Force
Miss Saundra G, Veach, daughter of
Mrs, Gail Long, of Rt, 7, Mocksville, has
enlisted in the U,S, Air Force,
Airman Veach, a 1978 graduate of
Davie County High School, joined under
the Air Force’s Delayed Enlistment
Program (DEP), which allows her to
accumulate time in the Air Force
Reserve until she enters active duty on
January 24, 1979,
Sergeant Gary Hubbard, Air Force
recruiter In Salisbury, N,C., stated that
Airman Veach successfully completed a
series of tests which qualified her for the
Morse Systems Operator field of
training.
It’s not too late at 60, 70 or 80 years of
age to begin good nutritional habits,”
she said.
Many older people, apparently dazed
or confused, can be restored to normal
by diet and care, she said. And regular
meals of nutritional value in pleasant
surroundings, she stressed, an do much
to help these people.
“Unless there is caring and main
tenance of dignity of that person, none of
this is going to work,” she said, “Caring
is essential in everything associated
with food .”
LKal Students On Dean’s List
144 students have been named to the
summer Dean’s List at Davidson County
Community College,
The recognition goes to students who
are enrolled full-time and have a “B” or
better on the courses they attempted.
From the Mocksville area are: J,
Caldwell, Billy Richardson and Shirley
Richardson.
fighting mental illness and promoting
mental health,” said Mrs. White.
Since the organization is non-profit
and non-govermental, its entire support
must come from contributions such as
those to be collected in October,
The original and continuing pruposes
of the Association are to:
Improve attitudes toward mental
illness and the mentally ill through
public education;
Improve services for the mentally ill;
and
Work for the prevention of mental and
emotional illness and the promotion of
mental health.
Through the social action and public
education programs the Association
helps to assure that appropriate funds
are available to support public mental
health services in North Carolina, and
that laws are passed to protect the rights
of thementally ill person to humane and
dignified treatment.
Deadline Is Sept. 10
For Entering Exhibits
In Dixie Classic Fair
The deadline for entering an exhibit in
the Dixie Classic Fair is fast ap
proaching, according to W,B. (BilK
Austin, Jr., Fair manager.'
“September 10, the deadline, will be
here before we know it,” he said, “All
persons planning to enter an exhibit
category should have their completed
entry blank in our hands by that time.”
He further reported that over $60,000
will be awarded to prize winners, plus
ribbons, trophies and plaques.
The Fair catalog giving rules for each
exhibit category and containing an entry
blank is available from the Fair office,
422 27th Street, P.O. Box 7525,Winston-
Salem 27109~or by calling 919-727-2236,
The Fair will open Friday, September 29
and run through Saturday, October 7 at
the Fairgrounds in Winston-Salem.
Pipe Smoking Contest To
Be Featured At Dixie Qassic
Smokers throughout the world are
invited to enter the 1978 Pipe Smoking
Contest at the Dixie ClassicFairon Oc
tober 5. Each contestant must furnish
his or her own pipe.
The winner will be the contestant who
keeps smoking the longest. Bach person
will be supplied with an equal portion of
tobacco and two large matches, U a
contestant's pipe goes out, he will be :
eliminated from the contest.
The Grand Champion smoker will be
awarded a five-piece case of Dr, Grabow
Starfire pipes, plus a pipe rach and
humidor from R, J, Reynolds Tobacco ,
Company. The Reserve champion will '
receive a two-piece case ot pipes and an
engraved pipe lighter.
The Winston-Salem Firemen’s String
Band will entertain throughout the
contest. A cash award ot $25 will be
made to the volunteer tire department
from the winner’s fire district. It the
champion lives in the city ot Winston-
Salem, the Winston-Salem Fireman’s
Retirement Fund will receive the cash,
award. If the winner lives in any other'
municipality, the paid fire department '
in that area will receive the award.
Full details and rules are available in
the Fair's catalog, along with an entry
blank. All entries must be In the Fair,
office by Septmeber 10. Interested
persons should contact the Fair at P.O.
Box 7525, Winston-Salem 27109--or call
919-727-2236, Catalogs are also available Ч |
from the Forsyth County Public Library
and its branches, ,
Jim Wall Enters UNC I
School Of Medicine |
Jim Wall of Mocksville has begun М Г
first year of training at the University of •
North Carolina at C^iapel Hill School ot ¡
Medicine, «
Wall is one of 160 students enrolled in '!
the four year program leading to a *
doctor-of medicine-jCMJ).l-degrfift._„^
Prior to entering the M,D, program,- J
Wall received B,S. degree from^ <
Davidson College, Davidson, N.C. He is *
a graduate of Oavie County High in •
Mocksville, N.C, .
He is the son of Mr, and Mrs, James
W. Wall ot Mocksville and Is married tOv
Kay W. Wall, daughter of Mr, and Mrs,;;;
Fred P, Wooten,
Elizabeth Taylor To
Attend Reception -
For Roger Austin
Former Governor and Mrs. James E,
Holshouser will host a reception for Mrs, ■<
Elizabeth Taylor Warner and Mr, and«
Mrs, Roger L. Austin at the Pinehurst
Country Club, September 23,1978 at 7:30 '
p.m.
TickeU for the affair are $100 per •
couple and the proceeds will go to the ^
Austin for Congress Committee, ac- “
cording to George Little, Southern Pine&^
Insurance Executive and Chairman of
the event. Tickets can be purchased by
sending a check made payable to Austin
for Congress Committee, P.O. Box 493,
Monroe, N ,C. 28110 or George Little, Box. :J.,
629, Southern Pines, North Carolina 28387. 'j
“The tentative plans are for Mrs.' .t
Warner to arrive in Charlotte by private "
jet for a press conference, then fly on to
Southern Pines for another press con- H
ference before the reception," Little •'«
said.
This event is the first in a series of "
fund-raising events to raise money tor
Roger Austin, Candidate for Congress in
North Carolina's Eighth District.
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a member ai The Ohio Casualty Croup
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HOURS: Mon.-Fri.9:00-6:00 \ ' ГSat.9:00-12:00 -M o tK s \ ule,
O A R R E LL EDWARDS-AGENT
I M i O N i : 6 3 4 .2 IÜ5 or 6 :H -3 S 8 y____
. jP u sh yo u rw w in to conversations, faster.
W ith a Tòuch‘C a ll P h o n e .
With a Touch-Call phone, you don't
need to make circles with the dial.
You just m ake tim e
with the little buttons.
Very convenient when
you can't wait to say
something important
to somebody.
And Touch-Call
phones add as much
contemporary elegance
to your home as they add convenience
to your conversation. They come in a
wide range of handsome
decorator colors and
styles. Just check the
back cover of your
telephone directory.
And call your Centei
Service Representative
for details.
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - SB
W e F e e d Y o u r / ^ y
a m ily F o r L e s »
-QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS PRICES GOOD THRU 9/9/78...
HOURS* ''M O N D AY th ru S A TU R D A Y S -9
SU N D A Y 12-6 M U M F O R D D R IV E
SAVE 40^
U.S. CHOICE BONELESS
Chttck Roast
LB.
YOU SAVE 30^
FRESH GROUND
Beef Patties
DELICIOUS HAM THAT SAVES YOU *1
C a n H a m
3 L B .
S W I F T
✓ V
B A C K T O S C H O O L S P E C IA L
2-1 LB. CAROLINA PRIZE BACON
2-1 LB. VALLEVDALE SAUSAGE
2-1 LB. VALLEYDALE THICK SLICED BOLOGNA
2-12 OZ. OSCAR MAYER VARIETY PACK
2-12 OZ. INDIVIDUAL WRAP CHEESE
9 LBS
$ 11 » »
12 0 z . Valleydale
Meat or Beef CFranks •••••••••••••
U .S . Choice BonelessChuck Steak • ••••• Lb.
U .S . Choice BonelessBeef Stew • ••••••• Lb.
U.S. Choice Boneless
• • • Lb.
12 O z . Oscar Mayer Meat,_
Beef, Or Thick Sliced
rCARDEN FRESH PROOUC
3 Lb . Bag MediumYellow Onions <
N .C . Yellow Sweet a ^ ^ -Potatoes. 3Lbs.99
Qarden Fresh Ears «TellewCorn 9/
^ G al. Donald DuckOrange Juice
Idahoan Instant A A C
p o t a t o e s • ^ E l Lb . B a g s ^ r j r
Bologna
12 O z . W inky’sCreme Desserts
SAVE 20*1
RED TOKAY
Crapes
$ 1 »
$ | 3 9
S№ouider Stoak . . . Lb. ^ 1
U .S . Choice Boneless * m m mShoulder Roast.. • • Lb.^ 1
• 1 ”
M A R K E T M A N A G E R S P E C IA L
5 LBS. SIRLOIN 1 A mmm
TIP STEAK
5 LBS. SIRLOIN $ 1 V 9 9
TIP R O AST ■ "
Fresh GroundMinute Steaks • ••••• Lb.
BARGAIN-SAVE 50*
$ | M
4 9 «
h r 1 LB.CAROUNA PRIZE
------Bacon
THIS WEEK SAVE 50* ON SHORTENING!!
S h o r t e n in g
4 2 O Z . C A N
J E W E L
LIMIT 1 W ITH *7.50 FOOD O R DER ’
HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS
GET READY FOR BACK-TO-SCHOOL
'"‘•''Clearasir TREATMENTS
10Z.
REG. TINTED89
1 OZ.
ANTI-
lACTERIA
LOTION
79
3.25 OZ.
SOAP
1 OZ.
,VANISHING FORMULA89
4 0Z.
MEDICATED
CLEANSER79
T H I S W E E K 'S
F E A T U R E D IT E M
DINNER FORK
O NLY
iACH
«NTN lACM S * M PU W N IM DUMNOWUnmOO
9/9/78
CHOOSE EITHER
RHINELAND» OR
VALHALLA»
PATTERN
J
■toSK'r.°:r.....4 /S 9 *
.........67*
. . . . 3 / » l
ANTI-PERSPIRAN
2.5 02. _
A . $ i0 9
(REG., FRESH I
SC EN T &UNSC.) ■
'/t u a i. Uo-t*eepAmonia.......
24 C t. TetleyToaBags....
13 O z . Mllnot
Evaporated
M ilk P re d M t
221^ O t. Totino
Classic Combination * ■ b oPlua •••••••••••••• I.
5 O z . Banquet ^ * mBolling Bags..........3/^1
2 Lb . Banquet * ■ a aFried Chicken..........*1**
2 Lb . Rusettes Steak A A CFries« •»••••••••••••
C O M T R E X -
10 oz. LIQUID
1 G A L WISK - ____ _ ^
L a u n d r y $5 3 ^
‘ t e rc p e itt
^ a r g a r ^SAVE 20'
11 QZ. BANQUET ,
k CHICKEN. TURKEY. SALIS.|
STEAK, MEAT LOAF
j 1 Lb . Fleischm an’s SoftMargarine
16 O z . GarnersOrapo Jelly •
7Vi O z . Martha White CornMuNinMix..
24 C t. X-Tra AbsorbantPampers
30 c t. DaytimePampers........
120z. SealtestCottage Cheese
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • •
• • • •
WE SAVE YOU 30'
49 OZ.
Detergent
SAVE 20'
1 LB. BLUE BONNET
Margarine
BAKERY-DELI*
Friod Chicken..........
(4 W ings, 4 Breasts, 4 Drum sticks, 4 T h ig h s ^
C hoppM l B B « ....
Miacaroni Salad • • Lb. 7 9
French Bread.......2/^ 1
Glazed Donuts • • • Doz. 9 8
Rolls • • • • 6 /8 9
10 c t. BrilloSoap Pads.......
14 O z. Keeblfr Honey Graham s,
Coconut Crisps, &
Cinnamon CrispsCookies
.49*
87*
K o i s ^
2 Lb . Ida Treat Crinkle2 Lb . Ida Treat Crinkle Æ ÂFries* •••••••••*••••
34 O z. Edwards
Chocolate, Coconut,
O r Lem on CondensedPies •. •...
бВ - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1978
RICHARD G. HICKS
Richard Goodman Hicks,
SO, of Advance, Route 2, was
;dead on arrival at the Oavle
■County Hospital at 9:45 p.m.
. Saturday night.
• He was born in Forsyth
' County to the late Henry C.
Hicks.
He was a member of the
Redland Pentecostal Holiness
Church. He was an employee
of Western Electric in Win-
ston-Salem.
Surviving is his mother,
Louise Martin Hicks; also
; surviving are his wife, Janice
Laverne Beauchamp Hicks;
one daughter, Miss Susan
Hicks of the home; on6 son,
Ricky Hicks of Advance,
Route 2; three brothers, John
Henry Hicks of Advance,
Route 1, George Hicks of
Winston-Salem, and Harold
Hicks of Route 8, Lexington;
and one granddaughter.
The funeral was held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Redland
Pentecostal Holiness Church
by the Rev. Billy Taylor, the
Rev. Paul Ledbetter, and the
Rev. C. J. Pardue. Burial was
in the church cemetery.
LEWIS M. LATHAM
Lewis McMahan Latham,
77, of Mocksville, Route S died
Monday at the Davie County
Hospital.
He was a retired insurance
representative.
He was born in Davie
County, son of William
Crawford and Lillie Belle
White Latham.
He was married to the liftte
Etta Brown Latham.
Surviving is one sister, Mrs.
Will Beck of Route 5,
Mocksville. The funeral was
conducted at 2 p.m. Wed
nesday at Eaton’s Funeral
Home Chapel. Burial was in
Crestwood Memorial Park.
THOMAS E. HAUSER
Thomas E. Hauser, Sr., 80,
of Advance, Route 2, died at
the Winston-Salem Con
valescent Center Sunday
evening.
Graveside service was held
at 11 a.m. Wednesday mor
ning at the Macedonia Church
Cemetery in East Bend.
He was born in Yadkin
County to Soloman Neal and
Alice Allen Hauser and was a
retired farmer.
Surviving are his wife,
Annie Horn Hauser; three
sons, T.E. Hauser, Jr., ot
Advance, N.C., Richard A.
Hauser of Concord, N.C., and
Harry E. Hauser of Pfaff
town, N.C.; five daughters,
Lillie A. Scholotfeldt and
Mary L. Ebert, both of
Winston-Salem, Joan H.
Campo of Los Angeles, Calif.,
Juanita J. Kelley of Loveland,
Colorado, and Betty A. Busch
of Laporte, Colorado; three
sisters, Mozel Hauser,
Geneva H. Baily, and Lucy H.
Honeycutt, all of Winston-
Salem; one brother, Jamie
Hauser of YadkinviUe, N.C.;
27 grandchildren and 10 great
grandchildren.
MRS. DELLA SHIDELEH
Mrs. Della Hoots Shidcler,
94, of the Fran Ray Nursing
Home died August 30th at the
Davie County Hospital in
Mocksville.
She was the widow of Bert
E. Shideler and was born in
Yadkin County to Issac and
Sarah Wishon Hoots. She
spent her early life in Yadkin
County and she had lived for
many years in Indiana.
She had made her home for
the past two years in Davie
County and was of Baptist
Faith.
Surviving are one sister,
Mrs. Maude Shore of
Mooreland, Ind.; one brother,
O.R. Hoots of Advance; and a
number of nieces and
nephews.
The body was sent to
rangthstown, Indiana.
Boss Armsworthy
Boss Rensy Armsworthy,
74, of Advance, Route 2, died
Thursday morning at the
Baptist Hospital after serious
illness of eight days.
He was born September 29,
1903, to the late Lewis
Meronie and Emma Cantor
Armsworthy.
He was a member of the
Bethlehem United Methodist
Church and was a dairy
farmer.
He was married to Violet
Irene Armsworthy who
survives, also surviving are
two daughters, Mrs. Maxine
Spillman and Mrs. Sherry
FYanco, both of Route 2,
Advance; two sons, Barry
Armsworthy nf the home and
Ricky Armsworthy of ad
vance, Route 2; two grand
children and one great
grandchild.
The funeral was conducted
al 4:00 p.m. Saturday at
Eaton's Funeral Home
Chapel by the Rev. Alvis
Cheshier and Rev. Leon
Wood. Burial was in the
Bethlehem United Methodist
Church Cememtery.
MRS. MERTIE McBRIDE
Mrs. Mertie Cuthrell Mc
Bride, 88, of Route 5, died at
Davie County Hospital August
29th.
The funeral was held on
Thursday ¿t Eaton's Funeral
Home Chapel conducted by
the Rev. James E. Clore.
Burial was in Mt. Olive United
Methodist Church Cemetery.
Born July 26,1892, in Davie
County, Mrs. McBride was a
daughter of the late Matthew
and Jennie White Cuthrell.
She was a member of Mt.
Olive United Methodist
Church. Her husband,
William Henry McBride, died
about five years ago.
Survivors include a number
of nephews and cousins.
Miss Nora Brackcn
Miss Nora Bracken, 56, of
Route 6, Mocksville. was
dead-on-arrival at the Davie
County Hospital Thursday
morning.
The funeral was conducted
at 2:00 p.m. Saturday at the
Chestnut Grove United
Methodist Church by the Rev.
Larry Staples. Burial was in
the church cemetery.
She was born in Davie
County to the late Daniel Levi
Bracken.
She is survived by her
mother, Minnie Evans
Bracken; one daughter, Miss
Sandie Bracken of the home;
four sisters, Mrs. Ada
Rumpble of Route 6,
Mocksville, Miss Willie
Bracken of Route 6,
Mocksville, Mrs. Honsie Hiler
of Spring Lake, N.C, and Mrs.
Lucille Canter of Greensboro;
two brothers, Red Bracken
and Bill Bracken, both of
Route 6, Mocksville.
Advance
Homecoming
Homecoming win be ob
served at Advance Baptist
Church, Sunday, September
10.
Following the eleven
o'clock morning service with
Ihe Rev. Ralph Carpenter,
there will be lunch on the
grounds.
Special singing is planned
for the afternoon.
Revival At
Yadkin Valley
Revival will begin at
Yadkin Valley Baptist
Church, Sunday, September
17th and continue through
Saturday, September 23.
Services will be held each
evening at 7:30. Guest
speaker will be the Rev. J.C.
Yeatts.
Special singing will be
presented each evening.
The pastor, the Rev. Leon
Wood extends a warm in
vitation to the public.
"A liar must have a good
memory." Quintilian
Davie
Gets New
Driver's License
Examiner
Doris Noble of Route 1, Cleveland, has
been named Davie County Driver’s
License Examiner by the North
Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles.
Assuming duties last week in her
office located in the County Office
Building on South Main Street, she
replaced Wade B. Gentry who has
served as examiner for 25 years. Gentry
was transferred by the department to
the Lexington based office last month.
Ms. Noble commented that "I will not
try to take the place of Gentry, a man
who was well thought of in this area for
his service, but I will try to serve the
people to the best of my ability, showing
fairness to all.”
The office is open Wednesday through
Friday, from 9:00 a.m. until 5:00p.m.
Ms. Noble will work in the Salisbury
office on Mondays and Tuesdays.
Jericho-Hardison News
Mr. and Mrs. Walter
White's daughter, Mrs.
Fairfull was visiting them and
shopping in Winston-Salem
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnie Harpe
have a new addition to their
family- a baby boy born
August 26.
Mr. and Mrs. James Jones
have a new arrival also- a
girl.
Mr. and Mrs. Junior Dyson
spent Sunday with the Hardy
Steelmans.
The hard rain and thun-
derstormswere not asked for
but we did need some
moisture. Sunshine is
promised for a day or two
now.
The Mauldins had company
from Maryland Sunday. They
enjoyed Mr. Mauldin’s
watermelons and cantelopes.
Mr. and Mrs. Armond
Smith and Mr. Smith Senior
visited at the apple research
farm in Hendersonville
Sunday. They also spent
sometime with their
daughter, Lisa and J.D.
Obermiller.
The John Brocks are at
tending a reunion of his army
buddies in Alabama this
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Thurlo
and sons Tim and Chad and
Mrs. Thurlo’s father were
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Mauldin
Sunday.
Kathy and Dean Seaford
and Mrs. Hardy Steelman
were iSaturday shoppers in
Salisbury.
Mr. and Mrs. Steelman’s
son, David Lee was home for
the weekend.
The Couch children sur
prised their mother and
grandmother, Mrs. Katherine
Frye, with a birthday party
Friday evening at Edd
Couches home.
The ole “flu bug” is out
again. Now that school has
started.
Our shutins are about as
usual-enjoying these cool
days.
Some say sneezing on Satur
day m eans you’ll see your
sw eetheart on Sunday.
JERICHO
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Route 7, Jericho Church Road
Phone 492-5291
SERVICES* Mnister - Charles Isenberg
S u n ^ y : ^Ible Study and classes for all ages at 10:00
Morning Worship at 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship at 6:00 p;m;
Wednesday Night: M id-w M kBible Study at 7:30
SERMON TOPICS FOR SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 7i
Bible Study; Galatians Chapter 5
Morning Worship; Jim J ones to SpeakEvening Worship: “Characteristics Of A Good Audience”
THOUGHT FOR THIS WEEK
“The man who trims himself to suit everybody will soon whittle himself away.’’
RMINGTOh , -rshlp: 1st Su.._
3td Sun. 10 a.m. - Sunday School 3rd ,S)in, 11 a.m., 1,2,4, Sundays 10 a.m.
Nb CREEK PRIMITIVE ■
BAPTIST CHURCH
The Episcopal Church
Cooleemee, The Church of the Good Shepherd Momhig Worship 9:30 a.m. Church School 10:40 a.m. Father Willis Rosenthal, Priest in Charge.
D AIL-A-PR A YER
634-3311
DIST CHURCH a.m. 3rd Sunday tool 1st Sun. 11 a.m.
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.
1238 Bingham Street
Mocksville, NC
PHONE 634-2167
EATON
FUNERALHOME
328 N. Main Street
MocksviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2148
MARTIN HARDWARE
& GENERAL
MERCHANDISEFeeds, Dry Goods Groceries, Fertilizer
PNQNE 634-2128
DAVIE TRACTOR &
IMPLEMENTCO.
Ford Farmlng-SaJM and
Service-New Holland Equijî
Wlibury Roid A Compiete
PHONE 634-8969 Repair
"THtRE IS A TIME FOR EVERYTHING . Ecclesiastes 3:1. The Living BSblc. lyndale House
F i v e M I N U T E S
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Austin Hamilton, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worsiiip Service 11 a.m.
MOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH 6 miles East on Hwy 64, Rev. Yates K.
Wilkinson, Pastor, Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Worship Service 11:00 a.m.-Evening
Worship 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
UNION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
HARDISON UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
AJIJ.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DULIN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH-Rev. John F. Edwards
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
NORTH MAIN STREET
CHURCH OF CHRIST Donald Freemin, Minister, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Wotshlp Service 11 a.m.-Evonin« Worship S«tvloe 7 p.m.-Wed. Service 7:30
PICTURES OF SILVER
The old Town Crier is no
more. Oh, there may be one
or two around as relics of
the past - but man gets his
news differently these days.
Sometimes we all feel that
with the news so bad, we
could do without the entire
process. That’s why when
we get some good news, we
hurry out to tell someone
else.
"Hear ye! Hear ye!" the old
Town Crier called out to his
neighbors. Over and over
again God has used the exact
same words throughout the
Bible: The good news of His mercy - His forgiveness
- His eternal love.
"HearVe! Hear Yel"
+++++++++++
A TTEN D CHURCH
THIS WEEK
+++++++++++
OCem m w rtltv A é n r t t iin t
FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH
COBLE LIME &
FERTILIZER SERVICE
Cooleemee, NC - Hwy 158
BuiiniN Phone Z844364
Home Phone 284-2762
LIBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH Troy C. Vaughn, Pastor
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH Hospital St., MocksvUle, NC Rev. Robert L. Taylor. Sunday School 10 a.m.-Mornlng
Worship 11 a.m.-Evenlng Worship 7 a.m.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOUNESS CHURCH
Rev. A. W. Smith, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worshlp 11 a.m.-Ufe-
Unsirs 7:30 p.m.-EvtngeUitlc Service 7:30-Wed. Bible Study 7:30 p.m.
DAVIE SUPPLY CO.
MociuviUe, NC
PHONE 634 2859
MARTIN EQUIPMENT
& SERVICE
508 Depot St. Mockiville, NC PHONE 634-2082
GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Walter L. Warfford, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worshlp Service 11 a.m.-B.T.U
6:30 p.m.-Evening Worslilp 7:30 p.m.
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Prayer Meet' ing Wed. 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD, Cooleentee, NC
CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH Or GOO I. W. dimes. Pastor, Sabbath School
10 a.m.-Worslilp Service 1 p.m.-Prayer Meeting Wed. 8 p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ON MILUNG ROADBarry Mahorney Pastor. Sabbath School 10 a.m.-Morning Worship 11 a.m.
(Ыв by these spqn- srs who believe in ui/ding character.
2nd Sun. 10 a.m. 4th Sun. 11 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Road.Sundiy School
10 a.m.-Worshlp Service 11 a.m.
HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Norman S. Frye, Pastor, Sunday
School 9:45 a.m.-M- — '10:45 8.m.-Evanielistic Service
7:30 p.m.-Wed. Service 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCll
Sunday School 9:4S-Worsh^ 11 a.m. MOCKSVILLE PENTECOS'TAL
HOLINESS CHURCH James C. Hodnett, Minister
Sunday School 10 A.M.Worship Service 11A.M.
Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Lifcunets Sunday 6:00 p.m
Bible Study Wed ' “7:30 p.m.
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. John Kapp, pastor-Sunday School
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Youth Fellowship 6:30 p.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.
MOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH Worship: 2nd Sunday II a.m.. 4th Sun.10 a.m.-Sundav School; 4th Sun. 11 a.m 2,1,3 Sundays 10 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Jericho Road, Office: 492-5291
Home: 492-5257, Charles C. Isenberg 7257
ST. FRANQS CATHOLIS MISSION Sundays at 10 a.m. - Sunday obligation
fuIfiUed also at anticipatory mass on Saturdays at 8 p.m.634-2667 or 246-2463
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Jimmy Hinson, Pastor, Sunday Service
9:50 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Sunday Evening 7 p.m.-Wed. Evening 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNUT GROVE UNITED
METHODISTCHURCH
BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
EATONS BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Moming Worship11 a.m.-Training Union 7 p.m.
DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Rev. T. A. Shoaf, Pastor, On Fork Bixby Rd.
Sunday School 9:45 p.m.-Mornlng Worship 11 a.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Bible
Study Wed. 7;3U p.m.-Evening Worship 7 p.m
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worshlp Service
11 a.m.-Evenlng Worship Service 7 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD Bixby
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY Rev. Charlie Talbert, MocksvUle, Rt. 4
(Epheaus) 284^381
CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKESVILLE PENTECOSTAL
I'OUNESS CHURCH MocksvUle. Route 5, Rev. Albwt Gentle
Sunday School 10 t.m.-Wotshlp Service
II a.m.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Fork, NC, The Church of the Ascension Cbuich School 10 a.m.-Moming Pnyer, Sermon 11 a.m.
TED’S GROCERY BAG &
MIDWAY RESTAURANT
Saliabury Road, Mock»vUle
Glenn S. Howard
-------DBA-------
SOUTHLAND DISTRIBUTORS
Route 1 - Advance
PHONE 998-8186
JEFFCOCO.JNC.
ROUTE I - Advance
"Our staff and employees
encourage you to attendàie church of your choice. "
A T T EN D T H E CHURCH
O F Y O U R CHOICEI
C. A. SEAFORD
LUMBER COMPANY
Jericho Road
Mocksville, NC
PHONE 634-5148
MOCKSVILLE
MOTOR CO.
Custom Ornamental Iron Work '
Steel Fabricatii\g
-Commercial & Residental-
Portable Welding Service
Phone 634-2379
315 Wilkesboro St.
J.P. GREEN
MILLING CO. INC.
Oiuay Flour
We Ciutom Blend
524 Depot Street
Phone 634-2126
FARM & GARDEN
SERVICE. INC.
961 YadkinviUe Road
PHONE 634-2017
or 634-5964
FOSTER DRUG CO.
hown Shopping Center Mockiville, NC
PHONE 634 2141
SHEFFIELD LUMBER
& PALLET COMPANY
Route 6 • Box 153
MockiviUe, NC
PHONE 492-5565
*
Davie District Court
urtvic i,uuiN it tiM tW K ia t KtLuRD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - 7B
The following eases wore disposed of
in the regular August 28, 1978 session of
District Court witli Robert W. Johnson,
Presiding Judge and Franic Bell, Asst.
District Attorney:
James Cleo Howard, operating motor
vehicle while under the influence and
driving while license revoked, sentenced
to two years suspended for three years,
$300 and cost, violate no laws of N.C..
other conditions.
Anthony Stuart Essie, assault on
female, sentenced to two years
suspended for four years, probation for
four years under usual rules and
regulations and special conditions: pay
$400andcost, not enter upon premises of
prosecuting witness, be gainfully em
ployed at full time labor, spend ten
week-ends in jail, violate no laws of state
or federal government, other conditions.
Julia Beauchamp Brown, unsafe
movement, $15 and cost.
Donnie Ray Britton, forcible trespass,
sentenced to six months suspended for
two years, not violate any laws of State
of N.C,, not enter premises of
prosecuting witness, cooperate with
staff of Mental Health Clinic and follow
their recommendations; trespass, tliirty
days.
Roy Odell Taylor, Jr., operating
motor vehicle while under the influence
and by entering intersection while stop
light was emitting red, sentenced to six
months suspended for three years, $150
and cost, surrender operators license,
violate no laws of N.C. and other con
ditions.
Mark H. Urscheler, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Blane Bennett, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, dismissed with leave.
Troy Hairston, by entering int
ersection while stop light was emitting
red, voluntary dismissal; operating
motor vehicle while under the influence,
sentenced to six months suspended for
two years, $100 and cost, surrender
operators license and other conditions.
Barbara A. Miller, speeding 65 mph in
55 mph zone, dismissed with leave.
James Steven Hinson, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, dismissed with
leave.
Richard Terril Spillman, non support,
dismissed.
Melvin Edward Hopkins, assault with
deadly weapon, sentenc^ to twelve
months to be served as follows: thirty
days in Davie County jail, remainder
eleven months suspended for three
years, probation for three years under
usual rules and regulations and
following special conditions; not assault
or enter upon premises of prosecuting
witnesses, be gainfully employed,
violate no laws of state or federal
government, other conditions.
Eddie Lee Booe, speeding 50 mph in 35
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Wade Hampton Gateley, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, dismissed with
leave.
Newman Dudley Stroud, reckless
driving after drinking, sentenced to six
months suspended for two years, $100
_ and cost, surrender operators license for
tliirty days, other conditions.
Brenda Ramseur Adanis, exceeding
safe speed, dismissed with leave.
Carl Wayne Garrison, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Peggy Clement Jones, driving white
license revoked, voluntary dismissal.
Donald Lee Shore, Jr., possession of
marijuana, $100 and cost.
James Julian Durham, violation of
probation, sentence activated.
The following cases were disposed of
in Magistrates Court or paid by
waivering court trial:
Palmer Church, litter, cost.
Jerry Lee Mclvor, excess of 35 mph in
35 mph zone, cost.
James Harold Dyer, excess of 35 mph
in 35 mph zono, cost.
Kilby Ray Jones, excess of 35 mph in
35 mph zone, cost.
Allen Lee Transou, speeding 66 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Freddie Gray Hellard, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Nancy S. Loper, speeding 68 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
William Keith Campbell, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Lynda Catherine Kennedy, speeding
70 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ila Haynes Crumpton, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Gene Monroe Richardson, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Gosselin Gaston, speeding 82 mph in
55 mph zone, $50 and cost.
Frank L. Wliitmer, safe movement
violation, cost.
Julius Wayne Stamey, speeding 66
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Steven Harvey Atkins, speeding 68
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Robert Andrew Stewart, improper
passing, cost.
Ronald E. McCulIoch, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Tony Dean Driver, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Thomas Albert Matlock, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
William W. Black, III, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Alton Brabble, Jr., speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
J. S. Rautenstrauch, speeding 71 mph
in 55 mph zone, $25 and cost.
Timothy Rex Williams, speeding 60
mph in 45 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Doris Church Hoke, excess of 35 mph
in 35 mph zone, cost.
Roger Dale Dalton, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James E. Heaton, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Judy Rojas Lord, speeding 66 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ashok S. bele, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Martin Lloyd House, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Larry Ray Starr, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Gilbert Eason Bacbeller, speeding 68
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Samuel Asberry Allen, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Alan Gray Mock, speeding 67 mph in
55 mph zone and improper passing, $10
and cost.
James Ryan Tallent, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Wallace Wayne West, speeding 69 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Tommy Call, worthless check, make:
check good and pay cost.
James Robert Gillespi, speeding 65
mph in 55 mph zone, $5 and cost.
Diane Booras Gierdano, speeding 70
nph In 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Robin Grant Haley, sp : 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
George Richard Jones, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Thomas Franklin Lashmitt, ex
ceeding safe speed, cost.
William H. Painter, 111, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Gladys Medley Arnold, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 aiid cost.
Ronald Keith Chattin, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Hubert J. Heatherly, speeding 68 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Zeb Blaine Robinson, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Michael Patillo, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Delmer Lee Veach, speeding 49 mph
in 35 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Thomas Joseph Brennan, Jr.,
speeding 68 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and
cost.
Robert S. Hughes, speeding 68 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Thomas C. Meadows, excess of 35 mph
in 35 mph zone, cost.
Alden H. Richardson, speeding 68 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Lynda Lee Rogers, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ricky Joe Roe, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Stephen P. Oliver, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Licenses Are Suspended
Motor vehicle operators licenses
suspended in Davie County for the
period ending August llth were as
follows;
Larry D. Robbins, 22, of Rt. 1 Ad
vance, revoked as of June 2, 1979 until
June 2, 1980.
Ruby S. Smith, 42, of Rt. 1 Advance,
suspended as of August 17, 1978 until
February 17, 1979.
Mark A. Webb, 17, of Rt. 2 Advance,
revoked as of January 30, 1979 until
January 30 , 1980.
Steven E. Jacobs, 27, of 2 Duke St.,
Cooleemee revoked as of August 21,1978
until August 21, 1979.
Alonzo G. Langley, 66, of Rt. 3,
Mocksville, revoked as of August 17,
1978 until August 17, 1979.
Vehicles In Mishap
Two vehicles were involved in a
mishap August 29th about 8:35 a.m. on
the Redland Road.
Involved was a 1976 Opel operated by
Neil Murphy Suddreth, 46, of Rt. 3,
Mocksville and a 1973 Plymouth
operated by Sue Bedding Riddle, 21, of
Rt. 3 Mocksville.
State Highway Patrolman James M.
Newton said his investigation showed
that the Opel was backing into the
roadway from a private drive, stopped
in the middle of road and was struck in
the left side by the Plymouth proceeding
north on theRedland Road; ■ M
Darnage to each vehicle was
estimated at $150. There were no
charges.
Center Fair
is
Saturday
The Center Fair will be Saturday
September 9, at the Center Community
Building and Center Arbor on Highway
64 West of Mocksville.
Exhibits will be received from 5 p.m.
UMlil 9 p.m. on Friday, September 8th
and on Saturday morning until 9 am.
.1 udging of the exhibits will begin at lu
a.m.
As usual, the well known pork bar
becue will be sold all day. There will be
two serving lines at the barbecue shelter
to give quicker service. Sandwiches and
trays will be available all day with the
supper beginning at 4:30 p.m.
Joe Long with his group the “Singing
Disciples” will entertain under the
Arbor at 7:30 p.m.
Exhibits may be picked up at 8:30
p.m. the day of the Fair.
Norman Forrest, Paul Forrest, Mark Williams and John Seaford
chop barbecue for the Center Fair on Saturday.
Funerals
CLARENCE O. WALLER
Clarence Odell Waller, 69,
of Route 1, Woodleaf, died at
the Rowan Memorial Hospital
in Salisbury late Monday
night, September 4, 1978.
Funeral services will be
conducted at 2:00 p.m.
Thursday at Eatons’ Funeral
Home Chapel by the Rev.
Shirley Jones and the Rev.
J.C. Swaim. Burial will follow
hi Rowan Memorial Park
Cemetery.
Mr. Waller was born in
Davie County January 29,
1909, to the late Ollie and
EmmaLezora Beaton Waller,
and was a retired farmer.
Survivors include his wife,
tlie former Ruby Combs; two
sons, Thomas Eugene Waller,
Route 1, Woodleaf, James
Stephen Waller, Route 11,
Salisbury; seven grand
children; four sisters, Mrs.
Ruth Waller, Route 7,
Mocksville, Mrs. Bessue
Connell, Miss Annie Waller
both of Woodleaf and Mrs. Sue
CrotLs, Kannapolis; one
brother, Tom Waller, Route 1,
Woodleaf, Mrs. Bobby
Montgomery, Rockwell; two
stepsons, Norman Eugene
Taylor and Jimmy Dale
Taylor, both of Salisbury;
eleven step grandchildren.
MRS. BERTHA DULL
JONES
Mrs. Bertha Dull Jones, 69,
of Advance, Route 1, died at
the Davie County Hospital
late Monday night. She was
the widow of tne late Glenn
Jones.
Y o u A n d Y o u r P e t
The funeral will be con-
т ., atducted Thursday, u a.
the Wesley Chapel United
Methodist Church by the Rev.
Gene Cloer. Burial will follow
in the church cemetery.
The family requests that all
memorials be made to the
Weiley Chapel United
Methodist Church Cemetery
Fund.
Mrs. Jones was born in
Davie CounW, October 8,1808,
to Ihe late Charlie and Connie
Spach Dull. She was a
member of the Wesley Chapel
United Methodist Church.
Her husband preceeded her
death February ii, 1978.
Survivors include: two
sisters, Mrs. Nellie Boger,
Mocksville and Mrs. Howell
Reavis, YadkinviUe; one
brother, Luther Dull. Route 5.
M|;luviU«. N C.
Most cat owners are very
pleased to see their pets
regularly using the litter box.
But those with male cats
should know that too many
visits can be a sign of a
serious urinary tract ob
struction.
The problem ’oegms when
various factors, not all
identified, cause minerals in
the diet to form sand-like
particles or stones in the cat's
bladder. In female cats, the
particles easily pass through
the uretha (the outlet from the
bladder) and are eliminated
with the urine. In males,
where the bladder outlet is
more narrow, the mineral
deposits are often trapped.
Sometimes enough particles
will collect to completely
block the urethra and stop the
passage of urine.
The signs of discomfort are
fairly typical and an alert o-
wner should suspect the
nature of the problem. At first
the cat will make frequent
trips to the litterbox or outside
in response to bladder
pressure. Urination may still
be possible, but the frequent
trips are a clue that trouble is
brewing.
As the condition progresses,
the cat will become more
uncomfortable and strain to
urinate for several minutes at
a time. Little or no urine will
pass and the owner may in
terpret the problem as con
stipation. Unfortunately
laxatives offer no help, and
only waste valuable treat
ment time. As the pressure
increases, the cat becomes
very restless and may cry.
Complete urinary blockage
is an emergency situation.
Unless the blockage is
removed, the animal will die
of uremic poisoning as toxic
wastes normally excreted in
the urine accumulate in the
bloodstream. At this point,
professional assistance is
desperately needed. Your
veterinarian will anesthetize
the cat, drain the bladder, and
remove the obstruction.
In addition to treating the
condition, your veterinarian
will discuss with you steps to
help prevent future urethral
blockage. They include:
-Increbbing your cat's
water intake so that minerals
are flushed from the bladder
before stones form. If your cat
refuses t» drink extra water,
the addition of U teaspoon of
salt to its food each day will
..icrease water intake
nutiteably Of course a buwl
Ml •ri's'ii wdier should alwi'
be available.
-Revising your cat’s diet.
Foods with a high ash or
magnesium content (those
containing whole fish or
ground bone) seem to
aggravate the condition.
Moist canned food should be
fed ia preference to dry food,
which contains only about 10
percent water or semi-moist
food ( 25 percent water).
Very little is known about
the exact cause of urinary
blockage. High levels of
minerals in the diet, previous
urinary tract infections and a
newly discovered virus seen
in the bladder of afflicted cats
may all contribute too the
problem.
If your pet’s condition does
not respond to dietary or drug
treatment, surgical correc
tion of the urethra may be
required.
Railroads
The U.S. Department of
Transportation’s Federal
Rai.road Administration
predicts that 14.8 milllion
people will ride the upgrade
Northeast Railroad Corridor
when the project is complete
around 1981. This is an in
crease of 53 percent over the
1977 ridership along the
corridor.
4-H News
4-H NEWS
DAVIE ACADEMY
The Davie Academy 4-H
Club met Monday, August 7,
at 1 p.m. at the Davie
Academy Community
Building.
The meeting was called to
order and Stacy Walker had
devotions. We discussed the
Carowinds Trip and 4-H
Reocrd Books.
We went to Crescent
Electric for our program. Mr.
Dale Brown and Mrs. Wyonna
Johnson welcomed us. Mrs.
Johnson took us on a tour of
the building. Everyone en
joyed the afternoon.
Mrs. Sara Walker served
refreshments and the meeting
was adjoumed.
David Winfrey-Reporter
SHADY GROVE
The Shady Grove 4+H Club
met Tuesday, August 29, at
the home of our leaders, Mr.
and Mrs. Tommy Cope. This
was a special meeting to work
on Record Books.
Nancy Hartman and Doug
Lee, 4-H Agents, attended this
meeting to help us work on
our Record Books. After we
completed our Record Books,
we played games.
Refreshments were served
by Karen Cope and the
pieeting was adjourned.
’ Rocky Cope-Reporter
Homecoming At
Blaise Sunday
Homecoming will be ob
served at Blaise Baptist
Church Sunday, September
lOth. All members, former
members and friends are
invited to attend this annual
occasion.
The services of the day will
begin with Bible Study at 9:50
a.m. Ronnie Riddle is the
director of the Sunday school
ministry of the church.
Morning worship service
will begin at 11 a.m. with the
Rev. Jimmy Hinson
delivering the message. His
topic will be, "Some Great
Homecomings.”
Following the morning
service a picnic lunch will be
shared.
A photograph will be taken
of those attending
homecoming at Blaise this
year.
v ^s
The Forward Harvest Forecast is good in most of thisarea, and Ford
has just offered a trading bonus on six tractor models through
SEPTEMBER 30THI
We have a good tractor inventory available to us and we're willing to
make long trades to keep customers coming In....
YES, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS... .AND WILL WORK TO EARN IT!!!
GIVE US A CALL-AND WE’LL CALL ON YOU!!!!
Davie Tractor
& Implement
Highway 601 South Mocksville, N.C.
Exhibits of watermelons, sun flowers, canned
displayed under the arbor at the annual Center Fair hi
I soods etc.
eldlast year.
are
Joins National Guard
PVl William S. Frye is the first High School Junior from Davie County
to join the Mocksville National Guard unit under a new spUt training
option available to High School Junior, Seniors or College Students as
well as other fields for the first time this school year. Sandy will attend
Basic Training next summer and return home and attend National
Guard Drills with pay. After he completes his Senior year he wUI go for
Ivance Individual ’Training to complete his training requirements.
' was sworn in by 2LT Jim CampbeU the new Delachment Com-
his Advance Indivldual ’^^n in g to complete his traL
idy was ■ " , ■ ■■ ~ . ■■ ■
mander in ceremonies held at the Armorv on August 31st, last ’Thur-
Sandy
sday. Attendinj
live on Route '
; were his parents Mr. and. Mrs. Sanford W. Frye who
Mocksville.
P it ts b u r g h h o u s e p a in t
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1238 BINGHAM STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NC
8В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE P^CORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978
Clouds Cause Light Turnout At
Doc Watson Concert At Tanglewood
About 500 people waited through an
afternoon of rain clouds and two warm
up bands for Arthel "Doc" Watson to
take the stage at Tanglewood Park last
Saturday.
WaUon, generally recognized to be the
best flatpicker In the U.S.A. and
probably the world, was preceded by
"Southwlrtd" a folk band part of whose
members are players in the Piedmont
Repretory Company, for whose benefit
the concert was given. Also playing
before Doc were the Younger Brothers,
a local band which appears at area
nightclubs.
When Doc did begin to play at about
b;30 p.m. the crowd was ready and
literally moved to within Inches of the
stage, so that they could hear a good
opportunitv to hear songs like "Bla-**
Mountain
rtunity to hear songs iike "Black
____ntain Rag”, "Southbound R«Uroad
Train" and of course "Tennesee Stud’ .
He finished with the classic "Will T^e
arcle Be Unbroken" after which the
crowd came to It's feet with a long
standing ovation.
Although the turnout to the concert
was low, a spokesman for the theatre
group said that it would continue it’s
fund raising efforU
Merle Watson Demonstrates his fine fìngerpicking style
A section of the crowd that came to see Doc and Merle Watson.
Doc Watson, althou^ blind since birth has been playing the
guitar since he was Aout eight years old,and knows over 800
songs by heart.
Around And About
'^ 1 ^ ^
CLEMMONS VISITOR
Mrs. Lacy Beshears of Clemmons, N.C. visited Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Stroud,
Jr. at their home on Maple Avenue, Friday aftemoon.
RECirPERATING AT HOME
Mrs. Roy CaH is recuperating at her home on the YadkinvUle Road, after
surgery last week at the Baptist Hospital In Winston-Salem. WhUe she was in
the hospital, a grandson, Chris Call of Gastonia, N.C. visited with his grand
father, R ^Call.
Doc, Merle, and their bass player; unaccompanied by any other instruments,
flatpick “Kack Mountain Rag” . (Photos By Garry Foster)
"Cotton To The Gin"
I remember one morning at the break
fast table. Dad announced what I’d
waited for all faU, We’d get everything
ready, and tomorrow we’d carry a load
of cotton off.
He’d been out to the store the night
before, and was talking with Frank
Brown, Frank said, “his cotton had
brough a pretty fair price, he sold his,
for two cents a pound.”
All the sacks had to be got from the
smoke house, where it had been stored,
to keep It from getting wet, then It was
weighed, an each bag was packed as
tight as you could get.
Among those sacks was what I’d
picked, I could tell which was mine, I’d
tied it with a piece of red cloth, it
weighed thirty pounds And I’d get aU
the money trom it, I’d be pretty rich I
thought. ■
Dad had to put some new shoes on old
Dan, and grease the wagon wheels, it
was nearly ten miles to the nearest gin,
It was an all day trip, so we tried to take
along what we’d need.
The next morning at daybreak, we
were all loaded and ready to move.
Mama sat up front with Dad on the
wagon seat, I rode on the back with the
cotton, and could sit any place I'd
choose.
‘We'd just got up the road around the
curve, when I looked back, and following
us was old Tag, why he'd het kUled for
sure if he got out on the big road. I yeUed
for him to "go back" but he wouldn't
pay no mind. I hollared for Dad to
"whoa".
I knowed If anything happened to that
old hound, my brother would be plumb
sick. So, I climbed down, and he took off
like a streak of greased lightning, when I
wacked him across the nose with a stick.
We made the trip without any trouble,
the horses hooves made a clacking
sound as they struck against tbe cement
road.
But I guess I didn't notice much of
anything, I was so filled with an
ticipation, of buying something from the
store.
Me ttiul Mama climbed down from the
wagon, when we got to town Dad said,
"he’d take the cotton on to the gin, while
me and Mama shopped around."
I'll never forget the good smells that
met me, when we walked in ic Л11.
Hendrick’s doors, Fresh ground cotfee,
apples, roranges and new overalls, I I '■
believe I could have spent the whole day
in that store.
There were boxes of shoes stacked aU
the way tto the ceUIng, hats, coats,
canned goods, so many things you
couldn't even see, a barrel nearly full of
crackers and a big roU of cheese, but the
counter with the bolta of cloth, was what
captured me.
Then I saw it, a piece of pale blue
organdy, was just what I had in mind.
Made with a gathered skirt with a ruffle,
and lace around the yoke. Mama said,
“now a piece of this calicoa print would
be better, that light color wUl show dirt,
and have to be washed every time you
wear It, you know."
She finally gave in, we got some
thread to go with it and If I could just get
a new pair of shoes, my outfit would be
complete, but Mama said,“the shoes
would have to wait," she wanted some
gingham for an apron, some new side
combs and ready sliced bread to eat."
Dad came in the store and he had a
pleased look on his face, he handed me
the seventy five cenU my cotton had
brought. Hesaidheguessedh'd just buy
him a new pair of shoes cause his was
wore plumb out, then I found out why he
looked so happy, the cotton brough M
cent a pound more than he'd thought.
We started to pay tor what we'd
bought, and the candy jars cought my
eye. Five sticks of pepperment, 2
coconut suckers, and some lemon drops
for granny. I tied my change in the
corner of my handkerchief, and we were
ready to ride.
As we started out the door, Mr.
Hendrix made me feel like a queen. He
said “Little lady, you're going to be a
heart breaker, by the time you’re six
teen."We climbed in the wagon and headed
for home. ’Then I asked Mama, “reckon
we could take my new dress up to Aunt
Jo’s tomorrow, to see if she’U make It?”
she said I don’t know, we’ll see.
I licked a few times on a sucker, then
carefuUy stuck it back in the bag. I
curled up on a pile of empty cotton
sacks, and feeling quite content, quickly
fell asleep.
Mrs. Berma Foster
Submitted May 1978
Doyle Spry and children, Louise ana
Toby, of Raleigh were the weekend
guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grady Spry, Sr. over the weekend.
Weekend guests at Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Benson of Franklin Community
included his sister and brother-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Leon McGinn of Daytona
Beach, Florida and their daughter and
son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Garves of
Springfield, Virginia. Also visiting with
the Bensons were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
■..enlz and children of Florida.
Walter Shoaf was admitted to Rowan
Hospi,ai Munday evening where he
continues to undergo treatment and
observation.
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Barber returned
iwme last Thursday after spending a
week at "Geneva On The Lake”, Ohio
with their granddaughter an4 her
husband. Mr. and Mrs. Carles‘Webb
and their daughter-in-law, Mrs. Cathy
Barber. Mr. andMrs. James Barber and
daughter. Deena, of Colt^bia, S.C.
visited with his parents ovetthe holiday
weekend. They returned home Monday
afternoon.
The women of the Cooleemee Church
of the Good Shepherd wiU meet Wed
nesday, September 13, in the Parish
House at 7:30 p.m.
The Cooleemee Senior Citizens Club
will hold their regular meeting Monday.
September 11, at 10 a.m. in the
fellowship hall of the First Baptist
Church. All members are asked to
attend to elect new officers for the
coming year.
Niberia
In the iRth century a Russian scientist
declared. ".Sii i‘rii> will make Russia
strong " His prediction appears to be
coming true as the Soviet Union exploits
that vast region’s mineral riches. A
pipeline is being laid 4,000 miles through
Siberia to carry oil from the Tyumen
fields to a refinery near Nakhodka on
the coast, says the National Geographic
Society's book "Journey Across Russia:
The Soviet Union Today”
Beautiful Hom es
PRICELESS PRIVACY
A 2 or 3 bedroom home located on 4 small ioininK
lots in a quiet zone. It has 1456 square feet of heated
area that includes a beautiful sun porch. Also has
enclosed back yard for pets or children. There Is
rden space with 2 utility buildhigs.
‘ private area. Please call
R EA L E S TA TE today.
OW NER W ANTS TO TA LK ’TUR KEY
Bring your offers on this newly remodeled 3
bedroom, brick home that also features a separate
workshop-garage and new carpet and vinyl
■ ml. Alla.......................
plenty of garden space w
Absolutely a quiet and nrl
CEN TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD
Г situated on a large'corner lot soufh
of tomi. Please call C EN TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD
throughout.
R EA L E S TA TE today.
•‘PERSIMMON PUDDIN“
Can be made from your own persimmon tree if
you buy this lovely 3 bedroom rancher. We want
even discuss the hi№e recreation room, or the 1^
acre wooded lot. But we will tell you about the
utility building outside and the two spacious baths.
Priced hi the low 40’s. Please call CENUR Y 21
BOXWOOD R E A L E S TA TE now.
“ BO-PEEP, B EATLES, AND BACH”
Can all be a part of this home, because there is
room for everyone from little baby to teenagers to
mom and pop. This old charmer has been com
pletely remodeled both inside and out, and features
a spacious lot surrounded by huge oak trees, S
bedrooms, 2 ^ baths, plenty of closet space, and 4
fireplaces. Just minutes from town. Please contact
C E N TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD R EA L E S TA TE today.
GO AHEAD AND FA LL IN LOVE
’THIS TIM E YOU CAN A FFO R D IT
The owners have loved this home but they are
moving. You win know the care it has has as soon
as you open the door. Just 8 years old. 3 bedrooms,
dining room, kitchen with built-ins, basement, and
carpet with paved drive. Located hi Sheffield Park,
ust minutes from town. For more informationJust
call us today.
I RAN O U T OF FINGERS
Counting all the extras In this new energy efficient
brick rancher. This home features neatppump,
thermo payne windows, insulated doors, large
concrete patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room,
dinlng-kltchen combination, many cTostes, car
port, with paved driveway. AU this and much more
located In Hickory Tree. Just minutes from town.
Please.call us today, C EN TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD
R EA L ES TA TE .
IF TH E PR ICE IS R IG H T
You can own this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom
brick home with IMi baths, living room, dbihig
room, large den, utility room, and a big fireplace
for these upcoming cold whiter nights. Fully hi-
sulated with paved drive. Excellent condition.
Please call us today for more Information.
SOM ETHING FOR H IE W HOLE FAM ILY
There Is something for everyone In the family In
'»eautifully decorated 3 bedroom home; a
hop for dad, and a big 1^ acre yard for the
This home also offers a kitchen that is fully
this
worksh
kids.
equipped, attic. Mi basement for storage, and a big
fireplace for those upcoming whiter nlgbts. Near
Cooleemee. Priced ui the low SO's. Please contact
C E N TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD R EAL ESTA TE.
SAVE N EA R LY $1000
In closing cost, by assuming the loan on this ex
ceptionally nice 3 bedroom home. Spacious living
room, dinlng-kltchen combination, IMi baths,'
workshop, and paved drive. Loated Just minutes
from town. For more information please call
C E N U TR Y 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTA TE.
M ILLIO NM IVIEW
HICKORY H IL L ---S te p hito this elegant 4
bedroom home and see for yourself. Not only does
It have all the modem conveniences, but it also has
large patio deck overlooking the beautiful 90 acre
lake, and convenient for all types of sports-golf,
swimming, tennis, volleyball, and fishlnK. For
more information call CEN U TR Y 21 BOXWOOD
R EA L ES TA TE .
W H ITN EY ROAD
3 bedroom. H i bath brick home. Full basement,
sun deck. No down payment if all qualifications are
met. Call Henry Shore today to see this well kept
home.
R EA L BARGAIN
This 1966 Model 12 x 60 mobile home can be yours.
Has a double carport built onto the back. Plus air-
condition window unit. Must be moved soon. For
more biformation call CEN TU R Y 21 BOXWOOD
R EA L E S TA TE today.
CROSS S TR E ET, CO OLEEM EE
This house has been remodeled and will just suit
you. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent condition. You
must see it to believe it. Please call today for an
appointment.
M OBILE HOME LOVER
1964 Magnolia trailer with approximately 1 a<
of land Is a steal for the young at heart. Located
Route 4 Mocksvllle and near sh^^lng center
acre
on
&
elementary school. See It and you »ill buy It.
DREAM HOUSE FOR NEW LYW EDS
Dream of yourself in this lovely 3 bedroom home,
with a free-standing fireplace In the den 2 full
baths, floors carpeted and tiled. Kitchen with stove
and refrigerator and alr-condltlon. Priced to sell.
For an appointment and more Information please
call C E I ^ R Y 21 BOXWOOD R EAL ESTA TE.
NO TRICKS, JU S T TR EATS
For the treat of your life, call CEN TU R Y 21
BOXWOOD R EAL ES TA TE today for an ap
pointment to see Ihis lovely 2 or 3 bedroom home,
1 ^ baths, dining room, kitchen, and breakfast room
combination, double carport and paved drive. Also
has central air to beat those hot summer days. Call
today-the price Is right.
ANGELL ROAD
BrickThis Is what you have been looking for.
rancher, with 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, fireplace, full
basement, breezeway, and double garage. All this
on 3‘iacres that has 418 ft. Road frontage. Johis
creek at back. Call Henry Shore today to see this
property.
I,AND FOR SALE
DAVIE COUNTY
Calahan Ml. (>i acres, $1100.00 per acre. Payment
extended over 3-yr. period. Some timber.
O F F HW Y 64 West
Nice secluded acre^e on Hunting Creek. 10
acres priced to sell. (All tod^
H O LID A Y ACR ES O F F 601 SOUTH
8.8 acres of building land, aheady sub-divided
Into lots. Priced to sell. Call today.
O n l U I K
r ~ n m 21
100% VA Financing Available
Other Listings Available
We Buy Equities
We Build Too!
®
B O X W O O D R E A L E S T A T E
6 3 4 - S 9 9 7
333 Salisbury Street
MocksviUe, NC 27026
DANNY CORRELL MANAGING BROKER ÜENN1S GRUBB CONTRACTOR
Associate Broker
Charles Evans
Office 284-2537
Salesman
Henry Shore
Home 634-5846
Office Manager
Sandra Shelton
Salesman
Dick Nail
Home 634-5462
Associate Broker
Shelia Oliver
492-5512
DAVIb COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - 9B
Emergency Medical Service Is Discussed For Rotarians
The Emergency Medical Service of
Davie County was explained to mem
bers of the Mocksville Rotary Club on
Tuesday.
Johnny Frye, assistant director of
Davie Medical Services, Introduced
other members of the staff and ex
plained the way the unit was organized
to serve the emergency medical needs of
the county. Fiye has been a member of
the Emergency Medical System for 7
years.
Other EM T’s present for the Rotary
luncheon Included: Dale Blackwelder,
Jim McCullough, Wayne Smith and
Robbery At Farmington
A breaking and entering and larceny
was reported at the Farmington Exxon
station last Thursday night or early
Friday morning. The robbery was
reported to the sheriff's department at
9:20 a.m., Friday.
Entrance was made by taking out
window in the wash pit.
Reported missing was $591.17 in cash
and checks, and Free on valued at $15.
Lt. Robert Purvis and Deputy Mel
Reynolds are investigating.
Fruit Exhibits
Sought For Fair
I Fruit growers throughout Northwest
North Carolina and Southern Virginia
are invited to enter their finest apples,
pears, grapes, persimmons, nuts, and
dried fruits in the Dixie Classic Fair
competitions this fall. Banners and cash
premiums will be awarded the winners
in the many exhibit categories.
Of special interest will be Nfcl Kolbe’s
Decorated Apple Contest, named for the
horticultural specialist at North
Carolina State University. Kolbe is a
long-time apple promoterand advisor to
many apple growers.
In addition, the Winston-Salem Retail
Merchants Association is sponsoring
special awards in several categories,
Including a sweepstakes award to the
county with the most points In the
judging and one to the grower on the
same basis.
Bobby West.
"Davie County is the only countyln the
state with 100 percent emergency
medical technicians”, Wayne Smith told
the Rotarians. He pointed out that to
become an emergency medical
technician required hours of special
training and the passing of state test.
"We are governed by regulations
adopted by the state’’, said Smith.
Frye showed slides made locally of
equulpment in use In Davie.
"In an emrgency situation call 634-
5913. This will ring both at the hospital
and at the sheriff’s office. We have
qualified personal on duty 24 hours a
day", said Frye.
Johnny Robert had charge of the
program and introduced Mr. Frye
President Charles Blalock presided.
Robbery Of Residence
Reported At Pino
A coin collection, guns and a 19-inch
protable television set, total value of
approximately $1609, was reported
stolen from the Calvin Trivette
residence, Pino Road, last week.
The breaking and entering and lar
ceny allegedly took place between 11
p.m. August 30th and 8 a.m., August
31st.
Capt. Richard Sharpe and Deputy Mel
Reynolds are investigating.
Vehicles Collide
fwo vehicles were Involved in a
mishap August 29, about 5:45 p.m. on
Wilkesboro St. in Mocksville.
Involved was a 1963 Ford operated by
James Roy Harris, 60, of Rt. 5,
Mocksville and a 1974 Mazada operated
by Russell Lynn Bettint, 26, of 519
Salisbury St., Mocksville.
Mocksville Policeman A.D. Adams
said his Investigation showed that
Bettint was pulling out of a service
station and did not see the Harris vehicle
which was hit in the side.
Damage to the Harris vehicle was
estimated at $75 and $100 to the Bettint
vehicle.
Letter
To Editor
Dear Editor:
We wish to express our deep ap
preciation to all the neighbors and
friends of Margaret Malinda Daywalt,
Route 1, Mocksville, N.C. for the many
beautiful cards, gifts and visits during
her prolonged Illness. Whether these
kind deeds were done through pity or
H o w a r d R e a l t y & «
I n s u r a n c e
N E W L IS T IN G ,
•r o w a n COUNTV-Don’t miss this one! Three
bedrooms, 2 full baths. Extra large family room.
they will surely be blessed by Him. I was
totally un-aware of such a wonderful
community still being in existence.
And, as acting power of attorney for
Margaret, we too, were treated with
kind consideration from the personnel in
each business which we entered.
Also, the efficient manner and
hospitality of Eaton’s Funeral Home
was far, beyond our expectation.
With kind regards to all,
Most respectfully,
Golda Dayvault
627 Margaret Drive
Statesville, N.C.
_____________ __________a large family ro
Very nice kitchen with range included. Central air.
..................... ea on 4V&
apple, pi
vines. Five
mot
This lovely home Is situatea on 4Vii acres enhanced^le, piby complete orchard of
>ear trees. Also grape
ium, peach and
miles from
through love, (the two are mighty akin) ; I ®pUTH MAIN STREET-3 Be^oom ^living, dining-
. M «... M b.d HU i,..a » u, » d T K s ;
good condition. Excellent loan available.
Car And Truck Collide
Two vehicles collided last Thursday j • IvUh^ man*'***^* ****about 1:15 p.m. in MocksvUle at the'
intersection of South Main and Salisbury ■
Streets.
Involved was a 1969 Ford operated by
Harvey Harold Zimmerman Jr., 17, of
Rt. 2 Advance and a 1976 AM General
Truck, operated by Harold Owen Bor
der, 44, of Rt. 6 Mocksville.
Mocksvilee Policeman A.D.Adams
said his Investigation showed that
Border did not see the Zimmerman
vehicle and struck it in the right rear
quarter. Damage to the car was
estimated at $1000 and $35 to the truck.
"W alk through life and talk
to anybody." Persian proverb
t SPLIT LEVEL-Over 1500 sq. feet heated area. Also
air conditioned. 3 bedrooms, living room, large
kitchenand dining area, IMi baths, utility. Lower
level finished nicely with fireplace. All electric.
» Large lot. Priced to sell quickly.
^ bedrooms, large
today®" S O V .U Financing. Call '
» NORTH MAIN S TR E E T- 3 bedroom frame home-
Perfect for remodeling. Very nice family neigh
borhood. Approximately iMi acres included in lot.
Convenient to shopping. Priced to sell.
IOU% FINANCING-3 bedroom brick veneer Щ
baths. Large kitchen-dining. Livingroom. Citv
water & sewer. ALL electric. No money down, if
, you qualify.
HOLIDAY ACRES-Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher
with central air. All electric. Over 1400 sq. feet of
heated area plus garage and patio. Very guiet
Ice lot. Home in extra good condition
conveni“" " "
T O T STREET-5 year old brick rancher In exceUent
a i ) d
By AGGERS WHITENER
After being subjected to
two consecutive columns on
the subject of outhouses, Folk-
Ways readers may have
determined that this
columnist may have become a
Rxation victim.
If so, there are apparently
others in the same condition if
one' may judge by the
outhousiana-or should it be
priya?-sent our way. , , . j
ifostcards, sketches,
poems, ballads and ad
vertisements have appeared,
most of them extolling the
joys and comforts of the
outdoor privy.
One Interesting item came
by way of Boone’s Grant
Hodges: a full-color display
ad featuring an elaborate one-
holer equipped with heater,
rug, bookcase, TV, and radio
and selling for the
magnlficant sum of $lB95-or
given free with the purchase
of $10,000 worth of the com
pany’s specialized products.
Bud Mason, of Bristol,
Virginia, who recently
provided some interesting
place name material for a
column, sent us a copy of
James Whitcomb Riley’s
“Passing of the Back-House,” aisng with a 1969 Newsweek
article about a pioneer
sanitation engineer whose
name was immortalized as a
result of his creation:
Crapper’s Valveless Water-
Waste Preventer.
Thomas Crapper, according
to the article, lived in Vic
torian times and came to the
rescue of the British Board of
Trade by inventing the now
familiar float-action device
which made for a vast saving
of water which had previously
been lost through an an
tiquated plug-pull system.
Actually some of the early
American Indoor Johns
represented little im
provement over the outdoor
style, especially in modest
housing areas.
I recall that when my
family moved from rural
McDowell County to the
I textile village of Spindale
years ago, the bathroom was
little more than an outhouse
I relocated.
True there was the addition Iof. plumbing (froze in the
I winter) , but the interior was
I as cramped and bleak as its I country counterpart.
In addition, it was located at
I one end of the back porch so
I that the user had to face the
Iweatherof theday or season
las he dashed along the 12 to 15
Ifeet of open area to reach Ihe
¡sanctuary.
Once inside he shivered in
Ithe winter’s chill or sweated
|in summer’s heat.
But the dark was the worst
all. Having to leave the
lieerful confines of hte kit-
I at night and make one’s
vay across the unlighted
ch was a frightening ex-
rience for a child.
And once he reached the
athroom safely, there was
Ltill Ihe fumbling search for
Ihe hanging cord which
irought harsh but welcome
ht from the bare bulb
verhead.
But for some even iht
irimitive indoor John wab a
jvonder not lo be believed.
Williams tells the
true story of an unmarried
mountain man who had lived
with relatives until the in
creased size of their family
forced him to seek lodging
with a brother who lived in a
small town in the foothills.
The brother’ according to
Dr. Williams’ bade him
welcome’ showed him his
room’ and indicated the
locatipo of the kitchen and the'
bathroom.
The mountain man stared
at his brother in open-
mouthed astonishment. "Do
you mean to tell me that you
eat and go to the privey in the
same building!”
Readers are invited to send
folk materials to FOLK
WAYS and FOLK-SPEECH,
Box 376, Appalachian State
Universaty, Boone, NC 28608.
Cornatzer
News i i
is undergoing
Davie County
Bill Jones
treatment in
Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Laird,
Eva, Ray, and Harvey Potts
attended the Carter reunion at
Fork Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. James Shoaf
of Marion, S.C. spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Day and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Sparks,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McDaniel
and Rodney, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Potts camped a't Lake Nor
man last weekend.
Leona and Betty Jean
Bowens visited Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Allen in Mocksville
Monday.
Saturday night visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jones were
Mr. and Mrs. Homer PotU
and Sharon and Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Jones.
Sunday luncheon guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones were
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nichols
of Rockhill, S.C. and Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Jacobs and Brian
of Cooleemee.
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Potts
visited Mrs. Nan Baity at
Guardian Care Rest Home in
Clemmons Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Frank
visited Mrs. Annie Frank in
Tyro, N.C. Sunday afternoon.
Ryman Shoaf of Marion,
S.C. spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts.
VETERANS BENEFIT
FROM THE
ARMY RESERVE.
The Arm y Reserve can use
your military experience 16
hours a month. You’ll earn an
extra Income with plenty of
fringe benefits. Call your local
Reserve unit to see if you qual
ify. It’s listed in Ihe white pages
of the phone book under "U.S.
Government."
O n l U l ^
W e ’r e H e r e F o r Y o u .I iU I) ()lli( (' is |П(1('|Х'1И1( t)(l\ ()\N IK (i <111(1 <1
CLEMIVIONS VILLAGE
Phone 766-4777
NEW LISTINGS
REDLAND ROAD...brlck rancher with 3 BR’s,
large living room with fireplace. 2 utUity rooms.
Mid $30’s
FIRST HOME BUYERS! Be sure you see this
charming 2 bedroom Cottage home. Utility room.
Good location. Upper teens
REDUCED
BEAUTIFUL GRASS LAND! 6.18 acres. Large
barn. Brick home with country kitchen, central air.
Storm windows. Country atmosphere in Davie
County.
CALL ABOUT THESE SUPER LIS-HNGS
BRICK RANCHER...has playroom In basement
with bar. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, extra large patio.
Low $30’s.
VOURS FOREVER! 3 bedroom rancher on wooded
lot. Fireplace In den. Full basement. BARGAIN.
LOW $40’s.
A LITTLE PAINT & POLISH IS ALL this house
needs...Cottage home with 9 rooms. Good In
vestment property. ONLV $20,000.00
SPREAD OUT! Large Colonial rancher, 4
bedrooms, fireplace in den. FuU basement. Under
$60,000.00. Adjoining acreage avaUable.
CORNER LOT perfect for mobile home. Septic tank
& water. Call for details.
BUYING OR SELLING?? CALL OUR OFFICE
•TODAY AND TALK WITH ONE OF OUR
QUALIFIED REPRESENTATIVES. WE’RE THE
NEIGHBORHOOD PROFESSIONAL. 766-4777 or
766-9114.
Jane Boyer
766-6944
Rosalie Hart
723-6284
Carolyn Johnson
766-4777
Joyce Wurgley
768-2596
Office
766-9114
J.K. MUler
766-6063
Samie Parks
919-961-6694
John Bailey
766-8324
Jo Mackintosh
Linda Pegram
768-1899
V'-location. Nice neighborhood. Extra clean and neat 3
I Tull baths
:hen and
porl
lovely features. Must see this
________________ig
bedroom home. 2 Tull baths, large livin;
Very roomy kitchen and
wasner. Large utility. Car;
roomy kitchen and famny room with dish-
............ irt. All electric. Many
W H ITN £Y r o a d - Fireplace and sundeck only two
of many features in this 3 bedroom brick rancher
with full basement. Large kitchen-dining. Living
room. IV^ baths. Neat, clean, and well-decorated.
Priced within your budget.
R IDG EM ONT - Three bedroom all-electric home
nicely decorated. Carpeted. Includes 1^ baths,
living room, kitchen-dining area. Very convenient
location for family living. Priced to sell. Call ^today.
'CRAF’nVOOD - No down payment if you qualify.
Three bedrooms, living room capreied, kitchen,
dining comgination. Full basement. All electric.
Nice lot. Priced to sell.
CRAFTW OOD - All electric 3 bedroom brick home.
Carpeted. Large kitchen with range. Full
basement with drive in door, extra nice quiet lot on.
dead end street. No down payment to qulaified
purchaser.
R IDG EM ON T - off Milling Road. Very good buyTn"
3 bedroom, all electric home. Livine-dining
combination. Kitchen with storage room. Carport.
Call today . No down payment if you qualify.
» i'^^^NG'TON - We have a «•••^er buy for you in the 2
bedroom home, livipc^TED itchen, bath, porches. Price at only $9,0Mfuu
CRAP’TW Oob - Three bedrooms with
bathrooms. All electric. Nice garden spot, extra large lot. Price to sell.
CRAFTW OOD - New exterior painting job really
pute the finishing touch on this home. Three
bedrooms, 1% bathrooms, nice laundry area. Extra large dining,'Nice. Good Price.
DEADM AN ROAD - 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, and
living room or 2 bedrooms with den. Just
remodeled. Priced to sell. _ ___
M ILLING ROAD - Lovely 3 •*;dro6m brick Ran
cher. Very roomy., w*v... _ A ? .den »rea with
fire(II«erfor winte' nice corner
lot. Other featur A baths, kitchen with
dishwasher, insiifw riiity room, extra outside
storage. Priced to suit your budget. Convenient
location for all your family needs.
SOUTHWOOD ACRES - Nice large corner lot,
deeply wooded. Good residential section. City
water. County taxes only.
H IC K O R Y H IL L - Spacious building site
overlooking cove in exclusive residential area next
to country club. Over 250 ft. road frontage with
jilen|y of trees.
G ARDEN V A LLEY - Over 3000 Sq. Ft. of Luxurious
I
Larew-Wood-Johnson, Inc.
IBR EALTO R
The most unique residential property ever
offered in Mocksville! Pre-Civil War brick
home on 13.8 acres in quiet residential section
of Mocksville. In original, untouched con
dition awaiting restoration. Large trees and
boxwoods, privacy and a highly desirable
example of early 19th Century Piedmont
North Carolina architecture with an in
teresting historical background. This
property has been nominated for inclusion on
the National Register of Historic Places.
Hickory Hill
Nice lot on Pinevailey Rd. Priced at $6,950.
Cooleemee
Two story commercial building. 98 x 48.
Only $20,000.00.
Jack BooeRd.
(off Hwy 601 North) - SmaU acreage tracts available.
Southwood Acres
We are seUing agents for the lots in Southwood
Acres, behind Davie County High School.
Several lots available to fit almost any style
house. Let us show you today.
Highway 601 North and FosMU Pr.
7 lots for sale. 6.8 mUes north of Interstate 40.
Call today for details.
CALL OR SEE
Don Wood-Hugh Larew
Office 634-5933
living in this 2-year-old contemporary situated on
itiful wooded location. ~ ' ‘ • ■ - •
yfuturistic. Foyer, large living room with cathedral
beautiful wooded location. Extra large lot. Interior
decorated to please many tastes irqm rustic to
u$ today
GARDEN V A LLEY - Lovely contemporary
level home in prestigous location. Over 3,0001
sq. ft. of living area including livhig roon
’family room - both with fireplaces. Built-in i
features In dining room and kitchen. Four si
ceiling. Dining room. Lovely country kitchen opens
to deck. Extra large den with built-in features.
Master bedroom suite for privacy. Two additional
I bedrooms with another Bath and laundry complete
first floor. Second Floor opens to large bedroom and
bath complex with 3 more large closets for storage.
Drive-in basement. Heat pump. Thermopane
I windows. Many other features. Very exclusive and
very livable.
IN-TOW N LOCATION-Older 4 bedroom home.
Priced to sell. Perfect for someone to do own
f remodeling. 2 story frame. Call us today.
HW y 601 SOU'TH - Call today for commercial land
and buildings immediately available. Call today
b“*l"ess property now avaUable near I Mocksville.
M ILLING ROAD - Excellent lot with 3 bedrooms, 2
large den with
" W c .n ir t< i3 iy
multi
heated
room and
-in custom
in dining room and Kitchen. Four spacious
bedrooms with extra storage all through this home.
Three complete baths, laundry room plus work
room for many projects. Large playroom off
Rrivatepatio. Centralair. Beautifully landscaped,
lany other features. Must see today!
^625 CHERRY ST.-3 bedroom brick rancher oh nice
quiet neighborhood street in walking distance of
shopping, churches, and school. Over 1200 sq. feet
heated area. Very good condition. Pecan trees. '
I Reasonably priced. Call today.
CRAFTWOOD-Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher. Alii electric. Convenient location. Full basement. Patlo.j
No down payment if you qualify.
C R A FTW O O D -A IR CO N D ITIO N ED -3 bedroom
Brick Rancher. 1>/^ Baths. Large Kitchen-dining.
Carport utility. Range, refrigerator, washer-dryer
1 included. No down payment if you qualify.
LAND
Lake lots now available at High Rock. Call today.
2 acres plus in beautiful wooded residential sectionj
Perfect for construction site of dream home.
4.4 acres off 64 East and Cedar Creek Rd. State Rd. NoJ
1836. Priced to sell.
BUSINESS
CORNER 6th & MAIN • W IN S TO I^A LE M • Single
office
sales arrangements available.
Julia C. Howard
Office • 634-3538
Home - 634-3754
•Myrtle r.rimes
Office - 634-3538
1^(«Itti¿^^giTwk.TY
Home • 634-5797
Ann F. Wands Office - 634-3538
Home • 634-3229
Charlie Brown
Office - C34-3S38
Home - 634-5230
C.C. Chapman
Office • &4-3S38
Home - 634-2534
H O M E F I N D E R
M U L T I P L E L I S T I N G S E R V IC E
- 2 to S
B^RAFtW OOD-New homes of different designs
■ Ranchers & Spilt Levels from 1150 to 1620 sq. ft. v3th _ ■baths and wall to wall carpet. Large lots. Financing ■available.
IDGEM ONT-New homes with 3 B.R., 1^ Baths,FiiCarport, Large
Vvailable.
„ Lots, too percent Financing
No down payment to qualified buyer.
SH E FFIELD r^N D ER CONTRACTRancher, full I basement.
RAINBOW ftD.-Verv -rp Bath Brick
Rancher, L.R., OJNDER C O N TR A ^ ‘ ^„g„t. central
lair.
1601 NORTH- 2B.R., 1 Bath 12x60 Greenwood mobile
Ihome, like new only 4 yrs. old. On lot 150x200, has ¡county water.
IT O T S TR E E T- 3 B.R.. 2 Baths. L.R., Dr.. 2 Utility■ rooms, central air.
[l a k e NOKMAN-t-Beautiful lake front house & lot
■ House has 3,800 sq. ft. heated area, 5 B.R. 3 full baths
|BuUt-in stove, dishwasher, compactor & dlyiosal
■ Formal D.R. Exterior Spruce Pine & Stone. Pier & ¡boat Vz interest with neighbor.
■ GARDEN V A LLEY ESTATES-Beautiful 3 B.R., L.R..
I den w-fpl., full basement, carport and large storage
I area. Approx. 1 acre beautifully landscaped.
I UNION GROVE - 2 bedroom home with good size
■ lot. large outside garage, good location. Only I $13,000.
MORSE S TR E E T - Beautiful 3BR brick home with
IfuH basement.
NEAR ADM iNDER C O N TR A C II ^ rancher,I pàtio Comb., Brk. area, utility room and
LAK E NORMAN-New home on water front, deeded
lot. 3 B.R. iMt Baths. Full basement, will lease or sell. I COOLEEM EE-2 B.R. 1 Bath home witn oil neat. Uniy
RIDGEM 0NT-4B.R.,
dinlM area.
ICHUR
1 Bath home, L.R. Kitchen
■EDGEWOOD ClRCLE-Beautifi^J B.R.. 2V4 Bath
■custom buUt homA • p q n T R A C Tji w-fpl. & built-in
lbpokshelves,\)i4DF‘^..v; oiuitj’ rm., garage, central lair. AJLon a wooded corner lot.
¡W ILL BOOE RD.-4 B.R. Double WidTMobile home w
^1. & electric heat, completely furnished, beautifully
icorated, large lot with chain link fence arouni [p roperty, 2 outDldg. excellent buy
■OAKLAND H EIG H TS^ B.K. 2 Bath honie, 2 car
earage. . G. Madison.
HICKORY HILLS-3 B.R. 2 bath split level, L.R. w-fpl Ifull basement. Diavrnom «».fni n.«».,
^ ^ ^ | » ' H O M E S W ITH A C R E A G E
I LONE HlCKi}Vi«npD''poN'rR ACT®' “ ^aths on 16 h & iif ftf landUNUER^CON
Iwi/h i n 2 SOLD' « - Bath RancherIn J l.n land.^.'iJiuer contract).
CHURCH RD.-Beautiful 3 B.R. 2 Bath
“ ^ S V rfT N T R A C T R. Comb.. Den
“ iireplace. Many estras<¡CaU for appoiniinent.
f H ILL RD.-Off 801-3 B.R. brick home, large
■ barn & numerous outbuildings with 8 acres of land.■ Local tel. to W-S.
■ c h e r r y h i l l RDc o i n )1- Nice 2 B.R. home with 5Гам м а# АЛЛ
on 5.2 acres of
pi.
|FARMINGTON-New*3 B.R., 2 Batih home built to sell
Il.R .. Den w-fpl., heat pump, central air. 1 Acre. I SANFORD AVb.- 2B.R. 1 Bath home oa 1.26 acres |D.R.-Den Comb.
■garage w-elec. eve. out,bldg. 36x20.
jbA N IE LS RD.-Very nice 3 B.R. l>^ Bath brick veneer
■home on 2.77 acres of land. L.R. Den, large kitchen
garage.
ADVANCE-Beautiful 5 B.R., i3Mt Bath home on 35
lacres of land. L.R., Den & Master B.R. w-fpl. Full
■basement w-fpl. & playroom. House has 4,175 sq. ft
¡living area. 5,000 sq. ft. bam, 4,000 sq. ft. utUity bldg
plus 2 other bldgs.
CANA ROAD- 3B.R. 2 full bath Brick rancher with
■attached garage. Also 24x30 workshop and approx. 14t
■acres of land. Has added Central Air
?;:ш !?ж с ОММЕ11С1АЬ
1б01 S O U TH -18 acres of good business property for sale
¡or lease.
|601 NORTH- Business lot 150x300, Ideal location near I-
l40. City water and sewer.
■DEPOT STREET-Good business lot • 4x368.
1-40 & 64 INTERSECTION-Good bushiess location.
Grocery & service station with approximately
$2,500 worth of stock, 3 gas tanks, private bathroom
inside, complete kitchen, & one bedroom. Nine-
tenths acre lot.
FOR RENT-Commerclal property building & paved
I parking lot. Just outside MocksviUe city limits.
isFARMS A N D L A N D * » « ^ ¡ ^ s m „íEAR I-40-Acreage tracts - four iu acre tracts;
Jtwo 14 acre tracts; one 13 acre and one 5 acre tract.
147.13 ACRES ON 601- ImUe north of 1-40. $99,000.
¡Twenty-five acres north of Farmington, lies
ibeautifuUy and can be sub-divided. ...luOODSON ROAD-27 Acres Owner wiU
¡consider financing, 215 feet of road frontage.
¡N . MAIN ST.- iNice building lot with ready-made
¡basement area. . j. j¡HW Y. NO. 64 EAST- 46 Acres of pasture and woodland
with large stream. ...... .FO STER RD.-99 acre farm with livable house. Ap-
f" irox. 60 acres cleared balance wooded. Approx. 2,000
_ t. paved road frontage,
IN TER SECTIO N 601 & 801-50 acres of land with house
& service station or can be bought as foUows; house &
service station w-2 acres of land; house & service
station with 10 acres of land; 40 acres of land (ex
cluding house and service station); 1 acre lot next to
end on 801 or 601 w-175’ frontage.
ALONG 1-40-130 acres, 65 acres on either side of 1-40
between Hwy. No. 601 & 64. Ideal for industrial or
residential.
D AVIE ACADEM Y RD.-75-88 acres of land, approx.
cleared balance in timber. An old house could be
restored.
FO STALL DRIVE-Off 601 North, Lot 100x263.
HEM LOCK STR EET-l.e acres with 220 ft. frontage on
S. Railway. N. MocksvlUe-Good building sites & small
acreage tracts at the end of Rd. 1479.
YADKIN COUNTY'2.193 acres, И acre good bottom
land and good building site in grove of hardwood trees.
NEAR ADVANCE-Approx. 15 acres left at tl.650 per
acre.
COUNTY LIN E ROAD-221 acres with paved road
through property. 83 acres hi one tract with lake. Can
Id separately. $850.00 per acre.
H-77.75 Acres with
I be sold sei
1б01 SO UT Acres houses on property.
Some of the land reset in pines, some In cultivation.
I O FF 801 NEAR FARM INGTON - Lot No. 3 Stlmson
Park. $4,500.
I DANIELS ROAD - Approx. 7 acres bam and half
■ lake.
■ DANIELS ROAD - 10 to IS acre tracts. tlSOO per [acre.
WE BUY
EQUITIES
MIS
I NFORMATION
K. D. 1-lowers - 8 492-7761
Sue Honeycutt
Phone 704-539-4973
f c ? n i “s424
J J j Insurance Dept: DarreU Edwards/Phone 634-3889
BRANTLEY REALTY A
INSURANCE CO» INC.
503 Avon Streel PHONE: ¿54 Slfls
Moclvsville. NC 725 9291
10В - DAVIK COUNTY l-NThRfKISl RI.COKO THURSDAY, SKPTUMBER 7, 197S
Administrator's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Lucy Inez Riddle Parks,
deceased, late of Davie
Cbunty, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 24th day of
February, 1979, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recoverh. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment (o the undersigned.
This the 18th day of August,
1978.
Lester M. Parks, Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Lucy Inez Riddle Parks,
deceased.
8-24 4tn
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate of
Hayden C. Stiller, Sr. ,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
, them to the undersigned on or
before the 17th day of
February 1979, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
.recovery. Ail persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 17th day of August,
1978 Ruby M. Stiller,
Executrix of the estate of
' Hayden C. Stiller, Sr.
deceased.
WiUiam E. Hall
Hall & Vogler
Attorneys at Law.
8-l7-4tn
NOTICE OF SERVICE
OF PROCESS BY
PUBLICATION
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
DISTRICT COURT
DIVISION
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE
-PAMELA C. LASH,
;Plaintiff
-V 8-
•TERRY E. LASH,
Defendant
TO: TERRY E. LASH
% Take notice that a pleading
seeking relief against you has
been filed in the above en-
ItiUed action. The nature of the
relief being sought is as
follows; divorse from bed and
b o ^ , custody of the two
Public Notices
monor children born of the
marriage, child support,
attorneys fees.
You are required to make
defense to such pleading not
later than October 10,1978 and
upon your failure to do so
against you will apply to the
Court for the relief sought.
This the 24th day of August,
1978.
Wade H. Leonard, Jr.
Attorney for Plaintiff
21 Court Square
MocksviUe, North Carolina
27028
Phone No.: 704-634-5020
8-31 3tnp
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
SUPERIOR COURT
DIVISION
FILE NO. 78
CVS 382
STATE OF
NORTH CAROLINA
COUNTY OF ROWAN
HARRY DULL,
Plaintiff
MARY BURROW BENSON,
and
WALTER LAWRENCE
LANNING,
Defendants
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
BEFORE THE CKERK
FILE No. 78 SP 47
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
NOTICE OF SALE
In the Matter of the
Foreclosure, by Charles L.
Folger, Trustee, of a Deed of
Trust executed by Jimmy W.
Melton and wife, Chpryl J.
Melton dated Deci-mbor 2,
1976 and recorded in Book 97
Page 786, Davie County
Registry.
BY AUTHORITY of the
Findings and Order entered in
the above captioned cause by
the Clerk of Superior Court of
Davie County, North
Carolina, and pursuant to the
power of sale contained in the
above captioned Deed of
Trust, the undersigned
Trustee, will sell at public
auction for cash to the highest
bidder on Wednesday, the 13th
day of September, 1978, at 10
a.m. , at the courthouse door
of the Davie County Cour
thouse, Mocksville, North
Carolina, the following
described real property
located in Mocksville
Township, Davie County,
North Carolina, to wit:
BEING all of Lot No. 44 as
shown on a recorded plat
entitled "CRAFTWOOD,
SECTION 4:, as developed by
Fortis Enterprises, Inc,, said
map being drawn by Otis A.
Jones Surveying Co., Inc.,
October 29, 1973, said plat
being recorded in Plat Book 4,
Page 139, in the Office of the
Register of Deeds of Davie
County, North Carolina, to
which reference is hereby
made for a more complete
description.
The above described
property is subject to the
restrictive covenants as
recorded in Deed Book 93,
Page 49, in the office of the
Register of Deeds of Davie
County, North Carolina.
Located on the above
described real peoperty are
the following improvements,
if any:
One story brick rambler -
three bedrooms - one and one-
half baths. Located at Route
3, Milling Road, Mocksville,
N.C.
This sale is made subject to
all outstanding and unpaid
taxes and or special
assessments, if any, and to
the provisions of Chapter 45 of
the General Statutes of North
Carolina. The successful
bidder will be required to
make a cash or certified
check deposit equal to ten
percent of his bid at the time
of the sale pursuant to, and or
limited by, N.C. G.S. 45-21.10.
This the 22 day of August,
1978.
Charles L. Folger
Trustee
Faw, Folger, Sharpe and
White
P.O. Box 332
Dobson, North Carolina 27017
Telephone: (919) 386-8298
Posted this the 22 day of
August, 1978.
Delores C. Jordan
aerk of Superior Court
8-31 2tn
Adminlstratirix NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the estate of
Velma Dalton White,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 24th day of Feb.
1979, or this notice will be
pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 18th day of Aug.,
1978 Dorothy Graham, Ad
ministratrix of the estate of
Velma Dalton White
deceased.
Martin & Van Hoy, Attys.
8-24-4tn
EXECUTOR’S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of Eva
C. Phillips, deceased, late of
Davie County, this is to notify
all persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 17th day of
February, 1979 or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 11th day of August,
1978.
C. W. Phillips, Executor of
the estate of Eva C. Phillips
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy
Attorneys
8-17 4tn
Administratrix’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the estate of
Timothy Wayne Fishel,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 31st day of
February 1979, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 31st day of August,
1978.
Blanche H. Fishel, Ad
ministratrix of the estate of -
Timothy Wayne Fishel,
deceased.
William E. Hall
Hall and Vogler
Attorneys at Law
Mocksville, N.C. 27028
8-31 4tn
NOTICE OF
SERVICE OF
PROCESS BY
PUBLICATION
TO: MARY BURROW
BENSON, TAKE NOTICE:
That a verified pleading
seeking relief against you has
been filed in the above
entitled action. The nature of
the relief being sought is as
follows:
Damages sustained in an
automobile collision caused
by your negligence on July 1,
1978.
You are required to make
defense to such pleading not
later than the I6th day of
October, 1978, and upon your
failure to do so, the party
seeking relief against you will
apply to the Court for the
relief sought.
This the 2Sth day of August,
1978.
SOMERS & EAGLE
Kenneth L. Eagle
Attorney for the Plaintiff
P.O. Box 4095
113 West CouncU Street
Salisbury, North Carolina
28144
Telephone: 704 636-7931
8-29-3tn
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION
CV
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
WAYNE E. STROUD
Plaintiff
vs
SANDRA M. STROUD
Defendant
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
PROCESS BY
PUBLICATION
TO; SANDRA M. STROUD.
the above named defendant.
Take notice that a pleading
seeking relief against you has
been filed in the above en
titled action. The nature of
the relief being sought is as
follows; absolute divorce.
You are required to make
defense to such pleading not
later than the 25th day of
September, 1978, said date
being 40 days from the first
publicatlot) of this notice, or
from the date complaint is
required to be filed,
whichever is later; and upon
your failure to do so the party
seeking service against you
will apply to the court for the
relief sought.
This the 8 day of August,
1978.
WAYNE E. STROUD
HENRY P. VAN HOY, II
Attorney for plaintiff
P.O. Box 606
Mocksville, N.C. 27018
Phone; (704 ) 634-2171.
8-24-atn
Administrator's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Dessie Hodgson Whitaker,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 31st day of
February, 1979, or this notice
will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 31st day of August,
1978.
William E. Hall, Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Dessie Hodgson Whitaker,
deceased.
* Burglar *F\n '
'Hold-up Syttfmci
Reddantial i Commarclal
*Frea '
% v r :
,ЮВ BRANI OCK P.O. Box 303
MOCKSVH-Le.N.C. 2702fl
Hall and Vogler
Attorneys at Law
Mocksville, N.C.
8-31 4tn
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION
CVD 134
WAYNE E. STROUD
Plaintiff
vs
SANDRA M. STROUD
Defendant
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF
PROCESS
BY PUBLICATION
TO: SANDRA M. STROUD,
the above named defendant.
Take notice that a pleading
seeking relief against you has
been filed in the aix>ve en
titled action. The nature of
the relief being sought is as
follows; absolute divorce.
You are required to make
defense to such pleading not
later than the 25th day of
September, 1978, said date
being 40 days from the first
publication of this notice, or
from the date compaint is
required to be filed,
whchever is later; and upon
your failure to do so the party
seeking service against you
will apply to the court for
relief sought.
This Ihe 28 day of August,
1978.
WAYNE E. STROUD
HENRY P. VAN HOY,II
Attorney for plaintiff
P C. Box 606
Mocksville. N.C. 27028
Phone: (704 i 634-2171
«•2«-3tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
There will be a meeting of
the Davie County Board of
Adjustment on Monday
September 11, 1978 at 7:30
p.m. in the Grand Jury Room
of the Davie County Cour
thouse. The following ap
plications for zoning com
pliance comcerning Special
Use Permits have been
received by the zoning officer
and are scheduled lo be
heard;
(a) W.R. Latham has
submitted a request for a
variance to the terms of the
Davie County Zoning Or
dinance involving side yard
setback at his residence on
Janlin Lane in Davie Gardens
Subdivision. The adjoining
property owners are Kenneth
C. Butner, Dan D. Dugan, -
Tony M. Parton and June
Dinkins Really.
(b) James R. Hilton- has
submitted a request for a
Conditional Use Permit to
place one mobile home on the
East side of Highway 601
South approximately .5 mile
North of Greasy Corner. The
adjoining property owners
are Linville E. Presnell and
Robert J. Ridenhour.
Signs advertising the public
hearing concerning these
requests will be posted at the
above mentioned locations.
All interested persons are
invited to attend said public
hearing at which time they
will have an opportunity to
speak in favor of or in op
position to the foregoing
applications. Prior to the
hearing, all persons in
terested may obtain all ad
ditional information on these
applications which are in the
possession of the Davie County
Zoning Officer by inquiring at
my office in the Davie County
Courthouse on weekdays
between the hours of 8:30 and
5:00 or be telephone at 634-
3340.
Jesse A. Boyce, Jr.
Davie County Zoning Officer
8-31 2tn
Administrator's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Mabel M.DuII, deceased, late
of Davie County this is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 7th
day of March, 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Wade Gerry
Dull, Administrator of the
estate of Mabel M. Dull
deceased.
William E. Hall
Hall and Vogler
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 294
Mocksville, N.C. 27028
9-7-4tn
Bids Requested
For; 400 pre-planned
delivered noon-time meals for
the projected Title Vll
Elderely Nutrition Program.
Sites: B.C. Brock 50-70
Lone Hickory 28-40
Yadkinville 28-40
East Bend 28-40
MADOC 50-70
Elkin 40-60
South Surry 28-40
Mountain Park 28-40
Lowgap 28-40
Pilot Mountain 28-40
Quotes Per meal price for
all sites
Sppoifications: Available at address below.
Closing Date: September
25, 1978
Conditions: Bidder must be
Equal Opportunity Employer
and Service Provider Priority
consideration for minority
Businesses
Submit to; Yadkin Valley
Economic Development
District, Inc.
Post Office Box 309
Boonville. NC 27011
(919) 367-7251
9-7-ltn
Executrix's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate of
George H.C. Shutt, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 7th
day of March 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of
Iheir recoverv. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Virginia P.
Shutt, Exectrix of the estate
of George H.C. Shutt
deceased.
9-7-4tn
Executors NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Martie McBride, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 7th
day of March, 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This is the 7th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Ray McBride,
Executor of the estate of
Martie McBride deceased.
John T. Brock, Atty.
9-7-4tn
Mar.k and Jeff Armsworthy and their dog "Blackle" take time off
from their watermelon business to pose for a picture. They are the sons
of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Armsworthy of Advance Route 2. (Photo by
Garry Foster)
Farm Market Summary For
Week Of August 28-SeDt. 1
Corn prices were 10 to 20
cents lower per bushel and
soybeans steady to 21 cents
lower through Thursday,
August 31, 1978, compared to
the same period of the
previous week according to
the Market News Service of
the North Carolina Depart
ment of Agriculture. No. 2
yellow shelled corn ranged
mostly $2.05 to $2.20 per
bushel in the eastern part of
North Carolina and $2.11 to
$2.'25 per bushel in the pied
mont. No. 1 yellow soybeans
ranged mostly $6.45 to $6.85 in
the east and $6.50 to $6.70 in
the piedmont. No. 2 red winter
wheat $2.92 to $3.26; No. 2 red
oats $1.06 to $1.15. New crop
soybeans harvest delivery
$6.00 to $6.34 per bushel.
Egg prices for the week
ending September 1 were 2
cents higher on large sizes
and fractionally lower on
medium and smalls compated
to those of the previous week.
Supplies were moderate to
short on large and adequate
on medium and small.
Demand was good. The North
Carolina weighted average
price quoted on September i
for small lot sales of cartoned
grade A eggs delivered to
stores was 67.88 cents per
dozen for large, medium 57.47
and smalls 39.13.
The broiler-fryer market is
sharply higher for deliveries
the week of September 4
compated to the previous
week. Supplies for early in the
week are very short and
demand very good for the
Labor Day Holiday. Weights
Advance News
Festival In The Park
Opens September 19
The Fifteenth Annual
Festival In The Park opens
Tuesday, September 19th in
Freedom Park. The Festival
will bring together varying
aspects of America’s culture
into a harmonious and fun-
loving whole with features for
the entire family.
Regional artists will display
their talents and wares in
over 80 tents and exhibits
ranging from Handcrafted
Jewelry to Soapstone
Sculpture, String Art to
Woodcarving, Scrim Shaw
and Wooden Toys to Tin
smithing and Beekeeping to
Dool Houses and
Blacksmithing. But arts and
crafts are only a part of the
Festival...There is also live
entertainment each night with
several performing groups on
opening night (Tuesday),
from Contemporary Jazz to
Glenn Miller type music to
Dixieland, on Wednesday
night Loonis McGlohon’s Trio
is featured -PLUS-, Thursday
night Arthur Smith and Air
Nation Guard's "I Love
America fantata”, Friday
night the Strawberry
doggers and The Tactical Air
Command Band, plus Steel
Drums and for Saturday
night, Les Elgart and Or
chestra -plus- and on Sunday
afternoon, the UNC Wind
Ensemble and UNC Jazz Lab
Band and The Youth Sym
phony with a return per
formance of The Tactical Air
Command Band at 7 p.m to
finish out the evening.
There is something for
everyone at this year's
Festival...The Festival In The
Park...September 18 through
24...and admission is always
FREE.
The first Ford sutomobila had
to wait over an hour foi its
first test run, since it was
built in a shed, and was wider
than the shed door.
A Cantata entitled "Jesus
Lives” will be presented at
the Methodist church Wed
nesday night September 13 at
7:30. The choirs from Ad
vance and Mocks churches
will sing in the Cantata.
Henry Warren from Advance
Baptist will be featured as a
tenor soloist. Pianist will be
Ronnie Smith from Green
Meadows Baptist and Mrs.
Ruth Latham at the organ.
The Cantata marks the
beginning of a series of
revival services at Advance
and Mocks churches, and will
be followed by prayer ser
vices in the homes the
remainder of the week.
Homecoming services will
be held at Methodist church
Sunday September 17. The
Rev. John Hamilton will be
the speaker at the 11 a.m.
worship service. A picnic
lunch will be in the grove at
the noon hour. An afternoon
song fest will feature singers-
the Calvary Way Quartet
from Winston-Salem; the
Turrentine Trio and Little
Joel Stafford, the March of
Dimes paraplegic. Revival
services being on Sunday
night al 7:30.wilh Ihe Rev.
Hubert Clinard bringing the
messages each evening,
Sunday Ihe I7lh through
TImrsday Sept. 21. There will
be special singing by various
groups each night. Everyone
is invited to attend these
services.
Mr. and Mrs. George
Poindexter of Orlando,
Florida have spent the past lo
days with his mother Mrs.
Matt Poindexter. They also
visited many relatives in the
area and were Friday night
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charlie Dunn in Mocksville,
along with Mrs. Poindexter.
Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Ward
spent the weekend at
Greenville, N.C. visiting with
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Bar-
wick.
Mr. and Mrs. J.E. Williford
of Dandridge, Tenn. spent
several days visiting their
children and grandchildren
Mr. and Mrs. George Judd.
Jr., Karen and Susan. They
also visited Mrs. Waller
Shull.
Sunday visitors of Mrs.
Clara Baily were Mrs. Willie
Harney and daughter Miss M-
aggio Luu Barney of Bixby
Mrs Grace Spry, Mr. and
i
Mrs. Harold Tilley and sons
Ronnie and Steve were
Sunday luncheon guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Spry.
Mrs. Jennie Walt Cornatzer
celebrated her birthday
Friday September 1. Mrs.
Cornatzer was pleasantly
surprised with her sister-in-
law Mrs. Lillie Myers brought
dinner and ate with her. Mrs.
Myers was accompanied by
Mrs. Mildred Hege and Mrs.
Dull who also enjoyed the
birthday dinner.
Sunday visitors of tmrs.
Mary Jarvis Thompson were
her sister-in-law Mrs. Thelma
Jarvis and her friend Miss
Irene Link of Mocksville.
They were visitors al
Methodist church for worship
service.
Kenny Potts had the
misfortune of being in\olved
in a plane crash in Charlotte
this past week. He has been
released from a Charlotte
hospital and is recuperating
at Ihe home of his parents Mr.
and Mrs. Gray Polls.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Foil and
son of Denver, N.C. spent the
weekend with her mother
Mrs. Della Essex.
Miss Annie Orrell of Win
ston-Salem spent several days
visiting her brother and
sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs.
John Orrell.
COUTE&TS, WOKAM CbP OvEK twQ ,PSEi-MTfe*.
ìTwi&jt'; iHfe-iL ÜTEABM5 16fc’A*TC-(uAu
OC CE M M 'CcfA ^IkNifrfZ CP ’.4» Tue *
are desirable. The North
Carolina FOB dock weighted
average price for less than
truckloads picked up a
processing plants for the week
of September 4-9 is 46.25 cents
per pound. This week over
7,000,000 birds were
-slaughtered in the state with
an average live weight on
August 30 at 3.99 pounds per
bird.
Tomato prices were lower
this week in westem North
Carolina with some fields
being abondoned. Large to
extra large tomatoes in 20-
pound cartons were quoted at
$3on August 31. For the week
of August 21, 300,000 cartons
of apples were shipped and
movement is increasing. This
week tray pack cartons of
fancy Red and Golden
Delicious apples sizes 88-ll3s
were $12 to $14. Cartons of
bagged 2>/4 up fancy Red and
Golden Delicious were $8.
Bean prices were steady with
pole beans $7 per hamper,
round green $6 to $6.25;
Cabbage was in moderate
supply with crates at $3.50 to
$4.
Heavy type hens were lower
this past week. Supplies \уеге
fully adequate and demand
very light. Heavy type hen
prices 18 cents per pound at
the farm with buyers loading.
For the period August 28-31
gross tobacco sales on the
South Carolina and Border
North Carolina Belt totaled
20.7 million pounds and
averaged $140.43 per hun
dred; Eastern Belt 34.9
million pounds and averaged
$137.64; Old and Middle Belt
30 million pounds were sold
for an average of $124.13 per
hundred. For this period the
Stabilization Corporation
received 3.5 percent on the
Border Belt, 5.5 percent on the
Eastern Belt and 5.9 percent
on the Old and Middle Belt.
A total of 11,764 feeder pigs
were sold on 11 state grade
sales furing the week ending
September 1. Prices were
mostly .25 to $5.25 per hun
dred pounds. U.S. 1-2 pigs
weighting 40-50 pounds
averaged $108.51 per hundred
weight with No. 3s $102.94 ; 50-
60 pound l-2s averaged $98.38;
No. 3s $87.71; 60-70 pound l-2s
$88.81; Noo. 3s $80.93 ; 7040
pound U.S. l-2s averaged
$79.69 per hundred pounds
with No. 3s $76.01.
Al weekly livestock auc
tions held within the state this
week, slaughter cows 25 cents
lower, yeal calves $1 to $3
lower, and feeder calves
steady to $6 higher per hun
dred pounds. Utility and
commercial slaughter cows
brought $34.50 to $42.50 a
hunted pounds, good veal
calves $59 to $68, choice
slaughter steers $51 to $52.25,
good and choice slaughter
heifers $49 to $50.25, good
feeder steers 300-600 pounds
$56 to $64. Good feeder heifers
300-500 pounds $50 to $56.50,
and feeder cows $31.75 to
$40.50 per hundred pounds.
Baby calves under 3 weeks of
age sold for mostly $20 to $68
per head.
Hog prices at daily buying
stations were steady to $1.00
lower ranging mosUy $47. to
$50. per hundred pounds. At
weekly livestock auction
market top hogs brought
mostly $48. to $49.80 and sows
300-600 pounds $38.25 to $47.50.
HOME /^5^,
I N S U L A T I O N - i S & S ^
B L O W N IN
A T T I C S A N D W A L L S
Speciaiiim gm .,„gHotnJSlift^
CALI DAV OR NIGHT V .
1-919-769-9736
S & S I n s u l a t i o nRoute 6 -Box 304
W lnston-Salem , N.C. 27107
iUSOUnE MICI1M
SAT. SEPT. 16 th. 10:00 A.M.
MR. J. FRANK WYATT ESTATE
C O N D U C T E O PO R B IL L Y 0 . 4 V IR O IL L . W Y A T T . C O -E X B C U T O M
O tR e C TIC m B : Prom M o c s iTlU t, N . C . |0 H v y . M ICsst A p p ro H m sttfy
ft M llM . T u rn U t t on N O C R i n c C H U R C H R O A D tad Co dU im « Por
A p p ro H m ito ljr t M llM lo S A L E . Look P o r Auetloo 8 if as.
ITE M S PO R S A L E IN C L U O E
G . E . U p rtfht P ro M tr
P rlfld a r« Cook Stovo
0 . E . W ash. D n t r C o n b .
Hoi poini R o frt«.
fim tJi 8 «t (A Jm o tt N rv )
(t)U p b o l. Swlvol R ocktrs
U d M l. C h air
Sola
O ld Stra lfhi Baek C h air
O ld R ocktr
Paean Tabla
M apI« Drop Loaf T a U t & C ta lrs
End T a U t
Efae. S a w li« M achlnc <Co m oI«)
NIC* Oak Church Banch
M a p lf Daak
M apla Sad Room Swll
Wovan B ia k ti
Plai Irons
Q uU l Pramas
Wood Clam pa
Shoa Last
(f ) Lawn M o va ra (Push)
I H. P. E la c. Start y o v a r
16 Pt. A lum . Laddar
M isc. Ya rd II Cardan Too ls
C a o m To p l o r Tra c to r
E lK . C n n d a r
Too l Boias
O il H aattr
Dog C sfsa 4 Housa
W haalbarrov
t t C a l. Rlfla
E ip a rt 1} C a . Shotgun
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O ld Oak Oraaaar
O ld Oak Chasi o t Drawara
O ld Osk Cantar ТаЫ а
Oak Bad
O ld End ТаЫ а
Oak Night SUnd
O il L a e p
Cun Rack
Ploor Larap
Plciwraa ft Pranaa
Olshaa ft Kltchan W ara
H a n d To o U
Wtntfoar Pans
ftOOO W indow A ir Coad.
P n ilt Ja rs
N a * Ya rd Svaapar
А р р гш . SO G a l. P a u l
t DsDch Visas
E la c. D riU a
Tobacco Saltar
(t ) Hand Plantara
( t ) O ld C o m SbaUara
O ld Wood tea Вож
Scfths ft Cradla
H o rss H aaas
В ft D Trloiffiar
0Ы . W ash T u b ft stand
Radloa
P rasagrs Cookar
Savaral Old C tttlrs
Cans Back 9 a U ft C h airs
Stsvsos 410 G a. Shoifva
Stavaas I I O a. Shotgun
М ал/ O iha r Jia n a
Ttm;CW W yOO 6NUIW V JM I
S A L S O O N D U C T fe iV
JIM SHEEK AUCTIONEEReK MttU, W
IOI u im t u u Ш U U Di ШНИ1 n Wtf W Ш nrt
dI
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1978 - MB
HUNTING
Safety Rules
Huntersl Remember these handy
rules of thumb for your protection
and (or the protection o( others
C U S S IFIED ADS
1 Treat your guns with respect Re
move all ammunition from firearms
before storing and while driving Store
guns and ammunition away from
children
2 Don't shoot at flat surfaces or at a
target without a proper backstop
3 Never point at anything you don’t
intend to shoot
4.Wear the proscribed color for
hunting,
5 Keep the 'safety ' on while carrying
your firearms; carry them with mu22les
down
6. Unload your firearms before clean
ing or making repairs.
7 Don't mix hunting with atcoholl
PER S O N ALS
»
r .
A N IM ALS
Pets & Livestock
FOR SALE; Beautiful AKC
Registered Cocker Spaniel
puppies. Butt colored. One
male and 3 females, $80,00
each. Call: 998-8840.
8-31 2tnpY
FOR SALE: Full blooded
Lsaha Appo, Female, 8 weeks
old, registered, most ot its
shots. Will take the best offer.
Call: 284-2996,
9-7-tnp-P
FOR SALE.„AKC Registered
miniature Schnauzer pups.
Nine weeks old. CSiampion
blc^ine. Call: 492-5571.
9-7 2tnpD
EM P LO Y M EN T
Help Wanted
THERE IS AN OPENING
FOR Short Order Cooks tor
1st and 2nd shifts. Experience
required. Apply in person
anyday between 9 a,m, and 5
p,m, at Sam’s Country Kit
chen, Int, 601 and Hwy, 1-40,
7-27-tfn S
EARN Extra income by
wearing and selling Sarah
Coventry Jewelry. FR EE
Training, Transportation
necessary. Call: 998-4925 or
998-4832,
8-10-tfnH
DEALER OP
PORTUNITY,,,Major line of
quality steel buildings; farm,
commercial and industrial.
Rewarding opportunity for
qualified person. Call or write
Jewell Building Systems,
Inc., P.O. Box 397, Dallas,
N.C. 28034.
8-31 3tpJ
WANTED...Telephone
C^nvasers for Davie County.
Call for interview. Part-time
work from the home. Choose
your own hours! Call: 998-
2156.
8-31 2tnpN
HELP WANTED SKILLED
WOODWORKERS-Long
established nationally known
manufacturer of high quality
solid wood clocks is ex
panding and seeks ex
perienced woodworkers. New
career opportunities for
cabinet assembly room
supervisor, plant engineer,
finishing room operators, and
quality assurance supervisor.
Are now available. Com
pensation open. Send resume
to; Ms, C, Leonard, The
Daneker Co., 2800 Belair
Road, Fallston, Md, 21047
8-3l-2tnp
Babysitting Wanted: Ex-
perienced child care in my
home, close
care
ile you shop.
Advance area. Call: 998-5606.
close supervision and
ing care while your work
while you shop. In the
loving care while your work
9-7-ltnp-S
Sltuationt Wanted
Will keep children in my home
from 7 a.m. until 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Ages 3 years and up
preferred. Call: 284-2792.
8-2l-3tnpF
Will keep children in my home
for either first or second
shifts. Location; Edgewood
Circle. Contact: Janet
Overcash at 284-2092.
9-7 2tnpO
tfnR
Home
FOR SALE; All types un
finished chairs, stools, of all
sizes-upholstered. swivels,
deacon benches, all kinds
used furniture. Call W. A.
Ellis at 634-5227.
413-tfnE
FOR SALE... Brand New
Water Bed, Call: Joseph
Tucker, Route 5, Mocksville
N.C. 27028.
9-7-ltp-T
Col. Wanda _
M. Myers # 4
A U C T I O N E E R -
Camplete Auction
Servías
^ NCAL-1328
704.633 1404
Rt. t StIUbury, N.C.
PR O PER TY
Acreage
FOR SALE...2 acres off 601, 3
miles out of Mocksville. Call:
W.A. Ellis, 634-5227. Also a 55
acre farm on Gladstone Rd.
2-9 tfnE
Business
FOR SALE: BUSINESS -• C
and W CarpeU - Intersection
of Depot St. and Highway 64
• East. Call Lewis Carter
(office) 634-2277 or (home) 998-5334.
5-18-tfnC
Homes
M IS C ELLAN EO U S
FO R S A L E ...C u s to m
frames...any size...expert
workmanship...over 35
samples on display...see at
C A U D E L L L U M B E R
COMPANY, 1238 Bingham
Street, Mocksville, Phone 63''-
2167.
4-24-tfnC
KIDDIE CAMPUS
PLAYSCHOOL. Daycare and
kindergarten. Daily and
weekly rates. Ages 2 and up.
Call 634-2266.
6-l-tfnK
MR. VETERAN"No down
payment on homes. Ranch,
colonial, contempary, etc.
Many sellers pay closing
costs. This means your cost is
nothing. We will work hard for
you. Winston-Salem Homes, Inc. Call; 634-2431.
8-3 tfn
WANTED; Old Muzzle
Loading Rifle with Patchbox,
WUl pay $1000,00 cash or
more. Call before you sell, 1-,
919-576-9451, Or write P, O,
Box 528 Troy,
N. C. 27371.
8-lOtfnC
FOR SALE; 4 White Wall
tires, size H78-14, Call: 998-
4517 after 5 p,m,
8-31 2tnpW
FOR SALE: Complete
electric heating system, $125.
68 Volkswagen Bug, $495,, 64
Chevy II Station Wagon, 3,000
miles on the engine, $395.
Call; 634-5735. At Hannah’s
Trading Post, 2 miles west of
Mocksville on Hwy. 64. Open
from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m.
9-7-ltnp-H
TURNERSBURG OPEN
HORSE SHOW... Saturday,
Sept. 9th beginning at 11 a.m,
at Harmony, N.C. 38 classes -
English, Western, Youth and
Open. Ribbons, trophys and
cash will be awarded. Horse
and Tack Sale Friday at 7
p.m. Phone 704-998-3059, 492-
7713 and 546-2450, Rain date
will be Sept, 23, at 11 a,m,
9-7-ltnp-C
FOR SALE AFRICAN
VIOLETS,.. Several different
varieties. Call: 634-5206.
9-7-ltp
FU R N IT U R E
Commercall
NEW AND USED OFFICE
furniture, fireproof files and
safes. ROWAN OFFICE
FURNITURE, 118 N. Main'
Street, Salisbury, phone 636-. 8022.
In Memoriam
Davie County Hospital
Auxiliary respectfully pays
its last tribute to George H.C.
Shutt, who died on August 24,
1978. Mr. Shutt was a charter
member of the Auxiliary and
was its only treasurer from its
inception in 1974. He un
selfishly gave of his time and
talen to further the auxiliary
in Davie Hospital.
He was a tireless worker,
contributing his time to all
fund raising events. Whether
frying ham counting money,
Mr. Shutt was there. His
devotion was especially seen
in the Auxiliary whether up
front or behind the scenes.
Mr. Shutt will always be
remembered for his im
measurable help in the
organization of Davie County
Hospital Auxiliary and for his
staunch support down thru the
years.
To Mrs. G.H.C. Shutt an d
his family, we offer our
deepest sympathy. Our hope
is that your sorrow will be
lifted by the dedicated life
that he lived.
The Davie Hospital Auxiliary
10-501tn .
Q U A L I T I E S
L ittle K n o w n F ac ts 9-7-tfnWS
D urin g his ow n lifetime,
Johann Sebastian Bach was a
little-known composer. He
didn’t become fam ous until
som e 100 years later, and
that was largely through the
study o f Bach by another
fa m o u s c o m p o se r, F e lix
Mendelssohn.
N o matter w ho yo u r favor
ite com poser is, his w orks will
sound their best only when
played on stereo equipm ent
designed for the m usic con
noisseur. Such stereo com
ponents, bearing the Realistic
name, are available only at
Radio Shack outlets. Realistic
offers perform ance, reliability
and value.
Mobile Homes
We buy and sell good used
Mobile Homes, Contact;
BONANZA MOBILE HOMES,
722 Wilkesboro Street,
Mocksville, N.C, Phone: 634-
5959,
10-7-tfnB
FOR SALE BY OWNER-12 x
60 Rltzcraft, 1972 Model
Mobile Home, 2 bedrooms, air
conditioned, window-unit.
Washer and dryer, stove,
refrigerator plus oil drum. In
excellent condition. Must be
moved soon. Located on Hwy,
801 at Needmore intersection,
Woodleaf, N,C, The estate of
George Louis Watkins,
Phone: 704-284-2897,
8-31-2tpW
FOR SALE.,, 1975 12 x 60
Mobile home, partially fur
nished. Includes air con
dition, washer, dryer, oil
drum and steps. In very good
condition. Call: 998-3235after
5:30 p.m.
9-7-ltp-B
Probably the oldest m usical
instrum ent is the flute. Made
since cave-dwelling days, they
were fashioned originally
from bam boo or som e other
hollow w ood and, before
that, from birds' leg bones.
"R uling ii eaiy, governing
difficult." Goethe
H O P E
b r o t h e r s
B yu j2 EB S
Commercial Property Lots
Acreage Tracts -- Homes
Divle-lredell-Forsyth
It Surrounding Counties
BROCK REALTY
Pbone (704) 8724111
Or 403-6733
Some people have believed
that eating cypreu seeds
w ou ld m ake them strong,
w ealthy and youthful.
O F T IŒ M A ÎM N E S
Typewriters
AckHngf Шипев
Service QiAa Makes
Earle’s
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Dill 636-2341
Saliibury. N.C.
As Quoted by the U S. Dept ot Labor. Bureau ot Labor Statistics. BulletmNo. 1875
S è fiL h o S S H M ?
Start now t(i plan f«ir pmfeb
ы<>па1 career driving a 'Hiu
K^"()ur рпуа1е1га1пи14}г*11и»|1
<1Пегь ciimpetent iiblruLl<ifb.
mtidem equipment and I'hal lengiiitf training fietdss. Keep yuur and train txi part tinti'
basib tSal. & Smi.i чг attend
ОШ 3 week full tiiik- rebidenttraining. CJ! nglit i.ii /uli
infoniiattui.
W IN ST O N 'S A L E M
910-7233233
R EN TA LS
Apartments
FOR RENT: Crestview
Apartments, U.S. 64 East.
Nice 3 rooms, patio and bath.
For adults. Call: 634-5420.
8-31-4tnpG
FOR RENT-Modern Brick
Home with 34 acres on Angell
Road, 3 bedroom, full
basement and double garage.
$175. Call 634-2532.
9-7-lnfM
Mobile Homes
Trailers and spaces for
RENT. Call 493-4386.
SALES
Yard
2 FAM ILY YARD
SALE...Last house on the left
on Whitney Road In Craft-
wood Develop
ment...Saturday, Sept. 9th
from 9 a.m. until-. Clothes,
toys, Avon bottles, kitchen
items and lots more. Watch
for signs.
9-7-ltp-S
2FAMILY YARD
SALE..,Saturday, September
9th from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. at
701 Avon Street. Many items
to choose from.
FOR SALE BY OWNER. . 3
bedroom-Hi rancher with full
basement, 2.3 acres of land on
Bear Creek Church Road.
Will help arrange financing.
Call 492-7202.
6-29- tfnB
FOR SALE: 9 room, 2 story
home in Cooleemee, 2 baths
with large screened porch and
separate upstairs apartment.
Located on large shaded
comer lot. Convenient to
schools, churches, and
shopping center. Phone 284-
2994 or 284-2761.
8-3-tfnK
NO DOWN PAYMENT: 3 and
4 bedroom homes. Call Bill
Shoaf at 634-2431 Winston-
Salem Homes.
8-3 tfn
FOR SALE BY OWNER-3
twdroom house on Forrest
Lane. Price reduced for quick
sale. For more information
caU: 998-5841.
8-31-tfnB
CREEKWOOD: Beautiful
split foyer, 3 l>edroom, 2
baths, 1950 sq. ft., 2 car
garage, 1 year old. In ex
cellent condition. $54,000.
Call: Bill Shoaf, Winston-
Salem Homes at 634-2431.
ll-lO-tfnL
Trailer For Rent. . .Yadkin
Valley Road. . .2 bedrooms. .
.on private lot with washer
and air condition. Call: 998-
8956 after 4:30 p.m.
9-7-ltnpH
Л -/
J L
INTS POR
OMEOWKIERS
Save Fuel
Unlike oysters, w hich are
at th e ir b e st o n ly d u rin g
m onths with the letter R in
their names, insulation R In
season all year ’round. Insula
tion keeps heat Inside a house
in w in te r and o u tsid e In
sum mer, increasing com fort
and saving on fuel and power
bills.
Checking the R-vaiue of
In su la tio n can help you
to get what you need.
In regard to Insulation, “ R ”
stands for resistance to heat
flow. The higher the R-value
of the total am ount of Insu
la tio n In sta lle d , the more
effective the Insulation wlll
be. R-38 and R-30 are typical
re c o m m e n d e d v a lu e s for
Insulation In attic floors.
" R-values of fiber glass and
rock w ool batt and blanket
In s u l a t i o n a re m a rk e d
on packages, according to
Sheldon H. Cady, executive
vice president o f the National
Mineral W ool Insulation A sso
ciation. He said bags o f loose
mineral fiber, meant for In
stallation b y blow ing or pour
ing, arc labeled to show the
num ber of bags needed to
achieve the R-value desired.
The U.S. Departm ent of
Energy estimates that about
70 per cent o f all hom e In
sulation used is fiber glass or
rock wool.
9-7-ltp-J
YARD SALE EVERY DAY
AT HANNAH’S Trading Post.
Good Used Cars and trucks at
GOOD prices! 2 miles west of
Mocksville Highway 64.
Opened from 9 a.m, imtil 9
p,m. Call;634-5735,
9-7-tfn-H
YARD SALE. . .Sept. 8th and
9th from 9:30 a.m. until 6 p.m.
at the home of Jack and Myra
Hellard, the only split-level on
the Willboone Road. All kinds
of bargains. Watch for signs
Cancelled if raining,
9-7-ltpH
6 FAMILY YARD SALE. .
.Friday and Saturday, Sept.
Bth and 9th from 10 a.m, until
5p.m. on Fri. and 9 a.m. until
5 p.m. Sat. Many, many
items for sale, too numerous
to mention. Unbelievable find
in treasures. Watch for signs
9-7-ltpS
"Créât'' Ideds Dept.
Som e people had the
"great” idea o f publishing a
biographical encyclopedia in
the 1 8 8 0 ’s. Unfortunately,
they printed all biographies
that were sent them, in
cluding 84 for people who
did not exist.
In the 1 9 6 0 ’s, the Am alga
mated Clothing and Textile
W orker’s U nion had the
“ great” idea o f forcing em
ployees at J, P, Stevens & Co,
to join up by staging a big
boycott o f that com p any’s
products. M an y members of
the religious com m unity
oppose this, including the
Southern N ew England, the
N orth Carolina and the
P a c ific N o rth w e st C o n
fe re n c e s o f the U n ite d
M e t h o d is t C h u rc h ; the
Central Atlantic Conference
o f the U n ite d Church of
C^hrlst; the United Presbyte
rian Church and Presbyterian
Church in the United States.
P r i d e M a r k
R o o f i n g C o .
Tear Off - Wood Shingles - Composition
FREEESUMATES
ivtoŒPEraaNS
Advance
Phone 998-5040
ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE
DG IJGCO U IERT
Mocksville
Phone 634-3981
---------
I aucti
S H E E K
AUCTION tREALTy COMPANY
634-3811
P.O. BOX 003 M O C K S V ILLE, N.C. 27028
N C A L 024
NCRL 40328
B OND ED
RES. 704/872-0502
Rt. 12 S T A T ES V ILLE
> N.C. 28677
tfnD
SERVICES
BOB’S AUTO SER
VICE,.,Autom atic tran
smission, radiator and
general auto repairs. 10:00 -
8:00 Monday-Frlday. 10:00
10:-2:00 Saturday. 998-4005,
Mocks Church Road, Ad
vance.
2-16-tfnB
Carpet Cleaning
Give your old carpet a new
lease on life with the do It
yourself steam cleaner®...
rinse and vac from DAVIE
SUPPLY COMPANY, 634- 2859,
Electrical
For fast and efficient service
on all electrical needs, large
or small, call Karl Osborne,
owner of OSBORNE
ELECTRIC COMPANY 634-
3398, 520 East Maple Ave,
5-11-tfnO
Garbage Pick Up
VEHICLES
Automobiles
FOR SALE; 1976 Thunderblrd
-fully loaded. Must Sell, Call:
634-3607,
8-31 tfnS
For weekly garbage pick-up
anywhere in Davie County ,„
call BECK BROTHERS
G A R B A G E DISPOSAL
SERVICE, 284-2917 or 284-
2824, Cooleemee. or County
Manager’s Office, Mocksville 9-7-tfn-J
FOR SALE ,„ Deluxe 1975
Rabbit, light Blue, a-c and
a,m, and f.m, radio. In Ex
cellent condition. Call:634-
3880 between 8 and 9 a.m. and
10 and 11 p.m.
6-12-tfnB
Septic Tank
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SERVICE ... certified lo
pump septic tanks ... large
truck for full time, efficient
service ... also rent sanitary
toilets .„ call 284-4362, Robert
Page, Cooleemee,
4-24-tfnP
Wall Coverings
Old walls need a new face..
See complete selection oi
newest wall coverings at
DAVIE SUPPLY COMPANY
at 634-2859.
3-25-tfnD
Woodwork
Now Open ... MIKE’S WOOD
WORK, we repair broken
furniture and take spec!' I
orders, cabinets, shelfs, etc.
CaU 998-5040.
12-8-tfnP
MOBILE HOME
SALES ON MOVE
Motorcycles
FOR SALE...1968 Harley-
Davidson Electra - glide,
(loaded) $2500., also a 1964
XLCH Sporteter $1500. C^all
East Bend 699-8891.
9-7-2tnp-H
Vans
FOR SALE, , ,1976 Step-In
Van 12ft, pay load, duel
wheels, automatic tran
smission, power steering and
air conditioned. Call: 634-
2675 after 5:00 p.m,
8-17-tfnM
Kessler's
Furniture & Upholsterir
(Formerly loe’s Upholstery)
O PEN D A IL Y
Mon. - Sat.- 9 : 0 0 - 5s3G
*Free Eftimatet
*Wide Variety of Samples *Presented In Homes
^Financing Available
Phone 284-2512
Cooleemee
A ccording to the M anufac
tu re d H ousing Institute,
m obile hom es now account
for nearly 30 percent o f all
new single fam ily housing.
While as luxurious and
spacious as m any regular
homes, owners cite the
m obile hom e’s low Initial cost
and low upkeep cost as their
m ain reasons for purchase.
I w a n t I d T
! to B U Y i
I L IV E S T O C K
I A.L Beck & Son
I Wholesale MeatsI ^omasville,N.C.
■w il l BUY lo r 100 cows I
j Im , * " •• • -
II
I
II
Gough Enterprises
Complete Home Service
Large Or Small-We Do It All!!!!
25 YEARS EXPERIENCE
a d d it io n s -r e m o d e l in í;KrrCHENS-BATHS-ETC. .
CABINETS-FURNITURE & REt>RODLlCTIONS
PH O N E 008-2076
Free Estimates______ Work Fully Guaranteed
I :. J in , Bulls, Vealt, Feederii
■ Locker Beef. ■
\ A.L.Beck,Jr. !
I Rt.l, Thomasville, N.C.I
■ Call Collect Anytime: S
Ii Winston-Salem ■
(010) 788-9008 I I or 788-7524 S
fPlione After 8 P.M. !
lear1yA.M .(010)476-889Sl
AIR WELL
DRimNGCO.
Route 9, Box 127
SUteevine, NC 2B677
Phone 872-7614
Advance, NC
Phone 99&4141
Ш Ж
WANTED TO BUY
LIVESTOCK
Beef cattle, hogs, veals, or
feeder cattle. I have an
order for all types of
cattle.
Will pay market price for
your livestock, right on
the farm. Payment In
check or cash, which ever
you perfer.
PROMPT PICK UP SERVICE
I will buy one head or
a whole herd.
Give me a calllll
FRED 0. ELLIS
Livestock |i^Aurtloneertng
Rt. 4, Mocks'iSlle, N.C.
634-5227 or 998-8744
Ufelon^ResldM
JEFF SELF SERVICE
P R O F IT
R A IS IN G E A R T H W O R M S
C«n You AnsiiWfr "YES'' to ТКем*
I Do you hk*
Ì Do you W*nl « buMWM ill VUif '
3 Do you rwfd trlMVinrni •>( rait« niKinv^
4 Dn yuu h«vr « tMrk k4id ot «nhrr
PERHAPS YOU CAN BECOME A WORM GROWER!
IF ACCEPTED AS A PROtXICEH. Wf. Ol I FR
• Proieuional Guid«ncf . Markeiiiiy Seivictf• Enchange Membership . Compleii' Siippli»'»
A C T TO D A Y ' SEND FO R YO U R FR E E BROCHURE!
HMN*. fkomr. drw rviiMi ol U« lu ^
MKTIOMN.mutut «MUMM MK
»II 9ПНТ • MTMI*. TMMIMM im»» • («I») Ш -т г
S S P l I W g S D A Y . SEPTFMIIPP -, ,97g
Onluo^
m d
B O X W Ò Ò D R E A L E S T A T E
W e’re th e
N d g h b o r h o o d
P r o f e s s i o n a l s :“
“We
D i d I t
For
You!”
W e a re p ro u d to a n n o u n c e th a t w e T r e n o w p a rt----------------.
o f C E N T U R Y 2 1 , th e c o m p a n y th a t le a d s th e real e sta te
w o rld in lis tin g s a n d sa le s.
W e ca n n o w b e tte r se rve y o u r real e sta te n e e d s w ith
th e s u p p o rt o f o u r m u lt i-m illio n -d o lla r a d v e rtis in g p ro g ra m
a n d a ll th e la te s t in p ro fe s s io n a l to o ls a n d te c h n iq u e s .
W E 'R E S T IL L IN D E P E N D E N T L Y O W N E D A N D O P E R A T E D ,
T H O U G H . So w e ’re th e s a m e lo ca l p e o p le w h o h a ve g ive n
yo u p e rs o n a liz e d a tte n tio n a n d e x p e rie n c e d s e rv ic e .
A n d w e 'll c o n tin u e to d o so b e c a u s e w e ca re a b o u t y o u .
T h a t ’s w h y w e d id it!
N o w w e ’re th e N e ig h b o rh o o d P ro fe s s io n a ls T rig h th e re ,
to s e rve y o u , so d ro p in o r o r c a ll w h e n e v e r yo u h a ve a
q u e s tio n a b o u t y o u r re al e sta te ne e d s'
BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE
Cordiatlu Invites You To A ttend Their
Saturday The Ninth Of September
Ten O ’clock In The Morning Until
Six O ’clock In The Evening
Sunday, The Tenth Of September
One O ’clock In The Afternoon
Until Five O ’clock
3 3 3 S a l i s b u r y S t r e e t
M o c k c v i l l e , N o r t h C a r o l i n a
noM»*
Each office is independently owned and operated^
fOU»l HOUSINC OPPOBulÌi»
S a t u r d a y , S e p t e m b e r 9 t h - - 1 0 :0 0 A . M . - 6 :0 0 P . M .
S u n d a y , S e p t e m b e r 1 0 t h - - 1 :0 0 P . M . - 5 :0 0 P . M .
•Country Ham
• Basket Bull • Football
• 42 Quart Thermos Cooler
•4-Quart Electric Ice Cream Freezer
jpjuspthers Too Numerous To Mention!!
6 3 4 -5 9 9 7
333 SALISBURY STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NX.
REFRESHMENTS WILL BE SERVED!!
Mocksville Sets Special Meeting For
September 19 On Splitting The PTCOG
By Doug Livengood
With numerous towns and counties all
around Mocksville rushing headlong
into calling for a split in the Piedmont
Triad Council of Governments (PT
COG), the Mocksville town board at its
meeting last week postponed making a
decision whether it would join in the
move to split the PTCOG.
On the same day the town board
decided to postpone making a decision
on the PTCOG question, the Davie
County . board of commissioners
unanimously voted to petition Governor
Hunt to split the PTCOG.
The town commissioners did decide to
hold a special meeting Sept. 19 to resolve
the question of whether they would join
forces with those favoring a division of
the PTCOG.
Mocksville. along with the counties of
Davie. Forsyth, Davidson. Surry,
Guilford, Rockingham, Caswell,
Alamance and Randolph and most of the
towns and cities within these counties,
are presently dues paying members of
the PTCOG.
The PTCOG is a regional planning,
administrative and consulting
organization which serves member
governments in Planning Region G of
the state.
Proponents of the split are attempting
to form two separate regional councils
of governments out of the present
Region G. with Davie. Forsyth, Yadkin.
Surry and Stokes counties and the towns
and cities within these counties forming
a new western region of Region G. The
remaining counties and towns in Region
G would form a new eastern regional
council of governments.
Mocksville Mayor R.C. Smith told the
town board members “it seems to be the
general opinion that we (Mocksville)
could be served best if we form a new
region."
He added. "From all indications.
D/VVIE C O U N T Y
Dot Shoaf (center) chairperson for the Committee of Telephone Sub
scribers of Cooleemee malces the first phone call over the Yadkin
Valley Telephone Corporation system that provides Cooleemee with a
countywide toll free connection. Committee members present for the
occasion were ( front row, I to r) Dot Smith, Prudence Johnson, (back
row) Otis Williams, E.C. Tatum, Arnold Garwood, Wade Groce,
president of the Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership Corp., and
Richard Beck. (Photos by Robin Carter)
$7.50 Per Year In North Carolina
$ 10.00 Per Year Out Side North Carolina THURSDAY. SHPTliMBliR 14, 1978
28 PAGES
Single Copy 1S cents
:^t0o1ëëinee Novv H^oltffëeCôijn^idë Service
The first telephone call over the
system providing Cooleemee residents
with county wide toll free service was
made September 8 by Dot Shoaf from
the 284 (Cooleemee) exchange to
Superior Court Judge Peter Hairston on
the 998 (Advance) exchange. The call
was made from the telephone office in
p; i
Cooleemee.
The connection of the cables providing
Cooleemee residents with this service
was made possible by the merger of the
Cooleemee Telephone Exchange into the
Yadkin Valley Telephone Membership
Corporation.
Bill McDonald, general manager of
Yadkin Valley Telphone Membership
Corporation said, “we are glad to be
able to provide this service and wish
that it could have been done years ago
when we attempted to purchase the
systemfrom l.H. Huske. It was
however, sold at this time to the Western
Carolina Telephone Company from
whom we purchased it on May 15,1978.”
McDonald also added that for the first
weeks the new system may be experience
undue busy singáis due to the newness
and popularity of the system.
“Since it is impossible to determine
the exact number of curcuits needed to
arry the calls before the system was
connected, the co-op will add new cir
cuits as needed after determining the
true volume of calls going over the
trunks,” said McDonald.
The merger of the Cooleeniee
Telephone Exchange into the Yadkin
Valley Telphone Membership Cor
poration was an historical' moment
\ ’•marking thefirstirme that'lOT the'Sreas
to dial the Advance, Ijames. and
Mocksville telephone exchanges into by
dialing directory listed numbers. The
merger of the Cooleemee Telephone
exchange into the Yadkin Valley co-op
drops the number of telephone com
panies within the county from 3 to 2 with
the Mocksville exchange (634) owned by
Central Telephone Company.
Another merger was made by the co-
(continued on page 2)
Police Report
The monthly report for the
month of August for the Mocksville
Police Department, as reported to
the Mocksville town board by
police chief Alton Carter on Sep
tember 5, was as follows:
-Arrests made-S3;
-Courtesies rendered-212;
-Complaints investigated-124;
and
-Warnings issued-45.
there is so much dissension now I don’t
think the members of this area ( the
present western area of the PTCOG)
could ever work effectively with Ihe
Greensboro COG." The PTCOG is
headquartered in Greensboro.
Smith, himself, journeyed to Raleigh
in July with numerous' elected officials
from northwest North Carolina. These
officials requested the Local Govern
ment Advocacy Council to recommend
to Governor Hunt that he split the PT
COG.
On August 29 Smith joined many of
these same elected officials and other
persons interested in splitting the PT
COG for a strategy planning session held
at Dobson to discuss ways to achieve the
split.
Sample re.scilutions, calling on the
governor lo split the PTCOG and
pledging that individual member
governments which passed the
resriution would join a new council of
government if one was formed, were
distributed at the Dobson meeting.
It was this sample resolution which
Smith urged the Mocksville town board
to pass at the board meeting last week.
Two department heads for the town of
Mocksville spoke at the board meeting
and strongly condemned the present
operations of the PTCOG as these
operations pertain to the town of
Mocksville.
Town supervisor Andrew Lagle told
the commissioners that some of the
money spent by the PTCOG for services
to its member governments, especially
for services to small towns such as
Mocksville. "may as well have been
thrown out into the middle of Highway 85
(the interstate highway running through
Greensboro) for all the good it does.”
According to Lagle. many of the
programs and services offered by the
PTCOG are designed so that only
Winston-Salem and Greensboro receive
any real benefits from the services.
Lagle did say that he believed that
"there is nothing wrong with the basic
purpose of the PTCOG” because local
governments within a region should be
aware of the activities of neighboring
(oontinucd on page 2)
NRC Explains To Senator Morgan
Reasons For Site Investigation
with a toll free system.
Wade Groce, president of the Yadkin
Valley co-op said, "This is a great
moment for not only the Cooleemee
residents but for the entire county being
the first time the county has been united
in a toll free system. “We are honored to
be able to provide this service.”
Cooleemee subscribers are now able
Judge Peter Hairston of Advance who served as legal advisor for the
committee is the recipient of the first phone call from Dot Shoaf. Ob
serving are (back row. I to r) Bill McDonald and Harvey Gobble,
Yadkin Valley Telephone officials, and Senator Jack Childers, who
assisted the Cooleemee subscribers in their contact with the State
Utilities Commission.
Applicants Sought
For Artist-ln-Residence
The Davic County Arts Council
announces that the Artist-in
Kesidpnrp position is now open for
applications. This position,
presently held by Pat Hicks, ex
pires .September 30 and, in ac
cordance with the Board's policy,
must be opened to new applicants
at each contact's termination.
Anyone interested in applying
must meet CETA requirements
and should contact Ms. Dare W.
Sanford. CETA Coordinator, at
(701) 6:14-5582 for further in-
I formation. Deadline for ap-
I plications is Friday. September 22.
The executive director for operations
JJ.S-.;Tiuclear Regulatory Com-
has
Morgan,
Democrat of North Carolina, that the
NRC is making every effort “to move as
expeditiously as possible in completing
the licensing action” for the Perkins
Nuclear Station in Davie County.
(jossick, in a recent letter to Morgan,
told the senator the NRC is attempting
to avoid delays in the licensing
procedure by requiring that an alter
native sites analysis be made now with
regard to the Perkins plant, instead of
having to undertake the analysis at a
later date after the Atomic Safety and
Licensing Board’s approval of Perkins
has reached the appeals stage.
Following are communiques from
Morgan, received this week by Dr.
Ramey F. Kemp of Mocksville.
Democratic state House representative
for the 30th-District, explaining recent
developments in the Perkins matter:
Dr. Ramey Kemp
P.O. Box 361
Mocksville, North Carolina 27028
Dear Ramey:
Attached is a letter from Mr. Lee
Gossick of the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission in answer <o‘tty'Ibtter to
Chairman Hendrie concerhing"'the
reopening of the permit hearings for the
proposed Perkins nuclear power station.
I hope you will find this letter useful.
Sincerely,
Robert Morgan
The Honorable Robert Morgan
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
Dear Senator Morgan:
Your letter of August 4, 1978 to
Chairman Hendrie, requesting the
Commission to overrule the decision of
the NRC Licensing Board to reopen the
record in the Perkins proceeding, has
been referred to me for reply. Chairman
Hendrie and members of the Com
mission may be called upon in the future
to participate in the review of deter
minations made by NRC Licensing and
Appeal Boards in the Perkins
proceeding. Accordingly, it would be
inappropriate for them to respond to
your letter.
On June 15,1978 the NRC Staff moved
the Licensing Board in Ihe Perkins
proceeding to reopen the record on the
alternative site analysis required by the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969. The Licensing Board granted the
Staff’s motion in an order dated July 14,
1978. The Staff requested that the record
be reopened to comply with a recent
NRC Atomic Safety and Licensing
Appeal Board decision in the case of the
Pilgrim Nuclear Generating Station 1
wherein it found that the analysis of
alternative sites required by the
National Environmental Policy Act was
deficient. The analysis of alternative
sites in the Perkins hearing record
suffered from the same deficiency. To
avoid the delay that would result if the
Staff waited for the Appeal Board to note
this deficiency during its review of the
Licensing Board's initial decision in
Perkins and then to remand to the
Licensing Board to correct the
deficiency, the NRC Staff elected to seek
correction of the deficiency before
issuance of the Licensing Board's initial
decision. This action on the part of the
NRC Staff should minimize the time
within which final decisions will be
reached regarding the issuance
(continued on page 2)
of
Arts Festival Is Saturday
Mocksville Board Wants To Know Of Its
Responsibilities For Junior High School
By Doug Livengood
The Mocksville town board wants to
become more aware of whal respon
sibilities the town of Mocksville will be
expected to shoulder with regard to the
planned construction of a new junior
high school to be opened in 1980 on a site
between Jericho Rd. and Sanford Ave.
And the town board decided al its
meeting last week to ask the Davie
County board of education to schedule a
joint meeting with the town board to
discuss the town’s rospiinslbilities
concerning the new schiinl
Town commisslontM Joi- Vlurphy, who
himself is a former iiicinufr ut ihe board
of education, brought up the question of
the construction of the new school at Ihe
commissioners’ meeting when he said
"I think we need to sit down wilh some
representatives from the board of
education and just see whut iheir plans
might be in the way uf town provided
services" fur the school.
He continued, "At this point in lime,
as far as I know, no one has cunt acted
the town of Mocksville in discuss ihe
proposed junior high."
Murphy noted lhal many uf the ser
vices necessary for the iieu schuoi. such
I as streets, sewerage, water, lighting,
police protection and traffic contrul.
might be areas of service wliere "the
burden of cost" might be necessary lo be
[borne by the citizens of Mucksville.
‘I certainly think we as a board
I should be luoking with our town I supervisor and our police chief and all ot
lour deparlmeni heads lhal wc ve goi
I that will pertain to this lo whai ii's <the
Ischool's construction I IS going lo invulvr
|us in ." said Murphy
He remarked, that he did nol svanì a
situation where Ihe town would be asked
"at Ihe last minute" lo "pul a $50,000
sireci in" for the new school "when we
don't have it in the budget."
Town commissioner Patricia Latta
eclioed Murphy’s comments when she
said ’'We’ve just been in Ihe dark" with
regard lo the plans for Ihe school. "I
dun'l think ils been by design, but
(lerhaps Ihey (school officialsi didn't
think we had any interests." in the
proposed plans for the school, observed
Uiiiii
She siiid, lhal lo lier knowledge, only
iMirc Mas a town uffici if I .......n.siilled
abuui plans for ilif Ml’» sihtml \ml'Imi
was when town supcrvisDr .Andrew
l..agle was coii<acii4i sriiuul ullici^ils
about whether il uuultl Ue pussitile l»r
Ihe luwn 10 run sewer lo Ihe new school
when il was al lhal tune bemt; con
sidered lo be constructed outside ol the
lown limits.
"I don't think even a member of ihe
I lown'si planning board was in on the
plans, so lo speak, for Ihe final location
or how lhal location would be in con-
neclion wilh the total planning of the
luwn." |x)inted oul Latla.
Town commissioner Gene Seals
commented lhal "It goes back lo the old
argument of Mocksville versus Davie
Couiily" in delerniining which govern-
)iu(l> \sill 'lie needed
'I'l'Mi es ill 'III' scliiiul
Well, ll we leU'iliiR u i iiii|n'i¡lie wilh
iuMii seliuiil ullirials > 'lirii v\r i r gning
luhave loknow wlial loexpecl sii we can
Include it in the budget and so forth."
said Mocksville Mayor U C. Smith.
“Well, we'll have lo see if it's a
realistic Ihint; wr ran afford."
nincluded Phi L.iiij
Woodson Foundation Grants
$1,000 For Library Piano Fund
Word has just been rereived from
David Fergusson. County Librarian,
that the Margaret C. Woodson Foun
dation, Inc., of Salisbury, has donated
one thousand dollars to the "Piano
Fund." A letter from James Woodson of
Salisbury arrived with the check
Tuesday,'and upon hearing the news.
Co^’hairman Dr. Henry Sprinkle felt
confident the goal would be reached.
Support has grown as the deadline of
September 14 nears. Local civic groups
have contributed generously, and those
wiiu liave already done so are listed
here: The Mocksville Jaycecs, DAV
Chapter 75, DAV Auxiliary Chapter 75,
and the Davie County Rescue Squad
Auxiliary.
The last two concerts, featuring Janet
O'Brien and James Lochridge
respectively, were very successful, with
l.ochridge, of Davie County, filling the
Multipurpose Room with a capacity
crowd of over one hundred people. The
fund driv» »nds Thursday, September
14. and i ' IS though Davie County
will have its own piano
By Valerie Slogick
The Davie County Arts Council will
sponsor their annual “Arts Alive Since
’75” free festival Saturday. September
16, 1978. on-the-square in Mocksville.
Exhibits will be open to the public from
10 a.m. until dusk. A disco dance contest
and festical dance “on-the-square” will
close out the day's activities. Judging
for the dance contest will be conducted
by Dave Plyler, Bill Winkler, and
Jennifer Hollar. Music will be provided
by Paul Richards.
Saturday, September 16, promises to
an exciting day for everyone. Crafts and
arts of all types will be on display.
Juried Art is an important part of any
art festival and a $75 first prize is being
offered to this year's winner. Judging
will be one by Betty Mitchell, of Win-
ston-Salem.
Concerts by the Davie High School
Band the State National Guard Band, at
10 a.m. and 1 p.m. respectively, will add
to the gaiety. The Dancing Boots will
perform along with the Davie High
School Band. Additional musical en
tertainment available will be conducted
on a competitive basis in the areas of
Rock, Bluegrass, and Gospel. Chris
Angle, of WTOB, will be one of the
distinguished judges for the Rock
competition. Doug Bales, of WXII,
Harper Van Hoy, and William Ralph
Winkler III will be our qualified
Bluegrass judges. Paul Tuttle, an ex
perienced gospel musician and com
poser, will be one of our featured gospel
judges.
We will have fiddlers and piddlers,
horse drawn buggy rides and Corvette
cars on display, artists doing instant
sketches and others displaying works
done in porcelain. Demonstrations will
be varied and interesting, including
such things as lye soap making, hook
rug demonstrations, quilting, ii eying,
horse shoeing, whittling. You name it
and we’ll have il.
This year’s festival has several
"firsts” to offer the residents of Davie
County. A festival-theme coloring book
illustrated by James Donaldson,
especially for the occasion, will delight
any child. A coloring book contest will
be held in conjunction with the festival.
Caudell Lumber (Company and The
Creative Frame & Stitchery all of
Mocksville and iciiiiard Kreau of the
Frame Shop, Salisbury will donate
framing materials to the contest win-
(continued on page 8)
Harper Van Hoy, manager of Fiddler's Grove Inc., will be featured
here as a judge for the blue grass music contest ^Saturday afternoon.
Mr. \ an lluv sponsors two main events a year in connection with
operating the family camoground which is open all year. The first
event is the Ole T^lme Fiddler's & Bluegrass Festival held each
Memorial weekend in May and the other is his annual “ Square-up"
scheduled every year on l.abor-Day weekend.
DAVII COUNTY I;NTI:RI’KISI: RI-CORn, TIIURSIMY. SI:I’TI;MBI:R M. 1‘>7H
Complaints To Trigger Enforcement Of
Dog Ordinance For Town Of Mocksville
Brenda J. Summers Joined Ihe WBTV ; News Staff as a reporter on July 31st. A native of Mocksville, N.C.. Summers began her journalism career there with
the Davie Enterprise Record newspaper
after graduating from UNC with a
1 degree in Radio, Television and Motion ■ Pictures. She has formerly been employed at WBBB in Burlington, WSSB in Durham, and WPTF Radio in Raleigh.
By Duug Livengood llnvp you dog owners In Mocksville
been wondering iiow the town's new dog ordinance will affect you and your pooch?Well, unless someone complains about your dog running loose the chances are
very good that you and Fido will escape the long arm of Ihe law responsible for enforcing the ordinance which went into
effect Sept. 1.
Al last week’s town board meeting
Mocksville chief of police Alton Carter fold Ihe town board members "I’m not going out here dog hunting. We don’t have the time or the people to go out
here and run up and down the streets” chasing and capturing dogs.“1 am not going lo go out here fooling with dogs unless I get a complaint on them. But if somebody calls me and complains about a dog...then we’re
going lo have to do something” to enforce Ihe ordinance, said Carter.And Carter reported that even if he receives a complaint about a dog running loose that Ihe dog’s owner will only
receive a warning the first lime the dog
is reported if the dog’s owner can, indeed, be identified.
Bui Carter hastily added that if he or his department receives another
complaint about the same dog running loose “then I’m going lo go and write a ticket” and enforce Iho ordinance which sajs lhal Ihe dnj; « owner “shall be guilty of a niisdotiicanor p in ^hable by
a fine nol exceeding $Wi or im- prisonmenl nol cxceudlng days” If he is convicted for allowing his dog to run loose.“One warning is enough. If you’re
going lo keep on warning them we can
do lhal wilhoul this or
dinance ..somewhere you're going to have lo draw the line," Carter iiMiiarked.Ill' noted lhal he and the members of his department have spent much lime inI-..... !,i>s ’I'ninn sln-i‘l !» slrci'l”
alU'iiipling to warn dog owners within limn aboiii Ihe new ordinance which forbids dugs lioni "running ul large on the streets or sidewalks" of the town "unless under the control of the owner or
a member of his immediate family by
leash, collar, chain or otherwise.”Carter observed, "Some people think that Iheir children never do any wrong. And there are some that think Iheir dog never leaves their yard. Both of them
Changes In Garbage Pickups Highlights
Meeting Of Mocksville Town Board
- Mocksville town supervisor Andrew Lagle told the Mocksville town board-last week at its meeting that beginning I the week of September 25 some changes .will be made in garbage collection• routes within the town..: The changes will be as follows;
• -Effective Sept. 25 Mumford Dr.,
Garner St., Sofley Ave., Edison St.,.Naylor St. and Church St. Extension will -have garbage pickup on Tuesday in- ;stead of Friday;• -Effective Sept. 25 the area of N. Main
■ St. past Milling Rd. toward Winston- ISalem, Carolina St., Milling Rd., -Lakecrest Dr., Sunset Dr. and Green- Iwood Ave. will have garbage pickup on .■Friday instead of Monday; and
• -Effective Sept. 25 the portion of lYadkinville Rd. Circle Dr. and Country -Lane which now have garbage pickup on -Monday will have garbage pickup on ITuesday.- Others matters of business at the town
.'board meeting were as follows;
‘ -The board unanimously endorsed a ■campaign being conducted locally by a Icitizens’ committee to raise $7,000 in •funds to purchase a grand piano for use lat the Davie County public Library;
; -The board adopted a final
-assessment roll for construction of a
jsewer line along part of Lexington Rd. Charles Clement Hines had appeared •Itefore the board on two occasions ¡requesting some relief on his
'assessment for the sewer Une along
^'ome property he has an interest in on ;Lexington Rd. But the board informed i^Hines that no relief could be given to him ^n the assessment;
' . -J.R. Bowles and other residents of jCherry St. in Mocksville came before
the town board to ask if the board could
lake some action lo help alleviate or eliminate what he termed to be excessive noise and crowds of persons gathering on a peice of property on Cherry St. owned by the Davie Counly Board of Education.
Buwles said these persons frequently
worked on cars on the property and
drove up and down the street in a
reckless manner.After much discussion, Mayor Smith asked the police chief to further investigate this complaint and the board members decided to have the town clerk
write a letter to the board of education
requesting that board’s aid in solving the problems which had caused the citizens' complaints;-Rev. Thomas S. Holman came before the board witha petition for street im
provements on Spruce Street. The
board asked town supervisor Lagle to
check the names on tlie petition against the tax books at the Davie County Courthouse;-Town zoning officer Jesse A. Boyce
Jr. presented a map of sub-divided property of the R.C. Poster estate. The town board approved and accepted this map, as had been recommended by the planning board;-Russell Spry, recreation director for
the town of Mocksville, reported to the
tward that a program of flag football would begin at Rich Park on Sept. 25. He noted that the Brock Gym is scheduled lo open on Oct. 1 and that he is presently
getting estimates for repair work at the gym. No bids had been received for relighting work at Rich Park, reported Spry.-The board authorized Mocksville
County Commissioners
ÍMake Appointments And
Consider Various Matters
; • Al their neeting last week the Davie
•County commissioners reappointed C.R.
■^derson,Samuel Daywalt and Edward
•Rosser to another three-year term to the •Davie County Hospital’s board of
Irustees.■' The commissioners also reviewed .’some of the questions to be answered
.'concerning the hospital's request that a ’ new medical office building be built near the hospital by the counly so that ad- 'ditional medical services can be offered for the county’s residents.
. It was the consensus of the com
missioners to meet with the hospital's trustees sometime during this month to Turther discuss the matter of the ‘medical office building.In other business:-The commissioners were advised by county manager Ron Vogler that they :would need to approve in coming weeks contracts for employes employed by the county under the Comprehensive -Employment and Training Act (CETA);
■ -The commissioners briefly reviewed
the input they would have upon the retirement of the county’s present agricultural extension chairman, Leo -Williams, in choosing his replacement
so lhal a new agent would be acceptable
to Ihe farmers of the county;-A motion by commissioner Bill
Foster to authorize the county manager to submit current population in
formation to the North Carolina
Department of Revenue, Sales Tax D-
ivision, was approved by the commissioners;-The commissioners approved the roster of the Cornatzer-Dulin Fire Department;-The board of commissioners
deferred any action on making or ap
proving two appointments to the Davie County Council of Economic Development;-The board reviewed a request made by the owners of Hickory Hill II
Development to allow water meters to
be installed at no additional cost to the owners.It was the ronsensus of the commissioners that current policy regarding this matter would have to be followed and that an agreement had
been made with the developer on the
construction of the lines as to the method for meter installation and this method was currently being followed; and-After reviewing a request from
residents along S.R. No. 1636 for the addition of a 3-inch and 2-inch water line, the commissioners approved this line addition.
chief of police Alton Carter lo advertise
for bids for a new police car for his department. These bids are lo be opened al the town board meeting of
October 3;-Town supervisor Lagle reported to the board that his department would be
trimming some limbs from trees that
were creating hazards along some of the
streets in town. He also noted that no
parking sign will be erected in the curve in the town cemetery.-The board passsed a motion designating that the federal Revenue Sharing monies received by the town be
used for construction of a new water
reservoir;
-The board unanimously passed a motion tocontinue keeping on the town's books a sewer assessment bill listed to the Davie County Board of Education for a sewer line on Cemetery St. The board
of education had adamantly refused to
pay this assessment, but the town board came to the conclusion that the board of education duly owed the assessment;-The board agreed to have the town purchase a truck from Reavis Ford for
$18,254.12. The Ford bid was the only bid
received for the truck.
-Mayor Smith reported to the board lhal the Davie County Council of Economic Development had recommended that Mary Forrest and Ed Goodwin be reappointed to serve another term on the board of directors of that organization. The Idwn board unanimously agreed with )^e pt^osed
reappoint meni of Forres)' ¿nd Goodwin; --Town commissioner Pat Latta asked
town supervisor Lagle lo check and see
what can be done lo improve or repair
the sidewalk in front of the old Southern Building;-Commissioner Latta also reported that the residents along Hemlock St. wanted something done about some
ditches in front of their homes. Mayor
Smith is to ask the residents of the street
lo get some pipe for the ditches and the
town will then do the needed work along
Ihe street; and,-The commissioners agreed to have the town clerk contact insurance companies about the possibiity of having Ihe town secure liability insurance for
the town's employees.
Chris Foster celebrated his fourth
birthday Sept. l.t with a party al the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dennis Foster. Guests included Michelle
and Melissa Bracken, Joy Markland and Emily Vestal. His grandparents, aunts and uncles were also there for the oc
casion.
ИГР wrong.". And, he continued, “After 1 gel a complaint (of a dog running loose) it's going lo be loo late unless I haven't given them (the owner) a warning.”
Carter noted lhal if a dog’s owner is convicted in court of letting a dog run loose then lhal owner will actually have to pay $77-$50 for the fine and $27 for the
cost of court. And he reminded dog
owners lhal they can be cited more than once for violation ot the ordinance if Ihey persist in letting a dog run loose.If a dog is found lo be running loose
and il is nol possible for Ihe police
department lo identify the dog's owner then Carter said the dog will be captured by Ihe county's dog warden and kept for
five days. If al the end of five days the
dog has nol been claimed then the dog
will be destroyed, explained Carter.Chief Carter did predict lhal “if you're going to ask whoever makes this complaint (about a dog running loose) lo come lo court you had just as well throw
lhal (new) dog ordinance right out the
window right now because this is not
whal they’re going lo do...they want me
to do their dirty work for them and they don’l want their neighbors mad at
them.”Town board member Gene Seats told
the board that he had already had several persons either complain about
or inquire about the new ordinance.
However, commissioner Joe Murphy
told the board he had several persons speak lo him complimenting the board for passing the ordinance.“We’re going to have lo pay for it (passing the ordinance). You’re going lo
have some people raise sand,” Carter
commented.Some of the town board members did mention that since the ordinance went into effect they had noticed lhal many of Ihe dogs which previously roamed the streets were no longer on the streets
because their owners had begun to keep
Ihem at home.
Motorcycle And Car Collide
A motorcycle and car were involved in a collision last Thursday about 5 p.m. on US 601, eight-tenth of a mile north of Mocksville.Involved was a 1965 Ford operated by
Linda Carol March, 18, of the Campbell Road and a 1975 Honda motorcycle operated by Jeffrey Mark Smith, 23, of Rt. 1 Mocksville.Slate Highway Patrolman A. C. Stokes
said his investigation showed that the
March vehicle was making a left turn
from US 601 onto the 1-40 exit ramp and turned into the path of the southbound motorcycle and was struck in the right rear.Smith was taken lo the Davie County
Hospital.Damage to the motorcycle was estimated at $350.Ms. March was charged with a safe movement violation.
% H e a lt h F a ir
"Follow the Yellow Brick Road lo
Good Heallh” will be the theme of the Davie Counly Health Department’s Open House-Health Fair lo be held Friday, September 15 from 9:00 a.m. lo 5:00 p.m. This event is being held to celebrate Public Health Week in North Carolina and lo acquaint Davie Coun- tians with the services of the Heallh
Department, Characters from “The
Wizard of Oz” will illustrate whal you
can do lo proleci your health and how
the Health Department can help.There will be exhibits, informational games and lours. Life Styles and Causes
of Death, Coronary Care, Diabetes,
Child Health, Home Health, Epilepsy,,
the WIC Program, Family Planning, Dental Health, and Environmental Health are a few of the topics to be displayed. In addition, refreshments will be served and a film festival of health-related films will be shown
conlinously during the day.Come to the Health Department on Hospital Street any lime between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Friday, and discover what your Health Department is doing
and can do for you.
Perkins Plant
(continued from page 1)
construclion permits for the Perkins
Nuclear Power Plant.
I assure you that the NRC will move as expeditiously as possible in completing licensing action in the Perkins
proceeding. If I can provide further
information, please do nol hesitate lo contact me.
Sincerely.
Lee V. Gossick Executive Director For Operations
Cooleemee Senior Citizens Meet
The Cooleemee Senior Citizens met Monday with 50 ■ members and one visitor, : Mrs. Bailey, attending. Two • new members, Mrs. Ruth 'Tutterow and Mrs. Mary ; Gulledge, were welcomed into the club.
, The nominating committee
; presented thwr slate of of
ficers, which'were approved
_ to serve for the coming year. -The newly elected officer are:; Granville Spry, president; Bessie Naile, vice president;
.Ethel Gibson, secretary;
;Luna Myers, assistant •se c re lirv ; R u sse ll
Ridenhoui. iieasurer, and Mrs. Thelma Gregory,
chaplain. These officers will be installed during the next meeting on September 25.Mrs. Theo presented a most Эlllertaining program, "A •Trip lo Ihe City ”
Mrs. Theo presented a most entertaining program "A
•Trip lu the City ."
: All members of the club
who are planning to attend
their outing on Monday, September 18, are asked lo
meel in the parking lot of the
First Baptist Church and be
ready to leave no later than 9:30a.m. The group will have lunch at the K & W Cafeteria in Concord after which they will be doing some shopping
at the Cannon Mills Outlet
Store in Kannapolis.
Secretaries Assn.
To Meet Tuesday
The Mocksville-Davie
Chapter of National Secretaries Association liilernatioiiai will hold Iheir regular monthly meeting on Tuesday, September 19, 19V8 at 7:00 p.m. at Ingersoll- Rand The program will be presented by Alton Carter, Chief of Police, Mocksville
Police Department All interested secretaries are in- viied lo attend
1 OWNER & OPERATOR:
1 RICKEY EVERHART
1 ASSISTANT MANAGER:
IVY GREGORY
^ р ш с ш Л а .
THRUSDAY THRU SUNDAY
1 LB. CHOPPED BBQ
IPT.SLAW ,4 - 0
1 PKG. BUNS
CHOPPED BBQ
SANDWICH * 1 .5 0
SMALL FRENCH FRY
MED. DRINKFri. & Sal. Only
BBQBEEF
SANDWICH *1 .2 5
PLATE * 2 .2 5
After 5 pm I n. Only
BBQ RIBS 3 HOT DOGS
• 1 .1 0
G > u n t r y B o y s B a r b e c u e
AT GREASY M RNER INTERSECTION 801 & 601
Bill McDonald (left) and Wade Groce (right) watch as Ralph Oliver joins the wires that will give county wide, toll free service to Cooleemee.
Cooleemee Gets Toll-Free EAS
(continued from page 1)
op September 2, when the Davie Exchange (493) was absorbed into the Advance exchange. This linkage of numbers with the 493-prefix into the
Advance exchange resulted in the permanent deletion of the prefix with these subscribers assisgned a new Advance exchange (998) number.Cooleemee residents have been working Howards getting county wide toll free telephone service for the past
nine years. Several pelitons have been
presented since 1969 by local representatives to the stale Utilities Commission. The most recent was drawn up by the “Telephone Subscribers of cooleemee” committee, a group of concerned Cooleemee citizens
seeking counly wide loll free service,
under the guidance of the them representative Peter Hairston. It began
circulation in August, 1977.Mrs. Dot Shoaf, chairman of the “Telephone Subscribers of Cooleemee
Committee” said, “This is the greatest
thing that has happened to Davie County
because for the first time we are united in toll free telephone service.”“After so many years of hard work by so many people, she continued, “our dream has come true.”
Since the purchase of the Cooleemee
Exchange by the Yadkin Valley co-op,
party line service has been eliminated.
The exchange now provides a private
line service to 1029 residences and businesses in the Cooleemee are of Davie and Rowan counties.PTCOG
Johnny Robertson, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnny Robertson of Route 7,
Mocksviiie, celebrated his Sth birthday. Monday, September 4th with a party at his home. He had a Mickey Mouse Cake. Special guests included his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Press C.
Robertson of Route. Mocksville and
Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Michael of Route 4,
Lexington.
Democrats To Hold
Watermellon Festival Friday
The Davie Counly Democrats will hold
a watermelon festival on Friday, September 15, in the Cooleemee .School
Cafeteria at 7 p.m.Mrs. Dot Shoaf, Cooleemee precinct chairman, extends an invitation to the public, regardless of parly affiliation, lo attend. she said.“There will be plenty of good ripe
Davie County grown watermelons for
everyone.”Bob Davis of Salibury will be the guest
speaker.Everyone is asked to bring knife and
fork.
Vehicles Collide
A traffic accident occurred Monday, September 11, at 12:09 p.m., on Salisbury Street in Mocksville involving
a ‘74 Volkswagon driven by Brenda
Hendrick Creason, 25, of Rt. 7, Mocksville and a ‘76 Ford driven by Darrell Eugene Edwards, 29, of Rt. 1, Mocksville.According to the accident report filed by officer R. S. Hupp of the Mocksville Police Department, Ihe Creason vehicle was traveling on Salisbury when the Edwards vehicle pulled out of a parking lot and struck Ihe Creason car.No injuries occurred in the accident
and no charges were filed.Damage to the Volkswagon was $75 and damage to the Ford was $25.
(continued from page 1)
local governments.He also noted lhal "as far as getting anything cleared through the PTCOG we’ve (Mocksville) had no problem.”
The PTCOG acts as a clearinghouse for
making recommendations to the state
and federal governments concerning local governments’ requests for grants.Mocksville police chief Alton Carter reiterated Lagle’s comments when he told the town commissioners that
concerning criminal justice programs offered by the PTCOG "Greensboro and
Winston-Salem just whack the cream right off the top of anything that comes along and the sinaller cities and towns just gel the crumbs left over. "Town commissioner Joe' Murphy,
however, hypothesized whether it might
not be necessary to again split a new
council of government, of which Mocksville and Davie County would be members, if for any reason member governments of the newly formed council of government become disen
chanted with other member govern
ments in a region, as has occurred in the PTCOG.“You’ve got to stop splitting somewhere,” reasoned Murphy.Murphy also questioned whether
Mocksville and Davie County “have as much in common with Surry County (which would be a member of the newly formed western area of the PTCOG) as we do with Rowan or IredeU” counties.
Another town commissioner, Patricia Latta, remarked, “I’m not sure we need Uiis layer (of government which is formed by a council of government) period.”Board member Gene Seats admitted
he had whal he termed a “selfish viewpoint” for not wanting to vote to split Uie PTCOG al Uie present Ume.
Seals, the administrator of the Lynn
Haven Nursing Home in Mocksville, told the board members that he has been attempting for tbe past 18 months to get approval from the Piedmont Health Systems Agency, which he said is a
division of the PTCOG, so that an ad
dition can be constructed al the nursing
home.“They could easily knock me out of what I’ve worked eighteen months for," said Seals, fearing reprisals from the PTCOG if he voted now to have the
PTCOG split.
Following the comments of Seats, commissioner “Buster" Cleary made a motion Uiat the board postpone for two weeks making a decision on whether to ask for a division of the PTCOG. Seats
seconded Cleary’s motion and the
commissioners voted lo hold a special
meeting Sept. 19 to decide the question.
124 South r ’ain .Street
Moclv8villc,>'.r,.
Ptiblislied «vi*r> Thursday by the ÜAVIb J'UnUSIlING COMPANY
MOCKSVILLK
RNTERPBISE1016-195R
DAVIK
RECORD1899-19.'5С
COOLEEMEE
JOURNAL1906-1971
Gordon Tomiinsiin.................................Editor-Pubiiiher
Becky Snyder
Director oC Advertising
Second CJass Postage Paid in •^^ot•ksнlJe, N. C. 27028
Srn.SCHlPTION PATES
87.50 per year in North rarolina; $10.00 per year out of itata.
Single Copy 16 cent«
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1978
OPEN
FRIDAY
NIGHT
TIL 8:30
STARTS THURSDAY MORNING
FREE FREE FREE
FREE
LADIES COAT
" MAN’S SUIT
BE SURE T O REG ISTER
Y O U M U S T BE 16 Y E A R S O F
A G E O R O V E R T O BE ELIG IB LE. BE
SURE T O R EG ISTER A T B ELK FO R
THIS P R IZE .
W IN N ER 'S C H O IC E O F O N E .
FREE
Drawing to be held Saturday at 5 P.M. on the square^FREE FREE FREE
LADIES COATS
WOOL BLENDS-LEATHERS
100% POLYESTER
TRIMMED-UNTRIMMED
GREAT SELECTION
Usually 70 To’160
T O
$9 ^ 8 8
PLAYTEX
FOUNDATIONS
SELECTED STYLES
1 . 0 0
T O
3 . 0 0 .
3 D A Y S O N L Y
O N E G R O U P
LADIES BLOUSES
PLAIDS ANDTAHERSALLS
POLYESTER AND COnON
Usually’14
n O .8 8
O N E
BOYS SUITS
SLIGHT IMPERFECTS
SOLIDS AND STRIPES
If First Quality
Values To’35
M 6 . 8 8
BOYS JEANS
JUNIOR
DENIM JEANS
PRE WASHEDCOnON DENIM
SIZES 7 TO 15
Usually 42
i 9 . 8 8
FAMOUS "BILLY THE KID”
REGULARS AND SLIMS
Original Price’11.75
SA*-®5 . 8 8
O N E G R O U P
BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
ASSORTED STRIPES
SIZES 8-18 Usually
’5.00 3.88
2 0 % o f f
ACRYLIC FLEECE BUNTING SET
Hooded jacket with but- "7 0 / ^
ton front: zip-up bunting I , ¿ \ j
has plaid lining. Machine
care. Sizes 0-6 months.usually 49
s a l e
‘BABY B’ KNIT SACQUES, GOWNS, KIMONOS
In 65 % SEF modacrylic, 3 5 % polyester. Wear
Dated® warranty for one full year by Monsanto.
Gowns; white, pinl<, maize or mint.
usually$2.75..............................................SALE 2.29
multicolor prints, usually$3.00 ............SALE 2.50
Sacques: white, pink, maize or mint
usually 1 .6 0..............................................SALE 1.29
Kimono: multicolor prints, usually$2,75 SALE 2.29
Warranted by Monsanto (or one full year's normal wear, refund or replacement when returned with tag and »ales slip to Monsanto. Properly constructed garments of approved SEF fabrics meet the appropriate U.S. Government flammability standards.
s a f e a n d c o z y s l e e p e r s
| W e a r D a t e d b y M o n s a n t o
'jama blanket' by
5 . 9 9 usually 7.50
I Comfortable sleep for baby with the assurance of full
I coverage. Full length zipper, roomy raglan sleeves,
I dainty embroidered applique. Plastic-sole enclosed
feet with elasticized anklets. Blue, pink, red or yellow.
Of 65% SEF modacrylic, 35% polyester in sizes S-XL.
our own brand 2-pc. sleepers
1 2 t o r * 9 usually S.50 each
Screen print design on long-sleeve t-shirt style
top Pull-on bottoms have elastic back,
non-skid soles, adjustable "grow" waist.
J Elasticized ankles, snapfasteners.Blue,
I yellow, pink. aqua. Of 65% SEF,
I modacrylic, 35% polyester in sizes 1-4.
The Wear Dated promise: Warranted by
Monsanto (or one full year’s normal wear,
refund or replacement when returned with
tag and sales slip to Monsanto. Properly
constructed garments of approved SEF
fabrics meet the appropriate U.S.
Government flammability standards.
S A L E ! W in t u k 'O r lo n ® y a r n s
4 - p l y a ll p u r p o s e b y C a r o n ®
8 8 ‘usually 1.29
Solid colors; 4 oz. skeins. . . Ombre; 2V i oz. skeins
For knitting, crochet . . . easiest-care blend for all wash-and-
wearables. Jumbo skeins guaranteed machi je washable
and dryable. Non-allergenic. Never needs ¡..laping; that:s
because you're working with 100% DuPont Orion* acrylic.
Beautiful colors. Gef in on the saving; I
*Du Pom Certi.'ication Mark
O N E G R O U P
MEN'S
SWEATERS
ASSORTED STYLES
Values To’18
»1 0 “
S M * T P
$ 1 3 8 8
s a t e l o u r o w n ' R e d C a m e
^ w o r k a n d l e i s u r e s e t s
M ADE W ITH A E LA N E S E -----*)R T R E L
7 . 9 9 6 . 9 9
pant, usually 8.99 shill, usually 7.99
They let a man go to the job looking neat, organized
and business-like. And these are the work sets that
stand up to plenty of hard work and wear. . . that's
because the stamina is built in! 65% Fortrel*
polyester, 35% cotton. And you get tough stitching,
bar-tacks. weli-anrhored buttons. Plenty of career
colors, too: It. grey olive, navy.
Pants: 29-42 waists. Shirts: 14-17 " neck sizes.
• Fortrel is a trademark of Fiber Industries, Inc.
‘Red Camel’leather career shoes
2 1 . 8 8 1 8 . 8 8
boot, usually $26 oxford,usually $23
Made with steel shanks to give your feet more healthful
support, day long. Soft-C'JEhlon insole i3oo<iyMr w«lt
construction and oil-resistant Neoprene soles. Ridged
soles and heels grip all surfaces. Dark brown.
DAVII COUNTY HNTlíRl’RISl-; RINCORI), THURSDAY. SUl’TUMBUR 14, H)7S
Library News
The Plano Drive is about over, and our thanks go out already to those who have
given or are considering giving. It Is not
too late to contribute, as contributions will be taken through Thursday until
5:00 p.m.Our display Ihis month consists of vocational guidance materials. We have
acquired a new set of materials with Library Services and Construction Act Outreach Enrichment Grant money for
those seeking occupational Information.
There are hundreds of Career booklets
devoted to individual occupations; there are about thirty Vocational Guidance Materials Booklets which are paperback books devoted to certain fields; there are various titles for women Including
the Catalyst series of booklets for un
dergraduated women seeking careers; there are some new periodicals including “Women's Work", “Career World’’, and "Occupational Outlook Quarterly”. The two volume Encyclopedia of Careers and Vocational
Guidance is excellent; a new Blue Book ol Occupational Education is on order; and finally a series of books from Arco ! Press is on order. The Arco books deal with Civil Service tests. Pace tests,
refresher courses and the like. Most of
the materials can be checked out and hopefully will fill a very evident current need In our county.New Books:Chesapeake, by James A. MIchener.
The most recent bestseller by one of America's most engaging novelists. The saga this time concerns the Choptank area of the Chesapeake Bay. 1583 marks
the beginning and 1978 the end.Barns; Their History, Preservation
and Restoration, by Charles Klamkln.Profusely Illustrated with photos, this volume tells how old barns were built; remodeling is covered, as Is saving what
we have left.
201 Plans To Build or Remodel Your
House.Each page has a plan, along with annotations. Size specifications are Included as Is a photo or drawing and the
actual plan. All types are covered from
ranches to colonials.
Till Death Do Us Part, by Vincent
Bugllosl.By the author of Helter-Skelter, this Is Ihe story of two bizarre murders connected only by a criminal mind at first. Bugliosi, the prosecutor in the case, tells
of the case from murder well through
trial, in which circumstantial evidence
plays a great part.Mail-Order Crafts Catalogue, by
Margaret A. Boyd.For the amateur craft expert, this Is a must. 1600 companies, stores, and individuals are listed which sell all types of craft material by mail.Lucrezia Borgia, A Biography, by
Rachel Erlanger.
Lucregla, who was said to be the most shameless and dissolute woman of her age, was actually not. She did not cruelly send her discarded lovers to their deaths, or concoct poisonous brews
for her guests. She was an interesting
woman, through, and this biography is a
fin introduction to the Italian
Renaissance.The Glimpses Of The Moon, by Edmund Crispin.This is an English mystery that verges on parody. A laborer named Hagberd is arrested for decapitating a farmer named Routh. The rector, the major, Gobbo, and Detective-Superintendent
Ling all try to solve the crime, but it is of course Professor Fen who, after lugging one man's head around in a sack
thinking it is a pig's head, eventually
solves the mystery.All About Meat, by Leonard Stanley
Lobel.Here is a complete study of meat, well illustrated, which not only may save you
some money, but may put some
delicious meat on your table. Nutrition
is included, along with chapters on holidays, summer cooking, frozen meats, carving and boning, and finally storing meats and poultry.My Enemy The Queen, by Victoria
Holt.This latest bestselling novel is written about Queen Elizabeth I by the woman who was constantly there in the triangle of love surrounding the Queen. Lettice Devereux was that woman. She
married the Earl of Leicester,
Elizabeth's first love, and was the
mother of Essex, Elizabeth's second.
Bill Weant and Johnny Roberts of WDSL
Bill Weant Receives
National Media Award
Bill Weant, Alcoholism Education
Consultant with the Tri-County Mental
Health Complex, has received a second-
place communication award in the national media contest competition conducted by the National Association of Mental Health Information Officers.Weant was recognized for outstanding
achievement in the field of mental
health and mental retardation com
munications in the audio-visual
category.NAMHIO is a national professional organization of information, education, public relations and communications practitioners concerned with services for the mentally ill and mentally
retarded.
The communication contest was
judged by public information-public relations executives in the Austin, Texas area : Dean Herbst, Head of the Division of Health Affairs, Texas College and University System---Ernestine Wheelock, Public Relations Director of Women in Communications~and Dan
Urban and Gary Haseloff of the Texas
Education Agency.
Weant was recognized for his “Alcohol Awareness” radio spots. "A.I.
R....Alcohol Information Report” is a
continuing monthly series of 10 60- second informational radio features aired on three radio stations in the area, WDSL in Mocksvllle, and WSTP and WRDX in Salisbury. The an
nouncements are broadcast three or
four times daily and reach an estimated
audience of 150,000 people.Weant’s objective in producing the announcements is to offer the general
public Information about alcohol, in
cluding how to deal with the problems
associated with excessive drinking and alcoholism and where to get help.Subjects have included: the female alcoholic, alternatives to alcohol abuse,
alcohol and industry, the black
alcoholic, alcohol and stress, alcohol
and traffic safety, the alcoholic in the family, drinking myths, and alcohol in the educational setting.In June, Weant's entry won the First Place Award from the southeast region and was then entered in the national competition.
Letters To Editor
Dear Sir:
In today's society, most people do not
want to become involved in anything that does not concern them personally or a close member of their family. I would just like to commend Tom Shore of Cooleemee for his act of kindness and
bravery a couple of weeks ago. Had It
not been for his concern and willingness to become involved with someone else's problems, in all probability, Monte Blackwood would have been permanently injured or possibly beaten to
death when assaulted on the tennis court of the Recreation Center.Blackwood was outnumbered by his assailants but the screams of his wife
brought Tom, who was visiting near by.
From the people in Cooleemee, our
hats are off to Tom Shore, who by caring enough to become involved, possibly saved the life of this young busband and father. Blackwood was beaten almost unconscious and required several days
of hospitalization. He was able to go
back to work this week and he feels mighty grateful to Shore for making it possible.
In fact, on that particular afternoon a couple weeks ago, Blackwood’s Guar
dian Angel appeared in the form of Tom
Shore...Thanks Tom, from all of us in Cooleemee.
Hayden Beck Ford Street Cooleemee
Dear Editor:Would you please print my letter in
your “Letter to the Editor” column.
Hopefully someone in your area can .
shed some light on my family history.My grandfather, James Milas Stroud,
was born January 12, 1877 to Wm. Thomas and Elizabeth Catherine Sparks Stroud. James Milas was born in the Rhonda or Statesville area.Wm. Thomas was born July 19,1852 in
or near Wilkes County. He lived most of,
his life near Wilkesboro^nd died there i ,', April 3* 1932. Wm. ThSfeas's paAntiii;/^ were Milas and Martha Ragsdale ' Stroud.
My family believes Milas, born about 1820, came to America from Ireland or England with two or three brothers. TOe brothers may have been named Giles and Phillip. One story is that there were
four brothers, and that two fought for the North and two fought for the South during the Civil War. We’ve lost all track of Milas’s brothers.
Milas Stroud was a minister for the Home Guard and was killed during the Civil War near Boomer, N.C.
Any information about Milas, his brothers, or his parents would lie greatly appreciated. Some of my family in Wilkes Co. believes we are related to
some Strouds in Davie or Iredell Co.Thank you for your help in this mailer!
Sincerely,Mrs. Alice Barllell
Hospital Auxiliary
Fall Ball Is Sept. 30th
The Davie County Hospital Auxiliary will hold their annual Fall Ball at the Bermuda Run Country Club on Saturday, September 30. The social hour will
begin al 6:45 p.m. and dinner will be served promptly al 7:30 p.m.Music will be provided by Ihe Clyde & Jo Lakey Band with Ihe dance beginning
al 9 p.m. until 1 a.m. Tickets .irp new jn
sale and may be purchased from any auxiliary member for $36 per couple. Anyone needing a ticket should make their purchase by September 25.
The buffet style menu will consist of
roast round of beef, baked chicken, seaford newburg. fresh vegetables, Au Gratin potatoes, choice of salads, rolls and butter, assorted pastries and coffee
or tea.
Semi-formal dress is required and
tables will be arranged to seat four to five couples.Additional information may be obtained by calling Mrs. Debbie Furches
at 634-5259, Mocksvllle.
B ir th
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Markland of Advance announce the birth of a daughter. Sharon Lynn. September 7th at the Forsyth Memorial Hospital. The
paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Markland. The maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Stuart. Sharon Lynn has a four-year-old sister. Susan.
W o o d - B r o w n
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wood of Route 1, Advance, N.C. announce the engagement of their daughter. Opal Brown to Terry Michael McDaniel, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McDaniel of
Cooleemee, N.C.
The bride^elecl is a graduate of Shady
Grove High School.
Mr. McDaniel graduated from Rowan Technical Institute and Davie County High School. He is employed with the Drexel-Heritage plant in Mocksvllle.The wedding is planned for this fall.
Cosmetolgist Assn.
To Meet Sept. 18
Davie Cosmetologist Association will meet at Margaret's Beauty Salon,
Monday. September 18 at 6 p.m.
Mrs. Brenda Alexander will be the guest hair stylist.All hairdressers are welcome. Nonmembers can attend with a five dollar fee
■, -....'J"-*'.»»'''- i '
Jason Barry Day celebrated his :ird
birthday Tuesday September 5 with a
party at his home. His parents are Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Day of MocksviUe
Grandparents are Rev. and Mrs. Elm er
Day of MocksviUe and Mr. and Mrs.
Jam es Shoaf of Marion. S.C.
Our Once a Year Ciearnace of Selecteii Merchandise
A t Savings of 20 - 40%
SEPTEM BER 11 - 16,1978
Finest Gifts And Accessories
COPELAND COLLECTION
Hours: 10-5 Mon. • Fri. - 10-1 Sat.
1504 W. Innes St. • Salisbury
3 DAY SALE
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
COME IN AND REGISTER FOR
ODR DOOR PRIZE ^
>3 DIMENSIONAL MARBLELIZED LAST SUPPER
DRAWING TO BE HELD SATURDAY
AT 5 P.M, ON THE SQUARE
AnnounciiiR........ Classes in Macrame-Hydrocal-
l2;00til9;00P.M. Hooked Rugs
P B ’ »
HobbyShoe
126 M Main Stn«l M o MPHONE 704-634-3915 __,
Hours: Moii-Wed-Frl-Sal-9 - 5
Tue. • Tliur»-12 • 9
T O ccidental Life
A Transamerica Company
Meeting Personal & Business InsArance Needs With A Wide Range Of Verstlle Products.
Life Insurance Al. Annuities Health Insurance , „ , Basic Hospital/Maior Medical
PERSONAL AND BUSINESS
Group Insurance Pension & Profii Group Pension ContraPension & Profit Sharing Plant Group Pension Contracts Investment Management
503 Avon St. Moeksville, NC Anent; Darrell Edvnrds
Kitchen Shears
Special kitchen shears are a great help for cutting meat. fish. fowl, bones and vegetables. They’U snip herbs, trim artichokes, cut open bags and frozen food pouches. Some handles are also
designed to flip jar lids or to open bottles
and screw-on tops. For baking, use them to cut dough, cookies and pizza without scratching the pan. /
Amy Jo Mason, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul (Mickey) Mason celebrated
her 2nd birthday with 2 parties at her
home. Saturday afternoon. September
!lth, Amy Jo and her Uttle friends en-
jo.ved games and refreshments on the
lawn. Sunday afternoon. Amy's aunts,
uncles, grandparents ntiil "rpnt grand
mothers helped hei celebrated the oc
casion. Refreshment!, were enjoyed by
everyone and a lot of fun was had by all.
Jenny Smith Has
16th Birthday
Jenny Smith celebrated her 16lh birth
day wilh a cook-out at her home Saturday evening. Hosts were her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Smith i)f Moeksville, Route 2.
Enjoying the occasion were her
grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Smith. Mrs. Louise Durham. Susie and John Smith, Danny. Cynthia. Ginger and Beilina Durham, Lisa, Mike, Bonnie and Amy Myers, Ann and Chris Howard, Roger and Tony Rhineharl, Dennis and Shane Varnadoe, Lisa Foster, Joe Brown, her sisters, Tammy and Melissa and special guest, her great grandmother. Mrs. Martha Smith
An aunt, Mrs. Cynthia Durham made and decorated the birthday cake.The honoree received many gifts and a good lime was had by all.
"Science And Mysticism”
To Be Discussed
By Former Astronaut
Former astronaut Dr. Edgar Mitchell,
the sixth man to set foot on Ihe moon,
will present a lecture on "Science and Mysticism; A Peek at the Future” on Thursday, Sept. 21. at 8:00 p.m. in Walt Chapel at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem.
Tickets for the lecture are $3.00 for adults and $1.50 for students. Tickets are available at the Book Nook In Winston- Salem and will also be available at the door.
Mitchell’s lecture will be sponsored by Ihe Spiritual Frontiers Fellowship, Winston-Salem Chapter.In addition to being a former astronaut, Mitchell Is currently an author and researcher on Psi
Phenomena and is the founder of the Institute of Noetic Sciences.
Vehicles In Collision
A traffic accident occurred Thursday, September 7. at 8:30 a.m., at the intersection of Salisbury and S. Ma(n Streets in MocksviUe Involving a '77 Chevrolet truck driven by Rhonda Judy
Trivette. 17. of Rt. 5. Moeksville and a ‘76 Dodge automodible driven by Deanna Michels Thomas. 16. of 211 Morse Street, Mocksvllle.
According to the accident report filefd
by officer A. D. Adams of the MocksvUle
Police Department, the Trivette vehicle was stopped at a yield sign waiting to enter S. Main when it was struck in the rear by the Thomas vehicle.No Injuries occurred in the accident and no charges were fUed.
Damage to the car was $300 and no
damage was reported to the truck.
Better Infant Birth DriveThe Fork Jaycettes will help in conjunction with the MocksviUe Jaycettes wilh their project. Better Infant Birth.A box has been placed at the Fork
Discount store for any baby items that
the public would like to donate for the
cause. Ail the items will be given to the mothers who attend the BIBS prenatal clinic.The Jayceeles will appreciate your generosity for this purpose.
Around And About
CELEBRATES 80TH BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Nannie AngeU CaU celebrated her 80th birthday Sunday with 82 of her
Immediate family present; eight of which were her chUdren. A bountiful and
delicious meal as weU as good fellowship was enjoyed by all. The chUdren credit
their mother with teaching them to serve God.
VACATIONS ALL OVER
Mr. and Mrs. BiU Nivens and son. Thomas of Route 4, MocksvUle and Mrs.- SaUy Hivens of Rt. 7, MocksvUle traveled a southern route across the United,
States visiting various points of interest in Nevada, California and Washington
state. A northern route was traveled home two weeks later.
ATTENDS FRALEY REUNION Attending the Fraley reunion which was held Sunday at Macedonia MeUiodist’ Church in Harmony were Mrs. Sue Holmes, Mrs. Frances Feimster, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Holmes and daughter, Cathy, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Holmes, Ms. Robin' Carter and daughter, Amy Carter and Breck Feimster. FoUowing a discussion of the family'slieritage, lunch was spread on the church grounds and enjoyed by
a large attendance. . ,
LOCALS JUDGE AT IREDELL COUNTY FAIR Mrs. Fredi Hammer of Advance and her husband, Earl Hammer were judges in the Iredell County Fair Pony and Horse Show in StatesviUe, Labor Day. The
show chairman Richard A. Boyd has asked that Mrs. Hammer return again
next year as judge, due to the response of the audience and the exhibitors.
ATTENDS HAIR SHOW IN SALISBURY Mrs. Margaret Wilson, Mrs. Estie Jones and Mrs. Blanche Hutchens attended «| Young Supply Company llairColoring and Styling Show at Uie Holiday Inn in-
Salsibury, Monday. September llth. Ronny Hamlet was Die featured artist.
EMPLOYED AS REGISTERED NURSE AT FORSYTH HOSPITAL Ms. Patty Richards, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. B. L. Richards, graduate ot Southern Missionary College. Chattanooga. Tenn., has been granted licensure
to practice nursing in the state of North Carolina. She is employed as a registered nurse at Forsyth Memorial Hospital in Winston-Salem.
STUDENT OFFICER Bobby Brownlow (Advance) was elected president of the sophomore class at
High Point College for the new year. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.
Brownlow Sr., Route 3. A pre-med student Brownlow is majoring in biology.
BACK-TO-SCHOOL COOK-OUT Mr. and Mrs. Olin Pardue honored their daughter. Sherry at a cook-out Sept.6. The occasion was to celebrate her first day at college. She is attending Mitchell College to become an Executive Secretary.
Flag Football League
To Organize Sept. 18 {
Anyone interested in entering a team or refereeing in Oie Moeksville recreation flag football league please contact Russ Spry at the town hall.League play is scheduled to
begin on Monday, September
25. An organizational meeting
is planned for Monday September 18, 7:00 p.m. al the
town hall.
U lillliilllllllllllliliiiilH IIIilllM M illiM H IIIM IIM IilllM illllllM ijlM n in
Sweet potatoes are best if
they taper at both ends.
free Fulton
a n n u a l Chicken Stew
Behind Hendrix Barbecue 64 East
Friday, Night, Sept. 22 7:00 PM
CARL STEWART
SPEAKER OFTHE NORTH CAROUNA HOUSE
FEATURED SPEAKER
B a r b e r J u n c t io n
e p o t R e s t a u r a n t
U.S. 70 EAST AND 801 SOUTH
B A R B E R . N C
RESERVATIONS FOR:• SPECIAL PARTIES• GROUP MEETINGS• WEDDING PARTIES
ALL ABC
PERMITS
Fulton Precinct Democrats
RICHARD HENDRIX, CHAIRMAN
Ad paid for by Davie County Democratic txecutive Committee, Dill Ijames Chaiiman
Specializes in prime ribs of beef and
other fine stealis and a variety
of delicious seafoods.
PHONE 278-4591
Hours: Tuesday • Saturday 5 PM • ’Til..,
TIIIIU M M M M IM M IillllliillUllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllM lllllllllllir
DAVlli COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1478 - 5
' г г ш ё >
S t a r t s T h u r s d a y ,
S e p t e m b e r 1 4 t h
PRICES GOODTHURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY
^ S f ^ l n c e ^ ^ 7 5
See These Great Bargains!!!!
Ladies Jeans
fashion
sizes 5 to 13 regular price $16.99
’ 8 . 8 8 “ *> *9.88
women sLeather Look Coats
assorted colors,with Hoods
sizes 8 to 16
regular $22.50
«0 « $ 1 8 . 8 8 .
LadiesKnltTops
short sleeve and long sleeve
SMLXL
regular $6.99 & $8.9^
NOW *4.44
LadiesPant Suits & DressesOne Group
У а
2 PRICE
Ladies FlannelShirts
cotton long sleeve regular $6.99
NOW $5.44
Ladies Panty Hose
sheer lo the waist
teen and adult sizes
regular 79(/
NOW FOR 1 . 0 0
Ladies Slacks
dress and casual
regular $13.99
NOW
M 0 . 0 0
ladiesGowns & Robes
regular $7.99 |
*6.44
REGISTER FOR THE
Women’sLeather Look Jackets
assorted colors sizes 5 to 15
regular $14.99
NOW $1 2 . 8 8
large group
new shipmentDress Length Polyester
if on bolts
values to $4.99
NOW
And Rotisserie
! TO BE GIVEN AW AY
Ladies Ear Rings
pierced values to $12.50
no» * 1 . 8 3 and I у
* 2 . 8 8
Dish Towelsassorted colors
regular $1.69
NOW
Ч . 0 0
’
i"
Л 1 * ^ < ч \ ч ч у о
Ч 1 У
Must Be 16 Years Or Older To
Register!!
D R A W IN G TO BE H ELD S A T .,
SE PT E M B E R 16 , AT 5 :0 0 P .M .
O N THE S Q U A R E IN M O C K S V IL L E !!
Jifiy Dresses
I NOW
Just sew them up
regular 20^ per inch
3 ’
PER INCH
MAKE A
DRESS FOR
5 pieceBath Ensemble
regular $9.99
NOW *7.44
NOW
one^^p ofLadies Casual Shoes
assorted styles and sport oxfords values to $14.99
*11.87
wranglerMen’s Jeans
flare lege, straight leg,
regular $13.99
NOW * 1 0 . 8 8
one group ofMen’s Suits vhIucs to
*34.8S... •44.88
one group ofMen's Jeans
values to $9.99
* 5 . 0 0 1 »
*9.44
Denim RemnantsCotton Regular $1.99
NOW $1.44
men's 6 inchMen’s Work Shoes
regular $22.99
NOW *19.87
one group ofMen's Shoes
casual and dress
values to $24.99
NOW *14.87
Men’sLow Back Overalls
sizes 30 to 44
regular $12.99 ^
NOW
Sizes 46 to 52 ft
regular $13.99
NOW
1 0 . 8 8
1 1 . 8 8
Boy's Dress Slacks
values to $16.00
sizes 8 to IB
NOW ^ 8 « 8 8
2 pieceBath Mat Set
regular $2.99
Assorted colors
NOVf 2.44
beautifulBath Towels
regular $;i.49
NOW $1.58
MATCHING WASH CLOTHS 77
NOW
Men’s Western Shirts
values to $8.99
*7.88
NOW
Men's Knit Shirts
short sleeve regular $5.99
*3.00
Boy’s Jeans
values to $7.99
Sizes 8 to IP
N0« * 5 . 8 8
StainlessDinnerwareservice for 12 regular $24.99
?17.44NOW
mirrorAluminum Kitchenware
pitcher, covered saucepan, sauce pot covered,
3 piece range set
regular $2.49 J g J l
NOW I
Cake Coverswith lock lid assorted colors regular $2.99
NOW 1 . 8 8
men'sFlannel Shirtslong sleeve
s m-l-xl regular $7.99
N O * * 5 . 8 8
Bcqr’s Shirts
long sleeve western and flannel
values to $5.99 sizes 8 to 18«4.44л»о*5.4
s o »
Girl’s Jeans
sizes 7 to 14
vlaues to $8.99
*4.00
7.66
6 DAVIl' rOUNTY ËNTURPRISI- RI-CORD. THURSDAY. Sl-PTËMBËR^4*^^787
у :F O O D V A U I
s m m
LEAN LOIN END
PORK ROAST LB.
шт
12 0Z.
PKG.
JESSE JONES TASTY
FRANKS
9 9 «
JESSE JONES SLICED
BOLOGNA
7
LEAN THIN SLICED OR REGULAR FRESH
PORK $ 1 99/
TENDERLOIN .b
LEAN MEATY
MARKET STYLE
SPARE RIBS IB .
80Z.PKG.
LB.19
JESSE JONES PURE PORK
SAUSAGE
$ 1 3 9
QUAKER-IN ENVELOPES
INSTANT GRITS
4 r
LB.
ARMOUR'S TOP QUALITY
SLICED ---
BACON
80Z.PKG.
★ SAVE 14‘
GORTON'S FROZEN
FISH STICKS
$ |692 LB. PKG.
к SAVE 60
^ I ^ ^ G O R T O N ' S
« ^ F R O Z E N BATTER FRIED
IU.S.D.A. CHOICE EYE ST1
lEYE OF ROUND Rdl
U.S.D.A. CHOICE JUICy
RUMP ROAS'
2 4 O Z . P K G
f i b y a l
V o a ^ d i d û & c û
Gassic Mugs
Sprii)gViolel
IMPORTED PORCELAIN CHINA
H
w
S A V E 7 0 c
FACIAL TISSUE
SCOTTIES
PLASTIC WRAP
HANOI WRAP
JUMBO SIZE 400 FOOT ROLL
OF FOOD
'«IQ H T TO RtSERVE
q u a n t it ie s
NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS
YOU
SAVE
EXTRA LEAN TENDER
CUBED STEAK1
200 COUNT
к SAVE 16'
32 n.. OZ. SIZE
IVORY LIQUIDONLY99'
GOOD ONIY AiHeffi
WIIH THIS COUPON
PRICEWiTHOUl'ner's .....Land Of Food couponOFFE« EKPIIES
September 16,1978 nr
99'
OIANT »IZC
^WLY4.19NR«•(И (Mt cOiWWOOD «HI* •<Heffner'S nd OLFfipd ...Cl П
S A V I
Spio & Span Cleaner 54 o/.. box
■3athrooiii Tissue
SoftWeve
Mrs. Filbert’s
mitation Mayonnaise
8 Quart
Liquid Disenfectant »soa.siae
For Floors
Favor Wax 7 O*. Si*«
liullon
I’restoiie
Anti Freeze
Palmolive Liquid
Furniture Poli-ilier
Gloss and Toss 12 Count
30'
16*
30'
6 *
14*
24'
26'
2 0 '
30'
DISH DETERGENT
IVORY LIQUID
320Z.B0nLE
★ SAVE 40*
FABRIC RINSE
DOWNY s
64 OZ. SIZE ▼
★ SAVE 46'
LAUNDRY DETERGENT
GAIN
GIANT SIZE
★ SAVE 36'
3 6 *
SUNKIST
LEMONS
BAG OF 10
2 6 *
SWEET RED
GR
LB.
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1978 - 7
S T H A T S H O U T
■ Æ !S № ¥ E
XHEFBOYAR DEE
n ftW o / iMoot
OR
1*1
I
ARMOUR’S LUNCH MEAT
120Z.CAN
ir SAVE 30‘
WELCH’S PURE
TOMATO JUICE
eWbv
SPAGHEHI
& MEAT BALLS
7% 0Z.CANS
- M
★ SAVE 17*
TALL
C A N S
32 OZ. SIZE
★ SAVE 18'
S A V E 2 3 c
AUNT JEMIMA
SYRUP
24 oz. BOHLE
(à B A L L A R DCANNED
★ SAVE 34*
G R E E N^ST A rvlPS
iOR
1ST $ 199
LB.
IVORFUL
• f i l l
$169 ^CRAPEDWW'
LB.
99 ORANGE-GRAPE-RED
WELCH’S DRINKS
$
FRESH AND CRISP
ZESTA CRACKERS
1 LB. PKG. 6 1 "
★ SAVE 12*
SEALTEST
ICE CREAM
SANDWICHES
6 9 ’
★ SAVE 26*
6 PACK
é feï
JCED
SE
12 OZ. CANS
★ SAVE 45*
M a r g a r i n e
MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE
lOOZJAR $
★ SAVE 50*
Heffner's Land Of Food Coupon
Coupon $4.19
^ A l f C 7 A C^ O W r M Price without
on
GROUND COFFEE AND GRAIN BEVERAGE
2 lb. can only with this coupon t
Deal No. **080:9______
ONECOUrONPHrUICHASE • OFFE! EXPIIES .Sept. 16, 1978
t e
. C 5
COKE OR PEPSI
CANNED DRINKS$ 129 CARTON OF 8
6 CAN CARTON
★ SAVE 30*DOG FOOD
GAINES BURGERS
6 3 "
1 1 1 i
180Z.PKG.
★ SAVE 12*
" T o t a l S h o p p i n g " V a l u e
3
-w I No Limit Specials
Stamps
3 Discount Prices
HEFFNER^S PRICES
Peanut Butter
Food Giant
I Sweet Mixed Pickles 22 o*. size
Hi-C Powder
Glad 2-Mil.
Trash Bags 8 Count
200 Ft.
RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS
APPLES
J> 1
[Plastic Wrap
Glad Wrap
|W ad5iii3l
Garbage Bags
Chum Salmon Tau can
30 Count
All Flavors
Kool Aid
6 Regular
2 Qt. Pkgg.
All Flavors
Kool Aid 2 Quart Pckfi. with Sugar
Kool Aid 33 Oz. Ilandv Can
Glad Urge
Garbage Bags 30 Count
Glad Lawn &
Clean-Up Bags 3 Count
DItcount
Price
’2.09
69'
*1.69
*1.09
75'77*
*1.33
69'
49*
*2.09
‘1.79
9 9 '
YOU
SAVE
40'
34*
30'
1 6 ',
44
1 0 '
1 6 '
1 0 '
30*
2 0 '
1 6 *
A
'f j -
&V*»'.j. C, -3
■ém
y
M O C K S V IL L E
C L E M M O N S
Y A D K IN V IL L E
L E X IN G T O N
L E W IS V IL L E
LAND
RIGHT TO RESEHVE
QUANlTIES
O F F O O D
NONE SOLD TO
DEALERS
8 - DAVIE COUNTY F.NTERPKISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1978
Arts Festival
(continued from page 1)
nen. Look tor rules at the coloring book booth when you purchase your coloring book.Another surprise is an orgiinal T-shirt designed by Elspeth Webster. A festival flare of clowns adorns the children’s T- shirt tn colors of blue and green; scarlet
and yellow. Hie adult design is a graphic play on Davie County and the words “Arts Alive”. They wiU be available in colors of brown and gold; blue and
cerise. Art Council members will receive a discount on each T-shirt purchased.
The National Guard Band will be appearing In concert Saturday on the square at 1 p.m.
Mi.
hamburgers, homemade ice cream, homemade baked goods and tall glasses of Coke. This fare can be ei^oyed around tagles placed for your convenience
under the oaks.This and much more will be yours for a day at the "Arts Alive Since ’75” ex- travaganza-Saturday, September 16, 1978. ShoiUd it rain all activities will be moved to the Brock Auditorium, and Gymnasium.
Steven Fields a senior at the Davie
County High School, will be the master of ceremonies for the “Arts Alive Since •75" festival.
Rom y tWT DISCOS t Mouse
-•tl
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•TOWN H«a B
CLcmcNT ST.
EMItKPRISC
RUT nO tlU l.
BOfiCRSTciiico
OSbORN'SSHtU
9
. BEUt'S
RINTZ /YORK'S
I 74,
Hotm *T.
PARKING IS
REST Room 0
IN PO anA T IO N 9
Thè above map shqws the location of the various displays for the Artg^Festival.-
TV Personality Dave Plyler
To Judge Disco Dancing
The “Arts Alive Since ’78” Festival will host several competitive events.
Disco Dancing On-The-Square heads the early evening activities. The Davie
County Arts Council would like to remind you that Dave Plyler Jennifer Hollar and Bill Winkler will be on hand to judge this portion of the talent competition.
Dave Plyler’s first on-air Job in
broadcasting lasted exactly 15 minutes- or just long enough for the General Manager of radio station WCOG in Greensboro to hear him say "Take him
off the air and never let him on again.”
Some seven years later, after completion of his United States Air Force service, and working several yeas as a DJ for WGBG Radio in Greensboro,
WCOG negotiated with Dave to return to
the station in a top DJ spot.Today, as Public Affairs Director at WXII-TV, Dave is co-host of the Mid- morning program, host of Report To The
People, host of Closeup, reports WXII
Business News, conducts Camera-12
field interviews, and appears several times daily for short new reports. In addition he is responsible for departmental control of the Youth '76 and
Shades of Ebony Public Affairs program.
Each year more than 4,000 local in
dividuals appear on the air on WXII under the auspices of the Public Affairs Department, and Dave interviews a good proportion of this number. As a
Department Head who also appears on
the air his day is varied, often beginning
.цJ
Dave Plyler
as early as 5 am in preparation for a 6
am sign-on news or weather report.
Dave has been the recipient of
numerous awards for his work in Public Affairs and as a former News Director at Channel 12.Plan to spend an evening under the oaks with Dave Plyler, as a contestant
or as part of the audience.
« . 1
Nancy Hoover of Salisbury will exhibit her handiwork of dolls'.
Nicotine gets its name from Jean Nicot, a 16th century
ambassador who introduced tobacco to France.
J
Anpll JeweltyAppliance
119 N. I^ in St.-MocktviUe, NC-Phone 634-2373
' Prize to be given aw ay ...
Big Ben Clock ^
B.C. Moore's
Court Square-MoclcsvUle, NC-Phone 634-2736
Belk
North Main St.-MocksviUe, NC-Phone 634-2124
Prize to be given away...
Bar Be Que Grill with Rôtisserie
Prize to be given away...
"Winners Choice” Ladies Coat or Men’s Suit
Daniel Furniture
745 S. Main St.-lMackfville, NC-Phone 634-2492
Davie Jewelers
134 N. l ^ n St.-Mocksvilie. NC-Phone 634-5216
Davie Sport Shop
so Court Square-MocksviUe, NC-Phone 634-5266
Prize to be given away...
AM/FM Radio
Prize to be given aw ay ...
*40.00 Alarm Clocl(
Prize to be given aw ay ...
Wilson Tennis Racket
Discount House
137-A SaUsbuiy St.-MockiviUe, NC-Phone 634-2S06
The Fashion Shop
42 Court Square-MoclcfvUle, NC-Phone 634-2389
Foster-Rauch Drug Co.
WUkesboro St.-MocksviUe. NC-Phone 634-2141
Prize to be given away...
*29.95 32 Piece Dinnerware Set
Prize to be given away...
*12.00 Shawl
Prize to be given away....
Sharp Calculator
Foster's Watch Shop
142 N. Main St.-MocksviUe, NC-Phone 634-2737
Hall Drug Co.
118 N. Main Sl.-MocictviUe, NC-Phone 634-2111
Mocksville Furniture
2 Court Square-MocksviUe, NC-Phone 634-5812
Prize to be given away...
Men’s or Ladies Bulova Watch
Prize to be given away...
Munsey Toaster and Broiler
Prize to be given away....
P.B.'s Hobby Shop
North Mtio Sl.-Modrtville, NC-Phone 634-3915
Prise to be given away...
3 Dlmentlofl Marblelized Last Supper *45.00
Rintz's
125-127 N. Main St.-MoeksviUe, NC-Phone 634-5142
Wilkins Drug
20 Court Square-MocksvUle, NC-Phone 634-2121
Prize to be given away...
5 Piece Bath Mat Set
Prize lo be given away...
Keystone Electronic Flash Camera
)N’TI ÏETTO REGISTER AT PARTICIPATING STORES.
DAVIE COUNTY ENTURPRIS1-: Rl-.C ÜRD. IHURSÜA'» . SLI’TliMBBR 14. 1<)78 ‘)
A p p e a r i n g O n S t a g e
y ^ e fU e /tn é e ^ /6*^ ^^ 978
D e s i g n e d T - S l i i r t s T o P r o m o t e A r t s F e s t i v a l
Doug BalesDoug Bales To Judge Bluegrass-Countiy Music Saturday
Bluegrass-Country competltibn
will be one of the big attractions at
this year’s “Arts Alive Since ‘75”
Festival. Who better to judge this event than a “Show Me” state native and avid Bluegrass fan- Doug Bales.Douglas Bales, Director of
Special Productions tor WXII-TV, coordinates the station’s on-air advertising and promotion, and is responsible for all station print and broadcast advertising. He writes,
directs and produces special films
and videotape productions, and has been the recipient of numerous ---awards in this field.-
10:00-10:45
10:45-11:00
lI'nO-1200 12:00-12:05 12:05-12:45 12:45-1 ;00 1:00-2:00
2:00-2:052:05-2:15
2:15-3:153:15-3:303:30-3:454:00-5:00
5:00-5:30
5:30-6:006:00-7:00
7:00-9:00
Davie High School Band and Dancing Boots Wee Miss Majorette of Davie Country-Bluegrass Music Contest
Drawing for Painting Davie High Jazz Ensemble Wee Miss Majorlte of Davie National Guard Band In Concert (Color Guard
provided by the Moclcsville National Guard Unit)
Drawing for painting Indian Dancing by Order of the Arrow
Gospel Contest
Atldns High Drill Team .The Showstoppers from the Judy Baylin Studio Rocic ContestDrawings (Painting) Participating merchants
(Winning tickets to be drawn by NC Junior Miss,
Debbie Solomon)
Disco-Dance Contest
“Winners Circle” (Wlnnerè from the country-blue-
grass, gospel, rock and disco dance contests)
Dance on the Square ( Paul Richards)
Throughout the day on the square:
Lye Soap Demonstration
Latch-Hook Rugs Demonstration Horse Shoeing Demonstration Surveying Demonstration Whittlers
Quilting
Pastel Portraits
Blood Pressure Clinic Surrey RidesAntique car and farm equipment showNational Guard Recruiting StationEye Bank-Sponsored by Lions ClubEpileptic Awareness Booth
WDSL live broadcasting
Wild Bird ExhibitJuried Art ShowTee ShirtsBalloonsColoring Books
(Concessions: homemade goodies, ice cream, candled apples, Q)ke, hamburgers, hot dogs, ham biscuits, coffee, popcorn.
A native of Eminence, Missouri, he attended the University of Missouri School of Journalism, and
worked in advertising for Von Hoffmann Publishing of St. Louis, Mo.; in the national advertising department of the St. Louis Post- Dlspatch; and The Biddle Ad
vertising Agency, all of Chicago,
Illinois.He is married to the former Mona Mutersbaugh of Paris, Missouri. They are the parents of
three children, and reside In
MocksvUle, N.C.Stop by and enjoy our Bluegrass groups along with Doug Bales, Harper Van Hoy, William Ralph Winkler III. Ck)mpetition will be
held throughout the day “on-the- square” in Mocksville, Saturday, September 16, 1978.
Th e tem perature on your
Home freezer shouid be kept
at 0“ F or beiow.
The Arts Council has put Davie County “on the map”--iocaMon,
"T-Shirt Territory.” Through the
talented efforts of Elspeth Webster, the Arts Council is pleased to be able to offer the residents of
Davie County this unique item to help promote the arts and Davie County.
Elspeth created two designs to
fit everyone’s tastes. For the younger set she chose a due of charming clowns, complete with baggy pants, floppy shoes, and those familiar smiling faces. “Put
a smile on your youngsters face
with one of these shirts. They are available in colors of blue and green; scarlet and yellow,” said Valerie Slogick, Publicity
Chairman.
The adult design is a graphic play on Davie County and the words "Arts Alive Since '75”. Adult T-shirts are available in colors of blue and cerise with a
second choice of brown and gold.
"These T-shirts are a must to round off the leisure fashion wardrobes for fall,” pointed out Ms. Slogick.
The shirts are available lor sale at the Davie County Arts Council office in the County Office Building
and will be available for sale at the Festival. Davie County Arts Council members are being offered a discount bn each T-shirtbought.Elspet
“The Showstoppers” of the Judy Baylin Dance Studio in Clemmons will appear in the festival here Saturday at 3:00 p.m.
¡Ispeth is a native of Scotland
and most recently lived in the village of Renfrewshire. She currently resides in Mocksville with her husband, Robert and daughter, Jenifer.
Mrs. Webster garduated from
the Glasgow School of Art with a D. A. degree. She expanded her art education to the area of teaching and received a post diploma from Jordon Hill.
Mrs. Webster was a freelance
designer in Britain and Europe and
did many illustrations for I.P. C. Group, which includes such magazines as Homes and Gardens.During 1969, at the Londoner Hotel, London, England, her
designs were exhibited at “Inprint
in Procin 70” and used throughout Europe and Britain. She has most recently returned to the world of freelance designing.“The Davie County Arts Council is proud lo have Elspeth Webster
counted among its active mem
bership and pleased that she has so willingly shared her talents with the residents of Davie County. It’s people like Elspeth that are helping to make this year’s “Arts
Alive Since ‘75” the best festival
yet and a challenge to surpass in years to come,” said Ms. Slogick.“Be apart of art” and join us On- thc-Square in Mocksville, Satur
day, September 16, 1978 for our annual gala event. There will be
Arts Alive in '75 T-shirts for sale durin: modeled by (L to R) Denna Minwalla, Alexl Sloi Elspeth Webster, designer of the shirts, and Nick Slogick.
Saturday’s festivities are ipck. Jeni Webster.
something for everyone ana
Elspeth will be on hand autographing T-shirts. In the event of rain everything will be
moved to the Brock Auditorium and Gymnasium. See you this Saturday,” concluded Mrs. Ms.
Slogick.
oad scrapper. 1920-30 vintage, will be among the antique equip* displayed Saturday by Gene McLaughlin.This road sera ment
A L A R M
C L O C K
T o B e G i v e n
A w a y S a t .
S e p t . 1 6 T H
A r t s A l i v e S i n c e 7 5 ’
(Dali it
“high time"
CEILINGALARM
CLOCK
17 A. Projects
corrBcl time
onto ceiling
in sharp, dig
ital numbers.
Invisible beam
won't disturb
sleep. 6W■' H.
Alarm. $39.95
LADIES STONE BRACLETS
LEAD CRYSTAL WINE SET
Reg. *39.00
COME IN AND REGISTER
MEN'S STERLING RINGS
5 0 %
OFF
B E A U T I F Y H E R
H A N D
Reg. *9.95
V40>N
$ 4 9 8
wtth highlights of gleaming sterling
silver. Initialed or not, these stunning
rings are available in three sizes,
adjustat)le to fit the finger. They are
the right touch for every occasion.
GROUPCHROME GIFT ITEMS
TIMEX WATCHES
ENGAGEMENT RIN
'/.CT. $ 3 7 5
Wedding Band *65.00
ENGAGEMENT RING
'/4 CT. *350
Wedding Bond *65.00
creates a smooth mellow softness ot tiiiish fo
our "on the cutf bracelets Initialed or not.
they are a stunning addition to any outfit.
Total W eight
18 P ts. »325
10 DAVIl; COUNTY KNTI Ul’RISi; RirORD. THURSDAY. SliPTKMBl-R 14. 147«
G e o r g e K o n t o s S e e k s T o C l e a r u p
M i s c o n c e p t i o n s A b o u t E p i l e p s y
By Kathy TomlinsonGeorge Kontos, 16 year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Kontos of Rt. 2, Advance, will participate in a live broadca.*-! about epilepsy from W.S.J.S. Radio Tiiursday, September 14, from 10:00
p.m.-11:00 p.m.The broadcast will consist of a call-in question and answer period dedicated to the purpose of clearing misconceptions
about episepsy. Peter Harris with the State Health and Education Office, will also be available for questions.Kontos, who was diagnosed an
epileptic in December 1974, has made it his crusade to inform people about the condition. After recently completing counseling by Carol Appolone, Associate Director of a community help program
sponsored by Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem, he wants to share with people the true sense of the condition and rid their minds of false limitations
believed about people possessing
epilepsy.Epilepsy is (he abnormal discharge of electrical brain waves which results in seizures. Poeple who have chronic
seizures due to this abnormal discharge
are labeled epileptics.There is no known answer as to why brain cells discharge abnormally and cause the symptoms of epilepsy.
However, scientists generally agree that
epilepsy can result from defects in the
brain, brain injury, before, during or after birth, head wounds, chemical imbalances, poor nutrition, childhood fevers, some infectious diseases, brain
tumors and some poisons. The condition
can strike anytime during one’s lifetime
with little or no warning.
Epilepsy is not curable, but it can be
controlled in varying degrees by the careful use of medications. Up to 50 percent of the people with epilepsy can achieve complete control and 30 percent a partial control.According to statistics there are 210
epileptics in Davie County. Reflecting
on this data Kontos said, “I have overcome the anxieties of having epilepsy, and hope to help and inform Davie County people possessing the condition in the same way in which I
have been assisted.”“The label that society gives an
epileptic through the lack of knowledge and misconceptions about the condition causes us to suffer far more than the condition itself."“I don’t want any closet epileptics in
- • I ? •
George Kontos
Davie County who feel that they have to hide their condition because society labels them as something to be ashamed
of.”“This is one of the many false beliefs about the condition, and it is my goal to
inform people that epilepsy is nothing to
be ashamed of, and that people diangosed as epileptics are Just as capable of making contributions to society as those who do not have it.”
Kontos appeared on WXII T.V. Monday and Tuesday participating on
the "Youth Today” show sharing with
people his beliefs and medically priven facts about the condition.Anyone seeking further information about epilepsy are urged to call in questions on the WSJD program. Kontos
noted that all questions will be answered
either on the air or through the mail.
Glendon McCullogh is Killed In Wreck In Memphis .Tennessee
Glendon McCullough, executive
director of the Baptist Brotherhood Commission since November 1971, was killed in a head-on, three -car collision during afternoon rush hour traffic in Memphis,.Tenn., August 23.He was the great grandson of Davie County natives, John McCullough and
Hettie Veach McCullough. .The accident also killed Mrs. Frances "Buckie” Sheffe, wife of the president of a Memphis investment firm. Her
Cadillac swerved into the center lane of
Poplar Avenue hitting the McCullough vehicle headon, overturning and
crushing it.Funeral services were held for McCullough on August 26 at Union Avenue
Church in Memphis, with graveside
services and burial at Arlington
Cemetery, Atlanta on August 28.McCullough who would have been 57 on Sept. 9, had been executive director of the Brotherhood Commission for
seven years. He came to the position after serving for 12 years as director of personnel for the Home Mission Board, Atlanta.A personal friend of President Jimmy
Carter, McCullough married the former
Marjorie Jones, a missionary to Brazil and former Woman’s Missionary Union executive, in 1974 in a wedding service at the governor's mansion in Atlanta. President Carter, then governor of
Georgia, was McCullough’s best man.His first wife, the former Ernestine Kesler, died of cancer in 1969, leaving McCullough with the responsibility of
rearing four young children, then ages 6
to er. Ken, now 19, a student at. Texas A & M University, had returned to school only three days before his father’s death. Kathy, 21 is a Memphis secretary, and Beth, 17, and Debbie 15, live with Mrs. McCullough at the Mc
Cullough home in Germantown, Tenn., a suburb of Memphis.
President Jimmy Carter telephoned the family of Glendon McCullough,
Friday morning, Aug. 25, to express sympathy following the death of the executive director of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Brotherhood Commission.A close friend Of McCullough who died Aug. 23 in an automobile accident in
Memphis, Tenti., Carter heard of the
death while on a raft trip with his family down the Salmon River in Idaho. His call came from the travelling White House in Jackson, Wyo.Carter, a former trustee of the
Brotherhood Commission, asked to talk
to each member of the family privately- McCullough’s wife, Marjorie, a former Southern Baptist missionary to Brazil, and his four children, Kathy, 21, Ken, 19, Beth 17, and Debbie 15. The children
were born to McCullough’s first wife,
who died of cancer in 1969.The president talked to the family for about 10 minutes, telling the children what a fine contribution their father had
made to the cause of Christianity and
why they should be proud of him. He said he and Mrs. Carter were very distraught when the news of McCullough’s death reached them.He told the children that McCullough
was “a loyal and true friend.” Carter was McCullough’s best man at his second marriage to the former Majorie Jones, which took place in the Georgia
FREE IWatermeloif
^ Feast I
Cooleemee School Cafeteriai 7:00 P.M.
FRIDAY NIGHT, SEPT. 15 |
BOB DAVIS, SR.
Speaker
d . The Davie Countv |
Democratic Executive |
Committee
Cooleemee Precinct
Democrats
Free Prizes To Oldest And Youngest
Ad paid for by Ilic i>jvic County Deiiiucratic lixccutivc
ilfflComimtlec. Billij amfs,auirman.
Loses 128 Pounds
T h a n k a to H e a lth y C o n w a y D ie t
When this photo was
taken, Mrs. Delores War-
ren had already lost 113 p o u n d s in ju s t II J
months. She has sincc .
lost another 15 pounds. ^
The now slim Mrs. War
ren, who loves lo dance ' and is attending beauty
school says, "I had never :
been able lo slick to a
diet and could never
have done il wilhoul the
Conway program."
The Conway weight reduction program con
sists-of three main elements;
• A balanced, 1000 calorie diet that includes all food
groups and exceeds the established nuirilional re
quirements for adults.
• Weekly educational seminars ihal deal with the
physical, nuirilional and emotional tausi-s ol over
weight,
•The Forever SHm plan for permanently maintain
ing slimness.
a00000000000000«00<НИИ>0000«0 0 oo«ooooo Q
N E W M E M B E R S - S A V E $ 5 .0 0 |Bring this coupon wtih you to any meeting S lilted and you will save $5.00 off Ihe Initial Reglitratlon Fee of $6.00 and Weekiv Seminar Fee of $3.00. Pay only $4.00 inttead of $9.00. Offers expires Fiiday, September 22, 1978. &M>o««««o««ooo«oooooooo««oooooo<M>oaao
W e e k ly In s ig h l-M o tiv a tio n S e m in a rs
Salinbu^-Thui^da» 8. 7:00 P.M.Happy Traveler Inii, b. Inne* St. StilesiiUei-IVlondays. 7:30 P.M.Holy Trinity Liitharaii Churcli,465 Hartiiese Road.W'H .Mtititfen iit’hofUi'
Kcgisuaiiun $b.00 plub Wcckh Scininari» $3.00
CONWAY DIET INSTITUTE-No Fish Requlreil
y s, 7:00 P.M.
H a t s A r e B r i m f u l O f H i s t o r y
An exhibit of hals Ihal opens Sep
tember 17 at the Arts and Science Museum of Statesville proves that hats are brimful of history.Sponsored jointly with Ihe Mint
Museum of History of Charlotte, the
"Headlines” showing will include more than 100 hats of the period 1840 lo 1940, ranging from nightcaps to Merry Widow styles and including sunbonnets, tea
caps, wedding and mourning bonnets,
“flower pots”, riding and motoring hats, tricornes, "mushrooms", berets, cartwheels, “baby dolls’’, and evening
closhes.Although most of the headgear was
loaned by individuals and collections in
North Carolina, it also includes a picture hat designed by Mr. John for Marlene Dietrich in the movie, "Shanghai Express” and another designed by Cecil Beaton for the Ascot scene in "My Fair Lady" and loaned by Jane Withers,
Hollywood actress.
A sailor from the N.C. Museum of History in Raleigh is made completely of pine needles, and three more
elaborate styles are trimmed in vulture
feathers. Every conceivable combination nf straw, velvet, ribbon, lace, beads and feathers is evident in various units of the exhibit that are grouped against a background of the “hot pink"
shade made popular by Schiaparelli.
A preview showing is scheduled for September 16at the museum, where the exhibit will be open to the public until
laie October. After that, il will tour the slate with emphasis on appearances in smaller museums as well as some major ones. Lexington, Charlotte, and
Asheville are among the locations already scheduled.The exhibit has .been arranged by Pete Ballard, costume curator for the Mint Museum in cooperation with Frank
Sherrill, curator of the Statesville
ni’iseum, and Stuart Schwartz, curator ol the Mint Museum. Hats have been loaned also by Old Salem, Inc.; the Roanoke Valley Historical Scoiety, the N.C. Museum of History, the Costume
Wing of the Western Reserve Historical
Society in Cleveland, Ohio; and Miss
Withers’ collection in Hollywood.
Mrs. W.S. McClelland of Charlotte contributed a “mourning hal” in the Mint Collection that is believed to have been that of Mrs. Stonewall Jackson. Other individuals who made loans or
gifts lo the exhibit are John Smith, the
Blum family, Mrs. David Wesson, Mrs. Jesse B. Glenn, Mrs. B.S. Womble, Miss Rosalie Wilson, Mrs. Cecil Bertie, Mrs. Frank Borden Hanes, Mrs. Mac Herman, and Mrs. Morris Sosnik, all of
Winston-Salem; and Mrs. John Welch of Louisville, Ky.
'Ч!
Angela Whitaker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Whiuker of Kt. 5.
Mocksviile celebrated her 2nd birthday
Saturday September 9th with a party at her home. Helping her to enjoy the celebration were her sister, Cindy, her uncle, Larry Royal, and her maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Royal of Yadkinville.Sailor hat of natural pine needles; ribbon and bow of plaid taffeta. Late I860’s. Loaned by North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh, N.C. t
governor’s mansion in 1974 when Carter
was governor.The White House issued a formal statement from the president concerning the death of the 56-year-old executive director of the Brotherhood
Commission, the Southern Baptist
national agency which involves men and boys in missions through Baptist Men and Royal Ambassador organizations.It saidi "Both Rosalyn and I were deeply saddened to learn of the untimely death of our good friend, the Rev.
Glendon McCullough. He was a wise and
charitable man whose life and career exemplified the finest qualities of a man of God. For all of us whose lives he touched, Glendon McCullough cannot be replaced. We extend our deepest sympathies to Majorie and other
members of the family.”
Needlepoint Course
Is Now Being Offered
Instruction in the easy art of needlepoint is now being given through the fall program of Davidson County Community College. Students will make a sampler of stitches which can be used
for a pillow or wall hanging.
Mrs. Rufus Brock is instructor for the
course whicli will be taught on Thursday nights from 6:30 to 9:30 p.m. Registration fee is $5. For further information call Mrs. Brock at 634-5128 or the community college at 634-3415.
^ € t 4 i & ¥ u t A / m € ic y >
F O S T E R - R A U C H D R U G C O .
PHONE 634-2141
■Mocksville, N.c. WUkesboro Street
L E A F
W H O P P E R S
SHARP
E L 206
1 4 V 2 О ж .
.99 VALUE
Ш С Т Я М К
¡U lC M A fW
/
ttlU M MAtra NMT
TENNIS lALLS
EARTHBORN®
SHAMPOO
8.O 1.
APRICOT AND
STRAW RERRY
1.091.85 VALUE
S h a r p ’ s
C a l c u l a t o r
To Be Given Away
Saturday.
D raw ing W ill Be Held At
5:00 P.M . O n The Square
D uring The F’estival
POIIDENT®
T A IIIT S
60-hl2
FREE
2 3 0 1
»»U O BfT o^
1.392.70 VALUE
STAYFREE®
M IN I-PA BS
M + s m i
1.49
2.29 VALUE
STRESSTABS®600
60*1 H B K w /lr a n tO 'i
m 4, 49VALUETM'VALUE
8 . 8 8
V A S E L IN E ®
¡•ETROIEHM JELIY
IS.Ì.
■ .991.79 VALUE
CONTAC
JR.
LIQUID 4.O 1.
VASELINE*IHTEHSIVE
CARE«
L O T I O N Ю
1 0 O Z .
OVTt-OtVMN
1.95 VALUE
TYLEHOL®
I X T U S T M IK T N
я т2.59
3.99 VALUE
MEAD
ECO N O M Y EN VELO PES .
2Л89> .89 EA. VALUE
im M 1Г ' sr>
Davie Cosmetologist Association
Contributes Memorial To Hospital
Uavic Cosmetologist Association has contributed $500 lo Davie County Hospital In memory of Annis Lou Smith
and Jn Cooley.
Estie Jones, treasurer of the association, delivered the check to Allen Martin, Administrator. Mr. Martin, responding by letter to the Association's officers, said, “It Is with pleasure and appreciation that I acknowledge this
Elizabeth KeAnne Tomlinson,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chuck
Tomlinson of Rt. 8, Salisbury, celebrated her first birthday September 9 and 10 with two parties at her home. Guests for both celebrations were served their choice of Raggedy Ann or coconut cake, homemade ice cream and
Coke. As a special treat, two tiny, decorated cakes were baked for Ke Anne by her paternal great grandmother, Mrs. Viola Tomlinson of Wilkesboro St. Other special guests
included maternal grandfather, Cedric
Smoot and wife Hazel Dyson Smoot of
Rt. 6. Mocksville, paternal grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Tomlinson of Halander Drive and numerous relatives and friends.
Eaton-Luper
Vows Are Spoken
Ms. Helen Eaton of Rt. 7,
Mocksville and Frank E. Luper of
Rt. 2, Advance were united in
marriage Friday, September 8, 1978, at 7 o'clock at the home of the groom. The Rev. Yates K. Wilkinson, Jr. performed the double ring ceremony before the immediate family.
The bride wore a dress of blue
polyester designed with a fitted bodice of floral print and full skirt.To accent her attire she chose a corsage of white carnations.Following a wedding trip to the
North Carolina mount ans the couple will be al home al the groom’s address
RECEPTION
Immediately following the wedding a reception was given by Mrs. Steve Poplin and Mrs. Jonnie Peoples, daughters of the bride; and Miss Jennifer Luper, daughter of the groom.
contribution and uccept It in memory ol those two fine ladies who not only served
Ihcir public and customer well but their community also."Martin continued by saying, “It is our intention to utilize these funds to assist
your hospital further adapt to the needs
of Ihe handicapped especially the ambulating handicapped by giving them more free access to entrances and bathrooms. In 1973 wc provided ap
propriately elevated ramps for
whcelchair persons. Now we must
consider our public toilets, none of which arc usable by wheeichaired individuals, and automatic opening doors, especially
at the emergency entrance.”
Randall Cole, Director, Environmental Services, will be in charge of such renovations and is already investigating necessary changes.Officers of the Davie Cosmetologist Association are, in addition to Estie
Jones, Treasurer; Margaret Wilson.
President; Thea Brown, Vice President; and Marie White, Secretary.The association has made previous contributions to the local hospital over the years.
Miss Angela Shbafis
Honot ed At Dinnei •
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Newsome and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Johnson were hosts Sunday evening at the Newsome home in Farmington to a buffet dinner honoring Miss Angela Shoaf who will marry
Edwin Spach, Sunday, September 24th.
Guests included the honoree, her fiance’, Edwin Spach, Mr. and Mrs. Sanford Spach and family of Route 2 Mocksville. Mr. and Mrs. Wade Spach and family of Winston-Salem and the Rev. and Mrs. Fred Shoaf of Stokesdale and his family.
The hosts presented the couple with a chest of silver.
My name is Lee Trivette and my parents are Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Trivette of Route 3, Mocksville. I
celebrated my first birthday Saturday, September 2, with my grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Beck of Madison, N.C. and Mrs. Lois Trivette of
Mocksville.
A r o u n d A n d A b o u t
RECOGNIZED FOR PERFECT ATTENDANCE
The charter members of the MocksvUle Lions Club were recognized at the
meeting last week for a hundred percent perfect attendance for 23 years.
Receiving attendance tabs were James D. Boger, Robert Davis, Carl Eaton, Hubert Eaton, J.A. Foster, Jr., H.R. Hendrix, Jr. Gilmer Hartley and C. Frank Stroud, Jr.
AT UNIVERSITY OF BRIDGEPORT
Karen A. Pollard, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James D. Pollard of MocksvUle,
wUl attend the University of Bridgeport this fall where she wiU major in nursing in the College of Health .Sciences. Founded in 1927 the University of Bridgeport
is an independent nonsectarian university with an 86 acre campus on the shore of Long Island Sound. Total enroUment is 8,060 fuU and part-time students.
RETURNS FROM FLORIDA Mrs. Mary Willy (Bowles) Wilson spent last winter and spring in Florida with her two sons and their families, Walter Leach of Maitland and Clyde L^ach of Cooper City. She has now returned to Mocksville and is residing at the Fran Ray Rest Home. Mrs. Wilson is a sister of Mrs. Edna Everhart of Fork.
GRADUATES AT BINGHAM YOUNG Larry Alexander Green of Mocksville was among the 2,024 graduates who received diplomas at the 103rd summer commencement exercises at Bingham
Young University in Provol Utah on August 18th. BYU is operated by The
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) and Is the largest church-related university in the United States.
GRADUATES UNC-CHAPEL HILL Teresa Karen Sparks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John F. Sparks of Rt. 2 Mocksville graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel HUl this summer with an AB degree.
\
Dinner Parties Honoi- Miss Mai garet Daniel
DAVlli c m \ I'. INTIRPRISI- RITORD. TllllR.SDAY, s m iM B I R 14. I«)7,S ||
r ' S t i i s i S i ^
S o o ts - M c D a n ie l
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie M. Soots of Edgewood Circle, Cooleemee have announced the engagement of their daughter, Cynthia Denise, to John W. McDaniel of Route 4, Mocksville, son of Mrs. Barbara Carter of Salisbury. 1110 wedding is being planned for September 30, at the Cooleemee Presbyterian Church at 4 p.m. FViends and relatives are invited to attend.
'^County Fair’ To Be Held At Bermuda Run
On Wednesday, September 20, you are invited to the “Country Fair" at Ber
muda Run Country Club. The buffet
luncheon meeting of the Christian Women’s Club, West, wiil began at 11:15.
The feature wiil be presented by
Country Fair of Winston Salem on “Blue Ribbon Crafts".Speaker for the luncheon will be Wanza Martin of Concord, Tennessee. Mrs. Martin is the wife of Charles M.
Martin and the mother of two children,
Cindy and Terry. She is a professional model in Television, runway ami photographic modeling. Mrs. Martin ft
a former part-owner and instructor of Pace Setter Arts which is a beauty, self- improvement modeling school and the
former chairman of the Concord
Christian Women’s Club.Special music will be by Florence Fiandach, a Mezzo soprano and concert singer. She graduated from New York
State University and studied at East
man School of Music. She is from Rochester, N.Y.
Reservations are necessary and may be made by calling Audrey Smith at 768-
4346 or Donna Toburen at 924-9893 no
later than September 18.
Reservations for a limited pre-school nursery are necessary and may be made by calling Debbie Hayes al 766-4096 or Vida Heath at 768-4528 no later than September 18. Parents are to bring a sack lunch for each child.
STEAK DINNERMr. and Mrs. Roy Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harris and Mr. and Mrs. William Johnson were hosts at a steak
dinner In their Steak House, Thursday, September 7, honoring Miss Margaret Anne Daniel and her fiance, Ted Harris of Winston-Salem.Upon arrival the bride-elect was presented a corsage of white roses.The Steak House was decorated with
roses and mixed summer flowers.Guests were served hors d'oeuvres followed by spinach salad, griUed steak, baked potato and shewered grUled vegetables. The dessert was blueberry pie with whipped topping.. The hostesses gift to the couple was a beautiful silver wine cooler.GuesU included Mr. and Mrs. William C. Daniel, the bride’s parents.DINNER AT FORSYTH COUNTRY CLUBDr. and Mrs. Frank H. Daniel and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Phillips were hosts at a dinner at Forsyth Country Club, Friday, September 8 honoring Miss Margaret Anne Daniel and her fiance Ted Harris of Winston-Salem.Upon arrival the bride was presented
a corsage of white daisies with babies’ breath.Prior to the dinner a coctall hour was held in the Social Room.
The dining table was centered with an arrangement of mixed summer flowers with silver and crystal candle holders with white candles. Place cards were
small magmlia leaves with the name of
each guest.A dinner of tossed salad, prime rib, green beans almandine, oven browned
potatoes and crab apples. The dessert was Country Club ice cream pie.Guests Included Mr. and Mrs. WUliam C. Daniel, the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson CaudeU, the
bride’s grandparents. Miss Barbera
Daniel, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Hondros of Winston-Salem and Robert Burchard of McLean, Virginia.A gift of silver in their chosen pattern was presented to them by the hosts.
Hospital Auxiliary
Ball Is Sept. 30th
Plans were finalized during the last
meeting of the Davie County Hospital AuxUiary for the annual “Fall BaU" to be held September 30, at Bermuda Run Country Club.
Music will be provided by the Clyde &
Jo Lakey Band. Dinner will be served from 7 *.o 9 p.m. followed by dancing from 9 a.m. untU 1 a.m.
All proceeds wUl go towards hospital projects.Tickets may be purchased from the foUowing;
Bruce Anderson, Andy’s Union 76;
Linda Brewer, 998-5856; Buster Cleary, 634-2785; Richard Cook, Davie Sport Shop; Earl and Debbie Furches, 634- 5259; Libby Gales, 284-2291; Annie Lois
Grant, 634-5159; Betty Gardner, 492- 7383; Barbara Green, 634-3489; Wayne Long, 634-5624; Allen MarUn, 634-3325; Elizabeth Martin, 634-2520; Ed and July
Rosser, 634-5679; Sydna Sanford, 634- 2397; George Smith, 492-4171.
BRIDAL LUNCHEONMrs. H.R. Hendrix and Mrs. Joe
Jarvis were hosts at a luncheon at
Bermuda Run Country Club, Saturday. September 9, honoring Miss Margaret Anne Daniel, bride-elect of Ted Harris of Winston-Salem.
The bride was presented a corsage of white daisies.Mixed summer flowers decorated the
luncheon tables.The luncheon consisted of fresh pineapple and strawberries marinated
in creme de menthe, turkey, ham and
asparagus with hollandaise sauce over toast, green beans, boiled tomato and a spiced peach. The dessert was a coconut
snowball wiUi chocolate sauce.
The hostesses gift to the bride was silver in her chosen pattern.Special guests included Mrs. William
C. Daniel, the bride’s mother and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson Caudeli the bride’s grandmoUier.
BARBECUE AT VINEYARD
GARDEN CLUB HOUSEMiss Barber<1 J. Daniel entertained her sister. Miss Margaret Anne Daniel and
her fiance, Ted Harris, Saturday, September 9, with a barbecue picnic in the Club House at Vineyard Garden Apartments in Winston-Salem. Barbara wUl be maid of honor in the wedding.
FoUowing the social hour, the thirty guests were served barbecue, slaw, baked beans, pickles, sliced tomatoes and pecan tarts for dessert.
Mixed fall flowers were used on the serving table.The hostess presented a blue garter to the bride to be worn in her wedding.
Guests included the bride’s parents,
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Daniel and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson CaudeU, the bride’s grandparents.
Jessica Kirsten Davis was one year old Friday. Sept. I. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gil Davis, of Rt. 1, Advance, gave a cook-out in her honor on Satur
day. Jessica liked her rag doll cake, but
was more partial to the many toys she
received.Attending the cook-out were her grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. J.C. Barney of Advance and her aunt and unclc. Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Jones and family of
Jonestown Rd.
' ^ 7 5 ”
d o t i o l A a n e a,
ia - ie o ^ te n / m l
u t A e n a te d o , €»e A a t ie a .
I am a big girl now. My name is
Chasity Leslie Crotts.l celebrated my third birthday September I. with cake and ice cream. I am the daughter of Pam H. Bolin of Rt. 6 MocksvUle and Frank Crotts of Lexington. Grand
parents are L.D. Hendricks of Rt. C
Mocksville and Betty Sue WUIiams of
Rt. 4. Mocksville and Mr. and Mrs. Kyle
l.anning of Lexington.
STARTS THURS. 14-Sat. 16
REDUCTIONS GALORESHELLS
LARGE GROUP >SSO»TEO COLOIIS LONG » SHORT SLEEVESPORTSWEAR
SLACKS, VESTS, BLOUSES AND SWEATERS REDUCEDSUMMER SPORTSWEAR
ON E RACK DRESSES, SKIRTS, BLOUSES, SLACKS GREATLY REDUCED.
ALL-WEATHER COATS
ONEGROUP GREATFORANyTIMEOFTHEVEAR. GREATLVREDUCED
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($15 value fortmly $3.50*)
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Sponge and
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.tfcrfe Nomuin't
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Now it’» your turn lo be beautiful.
m o L E n o R m n nThe IMucc for the ( !u»loni I'uce
No. 1 Court Square Mocksville, N.C:.
634-3222
Yadkin Piaui Shuppint; Center Vadkin\ille,
We Cai e About
Your Family
o n ^ e
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c a n d e f i^ m l< m
HALL DRUG CO.
.118 N. MAIN ST. MOCKSVILLE, NC
Phone
634-2111
Day
Phone
634-5400
Night
SORRY,
NO
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EXCHANGES
OR
LAYAWAYS.
^ R E G IS T E R F O R
^ T H E L O V E L Y S H A W i
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Must Be 16 Years Or Older
To Register.
D R A W IN G TO BE HELD
SAT. SEPTEM BER 16, AT A
5 :0 0 P M O N THE S Q U A R E ^ ^ .
IN M O C K SV IL L E . ^ "
ALL ITEMS
ON SALE
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MANY OTHER UNADVERTISED SPECIALS
The Fashion Shop
COURT SQUARE MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
Store H o u n : 9s30 Л .М . to S :30 P .M .
i: IM Vh LMLKPKISI, K.CORD. THUUSIMY. SKPTUMBI-R 14. U)78
1953 Class Of Central Davie Has Reunion
The 1953 graduating class of Davie County Central High School recently
held a weelcend of reunion activities.Festivities began Saturday evening with a Speaker-Dinner-Dance at Hickory Hill Country Club, Mocksville, N.C. During the course of the evening Ernestine Foster Hoke served as Em
cee.Featured on the evening program was
a welcome greeting, roll call of classmembers, memorial for deceased members, recognition of former teachers, presentations, and a main address.“Life Dividends” was the topic of a
most challenging address delivered by
Julius A. Fulmore, former teacher and
Athletic Director of the class, who is now serving in the capacity of an Assistant
Superintendent with the Greensboro, N.C. city schools. He urged each member to make contributions to his church, school, and community whereby
worthy, rewarding, and self-satisfying
dividends may be enjoyed.Other former teache-s and substitutes
present were Augusta A. White, Cora L.Massey, Eva D. Walden, Vaiiie S. Davidson, Thomas S. Holman, Lucille L.Fuimore, Georgia J. Scales, Andrew Scales, Ella R. Dalton, Madagaiene D. Gaither, and Robert A. Massey.
Class members attended from
Salisbury, Cleveland, Mocksville, High
Point, Baltimore, Md., Tinton Falls,
N.J., and Buffalo. N.Y.Sunday morning the group worshiped at St. John A. M.E. Zion Church on Hill Crest Drive here in the city. During
service, Georgia Carter Burgess made a presentation on behalf of the class.The culminating activity was a family picnic scheduled at Rich Park. Due to inclement weather it was held in the
cafeteria of the Mocksville Middle
School.
A business session was ensued with Dorothy Rucker Graham presiding. Geraldine Tatum Brown won the award for having the largest family in at
tendance, and Annette Williams Whitted
was the recipient of the fartherest
distance traveled award.
Reunion 1978 committee were: Sallie Hargrave Carr, Geraldine Tatum Brown, Dorothy Rucker Graham, Donald Lee Naylor, Ernestine Foster
Hoke, Clyde Studevent, Jr., and Cora L.
Massey.
Fran-Ray Installs Additional Fire Prevention Measures
wish to protect the lives of everyone who live or visit within our rest home,” said Mr. KiUen.One puff of smoke could set off the
whole detective system and we would
have to run to the basement to stop it. This would be upsetting to the residents
Fran-Ray Rest Home Inc. has replaced their old awning type windows with white single hung with baked on
enamel. "Smoke detectors have also
been installed all over the building for
instant warning in case of fire.Francis Killen, administrator says,
. we i& n d Woman Fails To Appear For Trialoperation r WE DO NOT WANT ANY.” He says
further, “that smoke detectors are only
required in newer additions and also new rest homes, but we want to be up with the latest requirements when it
comes to fire prevention. (An ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure).” Mr. Killen would like to request that all visitors please refrain from smoking inside the building as much as possible
since smoking is one of the big fire hazards. “We love our residente as well as our employees and ourselves and we
A woman charged with simple affray in the Cooleemee Shopping Center last Friday failed to appear for trial in
district court, Monday.
A court order was issued for Diana
Lynn Meadows, 18, of Rt. 1 Woodleaf. She is charged with simple affray involving Charles Dennis Turner Jr., 18, of Rt. 1 Woodleaf in the shopping center
about 10 p.m. August 25th. She is out
under a $100 bond.Deputy Junior Maulding was the arresting officer.
as well as the staff. Your cooperaUon would be hi^ly appreciated. Thank
you,” he continued.We have at least 15 fire drills a year to keep in pracUce in case the unwanted did happen. Our building is built with
safety regulations which must be in
spected annually,,’ Frances Killen said “We also have fire extinguishers located at important spote to use in case of fire. TOey may soon be replaced with the all purpose extinguisher to add to the fire
safety of the rest home,” he concluded.
The Ladle
The ladle is a round cup on the end of a
long handle for easy dipping and ladling.
Use it to serve soups, gravies and heavy
chowders which are difficult to pour from a pan. It also permits gathering of the proper proportion of juice and food
in somethine like a chowder.
Hunting Doves On Baited Land Charged
' I'ilMP . ipi'IIOll I. .i: L' ■’
■Jiivie County.
Twenly-sevci hunters, one won. twenty men and at least five juveniles were reportedly hunting off Pinebrook Drive in Davie County on baited land.
A field is considered baited when
grain such asHiieat, salt, corn or any kind of feed Is placed on land so as to entice birds to the land for hunting. It is also considered baited for ten days after
the removal of the bait. The ten day
extension of time is added because the
birds will return to the field even though the grain has been plowed under. It is legal to bail land but it is illegal lo hunt on baited land.
On opening day for hunting Dove Wildlife officers Ron Knight of Davie County and Al Hicks, Iredell County called for assistance when they located
Ihe baited land in Davie on i ■nppriv •ni noH I". Hnwnrd Boger. Wildlife ■ilh-ris inipi Watagua lorsytli und Yadkin counties came to assist.Apnroximntely 140 birds were seized from the hunters and their names have
t>een turned over the to U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service for taking migatory
birds over baited land. Charges, if any, will be issued in approximately two to three weeks.The hunters may not necessarily know
the lands have been baited but they are so charged if they are caught hunting in
that area.The hunters from High Point, Mt. Airy, Winston-Saiem, Charlotte, Chapel Hill and Davie were: Daniel Franldin
Cagle, Jr Edwm Moore Woltz, George
Rhodes Crater, John Marshall Evans,
J' Linda F. Spry, Bruce A. Foster,
William Blake, Porter Foster, Max L. Darnhardt, Jr Henry A. Spry, Thomas Edw. Duvfll .Ir., Robert Wayne Boger, K. Frank McCain, Oliver James Hart,
in, Oliver James Hart, II, William S.
Pearson, Carl S. Phipps, Robert Paul
Zimmit, Joseph Luke Zammit, Francis
Eugene Fulk, Frederick E. Woltz.
Operators Licenses
Are Suspended
Motor vehicle operators licenses
suspended in Davie County for the
period ending August 18th included:Edward R. Bruebaker, 20, Rt. 2 Ad
vance, suspended as of August 24, 1978
until October 23, 1978.James K. Munday, 46, of Cooleemee, revoked as of July 26,1978 until July 26, 1979.Hellen S. Groce, 55, of Rt. 6
Mocksville, revoked as of August 25,
1978 until August 25, 1979.
Alvin L. Lewis, 22, of Rt. 7 Mocksville, revoked as of July 26, 1978 until July 26,
1979.
Continental ShrivesContinental shelves, built by eroded soil and the remains of countless sea
creatures and plants, stretch beyond the
shores of ail the continents. Together the shelves cover an area nearly one-fifth as large as earth's dry land. National Geographic says.
Social Services Board Retirees Honored
A luncheon honoring Dr. Ray Hartness (left) as out KoiM chairman of the Board of Social Services was recently held at tne Ramada Inn In
Clemmons. Don Wall, (center) director of the local department, staff and board members were present for the occasion. Also honored were
past chairman Julius Sutter and Bud Alexander, (right) All were presented gifts for their service and dedication.
Pilblic Hearing Comments
Given On Conservation Programs
A public hearing on the Resource Conservation Act was held on August 31 to obtain comments on conservation programs from interested local citizens.The Resources Conservation Act,
often abbreviated RCA, was enacted
last November by Congress to provide
local people with an opportunity to help
shape national conservation programs.
It directs Ihe Secretary of Agriculture to do two things:
1. Report on the status and condition of Ihe nation's soil, water and related
resources, and
2. Prepare a conservation program
based on this appraisal.
The appraisal of soil, water and other resources will be completed by December 1979 - and then made again five years later. The conservation program that responds to needs in- dentified in Ihe appraisal will be prepared to include a national policy
and a budget that will be updated each
year. Finally the program will be
evaluated to see if it is accomplishing its goals. This will be done by January 1981, and each year after.Major concerns of the seventeen persons present at Ihe local hearing are listed below:
I. A. Control of water at the source, i.e. on Ihe land.(a) by small ponds(b) by land treatment.B. That more financial assistance should be made available for these
permanent conservation practices,
instead of short term practices.C.‘‘ The cost of installing a conservation practice has increased drastically. That not enough financial assistance available.
D. The needs of individual farms do vary. A conservation nrneram with a
broad perspective should be developed lo satisfy the various needs.
II. An informative program needs to be carried on to inform the part-time farm population aboul Soil Conservation and Soil Stewardship.
III. Roadsides are eroding and
vegetation is not maintained on our
public highway right-of-ways.IV. Land use planning should consider prime farmland.V. A. Our forest land is not being as productive as possible. There is a need for ijetter utilization of a forest crop.
B. More stands need to be grown to
timber size.
C. Reforestation should begin soon after harvesting.VI. A. Farmland in production should be taxed differently than development land or land held for speculation.
B. Farmers need to be protected from
the inheritance tax to preserve the farm
and the farm family.
Meeting Of Davie Countians
For Ingram Monday Night
There will be a meeting of all Davie
Countians both Democratic and
Republican for John Ingram candidate for United States Senator.The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. Monday night, September 18 at Democratic Headquarters on North
Main Slreet, Mocksville.
Member of the State House of
Representatives Ramey Kemp has accepted the position of coordinator of Ihe Ingram campaign in Davie County.The public is cordially invited to this meeting to launch Ingram's fall campaign in Davie Countv.
7 5
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IMVIi; C OUNTY líNTlíRPRISK RIÍC UKU. THURSDAY. SHPTKMBHR I4 .II‘)7H
I n g e r s o l l - R a n d S p o n s o r s B u s i n e s s
Glenn Howard (lert) talks with Bob Armstrong, general manager of the Portable Coi^ressor Division from Woodcllff Lake, N.J., ana Bill Kid, manager of Engineering and Development at IngersoU.
Richard Beck of Central Carolina Bank In Cooleemee (left) discusses the need for economic education with featured speaker Fred McLimore of Purdue University.
By Kathy TomlinsonArea business and political officials participated in a business awareness day last Thursday sponsored by the Ingersoll-Rand Company of Mocksville.
The approximate 30 participants were
given a tour of (he local Pack Air Division which serves as world national headquarters by Bob Webster, supervisor of process engineering, and Jerry
Seager, machine shop manager. On the tour of the plant which employs 750 Davie Citizens, guests were shown the complete manufacturing process of portable air compressors which are
shipped world wide, with emphasis
placed on the automation inforce at the MocksvUle facility.After the completition of the tour,
guests were hosted by Ingersoll-Rand officials at a Bermuda Run luncheon. Featured speaker was J. Fred McLimore, member of the faculty of the school of management at Purdue
University; who has borrowpd from his
own industrial experience ol IS years to bring the lack of econmic education among American young people light.
Believing that there is a complete
ignorance of economics and the mechanics of the American free enterprise system, he stressed the awakening of business, political and educational leaders to strike a coalition and help alleviate the problem.
“We have become so progressive that
the basic fundamentals of what has made the United States the land of opportunity have been forgotten,” said
McLimore.“There is a complete misunderstanding of what the system is all about,” he commented, “and it is my concern to show people that together
with business great things can be ac
complished.”McLimore concluded that there must be an awakening of local officials and citizens dedicated to the educational promotion of the free enterprise system.This is the beginning of plans sponsored by Ingersoll-Rand to help promote
and economic understanding between
business and the local people.
The day concluded with a time allotment for questions and answers between IngersoU officials and local participants.
ExplainsProcess
Bob Webster explains the production (I to r) Don Beam, Branch Banking Carolina Bank, Dave Tedder,
rocess to local business leaders Trust, Rocky Johnson, Central assistant principal Mocksvillecaroima uanK, uave redder, assistant principal Mocksville RIementary School, Julius Suiter, assistant principal Davie County High School and Ken Sales, plant manager of Baker F^iirniture.
I ____ Approximately 30 local business, political and educaUonal officialsI im PnPnn enjoyed lunch at Bermuda Run Golf and Country Club during thek U 11 U I I C U I I business awareness session sponsored by Ingersoll-Rand.
T e l e v i s i o n I n T h e C l a s s r o o m I s I m p o r t a n t T o o l
Mrs. Dot Hilton Is Chairman Of Mental Health For Ephesus
Mrs. Dot Hilton of Mocksville has been named Mental Health Bellringer chairperson for the Ephesus area for the October 1978
campaign, announced Ludie H. White, President of the Mental Health Association in North
Carolina.
“The Mental Health Association
is the largest citizens' voluntary
advocacy organization in the United States fighting mental illness and promoting mental health," said Mrs. White.
Since the organization is non
profit and non-governmental, its entire support must come from contributions such as those to be
collected in October.The original and continuing purposes of the Association are to:
-improve attitudes toward
mental illness and the mentally ill through public education;-improve services for the
mentally ill; and -work for the prevention of mental and emotional illness and the promotion of mental health.
Television in the classroom has a power all its own. It cannot be ignored. There is evidence indicating that school television (STV) can improve reading
skills, encourage class discussion and promote student interaction.Today it is estimated that one-third
(IS million) of the nation’s kindergarten
through 12th grade students regularly
receive a portion of their instruction
through television. In North Carolina, 28 per cent of the teachers who recieve a useable signal use school television.
Among parents and educators alike, there is increasing interest in the medium’s total impact on education.Current STV series shown on UNC-TV
stress Ihe basics of reading, writing and mathematics as well as include courses on art, science, music, history, consumer affairs and career education.
More and better programs account for
part of STV’s increasing use, but factors
involving the students themselves are
also important. Children’s familiarity with television is often cited as a reason for its importance in classrooms.
Educators also stress the wide
diversity of students who respond
poslitively to television. On Iowa
elementary school teacher says;
"Television cuts across the ability lines. Attentiveness and interest are virtually the same, no matter what the student’s ability. Retention of information
learned from television is very good
because it used visual senses.”
The mobility of television is also an important consideration. Television can take students to places they may never have the opportunity to see.
Besides bringing new material into a classroom, television can augment and improve existing tools. Certain
programs can add a new dimension to a traditional course. For example, ALL ABOUT YOU, a program which demonstrates how the body functions
and examines the benefits of good health
care, can contribute substantially to a
health science class.The inherent entertainment value of
television is another important asset. Ideal are presented in an entertaining
way, yet the concepts are there ana
children grasp ihem more readily.
SESAME STREE1 is a good example of
this.The resources of television are much greater than that at any one school. Many STV programs have production
costs in the tens of thousands of dollars,
making them too costly for any one school or school system to produce. Television’s ability to draw upon the expertise of professionals and its
mobility gives it instructional
capabilities that traditional educational
methods cannot equal. ■“An example of STV improving reading skills is given in the case of a Cincinatti
school experiencing a continuing downward trend in average reading achievement. The trend was reversed when the school began using the reading
series THE ELECTRIC COMPANY.
A school in Oceanside, New York
improved both reading and writing
skills by using COVER TO COVER, a series which discusses one or two books during each segment and describes part
ry I
To stimulate student involvement in a
televised lesson, many STV programs are open-ended; a problem is presented but no solution is supplied. This type of program allows the students to see the
problems of others and relate them to
their own problems. A program might deal, for example, with the difficulty of defining and applying the concept of “success” to one’s own life. Since no pat
answer is given, the program, with the
active encouragement and guidance of the teacher, can stimulate spirited student debate and critical thinking.
The open-ended program points up the necessity of having well-prepared, interested teachers use television fully. STV does not replace the teacher. It is a
teacher resource, accompanied in many
instances by printed study materials
which require the teacher’s skilled participation.Television’s assets and resources, its mobility and familiarity, its ability to
instruct and involve all contribute to its
growing popularity.
A itorage battery does not store electricity, liut chemicals
which can create electricity.
i f O / S S i
More Car,
More Kicks,
LESS Money.
That’s Chevy Monza (or 79 with a lot of NEW
STANDARD FEATURES, Plus, a long list of other
highly desirable STANDARD features. And with all these features now STANDARD, the
Manufacturer's Suggested Retail Price of the 1979
Monza is actually LOWER than that of last year's
Monza with the same equipment.
Monza's NEW STANDARD features for '79
include...
• AM radio • Tinted glass • Sport steering wheel
• Shift console' • Body side moldings
'79 Monza Coupe
• Shill console standard on
all models except Monza
Coupe (1HM27)
Pennington
Chevrolet Co., Inc.
Phone 634'2U5 Dealer License 789
PRSr THINGS FIRSTEDÜÜOKW
If you believe that education is one of the things which should be put first in life,
then First Federal has a savings plan that can help you prepare for your child’s future.
We call it the Savings and Loan Foundation College Savings Plan.
This plan allows you to open a special savings account for your child’s college education,
and it has a big plus... the interest earned can be ta>c free.
Drop by one of our offices and ask for a free booklet explaining the advantages of this account.
It will be well worth your time... and your child’s.
HRST FEDERAL SAVINGS
Main Offlcc; 230 N. Cherry Street
Branch Offices: 490 Hane^ M all 130 S. Stratford Road 2815 Reynolda Road/3001 W aushtown Stieei
Mocksville Office: 215 Gaither Street
14 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14. 1978
Social Security
People working in employment or self employment
covered by social security arc earning credit differently this year than they did before 1978. Social security credits are
measured in units called
quarters of coverage.
A person's right to benefits is determined by the number of quarters of coverage he or she has. The required number basically depends on a person’s date of birth. No one needs credit for more than 40 quarters of coverage--10
years.Starting in 1978 a person receives credit for one quarter of coverage for each $250 of covered annual ear
nings up fo a maximum of 4
quarters if annual earnings are $1,000 or more. This applies to both employees and self employed people. Before
1978 most employees earned
one quarter of coverage if
they were paid $50 or more in
covered wages during a calendar quarter. Self- employed people earned 4
quarters of coverage if their annual net earnings amounted to $400 nr more. In addition, the $250 measure
will increase each year to
take account of increases in
average wages in the U.S.
No changes were made in the rules about how many quarters of coverage are required for benefit
eligibility.More informatton about
social security credits and how they are earned can be obtained at the Salisbury social security office, located
at 105 Corriher Av. The
teleohone number is 634-2868.
My friend told me that I
could apply for benefits for
my dead husband who died 4 months after an automobile accident. I didn’t believe il. Is
it true?In your case, probably not,
since your husband was ap
parently not disabled for the
entire 5 months waiting period. But It is true that an application tor disability benefits can be filed after the
death of a disabled worker. It
the claim is approved, back payments may be made for some months preceding the death of the worker. The application must be filed
within 90 days after the
worker’s death.
I received about $1,000 in
income tax refund this year. Will this affect my social security check?No. Income tax refunds do
not count as earnings.
Do I need to come to the
office to report things to social
security?No. Mall or phone the informatton.
I’m taking driver’s
education in high school and
will need a social security
number when I apply for my license. How do I get one?Contact any social security office and ask for form SS-S.
Proof of age (such as a birth
certificate) and of identity
<such as a student card) should be submitted; they will be returned. Since it takes about 6 weeks to get a card, apply early.I just got married a few
weeks ago. Does my marriage
have any effect on my jSSI payments?A change in your marital ; status could affect the amount
- of payments due you and your
'husband or wife. You should
: notify social securitypromptly. The people therewill tell you how your- marriage affects your
payments.
I recently applied for an
auto loan from a finance company. The person who took my application asked for my social security number. I
didn’t want to give it to her,
but she said the company uses social security numbers for filing purposes. Is this practice legal?Some non-government organizations use social
security numbers for record
keeping purposes. Such use is
neigher required nor
prohibited by Federal law. Knowing your number, however, does not allow these organizations to gel in
formation from your social
security records.
I pay a monthly premium for Medicare hospital insurance protection because 1 didn’t have enough social security credits to get il. I also have the medical insurance
part of Medicare and pay the
monthly premium for it. Can I drop the medical insurance?If you are buying hospital insurance protection, you
cannot cancel your medical insurance without losing your hospital insurance too.
However, you can cancel your
hospilai Insurance and still continue your medical insurance.
I’m a roust a bout and
change jobs frequently. Now
lhal I'm in my 50’s, 1 want to check the records to make sure that all my earnings have been reported correctly
to social security. Can this be done?Ves. All you have to do is call, write or viiil any social
security office. Someone
there will give you a form called. "Requeil for Statement of Earnings." Vou can use this form to find out the wages credited and the
quarters of coverage you have under social security.
I've been told that when I’m
65, the monthly retirement
checks I can gel on my own earnings record will be higher than the payments I’m now gelling. Can 1 change over
from widow's benefits to retirement benefits al that
lime?Yes. You can apply for retirement payments on your
own earnings record at 65. If
you're entitled to two benefits, social security will pay the higher amount.I'm a housewife and haven't
worked in the past 12 years. Now that my kids are older. I'm planning to get a job again. Will I be starling from scratch as tar as social
security is concerned, or will I
still get credit for the 5 years I worked before I got married?If you work <in a Job covered
by social security the credits
you earned during those 5 years remain on your record permanently. If you return to work, the additional credits will be added to your social
security earnings record.
What other dependents
besides children may be eligible for benefits on a disabled worker's record?.In addition to disabled
children, unmarried children
under 18, and children bet
ween 18 and 22 who remain
unmarried and in school,
other dependents that may
quality for benefits include a
wife at any age if she has a child under 18 or disabled in her care getting benefits on your, the worker's record: a husband or wife age 62 or older even if there are no children getting benefits.
I was thinking of opening a
bank account for my 4-yr. old son. Does he need a social
security card for this?Many banks use the social security number as their own means ot identification, and it is also used for tax purposes (such as reporting interest).
You can apply for a number,
on his behalf, at any social security office in person or by mail. His birth certificate will be needed as evidence of age and citizenship.Because I have very little income, I Uve with my
daughter. She helps to sup
port me. Does this make me ineligible for SSI paymente? You may be eligible tor SSI payments, but your SSI payments may be reduced. If an eligible individual lives in another person’s household
and receives support and maintenance in kind trom that person, the basic SSI payment is reduced by one-
third. This reduction takes
tbe place ot counting the dollar value of the support and maintenance as income. The aged widow next door to me has been living on the
insurance her husband left
her. Now that’s gone and she has no income at all. I’m taking her to apply for SSI payments, but they won’t start right away and she needs money now. Is there any way she can get immediate financial assistance? The social security office can
authorize an emergency
advance payment if an SSI claimant is eligible for one.
Also, some state and local governments make interim assistance payments to SSI claimants who are waiting for a decision on their eligibility.; For more information, call
any oscial security office.
My wife and 1 are leaving next
month for a tour of Europe.
We’ll be gone for about 10 weeks. Can we arrange to have our social security retirement checks forwarded to us?Special rules apply to social security beneficiaries while
they are ourside the U.S. If
you go outside the country tor 30 days or more, your absence may affect your right to checks. For more information, ask at any social
security office tor the leaflet,
“Your social security check while you’re outside the United States.”I have a woman who comes into my home twice a month to clean. I’m a busy man and
I don't see why I should bother
to keep recor(ls and report her wages to social security when I'm only paying her a small wage?If you pay your household
worker ISO or more in cash
'wages in a calendar quarter
you must report her wages. There are penalties for tailing to report her wages, and you would be depriving her of tbe earnings credit she will need someday to get benefits under
social security.
The fastett tpeed at which a
giant tortoiie can crawl it
about five yardt a minute,
if it could travel five timet
ai fatt, it would be going at
almost one mile per hour.
Virtoriai Uotel "nje Green Park Inn at Blowing Rock, N.C. is one of the few surviving hotels from
Ihe Victorial era. Built in 1882, the white frame landmark has been beautifully restored snd is one of the finest resorts in America.
SAVE UP T O ...
c o o t c e m c E
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Using Iho theme ‘'inlerlockiiin; circles", George first sketches his drawings on graph paper.
The talented hands of wood carver, George Hairston, arc kept busy carving original designs, all
native to Davie County, for the Court House.
Geol'ge Hahston...
S o m e t h i n g S p e c i a l
F o r D a v i e C o u n t y
, There are touches of beauty being added in the Davie County Court House Uiat will set It apart from any other.These are hand-carvings by Davie Countv’s own George Hairston, a very talented craftsmen.Plagued by the idea for at least six months before he actually began the
carvings, George says, “I wanted to leave this kind of work for the people in Davie County ... It is highly visible and
will last forever.”It all began when Martha Kontos of
the Davie Arts Council asked George
about doing some volunteer work with
youngsters in the schools. In manageable groups, George is working with the entire fourth grade. His plans include taking them to the N.C. Arts School and SECCA mainly because he ^ y s he feels “the kids need to see the
context of art work more clearly.”
Some of the kids were a little
;roystified by seeing an artist in their
school and Hairston thought perhaps it would all seem a little less baffling if they could see things in a different context. He says SECCA is perhaps one of the best galleries in the Southeast and
the Arts School is known around the
world. The school board agreed that taking the kids would be a great idea. The fact that the kids would be outnumbered by artists and their work would certainly impress them.Hairston had tried to persuade the
Arts Council to fund his wood carving
project for the county and the town, however they were too deeply involved with performers at the time. He then approached Ron Vogler, the county manager, about using him for a reference and this was the beginning.Hairston had been actively involved in the Arts Council and craft fairs in this
area for quite some time, but the work he is dohig !in the cburt house is much more rewarding than making craft items for sale.
Hairston's project is funded, only one year at a time, through Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA),
a government funded program and not by tax money from local residents. He says if Davie had not been able to get a portion of these funds, it is possible that it would just go back into the State for
possible funding somewhere else.
Hairston feels that even though the work he is doing could go on for years, in one years time he can add a great many carvings to the court house for ail the people in Davie County to admire and enjoy.
He has been able to purchase the wood
far below wholesale cost. For outdoor carvings George prefers to use redwood, but for his interior carvings he uses walnut.
At this point, his work is displayed on
the north side of the court house - above
the door opening into the court room,
above doors and windows facing west and in the county commissioners room.His general theme is the “interlocking circle" using designs which are native to Davie County.. Things which have either grown here or are not growing in this
county...agriculturally or ornamentally.
Many of his ideas came from working with the fourth grade kids. “Their ideas are definitely involved,” Hairston said. “I asked for their help and ideas for the carvings.” The kids gave him their
drawings, which al this time will fill
several big boxes. He says he enjoyed looking through them and from the drawings, regardless of how rough they may have looked, originated many good ideas.
The work George is doing for ^the people ofiS^avie County "has-been ‘ rewarding. Although the amount oi money, he is paid is small, he says it is
great experience and even more professional recognition, which is he'pful to any artist.George has also talked with the Mayor of Mocksville about doing some work
around the town...such as large, attractive munincipal signs which will continue to look good for many years to come.
He has also done a great deal of
carvings from solid ivory. In fact, George recently received a permit from the Congress of U.S. to use ivory for his carvings.His talents are not limited to just wood carving by no means, but apparently he does enjoy working with wood. In
months to come, more and more of his work will become visible in the court house.George Hairston is giving much more to the the people of Davie County than he is receiving in return. For many
generations to come his work will be
admired and remembered for the
purpose in which he genuinely intended...“leaving something special here for the people of Davie County.”
George transfers the images from his drawings to whatever type of wood is selected for the carving.
Story by Mr. 'ene Benson
Photos by James Barringer
Meinbt'rs of the board of i-uiiunissioners allow their regular meeting to be interrupted long enough for a plioto showuig Iioh Hairston's carvings are displayed in Iheir conference room. (Note carvings on each end of the conference table.)
:в IMVIL COUNTY liNTHW’RISi: Ri:C0RD. TIIURSIMY, SI-PTHMBHR 14. 1478
■ G ir ls T e n n i s T e a m W i n s S e c o n d S t r a i g h t M a t c h
The Uavio High girls tennis Icnm won
llipir sccond straight malch with a 5-4
viclory over conference foes Asheboro
last Tuesday al Davie's home courts.
The malch was lied al 4-4 with only
one doubles game remaining. Davie's
team of Paige and Tracey Stapleton
downed Asheboro’s Allison M yall and
Bev Von Cannon in Ihree sets to give Ihe
Eagles the victory. The sisters won Ihe
game 6-2, 5-7 and B-4.
Davie's number one singles player,
Tammy Allen, won her match over Lori
Kishbough 6-0, fi-2. Asheboro took the
number Iwo and Ihree spots wilh Hope
Snyder defeating Jill Amos 6-1, 6-0 and
Bev Von Cannon beating Tracey
Stapleton B-3, B-4.
Other singles winners for Davie were
Jennifer Hanes and Paige Stapleton.
Hanes downed Tam my Bailey 6-4,5-7, 6-
4 and Stapleton downed Anna Atwater 6-
4, 6-4. The other singles match showed
Asheboro's Allison Myalt winning a 6-3,
i\:\ Hi»ri«»nn fivpr Knfhnrinp nrissplfp
In number one doubles play the team
of Kishbough and Snyder defeated
Davie's team of Amos and Allen 7-5, 6-3.
In number three doubles, Davie’s leam
of Grisette and Kathryn Latham won a
7-5, 6-4 decision over Amy Ai mstrong
and Karen .Iordan
liver non-CDiifereiife oppuiieMls Kui-
bush.
Davie swept singles play wilh Allen,
Am os, Tracey Stapleton, Hanes,
Grisette and Paige Stapleton all
downing their Forbush opponents with
case.
In doubles action Davie's top team of
Amos and Allen decisioned Missy
Speas Cindy Hauser 6-3, 6-0. The Eagles
number three team of Angela Riddle
and Regina W illiams downed Gayle
Johnson and Beth Saylor 3-6, 6-3, 7-6.
Forbush's only win came when the
team of Suzie Johnson and Angie Myers
won a 6-3, 3-6, 6-1 decision over Latham
GirlNetteis
1978 navie High Girls Varsity Tennis Team Front Row L-R; Lou Ann Eaton, Kim Erickson, Karen Cornatzer, Tammy Allen Second Row L-R: Jill Amos, Paige Stapleton, Regina Williams, Angela Riddle. Back Row L ^ ; Katherine Grisette, Jennifer Hanes, Katherine Latham, Tracy Stapleton, Edie Ferebee. (Photo by Garry Foster)
and Karen Cornatzer.
Last year, Davie finished fourth in the
North P iedm ont Conference and
Asheboro was third. Davie is coached by
Dennis McCarthy.
The Davie High girl’s varsity tennis
schedule for 1978 is as follows:
Sept. 14 at Davie, North Davidson:
Sept. 18 at Davie, Salisbury; Sept. 21 at
Lexington; Sept. 25 at North Rowan;
Sept. 28 at Davie, West Rowan; Oct. 2 at
Thomasville; Oct. 5 at Asheboro; Oct. 9
ai Davie, North Davidson; Oct. 12 aai
Salisbury; Oct. 16 at Davie, Lexington;
Oct 19 al Davie, North Rowan; Oct. 23
al West Rowan; Oct. 26 at Davie,
Thomasville. All matches begin at 3
p.m.
Little League Football Opener
Gets Season Underway
Little League Football season opens
with a tie ballgame.
The Litlle League Football season
opened on Saturday night celebrating
Teacher Appreciation Night with the
Trojans and the Cowboys playing to a 0-0
tie. From the opening kickoff it was
evident these two teams were equally
matched, and the possibility of a tie was
in the minds of everyone in attendance.
In the second gam e a lot of scoring
resulted in the Oilers defeating the
Chiefs 28-6. David Gillespie scored three
touchdowns and John Folm ar ran for
one while John Talbert rushed for two
extra pninl« fnr the Oilers. Roger Smoot
scored the Inne touchdown for the
Chiefs.
Next week the footballers will be
celebrating Rescue Squad and Am
bulance Service Appreciation Night.
The schedule will bniig ihc Cuwlwyi,
vs the Ram s al six o’clock followed by
Ihe Oilers vs. the Trojans at seven
o’clock.
Standings
Oilers
Rams
Cowboys
Trojans
Chiefs
Won
1000
0
Lost00
00
1
Tie0
0110
Motorcycle Championships
This Weekend At Farmington
Farm ington Dragway will be the
scene of the North Carolina Motorcycle
Championship this week-end September
16 and 17,1978. Featured in the two-day
event will be Top Fuelers; Ray Price of
tUleigh, N.C. in the nation’s fastest
funny bike; John Dixon of Wallace, N.C.
in a supercharged Yam aha; Roland
Sluart of GainesvUle, Fla; ' In' alw ln-
engine Harley-Davidson; —PLUS—The
prem ier of D anny Johnson’s new
supercharged Kawasaki.
Johnson, of Yadkinvilie, N.C. former
number one Top Fuel rider in the
country, will debut his own bike after
spending almost two years building and
designing his own creation. He is best
remembered in his Harley-Davidson
that made him the num ber one qualifier
in every race he entered in national
competition before his temporary
retirement. Johnson will also be
defending his unprecedented record of
never having lost a race at Farmington,
which is only nine miles from his home.
Also featured will be competiton in
Open Gas, E.T. Classes, and Show
Bikes. Qualifying will be held in all
classes on Saturday only along with a
Motorcycle Swap Meet. Gates open
Saturday at 12:00 with eliminations
Sunday at 2:30.
Charged With Possession
Wade Allen Osborne, 20, of 16 Duke
Street, Cooleemee was arrested about
1:15 a.m . Sunday morning and charged
with the possession of a controlled
substance. Osborne allegedly had in his
possession a plastic bag of m arijuana
and smoking paraphanelia.
Bond was set at $2,000 for a court
appearance on September 28, 1978.
Deputy Junior Mauldin and Deputy
John Coley were the arresting officers.
Davie High Girls
Volleyball Team
1978 Da vie High GlrlBVolleyball Team. Front Row L-R; Vanessa Smitlu C Gina Shore, Linda Phelps, Vicki Jordan, Rhonda Bullabough, Amy'Howard, Kathy Cornwell; coach. Back Row L-R; Aileen Steelman; coacn, Sharon Young, Anna Everidge, Sarah Gardner, Deanna Thomas, Mary Gardner, Dena Sechrest. Elaine Fields, Daphne Beck, Manager (Photo by Garry Foster)_______
Wonder if John Mackovic would let
Arnold Palm er call a few plays from the
sidelines against Virginia Tech this
S aturday night? W onder if John
Mackovic will try to m atchup his golfing
skills with those of Palm er, Lanny
Wadkins, Gary Haliberg, Bob Byman,
David Thore, Jim Simons, Scott Hoch,
or Jay Haaas? To take it all a step
further, why even bring up such notions
at all?
You must understand that this coming
weekend at Wake Forest is not your
common, garden variety, everyday,
run-of-the m ill sports weekends. There’s
plenty of golf and there's plenty of
football on tap for those who care for
either or both, or for that matter, those
who don’t care at all.
In the football cam p the Deacons will
put their 1-0 record against Virginia
Tech in a 7:30 p.m . kickoff at Groves
Stadium. Earlier in the day Arnie and
Gang will have teed it up at Bermuda
Run Golf Course for the Wake Forest
Pro-Am and Exhibition to raise money
for the Worsham-Knott scholarship fund
established for the golf program years
ago by Palmer.
Mackovic says he intends to spend the
day roaming the Bermuda Run course
during the tourney, visiting, meeting a
few folks. He lives out there, you see. So
does Lanny Wadkins. Palm er hasn’t
said if he'll offer Mackovic any coaching
advice but I rather suspect he’ll take a
seat in the new box seat section of
Groves Stadium and sit back to watch
his Alma M ater’s football team in ac
tion.
With the Deacs having wrested a 14-0
win from the Virginia Cavaliers behind
a strong passing performance by Ken
Daly and the running of Jam es Me-
Dougald and Albert Kirby and with the
Pro-Am event in town a crowd of up
wards lo 26,000 should be on hand for the
grid contest. Nobody's saying how many
folks are going to be out at the golf
tourney. All they're saying is that the
Worsham-Knott chest will be (100,000
richer by the end of Saturday afternoon.
For those of you who would come for
events such as these, here's the best way
to play Ihe angles and save a bit of
money, even if none of it goes lo help
wilh Ihe balance of trade: tickets to the
i’ro-Am are $5 each and you can get
them at Bermuda Run or at the Wake
Forest Athletic Ticket Office. If you
have a ticket for Ihe Pro-Am and you
want to attend the football game you can
get $2 off the price of an adult's ticket
with your Pro-Am ticket stub. Now, if
you want to take the fam ily, stop by any
Winston-Salem area Hardees and pick
up a coupon that will save each of your
children $1 off Ihe price of a child’s
ticket 10 Ihe football game.
Now, I and hold on for this) if you want
III iilav in the lournament, tee il up and
T h e
D E A C O N S
bi/ Pat Gainey
everything, fu lifill a ll those M itty
dreams of whipping Palm er, Wadkins,
and Simons with a 45 foot eagle putt on
the 18th green, hob-nob with them, meet
Buddy Hackett and the entire gallery,
the sum is $1,000. That's right. A mere
$1,000 will get you a round of golf with
those pros. Think that’s a bit steep do
you? Call Neiman-Marcus in Dallas,
Texas and tell them this is what you
want to give a friend for Christmas.
They specialize in being able to satisfy
virtually any whim for a price. If you
are going to pass this time, call them
later on.
If you’re not inclined toward the golf
set then come see the Deacs in action at
Groves Stadium against Bill Dooley’s
Virginia Tech team. Tickets there are $8
and $4. It'll be a good show too. John had
'em “smokin' ” when they came out
against Virginia.
And if you’re not inclinned toward
either and you’ve read this far just to
pass the time of day, have a good
weekend. It ’ll certainly be m ore
peaceful than mine will be. A thousand
dollars? A thousand dollars. Have a
good weekend.
Walt Boyle Sr.
Sets Torrid Pace
InYMCASwim Meet
Fifty-four year old Walt Boyle Sr. of
Berm uda Run catpured num erous
honors last weekend as a participant in
the 4th Annaul YMCA Invitational
Masters' Swim Meet held at Fayet
teville.
In his class Boyle won the 100-, 200-,
500-, and 1,650-yard events. In winning
these events Boyle broke his own North
Carolina swim records and all of the
established meet records for the events.
Swimmers from all over the nation
came to Fayeteville last weekend to
compete in the short course meet.
FIRES
The following fires were reported to
the Davie County Fire Control Center
during recent ,day$:
-September'? - the W illiam R. Davie
Fire Dept, responded to a tobacco barn
fire at the Clint Smith residence at 9:04
a.m .;
-¡September 7 - the W illiam R. Dava-
Fire Dept, responded as a standby to a
truck accident al 3:50 p.m . on highway
601 N.; and
-September 11 - Ihe Center Fire Dept,
responsed to a car fire at Bear Creek
Hill at 7:10 a.m .
Bordens Wins 2nd
In Class В Softball Tourney
The Davie County Bordens' Club В
softball team captured second place
honors in a state tournament played
Labor Day weekend at Mayodan.
Smokey Joe's of Lexington was the
tournament winner.
Thirty-two teams were entered in the
tournament.
Bordens won five out of seven games
and five of the ten Bordens’ team
members made the tournament’s all-
state team. These all-state team
members were Kathy Hutchens, Judy
H ow ard, P a tric ia D w iggins, Vickie
Wilson and Deanna Thomas.
The Bordens team is sponsored by
Garland Bowens and m anaged by Jack
Nichols.
East Davie Jaycees
Sponsor Tournament
To Fight Dystrophy
On Two consecutive weekends the
East Davie Jaycees sponsored a softball
Tourney w ith proceeds going to
Muscular Dystrophy.
August 18-20 Eight men's teams
com peted w ith U nifi w inning the
championship I ' lai Mawlers, 2nd and
Band В Green House ,?rd Leading hitters
Trophy went to u u n n y M atthew s,
playing for Unifi.
August 25-27 eight womens teams
competed with Borden winning the
championship, Riley Oil 2nd and Bor-
denettes 3rd. Leading Hitters Trophy
went to Patricia Dwiggins playing for
the Bordens.
During the two weekend East Davie
Jaycettes assisted with concessions.
The Jaycees would like to thank all the
teams and everyone who helped in any
way wilh the tournament. The total
proceeds goining to Muscular Dystrophy
was $724.00.
Davie Runners In Carolina
Street Scene 10,000 Meter
L.arry l.anier, 28, of Advance, led a
group of six Davie County runners who
competed in Ihe Carolina Street Scene
10,000 meter road race in Winston-Salem
last Saturday.
The race was sponsored by Schlitz
i.ight, and was held in conjunction with
the Carolina Street Scene Arts and
t.'rafts festival.
The other Davie County runners who
completed the race and received a t-
shirt were; Taylor Slye, Tom Stayer,
Barbara Latta. Denise Wood and Bill
Ferebee.
A fun run will be held this Sunday at
the Uavie High School track at 7 p m.
and all interested persons are invited to
attend. Distances will vary depending
on the runners ability and beginning
runners are urged lo come out and run
with a few of the experienced runners
who regularly attend.
Bordens
Softball Team
The Borden team Is made up of first row-Judy Howard, Phyllis Nichols, Patricia Dwiggins; second row-Angle Comatzer, Deanna Thomas, Vickie Wilson; thlrd^row-Manager Jack Nichols, Kathy Hutchens, Linda Dwig^ns, Cathy Hanes, Luvada WTsecarver, and Sponsor Garland Bowens. (Photos by Robin Carter).
Y o u A n d Y o u r P e t
No one likes to consider the
possibility that some day a
favorite pet m ight be injured
in an accident. Yet given the
fact that most dogs and cats
are free to roam the house and
neighborhood, it’s best to be
prepared to adm inister first
aid to your pet.
Your first step in providing
first aid should be to take
precautions against being
bitten or scratched-even if
your pet is norm ally good-
natured. Do not assume that a
pet in pain will recognize a
fam iliar voice or face. Use a
blanket or jacket to cover the
pet’s head, or convert a scarf
into a temporary muzzle so
you can examine the anim al
safely. To examine a cat,you
may need a friend to restrain
the cat’s feet while you hold
its head.
In any accident, the most
obvious injuries w ill be
broken bones or heavy
bleeding. Broken lim bs
usually stick out at an un
natural angle and must be
im m obilized w ith a te m
porary splint and som e
tow eling. The splint and
broken leg should be wrapped
firm ly together to prevent
further movement which may
cause additional bleeding or
tissue damage
The easiest m ethod to
control heavy bleeding is
direct pressure over the
wound by applying a clean
handkerchief w ith your
finge s Blood that is bright
red anil spurting out rhyth
mically comes form an ar
tery: darker, slower flowing
blood comes from a vein If
you are unable to stop the
blood in a few minutes using a
pressure bandage, you may
have lo iry a lourniijuel A
tour’-i'iuei is a narrow strip of
m a iTiH (a lie. stocking or
Itell' lied lightly b fiw m i Ihe
heart and the wound Tour
niquets must be loosened for
one minute at 5 to в minute
intervals so that the tissues
below the tourniquet.are not
com pletely deprived of
oxygen and blood.
If your pet has stopped
breathing, you must apply
artificial respiration. Lay the
pet out on its right side, and
gently pull the tongue of its
mouth as far as possible.
Apply even steady pressure
on the rib cage, with your
hands Press down a p
proxim ately every five
seconds Do’it siowly'but with
strong pressure to the chest
area. The firm pressure also
massages the heart. You may
have to work on the anim al a
half hour or more. There’s
alw ays the possibility of
reviving an anim al as long as
there is a heartbeat.
Heavy bleeding, trauma,
paiji and severe fright all ana i i p ^
contribute to the development
of shock, even if m ajor in
juries are not present. M ajor
symptoms of shock in anim ats
include pale, grayish gums
and lips.
RIFLES • SHOTGUNS • HAND GUNS • HANDMADE KNIVES
BUVCK POWDER GUNS • HUNTING SUPPLIES
DAM'l WOOMS TnS9§nS
RON SMITH. Owntr
I REE ESTIMATES ON REPAIRS
ROUTE »3. BOX 393A DULIN RD
I TELEPHONE 19191 998-^ ^ J
T O N IT EBPM T E N D E R
H H J U U 0 U 8
C O M E D T I
B A R E F O O T
I N T H E P A R K
Newlyweds move into a Greenwich
Village apartment where their lives
are completely and unexpectedly
rearranged by a charming neighbor.
A comic masterpiece'
Robert Redford
Jane Fonda
U I X I I
i» <
i
D a v i e D e f e a t s T r i n i t y 1 0 - 0 ;
A t M o o r e s v i l l e F r i d a y N i g h t
DAVII; COUNTY 1-NTURI’RISl: RECORD. THURSDAY, SliPTHMBUR 14. 1Ч7Н Mi
Larry Whitaker of Davie breaks away from Trinity defenders for a good gain. (Photo by Garry Foster)
"They also serve who only wait” is a phrase that could have well applied to these Davie players last Friday night. (Photo by Garry Foster)
WU
Î P i ^ î L I l
Practical jokes and general horseplay
is evident anytime fisiiermen and
hupters get together. For a short time,
tliey are released from duties and
worries and telephones and can t>ecome
sm all boys again. As someone once said,
the only difference between m an and
boy is the price of his toys.
Here at Kure Pier, we get a lot of it. In
fact, some of our employees are not
I k adverse to a general hot foot, salting
someone’s coffee, dropping a shrim p in
a friend’s soft drink, and others with a
little more finesse.
Bobby Theodore operates a gift shop
up the street from the pier and oc
casionally sneaks in a little flounder
fishing between customers. Pier em-
|)> ployee Ben H orne claim s Bobby
wouldn’y know a flounder if he caught
one. Bobby says Ben is just envious of
h|s flounder prowess.
.-•One day, Bobby came through the
pier, saying, “keep an eye on m y reel. I
gotta run back to the shop a m inute.”
Ben had been waiting for the moment.
|) Quickly, he reeled in Bobby’s tackle,
made the encessary adjustments and
recast. When Bobby returned, he said,
“Better check your line. I saw il jerking
a while ago.”
Bobby rushed out, set his hook, yelled,
“ Igo t h im !” Cranking furiously, Bobby
reeled in his catch~an extra two pounds
of sinkers and a two foot long cut-out
cardtM>ard fish. On the side, in big let
ters, the word FLOU N D ER.
•Red Doty is now mayor of Kure
Beach. Skipper Carl Snow invited Red
and a few friends to accompany him and
a few friends on a trolling trip to High
Rock. Spanish Mackeral had been
showing up in good quantities. Red was
anxious to get in on the catch.
He managed to keep up with the crowd
ntil he made a trio belo\^
gathered up Red’s lure and cut the barbs
off all his hooks. Without barbs, there
was nothing to keep Iho fish on the hook
after striking.
Red fished the rest of the afternoon,
getting strike after strike, never landing
a fish. Naturally, he took a general
riding from all the other fishermen.
Red must have got all his cussin’ out of
his system that afternoon. Shortly
thereafter, he became an ordained
Baptist minister.
He came off the pier dressed as a
business m an, not as a fisherman. That
wasn't unusual. It was unusual to be
carrying a dress hat full of freshly-
caught fish. Naturally, I asked why. “ I
just came along with the other guys. I
don't fish. Kiddingly, I said I'd carry off
all their fish in my hat.” His smile
wasn't that happy, adding, “They're
m aking me do il, too "
From experience, 'k ' "w 'hat denisons
of Ihe deep have a sense of humor, too.
In Marine Land, Florida, 1 introduced
myself to the fish trainer, told him I was
interested in fish, owned Kure Pier, and
would like lo see the whale up close.
Permission was granted.
The whale was in a sm all holding tank.
He was about fifteen feet long and four
feel across. Half his body was above
water. 1 was within touching distance.
His eyes were sm all in that great hulk of
a body. His hide was grey in color,
spongy looking, and rather rippled like
an old-fashioned bed quilt. I wanted to
touch him . Leaning over, I pushed one
finger against his hide. He seemed to
look at me a long minute and then
submerged.
Im mediately, he came back lo Ihe lop
of Ihe water . iind sprayed me from
head lo fool
I can swear I saw a twinkle in his eye!
m e
K e y s t o n e
E l e c t r o n i c F l a s h
C a m e r a
Drawing To Be Held Saturday
at 5:00 P.M. On The Square
During The Arts Alive Festival
W i l k i n s D r u g C o , I n c .
COURT SQUARE MOCKSVILLE
PHONE 6342121
Davie County’s War Eagles opened
their North Piedmont Conference high
school football slate last Friday night
with a 10-0 victory over Trinity at Ihe
Davie High Stadium.
The W ar E agles w ill play at
Mooresville on Friday night.
Coach Joe Kennedy's gridders. now 2-
0 scored all 10 points in the
quarter, then protected Ihe lead Ihe rest
of the way.
Halfback Brent Burton scored in the
first quarter on a 25-yard rui,. then Steve
Grubb kicked Ihe extra point.
Grubb also kicked a 30-yard field goal
lo make it tO-0.
Steve Fleming set up the field goal
with a long punt return. Fleming also
had two interceptions for the War Eagles.
Burton led the Davie County ruâhing
attack with 72 yards on four carries.
Kenny Frost gained 59 yards on 16 at
tempts.
Davie had 15 first downs to 10 for
Trinity and 240 total yards to 199 for the
Bulldogs. The W ar Eagles got 205 yards
on the ground and 35 through the air.
Trinity threatened in Ihe third and
fourth quarters, reaching the Davie
three-yard line in the third stanza and
the one-yard line in the final period.
Pass intercepUons stopped both threats.
Davie's Ronnie Wilson had two In
terceptions for the game.
FIrit Oowni Ruihtng Y«rd»o* Patting y«rd»gt PatttiPuntiPuiTiblet Lott Yardt Ptnalliad
STATISTICSтгш^
75 120 ♦-17-S é-39.0 2 M
»•'•“"Я
'S4-IM S44.4 I«SINDIVIDUAL LCADBRSRuthing - Trinity; Creaty 7*41. Davtt County: Burton 4>72. ProtiPatting - Da.vi* County: Pratt 4 IM 39 yardt.
Covnty 10 0 0 0 - 10Trinity 0 0 <0 0- 0OC - Burfpn 25 run (Grubb kick)DC - Grubb M field goal
C o a c h K e n n e d y P r a i s e s D e f e n s e
г ’•‘•.'i
Randv Atliev . . ,■......good defensive game
By Doug Livengood
"Our defense just really had a super
effort," commented Davie High head
football coach Joey Kennedy after his
squad shut out Trinity, 10-0,last Friday
nighl.
Actually, the W ar Eagles' defense has
pul two fine back-to-back defensive
efforts on the boards. In the season
opener against West Davidson the Davie
defense allowed only one touchdown to
be scored against il in that 20-6 victory.
Then came the Trinity shutout.
"W e were hitting hard on detense
Friday night. And we had five in
terceptions on our pn<is defense and also
recovered two luniblcs.' noted Kennedy.
“Steve Flem ing intercepted two balls
for us and Randy Athey played a good
defensive game for us," said the Davie
Steve Grubb.....kicked fíeld goal
coach.
Although his team walked away with a
victory over Trinity, Kennedy observed
that the W ar Eagles did “make an awful
lot of mistakes, particularly on offense"
during the game.
“We've got to iron out some of these
mistakes on offense because our in
consistency there is really hurting us,”
he remarked.
According to Kennedy, some of the
brighter sports on offense for Davie in
the Trinity gam e were three pass
receptions by Flem ing, a 30-yard field
goal by Steve Grubb and some good
offensive line play by Greg Young.
“Overall, however, I was very pleased
with our effort and our team and the
coaches were pleased with the victory
over Trinity,” he added.
Greg Young,....goofl offensive line game
Kennedy said “Trinity came up here a
whole lot healthier than we thought they
would. And when they're healthy they're
a pretty good football team ."
The Davie coach was pleased to report
that his squad did not suffer any injuries
In the Trinity game. And he also noted
that Rex AJlen, Davie's all-state of
fensive lineman candidate, "m ight be
able to play for the first time this season
against Mooresville Friday night.”
Mooresville has not won either of its
first two games of 'the season. But
Kennedy hedged his bets Monday af
ternoon when describing Mooresville.
“We feel like Mooresville can be
dangerous because they’re young and
because when they start to get some
early games success they are going to be
lough. They played really tough against
a strong West Rowan team ,” he said.
P a l m e r , W a d k i n s A n d O t h e r P r o s S c h e d u l e d T o T e e O f f
I n $ 1 0 0 , 0 0 0 G o l f E x h i b i t i o n S a t u r d a y A t B e r m u d a R u n
A $100,000 benefit golf match for Wake
Forest University’s golf program will be
played Saturday at the Bermuda Run
Golf and Country Club in Davie County.
Several professional golfers who are
graduates of W ake Forest, two
amateurs from Wake Forest, touring
pro Bobby Wadkins, brother of Bermuda
Run professional Lanny Wadkins and
several well-known entertainers will
head the field of players in the
exhibition.
The exhibition is scheduled for
Saturday afternoon before Wake Forest
plays Virginia Tech in a football gam e at
Groves Stadium in Winston-Salem that
night.
Lanny Wadkins, who in addition to
being Bermuda R u n’s touring pro is a
former P G A «ham pion, w as^m ong the
first to suggest the exhibition. Others
who will play are tour regulars Arnold
P alm e r, Jim Sim ons, Joe In m an ,
Lornard Thompson, Jay Haas, Curtis
Strange, Eddie Pearce and Bob Byman.
Also scheduled are club pro Jack
Lewis and amateurs Jay Sigel and Gary
H allberg, the D eacons’ latest All-
America golfer.
Entertainers scheduled to appear at
the exhibition include comedian Buddy
Hackett, Michael Landon, star of the
popular television series “Little House
on the Prairie,” and Harvey Korman,
former co-star of the “ Carol Burnett
Show.”
Under the format, a person will pay
$1,000 each to join the Deacon stars in
exhibition play.
Billy Satterfield, developer of Ber
muda Run and director of Saturday’s
exhibition, said, “It ought to be worth
$1,000 to be able to tell your children that
you played golf with Arnold P alm er.”
He indicated that privilege would go to
those with the largest donations. “We’ll
have a blind draw at breakfast,” he
said. "W e w on’t do too m uch
cheating...but if somebody slips us some
extra money, there’s no te ling what
we’ll do.”
Satterfield said he is acting as director
because several Wake Forest golfers
approached him during the Masters golf
tournament in April and suggested the
idea of the event. Their proposal was to
raise $100,000 with an exhibition.
In addition to individual purchasers,
several corporations have bought places
in the exhibition for their executives and
clients. Advance ticket sales have also
been to corporations for distribution to
Iheir customers.
The contributions are tax deductible.
Satterfield has stressed the national
Highest Town
Blowing Rock was char
tered as “ the highest town in
North Carolina” in 1889.
publicity which Wake Forest golfers,
professioaal am ateur, have brought to
Winston-Salem.
The tickets are priced at $5 each and
after Ihe golf exhibition m ay be ex
changed for a $2 discount off tickets for
the football game.
“ We in Winston-Salem don’t realize
what the golf program does for the
town,” Satterfield said. “We want the
merchants to buy 30,000 tickets for the
exhibition give away the tickets and
have those people fill up the football
stadium too.”
Tickcts for the exhibition are on sale
at the following locations:
-Bermuda Run Country Club;
-Northwestern Bank, Clemmons;
-Wake Forest Athletic Ticket Office;
~R & M Sporting Goods, Hanes M all;
-Forsyth Bank, downtown and m ain
office in Winston-Salem;
-Norman Stockton, all locations in
Winston-Salem; and
-Sheraton Motor .Inn, Winston-Salem.
Daily free drawings are being held at
the following merchants;
-Staley's Charcoal Steak House;
-Wachovia Modern Oil Company
-Macs Foods, Advance, N.C.;
-Cloverdale Ford;
-Northwest Bank-CIemmons;
-H ickory F arm s- H anes M all &
Thurway;
-Winkler Motor Inn;
-Towne Jewlers;
-Ed Owens Chrysler Plymouth;
-Carriage House Restaurant;
-Roger West Chevrolet;
-Foodcraft Equipm ent Company;
-Putt Putt of Winston-Salem;
- Jim Weavil TV & Appliances;
-Liberty Lincoln Mercuty;
-Holiday Inn West and North;
-Winston-Salem Savings and Loan
(M ain Office)
-Pizza Hutt-Clemmons;
-Crown Drug Co.-Clemmons.
Butch Osmon Sets Farmington Dragway Records
Butch Osmon showed a crowd of 1700
drag racing fans at F arm in g to n
Dragway that he returned to F ar
mington to win. The Leavitsburg, Ohio
drag racer not only captured the
powerful Pro-Comp division in Friday
and Saturdays Late Summ er Classic,
but shattered the tracks elapsed time
and speed record in his 1400 horsepower
rail dragster.
On the first run, Osmon defeated Ray
Weaver of Seville, Ohio with a speed of
155 mph with an elapsed tim ^ of 4:67
seconds. He shattered the track record
on his second run against Butch Ker-
noodle of Virginia Beach, Va., by
clocking a speed of 161 m ph in 4:49
seconds. Osmons dragster suffered a
broken valve lifter before the third run,
but Osmon made a quick repair. This
was done during a one hour blackout
when a transformer went out at the
track. Osm on had brought an
emergcn'-y generator for such purposes.
Osmon w’on against Weaver once again
in the thn'd round and promptly turned
In an identical speed and time on his
record breaking run, 161 m ph, in 4:49
seconds. “ I guess I had the clutch set
perfectly this tim e," said Osmon, I the
dragster was getting too much traction
and the adjustment took care of that."
Weaver had defeated Osmon at F ar
mington in July.
“ Bunny" Burkett of Sterling, Va. and
Butch Kernoodle of Virginia Beach, Va.
were behind the wheels of the funny
cars, and both had problems either with
traction red lighting at the starting line.
Ms. Burkett, one of only two funny car
drivers on the national curcuit turned
her best time at 148 mph with an ET of
5:85seconds. “ It was the first time here
with my new funny car", she said, “and
I was a little anxious one time tonight
tonight, staging too close and red
lighting and wasn’t getting the traction I
needed. I'm ready to come back
though, and track officials indicate a
return match is being considered.”
Local area winners in other divisions
were Ricky Smith of King and Bo
Moxley of Independance, Va.-Modified;
Darrell Gatither, of W-Salem and Billy
Reavis of Pfafftow n-Pro-M odified;
Kenny M elton, H illsv ille , Va-
Superslock; Tim Cline, Kemersville.
H arold B aity, Y adkinviU e, Lonnie
Scriven, W-Salem, Mike Atwood, Walnut
Cove-ET Bracket. Melton and Moxley
borth won $500 with Revis winning $400.
Osmon grabbed the lions share of the
$7,025 purse taking home $1500.
Tweetsie To Operate On Limited Schedule During The Fall
With a hint of Autumn in the
air,T w eetsle R ailro ad has
announced the im
plem entation of its fall
operating schedule effective
September 5.
Weekdays through October
29, Tweetsie will operate on a
limited schedule,9 a.m . lo 5
p.m. , to include the train ride
around scenic Roundhorse
Mountain , Mouse Mine Line
Number 9 mini-train ride,
deer park and petting zoo, and
Old M iners panning for
gold.Shops and services In
Tweetsie Junction , Ihe
restored western town which
serves as the depot for Ihe
century old steam locomotive,
will remain open for browsers
and shoppers visiting Ihe
popular theme park
“This limited schedule of
operation is geared to provide
our visitors wilh a prime
opportunity to enjoy the
spectacular fall color seasor.”
said General Manager E.
Spencer Robbins. “The train
operates a little slower so that
everyone can savor the
beauly of the area, while the
other amenities operate lo
enhance the relreshing Ihe
Ad'onir n’mrifiphprp"
In ninjunclion wilh Ihe
rovj.spc schedule . Tweetsie
has issuffl ,nn invitation lo
elem entary schools in
Watauga and Avery counlys
lo bring ilieir newly-enrolled
kindergarden and firsl-
graders to the attraction as
part of a back-lo-school "get-,
acquainted" program.
"This is a project we have
sponsored for several vears
and found it to be a lii' orite
among the school principals
and teachers,parents, and
students" , remarked Rob
bins. “ II gives Ihe children an
opportunilty to see how an
actual railro ad com pany
operated during the turn of
Ihe century, and to enjoy a
sanctioned outing as w ell".
Tweetsie, the forerunner in
coordinating m any programs
geared to serve the local
public, will escalate to its
regular schedule on weekends
through the October closing
dale. All amenities within the
park will remain open from 9
a.m . to 6 p.m. as during Ihe
regular season.
A dditional inform ation
r e g a r d in g T w e e ts ie
R a i l r o a d ' s r e v is e d
operational schedule may be
obtained by calling 704-264-
90fil or by writing P.O. Box
3«8, Blowing Rock, North
we can help you.
H O M E
I M P R O V E M E N T
L o a n SDSOUTHERN DISCOUNT
P. 0. Box 689 /42-A Court Square Mocksville/ North Carolina/27028
Mon. & Fri.-9:00 i.m.-d:00 p.m.NEW HOURS: Tuet Thru Thurs.--9:00a.m.-S:00 p.m.CLOSED ON SATURDAYS
ADVANCE TICKETS NOW ON SALE!
SAVE $2.50 ON RIDES!
Discount admission and ride tickets on sale through
September 28 at all Northwestern Bank offices and the
Coliseum Box Office at Ihe Fairgrounds
Enjoy 9 fun lilled days and nights with Ihe exciting
JA M ES E STRATES SH OW S on the midway plus
special big-name professional entenainmem
Chitwood Auto Thrill Show —
Oct. 2 8. 3 '
Mickey Gilley — Oct. 4
Tom T . Hall — Oct. 5
Tractor Pull — Oct. 6 & 7
W TOB Disco — Sept. 29 & 30, Oct. 7
W rrOR Blue Grass & Country Play-Offs
— Sept. 29 & 30; Oct. 1, 2, 5
Mariah Group every day I
It's Something Great in '78
A World of Fun waiting for you at
Sept.89-0ct.7
Winston-Salem
4В DAVir, rOUNTY 1:NTI;RI’RIS1-; RIíCü RD. THURSDAY. SI:I>TI;M»UR 14. 1Ч7К
Mrs. John Seaford of Rt. 1, Mocksville won “Best of Show” with her coconut cake entry. Mrs. Seaford won first place ribbons for all five cakes entered in the bakinj; division.
18th Annual Center Fair Labeled Success
The 18lh annual Center Fair was
labeled a success by officials Saturday
as people turned out from all over the
counly lo participate in the festivities.
Held on the grounds of the Center
United Methodist Church on Highway 64
just outside ot Mocksville, 155 people
entered the various categories of
competition hoping to win a treasured
blue ribbon.
Participating categories of judging
Included neddlecrafts, horticulture,
baking, arts and crafts, flower
arrangements, Christmas decorations,
house plants and a display of foods found
in our natural environment ranging
from wild berries to oppussum and
racoon meat, plus a wide array of
others.
There were 2 judges from the
Mocksville area assigned to each of the
11 divisions of competition. Winners In
each category were awarded ribbons
according to Iheir level of achievement
among the entries.
Louise Tutterow of Route 1,
Mocksville and chairm an of the 1978
Center Fair commented, “we are not
disappointed in this year’s fair even
though the num ber of entries dropped
from 215 to 155 this year.”
“We have some outstanding exhibits,
and are very pleased with the par
ticipation which has brought people
from all over Ihe county together.”
One of the most famed aspects of the
Center Fair is the barbecue for sale
during the day which is prepared by
local citizens. This year approximately
1900 pounds of pork was cooked to fill the
appetitles of hungry fair goers. Long
lines of people formed throughout the
day to get a sam ple of the abundance of
barbecue prepared.
Proceeds of the Center Fair go to the
operation of the Center Volunteer Fire
D epartm ent. C om m ittee m em bers
organizing this year’s festival were
Louise Tutterow, Alice Barnette, Peggy
Evans, and Carol Forrest.
James M. Anderson (center) takes time out from the preparation of the famed barbecue sold at the Center Fair to greet friends that have
assembled to examine exhibits.Crystal Webb sold balloons to
raise money for the heart fund.
Hilton Head Island is a
sportsman's paradise and is
one of the most surprising
sports resorts in America.
There are nine true cham
pionship golf courses, Jack
Nicklus designed one, Arnold
Palm er live on another; and
100 tennis courts. Evonne
Goolagong lives here. There is
both fresh water and deep sea
fishing, sailing, nature trails
for cycling, hiking, or horse
back riding. Two wild life
preserves and m ile after m ile
of beautiful beaches lined
with natural foliage are al
Hilton Head.
And most surprising of all,
you have access to any of the
islands sports facilities if you
stay in some of the Hotels
there or Inns. There is nothing
quite like it. And its not too
far away, Hilton Head Island,
South Carolina.
Recipes from the area
Creole Shrimp
4 slices bacon
1-4 cup chopped onion
1-4 cup chopped green
pepper
2 cups canned tomatoes
1-2 tsp. dry mustard
2tbs. vinegar
dash tabasco
salt and pepper to taste
2 cups peeled, boiled shrimp
F ry bacon u ntil crisp,
remove from pan and save.
Add onions and pepper to
bacon fat and sim mer until
tender. Add tomatoes and
seasoning. Chop bacon real
fine, add to mixture and let
sim mer over low heat about
30 minutes. Add shrim p and
sim m er 15 minutes longer.
Plain Baked Fish
16 or 8 lb. bass flounder or
other large fish
salt and pepper
2 cups chopped celery
1 cup melted butter.
Clean fish and split or fillet
for easier serving. Salt and
pepper inside and out spread 1
cup celery and 1-2 c i^ butter
inside fish. Put rest of celery
and butter on top of fish.Bake
at 325 for about 30 to 40
minutes.
Shrim p And Corn Pie
1 cup cooked shrimp
2 cups corn (grated)
2 eggs slightly beaten
1 tbs. butter
1-2 cup m ilk
1 tbs. Worchestire Sauce
1-2 tsp. salt
1-4 tsp. pepper
M ix a ll ingredients to
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M A IN T E N A N C E
F R E E 34?5d(CH
V A L V O L IN E A L L C L IM A T E
H E A V Y D U T Y M O T O R O IL
ValvoUne weekly Foottiall Pool sweepstakes forms avallatjie at all participating CAROUEST stores.
5 ^
PRICES
FOR
CROUP
22F, 24
24F
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Good at patklpsang CAROUEST Auto Pam Storet tnru Sept. 197B
MOCKSVILLE AUTOMOTIVE
757 SOUTH MAIN STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NC
PHONE 634-2944
WE KNOW WHAT you MEAN WHEN YOU'RE TALKING PARTS .
Nancy Tutterow heads the long line of ladies that gathered to admire baking entries at the Center Fair.
Aline Dwiggins, Mrs. Bob Lyerly and Mrs. Deo Kimmer examined some of the canned goods entered at the fair.
St. Jude Announces
Drive Chairmen For
Cooleemee IViarch
St. Jude Children's Research Hospital
has announced the appointment of
Bobby Blackwood and (^a rlle L. Jordan
as chairm en for the fall door to door
march In Cooleemee.
The cam paign will take place in late
October and the proceeds will be used to
continue the work of St. Jude Hospital.
Founded by entertainer Danny Thomas
sixteen years ago, St. Jude Children’s
Research Hospital is devoted to pain
staking medical research and care of
children stricken w ith catastrophic
diseases, including leukemia, hodgin’s
disease and other forms of cancer.
Sr. Jude's is non-sectarian, Interracial
and completely free of charge to
patients. Once a patient is admitted, the
hospital provides total medical care
and, when needed, also provides tran
sportation and lodging for parent and
child.
St. Jude’s is the largest childhood
cancer research center in the world. The
work done there benefits not only the
h o sp ital’s patients, but children
everywhere because the results of this
research are shared with physicians
worldwide. Everyone can now share in
the optim ism of a growing "cure rate"
because of the work at St. Jude
Children’s Research Hospital.
St. Jude’s receives assistance from
federal grants, but over 60 percent of its
support comes from volunteer con
tributions in October "The residents of
this comm unity will have an opportunity
lo help children live ihroughout tlie
world by giving what they can to St.
Jude’s when a volunteer comes to theh-
doors,’’ said the local co-chairmen.
Davie Man Sentenced
For Assault On Female
In Forsyth County Superior Court last
week Jam es M urry D ew alt of
Mocksville was sentenced to a 13- to IS-
year term in prison after he pleaded
guilty to a charge of assault with intent
to comm it rape.
The charge was reduced from second-
degree rape.
Dewalt was charged with raping
Debra Clodfelter of 3634 Yale Avenue,
Winston-Salem.
Miss aodfelter told police that Dewalt
sexually assaulted her al her house after
she refused to tell him the whereabouts
of his girlfriend.
Free Blood Pressure Clinic
Saturday In Cooleemee
There will be a free blood pressure
clinic in the Cooleemee Discount Store
on Saturday, September 16, beginning at
10a.m . until 2p.m . by Registered Nurse,
Mrs. Linda Hodges.
Fred Pratt Is Critical Of State Expenditures
gather, pour into 1 quart
buttered casserole and bake
for 30 minutes at 300.
Porcupine Meat Balls
1 cup uncooked rice
1 lb. ground beef
1-4 cup chopped onions
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. pepper
1-6 oz. can tomato soup
Wash rice and m ix with
meat, add onions, salt and
pepper. Make into balls and
place in cooker and caver
with water. Simm er over low
heat for one hour. Pour
tomatoes uoup over meat and
sim mer 10 minutes longer
Mushroom Liver Pate 1 Ib. liver sausage
1-4 cup minced onion
4 oz. chopped mushrooms
Blend all ingredients. Roll
into a log. Cover with cream
cheese softened with cream.
Slice then.
Cheese Sticks 1 cup grated cheese1 cup flour
2 tbs. butter
cold water
Add cheese to flour and cut
in butter. Add enough cold
water to make pastry. Roll
out. Cut into sticks and bake
in moderate oven.
Smoked Oysters
1 quart oysters
2 tbs. liquid smoke
Preheat oven at 350
degrees. Put oysters on jelly
roll pan and sprinkle with
liquid smoke. Place in oven
Stir several times until all
water is out and edge of
oysters curl. Serve hot on
crackers.
SUZANNE
Homecoming At
Advance Methodist
Humecomiiig services will
be held at Advance Methodist
Church Sunday September 17.
Tiie Rev. John Hamilton will
be (he speaker for Ihe 11 a.m .
worship service. A picnic
lunch will be in Ihe grove al
Ihe noon hour.
An afternoon service of
singing will be by Ihe Calvary
Way Quartet of Winslon-
-Salem. the Turrenline Trio
mid lillle Joel Stafford Ihe
.March uf Dimes paraplegic.
itevlval services begin on
Sunday night at 7:M wiih Ihe
Ik-v Hubert Clinard bringing
the messages eadi evening
Sunday through Thursday
September 21. There will be
.special singing by various
groups each niglil Everyone
i.s invited lo allend ihese■M'l'Vll'OS
Fred W .'P rall, Republican candidate
for the N.C. House from the 30th
Legislative District of Davidson and
Davie Counties said that Governor Hunt
is seriously mis-reading the mood of the
electorate if he thinks that he can satisfy
the taxpayer demands for a tax
reduction by toying with a one time $50
tax rebate.
“ It doesn’t really m atter to the North
Carolina taxpayer whether his per
capita lax load is the 48lh in the nation or
not. .All he knows is that his real income
is going down and his taxes are going up.
North Carolinians are paying 27 percent
more in taxes this year than they did
jusi two years ago. The state budget has
risen from 3.46 billion dollars in fiscal
year 1976-77 to 4.41 billion in fiscal year
1978-79,” said Pratt.
Pratt pointed out that by reducing the
state budget to last year’s level of 3.9
billion dollars and by lim iting Ihe taxes
collected by general fund revenues,
prim arily sales and income taxes, to last
year's level of 2.06 billion dollars, a tax
reduction of approximately 800 million
dollars would be possible.
"Last years collection by the general
fund increased some 14 percent over the
previous year and projections are that
this growth will be maintained or ex
ceeded this fiscal year. An 800 million
dollar lax reduction would approximate
a 150 dollar reduction for every man,
woman, and child in the state,” said
Pratt.
Pratt emphasized that the state must
continue its essential services such as
public education and public welfare to
those who are unable to help them-
Driver Injured In Wreck
The driver of a 1971 Ford pickup was
taken to the Davie County Hospital
following an accident last Thursday
about 4 p.m. on US. 601 North.
The driver was identified as John
W ilmer Eggleston Jr., Salisbury, N.C.
Slate H ighw ay P atro lm an C.W .
Bjorkland said his investigation showed
that Eggleston ran off the road on the
right to avoid hitting another vehicle
that had stopped suddenly in front of
him. The pickup struck a driveway
culvert and went down an embankment.
selves. There are, however, he saia
many ways that the state can reduce its
expenditures w ithout a concurrent
reduction in essential services.
"For example the state bureaucracy
is growing at a rate of some 6,000 em
ployees per year. Thtii can be stopped.
Spending for such luxuries as the new
veterinary school, the new state
building, prim arily to provide private
offices for legislators, and the new
division w hich the D epartm ent of
Human Resources recently created to
assist its employees and their families
wiih Iheir personal problems, can be
elim inated," Pratt said. "If tax
collections had not increased as a result
of inflation and wage increased the state
would have managed to hold ex
penditures to last year’s level. There is
no reason lo spend this extra money just
because it is there,” he concluded.
Grasshoppers
Layers of grasshoppers, found em
bedded in glaciers of the Rocky
Mountains, prove the insects swarmed
over the area centuries before the first
settlers arrived.
R e d u c e C o s t o f H e a t i n g Y o u r H o m e !
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cold winds blow. Fiberglas Insulation will not retain mots*
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resistance lor the life ol your home. It pays for itself
with the money it saves.
MOCKSVILLE
B U I L D E R S S U P P L YPHONE 634-5915 or 634 5916
8 :0 0 5 :0 0 W EEK DAYS 8 :0 0 12 :0 0 SA T U R D A Y S
D e v e l o p m e n t a l E v a l u a t i o n
C e n t e r s A i d i n g C h i l d r e n
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1978 - SB
plastic blocks in his hand as he sat in the
center’s playroom. He was small for 'four years old-much too small. Later professionals would decide that ’•Johnny” (not his real name) was suffering from a case of malnutrition.
His was a classic case of neglect.Johnny is one of some 9,000 children each year that are served by one of the state’s 19 regionally located Develop
mental Evaluation Centers (DEC).
' The centers are designed to find out what is wrong when the Johnny’s of this world aren’t developing normally.Most of the children who are referred
to the centers first were noticed as having difficulties in school, by social services workers, by health department workers, or by private physicians,
according to Tom Vitaglione who heads the program for the Department of Human Resources, Division of Health
^rvices.Often, even in small infants, it is easy for one professional to know that something is wrong with a child, but unless the particular difficulty lies
within his field, he may not correctly
diagnose the difficulty.Vitaglione said that the purpose of the .center is to make sure that each child can reap the full benefits of the servicesEmergency Farm Loans Available
Secretary of Agriculture Bob Bergland has given Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) state directors
authority to make emergency loans to
farmers as soon as loss from natural disaster is confirmed.The secretary abolished a time- consuming system in effect for several years that required county governments
and state governors to request disaster loan service, then for the Secretary to designate counties where FmHA emergency loans would be made. This
course .was followed when damage
assessment reports indicated the need for 25 or more farm emergency loans in a county.Under the new, less time-consuming procedure. State Director James T. Johnson will authorize the agency’s
county offices in North Carolina to make
emergency loans to any number of farmers showing a need for emergency credit to offset substantial loss caused by storm, flood, drought or other natural disaster. The state director will act on the basis of available information and damage reports received from FmHA
county offices. Designations of
eligibility by the Secretary of
Agriculture will no longer be required.FmHA emergency loan services also are automatically available where a major disaster or emergency has been declared by the President.James T. Johnson said Berg land's
action to cut red tape from emergency
loan procedure was taken under a pcovision of the Agricultural Credit Act of 1978, signed by President Carter Aug 4,■ FmHA .emergency loans are made to farmers lacking other sources of credit for recovery from natural disaster.
Beginning Oct. 1, 1978, amounts off
setting actual loss associated with
production will be made at an interest rate of 5 percent, and additional amounts at higher rates. Low-rate loans also are made to restore farm dwellings and household effects lost or damaged
due to natural disaster. Loans are made
through FmHA county offices.
provided by state and private facilities. The program is designed to help everyone in the society reach his or her
potential.When a child is referred to a DEC, he to she is examined by a team of professionals. The child receives a physical examination and psychological
tests. His environment is checked by a
social worker. He is tested by speech and hearing specialist, educational experts and others.
The parents are interviewed for their insights into the child’s behavior.After a series of tests on the child and the interview with the parents, the professionals meet to discuss how to
meet the needs of the child so that the
difficulties will be treated and the child will not be lost by society.In Johnny’s case, his mother, who had been a neglected chiild herself, told
caseworkers about her treatment of her
child which was modeled after her own upbringing.The professionals decided that Johnny’s mother needed nutritional counseling and counseling about how to
encourage her child to eat. The child
himself needed to be sent to a pre-school program where attempts could be made to correct his anti-social behavior. But the emphasis of the professionals in the
regional center was to find a local community facility that would follow-up on the child to make sure that the service programs work.One reason for concern about the local follow-up program is that Johnny, like
most children with a developmental
delay, will continue to have their problems if the programs for correction are not followed through.In Johnny’s case, the professionals felt it would be extremely important to
weigh him periodically to make sure
that the eating program was working. With correction, Johnny’s malnutrition could eventually cause this brain function to be limited and the child to become retarded.Neglect and previously unsuspected
abuse are only two of the findings that
have been made at the center.
Sometimes children are emotionally
disturbed. Emotional disturbances in small children sometimes disguise themselves as mental retardation because the children do not respond at the same levels as other children of the same age.
Other findings that are made
frequently at the center are learning disabilities, speech or hearing problems, physical diseases or birth defects.Often, as in Johnny’s case, if the disorder is caught early enough it can be
corrected and the child can lead a
normal life. No child is too young to be seen in the DEC. No child is too rich or too poor.The service, offered through the Department of Human Resources if
designed to help everyone in the society
reach his or her fullest potential.The largest number of children seen by DEC’S in the state come from
families with incomes of $0 to $5,059. The next largest group of children are from families with incomes of $13,428 or over,
which is the highest income category
available, Vitaglione pointed out. Fees are charged according to the family’s ability to pay.
The Developmental Evaluation
Center for Davie County is located in Winston-Salem.
Sea-Going Mammals Sea-going mammals can function
under water without breathing for up to
30 minutes.
Jericho-Hardison News
The Center Fair has come and gone. Some neighbors entered a combination on things and some came off with high honors we’re proud to announce.
The Ruritans had their covered dish
supper Thursday night. There was a good crowd and good food. The meeting ■ was held at the Jericho-Hardison building.' I am sorry I didn't have this in-
" formation at last writing but I will in- ;^clude it now. Mrs. Lester Frye's sur- prise birthday party was to celebrate 'her 62nd birthday. Tliere were 48 guests
'present and she was given a cake by
Mrs. Nell Smith and Gwyn. She received '•many nice gifts and special guest was ‘ Mrs. Opal Ward of Mocksville and Mr. and Mrs. Gary Harris. We wish you , many more Mrs. Frye.We hear Roy Feezer is a very good
• peach peeler and was nice to help out a
..'friend. Keep up the good work, Roy.Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Couch and son 'Wesley are on a little trip this week. ‘-Hope its been as nice at the beach as it .has been here.Mrs. Onie Mauldin hosted the Kappa “Club Tuesday. There were 13 memters
present. They have collected some 3264
cancelled stamps to feed the poverty
stricken over seas.Emette Thurlo and son C^had visited
his mom and Dad, Mr. and Mrs. Mauldin
Thursday evening. They brought a bushel of beautiful tomatoes for Mrs. Walter White that they got from their garden.J.D. and Lisa Overmiller were guests
of her parents over the weekend. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Armond
Smith.The Blue Grass Festival was a
disapointment Saturday night. I guess too many took in the Center Fair. Its too bad to since it was for a good cause.Just in case you didn’t know S>unday
Sept. 10 was a special day for grand
parents, a new day honoring grand-
tathers and grandmothers.Mrs. Claude Cartner is making a quick trip to Charlotte Monday morning.The Foster reunion was a huge suc
cess with some 80 friends and relatives attending. The reunion was held at the Agusta Community Building.
rent ANEW 1978
bv the day, week or month
LTD II
niC09 T O IL F R E E from
WinitonSalem 722-2386
Waverick
*Lo w Dally Rentals
*A ir Conditioning available
•Rent newett Model Fordi-
Ali lizet and models.
I R E N T - A - C A R
_ For Cars. Trucks and
_ Savings Bucks See...Reavis Ford, Inc.
Highway 601 North N.C. Dealer
Mocksville, N.C. 27028 LicMte
Phone 634-2161 2410
A J
Charles S. Brown of Mocksville was
among some 600 freshmen who completed “Knob Week” at The Citadel onAug. 25.
AugFollowing traditions evolved at the military college since its founding in 1842, freshmen cadets are indoctrinated druing a week of concentrated training. This enables the new cadets to take their
places as members of the South Carolina Corps of Cadets. During “Knob Week” the freshmen underwent instruction in drill, college regulations, honor system,
traditions of The Citadel, and other
training necessary to assist each new cadet in acquitting himself well in the classroom and on the parade ground. Charles is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Wilfred Brown, 739 Park Ave.
Smith Grove Annual
Meeting Is Sunday
Smith Grove Community Develop
ment Center will hold its annual meeting Sunday, September 17, at 2 p.m.At this meeting five people will be voted on to run for the board of directors. Anyone wishing to run for this
office must sign a form three days prior
to September 17. Forms may be ob
tained from Phvllis Williams. ^
Local Students On Dean’s
List At Mitchell College
Students from Davie County making
the dean's list at Mitchell Community College in Statesville for the summer quarter included:Mary V. Angell of Mocksville, with a
4.00 quality point average;Susan M. Smoot of Mocksville; and
Elizabeth B. Snow of Mocksville.
Arktlka
The first surface ship ever to reach the North Pole was the Soviet icebreaker Arktlka, on Aug. 17, 1977, National Geographic says.
Uppercl
id beganlassmen registered
- T h i s I s G o s p e l M u s i c W e e k
Prqclalming “gospel music n« n significant part of North Carolina's religious culture”, Governor Janips n.
Hunt has declared the week of Sep
tember ll-I6as “Gospel Music Week" in the state, and has commended Congressman Bill Hefner of Concord for
his leadership in promoting gospel
music.The climax to the week will be the annual Carolina's Song Festival which is
hosted by Congressman Hefner at the (Charlotte Coliseum. More than 8,000 gospel music fans are expected to attend the festival which begins at 8 p.m.
Saturday, September 16 and features
some of the top singing groups in the country, including the Statesmen, the Cathedrals, the Hemphills, the HensonFamily and the Harvesters.Governor Hunt publicly recognized Hefner's role in music with a formal citation which noted "that over the past
25 years. Bill Hefner has provided a spiritual uplift to hundreds of thousands of people throur'.iout the United States and Canada”. Hunt also commented Hefner for “providing distinguished
service and moral leadership while representing North Carolina's Eighth District in the Congress of the United
States”.“Gospel music brings spiritual en
joyment to thousands of people,” Hefner
said. “It is joyous. It is from the heart.
It's got rhythm. And it's just good
singing witli simple messages that all
can understand.”Hefner formed the Harvesters Quartet in the 1950's and was a popular entertainer for many years on several radio and television stations. Although
he moved into broadcast management,
owns a Kannapolis radio station, and
now serves in the United States Congress, Hefner said. “I’ll never quit
Governor James B.Hunt presents a citation to Congressman Bill
Hefner, commending the Sth District democrat for "distinguislied service to the Congress” and for his contributions toward "malting gospel music a significant part of North Carolina’s religious culture”.
Hunt declared the week of September 11-16 as Gospel Music WeeIc in North Carolina.
singing. I believe in gospel music.”
Hefner .sings occasionally at congressional prayer breakfasts and at other activities in Washington and in the state’s 8th Congressional District.“I am pleased that Governor Hunt has
recognized gospel music as a cultural and religious form,” Hefner said. “And I’m very honored to have this official
citation expressing the state’s appreciation for work I've been doing.” Hefner organized the annual
Carolina's Song Festival held each fall in Charlotte and has been its host for years. The festival "has become a tradition for gospel music fans throughout the Carolinas and other
nearby states.
D a v i e G r o u p T o S t u d y S t u d e n t s G r a d i n g
Educators everywhere are taking a closer look at the way students are graded and promoted and the Davie County schools are
no exception.At its meeting last week, the Davie County Board of Education formed a .study committee, with three subcommittees, to study
promotion policies, grading and graduation requirementa.The 24-member group, which was scheduled to hold its first meeting on September 11, includes
parents, teachers and school ad
ministrators.Subcommittee chairmen are :
A. M. Kiser Jr., director of instruction for the county schools, promotion policies ;Elaine Strider, elementary supervisor, grading and reporting; and Kermlt Buckner, assistant principal of
Davie High, graduation
requirements.The committee will discuss school policy and set future guidelines, said James Everidge, superintendent of county schools.“We anticipatis .this-thing could
take all year ..we're not going to
-rash it,” remarked Everidge.
In other business the board: -Approved the Pinebrook PTA's
request to sell popcorn during the week of Sept. 21 - Sept. 27;-Approved a magazine sale Sept. 29 - October 9 to raise money for the Davie Countyschools’music
program; and
-Denied the Davie High School junior class request to sell candy as a fundraising activity.
rain,
choose the driest lane. The
right lane gets more traffic
than the others and is gener
ally the driest.
O n c e y o u * v e f o u t t d ,
t h e o n e y o u w a w t . , .
G e t a S i i m i e I n t e r e s t L o a n f i x m ..
^ T H ENORTHWESTERN
O r a s k y o u r d e a le r a b o u t N o r t h w e s t e r n S im p ie In te r e s t F i n a i K i n g .
fìU 1MVII-: COUNTY i;n t i:ki’RIsi-: r i-c o r d, t iiu r s im y . s i:pti;m w к u .
XlI»H JVrrnl>NT>*TK««»rAMIKIIIf Am iP IP IIII т.4»\ки1лпикпт1101 ««л^ппоы^км1\(;о1.п№ Ш Ш Ш
$100,000 MAN-Woodrow Wilson is
frnmed in zeros in this gold certificalc
issued in 191)4. The note is the lurgest
ever issued in the United States. One
Couf lesy. National Museum of Hislory and Technology, SmUhsonian lnslitut«n
of the 42.000 notes in the series, print
ed for FedernI Reserve use only, is on
display at the National Museum of His
tory and Technology in Washington.
D e p r e s s i o n - E r a G o l d C e r t i f i c a t e s
B e a r I m p r e s s i v e S t r i n g O f Z e r o s
Some bills in the Treasury
Department vaull are just too
attractive to to.ss into an in
cinerator.
So this year when Treasury
officials decided to get rid of
nearly $2 billion in gold
certificates that had been
locked up for years, they set a
few aside. Among them were
eight $100.000 iiutGSi the
largest denom ination ever
issued in Ihe United Stales.
The notes had been lying
around sincc IM'!. about Ihe
I G r e e nI I
I M e a d o w s I
Rev. Henry Stokes of Wake
Forest University was guest
speaker for the morning and
evening worship services at
Green Meadows Church on
Sunday.
R ev. and M rs. D avid
Roberts have been on
vacation for a few days,
visiting w ith fam ily and
friends in Virginia.
The youth led revival will be
held at Green Meadows this
Friday, Saturday and Sunday
at 7:30 p.m . Tommy Wilson
and G lenn Short from
Wingate College will be here
to lead in this revival. An
invitation is extended to
everyone to attend these
services for people of all ages.
M r. and M rs. M itchell
W heeler are attending a
Constan seminar in Charlotte
this week.
M rs. John Jones and
daughter Y'vonne spent the
weekend with her parents Mr.
and Mrs. J.K . Smith Sr.
Beginning Oct. 1 through
Oct. 4 a lay evangelism school
w ill be held at Green
Meadows Church.
M r. and M rs. M itchell
Wheeler and daughter, Sylvia
and son Vincent attended the
Lanier fam ily reunion in the
Ijam es comm unity on Sun
day.
M r. Ernest McKnight died
on Sunday at Forsyth Hospital
after several weeks of
declining health. F uneral
services were conducted on
Tuesday at Eatons Funeral
Home with interment services
at the G reen M eadows
Cemetery. M r. McKnight was
a lifetime resident of the
community.
point in the Depression when
President F ran klin D.
Roosevelt ordered the
Federal Reserve banks to
turn in all of their gold.
"The Federal Reserves had
huge quantities of gold-some
had millions of dollars wor
th ,” explained 0 . H.
Tomkinson of Ihe Treasury
Department ".So to pay them
back, the Treasury Depart
ment. "So lo pay them back,
the Treasury had those lOUs
printed u p ." For con
venience. the "lO U s" were
printed in the form of big bills-
-$10Us. SI.OOOs. $10.000s. and
Ihe mind-boggling $IOO,OOOs.
Printed only lo repay the
Federal Reserve banks, some
of the gold cerlificales-which
hear Woodrow W ilson’s
pcirh ,11' never made il oul of
till'Trciisiiry vaull. Those that
renitimcd locked away in
cluded the first note of each
denomination, marked with
serial number AOOOOOOOl A.
"Fortunately, somebody at
Ihe T reasury had Ihe
foresight lo keep th e m ,"
Tomkinson told the National
Georgraphic Society. That
foresight also is appreciated
by E lv ira C lain-Slefanelli,
curator of numismatics of the
Smithsonian Institution, Ihe
new caretaker of some of the
notes.
Mrs. Stefanelli said that
although Ihe $100,UOU note is
only one of many rare bills on
display at the Museum of
History and Technology, it
draws people like a magnet.
‘‘One hundred thousand
seems to be Ihe m agic
num ber," she said. "But
actually it'd just a piece of
paper. Somebody could steal
it, but they couldn't spend it."
Somebodv could spend a
$1«,00() bill-lhe largest ever
issued to the American public.
The bill, bearing a portrait of
Salmon H. Chase, secretary of
the Treasury under Abraham
Lincoln, was last printed in
1945.
That year the Bureau of
Engraving and Printing also
quit making the other big
bills, the $500, . $1,000, and
$5.000. It was almost 25 years
before the Federal Reserves
used up their stocks of the
bills.
"There just was no gre.nt
demand for them ." explained
Herbert Krisak of the Bureau
of Engraving ond Printing.
"People started using checks
and credit cards instead."
Although banks now are
supposed lo turn tiiese big
bills in to the Federal
Reserves, there still are some
floating around , for example.
:ifi2 $10.000 bills rem ain
unaccounted for. Depending
on their series and condition,
the discontinued bills could be
worth considerably more than
Iheir face value, says Harvey
Slack, a rare-money authority
in New York.
Today Ihe biggest bill
printed for circulation is the
lowly $100; 67 million of them
rolled off the presses this
year. That's almost twice as
many as were printed Ihe
year before, an increase lhat
might be utlribulcd lo in
flation or hoarding because of
m istrusl in financial in-
slilutions.
But big hills can mean big
losses.
“ A person who hangs onto a
$I0.0(M) bill for a year instead
of depositing his money could
losi $filMl in interest." Slack
pointed oul.
Mocks News
Homecoming day will be
observed here the 4th Sunday
Sept. 24 . The 11 a.m . sermon
w illbe preached by The
Pastor Rev. Alvord. The
revival will begin at 7:30 on
Sunday evening and last
through the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Allen
and boys Jason and Gred
spent Monday with her
I can’t eat, I can’t talk.
Been Drinkin’ mean Jake,
Lord
Now can't walk.
Ain't got nothing to now to
lose
Cause I'm a jake walkin
papa
Wilh the jake walk blues.
Recollection of this old
blues song recently came in a
rather unusual way. Walking
through a wooded area near
my home one day, I came
across a collection of empty
vanilla flavoring bottles.
Im m ediately niy m ind
flashed back to the various
other liquor subslilules which
were making Ihe rounds
during my early years: bay
rum , pepperm int extract,
lemon and orange flavoring,
und u host of patent medicines
with high alcohol content,
including the Infamous ex
tract of Jam aica ginger.
C ontaining u|) to 70
alcohol, "jak e". as if was
often called was offered as a
medication by drug stores and
other agents and was an
especially big seller in dry
counties of the South
Usually It was "cut " or adultraled wilh such sub stances as molasses, pine
resins, herbal extracts and
Ihe like. It was usually found in two-ounce bottles which sold for about thirty-five cents
each.
Sometimes the purchaser
look the contents straight. ai
other times he might use it to
make a bowl of party punch a
little more interesting.
It uas capable of bringing
on a pretty good buzz, often
lollowed by a hangup d . but
usually offered no m ore
problems tlian coinetilioiial
alcohlic drinks
Then ill till' turn III the .iu's a
lu-w l uttmg ' solutmn for the
jaki' was introduced a
compound known as TDCI’
(tri-ortho-cresyl-phosphate).
Soluable and tasteless, it
appeared lo serve if purpose
well.Unfortunately, however,
it also affected Ihe cells of the
spinal cord and often caused
the user to to develop whal
was known as Ihe "jak e" or
"jake-leg" paralysis.
If he recovered sufficiently
lo be able lo walk, il was with
a high-stepping gait
somewhat akin lo polio vic
tims, It became known as the
“ jake-leg" or “ jake-w alk"
and resulted from the in-
flexibilly of Ihe user's feet and
ankles.
The paralysis claim ed
thousands of victim s, in
cluding iieavy contvnlralions
in such Southern Appalachia
stales as K entucky and
Tenni'ssee.
Reaction was also
widespi'ead. Some ministers
claimed that the "jak e " was a
punishm ent sent by Uod
because of the sins of
mankind
Quack doctors rushed
lorw ard with various
medications guaranleed lo
bring cures or al least
relief
K 'lk healers offered mud
packs ,ind herbal cures
Clinics esjwcially desigiieil i
treat Ihe Jantaica Ginger
I'iin il yf^is s p ru n g up in
sirau’ttii „ications.
And folk musicians filled
Ihe air wilh iheir blues,
echoing Ihe laiiienlalions of
the "jakies"
I went lo bed Iasi iiigtil.
teelin' mighty tine.
Two o'clock this iiiiiriiMig
'he jakc leg «eni
down oi.\ »(jiiti-
I tl,id tic lake Ic^ 'III:
I ii:ii( i l .......ill- ii'L' 14'
llc:iilrr> .111- MU I'i'd II M'li'i
laaUTial l-"l К W \'>.S,Hnv
:!7li ,11. SlilM
rnivcrsit.v liiMiMi Л I JtiiiOH
parents Mr. and Mrs. Claud
Johnson of North Wilkesboro.
Mrs. Annie Craver spent
last week with her daughter
Mrs. Nan Minor of Charlotte,
She was accompanied home
by her daughter where she
spent a week. Mrs. Minor was
supper guest on Thursday
evening of M r. and Mrs.
Robert Carter of Fork.
Mrs. Clarence Campbell of
ThomasviUe spent Thursday
with Miss Ethel Jones She
was here to attend the funeral
for Mrs. Bertha Jones at
Wesley Chapel U nited
Methodist Church Thursday
morning at 11 a.m .
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Allen
spent the weekend at the
mountains.
Mrs. Hila Myers and Mrs.
Lois Wilson of Winston-Salem
visited relatives here on
Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Allen
Mr, and Mrs. Joe Brewer, and
Miss Cindy Brewer, Mr. and
M rs. Johnny C arter, and
Loresa and Kenny Carter, Mr,
and Mrs. John Phelps and
Miss Cindy Phelps spent the
weekend at the mountains.
Mrs. Jam es Carter spent
Tuesday with her mother
Mrs. Lydia Allen of Courtney,
Mrs. Carrie Shutt of Ad
vance spent Thursday af
ternoon w ith M iss Lettie
Bowden.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Orrell
spent a few days in Ihe
mountains.
M rs, Flossie Jones is
spending a week with Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Brown of Sum-
merfield.
Clyde Jones had the
misfortune of loosing one of
his farm mules on Friday.
4-H News
The Davie Academy 4-H
Club met Monday, September
4, 1978 at the Davie Academy
Communily Building.
Elaine Koontz called the
m eeting ol order. M ike
C artner had devotions.
Teresa Shew called Ihe roll
and read the minutes of the
Iasi meeting, Shirley Koontz
gave a Treasurer’s Report.
We discusied Record
Books. Paper D rive, 4-H
Church Sunday October 1.
National 4-H Week October 1 -
7. Center Fair September 9.4
H Craft Workshop November
i:t a, the County Office
U uilding. and Stale F air
<). >t«.r 13 ■ '.'1
iXme l.,ee. 4 M Agent, had
the pi»t(ram or h nrni Safety.
SPECIftL PLASTIC SALE
S A T U R D A Y
S U N D A Y
Live Country Music 4 to 7 p.m. Saturday
N V V O
IVIany Other Special Reductions
Buya BBQ Grill
»È 5 lb. Charcoal
^’^ m r o F Lighter Fluid
YOUR FIRST
g g ^ F R E E
■ WHEN YOU TURN IN
FIESTA STAMP
YOUR COM PLETED
RESERVATION CARD
HERE’S HOW...
to reserve and get your own set of this fine cookwarel
1 CHO O SE — Come in today and make your choice of one
. of the beautiful, colorful designs available.
2 RESERVE — Register your choice ot pattern and
■ cookware set on this free reservation form.
3 C O LLEC T — FIESTA stamps at 99« each (plus tax)
■ and paste them on your saver card.
4 REDEEM — When your card is complete, pick your set
• up right at the store and take it home with you for yearsup rig
of en|({oymenti
Beautiful Patterns in Lifetime Porcelain over Carbon Steel
tVIADE IN SPAIN
C H O O S E F R O I W T H R E E
D E C O R A T O R D E S I G N S
• Stain resistanti Easy lo keep looking sparkling new lor years.
• Heavy carbon-core “Inner-shell" lor even heat distribution and great cooking results.
COPENHAGEN
I Genuine porcelain exteriors and interiors are heat and chip resistant... oven prool to 350 degrees!
• Heavy gauge stainless steel trim and flame guards.
ASPEN
# "Fired on" decorative patterns will not lade or wash oil.
• Oishwaslier sale!
TUDOR BLUE
WHISTLING TEA KETTLES...Big three quart capicily — genuine porcelain on heavy carbon steel — patterns lo match the cookware set ol your cholcel
$R?95 S $ЯП69
\ J ^ FOR ONLY
$ 2 2 2 6
Picl< up your
Saver Card
T O DAYf\
S ta rt savin g
fo r y o u r set
N O W !
SEE TH E S E B E A U TIFU L C O O K W A R E S E TS N O W
EX C LU SIV ELY A T
^ I x m G S ^ o o d S
H o m e o f t t ie n e v e r e n d i n g s a le .
DAVlli COUNTY 1-NTliKl’RISI- RECORD, THURSDAY, SHPTEMUliR 14, l»7,S 7В
o p m
W e K n e w W h a t
L i k e T o F e e d A F a m i l y
rOUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS PRICES GOOD THRU 9/16/78...SAVE 4 0 ‘ lb this week
H O U R S :
M O N D A Y th ru S A T U R D A Y 8 -9
n d S t e a k
I«
B A C K - T O - S C H O O L S P E C I A L
M L B . CABOLINA PRIZE
B A C 0 N ...2-1LB . V A LLE Y D A LE
S A U S A G E...2 -1LB . V A L L E Y D A L E 9 LBS. ONLY
B 0 L0 G N A ...2 -12 0 Z. DSCAR M A YER t 4 Q Q
V A R IETY PA C K ...2 -12 0 Z. IND. » T T » »
W RAP C H EES E
U.S. Choice Cubed
R o u n d S t e a k
U.S. Choice
B r e a k f a s t S t e a k • • Lb.
U.S. Choice
E y e R o u n d S t e a k . • Lb.
YOU SAVE 2 0 '
^ Garden Fresh^gi£|^ Produce
Garden Fresh a f
Y e l l o w C o r n 5 / 5 9 ‘ o r 9 / 9 9
Red Tokay 1 ^ 0 ^
C r a p e s • • • • • • • • • • a L b .^ P ^ r
Garden Fresh m
B r o c c o l i ................... • • • Bunch..
Vi Gal. Arcadia
O r a n g e J u i c e .......................W
Idahoan Instant
P o t a t o e s 2 - 1 L b . B a g s 9 9
Г F R E S H G R O U N D
M i n u t e S t e a k
1 Lb. Oscar MayerMeat Or Beef a _ m a
F r a n k s * • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
1 Lb. Oscar Mayer Cheese Franks Or
B i g O n e s •••••••••••
Hormel Cure 81
H a m • •••••••••••• Lb.
1 Lb. Gunnoe Pork
S a u s a g e ...............................
1 % Lb. Gunnoe Pork
S a u s a g e ......................................
V» Talmadge Farms
16 Oz. McKenzie ^
C u t C o m ............................................. 2 / ^ 1
2 Lb. Morton m Л
P r i e d C h i c k e n .....................
M atch your coupons
to see if you’re
the w inner in the
Colgate $100,000
IMatch-Up Sw eepstakes.
Palmolive Dishwashing Liquid-48 O z....................M '
Fab Delergent-King S iz e ...................................................*2<
Fresh Start-Giant Size...........................................................*V
Cold Power Detergent-Giant...........................................*1 ’
SPECIAL! YOU SAVE 41‘THIS WEEK!
M a y o n n a i s e
QT. JAR
J.F.G.
V l IMIT 1 WITH *7.50 FOOD ORDER
TRY SOME ...SAVE 10
Lb.
$ 2 * *
$|S9
$ | « 3
$ | S 9
/ “^ e l p ’ ' Young I America
AGREE CREME RINSE &
CO N D ITIO N$|39
1EG., OILY,
.GENT S H A M P O O
2 OZ. SOLID
ANTI-PERSPIRANTIMAN POWER
OR MINT
S T E
T S oz. SPRAY DEODj
M A N P O W E R
15^ COUPON GOOD TOWARDS THE PURCHASE |/
OF ONE (1) STEW ART SANDWICH AT
LOWES FOODS
1.5 0Z. REG./UNSC:
D IA L R O LL-O N
2.5 oz. REG./UNSC.
D IA L RO LL-O N
..GOOD THRU 9/16/78.
SPECIAL! SAVE 3 o q
a SAVE 20'THIS WEEK
2 LIT E R B O n i E
P e p s i C o l a
5 LB. W H IT E L IL Y
P L A IN O R S E L F R ISIN G
• B A K E R Y -D E L I*
T o u c h d o w n S p e c i a l
12 Pieces Of Pried Cliiclcen
3 Breasts 3 Drumsticks
3 Wings 3 Thighs
1 Pint Potato Salad
6 Fresh Rolls __
Taiie Some To Tlie Ball
Oame Thl» Weekendl
Salisbury steak «
P l a t e L u n c h * *•*•••
16 Oz. Loaf
2 Pk. Pet Rllz
Deep Dish
P i * S h e l l s 6 9 *
.........................B f
10 oz. premium S A C
S e l t i n o s * • • • • • • • • * • • 9 ^ r
16 Oz. Nabisco
r t g N e w t o n
16 Oz. Premium
Pet Rllz
P r u i t C o b b l e r
DownyflakeHot & Buttery Ш A m
W a H l e s .......................................................9 9
8В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBtR 1-4. n>7S
Funerals
ERNEST C. McKNIGHT
Ernest Clay McKnight, 69,
of Advance, Rt. 1, died Sun
day at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital. The funeral was
conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday
at Eaton’s Funeral Chapel by
the Rev. Alvls Chesire and the
Rev. David Roberts. Burial
was In G reen M eadows
Cemetery.
He was born in Davie
County the son of Pink and
Neely Martin McKnight and
was a , retired saw m ill
operator.
Surviving are his wife, the
form er Ruby S m ith ; one
daughter, Mrs. Vivian Joyce
of Rt. 1 Advance; one son,
Ronnie McKnight of Rt. 1
Advance; and one grand
daughter.
M RS. FR A N K IE N. W HITE
Mrs. Frankie Noble White,
77, died Saturday, September
9th, at Davie County Hospital
after a lengthy illness.
She was a native of Davie
County and a member of
Liberty AM E Zion Church.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 2 p.m.
with the Rev. Kevin McGill
officiating. Burial will follow
in the church cemetery.
The Dody will be taken to
the church one hour prior to
the service to He In state.
Survivors include one
daughter, Mrs. Barbara ^Ann
Thomas of Cooleemee; seven
sons, Jam es L. W illie, Jesse,
Robert, Joseph, John L. and
R ay E d W hite, all of
Cooleemee; 27 grandchildren
and 23 great grandchildren.
Revival Services
At Cornatzer
Revival services will begin
at Cornatzer United
Methodist Church Sunday,
September 20, and continue through September 23. Services are at 7:30 p.m. Sunday through Wednesday.
Guest speaker will be the Rev. Bobby Swaim of Marion, N.C.
There will be special singing each evening.The public is Invited to attfnd.
Youth-Led Revival Is Planned For Green Meadows Church
The Rev. Canon Nichols
Fork Episcopal
Gets New Vicar
'Die Wardens and Vestry of the Episcopal Church of the Ascension at Fork have called the Reverend Canon Christopher Nichols of Winston-Salem as Vicar ot their congregation.He has served parishes in
Alabama, Montana, New
Jersey, New York and in the Di'-:;e->e of Westem North Carolina. He is a graduate of
Columbia University, with a
B.A. and M.A. degree and ot Nashotah House (Episcopal
Seminary), Wisconsin, with a master's degree In theology.The Rev. Canon received
the Richard Cardinal Cushing
Ecumenical Award In 1968 and the Bishop’s Gold Medal ot Honor tor meritorious service in the Diucese ot New Jersey in 1969. During his
ministry he has served as
chairman of the N.Y. Narcotics Guidance Council, chaplain ot Kiwanis, Rotary and Lions service clubs,
police and fire chapUan,
council member ot the Boy
Scouts of America, Red Cross and various hospital boards.Visitors are always welcome.The moming services are at
n a.m. each Sunday.
Energy
Energy cannot lie created
or dectroyed. it can only lie
changed from one form to
another.
Green M eadows B aptist
Church Is to be led in "Youth-
Led Revival" services from
F riday , Septem ber IS,
through Sunday, S ptember
17,by Tommy Wilson and
Glenn Short, two students
from Wingate College. Ser
vices will take place Friday
night at 7:30 followed by a
youth fellowship with the
team . On Saturday an Issues
rap session with the team Is
planned at 10:30 a.m ., a
cookout at 6:00 p.m ., and
revival services at 7:30 p.m.
The team will conclude Its
work leading the 11 oclock
services on Sunday morning.
M r. Wilson who will be
preaching at all the services
Is a senior at Wingate College
from R ed Springs, North
Carolina. He Is the past
sldent of the PhHstlan
iident Union at Wingate and
curren ly serves as slate
president for the B aptist
Student U nion of North
Carolina. Glenn Short is a
multi-talented m usician who
plays several instruments and
will be in charge of music In
the services.
All young people and adults
In the area are invited to be a
part of the services.
Auction At The
Church Of God
An auction will .be held at
the Cooleemee Church of God,
Saturday, September 23, at 10
a.m . at the church.
Many items for this auction
have been donated by the
merchants of this area; so
come on out and find a
bargain.
The sale will continue all
day until all Items are sold.
Baity Reunion
The Baity Reunion will be
held at the Rock Springs
Cam p Ground on Sunday,
September 17, at 1 p.m . A
short program will follow the
luncheon.
Daywalt Reunion
The Daywalt reunion will be
held Sunday, September 17th
at the D avie A cadem y
Comm unity building. Dinner
will be served at one o'clock.
Fam ily and friends are
Invited to attend and bring
with them a well filled basket.
F a r m i n g t o n N e w s
Tommy Wilson
Yadkin Valley
Bonnie Weatherman is in
the Forsyth Hospital where
she underwent surgery last
Wednesday. Her condition has
im proved some but she will
probably rem ain In the
hospital this week.
The Women’s Missionary
Fellowship met Tuesday night
at the church at 7 p.m. This
meeting was to elect new
officers for the next year.
Susan Howell was given a
baby shower at the home of
Nellie King Monday evening.
She received m any useful
gif la.
Bill Hale's brother who
lived In M aryland passed
away Saturday. Our deepest
sympathy is extended to Bill
and his fam ily at this time.
The V alley C om m unity
would Uke to express their
deepest sumpathy to Mrs.
Ruby McKnight and children
whose husband and father,
E rnest M cK night passed
away Sunday. He had been in
serious condition at Forsyth
Hospital for about a week.
M r. and Mrs. Mike Howell
and Suzanne have a new
addition to their fam ily .
Michael Joseph was born at
Forsyth Hospital August 29.
R uby M cB ride entered
Forsyth Hospital Monday for
tests and x-rays.
Bill M arkland’s mother Is a
patient at Forsyth Hospital.
Happy birthday to Lillian
Hauser, Alvis Wood and Gray
CUiudle.
Motorcycles
There are more than 5
m i l l i o n m o t o r c y c le s
registered. in this country
according to figures compiled
Glenn Short
Gospel Baptist
Revival Is Set
Gospel Baptist Church will
hold their revival September
18th through September 23rd.
Services w ill begin each
evening at 7:30.
Guest speaker will be the
Rev. Hinkle Little of Calvary
Baptist Church, Taylorsville.
Special singing w ill be
Drovided each evening.
The church Is lo c a t^ North
of M ocksv'M p first road
passed I’lp raiu Road. The
public is iiiviku to attend.
Arts&CraftsShow
At West Iredell
An arts and crafts show and
sale will be held at the West
Iredell High School on the
Island Ford Road, Saturday,
October 7th.
Many varied crafts will be
offered for sale by people
from all seot'-'ne ,.f the state.
Also, there v'il btoake sales,
door prizes, live en
tertainment and other events.
Proceeds will go to benefit
the West Iredell W arrior
Band.
Rescue Squad
Plans Fish Fry
The annual fail Fish fry
sponsored by the Rescue
Squad will be held Saturday,
October?, from 11 a.m . until 8
p.m .. or until everything is
sold out.
Anyone wishing to bake
cake for the occasion is asked
to call some of the members.
Donations of any kind will be
appreciated.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wood
and daughter Miss Donna
Wood spent Iasi weekend at
Myrtle Beach.
Cap!. and Mrs. Jerry Mason
of F ayetteville spent the
weekend wilh relatives in
Farmington. They were the
guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ray
Harding and family. Mr. and
Mrs. Joey Mason and aim
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. W.S. Spillman.
Mrs. Elva C^sh has been on
the sick list for several days.
We hope she will have a very
speedy recovery.
Mrs. B.C. Brock Sr. who is
still a patient in Davie County
Hospital has shown some
improvement over the past
week. We hope she continues
lo improve.
The mens Sunday school
class of the F arm in g ton
Methodist Church and several
ladies of the Ladles Bible
class along with their families
were Ihe guests of M r. and
Mrs. J.T . Connor at their
cottage which is located
beyond Hlllsvllle. Va. The
pastor, Rev. J.E . Cloer and
his wife and children were
present for the outing. They
had Sunday school upon the
Tinuntain side. There were 51
who attended the outing.
1 liniiks lo Mr. and Mr».
Connor for their hospitality.
The fellowship together and
the delirious food were quite
enjoy.'ible to everyone.
Buck Jones
At Lighthouse
Buck Jones will be special
speaker at the "Lighthouse"
al Ihe Cooleemee Recreation
Center, Saturday, September
16th at 7:30 p.m . He will
speak on Alcohol and Its effect
nn people.
Mr. Jones Is a native of
(Umlcemce and Is am em ber of
« M ethdist church near
Mncksville. He also coaches
litlle league football teamms.
‘Itiir youth of Davie area
cordially invited to attend.
WoodleafNews
The Rev. M alco lm , M.
B ullock pastor of U nity
Presbyterian Church for the
past ten years tendered his
resignation to the
C ongregation last Sunday,
effective October 81 h Rev.
Bullock has accepted ■ call to
the HunteisvUle i ’resbyterian
at Huntersville, N.C.
Roger Ferrell a student at
N.C. State was injured in a
fall and spent several days in
Wake General hospital is now
at his home recuperating.
Mrs. Fay Bailey Is now at
home improving after being a
patient for a week In Rowan
Memorial hospital. Her sister
Mrs. Jean Edmlnson of An
derson, S.C. is spending some
time with her during her
recovery,
Mrs. Bertha Watwore is a
patient and is improving In
Rowan M emorial Hospital.
M r. and Mrs. Talton Carrell
have returned from an ex
tensive trip through several
states including Oregon, and
Washington State. They also
journeyed on to Alaska where
they spent several days.
Clifto^ Evans of Rt. I, Mocksville, displays a
white sweet potato weighing» pounas dug
September 8 from his garden.
JERICHO
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Route 7, Jericho Church Road
Phone 492-5291 •
SERVICES* Mnister - Charles Isenberg
Sunday: Bible Study and classes for all ages at 10:00
Morning Worship at 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship at 6:00 p;m;
Wednesday Night: Mid-we«kBible Study at 7:30
SERMON TOPICS FOR SUNDAY, SEPT. 17.
Bible Study: Galatians Chapter 6
Morning Worship: "The Abundant Life"Evening Worship: "One tVlore Night With The Frogs"
THOUGHT FO R THIS WEEK
Hurry and worry are the the fertilizers that
raise ulcers"
THODIST CHURCH
i f a.ipr- SunSw ^i^ool i'm Sum 3.2,4rSundays lO_a.m.
WESLEY CHXPEL MEfHODiSt^ CHURCH Worship: 1st Sun. 11 a.m.3id Sun. 10 a.m. - Sunday School 3rd Sun, 11 a.m., 1,2,4, Sundays 10 a.m.
NO CREEK PRIMITIVE
BAW ST CHURCH
Tlie iolscooal Church
Cooleembe, The Church of the Good Shepherd Momiiu Worship 9:30 a.m. Church School 10:40 a.m. Father WilUs Rosenthal, Priest in Charxe.
DAIL-A-PRAYER
634-3311
"THURE ISA TIME FOR EVERYTHING . . . " Ecde>ia«es 3:t, The Uving В>Ыс. lyndale K,.u:c
M i N U T e s
ж # «
CAUDEU
LUMBER 1».
1238 Bingham Street
Mocksville, NC
PHbNE 634-2167
EATON
FUNERAL HOME
328 N. Main Street Mocksville, NC PHONE 634-2148
MARTIN HARDWARE
& GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Feeds, Dry Goods Groceries, Fertilizer
PHONE 834-2128
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH Rev. Austin Hamilton, Sunday School
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.
MOCXS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE
BAPTIST CHURCH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH
6 miles East on Hwy 64, Rev. Yates K. WBkinson, Pastor, Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Worship Service 11:00 a.m.-Evening ' Worship 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ELBAVILLE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
UBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
HARDISON UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
A J4.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DAVIETRACTORt
IMPLEMENT CO.
Ford FarmingSales and
Service-New Holland EquiR
SillibutY Roid A Complete
PHONE 834-6888 Repair
COBLE LIME &
FERTILIZER SERVICE
CoolMmM. NC - Hwy 158
Buiim tt Phone 2844354
Horn« Phone 284 2782
DULIN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH-Rev. John F. Edwards
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
NORTH MAIN STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST
DoiuUd Freeman, Minister, Sunday School 10a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Evening
Worship Service 7 p.m.-Wed. Service 7:30
FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH
UBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH
Troy C. Vaughn, Pastor
HOW TO HANDLE TIME
During World War II a popular radio show v^as called "Tho March of Time." Hislorical events and neviis items were woven skilKul'y together to form gripping and exciting episodes. One night alter the show
had gone off the air, my father took a moment to teach me an unforgettable lesson. "Time doesn't
always march." he said. "Usually it races at break neck speed or drags its (eee agonisingly slo«." I knew
what he meant. I had experienced both.
But in later years I found another fact about time. It can stand still, or seem so. It is as il the hands were removed from the clock and the shadow of the sun refused to move. And that's the way it was
when I, as a youth, was confronted by the reality of God. All life around me ceased and eternity was
looking me square in the face. The clock of my soul was turned ahead and I stood breathless with
amazement. Time was no longer merely the stuff of which life was made. My life moved into a new
Kingdom - a new and more exciting reality came into my being. “In tile beginning, Cod . .." the first
words of the Bible, took me from "here" to "there" - and I lost my fear of passing time forever. Now
we believers claim the viclory in the shout of the angel in Revelation, "Time shall be no more."
OCommunity Adv*rti»in9
O AVIESUPPiriXI.
MocksviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2859
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH Hospital St., MocksviUe, SC Rev. Robe
L. ‘Taylor, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Moming Worship 11 B.m.-Evenhig Worship 7 a.m.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOUNESS CHURCH
Rev. A. W. Smith, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship 11 aJn.-Ufe-
liners 7.30 p.m.-EvanfoUitic Service
ivvv. nuivi I,, niuixoru, aunoay 5cnooi
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-B.T.U.
S:30 p.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Prayer Meet- ngWed. 7:30 p.m.
GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Walter L. Warfford, Sunday School
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-B.T.U
6:30 Event
Ing Wed. 7:30 p
CHURCH OF GOD, Cooleemee, NC
CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF GOU I. W. Ijames, Pastor, Sabbath School
iO a.m.-Worship Service i p.m.-Prayer Meeting Wed. 8 p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ON MILUNG ROAD
Barry Mahorney Pastor, Sabbath School10 a.m.-Morning Worship 11 a.W;_____
This feature IS p u b
lished in the interest
o f a better com m un
ity and is m ade p os
sible by these spon
sors who believe in
building character.
HUNTSVILLEMETHODISTCHURCHWORSHIP:2nd Sun. 10 a.m. 4th Sun.11 a.m.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
Gladstone Road.Sunday School10 a.m.-Worsiiip Service II a.m.
HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE
Norman S. I-rye, Pastor. SundaySchool 9:45 a.m.-Worship Service
n.-Evangelistic Service
7:30 p.m.-Wed. Service 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9:45-Worship 11 a.m. MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL
HOLINESS CHURCH James C. Hodnett, Minister
Sunday School 10 A.M.Worship Service 11 A.M.
Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Lifeliners Sunday 6:00 p.m.
Bible Study Wed 7:30 p.m.
mac:e d o n ia Mo r a v ia n c h u r c hRev. John Kapp, pastor-Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Youth FeUowship 6:30 p.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.
laOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH Worship: 2nd Sunday 11 a.m.. 4th Sun.10 a m.-Sundav School: 4th Sun. 11 a.m 2,1,3 Sundays 10 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Jericho Road, Office: 492-5291
Home: 492-5257, Charles C. Isenlieig 7257
ST. FRANOS CATHOLIS MISSION Sundays at 10 a.m. - Sunday obligation
fuUlUed also at anticipatory mass on Saturdays at 8 p.m.
634-2667 or 2«-2463
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Jimmy Hbison, Pastor, Sunday Service
9:50 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Sunday Evening 7 p.m.-Wed. Evening 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNUT GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
BAILEY'S CHAPEL UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION UNITED METHODISTCHURCIi
EATONS BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Moming Worship
11 a.m.-Training Union 7 p.m.
DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLE
Rev. T. A. Shoaf, Pastor, On Fork Bixby Rd. Sunday School 9:45 p.m.-Mornlng Worship
11 a.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Bible
Study Wed. 7. JU p.m.-Evening Worship 7 p.m
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service11 ajn.-Evening Worship Service 7 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD BUby
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Rev. CharUe Talbert, MocksvUle. Rt. 4 (Epheaus) 2844381
<X)NCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKESVILLE PENTECOSTAL
r'OLINESS CHURCH MocksvUle, Route 5, Rev. Albert Gentle
Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service
11 a.ro.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fork, NC, The CHiurch of the Ascension Church School 10 a.m.-Moming Prayer, Sermon 11 a.m.
w m m
A TTEN D T H E CHURCH
OF YO U R CHOICE!
C. A. SEAFORD
LUMBER COMPANY
Jericho Road Mocksville, NC PHONE 634-5148
MOCKSVILLE
MOTORjCp.
Custom Ornamental Iron Work ' Steel Fabricating rCommercial & Residental- Portable Welding Service
Phone 634-2379 315 Wilkesboro St.
J.P . GREEN
MILLING CO. INC.
Daisy Flour We Custom Blend 524 Depot Street Phone 634-2126
FARM & GARDEN
SERVICE. INC.
961 Yadkinvilie Road
PHONE 634-2017
or 634-5964
FOSTER DRUG CO.
Lowea Shopping Center MocksviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2141
MARTIN EQUIPMENT
& SERVICE
508 Depot St. MocksviUe, NC PHONE 634-2082
TED'S GROCERY BAG &
MIDWAY RESTAURANT
Salisbury Road, MocksviUe
Glenn S. Howard
--------------------DBA ----------
SOUTHUINO DISTRIBUTORS
Route 1 - Advance
PHONE 998 8186
JEFFCOCO.JNC.
ROUTE I - Advance
“Our staff and employees
encourage you to attend the church of your choice.'
SHEFFIELD LUMBER
tPAUET(»M PAN Y
Route 6 • Box 133 •MocksiiUr, .NC
PHONE 492 5565
DAVIK COUNTY hNTlíKPRISi; К1-ГОК1). THURSDAY, Slil’TliMBHR 14, 1‘)7Н »BFarm Bureau News
Beef prices have been rising
for only a few months, but
they are attracting much
attention because of their
importance In the consumer’s
food budget.
"T his Is very u n
derstandable,” according to
Kenneth Mlntz, president of
the D avie County F arm
Bureau.
“However It Is well for us to
be aware of the fact that these
higher prices are beginning to
signal producers to start
rebuilding their herds. The
consumer, by absorbing a
relatively sm all cost increase
this year, will have helped
insure adequarte ^itpplips of
beef in the years alicad."
Mlntz, who pointed out that
Farm Bureau’s membership
drive is now underway, said
“If there Is a villain involved
In higher meat prices, It has to
be inflation.”
He said Farm Bureau is a
staunch believer in a
balanced federal budget and
reduced governm ent spen
ding, which Is the prim ary
cause of Inflation.
Mlntz emphasized the fact
that despite higher food prices
over the years. It has been the
farm er’s gain in efficiency
that has helped iteep ^ood
costs in check. “The U.S.
consum er now spends 4
percent less of his income on
food that he did just 10 years
ago,” he said.
Mintz said by joining Farm
Bureau a farmer has at his
disposal the largest general
farm organization in the
»'county, state, and nation.
“We urge all area farmers
to become part of a respected
organization that w ill be
working on their behalf al all
levels and at all times.”
Alcohol Information Report
By;
WILLIAM F.WEANT.M.S.
ALCOHOLISM KDUCATION CONSULTANT
Effccis of Alcohol on the
Body - Alcoholic beverages
enller the body In the same
m anner as regular food
products, but the digestive
process differs greatly.
Alcohol does not need to be
digested and can be absorbed
from the stomach directly
into the circulatory system.
This absorption begins im
mediately upon consumption,
and traces of alcohol can be
detected in the blood within
minutes. Most of the ab
sorption of alcohol takes place
within the first foot of the
sm all intestine, with about
twenty per cent being ab
sorbed directly through the
walls of the stomach. Some
may be absorbed through the
lining of the mouth.
A fter entering the c ir
culatory system, alcohol Is
quickly transported to all
parts of the body tissue.
Alcohol is thus stored all over
the body and not just in
p artic ular places in the
manner that fat, sugar, and
protein are stored. As the
blood containing alcohol
enters the liver, it is broken
down chemically; first into
acetaldehyde,^then Into acetic
acid. Alcohol remains In the
blood until It Is either expelled
in the form of waste material
or recycled through the liver
where it is broken down.
Behavior of the individual
“under the influence” can be
associated with the level of
alcohol In the blood stream;
Alcohol percentage 0.01
percent - Feeling of clear
head and free breathing.
Alcohol percentage 0.02
percent - Desire to talk freely
and a sense of warm th and
[
Com e in a n d Check our Low
e ve ryd a y prices on ofher tires
not listed
warreofy
$
я * » * « 1 4 — » 4 7 M í— '4 7
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;ss
•MILEAGEи iha Ь1ш «vat't dfltwn to it» ('»И w»t <п«- C4IW> e>v<r.s 40.000 miles o< norn>«i p4tsang«r C4> Urw'Ct (0 the eriqin«!OO the c«r on «vhich >t 0<tQ'n«Mv intlii'ti] «01 a >«i«on Olhef 1 . 21. 31 4) ÿr e« 61 «bov« Il will be 'cpi^ctid You fnosi p«y ap p>opii«t« t^ie« (o> d''v k«fvice charpe«•i meiif4(>ng «(У) baUnr-ng «гм1 <o> the oer ceni «( miitbvOK r«ce<v«4l n«i |ht adiuttab'a tift in «cco'danre w>ih tn#miitaga ad«u»tment labia in thit warunty UN5CflVlCC*BiL»TY
OTHER THAN1f"*tp<oo»* mount mg2l'oadhaia>dteg a cm inag brunt impaefor puneeur*»3) «ppa'vni irrptopei •л11а1юп '
5) tue «>>hecta'..ke'''b'v imbaUnca6) dam«ge e«u»d bv abut* curt>mg coOioon accxJoni. liig. pioi«et>on >ub or vanda*>»m Ol7i tiead ««eooui. u v.iii be lap'aetd ai* #eo.wale"i Oaytoo t.*t. Ir## 0> ebitg». \-r^iuó-r'g a^ebai4ne<ngl du«>ng i<»tt
CLEMMONS
T IM and A U T O M O T IV E
MiwlivllMlammonf Rood.
CI«mmoM,N.C. Ph766«S450
M O C K Tin mid ДиНиШЬ»
4T$t Counuy е м M ш -toto rU ’iOII
MÉNA U. f49»M7}
well-being.
Alcohol percentage 0.03
percent - Depression of the
central nervous system ,
resulting in a feeling of
euphoria.
Alcohol percentage 0.05
percent - Lack of coordination
and inhibitions.
Alcohol percentage 0.10
percent - Staggering and a
feeling of drosiness.
Alcohol percentage 0.20
percent - Feeling of nausea
and poor bladder control.
Alcohol percentage .0.30
percent - Lack of com
prehension and intermittent
periods of sleeping and
vomiting.
Alcohol percentage 0.40
percent - Unconsciousness.
(This is the forty-sixth In a
series of articles about
“alcohol” provided by Bill
Weant, Alcoholism Education
C onsultant w ith the Tri-
County M ental H ealth
Complex. These articles are
designed to create u n
derstanding about sensible
drinking, alcohol abuse, and
alcoholism In our society. If
you have a question con
cerning alcohol that you
would like answered in a
future column, phone 634-
2195).
Jr. 4-H Leaders
i
Complete
Ш
Landscaping Project
At Fran Ray
Junior 4-H leaders of Davie County
have recently completed a summer
landscaping project at Fran Ray Rest
Home located behind Davie County
Hospital on Hospital Street.
The program which was supervised by
Douglas I^e , assistant extension agent,
consisted of pruning shrubs, pulling
grass, and planting bedding plants and
tomato plants in a 150 ft. long by 3 ft.
wide area.
Francis Kilien, supervisor of the
facility said, “the residents and per
sonnel have greatly appreciated the
accom plishm ents of the club this
sum m er.”
“The effort put forward to make this
area more beautiful is commendable
and we have enjoyed working with each
and everyone of these young people.”
The purpose of the Junior 4 -H leaders
is to help volunteers with community
clubs and coordinate county wide
projects. The work at Fran Ray Rest
Home is the first of an annually
scheduled landscaping project by the
youths.
Francis Klllen, Fran Ray Rest Home manager (right) looks over the land- Davie 4-H Youth leaders this summer. They are (1 to r) Rita White. Renee Bracken. Joe Tulbert. Jeff White and Melinda Wright. Not pictured: Terry Reavis, Jerry Phillips. Iva Trexler and Robin Brock. (Photo by Robin Carter) ^
I n f r a r e d D e v i c e s W i l l B e n e f i t A i r T r a v e l e r s A n d F i r e f i g h t e r s
Sharp new eyes are
focusing on hazards faced by
firefighters and airline
passengers,
Infrared devices developed
by the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
in Boulder, Colo., pinpoint
forest fires, warn of clear air
turbulence, and detect
l.iiiuiTdu.': wind shears al dU'lNirlS
(\ c la im in g ra d io m e te r
being ifsted by NOAA
scientists can see through the
thickest smoke generated by
forest fires and zero in on the
exact location of a fire
line' or specific blazes.
Moreover, acting as a ther
mometer, it may someday
help head off f<>resl fires
before they start t)>'spotting
areas on the forest flour that
could burst into flam e
because of very hot and dry
conditions.
Mounted in the belly of an
aircraft, the infrared eye of
Ihe radiom eter instantly
converts the thermal or heat
signals from a hidden fire or
hot spot into a visual map.
The various shades or hues
are calibrated again^' lem-
pcralures lo show Ir iuble
areas on the map.
From 30,000 feel the devicc
can map almost 4,000 square
miles In just 45 minutes.
The Instrum ent got its
baptism of smoke and fire last
year in C alifornia w hile
m aking survrv- nl the
devastating Bin .Sm Vl.i.'bie
Cone forst fire iiiil per
formed well.
•We wani lo see exactly
whal rofinem enls arc
necessary in Ihe system, so
we're standing by lo assist in
any major conflagration that
may break out west of the
Hiit'kies lhi.s sum mer or early
iiiil," said Dr.Peter M.Kuhn,
a NOAA meleoroiogisl who
has been working lo develop
new infrared in-
slrumenlalion.
Anything lhal would help
fire bosses in direct their
H e a i t i i T i p
From The American Medical Assn.
Four Corners
M r. and Mrs. Joe White and
M ark, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Carr
Harpe attended an outing tor
Blltmore employees and their
families at Swananoa Park
at AsheviUe Saturday night.
Approximately eleven hun
dred attended.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Richie
visited L .S. Shelton Sr.
Saturday night.
M r. and Mrs. Jerry Potts
and Shane, L.S. Shelton Sr.
were Sunday dinner guests of
M r. and M rs. C lifford
Fleming.
M r. and Mrs. Joe Shelton
visited M r. and Mrs. Tom
Anderson Monday night.
A ll the children and
grandchildren were supper
guests of M r. and Mrs. Zeno
Adams Sunday night.
M r. and Mrs. Jack Parrish
attended a birthday dinner for
his sisters In Winston-Salem
Sunday.
H ipertensión, high blood
pressure, is responsibile for
100 deaths a day in this
country, afflicting nearly one
out of every ten adults. The
most susceptible to it are
those with a fam ily history of
hypertension and blacks,
whose risks are twice that of
whites.
High blood pressure has
been compared to a time
bomb - silent until It explodes
lnto,J'ataI or crippling stroke,
heart disease, or kidney
failure.
Many who have had this
disease are uaware of it and
some that are aware of it do
not adequately comply with
treatm ent. H ypertension
causes no pain or other
symptoms until the individual
Is suffering from the long
term consequences of the
disease.
Blood pressure is the force
in which the blood pushes
against the walls of the blood
vessels. A measurement is
taken painlessly with a cuff
that fits around the upper
arm and a gauge which gives
the reading. The reading of
your blood pressure is usually
taken each time you visit your
doctors office.
This reading is given as a
fraction. The top number, the
systolic pressure, measures
the force of the heart pushing
blood from the heart Into the
blood vessels. The bottom
num ber, the diastolic
pressure, m easures the
pressure when the heart is at
rest betweeen beats. A
pressure of between 100-70
and 140-90 is usually con
sidered normal for an adult.
A higher blood pressure
means there is too much
strain on the heart and you
should consult a doctor.
In most cases, higher blood
pressure is easily treated. In
■■.milder cases-^^our physical)'
m ay have you lose weight,
restrict your salt intake, quit
sm oking, and begin a
program of regular exercise.
Other cases,eertain drugs
m ay be prescribed to bring
your blood pressure under
control.
In either case, follow your
physicans orders.’ High blood
pressure
In either case, follow your
physlcan's orders. High blood
pressure cannot be cured but
it can be controlled. Don’t let
the silent killer get the best of
Helmets
A National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration study
shows the chance of fatal head
uijury appears to be at least
four times greater for the
motorcyclist not wearing a
helmet compared with the
cyclist wearing head gear.
SAVE!
The Forward Harvest Forecast is good in most of this area, and Ford
has just offered a trading bonus on six tractor models through
SEPTEMBER 30THI
We have a good tractor inventory available to us and we’re willing to
make long trades to keep customers coming in....
YES, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS... .AND WILL WORK TO EARN IT!)!
GIVE US A CALL-AND WE'LL CALL ON YOU!!!!
D a v i e T r a c t o r
^ & I m p l e m e n t
Highway 601 South Moeksville, N.C.
counler ii":ii l', «iiu ld be
welcome Snmki' is'ilten so
thick lhal piinis i .in \ see weii
enough ill drop chem ical
relardanis accurately.
Unlike smoke, wind shear is
an invisible enem y that
sometimes gives pilots fits
during Iheir final landing
approaches. U sually
associated w ilh Ihe 'iusi
fronts lhal precede the c ild
wedges of aire m an a'iiv irim-
ihunderslorms. windsliear is ;i
sudden change !• '.Mml ¡.poi'il
or direction. I: can have
devastating rmisequences.
Experts say ihr plieniimenon
has been a faciur in !I0 air
plane accidents worldwide in
Ihe pasi "I years.
NOAA ■> nighl testing an
infrared ( ¡idionieler linked lo
a sensor in the cockpit that
would warn a pilot of a sudden
change in lemperalure in his
landing palh,Compulor losts
have indicated ihai the
radiom eler can pick up
s ig n ific a n i le m p e ra lu re
changes as tar as six miles
aw ay,
As Dr Kuiin explained,
■'plane I indint! iiorm aliy
passes :l'riiiigh steady by
graiiual iiicreasc in lem-
peniaiic. because ihe tem-
peni iiii’ if Ihe almosphere
nonibills decreases about
hall .1 degree Celsius wilh
each 32И feel of altitude.In a
piisl fronl-w’’ii1 shear
si4iiiiiiip 'luMi' would bea
sudden and drastic change
Wc liiipc 'lie iMillometer will
lake away llie surprise and
assurer safer l.imllnf.s under
IlCSC <l!tfic!ll' .
Kveii fliiscr 111 coiiinierciai ®
ilcvelopnieii! i.s an intrared
radiomeler lhal will give
airline passengers and flight
personnel lim e to bullon down
before they encounter that
unpredictable menace known
as clear air turbulence.
Huge air waves break high
in Ihe atmosphere-much like
ocean waves-and can sud
denly plunge an aircraft
earthward. Abnormal con
centrations of moisture ap
pear in Ihe almosphere where
Ihese air waves break.
In his work D r. Kuhn
discovered that fluctuations
in atmospheric water vapor
could be delected by
radiometers to warn of tur
bulent areas ahead of an
aircraft as much as four lo 10
minutes in advance.
P IT T S B U R G H H O U S E P A IN T
MILDEW RESISTANT ON PAINT FILM
O i l B a s e G l o s s
One finish tor siding and trim, excellent color and gloss retention.
NOW I ONLY
♦SAVE *7.2 0
S u n -P ro o f^ H o u se
P a in t W e a th e rs
th e W e a th e r
Sun-Proof House Paints have recently been reformulated and specially reinforced to provide maximum protection against the elements—the ravages of severe cold in the vifTnter, and extreme heal in summer. Come in today and let us recommend the one best
suited to your need.
REZ®
W o o d S ta in s
Your choice— Oil or Latex—
Interior or Exterior— Solid
Color or Semi-
Transparent ^___
eltect...144
beautiful colors V ^od~
and Redwood. /(«.TAWj
A c r y l i c L a t e x F l a t
May be applied lo damp surfaces, soap and water clean-up.
NOWONLY $
♦SAVE *4.25 gal.
A c r y l i c L a t e x
S e m i - G l o s s
Durable semi-gloss finish, use for both siding and trim.
NOWONLY $1 0 1 ?
♦SAVE *4.35 eal
ofl manutectur*r’« •ugo««t«d r*iall prlet.
P a in t R o lle r &
T ray S e t
Include« fine quality B" polyester roller cover (H" nap)— can be used in either latex or oil-based paints. Sturdy, 11' metal tray with 114 qt. capacity. 9' roller frame with threaded handle tor extension pole.
♦e* in>nul«ctuttt'i rdfll »rlc«.Whil. tni) itinatio color* only Cuflom coloti HijhllK nijh.t
C A U D E L L L U M B E R ( Ю .
1238 BINGHAM STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NC
DAVIt COUNTY l;NTl;RPRISH RECORD, THURSDAY. SUJ’TUMBER Ы I >’ 8
Boxwood Realty Celebrates Affiliation With Century 21
Danny Correll, president of Boxwood Real Estate, welcomes Judy
Rosser as she signs the register of guests.
Op. " house festivities were held at Box- ood ileally Inc., Salisbury Street, Saturu.i) and Sunday, commemoratine
Iheir association with Century 21 Real Estate.
Century 21, the nation's largest real estate marketing firm announced th,e
affiliation of Boxwood Real Estate as a member of their organization last week.
The Davie County High School Jazz Ensemble performed on the grounds
Saturday afternoon and free helium filled balloons and growth charts were given to the children. Refreshments were served and registration for door
prizes to be awarded was also held.
Danny Correll, president of Boxwood Real Estate said, "we want to thank
everyone that made this grand opening
possible."
“Through our affiliation with Century
21, we hope to offer our clients what they
deserve, ia well trained professionally
oriented program.”
Through Century 21, Boxwood Real
Estate will offer a nation wide referal
program for homes, and provide a complete photo portfolio of each home
listed.
Jonn R. Tice, regional director of Century 21 said, “we’re delighted to welcome this outstanding company to
our organization, and they will provide
an excellent', well established level of
real estate services to this area."“With over 6,500 member firms, each one independently owned and operated,
Century 21 offers the home buyer and
seller Ihe neighborhood know-how of professional sales people, throughly
trained In modern real estate prac
tices."Boxwood RedI Estate Company, previously known as Swicegood Real
Estate, was purchased by Danny Correll and Dennis Grubb In May of 1978. The
firm was originally organized in 1971 by
Jerry Swicegood and moved to its present location on Salisbury Street in 1974.
; Little Tracey Sechrest, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Barry Sechrest, is happy to receive a helium balloon from offlce manager, Sandra Shelton.
Mrs. Danny Correll (left) and Mrs. Dennis Grubb < right) look over brochures they used while assisting their husbands in the planning of the grand opening held last Saturday and Sunday.
Macedonia
Rev. and Mrs. John Kapp, members, friends, neighborswish to express their heartfelt sympathy to the : Ernest McKnlght family. Mr. McKnight passed away on
Sunday afternoon al Forsyth
Memorial Hospital.Our church bulletins are given this month by Mrs. Grace Call in honor of Mr. and Mrs. F.R. “Forty"
Beauchamp's SOth wedding
anniversary which Is September IS. We wish Mr. and Mrs. Beauchamp many more happy wedding anniversaries.
Our young people will be
picking up glass Saturday
September 16. Vou can call Terry Wood at 998-4894 and
Jerry Davis at 998-4083 if you have any glass to be picked up. Or you may take it to
Terry Wood’s home. Our
young people have been
working real hard at this project, so let’s help them if
you can.Those that are sick...Mrs.
Jerry Davis has returned home from Forsyth Memorial
Hospital. Miss Ida Ellis and
Mr. Clarence Hockaday have
returned home from Davie
County Hospital. Remember these alone with prayers and get well cards. Mr. Ernest Burner is in Davie Hospital
very sick.Mrs. Franklin Douthit was the guest of Mrs. Hattie Cope, Mrs. Pink Hendrix, Mrs. Roy Hendrix and Mrs. Audbon
Ellis last Friday which was
Mrs. Douthit's birthday. Her mother and sisters carried her out to the K4W for dinner.
After dinner they went back to
Mrs. Douthit’s home and had ice cream and birthday cake. Mrs. Hazel Smith and Franklin Douthit were there lor cake, ice cream. We wish Mrs. Douthit many more
happy birthdays. They all
really enjoyed themselves
very much.Members don't forget when they come to take pictures for the church annual. All
members are urged to go
have their family’s picture made.If anyone has any news I would appreciate it if you would call me so I can have
news for the newspaper i998-
44S8> Thank you!
Dewiila Smith pours punch for Dennis Grubb, contractor for Boxwood Real Estate, during their grand opening festivities marking their
alliance with Century 21 RealEstate. ( Photos by Robin Carter)
Health Tips From The
American Medical Association
The pregnant female must be cautious when taking medications for allergies. In the August issue of Annals of
Internal Medicine, Paul
Greenberger, MD, and Roy Patterson, MD, FACP, of Chicago discuss certain drugs
for Ihe safety, for the mother
and the fetus.
The Annals of internal Medicine is the official journal of the American College of Physicians, a
national professional
association of more than . 40,000 specialists in internal medicine and related areas.
Doctors Greenberger and
Patterson stated, "When a
physician is seeking iil- formation about drug safety during pregnancy, the Physician's Desk Reference
•PDR) is of little value in some cases and inscnsistent in others." The physician is put on the spot, so to speak.
He must authorize a drug lo
relieve Ihe pregnant woman's
allergy. even though
theP hysician's Desk Reference (PDR) .may state that "Safety of this drug in human pregnancy has not
been established, and use of
the drug in pregnancy
requires that the expected therapeutic benefit be weighed against possible hazard to mother and child."
This is not very helpful.
One answer is to avoid the use
of medication as much as possible during pregnancy, and in the authors' opinion, "during the first trimester of pregnancy, no medication
should be given unless ab
solutely essential."Congress has informed the drug companies that a drug had lo be proved sale before it could be given to a pregnant woman. Tests to determine this are difficult, because of the problem of deciding
whetiier data from animal experiments is applicable to Immans.
Tbe two physicians (both al
Nurthweslern University
Medical School) conclude
that:
•‘The possible but apparently improbable adverse effects of drugs used in the therapy of allergic disease
should be viewed in relation to
the possible adverse effects of
Ihe allergic disease on pregnancy. The outstanding example is the use of steriods in asthma, where the disease
itself can pose important risks lo both the mother and fetus."
To frseza matt, UH a moil' ture-vtpor-proof wrap, tuch
■< heavy aluminum foil,
heavily waxad fraazar pi«er,
or (pacially laminated ptperi.
'4
Shelia Oliver (left) local Century 21 sales offlcial, shows Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kruea the complete photo portfolio featured by their firm.
B e a u t i f u l H o m e s
PRICELESS PRIVACY
A 2 or 3 bedroom home located on 4 small ioinin; lots in a quiet zone. It has 1456 square feet of neatei area that includes a beautiful sun porch. Also has enclosed back yard for pets or children. There is plenty of garden space with 2 utility buildingsAbsoiutely a quiet and private area. Please call CENTURY 21 BOXWOCJD REAL ESTATE today.
OWNER WANTS TO TALK TURKEY Bring your offer« ■•ewiy remodeled 3bedroom, brick features a separateworkshop-garagi .lew carpet and vinylthroughout. All situated on a iat^e corner lot south of town. Please call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD
REAL ESTATE today.
••PERSIMMON PUDDIN^^Can be made from your own persimmon tree if yoii btiylthis lovely 3‘ bedroom rancher. We want even discuss the huge recreation room, or the acre wooded lot. But we will tell you about the utility building outside and the two spacious baths. Priced in the low 40’s. Please caA CENURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE now.
•BO-PEEP, BEATLES, AND BACH”Can all be a part of this home, because there is room for everyone from little baby to teenagers to mom and pop. This old charmer has been completely remodeled both inside and out, and features a spacious lot surrounded by huge oak trees, S bedrooms, baths, plenty of closet space, and 4 fireplaces. Just minutes from town. Please contact CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE today.
GO AHEAD AND FALL IN LOVE THIS TIME YOU CAN AFFORD IT The owners have loved this home but they are
moving. You wlllknow the care it has has as soon as you open the door. Just 8 years old. 3 bedrooms, dining room, kitchen with built-ins, basement, and carpet with paved drive. Located hi Sheffield Park.Just minutes from town. For more information call us today.
I RAN OUT OF FINGERS Counting ail the extras in this new energy efficient brick rancher. This home features neat-pump, thermo payne windows, insulated doors, large concrete patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room, dining-kitchen combination, many cTostes, carport, with paved driveway. Ail this and much more located in Hickory Tree. Just minutes from town. Please call us today, CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE.
IF THE PRICE IS RIGHT You can own this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom brick home with IMc baths, living room, large den, utility room, and for these upcoming ci3d winter sulated with paved drive. Exceil Please call us today for more information.
SOMETHING FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY
SAVE NEARLY (1000 In closing cost, by assuming the loan on this exceptionally nice 3 bedroom home. Spacious living room, dining-kitchen combination. H i baths, workshop, and paved drive. Loated Just minutes from town. F^r more information please call CENUTRY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE.
MILLIONIIfVIEW HICKORY HILL---Step into this elegant 4 bedroom home and see for yourself. Not omy does it have all the modem conveniences, but it also has large patio decic overlooking the beautiful 90 acre
REAL ESTATE.WHITNEY ROAD 3 bedroom, IV& bath brick home. Full basement, sun deck. No down payment if all qualifications are met. Call Henry Snore today to see this well kept home.
REAL BARGAIN This 1966 Model 12 x 60 mobile home can be yours. Has a double carport built onto the back. Plus air- condition window unit. Must be moved soon. For more information call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE today.
CROSS STREET. COOLEEMEE This house has been remodeled and Will just suit you. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent condition. You must see it to believe it. .Please call today for an
appointment.
MOBILE HOME LOVER acreon&
There is something for everyone in the family In >eautifully decorated 3 bedroom home; a hop for dad, and a big IVi acre yard for the This home also offers a kitchen that is fully attic. Ml basement for storage, and a big mgh
thisworksho] kids.
fireplace for those upcoming winter nights. Near Cooleemee. Priced in the low SO’s. Please contact CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE.
1964 Magnolia trailer with approximately 1 ac of land is a steal for the young at heart. Located Route 4 Mocksville and near shopping center elementary school. See it and you wtll buy it.
DREAM HOUSE FOR NEWLYWEDS Dream of yourself in this lovely 3 bedroom home, with a free-standing fireplace in the den 2 full ' baths, floors carpetea and tiled. Kitchen with stove and refrigerator and air-condition. Priced to sell. For an ajywintment and more information please call CEPmJRY 21 BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE.
NO TRICKS, JUST TREATS For the treat of your life, call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD REAL today for an appointment to see this C n m »r 3 bedroom home, 1 baths, dining room.rTilSen. and breakfast room combination, double carport and paved drive. Also has central air to beat those hot summer days. Call
today-the price is right.
ANGELL ROAD This is what you have h«»en looking for. Bricit rancher, with 3 be^-_1 bath, fireplace, full basement, breezew; SSJi*» juble garage. All this on Slat-res that has .7o it. Road fronUge. Joins creek at back. Call Henry Shore today to see this property.
• ^ND FOR .SALE
DAVIE COUNTY c aiahaii Ml, im acres. $1100.00 per acre. Payment extended over 3-yr. period. Some timber.OFF HWY 64 West Nice secluded acre^e on Hunting Creek. 10 acres priced to sell. CTall tod ^HOLlbAY ACRES OFF 601 SOUTH 8.8 acres of building land, already sub-divided into lots. Priced to sell. Call today.
O n t u Q i
100% VA Financing Available
Other Listings Available
We Buy Equities
We Build Too!
B O X W O O D R E A L E S T A T E
6 3 4 - 5 9 9 7
333 Salisbury Street Mocltiville, NC 27028
DANNY CORRELL MANAGING BROKER DENNIS GRUBB - CONTRACTOR
Associate Hrulver
(Diarien. Evans
Office 284-2537
Satesinan Henry Shore
Home 634-5846
Oif'ue .Maiiager
Sandra Sliellon Saleiinian
Dick Nail
Hume 634-5462
Associate Broker
Shelia Oliver
492 5512
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Alexander vacationed several days this week in Myrtle
Beach, S.C. They returned
home today( Wednesday).Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kurfees were host to a supper on Thursday evening honoring Mr. and Mrss. Ben Mitchell on Iheir wedding anniversary which was Sept. 10. This was also a going away supper for Pfc. Don Branch, Jr. who left
Friday for California and on Saturday for a 13 month tour of duty with the U.S. Marines in Okinawa. Scott Branch
was also a guest at the dinner.Mr. and Mrs. Kurfees spent ' Sunday in Buies Creek with thir son. Marly. A member of the B.S.U. Out Reach Team of Campbell College, Marty will be preaching at the 11 a.m.
worship service in a Baptist church in Enka, N.C. on Sept. 17.Waller Shoaf relumed
home Sunday from Rowan
Cooleemee Circle
Has Meeting
The morning circle of the Cooleemee United Methodist Church held their monthly meeting Tuesday morning with Mrs. J.G. Crawford at her home on Ruffin Street
with seven members and two
visitors attending.The Rev. John Edwards opene.d the meeting wiih prayer after which Mrs. Janie Vogler presented a program,
“Hands of Christ”. Mrs.
Vogler also reported on her recent trip to Lake Junaluska and closed the meeting with prayer.
C e d a r
C r e e k
A thought for the day...Let us remember that a well disciplined life begins with the dedicated life, dedicated lo Christ.Summer is almp.sl gone and
fall is near by. Many things have happened in this world- some good and some bad. However, everything is for a purpose.School days are here again.
Let us as Christians pray that each teacher and children will have a good school term. Since we are living under a dictatorship we sure can pray
for them at home--no prayer
in school.The revivals are still in progress everywhere. Let us hope that someone will find
Christ as their Savior.^Mrs. William Eaton had as
her guest for two weeks her daughter Mrs. Robert Wiseman of Rhaway, N.J. Mrs. Cann Campbell of
Winston- Salem enjo>ed a
week here al home with mother and sisters Jean and
Darrin.Several members from Cedar Creek attended the homecoming revival at the Chinquapin Grove Baptist
Church last Sunday the lOth.
Sunday Sept. 10 was a hazy
day. However, a good Sunday school here at Cedar Creek Baptist Church. The Sunday afternoon worship devolionals were conducted by Bros. OdeU Eaton and John West.
The pastor Rev. Hay
brought a spiritual message. The choir sang beautifully.Mrs. William Ealon called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ridgell Br. Ridgell has
been a patient in Davie
County Hospital for several days recently for tests. And now he is at home the neighbors and friends are glad to know.Mrs. Kay West is home
after undergoing surgery
recently at the Forsyth Hospital in Winston-Salem. We were glad to have her home and at Church Sunday and doing nicely thank the
Lord.Amn. Joe West of Whiteman Air Force Base, son of Mrs. Kay West is home on a furlo visiting his mother and sister, Janie and Kevin and Jason. He attended Church Sunday. Mrs. Ann Campbell was
dinner guest of her mother
Mrs. William Eaton and
sister, Jean and Darrin. Tony
Tatum and Tracy Eaton visited Darrin Eaton all evening Iasi week.Darryal and Kenneth Eaton, students in school were home for the weekend. Miner Smith of Houstonville,
N.C. was in the community recently visiting his brother Thomas Smith and Ihe Transous.Little baby George Jr. Scott
and Baby Jason West were all happy smiles at church Sunday (laughs) we love them
boys.Odell Eaton and son Tracey called Sunday evening at the home of his mother, Mrs. William Eaton and sister Jean
and Darrin.Mr. and Mrs. McKeniey Eaton of Winston-Salem
called Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ambros Brock. Also Mrs. Daisy Tatum called. They attended worship
service.Our deepest sympathy goes
out to those that have lost
their loved ones. Please keep our chain prayers for the shutins and peace in this world 111 make a beller place for all lu live
Memorial Hospital after a weeks treatment. He is much
improved.Mr. Woody Yarbro returned
home from Davie Hospital
Tuesday and is much improved. Visiting with him since his iilne.ss were his brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Lacy Yarbro of Orlando, Florida, John
Yarbro of Salisbury, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bolic of Morganton and Lucille Fisher of Hickory.Odell Grubb is recuperating
at the home of his daughter,
Mrs. Kenneth Beck of Wedgewood Drive, Salisbury. Mr. Grubb was moved trom the Spencer Rest Home last
week andis improving nicely.
s$s$$$ss$s$s$ssss
Shiloh Baptist
To Hold Revival
Shiloh Baptist Church wili hold their annual revival
i)cginning Sunday, Seplember
17th al :i p.m. and continuing liiniiigh Friday, Seplember 22, Services will be held each
evening al 7:.10, with guest
choirs appearing each night.Sunday's service will be conducted by the Rev. ,liihnson. The speaker for the remainder of the week will be
Ihe Rev. Garther Roland, pastor of the Anti> ii Christian Church of Winsiiin- Salem.
Koals
There are 9 million boats and 50 million persons
engaged in recreational boating in the United States,
the U.S. Coast niiard savs.
H o w a r d R e a l t y & ^ ,
Insurance
NEW LISTING
) .i.iH AVON STREET-Two bedronm starter home in
iM vii; COUNTY i:n tu ri’risi- r i t o r d T hu rsd ay . si:pti-mbiìr i4. i*)
' *6 matching walnut cain bottom chairs-unfinished *Oak
Hall rocker * 2 Oak Dressers * Oak Sideboard *Single
Oak Bed *Rockers *Ball & Claw Piano *Center Table
*Smoking Stand ^Telephone Desk and chairs * Mantel
Clock * 25 pieces ruby red carnival depression
n U C H , MUCH M ORE A V A ILA B LE
Red Barn Auction & Antiaues Coen All Day
Saturday And Sunday. Come In And Make
AnOfferl!!!Red Barn Auction
LO C A TED JUST BELOW C O U R TN EY SCHOOL
Bill Miller
PH ONE 463-5550 N .C .A .L.1113
O n l u i ) ^
I I . j ' li I
We’re Here l^or You.
I .u h (»lli( <■ is lii(i< |icn(l< iill\ ( ) « Mcd .111(1 ()|)i r,iK (I
C L E M M O N S V I L L A G E
P h o n e 7 6 6 - 4 7 7 7
NEW LISTINGS
REDLAND ROAD...brlck rancher with 3 BR’s,
large living room with fireplace. 2 utility rooms. Mid ISO'sFIRST HOME BUYERS! Be sure you see this charming 2 bedroom Cottage home. Utility room. Good location. Upper teens
REDUCED
BEAUTIFUL GRASS LAND! 6.18 acres. Large barn. Brick home with country kitchen, central air. Storm windows. Country atmosphere bi Davie County.CALL ABOUT THESE SUPER LISTINGS BRICK RANCHER...has playroom in basement
with bar. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, extra large patio. Low t30's.VOURS FOREVER! 3 bedroom rancher on wooded lot. Fireplace in den. Full basement. BARGAIN. LOW *40's.
A LITTLE PAINT & POLISH IS ALL this house needs...Cottage home with 9 rooms. Good in
vestment property. ONLY t20.000.00
SPREAD OUT! Large Colonial rancher, 4 l№drooms, fireplace in den. Fuil basement. Under <60,000.00. Adjoining acreage available.CORNER LOT perfect for mobile home. Septic tank & water. Call for details.
BUYING OR SELLING?? CALL OUR OFFICE
.TODAY AND TALK WITH ONE OF OUR
QUALIFIED REPRESENTATIVES. WE'RE THE
.NEIGHBORHOOD PROFESSIONAL. 786-4777 or 766-0114.
Jane Boyer 766-6944
Rosalie Hart
723-6284Carolyn Johnson 766-4777 Joyce Wurgley 768-2596
Office
766-9114
J.K. MUler 766-6063
Samle Parks 919-961-6694
John Bailey
766-8324 Jo Mackintosh 766-6936 Linda Pegram 768-1899
Laiew-Wood-Johnson, Inc.
mUeALIOR
The most unique residential property ever offered in Mocksville! Pre-Civil War brick home on 13.8 acres in quiet residential section of Mocksville. In original, untouched con
dition awaiting restoration. Large trees and boxwoods, privacy and a highly desirable example of early 19th Century Piedmont North Carolina architecture with an in
teresting historical background. This
property has been nominated for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places.
Hickory Hill Nice lot on Pinevalley Rd. Priced at $6,950.
Cooleemee
Two story commercial building. 98 x 48.
Only »20,000.00.
Jack BooeRd.(off Hwy 601 North) • Small acreage tracts available.
Southwood Arres We are selling agents for the lots in Southwood
Acres, behind Davie County High School. Several lots available to fit almost any style house. Let us show you today.
Highway 601 North and Fostall Or.7 lots for sale, 6.8 miles north of Interstate 40.
Call today for details.
CALL OR SEE
DonWood-HughLarew
Office 634-5933
Living Room and family room. Oil circulator. Nice lot with garden space. Good in-town residential location. Priced to sell.
HUWARD STREBT-Three bedrooms. I Mi baths. I Large well-equipped kitchen and dining. Spacious * living room. Separate utilitv and carport. All electric. Very good loan available.
HOWAN COUNTY-Don’t miss this one! Three bedrooms, 2 full baths. Extra large family room. , Very nice kitchen with range included. Central air.. This lovely home is situated on 4'4 acres enhanced by complete orchard of apple, Ыит, peach and
Pear trees. Also grape vines. Five miles from , 'iber. •
NORTH MAIN STREET- 3 bedroom frame bome- Perfect for remodeling. Very nice family neighborhood. Approximately I'/i acres included in lot. ( Convenient to shopping. Priced to sell.
101»% FINANCING-3 bedroom brick veneer baths. Large kitchen-dining. Livlngroom. City water & sewer. ALL electric. No money down, if you qualify.
HOLIDAY ACRES-Loveiy 3 bedroom brick rancher with central air. Aii electric. Over 1400 sq. feet of heated area plus garage and patio. Very euiet location. Nice lot. Home in extra good condition with many conveni»”'*»*’TOT STREET-5 year old brick rancher In excellent
WHITMEV r o a d - Fireplace and sundeck only two of manv features in this 3 bedroom brick rancher with full basement. Large kitchen-dining. Living ( room. I'/i baths. Neat, clean, and well-decorated. Pricedjyithin your budget.
RIDGEMONT - Three bedroom all-electric home nicely decorated. Carpeted. Includes I '/ i baths, t living room, kitchen-dining area. Very convenient location for family living. Priced to sell. Call today.
HWY 64 WEST-Brici' 3 bedrooms, large
^ kitchen-dining. Like ">(• Financing- Call
CRAFTWOOD - No down payment if you qualify. Three bedrooms, living room capreted, kitchen,I dining con^nation. Full basement. All electric. Nice lot. Priced to sell.
CRAFTWOOD - AH electric 3 bedroom brick home. Carpeted. Large kitchen with range. Full I basement with drive in door, extra nice quiet lot on dead end street. No down payment to qulaifled purchaser.
(SPLIT LEVEL-Over 1500 sq. feet heated area. Also
^ a ir conditioned. 3 bedrooms, living room, large kitchenand dining area, IM: baths, utility. Lower level finished nicely with fireplace. Aii electric. (Large lot. Priced to sell quickly.
SOUTH MAIN STREET-3 Bedroo^', living, dining- kitchen, large utilitv ••¿¿^iтB^C?eгfect starter or retirement ho oNO£R-«^eneer. Almost new. Very good conditioii. Excellent loan available.
RIDGEMONT - off Milling Road. Very good buy in 3 bedroom, all electric home. Livii№-dining I combination. Kitchen with storage room. Carport. Call today. No down payment if you qualify.
CRAFTWOOD - Three bedrooms with 1% bathrooms. All electric. Nice garden spot, extra -large lot. Price to selb*CRAFTWOOD - New exterior painting Job really puts the finishing touch on this home. Three bedrooms, I'/i bathrooms, nice laundry area. ’Extra large dining,'Nice. Good Price.
DEADMAN ROAD - 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, and living room or 2 bedrooms with den. Just iremodeled. Priced to sell.
cher. Very roomy w“’ X<i den area with ( fireplace for winte'' t .*rK V J:x tra nice corner Hot. Other featurO Q ^vV - /^ baths, kitchen with
__ yt_______________location. Nice neighborhood. Extra clean and neat 3 , iai fan porlovely features. Must see this one.
______________IgL___________________________bedroom home. 2Tull baths, large living and dinii
"':ry . ‘ .............................wasner. Large utility. Car]Vei
ing.Ish-roomy kitchen and fanfitly rbotii with disE irt. All electric. Many
MILLING ROAD • Lovely 3 >>:droom brick Ran- y w“’
dishwasher, in s i^ ^ ^ ity rMm, extra outsidestorage. Priced to suit your budget. Convenient i , location for aU your family needs.
^SOUTHWOOD ACRES - Nice large comer lot, deeply wooded. Good residential section. City water. County taxes only.HICKORY HILL - Spacious building site
overlooking cove in exclusive residential area next to country club. Over 250 ft. road frontage with plenty of trees.
i625 CHERRY ST.-3 bedroom brick rancher on nice
good condition. Pecan trees.
quiet neighborhood street in walking distance of topping, churches, and school. 0ver_1200 sq. feet heated area. Very good condi ', Reasonably priced. Call today.
IN-TOWN LOCATION-Older 4 bedroom home. Priced to sell. Perfect for someone to do own remodeling. 2 story frame. CaU us today.
HWV 601 SOUTH - Call today for commercial land and buildings immediately available. Call today ^ about business property now available near MocksvUle.
MILLING ROAD - ExceUent lot with 3 bedrooms, 2 Baths, central air. Fully carpeted large den with fireplace. Extra nice kitchen. Sun deck. ' t utility. CaU us today.
GARDEN VALLEY - Lovely c
Large
level home in prestigous location. Over 3,00d heated isq. ft. of living area including living room and "^family room - both with fireplaces. Built-in custom features in dining room and Kitchen. Four spacious bedrooms with extra storage all through this home. .Three complete baths, laundry room plus work "room for m a ^ projects. Large playroom off private patio. Central air. BcautiniUy landscaped. Many other features. Must see todayl
ICRAFTWOOD-Loveiy 3 bedroom brick rancher. All electric. Convenient location. FuU basement. Patio, No down payment if you qualify.
»CRAFTWOOD-AIR CONDITIONED-3 bedroom Brick Rancher. Baths. Large KitchenKlining. Carport utility. Range, refrigerator, washer-dryer included. No down payment If you qualify.
FOR LEASE
dining room, coiy den with nreplace, kitchen with I built-Tns, fuil basement with finished playroom,I hobby room and shop-utUity. Screened porch. Redwood deck. Grill, Two-car carport Central air. Fully carpeted. Acre lot. I
LAND
Lake lots now available at High Rock. Cali today.
^ “rfect Pi?*ci>nstf5i?tVi[!!' residential sectionreneci tor construction site of dream home.
I Julia C. Howard Office - 634-3538 Home - 634-3754
Myrtle Oriraes Oflice - 634-3538 Home - 634-5797
1^
iff:«!,« I»
Ann F. Wands Office - 634-3538 Home - 634-3229
Charlie Brown Office - 634-3538 Home - 634-5230
C.C. Chapman Office - &4-3538 Home - 634-2534
H Q M E F I N D E H
M U LT IP LE LIS T IN G S ER V IC E
CRAFTWOOD-New Ranchers & Sj baths and wa avaUable.
g S
D-New homes of different designs.^lit Levels from 1150 to 1620 sq. ft. mth 2 to wall carpet. Larse lots. Financing
IDGEMONT-New homes with 3 B.R., IVi Baths, ;e Lots. 100 percent Financing lown payment to qualified buyer.arport. Lari Available. No
Utility
SHEFFIELD Tij^nER CONTRACTRancher, full basement.RAINBOW ftD.-Verv •;SpirT’4 Bath BrickRancher, L.R., lUNDER CONTRAi^iement. Central air.
601 NORTH- 2B.R., 1 Bath 12x60 Greenwood mobile home, like new only 4 yrs. old. On lot 150x200, has county water.
TOT STREET- 3 B.R.. 2 Baths. L.R., Dr., 2rooms, central air. ___________________________
LAKE NORMAN-(-Beaii№ul lake front house & lot. House has 3,800 sq. ft. heated area, 5 B.R. 3 fuU baths. Built-in stove, dishwasher, compactor & disposal. Formal D.R. Exterior Spruce Pine & Stone, rter & boat Щ interest with neighbor.GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES-Beautiful 3 B.R., L.R,, den w-fpl., full basement, carport and large storage area. Approx. 1 acre beautifully landscaped.
UNION GROVE - 2 bedroom home with good size
lot, large outside garage, good location. Only $i;t,o(w.
MORSE STREET - Beautiful 3BR brick home with full basement.
NEAR ADVdnDER CONTRAViioile home on lot.
^ rancher. L.R.. D .R .. Kit, Comb., Brk, area, utility room and patio ...^..........
LAKE NORMAN-New home on water front, deeded lot. 3 B.R. V/г Baths. FuU basement, wiU lease or sell. COOLEEMEE-2 B.K. 1 Bath home with oil heat. Uniy
T O T S TR EET
RIDGEM0NT-4B.R., dining area.1 Bath home.dining ;
CHURCH ST.’ (CONTRACT ne lust recently remodelled, llJ^L»i;'h^^.uornood.EDGEWOOD CTlRCLE-BeauOfiiJ B.R., 2% Bath custom built homo • w-fpl. & built-in
bookshelves,lJi<Dti»V..V, ijiiiity rm., garage, central air. AU on a wooded corner lot.
WILL BOOE RD.-4 B.R. Double Wide Mobile home w- fpi. & electric heat, completely furnished, beautifully decorated, large lot with chain link fence around .. exceUent buy
IGHTS-4 B.R. 2 Bath 1101116, 2 car garage. . G. Madison.fnCKORY HILLS-3 B.R. 2 bath split level; L.R. w-fpl., ull basement, plavrnom ur.fni mot... «v- HOMES WITH ACREAGE
LAKEWOOD VILLAGE-Owner must sell- Relocating-very nice 3 B.R., 1 Bath home on corner lot. New roof, carpeted, newly painted. Loan assumable!MOUNTAIN RD.-Rowan County-2.4 acres of land covered in hardwood trees. 93,000.
BEAR CREEK CHURCH RD.-Beautiful 3 B.R. 2 Bath Spllt-Foyer on 24 acre« R. Comb., Den,full basement \JNDER iirei Call for appoimment.
CHERRY HILL RD.-Off 801-3 B.R. biick home, large barn & numerous outbuildings with 8 acres of land. Local tel. to W-S.SANFORD AVE.- 2B.R. 1 Bath home on 1.26 acres,
M rNORTHTEAR WILI.IA'* irT W IE - Very nice 3 B.R., 2 Bath CONTRAii‘.and, large amountof road froniVJ^.Vii« u.K.-Den comb., utility room, garage w-elec. eve. out bldg. 36x20.CORNATZER RD- 2 J? “upc'Dith home on 5.2 acres of and. one B.R. hasPElJ'J^fi., Den w-fpl. FARMINGTON-New 3 B.R., 2 Bath home built to sell. L.R.. Den w-fpl., heat pump, central air. 1 Acre.
DANIELS RD.-Very nice 3 B.R. Bath brick veneer home on 2.77 acres of land. L.R. Den, large kitchen, :arage.LDVANCE-Beautiful 5 fi.R., 3 ^ Bath home on 35 acres of land. L.R., Den & Master B.R. w-fpl. FuU basement w-fpl. & playroom. House has 4,175 sq. ft. living area. 5,000 sq. ft. bam, 4,000 sq. ft. utUity bldg. plus 2 other bidgs.
CANA ROAD- 3B.R. 2 full bath Brick rancher with attached garage. Also 24x30 workshop and approx. 1^ acres of land. Has added Central Air S ^ ^ W ^ M S iC O M M E R i^ A L
601 SOUTH-18 acres of good business property for sale or lease.601 NORTH- Business lot 150x300, ideal location near I-
40. City water and sewer.DEPOT STREET-Good business lot ' «1x368.1-40 & 64 INTERSECTION-Uood busmess location. Grocery & service station with approximately $2,500 worth of stock, 3 gas tanks, private bathroom inside, complete kitchen, & one bedroom. Nine- tenths acre lot.FOR RENT-Commercial property building & paved parking lot. Just outside MocksviUe city limits.
FARMS AND L A N D i i » « ^ i S W NEAR I-40-Acreagc tracts - rour acre tracts; two 14 acre tracts; one 13 acre and one 5 acre tract.
47.13 ACRES ON 601-1 mile north of 1-40.199.000.Farmington, liesTwenty-five acres north of ta n beautifully and can be sub-divided. iOODiiON ROAD-27 Acres Owner wlU 601 N O R T H
residíDAVI
N. MaIn' sT.' % cr"bu¥ding lot with .'•iady-made
HWy !*NO. m IeAST- 46 Acres of pasture and woodland
FOSTE^VD*!-99"*acre farm with livable house. Approx. 60 acres cleared balance wooded. Approx. 2,000
h.^aved road frontage.
INTERSECTION 601 & 801-50 acres of land with house & service station or can be bought as foUows; house & service station w-2 acres of land; house & service station with 10 acres of land; 40 acres of land (excluding house and service station); 1 acre lot next to end on 801 or 601 w-175’ frontage.ALONG 1-40-130 acres, 65 acres on either side of 1-40 between Hwy. No. 601 & 64. Ideal for industrial or idential.""liTACADEMY RD.-75-88 acres of land, approx. >/4 cleared balance in timber. An old house could be restored.FOSTALL DRIVE-Off 601 NorUi, Lot 100x263. HEMLOCK STREET-1.6 acres witii 220 ft. frontage on S. RaUway. N. MocksviUe-Good building sites & smaU acreage tracts at the end of Rd. 1479.YADKIN COUNTV-2.193 acres, '/4 acre good bottom land and good building site in ^ove of hardwood trees.
NEAR ADVANCE-Approx. 15 acres left at »1,650 per
acre.COUNTY LINE ROAD-221 acres with p ay ^ road through property. 83 acres in one tract with lake. Can be sold separately. $850.00 per acre.601 SOUTH-77.75 Acres with 2 houses on ,Some of the land reset in pines, some in ciutivation.
OFF 801 NEAR FAR.MINGTON - Lot No. 3 Stimson Park. $4,500.DANIELS ROAD - Approx. 7 acres barn and half lake.DANIELS ROAD - 10 to 15 acre tracts. $1500 per acre.
1-40 & 64
INTlRStCJION
1816 WHITNEY
ROAD
223 RIDGEMONT
WE BUY
EQUITIES
M is
I NFORMATION
Martlia EdwurJii Phone 634-2244 Graham МаШюп Phone 634-5176Г. D. 1 lowers Phone 492-776
Sue Honeycutt Phone 704-539-)973 r.ugene Bennett ’hone 9984727 iam Howell 'hone 634-5424
Insuran.-e Ocpt: Darrell l-dwards/Phone 634-3889
BRANTLEY REALTY &
V i s :
MORSE STREET
INSURANCE CO.. INC.
■503 Avon .Slieel
Murlvsville. NC
IMIONK: Ь34 2105
725-9291
i :b ü a v iu COUNT' lnii k i’k iííL к :л о .чь IHURSDAV, si:i'Ti;m b i:r м . nir.s
Administrator's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTYHaving qualified as Administrator of the estate of Lucy Inci Riddle Parks,
deceased, late of Davie
County, Ihis is lo notify all persons having claims against said estate lo present them to the undersigned on or
before the 24th day of
February, 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recoverh. All persons indebted lo said estate will
please make immediate
payment (o the undersigned.
This the 18th day of August,
1978.Lester M. Parks, Administrator of the estate of
Lucy Inez Riddle Parks,
deceased.
8-24 4tn
NOTICE OF SERVICE
OF PROCESS BY
PUBLICATION IN THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE DISTRICT COURT
DIVISION
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY ----
NOTICE
PAMELA C. LASH,-
PlalnUff
-vs-TERRY E. LASH, Defendant
Public Notices Two Found Guilty In Tennis Court Brawl
TO; TERRY E. LASH Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the
relief being sought is as follows; diverse from bed and
\f board, custody of the two monor children born of the marriage, child support, attorneys fees.You are required to make
defense to such pleading not
later than October 10,1978 and upon your failure to do so against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.This the 24th day of August, 1978.
Wade H. Leonard, Jr. Attorney for Plaintiff 21 Court Square Mocksville, North Carolina 27028 Phone No.; 704-634-5020
8-31 3tnp
IN THE GENERAL
COURT OF JUSTICE
SUPERIOR COURT
DIVISION
FILE NO. 78 CVS 382
STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA
COUNTY OF ROWAN
lURRY DULL,Plaintiff
v.
MARY BURROW BENSON andWALTER LAWRENCE LANNING,Defendants
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS BY
PUBLICATION
TO; MARY BURROW
BENSON, TAKE NOTICE;That a verified pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in the aboveentitled action. The nature of
the relief being sought is as
follows;Damages sustained in an automobile collision caused by your negligence on July 1,
1978.You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than the 16th day of , October, 1978, and upon your failure to do so, the party
seeking relief against you will
apply to the Court for the
relief sought.This the 2Sth day of August, 1978.
SOMERS & EAGLE
Kenneth L. Eagle Attorney for the Plaintiff P.O. Box 4095 113 West Council Street Salisbury, North Carolina
28144Telephone; 704 636-7931
8-29-3tn
Administrator’s NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Dessie Hodgson Whitaker, deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all
persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the undersigned on or before Ihe 3lst day of February. 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of Iheir
recovery. All persons indebted to said eülale will pleaiiL' make iiiiinediate
payment to Ihe undersigned.
This Ihe 31st day of August,
1978.William E. Hall, Administrator of the estate of Dessie Hodgson Whitaker,
deceased.
Hall and Vogler Attorneys at Law Mocksville. N.C.
8-31 4tn
Executor’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of Bertha D. Jones, deceased, late pf Davie County, this is to notify all persons having
claims against said estate lo
present them to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of March 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment lo the undersigned.This Ihe 13th day of September, 1978 Vernon Du 1,
Executor of the estate of Bertha D. Jones deceased.
John T. Brock, Attorney
P.O. Box 241
Mocksville, N.C. 27028
9-14-4tn
NOTICE OF SALE
OF REAL PROPERTY
The Davie County Board of Education having determined at its August 7,1978 regularly scheduled meeting that the
following property located in
Davie County is unnecessary for public school purposes, voted lo sell and will sell on October 14,1978 lo Ihe highest
bidder for cash, the following
described property, subject to
upset bid, with the requirement that the successful bidder deposit ten percent of the purchase price and further subject lo ap
proval by the Davie County
Board of Education, viz;A brick veneer house containing approximately 1,900 square feet located on Lt. No. 1, Block F., Section III, of the Subdivision of-
Southwood Acres, Addition III
as recorded in Plat Book 4,
page 141, Davie County
Registry, to which reference is made for a more particular
description.The above land is subject to a certain restrictive convenants which run with the
land as appear and are fully
set forth in Book 92, page 315,
Davie County Registry.
This property will be available for inspection on Oct. 14 1978 from 10;00 a.m. until 12;00 o’clock noon.By order of the Board, Ihis
Ihe llth day of September,
1978.Wade H. Leonard, Jr.School Board Attorney
Place of Sale ; On premises. Hickory Street, Southwood Acres, Mocksville, North Carolina Time of Sale; 12;00 o’clock
noon, October 14, 1978.
9-14-4tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
CHANGE IN GARBAGE
PICKUPTO WHOM IT MAY CON
GER;Effective September 25,
1978 the following will have garbage pickup on Friday
instead of Monday; Area of North Main Street Past
Milling Road Towards Winston. Carolina Street, Milling Road, Lakecrest
Drive, Sunset Drive, Greenwood Avenue.Town of Mocksville
9-14-2tn
Administralirix NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administratrix of Ihe estate of
Velma Dalton While,
deceased, late of Davic County, this is lo notify all persons having claims against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or before the 24th day of Feb. 1979, or Ihis notice will be
pleaded in bar of Iheir
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 18th day of Aug.,
1978 Dorothy Graham, Administratrix of Ihe estate of Velma Dalton While deceased.
Martin & Van Hoy, Attys.
8-24-4tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
CHANGE IN GARBAGE PICKUP
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
CERN;
The portion of YadkinviUe
Road, Circle Drive and
Country Lane, which now have garbage pickup on Monday will be changed to Tuesday, effective September
25, 1978.
Town of Mocksville
9-14-2tn
Administratrix’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministratrix of the estate of Timothy Wayne Fishel, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or before the 3lst day of February 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of Iheir recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 31sl day of August,
197«.
Blanche H. Fishel, Administratrix of the estate of - Timothy Wayne Fishel, deceased.
William E. Hall Hall and Vogler Attorneys at Law Mocksville, N.C. 27028
8-31 4tn
NOTICE OF AD
VERTISEMENT
The Town of Mocksville will open bids on October 3,1978 at 7:00p.m. in the Town Hall for
1979 POLICE CAR specifications can be obtained from the Town Hall. The
Town reserves the right to
accept or reject any or all bids.
Catherine C. Collins
Town Clerk
9-14-ltn
PUBLIC NOTICE CHANGE IN GARBAGE PICKUPTO WHOM IT MAY CON- CER;Effective September 25,
1978 the following will have
garbage pickup on Tuesday
instead of Friday,; Mumford
Drive, Garner Street, Sofley
Avenue, Edison Street, Naylor Street, Church Street Extension Town of Mocksville
Executrix’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of George H.C, Shutt, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is lo
notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them lo the un
dersigned on OC before the 7th
day of March 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment lo the undersigned. This the 7th day of September, 1978 Virginia P, Shutt, Exectrix of the estate
of George H.C. Shutt
deceased.
9-7-4tn
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
IN THE GENERAL COURT
OF JUSTICE
DISTRICT COURT DIVISION ’/B- CVD 134 WAYNE E. STROUD Plaintiffvs
SANDRA M. STROUD
Defendant
NOTICE OF SERVICE OF PROCESS
BY PUBLICATION TO: SANDRA M. STROUD,
the above named defendant.
Take notice that a pleading
seeking relief against you has been filed in the above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought is as follows: absolute divorce.You are required to make defense to such pleading not
later than Ihe 25th' day of
September, 1978, said date being 40 days from the first
publication of this notice, or from Ihe date compaint is required to be filed,
whichever is later; and upon
your failure to do so the oarly
seeking service against you will apply to the court for relief sought.
This the 28 day of Aug.1978.
WAYNE E. STROL'D HENRY P. VAN HOY,ir
Attorney for plaintiff
P.O. Box 606 Mocksville, N.C. 27028 Phone: (704 ) 634-2171
8-28-3tn
Executor's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
executor of the estate of Mertie McBride, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons having
claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or iiefore the 14 day of March 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate
payment lo the undersigned.
• This the 14th day of Sep
tember 1978 Ray McBride, Executor of the estate of
Mertie McBride deceased.John T. Brock, Attorney
9-14-41П
9-14-21П
*Burglar *Fire ' Hold-up Systemsi
Residential i iai• Commercii
jr «
*Free Estimates Щ * Brand Ni
lOYeaKJîOBE ‘Èxpeiienci p .o . Box 303
MOCKSVILLE, N.C. 27028
:«ms
IBRANKOCK
u s m ^ m
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
BEFORE THE BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS FOR THE
FOLLOWING ZONING
AMENDMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to Ihe requirements of Article 20-B of Chapter 153 of the General
Status of North Carolina and Section 20 of the Davie County Zoning Ordinance that the Board of County Commissioners of Davie County
will hold a public hearing at
the Davie County Courthouse,
Mocksville, NC on Monday, October 2, 1978 at 1:00 p.m. The following proposed zoning amendment of Ihe official
zoning ordinance of Davie
County will be considered;
(a) The Davie County Planning Board has submitted a request lo amend the
Davie County Zoning Or
dinance by adding “airports"
lo the list of permitted uses found in Section 80.2 of this ordinance. Section 80.2 of the Davie County Zoning Or
dinance would read as follows
if this proposed amendment is approved;Section 80.2 Conditional Uses. The following uses shall
be permitted subject to a
finding by the Board of Ad
justment that the additional
conditions listed will be met: Landfills, provided that all public health regulations are fulfilled and maintained.
Airports, private parks,
playgrounds, clubs and
lodges, golf courses, swimming pools, fishing lakes, family camp grounds, drag strips, raceways, and similar recreation uses subject to a
finding by the Board of Ad
justment that such proposed
uses will not create a public
nuisance or be detrimental to
the public welfare.
All parties and interested citizens are invited to attend said public hearing at which time they shall have an op
portunity to l)e heard in favor
of or in opposition to the
foregoing proposed change. Prior to the hearing, all persons interested may obtain any additional information on
these proposals which are in
the possession of the Davie
County Zoning Enforcement
Officer by inquiring at my office in the Courthouse in Mocksville, NC on weekdays between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at 634-3340.
Jesse A. Boyce, Jr. Davie County Zoning Officer
9-14-2ln
Administrator’s NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Mabel M.Dull, deceased, late of Davie County this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 7th day of March, 1979, or this,
notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 7th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Wade Gerry
Dull, Administrator of the estate of Mabel M. Dull deceased.
William E. Hall Hall and Vogler Attorneys at Law
P,0. Box 294 Mocksville, N.C. 27028
Two men were found quilty
Monday in Davie County
District Court of assault wilh a deadly weapon in connection with a brawl that occurred at the Cooleemee tennis courts late last month.
Wayne Shanks and Mike White, both of Cooleemee, were given 6-monlh terms, suspended for three years after being found guilty of the
Juveniles Are Charged
With Stealing Car
Two juveniles, ages 13 and
15, have been charged wilh stealing an automobile and breaking and enterring.The two youlhs, one a resident of Cooleemee and the other of Rt, 1 Woodleaf, are
charged with stealing an
automobile from Godbey’s Garage, located on NC, 801 in Rowan County just across the county line, last Thursday
nighl. The vehicle, a 1968 Buick Eleclra, was wrecked about 12:39 a.m. Friday morning on NC 601 South at Ihe Second Creek bridge.
The 15-year-old lad was
picked up at his home later Friday morning and admitted stealing the car. The 13-year- old was picked up on the Needmore Road in Rowan
County with the assistance of
Rowan County deputies.Deputy Junior Mauldin investigated.
Vehicles Collide
A traffic accident occurred j Monday, September 11, at ¡ 12:09 p.m., on Salisbury I Street in Mocksville involving a ‘74 Volkswagen driven by
Brenda Hendrick Creason, 25,
of Rt. 7, Mocksville and a ‘76 Ford driven by Darrell Eugene Edwards, 29, of Rt. 1, Mocksville.
According to the accident report filed by officer R. S. Hupp of the Mocksville Police Department, the Creason vehicle was traveling on Salisbury when the Edwards
vehicle pulled out of a parking lot and struck Ihe Creason car.No injuries occurred in the accident and no charges were filed.
Damage to the Volkswagen
was $75 and damage to the Ford was $25.
charges. They were also ijotn placed on proiiation for one year.Two other men involved in
the Incident, Tom Shore and
Monte Blackwood, both of
Cooleemee, were found not guilty of assault with a deadly weapon in connection wilh the incident.
According lo previously reports, Blackwood and friends were playing tennis at Ihe tennis courts in the early
evening of August 22 when a
carload of ten persons drove up and wanted Ihe courts tn play basketball.Supposedly, an argument
and fight then resulted among
the persons involved.At approximately 8:20 p.m. that evening Blackwood appeared at Ihe Davie County
Jail to take out warrants because of the incident. While at the jail he collapsed and was taken by ambulance to Ihe Davie County Hospital
where he was admitted and
spent several days for treatment of injuries.One warrant taken out by Blackwood and Rick Whitley
of Cooleemee charged Shanks
with assault with a deadly
weapon. The warrant
charged that Shanks hit Blackwood with a metal tennis racket about the head and body and that Shanks also -hit-Blackwood about the head
and body with his fists.Another warrant taken out
by Blackwood and Whitley
charged While with assault
with a deadly weapon by
striking Blackwood about the head nnd body with a metal
tennis racket and hitting him
about the head and body with
his fists.Shore had been charged by Shanks with assault with a deadly weapon in connection
with Ihe incident at the tennis
courts. Shanks had charged Shore wilh hitting him on the right arm wilh a car jack.
Woman Given Attorney
In Vandalism Charge
The case of a 30-year-old
East Spencer woman,
charged with four incidents of vandalism in the Cooleemee Shopping Center, was con
tinued in Davie District Court on Monday to September 18th,
An attorney was appointed by the court lo represent Brenda Hall Pierce of East Spencer. She was arrested about 4 a.m., Sunday, Sep
tember 3, and charged with
littering and damage to personal property,Ms, Pierce was charged wilh littering in the
Cooleemee Shopping Center
by turning over a trash can;
damage to personal property in breaking the glass in the door of the J , N Variety Store, damage estimated at $75; breaking glass in Libby’s
Fashion Shop, damage
estimated at ^275; breaking.....
the fiourescent light at the Cooleemee Sunoco Station, damage estimated at $20,Deputy Junior Maulding was the arresting officer.
'ЯМК^ У в »: ужежк >s»r
Revival
Some people once believed that mountains were formed by an enormous underground serpent moving about.
Will Begin Fall Revival Services
Sundau Sept. 17 Thtti
Saturdau Sept. 23.
There will be gospel pr^ching
and special singing nightly
i beginning at 7:30.
I The Rev.RauWaddeUof
^Pleasant View Baptist Church in
i Rhonda, N. C. will he the
visiting evangelist.
W illiam Hutchins Pastor
I bsolute AUCnoi?
S A T . S E P T . 1 6 th . 1 0 :0 0 A .M .
MR. J. FRANK WYATT ESTATE
CONDUCTED FOR BILLY G. & VIRGIL L. WYATT, CO-EXECUTORS
DIRECTIONS; From MocksviUe, N. C. go Hwy. 64 feast Approximately
5 Miles, Tum Left on NO CREEK CHURCH ROAD and Continue For
Approximately 2 Miles to SALE. Look For Auction Signs.
S A T U R D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 1 6 , 1 9 7 8
1 0 K K ) A . M .
Brushy Mountain Enterprises, Inc.
(LOCATION; 3.4 Mites North on R t 16) TayloBtille, H .a
AUTOMATIC SAWMILL- LOGGING EQUIPMENT -TRUCKS AND TRAILERS
FRICK 3 BLOCK CARRAGE
FULGHUM ROSSER DEBARKER BERRY FEED WORKS
BUSBY 8" GANG SAW
TYLER 4 SAW EDGER
FULGHUM 58" CHIPPER
FULGHUM 36" CHIPPER
NEWMAN CIRCLE RE SAW 3 COMPRESSORS
100,000 # FAIRBANKS MORSE SCALES
DEPENDABLE KNIFE GRINDER
FULGHUM SCREEN t COLLECTOR
WELDER • GRINDERS• TOOLS
100 CHAIN SAWS • STEEL TROUGHS
LARGE ELECTRIC MOTORS
440V STARTER CONTROLS
1978 PRENTICE 210 KNUCKLE LOADER BOOM1977 C-6-D TREE FARMER SKIDDERS
1976 S40B AC ARTICULATE LOADERS
1973 C-90 CHEVROLET LOG TRUCK W/318
1973 4200 TRANSTAR TWIN SCREW197J FRUEHAUF 40’ FLAT
1975 C-250 SCOTTSDALE (4WHEEL ORIVE)
5-EXCELLENT 40' CHIP VANS1967 C-70 CHEVROLET LOG TRUCK W/OETROL
10,000 FULGHUM BT FORKLIFT
1949 WILLYS JEEP
1973 FORD F100 PICK-UPHYDRO-SLASHER BUCK SAW
TRUCK TIRES AND RIMSPORTABLE WELDER W/TRAILER
2 • 4,000 GALLON FUEL TANKS
C O N T A a : K I N G C O L E
N .C . A U C T IO N U C EN S E N O . 363 7 0 4 ^ 3 2 - 9 5 7 7
ITEMS FOR SALE INCLUDE
Q. E. Upright Freezer Shelving
Frigidare Cook Stove Old Oak Dresser
G. E. Wash. Dryer Comb,Old Oak Chest of Drawers
Hut point Ref rig.Old 9ak Center Table
Small Dlnnette Set (Almost New) Oak Bed
(2) Uphol. Swivel Rockers Old End Table
Uphol. Chair Oak Night SUnd
Sofa Oil Lamp
Old Straight Back Chair Gun Rack
Old Rocker Floor Lamp
Pecan Table Pictures & Frames
Maple Drop Leaf Table Si Chairs Dishes & Kitchen Ware
End Table Hand Tools
Elec. Sewing Machine (Console)Window Fans
Nice Oak Church Bench 5000 Window Air Cond.
Maple Desk Fruit Jars
Maple Bed Room Suit New Yard Sweeper
Woven Basket Approx. 30 Gal. Paint
Flat Irons 2 Bench Vises
Quilt Frames Elec. Drills
Wood Clamps Tobacco Setter
Shoe Last (2) Hand Planters
(2) Lawn Mowers (Push)(2) Old Com Shellers
8 H. P. Elec. Start Mower Old Wood Ice Box
16 Ft. Alum. Ladder Scythe b Cradle
Misc. Yard St Garden Tools Horse Hames
Canvas Top for Tractor B & D Trimmer
Elec. Grinder Dbl. Wash Tub & Stand
Tool Boxes Radios
Oil Heater Pressure Cooker
Dog Cages & House Several Old Chairs
Wheelbarrow Cane Back Sola 6 Chairs
22Cal. Rifle Stevens 410 Ga. Shotgun
Expert 12 Ga. Shotgun Stevens 12 Ca. Shotgun
Many Other Items
TERMS: CASH OR 6000 CHECK DAV OF SALE
SALE|CONOUCTEDBY
JIM SH EEK AUCTIONEER
LlBMMtd Md B on M NCAL No. tM
UteekNlllt.N«.
NOT RCSPONSiBU IN CASE OF iNiURV OR LOSS OF ANV TYPE Л
DAVII: COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 14, 1478 IJB
AN IM ALS
Pets & Livestock
FOR SALE...AKC Registered
miniature Schnauzer pups. Nine weeks old. Champion bloodline. Call: 492-5571.
9-7“-atnpD
Puppies to give away--8 males, 3 females, doberman & boxer mixed breed, 6 weeics
old. Cali Sherry Glass-284- 2467, Cooleemee after 5 p.m.
»-14-2tnG
EM P LO YM EN T
Help Wanted
THERE IS AN OPENING FOR... Short Order Cooks for
1st and 2nd shifts. Experience
required. Apply in person anyday between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. at Sam’s Country Kit
chen, Int. 601 and Hwy. 1-40.
7-27-tfn S
EiiRN Extra income by
wearing and selling Sarah Coventry Jewelry. FREE Training. Transportation
necessary. Call; 998-4925 or
998-4832.
8-10-UnH
DEALER OP- PORTUNITY-.Major line of
quality steel buildings; farm,
commercial and industrial.
Rewarding opportunity for qualified person. Call or write Jewell Building Systems, Inc., P.O. Box 397, Dallas,
N.C. 28034.
8-31 3tpJ
WANTED: A baby sitter for a . Syearold, tostay inhomeand
do light house work from 7:30
a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Located 5 miles out on Lexington high
way. CaU: 998-5540 after 6
p.m.
9-14 tnfP
SCH OOL BUS D R IV E R S
NEEDED...Pinebrook School
district. For further in-
iormation call: 998-3868 or
!HI8-:i50(l.
9-14 2tnpP
HELP WANTED: Real
Estate Salespersons needed
Immediately! ...Formal
Training Program ...National Referral Service ...Excellent O ffice E nvironm ent ...Requires Real Estate Ucense ConUct: Century 21, Boxwood Real Estate at 704-
634-5997.
9-14-tfn B
Situations Wanted
Will keep children in my home for either first or second shifts. Location: Edgewood
Circle. Contact: Janet
Overcash at 284-2092.
9-7 2tnpO
FU R N IT U R E
Commercail
NEW AND USED OFFICE
furniture, fireproof files and
safes. ROWAN OFFICE FURNITURE, 118 N. Main' Street, Salisbury, phone 636-
8022.
tfnR
Home
FOR SALE: Ali types un
finished chairs, stools, of all sizes-upholstered. swivels, deacon benches, all kinds used furniture. Cali W. A.
Ellis at 634-5227.
4-13-tfnE
FOR SALE: Several used and
rebuilt pianos. Will rebuild
and refinish old pianos. Call
9W-8959 after 5:00 p.m.
9-14-4tpC
FOR SALE: 20 Ft. Chest Freezer.. .In Good condition.
Call: 998-4625.
9-l4-UnpF
1 FOR SALE: Drop-in Avocado
stove. Like new. $150.00
Phone 998-J947
9-14-781tnD
Star Spangled
Banner
written
SEPT. 14, IBM
a>H m t OAKi^v, BOfZH INJOHIO IKJ 1060, VVA^ оме OF ТЦЕ WORUp'Ä MOéT ACCURATE í»HOT6 WITH A P\ifTOL. И1Г-THE ПН1М riAiìHÙ САРРAT 9 0 F Í¿ T /th e musical,"AWWlB ÖET youK AeOüTHER UFE* ^ _ -
и и A '
Fe?K СйАСк RíTOu i& éPEC.íAtlé'T 3 рУЕ(г АМеМРЕ-К? OF THE U.t? APMV'é»' MACK^MANí^HíP Tt■A^^,H'HO WOM TWO 6otp AT -WE¿HAMPIO/VJ^MIP OF Twe AMEBICA^ IN MEKlcro 01ТУ /
OFFICE MACHINES
Typewritas
Adding ^'¡achines
Service Ch All Makes
Earle’s
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Dial 636-2341
Salisburv.N.C.
Tha Virginia blue Iswi enact-
•d in 1619 required men to
draw according to their rank.
Ш Ш
WANTED TO BUY
LIVESTOCK
Beef cattle, hogt, vealt, or
feeder cattle. I have an
order for all types of
cattle.
Will pay market price for
your livestock, right on
the farm. Payment In
check or cath, which ever
you perfer.
PROIHIT PICK UP SERVICE
I wiii buy one head or
a whole herd.
Give me a call!!!
FRED 0. ELUSLivestock I Auctionaarlng
Rt. 4, Mock«\iIle, N.r.
634-5227 or 998 8744^Ifelorjjj^^Retldent^^
CLASSIFIED ADS '.‘..that our flag was still there.”
M IS C ELLA N EO U S
FOR S A L E ...C ustom
frames...any size...expert workmanship...over 35 samples on display...see at CAU DELL LU M BER
COMPANY, 1238 Bingham Street, Mocksville, Phone 63<i- 2167.
4-24-tfnC
K ID D IE CAMPUS
PLAYSCHOOL. Daycare and
kindergarten. Daily and weekly rates. Ages 2 and up. Call 634-2266.
6-l-tfnK
MR. VETERAN-No down
payment on homes. Ranch, colonial, contempary, etc. Many sellers pay closing costs. This means your cost is nothing. We will work hard for you. Winston-Salem Homes,
Inc. Call: 634-2431.
8-3 tfn
WANTED: Old Muzzle Loading Rifle with Patchbox. Will pay $1000.01 cash or
more. Call before } ou sell. 1-.
919-576-9451. Or wr te P. 0. Box 528 Troy,N. C. 27371.
8-lOtfnC
Lecithin Kelp' B(>' Cider Vinegar' Now all four in one
capsule, ask for VB6 plus or
VB6plus Double strength,
Davie Discount Drug,
Cooleemee, N.C.
9-14-ltp
FOR SALE: Ceramic greenware. Phone 998-5017.
9-14-ltnG
Water pills and laxatives may
deplete your body’s essential Potassium-ask for К Forte’ at Davie Discount Drug, Colleemee.
9-14Up
PERSO NALS
HICKS
The family of the late Richard Hicks gratefully acknowledges each and every
kindness shown them during
their bereavement. A special thanks to the ambulance attendant and the hospital staff, as well as neighbors and
friends. May God richly bless each of you.
914-ltnpH
ARMSWORTHY The family of the late Boss Rensy Armsworthy express their heartfelt thanks and
appreciation to all who were ■ so helpful to them during the death of their loved one. May God richly bless each of you.Mrs. Irene S. Armsworthy and children
9-14-ItpA
To the Editor:We would like to express our gratitude to the many area merchants and individuals for their in
volvement with Davie Youth
Encounters. They selflessly gave their time, talent, and products, and tried to make the Bluegrass Festival a success.
Foremost, we would like to
thank John Allen for all the work he did in gathering together the bands, all of whom played very good music
and donated their talents.
Doug Fagan and the Davie High School Student Council provided the publicity, worked at the event, and kept our spirits up. All tlie volunteers and the Youth
Encounters kids worked very
hard.Only one vital ingredient for success was missing; a crowd of people.We would like to extend a sincere thank you to the
following people and mer
chants.Miller’s Bar B Que.C’s Bar B Que.U Stop N Grill, Davie Sport Shop, Doug Bales, WDSL, Davie Enterprise, Heffner’s Land of Food,
Cooleemee Supermarket,
Cooleemee Discount House, Mocksville Discount House, Barber’s Grocery, Creason’s Shell, Wagner’s Grocery, The Mocksville Moose Lodge,
Sam’s Country Kitchen, Coca
Cola, Emergency Medical Squad, Davie County Deputies.We especially want to thank the people not affiliated with
the program who approached us about helping when they heard of what we were trying to do.Sincerely,
Lynette Bouchard Denise Jones
"One man’s fault is another
man's lesson." H. G. Bohn
H O P E
B R O T H E R S
B U IL D E R S
Commercial Property Lots
Acreage Tracts -- Homes
Davie-i redell-Forsyth
& Surrounding Counties
BROCK REALTY
Phone (704)872-4111
Or 493-6733
Kessler's
Furniture & Upholstery
(Formetly Ice’s Upholstery)
OPEN DAILY
M on.-Sat.-9 :0 0 -5 :3 0
*Free Estimites
*Flnancing Available
Phone 284-2512
Cooleemee
PR O PER TY
Acreage
FOR SALE...2 acres off 601, 3 miles out of Mocksville. Call: W.A. Ellis, 634-5227. Also a 55 acre farm on Gladstone Rd.
2-9 tfnE
Business
FOR SALE: BUSINESS -- C and W Carpets - Intersection of Depot St. and Highway 64 East. Call Lewis Carter (office) 634-2277 or (home) 998-5334.
5-18-tfnC
Homes
FOR SALE BY OWNER. . 3
bedroom-H4 rancher with full basement, 2.3 acres of land on Bear Creek Church Road. Will help arrange financing.
Call 492-7202.
6-29- tfnB
FOR SALE: 9 room, 2 story home in Cooleemee, 2 baths
with large screened porch and separate upstairs apartment. Located on large shaded corner lot. Convenient to schools, churches, and
shopping center. Phone 284-
2994 or 284-2761.
8-3-tfnK
NO DOWN PAYMENT: 3 and 4 bedroom homes. Call Bill Shoaf at 634-2431 Winston- Salem Homes.
8-3 tfn
FOR SALE BY OWNER-3 bedroom house on Forrest Lane. Price reduced for quick sale. For more information
call: 998-5841.
8-31-tfnB
CREEKWOOD: Beautiful split foyer, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, 1950 sq. ft., 2 car
garage, 1 year old. In ex
cellent condition. $54,000. Call: Bill Shoaf, Winston- Salem Homes at 634-2431.
9-7-tfnWS
Mobile Homes
We buy and sell good used Mobile Homes, Contact: BONANZA MOBILE HOMES, 722 Wilkesboro Street, Mocksville, N.C. Phone: 634- 5959.
10-7-tfnB
FOR SALE ... Double-wide trailer 24 X 50, 3 BR, 2 full baths, extra insulation, storm windows, central air condition, 10 X 20 awning in
cluded. In Excellent con
dition. NO furniture. $10,000. Setting on house movers steel ready to move! Call: 998-8307.
9-14-tfn H
FOR SALE: 10 x 50 Mobile
Home furnished, 2 air con
ditioners, 280gal. oil tank and a 10 x 20 porch. Call: 492-7325.
9-14 tfnH
FOR SALE: 1970 Hyde Park
Mobile Home 12 x 53. Total electric. 2 bedrooms and one bath. In Good condition. Call: 998-5212.
9-14-ltnpK
The first computer, created in
1827, compiled and printed
logarithm tables from 1 to
108,000.
Col. Wanda
M. Myers 9 ^
A U C T IO N E E R -
QxvpieteAicticxi
Sendee
^ NCAL-1328
^ 704-633-1404
Rt. 1 Salisbury, N.C.
Gough Enterprises
Complete Home Service
Large Or Small-We Do It A ll!!!!
25 YEA R S EXPERIENCE
ADDITIONS-REMODELING KITCHENS-BATHS-ETC. .
CABINETS-FURNITURE & REPRODUCTIONS
PH O NE 998-2076
Free Estimates Work Fully Guaranteed
HOME
INSULATION*iS!£gR /
B LO W N IN .
ATTIC S A N D W A U S
CALL DAY OR NIGHT
l'919-769-9736s&s Ъ п
R EN TA LS
Apartments
FOR RENT: Crestview
Apartments, U.S. 64 East. Nice 3 rooms, patio and bath. For adults. Call: 634-5420.
8-31-4 tnpG
Mobile Homes
Trailers and spaces for RENT. Call 493-4386.
11-10-tfnL
PUKT é
I r
is
here
again.
Enter
Now!
Boys and girts, ages 8 to 13,
come to our dealership
through
September 29 to sign up.
Bring your parent or
guardian and, while you're here, pick up a free PP&K Tips Book,
You’ll find tips from the pros that may improve
your skills and your
chances for a trip to the
PP&K finals to be held at
the NFC Championship
game to be played on January 7,1979.
Registration:
through
September 29.
REAVIS FORD
Yadltinville Hwy.
Mocksville, N. C.
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
t C f B O Y I
L IV E S T O C K j
A.L Beck & Son |
Wholesale Meats | Thomasville, N.C. |
lo r 100 COWS I
SALES
COURTNEY ANTIQUE
FLEA MARKET. . .Every
Third Sunday in each month. Located beside of Courtney School, Yndkin County. Next Antique Rea Market is Sun
day, Sept. 17th. Call(9l9) 463- 2521 or 463-5529.
9-14-UpS
2 FAMILY YARD SALE AT THE TOOTS RIDDLE RESIDENCE. . .Friday and
Saturday, September 15th and
16lh from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. On the Yadkin Valley Road. A few antiques, wash basin, some furniture and an antique
frame. .. many more items of interest. Cancelled if raining.
9-14-ltpR
YARD SALE: Seventh Day
Adventist Church on Milling Road in the shelter behind church. Rain or Shine, Thursday, Sept. 14 8:00 to 7:00
and Friday, September 15,
8:00 to 6:00.
9-14-ltpC
YARD SALE...Friday and Saturday, September 15 and 16 from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m. Just off Redland Road. Watch for signs! Toys, clothes, and many misc. items priced to
GO! Rain Date: Saturday,
Sept. 23.
9-14 ItpS
BIG 6 FAMILY YARD .SALE .Saturday Only.. September leth from 8
a.m. until 5 p.m. Highway 801
in Advance beside the Car Wash.
9-14 ItpT
3 FAMILY YARD SALE ...
Saturday, Sept. 16th from 9
a.m. until 6 p.m. Just 9 miles
east of Mocksville on Hwy. 158 at the Baltimore Road. Watch for signs! Plants, ceramics, furniture, bicycle, girls clothes 3T - 4T, playpen, quilts, lamps, odds and ends.
Rain or Shine! Call: 998-4895.
9-14-ltp B
YARD SALE from 9 a.m. until
3 p.m. SAT. ONLY, Sept. 16,
across from Myers Exxon on Highway 158 east of Mocksville. Glassware, household goods, clothes, tools, baby things, lamps,
drapes and other items. Rain or Shine. Watch for signs!
8-14-ltp A
YARD SALE EVERY DAY
AT HANNAH’S Trading Post. Ciood Used Cars and trucks at GOOD prices! 2 miles west of Mocksville Highway 64. Opened from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. Call:634-5735.
9-7-tfn-H
YARD SALE AT RALPH POLK residence on Cemetery Street in Cooleemee, N.C. All day Saturday, Sept. 16th from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. Watch for signs!
from the Star-Spangled Banner
Francis Scott Key
John Staffor(j Smith
SERVICES
Auto
BOB’S AUTO SERVICE...Automatic transmission, radiator and general auto repairs. 10:00 - 8:00 Monday-Friday. 10:00
10:-2:00 Saturday. 998-4005,
Mocks Church Road, Ad-
2-16-tfnB
Carpet Cleaning
Give your old carpet a new
lease on life with the do it yourself steam cleaner o... rinse and vac from DAVIE SUPPLY COMPANY, 634-
2859.
tfnD
Electrical
I -;.jlso. Bulls, Vealt, F«ederi| 9-i4-itpP
2Celves...We Pay Caih For !
I a iI Cattle When Picked Up. I
I Your ■ Locker Beef. ■
! A.LBeck,Ji, !
I Rt.l, Thomasville, N.C.|
I Call Collect Anytime: ■
Winiton-Salem ■
I (919) 788-9008 | ! or 788-7524 m • Phone After 6 P.M. !
fe a M ^ j^ | 9 1 ^ 7 M m j
IL L I AIR WELL DRILLING CO.
Route 9, Box 127 Statesvffle, NC 28677 Phone 872-7614
Advance, NC Phone 99a4141
For fast and efficient service on all electrical needs, large
or small, call Karl Osborne, owner of OSBORNE ELECTRIC COMPANY 634- 3398, 520 East Maple Ave.
5-11-tfnO
Garbage Pick Up
For weekly garbage pick-up
anywhere in Davie County ... call BECK BROTHERS GARBAGE DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284-2917 or 284-
2824, Cooleemee, or County Manager’s Office, Mocksville
6-12-tfnB
Septic Tank
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
SERVICE ... certified to pump septic tanks ... large truck for full time, efficient service ... also rent sanitary
toilets ... call 284-4362, Robert Page, Cooleemee.
4-24-tfnP
Wall Coverings
Old walls need a new face..
See complete selection ol
newest wall coverings at DAVIE SUPPLY COMPANY at 634-2859.
3-25-tfnD
Woodwork
Now Open ... MIKE’S WOOD WORK, we repair broken furniture and take special orders, cabinets, shelfs. dc. Call 998-5040.
V EH IC LES
Automobiles
FOR SALE: 1976 Thunderbird -fully loaded. Must Sell. Call:
634-3607.
8-31 tfnS
FOR SALE ... Deluxe 1975
Rabbit, light Blue, a-c and a.m. and f.m. radio, in Excellent condition. Call:634- 3880 between 8 and 9 a.m. and
10 and 11 p.m.
9-7-tfn-J
FOR SALE: 1965Volkswagen, good mechanical condition and reasonably priced. Call: 284-
4284.
9-14-ltpB
Campers
FOR SALE: Apache’ Fold-out Camper...sleeps 4 to 6. In
Good condition. $250.00. Call: 998-3113.
9-14 ItnpB
Motorcycles
FOR SALE... 1968 Harley-
Davidson Electra - glide, (loaded) $2500., also a 1964 XLCH Sportster $1500. C^all East Bend 699-8891.
12-8-tfnP
9-7-2tnp-H
Tractors
FOR SALE...Super A Farmail with new tires, cultivators, fertilizer distributor, listing disks, pulley, bog harrow, and
turning plows. Needs painting, but in GOOD condition. $2200. Call: 998-8953.
9-14 ItpR
Trucks
FOR SALE ... 1969 Ford
Ton Pick-up, 3 spd., overdrive and air condition. Call: 998-8186.
9-14-4tnp H
Vans
FOR SALE. . .1976 Step-in
Van 12ft. pay load, duel wheels, automatic transmission, power steering and air conditioned. Call: 634- 2675 after 5:00 p.m.
8-17-tfnM
P r i d e M a r k
R o o f i n g C o .
Tear Off - Wood Shingles - Composition
ESTIMATES
ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE
MQ<E PERKINS
Advance
Phone 998-5040
DOUGOOIJIERT
Mocksville
Phone 634-3981
BE A THREE SEASON HUNTER ■WIN A CUSTOM MADE HUNTING KNIFE"
9 0 0 M S j.
I
I
I
DEER HUNTING CONTEST
Bow Hunting — Muzzle Hunting
Regular Gun Season
(Seperate Contest For Each) ROUTE «3. BOX 393ADUUN RD MOCKSVILLE. N.C 27028 ^
S H E E K
AUCnONtOEALTV COMPANY
634-3611
P.O. BOX 903 M O C K S V ILLE. N.C. 27028
N C AL 924
NC R L 40328
B O NO EO
RES. 704/872-0502
Rt. 12 S T A T ES V ILLE
N.C. 28677
W in ito n
WANTED
SCHOOL B U S D R I V E R S
FOR SHADY GROVE SCHOOL
IF INTERESTED, C A Ii Т01Я EMLY, PRINCIPAI^ AT 998-4719
AS SOON AS POSSIBLE
(^rtification worli given September 25 and 26 will be the only time this year.
$2.62 pel houi plus bonus plan
I4B 1MVII-. COI M r I Nil Kl’KlSl. K. Tlll'USDAY, Sl;ni;MlJl;R 14. I<>7S
aOSE OUT OH ALL
P O R C H 'f
A Lot of Appliance for Your Money
n C LO S E m m w
kOO
^ 1 9 9 *
*1 2 5
0 0 O F F S U G G E S T E D R E T A IL P R IC E
L A - Z - B O Y
“ T h e C h a ir P e o p l e ” ®
R E C L I N A - R O C K E R
C H A IR
\
Itii* l.i / Bov Hediiii) RocKt'f Ctuif li toi Iht*siyif Í ti'ii - Aoniciti and tfu* ( ufnfurt muitlHl m.<n It s H e I f.iimU t M.iir All vuu I'dV*- !»> t1u isb.ii ^ tf' i‘ii|L'> >i'Ut liivnrilr I. i-mtotl l>ü-¡i\ion Miciuil'fU; ItMl ll’ lull lu'il]\u- f'Miij'i;-piiMltun .ilii-kN-- .lit !!'•' »•>, orifjrf unt' ■ <)Ui<} ifii.fi'ifi.' Ifir ! .t / Hvs Kt'i lii’.t Ku.ih.i'i I' flit M-t 1ll.lt dl’t' II t lu^ik .1
u>i ^>*-t
f / /'éíL^\
KI NG SIZE HEAD BOARDS $|g g c
:(SHOWROOM SAMPLES)====:
3 PIECE
BEDROOM SUITE
DRESSER-MIRROR-CHEST-BED
MAPLE FIN ISH __________
» 2 1 9 . 9 5
SHOWROOM »W fl-ES
STANDS
PRICES
START AT
’ 3 9 . 9 5
(5) Demonstrator
Dishwasher
D ELU X E H O TP O IN T D ISH W A SH ER S
A T G R E A T C L O S E -O U T PRICES!
> Satutday
Sept- W
^ a tS P 'M '
on the
Court
Square
L978*
$
(7) DAMAGED
l95
N - 7 1 1
■ I
I l o
14.2 CU. FT. POWER-SAVER
REFRIGERATOR, NO-FROST,
OPTIONAL ICE-MAKER.
Model CTF14ET
WHITE
ONLY * 2 7 9
i lo Lpucrijvtr
□ 40" Easy-Clean oven range □
Clock and automatic oven timer □ Full-width cooktop lamp □ Calrod* surface units □ Surface unit "on" light.
(2) DAMAGED
• • • • • •
^ ( i i V U i l V n i l Deluxe A M 'F M
Personal Portable Radio
I i Operates on 4 "C" cell batteries
(not included) or .AC house current
. Slide-rule vernier AM - FM tuning dial
. I Push-button controls for On. Off, AM/FM and AC, DC power selection
’ Sliding scale volume indicator
. round dynamic speaker
Simulated leather case and carry liandle
L ; Telescoping FM antenna
Hide away built in .AC power cord
: , Earpnone included tor private listening _ . MJimensions, 5^.4"W. x ¡“"H
' UL listed ^
GREEN ONLY
MICROWAVE OVEN
* 2 7 9 “ .
11 o iip jo rijx jb
□ Microwave oven w/ith big 1.3 cu. fl.
capacity □ 2 Power levels with defrost cycle □ 25 Minute timer □ Recipe guide on front panel.Model RE925V
DENTED
ON SIDE » 2 5 9
95
R C AXL-100 ncil
New 100% solid state XtendedLlfe chassis is designed to rurt cooler
and use less energy than any previous R CA chassis. Result: longer
iife expectancy.
• Low power consumption— actually costs less to operate on average
than a 100-watt bulbf
• Automatic Color Control and Fleshtone Correction system holds
fleshtones and other colors to the settings you select.
• Super AccuColor black matrix picture tube gives you brilliant color
with sharp contrast.
• Automatic Fine Tuning (A FT) pinpoints and holds the correct
broadcast signal.
• Colonial styled cabinet with maple finish on hardboard and select
hardwood solids. Simulated wood trim.__________
RCA 25'di.gon.i ColorTrak with
new XtendedLlfe chassis and electronic tuning
Getting the color right Is what ColorTrak is all about, it's RCA's most
advanced, most automatic TV. And now a brand new chassis makes
it better than ever.
• New 100% solid state XtendedLlfe chassis is designed to run cooler
and use less energy than any previous RCA chassis. Result: longer
life expectancy.
• Low power consumption: actually costs about the same to operate on
average as a 100-watt bulbl
• Automatic Color Control and Fleshtone Correction system holds
fleshtones and other colors to the settings you select.
• Automatic Light Sensor adjusts picture for changes in room light.
• R CA Super AccuFilter picture tube has tinted phosphors to help keep
colors v vid, even in bright room light.
• R CA SignaLock electronic tuning lets you select all VHF and up to
8 U H F channels with one convenient knob.
• Country French cabinet with oak finish on oak veneers and solids.
Simulated wood trim.
*5 9 9
9 5
W/T
AT THE OVERHEAD BRIDGE MOCKSVILLE, NC
CUSTOMER CARE . . . EV ER Y W H Eg
t [foil L)cpci>J<iLlc b«
D A N I E L S . ^
F u r n i t u r e & E l e c t r i c C o .
Phone:
634-2492
M u r d e r C h a r g e d I n S a t u r d a y N i g h t S h o o t i n g
A 33-year-oId white Winston-Salem man has been charged with first degree murder as the result of a shooting last Saturday night at Dud’s Trading Post at County Line.
John Robert Riddle, 33, 304 Townley
Street, Winston-Salem was charged in a warrant issued September 19th with shooting Lawrence Ray Hairston, 58, a
black of Rt. 4 Mocksville in the stomach
twice with a .22 caliber pistol.The shooting allegedly took place Saturday night about 11 ;30p.m. at Dud’s Trading Post located at County Line. Hairston was brought to the emergency room at the Oavie Hospital and the
Davie County Sheriff’s Department was
notified of the presence of a man with
gunshot wounds about 11:49 p.m. The bullets were removed by emergency
surgery and Hairston was placed in the
intensive care unit at the Davie County Hospital where he died 11:15 p.m. Monday night.'
Riddle was picked up at the Travel
Lodge Motel, Patterson Avenue, Win
ston-Salem, at approximately 5 a.m.
D A V IE C O U N TY
$7.50 Per Year In North Carolina
$10.00 Per Year Out Side North Carolina THURSDAY, SliPTEMBER 21, 1478
28 PAGES
Single Copy 15 cents
P r o p o s e d H o m e F o r R e t a r d e d
A d u l t s R u l e d A P u b l i c F a c i l i t y
Tuesday morning.Joy Dawn Jones, 22, a white female of Rt. 2 Box 361 East Bend, was charged by
Deputy J.R. Purvis on Tuesday morning
with being an accessory-after-the-fact of
murder in that she did aid, abet and accompany James Robert Riddle after he had shot Hairston with a pistol.Both Riddle and Ms. Jones were arraigned Tuesday afternoon before Judge Lester P. Martin. Riddle was bound over to a bond hearing at 3:30 p.m. Thursday afternoon. Bond for Ms. Jones was set at $5,000.Lawrence Ray Hairston was the son of
the Rev. Raymond Hairston. He was a
native of Davie County and attended local schools. He was a veteran of World War n and a member of the Fairfield Baptist Church.Funeral services will be held Thursday afternoon at 4 p.m. at the Fairfield
Baptist Church. The Rev. F.D. Betts will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body will lie instate an hour prior to the services. The family will meet with friends at the Morrison- Studevent Funeral Home Wednesday
evening from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.In addition to his father, survivors
include his step-mother, Alma Hairston
of Winston-Salem; nine sisters, Mrs. Margaret Fowler, Mrs. Helen Day of Long Island, N.Y.; Mrs. Bertha Lee
(Continued on page 4)
Elections Office
Open Saturday
ofthe
Deputy Sheriff James Hunter escorts John Robert Ridoie, xs, of
Winston-Salem, charged with 1st degree murder of Lawrence Ray Hairston last Saturday night, to the Davie County courtroom for
arraignment Tuesday afternoon. (Photo by Garry Foster).
nty S _
Q)urt Monday that a proposed home for mentally retarded adults near the main business area of Mocksville would be a public facility and as such is entitled to a certificate of compliance with the zoning
ordinance.
After a lengthy hearing, Judge Peter
W. Hairston directed orally that the
certificate be issued and gave the principals 10 days to agree on the language of an appropriate draft of such an order.The matter involves the large, two- story frame house (formerly known as
W i n s t o n - S a l e m N A A C P A s k s F o r
I n v e s t i g a t i o n O f D a v i e P r i s o n U n i t
The Winston-Salem NAACP has ate
chapter of the that there have been rumors about a
asked state officials to' prison officer carrying a .25-caIiber lat it. terms "intolerable automatic pistol and threatening in- “iMdWons” at the DaV®' " mates with it; and,'tliat there have also,
Ckiunty prison unit.A letter dated September 7 and signed by Patrick T. Hairston, chapteri
president, listed twelve grievances
ranging from complaints of a lack of
greeting cards in the prison canteen to a
request that officials Investigate rumors that the unit superintendent has supplied knives to white inmates.Copies of Hairston’s letter was mailed
to Amos E. Reed, secretary of the N.C.
Department of Corrections, to (3ov. James B. Hunt and to U.S. Attorney General Griffin Bell.The allegations in the letter were
almost identical to those made by in
mates In a letter published two weeks ago in the Winston-Salem (Chronicle, that city’s weekly black newspaper.The most serious allegations are that
there is “open prejudice" in em
ployment practices and honor grade,| custody and parole procedures at the unit; that the shower facilities are “dangerous, inadequate and unsanitary"; that the unit is overcrowded;
been rumors that thé unit’s superln-| tendent, T.W. Holmes, and two members of his staff have given "white in
mates knives to use against black inmates."
Holmes denied most of the charges.
He said that the showers at the iH-ison,
are adequate, are cleaned every day by
inmates, the area is well tiled and has
decent ventilation. Holmes called the complaints about prejudice and' discrimination “a broad statement," and he denied rumors that he or any
member of his staff carries weapons
into the unit, threatens inmates or
supplies inmates with knives. Holmes said prison officials are not even allowed to carry pocket knives or keys into the prison.
Top prison officials have declined to(
answer the grievances point-by-point at present. Reed said he realized that there were problems with the state’s prison
system generally but that he had not had
a chance to discuss the specifics of
Hairston’s letter with his staff.
Bert Rosefleld, who recently became the prison system’s North Piedmont' area administrator, said last week that he was aware of Hairston’s letter and he, had already discussed it with his staff.;Prison officials in Raleigh have not
said whether they believe the com-, plaints warrant an investigation. , Hairston said he will pursue the issue even if his initial action is not effective.
“I intend to see something done about this. We want an investigation," he said.
the Kimbrough house) located on the
Lexington Road, near the intersection
with South Main Street . The challenge
was filed by Harry A. Osborne, who has
an ownership interest in the house, the Davie County Group Home Inc., and its chairman, Terrance D. Jones.Osborne testified that before and up to Nov. 8,1976, when the zoning ordinance
became effective, both the upstairs and
downstairs space in the house was rented to one or more persons living together “as a single housekeeping unit.”
Thereafter, the house was rented at different times to different people
through October 1977, when it became
vacant Osborne said that, though he did not advertise, he made it known by "word of mouth” that it was available for renting.
About April 1, 1978, Osborne main
tained, he entered into an oral lease
agreement with the Oavie County Group Home for leasing the house to the nonprofit corporation to be used as a home for six mentally retarded adults
and a staff of two.
However, he alleged, no written lease was executed by himself and his wife,
because Jesse Boyce, Town Zoning Officer, “was of the opinion that the zoning ordinance prohibited the Davie
Ctounty Group Home from using the property as a home for mentally retarded adults.
According to an affidavit filed by Jones, Davie County Group Home made
a contract with the Tri-County Mental Health Complex to operate the home.
and structural floor plans were approved by the N.C. Department of Human Resources on April 10.Boyce said the property was and is zoned “central business," and was and
is suitable for accommodating one or
more persons living together as a single
housekeeping unit. But he did not and does not consider the group home to be a public facility.When Jones applied for a certificate of
zoning compliance for the proposed
home, Boyce denied the application.
Davie County Group Home appealed to
the Mocksville Zoning Board of Adjustment, and its members sustained Boyce on a split vote.The zoning board’s decision then was appealed to Davie Superior Court, and
Hairston’s decision followed.
The Davie County Board Elections office located in
Courthouse will open Saturday,
September 23, 10:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m. to accommodate residents of Davie County who desire lo register, or make precinct changes
for the General Election.
The regular office hours are Monday. Wednesday, and Friday each week, 9:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. The deadline for registering, or making changes for the
General Election is October 9.
College students, or anyone else who will he out of town, and unable to go to the polls the entire period that the polls are open on November 7 may find this a con
venient time to vote a "one stop” absentee.
If any questions call during regular office hours 634-2027.
N R C S t a f f B e i n g S h o w n
A l t e r n a t i v e S i t e s F o r P e r k i n s
P i a n o F u n d R e a c h e s G o a l
F e d e r a l F u n d i n g R e n e w e d
F o r L o c a l C E T A P r o g r a m s
Federal funding has been renewed for
several Title II CETA (Comprehensive
Employment and Training Act) positions in Davie County, the county commissioners learned Monday night.Earlier this summer, the commissioners had been told that the county
would lose all of its Title II CETA workers because of federal budget cuts, Ron Vogler, county manager said.Almost ail of the positions were refunded several days ago, however, Vogler said.
The number of CETA positions funded
for this year is now “substanitally the some” as last year, Vogler said, adding he did not have exact figures on the number of positions In the CETA
program.
"There are 26 CETA workers in the
county now,” Vogler said, and ‘That’s almost the same number as last year.”
"Title VI CETA was cut to 80 percent
of last year’s total,” Vogler said, "but
the cut did not make a substantial difference since the number of CETA workers in the county is very small.The federally finded CETA program is designed to provide temporaiV positions
and job training and experience to help
indigent or unskilled workers obtain
permanent jobs later.In other business the commissioners;-Reappointed Mrs. Alice Ellis to the Department of Social Services Board;-Discussed county water system
plans;
-Approved rosters for the Sheffleld- Calahaln volunteer fire department;-Reviewed tax reports; and-Signed a contract with the Northwest Child Development Council to aid in the council’s day care program in the
county.
Mrs. George Martin announced
Monday that the Piana Fund drive for the Davie County Public Library was successful, and that the goal of $6,890.00 had been reached late on Thursday September 14, which was the deadline. A
final tally has not been released because
gifts are still being received. But the
piano committee will meet Tuesday September 26 at 7:30 in the library to come up with final tally and to plan for future programs.Excess money will be spent on a
cover, a concert stool, maintenance, and
entertainers, all things which will help
the public get more out of the piano.The drive for the seven-foot Baldwin from Piedmont Music Center started only a month ago and to date there have been over 265 separate contributions ranging from $1.00 to $1,000.00 The "Plano Committee” wants to publicly
thank everyone who contributed or
helped in this community effort.
inCivic organizations which helped
addition to those listed last week are; Mocksville Woman’s Club, Davie Golden Age Club, East Davie Jaycees, Davie Cosmetologist Association, Davie County Chapter Symphony Women,
Fork Jaycettes, Baltimore and Bixby
Homemakers Club, Davie Homemakers County Council, and the Fork Jaycees.
Members of the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission '(NRC!) staff are touring alternative sites this week for the Perkins nuclear power plant, Duke Power Company officials announced Monday.NRC staffers met at the Duke Power
Company headquarters in Charlotte at 10 a.m. Tuesday for a briefing. The group then toured the Wateree and Fishing Creek, S.C. alternative sites.On Wednesday the group was
scheduled to visit sites at Middleton
Shoals on the Savannah River and Lake Hartsell, S.C.
Thursday the group will tour the
Davie Ctounty site as well as proposed
sites on Lake Norman, at Tuckertown in
Rowan County and the Broad River basin near the South Carolina boarder, Ms. Howard said.
The site hearings for the Perkins plant were ordered re-opened earlier this
summer after the NRC ruled it needed
more information about the sites and the
way Duke Power planners picked the Davie County location for the Perkfhs" power plant.No actual date has been set for formal site hearings on the Perkins plant, Ms.
Howard said. This week's tours are
designed primarily to acquaint NRC members with various alternative sites.David Springer, newly-elected head of the High Rock Lake Association, chief opponent of the Davie County site, has
indicated he will also participate in the tours.
Car Hits Utility Pole
A 1965 Plymouth struck a utility pole in an accident on Depot Street last
Sunday about 4:05 p.m.
The vehicle was being operated by
Michael Leonard Johnson, 16, of 551 Williams Street, Mocksville.Capt. R. W. Groce of the Mocksville
(continued on page 2)
S h e r i f f s D e p a r t m e n t F i n d s
F i e l d O f 8 0 0 M a r i j u a n a P l a n t s
By Marlene Benson
An annonymous tip to Davie County
Sheriff Robert Kiger resulted in the
Easter Seal Society To
Present Awards At Open House
The Northwest Region of the Easter Seal Society for Crippled Children and Adults will hold iU 1978 Awards Meeting and Open House on Sunday, September
24,1078, from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m., at
tbe office located at 3061 Trenwest
Drive, Winston Salem.
“nie Society, a 58 year old Agency, is
dedicBt«d to providing services and aid to handicspfwd individuals. The Northwest Chapter currently serves Alexander, AUeghany, Ashe, Davidson.
Davie, Forsyth, IredeU, Rowan, Stokes,
Surry, Watauga. Wilkes, and Yadkin
Counties.In addition to the hundreds of ban- tiicapped children and adults currently being assisted, there are many more
who need help. Easter Seals must count
I un you.The following awards will be
[presented: Piaqu-Past President.
Weldon Garrison. Plaques: Davie High
School; Appalachian State University;
Emergency Patrol Unit; John and Pat O'Conner and WXII Television. Certificates: Eva Moser; Holiday Inn; Audio-Video Concepts; Ed Kelly's;
Linda Tesh; Z-93 Radio; Gray Brothers
Furniture; Colony Dodge; Richard
Lowder; Polar Palace; Skate World; Watauga Democrat; Winston Salem Journal and Sentinel; Kernersville News; Thomasville News; Suburbanite;
Bud Caermon; Tommy Collins; Don
Parker; Creative Life Center; Martha Mahon; Mr. Averette and Don Jewell.Volunteers make the difference. Please do your part by giving to Easter
Seals for Crippled Children and AdulU. For more information or for assistance,
contact the Northwest Region's office at 3061 lYenwesi Drive, Winston-Salem or call 765-6035.
discovery of about 800 marijuana plants growing in a field along the creek off the Jack Booe Road near the Yadkin County
line over the weekend.The plants averaged ten to twelve feet
in height.Lt. Robert Purvis, who assisted Sheriff Kiger in pulling up the plants, pointed out that the Wilkes County
Sheriff’s Department recently seized
5,000 marijuana plants which "they estimated the street value at three
million dollars." Purvis added this may
give you an idea of the "relativity of
value.”
Sheriff Kiger said this was “the biggest single bust for the Davie County Department.'' Assisted by Capt. Sharpel.Lt. Purvis and Deputies Mel
Reynolds and Cecilia Hemrick, Kiger
said they carried the marijuana plants a
good mile and loaded them on the back of his pickup truck. "They were the
(continued on page 2)
Public Hearing Set For October
2nd On Zoning Amendment
Sheriff R.U. Kiger and Deputy Robert Purvis look over a field of about 800 well- cared-for marijuana plants seized in Davie Countyr over the weekend.
Hie Davie County Board of Commissioners will hold a public hearing at
00 p.m., Monday, October 2, at the Davie County Courthouse to consider amending the county's zoning ordinance to add airports to the list of permitted
uses under the conditional uses section
of the ordinance.The board of commissioners scheduled the public hearing after the Davie County Planning Board recommended to the commissioners that the
county's zoning ordinance be amended
to permit airports to be zoned under a conditional use classification in a residential-agricultural area.Under the present zoning ordinance,
airports must be zoned in a heavy industry classification.The planning board made its recommendation after studying the issue of the classification of airports in Ihe zoning ordinance at its August 30lh
meeting.Actually, the planning board had been asked by the iioard of commissioners early last month (o study a recommendation from the commissioners themselves that the zoning ordinance be
amended lo permit airports to be
classified under a conditional use.
All of this complicated series of legal maneuvers was precipitated earlier this summer when the owners of Twin Lakes Airport in eastern Davie County petitioned the commissioners to have
the airport rezoned from its present
residential-agricultural (R-A) and residential (R-20i status to the heavy industrial classification to comply with Ihe zoning ordinance.
When the airport was established the county did not have a zoning ordinance and when the zoning ordinance was
adopted a few years ago the airport was allowed to remain in a residential- agricultural area as a nonconforming
business.In order to be able to expand the facilities at ihe airport the airport owners must first have the airport properly brought Into compliance witli
the zoning ordinance which requires airports to be classified as heavy in
dustrial areas.Many nf the properly owners near Twin i-akes Airpori are opposed to the
proper(>- hemg rezoned lo a heavy in
dustrial area and they presented the
(Lumiiuicd nil paj-c 2»
iM vii: COUNTY I:n t i;r i'r is i-; r k c o k d . Th u r s d a y , siípt em b er :i . и)7«
(continued from page 1)
tallest plants I’ve seen around here”, he said “and evidently they were being taken care of.”
M a r i j u a n a S e i z e d B y S h e r i f f
The plants were loaded up Monday and taken to the incenerator at Heritage Furniture Company where the sheriff
and his deputies burned them.
No arrests have been made and the investigation continues.
Davie Deputies, John Coley (foreground) and James Hunter (background)! assist in loading the marijuana whlcn was burned in the incenerator at Herita Furniture Co. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
E x e c . C o m m i t t e e O f P T C O G
V o t e s N o t T o S p l i t R e g i o n 6
; The executive committee of the Piedmont Triad Council of Governments (PTCOG) voted unanimously last week not to split Region G, the ll-county area
now served by the PTCOG, into two
parts.The board ot commissioners in Davie, Stokes, Surry and Yadkin counties, as well as boards in several smaller municipalities, recently passed
resolutions asking (^v. James B. Hunt
Jr. to split Region G. Those four countries and Forsyth would form a new northwest region. Guilford County and the other five counties would form a
Jseparate region.- (As of press time early Tuesday 'evening, the Mocksville town board was scheduled to meet later in the evening to ;decide if Mocksville would join in the :move to have the PTCOG split.)Fred D. Hauser, chairman of the -Forsyth County board of com- :missioners, was the only member of the PTCOG’s executive committee to abstain from voting at last week's meeting :on the move to split Region G.' “It's my privilege to sit on the fence
.and that’s what I'm going to-do,” said
Hauser.Mayor Wayne A. Corpening of Win- :ston-Salem Joined the executive committee members in the unanimous vote 'to keep the region unified.
- Observersof the move to have the
-present Re^on G split have consistently predicted that Forsyth County and -Winston-Salem would have to be in- :duded in a new region with Davie, Yadkin, Surry and Stokes counties ^before the governor would consent to split the present Region G.Hauser said Forsyth has important economic ties with the northwest counties that are advocating a split. He said that Forsyth and Guilford must also continue to plan together to prevent
urban sprawl and slums.Winston-Salem, Greensboro and High Point form a Standard Statistical Metropolitan Area. Undsay Cox,, executive director of the PTCOG, said splitting this urban core would be impractical and costly.
Cox presented a staff study that shows that numerous services would have to be duplicated or cut if the region split. These include PTCOG-administered
medical, economic development and
transportation programs.Hauser did not address any of these issues. He only said that he will support the governor’s decision.
Several committee members said that
they too intend to support the governor. But, they said, even though Raleigh officials will determine the region’s boundaries, the committee should ex
press an opinion on the subject.
The counties seeking a split have held several meetings during the past year. Hauser said he was invited to the first, but was unable to attend because he had
another commitment. He said he was not invited to subsequent meetings.
The Forsyth commissioners have not
voted on the PTCOG split and Hauser said he does not plan to introduce a resolution before the commissioners calling for a spUt.
Several PTCOG committee members
were critical of Joe C. Matthews, executive director of the Northwest Economic Development Commission.The commission serves the five north
west counties that would form the new
COG.
John C. McKenzie, the mayor of Pilot Mountain In Surry County, quoted a newspaper report to the committee
indicating that Matthews wants to be director of the new COG.PTCOG members asked McKenzie why Surry County officials want a split. McKenzie said that he personailj disagrees with those officials, but that they probably think Region G is too large.
He said, however, that he had
documents showing that Matthews and Jimmie R. Hutchens, director of the Yadkin Valley Economic Development District, have been trying to split the
PTCOG since 1970.
Several committee members said
politics and backbittlng seem to be motivating the move toward a split.PTCOG chairman Nell N. Fleming III, an Alamance County commissioner,
said Matthews and Cox ‘‘have built up
such a wall between them” that
cooperation is difficult.
The full PTCOG board was scheduled to meet September 20 to discuss the possible split.
Fires Are Reported
Fires reported in Davie County during the past week Included:
September IS, about 4:18 p.m. the
MocksviUe Fire Department answered a
call to the R. G. Brewer residence on
Park Avenue, smoke coming out vents.September 16, about 9:47 p.m., the Sheffield-Calahain Fire Department answered a call to a tobacco barn fire on
the County Une Road.
September le, about 9:01 p.m., the
County Line Fire Department answered a call to assist the Sheffield-Calahain Fire Department in a tobacco bam fire.
Wreck On Depot Street
(continued from page 1)
Police Department said his in
vestigation showed that Johnson was
traveling north on Williams Street when the driver’s foot slipped off the brake onto the accelerator, causing the vehicle to cross Depot Street and strike the utility poie.
Damage to the Plymouth was
esUmated at $450 and 1600 to the utUity pole.
Public Hearing
(continued from page 1)
county commissioners with a petition several weeks ago expressing this opposition.
It was after the commissioners received this petition that they decided
that a conditional use classification for airports in the county zpning ordinance would be the best way to protect toe interests of boUi sides involved in the Twin Lakes dispute.
By aUowing airporu to be classified
under a conditional use permit in th#
zoning ordinance, only an airport, subject to any conditions set forth by the Davie County Zoning Board of Adjustment, can then be allowed to occupy a site designated for airports.But under the present zoning ordinance which requires airports to be classified as heavy industrial areas any number of a variety of heavy industrial
businesses can also occupy a site zoned for an airport once the zoning has been approved.
Vehicles Collide On US 158
Two vehicles were Involved In a coUislon last Saturday about 2:5S p.m. on U.S. 158, s miles east of Mocksville.
Involved was a 1968 GMC truck
operated by Jane White Carter, 34, of Rt. 3, Advance, and a 1971 OldsmobUe
operated by Cathy Ruth Jones, 27, of Rt. 3.
State Highway Patrohnan James M. Newton said his Investigation showed that the vehicle operated by Carter was
proceeding norUi on N.C. 158 At
tempting to cross U.S. 168 this vehicle
failed to yield to the Jones vehicle that was traveling west on U.S. 158.Damage was estimated at $200 to each vehicle.
Ms. Carter was charged with failure to yield right of way.
C r e s e n t E M C M a i l s $ 2 3 4 , 5 0 0
I n C a p i t a l C r e d i t R e f u n d s
The Crescent Electric Membership Corporation’s Capital Credit Refund checks are in the mail.
¿"bTtilLt Pedestrian Is Hit In Parking Lot By Tractor-Trailer
A pedestrian was hit by a tractor-
traUer while waUcing In a parking lot at
the Union 76 Truck Stop, March 13,
about 6:30 p.m.The pedestrian, James Loyd Mischler, 17, was taken to the Davie County
Hospital.State Highway Patrolman James M.
Newton said his Investigation showed that the tractor-trailer was being operated by Ronale E. McNear of
Charlotte. The vehicle was pulling from
a stopped position making a right tum to
go west in parking lot and the driver
failed to see the pedestrian walking south. There were no charges.
Motorcyclist Injured Saturday On N.C. 801
A motorcyclist was Injured In an accident with a car last Saturday about 8:30 p.m. on NC 801.
James Larry Whitt, 25, of Rt. 2 King
was taken first to the Davie County
Hospital and then transferred to the
Forsyth Memorial Hospital.State Highway Patrolman J.L. Payne said his invvestigation showed that John
Branley LayeU of Winston-Salem was
operating a 1974 Plymouth which at
tempted to tum left into a private drive
and turned into the path of Whitt on a 1971 Honda motorcycle which was being operated without headUght burning.Damage to the Plymouth was
esUmated at »1,000 and »900 to the
Honda. Charges are pending.
Over 14,000 individual checks totaling »234,500 were maUed to member-owners
of the Cresent Electric Membership Corporation last week. These checks
went to the people using соч>р power
during 1964-65.
It Is estimated that more than one- third of this capital credit refund went to coop members In Davie County.Approximately »34,387 has already been refunded to estates during 1978. Capital credits are refunded In full to Uie estate of deceased members upon ap
plication by Uie legal representative of
the deceased member.
“The board of directors and
management are pleased that the financial condition of the co-op meets Uie guidelines established by REA In order that a capital credit refund could be made to the memberowners at this
Ume,” said Donald D. Rice, general
manager.. This is the fourth con- secuUve year that a general retirement of capital credits has been made. The
refund reflected the remaining balance
of 52 per cent of the margin for 1964 and 35 per cent of the margin for 196S. The remainder of credit for those years
between the period represented In this
refund and №e current date is required
for member equity and reserves.“As you know, aU of the cooperaUve’s revenues in excess of operating expenses In each year (margins) are recorded on tbe books as capital furnished by the members (capital credits). The Cresent Conductor Is used
as Uie means to notify members of Uie
per cent of margins for each year, and that they are assigned on the cooperaUve’s books to the Individual member accounts. The amount assigned to member accounts is
determined by multiplying your total
power bUl for the year by the per cent of
margin for that year. Members are furnished complete informaUon about Uieir capital credit account at anytime by contacting the co-op offices,” Rice added.
The co-op Is a non-profit organization
and the member-users can expect a
return. In cash of any margin above the cost of service.
Capital Credits is the plan used to assign and refund all margins realized by Uie operating of Uie coooperatlve.
Vehicles Wreck On 1-40
’Two vehicles were involved in a
collision September 12, about 2:05 p.m.
on Interstate 40, 1.4 mUes east of
Mocksvllle.Involved was a 1978 PonUac operate by Robin Ray Rice, 22, of Hickoiy and a 1973 Chrysler operated by James •• • I Turner, 61, of Ahoskie, N.C._ jite Highway Patrolman A. C. Stokes
said his investigaUon showed that the Rice vehicle was traveUng east on 1-40 at 55 mph. The Turner vehicle, traveling
at an excessive speed, overtook the Rice
vehicle, apparenUy got too close to it
before changing lanes to pass.Damage to the Rice vehicle was estimated at »300 and »400 to Uie Turner vehicle. Turner was charged wiUi
foUowing too close.
Thermostat settings The thermostat is a cost-and-energy- savlng device you may have overlooked.Set it just warm or cool enough for comfort, depending on the time of day
and what you’re doing. Just a few
degrees difference In the temperature of your Uiermostat can make a big difference in cost month after month.
o fa ir r s s i
ЩшШтш.
124 South P'ain Street
Moclve\ille,> ,r.
Published every Thursday by the
DAVIE PLBÚSHING COMPANY
MOCKSVli.LKENTERPRISE
Ю 16-195П
DAVIE
RECORD1899-19.'5P
COOLEEMEE
JOURNAL1906-1971
Gordon Toinliiigon..........................Editor-Publisher
Becky Snyder
Director of Advertising
Seroiid f'Jaks Postage Paid in Niockciille, N. C. 27028
Sl'RSCPIPTlON PATES
$7.50 par year in North Carolina; $10.00 per year out of ttau.
Single Copy 16 cent!
THE NEW 1979’S ARE ON THE WAY! FOR TOP
BUYS ON THE SEVERAL 1978’S WE HAVE LEFT
IN S T O C K .... SEE US TODAY.
BUV HOW! SAVE NOW!
Watch for the Grand Showing
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U S E D C A R B A R G A I N S
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FURCHES MOTOR Ca
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n r m m m m w m t
Mocksvile. N.C
DAVU- COUNTY l-NTIiRPRlSE RI-CORD, THliRSDAY, SliPTIiMBIiR 21. 1478 3
Rosemary Cozart and 4-month old daughter Kelly examine one of the car seats purchased by the Mocksville Jaycettes for their Buckle up Babes project. Jack Pennington of Pennington Chevrolet examines the order sheet placed by the Jayceetes.
‘B u c k le U p B a b e s ’ P r o je c t
Buckle up Babes, a nattonal Jaycette project is under way in Davie sponsored
by the MocksviUe Jaycette organization.
Through the purchase of 10 infant car seats from Pennington Chevrolet Company, the Jaycettes plan to rent
them to interested famiUes with a portion of the deposit retumed to the
people when the car SMts are turned back into the club.
The seats wUi be distributed on a first
come, first serve basis and after the demand and response have been determined, more wUl be purchased by the club and made available to the public.
The Infant Love Seat now available
WiU hold a baby weighing up to 20 Ibs., and should remain usuable untU the
child reaches the age of 6 months.
Buckle up Babes is a national project to educate the pubUc about chUd safety in cars, and to provide them with a means to hopefully prevent injuries to
chUdren whUe riding in cars.
The project has been undertaken due to Uie fact that auto accidents are the leading cause of death for children under 4 years of age.The Mocksville Jaycettes are
providing a car seat rental program to inspire families to use or purchase an
infant seat.For further information contact
Rosemary Cozart at 634-3740.
Pinebrook P.T.A. Holds First IMeeting
The Pinebrook Parent-
Teachers AssociaUon held its first meeting for the year on Monday, Sept. 11 at 7:30 p.m. President Robert DaU caUed the meeting to order. Devotions were presented by Bryant WUliams, an eighUi
grade student at Pinebrook.
Mr. Dail introduced the officers for Uie year who are; Mrs. Beverly Dorsett, vice- president; Mrs. Bonnie Vest, secretary; and Mrs. Barbara
AUen, treasurer. W.T. Eanes,
principal, introduced the
faculty and staff.
Each committee chairman
presented plans for the year.
The project chairman, Mrs.
Kathryn Mabe presented a short program on a proposed popcorn sale. This project was adopted and will begin on
Sept. 21.
The proposed budget for the year was presented and ac
cepted. Priorities for use of
Uie money were discussed and decided upon. An alarm system for the school wiU be installed foUowed by a paved
area for the playground. One
additional television set will
be purchased for the school.The membership drive is open and all present were encouraged to join for $1.00 per adult. Any interested citizen in the community is
invited to join and support the Pinebrook P.T.A.A special feeling of ap- preciaUon was expressed to faculty, staff and parents to
Mr. Charlie Ellis and the
many others who installed the antenna system at Pinebrook.
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WAIST SIZES 25" TO 40"
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usually $22 1 6 . 8 8
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our own brand 2-pc. sleepers
2 f o r * 9
usually 5.50 each
Screen print design on long-sleeve t-shirt style
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Elasticized ankles. snapfasteners.Blue,
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modacrylic. 35% polyester in sizes 1-4.
The Weat Dated promise: Warranted by
Monsanto for one full year's normal wear,
refund or replacement when returned with
lag and sales slip to Monsanto. Properly
constructed garments of approved SEF
fabrics meet the appropriate U.S..
Government flammability standards.
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Plus a N o -R is k M o n e y B a c k G u a r a n t e e t i o m P i a y i e x
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■4 DAVII ( (HiNT> I NTI RPRISI Rl.COUl). TIIURSDAV. SI I’TI-MBIiR :i, l'»7X
This Is Awareness Week—
W h a t I s L u p u s ?
By Marlene Benson
Lupus what?Many times these are the first words uttered by the patient, friend or family of one who lias been diagnosed as having
discoid or systemic Lupus
Erythematosus.And this was basically the reaction of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoyle of Cooleemee six years ago when they learned their voungest daughter, Margaret, was the
v’cltlm of Lupus.Commonly known as "the great
imitator”. Lupus Is quite often
misdiagnosed. It often mimics heart
disease, kidney disorders, rheumatic fever and even cancer. It can come and go In seemingly random patterns of remission and activity.Lupus afflicts more than 500,000 Americans, with 50,000 new cases each year; yet the chronic inflammatory Ulness Is barely know except by suf
ferers, their families and the doctors
who treat It.With the use of cortlcosterlods and drugs that suppress the body’s antibody defenses, the natural tendency to throw
off foreign substances, 90 percent ot
lupus patients now live long beyond the 10-year lifespan than once was all they
could expect.Because the disease Immitates s»
many other, Mrs. Hoyle said it takes a
- - knowledgeable doctor to diagnose lupus. And without proper treatment, severe
forms of the disease can ripple,
disfigure and kill. There Is no know cure
for the disease.Systemic lupus, the most dangerous form and the ^pe which Margaret has, causes swelling and inflammation of connective tissues and may involve any
organ system in the body-the brain,
muscles, lungs, heart, blood or kidneys.
Often, jolnU are affected, leading to mistaken diagnoses of arthritis.Discoid lupus, a different form, affects only the skin, producing reddened, disc-shaped lesions. This form of lupus
usually isn't a serious health threat, but the red patches are ugly, painful and
sometimes produce scars.
Some systemic lupus sufferers also
have skin lesions; more often, their symptoms are easily mistaken for influenza or even overwork; joint and muscle aches, severe faUgue, persistent low fever, weight loss, irritability or loss
of appetite.President Carter has declared this
week National Lupus Week for 1978. Gov. Jim Hunt also has declared it Lupus Awareness Week in North Carolina, as has Gov. James Edwards in South Carolina.Mrs. Hoyle says there are Lupus
Chapters in Raleigh, Fayetteville, Charlotte, and in Statesville. Margaret is a member of the Statesville Chapter : and keeps in close contact with some of the members there on a regular basis.
It is still questionable as to what
causes the disease, but it is know that
■ lupus is notcongtagious. .and seven out
Wreck On Gladstone Road
f f ' A 1974 Ford truck went out of control j'and wrecked last Saturday about 9:30 •tp.m. on the Gladstone Road.!• State Highway Patrolman James M.
Newton said his investigation showed
' that the truck, driven by Grimes H.
Parker Jr., 35 of 66 Duke Street, Cooleemee was proceeding south on the •Gladstone Road when the driver lost ' control, ran off the right side of the road, . then back across the roadway, off the
' left side of the road ans struck a ditch
- bank.
; Damage to the truck was estimated at '• $150. Parker was charged with driving ; inder the influence.
ol ten times it strikes women In the age
range of 17-40.It Is believed an unexplained
malfunction of the body’s antibody
system causes the disease. Normally, antibodies defend against viruses and bacteria; in lupus, the defenders turn Inward and attack the body’s own connective tissue.Although treatment cannot cure the
disease, it can relieve many of the symptoms. Since it varies from person to person, treatment has to be tailored to fit the individual.As with other serious diseases,
patients who fact their problems
squarely, follow their doctor’s advice, learn all they can about living and coping with lupus, usually do better than those who either tend to hide theii heads
in the sand or become excessively
anxious.The importance of the understanding
and support of the family for the Lupus patient cannot be overemphasized. Mrs. Hoyle says family attitudes play a. major role In the emotional well being of the patient.
One seldom sees Margaret but what
she has a big smile and a very good attitude. At this time, she is in the hospital, but she still manages to keep up her spirits and hopefully will be coming home the first of next week.
It’s true medicine cannot yet cure the
disease, but neither can drugs cure
diabetes or heart disease. Yet, many people are living good productive lives with these illnesses, through consistent care and understanding. Increased awareness of the disease and im
provement in diagnostic tests make
early diagnosis possible.
F e e d C o r n !
Tom and J.W. Phelps have a crop ot unusually large feed com growing In a
field off the Pine Ridge Road, Cooleemee. ’The stalks stand aoumd 12 feet tall and the ears of com are considerably larger. Shown looking over the bumper crop Is Tom's wife, Dianne,
and Children, Clay, 8, and Tammy 8. The corn, which is of the Pioneer no. 314). variety, was sod-planted after wheat had been harvested from the field. Tom'
says they expect a yield of more than ICO
bushels per acre. (Photo« by Jim' Barringer).
A former Rear Admiral of the U.S. Navy urged Mocksvllle Rotarians at their meeting on Tuesday to seriously consider the place of the military budget in our life today.
Kenneth Ray Wheeler of Statesville,
who retired in 1974 after 36 years of
service with the U.S. Navy expressed alarm tiiat we have been disarming militarily since 196S.
Using the quotation that “those who Ignore the lessons of liistory are ix>und to relive them”, Mr. Wheeler cited three
factors that each and every citizen
should consider:
(1) The United States has been in
volved in a major war each 17 years
since it’s inception.
(2) The basic nature of individuals and nations is that of agression, of placing the greatest value on strength.(3) The United States is no longer a “have” nation in terms of natural resources.
“Consider the above and then realize that our army today is of less strength than prior to Vietnam; our Air Force is
only two thirds of what it was prior to
Vietnam. Today we have 384 strategic bombers compared to 1600 two years ago. And the Navy has dropped from 900 units in 1965 to 465 today”, said Mr. Wheeler.
The speaker graduated from the University of California in May 1939,
was commissioned an Ensign in the U.S.
Navy and went immediately to active duty. He served in the Phillipine Islands
R e t i r e d N a v y A d m i r a l E x p r e s s e s
C o n c e r n O v e r O u r M i l i t a r y D i s a r m i n g T r e n d
and was assigned duties abroad the
submarine tender USS CANOPUS. With the fall of Corregidor in May 1942 he became a Prisoner of War.He was promoted to Rear Admiral in
June 1965 and became the Assistant
Comptroller of the Navy, Washington,
D.C.He retired as a Vice Admiral after 36 years of service in September 1974. He is a graduate of the Naval War College and Advanced Management Program at Harvard Graduate School of Business
Administration. In 1961 he was awarded
the George Washington Honor Medal
from the Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge. He is a former chairman of the President’s Committee on Services and Products of the Blind and other severely handicapped.Chester Blackwelder had charge of
the program and introduced Mr.
Wheeler. President Charles Blalock
presided.
Demsie Grimes was inducted into the club as a new member by Charles Dunn.
S c h o o l B a n d M a g a z i n e
S a l e T o B e g i n S e p t e m b e r 2 9
Stewart To Speak At Democrat
Chicken Stew Friday Night
Rescue Squad Fish Fry
The annual fall fish fry of the Davie County Rescue Squad will be
held at the squad building on
Saturday, October 7th. Serving will
begin at II a.m. and will continue
until 8 p.m. or until sold out.The menu consists of fresh fUlet of flounder, slaw, french fries, coffee or lea. and all the trim
mings.
"Come out and make tnis day of
pleasure and help support this
worthy cause. All help, food or
donations will be appreciated”, said a member of the Rescue Squad Auxiliary.The local rescue squad is
planning to enlarge their building, put on a new A frame roof, and
bring their equipment up to date.
Teletips Available On Insulation And Doors
Insulation, storm doors, storm windows and weather stripping seem to be ' ;on the minds of Davie County residents as they cope with energy costs.. Tips on selecting and installing in
sulation, attic fans and solar water
heating systems are as close as your
telephone.Mrs. Nancy Hartman, extension home economics agent, explains that a statewide telephone answering service called Teletip has energy conservation
; messages that could be of interest to
■ you.• To take advantage of Teietlp, all you
iNIROY_______________
need to do is dial this toll-free number-1-
800-662-7301,” she points out.The service, Mrs. Hartman adds, is operated by the N.C. Agricultural Ex
tension Service.After you dial Teletlp,-all you have to
do Is give the operator the number of the
message you wish to hear. Have a pencil and paper handy to take notes.Operating hours for Extension Teletip are 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday through
Friday and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sat
urdays. For a complete listing of Teletip
topics, contact your county Agricultural Extension office.
Davie Clounty School students in. ^ades Ave through twelve' will take home magazine subscription information on Friday, September 29. The drive will end on Monday, October 9. The Band Boosters’ Club is assisting the schools with the drive and hopes to be able to pay for the new uniforms for the
Davie High Band through a successful
sale this year.
Magazines are purchased through the
Quality School Plan, a subsidiary of the Readers Digest Company. QSP has over 300 magazines and periodicals available
for subscription, and will honor any
special rate subscriptions available for to subscribers through any special offers. Students will be given coupons for a prize for every magazine sold and a grand prize will be offered at each
school. Bach elementary school will be allowed to retain 25 per cent of the net profits from the sale at their school and
the remaining proceeds will go toward the purchase of uniforms for the band. High school students will also offer
stereo records and tapes for sale at a discount price.
“I can’t think of a more worthwhile or
beneficial project for our students and
community to support,” said Robert Patillo, Davie High Band Director. “Almost every home has one or more magazine subscriptions through QSP they probably would save money on
them through the QSP program, and, at
the same time, be contributing to the
quality of our band program. I hope the citizens of Davie County will continue to support this drive as they have done so generously in the past. We are depen
ding on these funds this year more than
ever.”Mr. Ben Byers, President of the Band
, Boosters’ (3ub, urges all parents and Wizens of thecounty to unite behind this
very worthwhile drive”. "Reading is a continuing part of education for adults as well as students and (}SP has magazines that will appeal to everybody’s interest. When you think about ordering a magazine, I hope you
will also think about how your sub
scription will help the band program and
save that subscription order until
September 29. The band needs and deserves your support more than ever.”
Carl J. Stewart Jr., speaker of the North Carolina House of Representatives, will be the featured speaker at
the annual Fulton Chicken Stew, Friday
night, September 22, at 7 p.m.
This annual chicken stew sponsored by the Democrats of the Fulton Precinct, will be held at Fork behind Hendrix Barbecue, off U.S. 64 East. In
addition to Mr. Stewart, there will be
special musical entertainment.Stewart, a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Duke University in 1958 was captain of the debating team, Atlantic Coast
Conference Debating Champion, a
member of Omicron Delta Kappa, Tau
Kappa Alpha, Who’s Who in American
Colleges and Universities, and
graduated from the Duke University Law School as president of the senior
class.
He was also awarded the honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Belmont
Abbey College.
Stewart is a member of the North
Carolina Bar, Gaston County Bar Association, North Carolina B^r Association, American Bar Ass^atig North Carolina Academy of 'Trl Lawyers, and the American Lawyers Association.
He has served as chairman of
Legislative Council of the Soutl Regional Education Board and also a ^ member of the North Carolina Economic Development Board. ^
He was first elected to the Nortti
Carolina House of Representatives from
Gaston County in 1966 and has serv^ continuously since that time.
Rainfall
Rainfall fur the month of August in Davie County was measured at 5.01 inches. This was 1.58 inches
less than the 6.59 inches recorded
for the same month in 1977.
Calvary Baptist To
Have Special Song
Service Sunday
The music ministry of
Calvary Baptist CJiurch in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina presents the Adult Choir and Orchestra in a Fall Festival of Praise Concert on Sunday aftemoon, September
24th at 4:30 p.m. The church is located on the corners of Country Club and Peace Haven Roads in Winston- Salem.
The concert will consist of
familiar hymns and gospel songs, all arranged by Ron Huff for choir and orchestra. Some of Mr. Huff’s other
works that have been per
formed by the choir are: the Bill and Gloria Gaither, “Alleluia”, and the Christmas inusicai, "His Love Reaching”.
"The Adult Choir invii«» you to worship with them on Sunday afternoon, the 24th at 4:30 p.m.,” said Larry White,
Minister of Music.
41014104411041134123412641294132413541384141414441504155
How & Where lo Caulk
Installing Balt and Blanket Insulation
Insulating Your Hot Water HealerKeep Cool While You Save Money
Selecting Caulking Materials
Selecting InsulaUon Materials
Selecting Storm Ooors
Selecting Storm WindowsSelecting WeatherstrippingThermostat AdiuslmentsSelecting Window Air Conditioners
Selecting Anic Fans A Ventilation SystemsSelecting Solar Domestic Water Heating Systems
Firewood lor Home Heal
LR. Hairston
(continued from puee I )
Austin, Mrs. Hazel Howell of
Moeksville; Mrs. Frances Simmons of Cleveland, N.C.; Mrs. Wilma Cuthrell, Mrs. Flora Burbridge, Mrs. Lula Lane, Mrs. Mary F. Hairston, all of Rt. 4
Mocksvllle; 3 brothers, Albert, McKeerock, Pa.; W.C. and David Hairston both of Mocksvllle.
Toyota Overturns
On Cornatzer Road
Plym outh wat not the ftrit tettlement in New England.
A colony wai founded in Maine in 1607-13 yean earlier-
but didn't last.
reiting adult breathe* from 14 to 20 timet a minute!
A 1974 Toyota went out of control and overturned onto the railroad tracks on Ihe Cornatzer Road September 13th about 6:30 p.m.The vehicle was being driven by
Sharon Chaffin James, 21, of Rt. 7,
Turrentine Church Road.State Highway Patrolman A C. Stokes said his investigation showed that the vehicle was traveling north on the Cornatzer Road, went off the rradway on Ihe right, pulled back onto the
roadway, went out of control in loose dirt, slid around and overturned onto the railroad tracks.Damage to the vehicle was estimated at tl4Q0. There were no charges.
D o Y o u
K n o w ?
Health Srrviceii
In a survey done recently.
Iieailh dpparlmenis in North
Curuiina were delivering a
larger average number of
services than the regional
¿ivi-rage or Ihe national
average.
.Median Age
In North Carolina In 19M.
Ihe median age uf life was 28
m eaning as m any died
lielore llial age as died af-
•erwardi. today liie median
111 liie is HH,
Health I'l'utiranib
All public lieallh programs
III North Carolina now have
sei performance standards
lievelnped by local and stale
piililii Iieailh personnel Loi ai
liealili deparim enis ace
iipurading their sersu'e» id
nieei the standards
N O W I N S T O C K
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W I L K I N S
D R U G C O M P A N Y
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Fqi Walt Boy
DAVIi; COUNTY tNTliRPRlSI-; RliCOKD. THURSDAY. SI-PTI-MBliR :i, l‘)78 - .S
S w i m m i n g
G e t s B e t t e r !
(FIRST OF TWO ARTICLES )
"Swimming in a competitive meet is liice hitting your head against a wall. It feels so good when you quit. And for several days after a meet you’re on a high that no drug or alcohol can ever
give you,” exclaims Walt Boyle Sr. of
Bermuda Run.The S4-year-old Boyle is definitely qualified to comment on competitive
swimming and the exhilaration it gives
him. He is currently the holder of 8
North Carolina state Masters' freestyle swimming records for men aged 50-54 years. And in the 1978 AAU National Long Course Masters' Swimming
Championship held earlier this month in Rhode Island, Boyle finished in the top temwimmws 1 n ^ nationiir5-of“the-
/reestyle swimming events in which he
was entered.
Any way you look at it this list of accomplishments "sure ain't bad" for a man who has been swimming as a member of the Winston-Salem YMCA
Masters' Swim Team and the state's Tar
Heel Masters’ Swim Club for only the past year.But Boyle himself would be the first person to hasten to explain that
swimming has been “a thread" which
,has been inextricably woven into his lifestyle from his very earliest years of life.' In an interview early last Saturday morning, after he had swum a practice
swim of more than 2,000 meters (ap
proximately lV4-miles) at the Winston-
Salem YMCA's pool, Boyle expounded
on the presence of and importance of swimming in his life."My mother was a true Texan and very exercise conscious. During my early years we lived on a ranch in West
Texas and, in addition to riding and
roping, she started me swimming in a
rain barrel and in the Pecos River,"
noted Boyle.“Later," he continued, “when I was about six or seven we moved to the south side of Chicago. This was during the Depression and when my dad had to go
to work every Saturday he would drop
me off at a gym."While at the gym the young Boyle began to work out with a gymnastics team and the first trophy of any kind he ever won was a gymnastics trophy in
1932, he fondly pointed out.
“I started working with a high wire and trapeze act at the gym called 'The Three Bears.' There, was Papa Bear, Momma Bear and Baby Bear and I was
the backup Baby Bear and got pretty
good on that trapeze," he explained.
“Well, after our gymnastic and-high wire and trapeze workouts we would .take a swim in the gym's pool to cool off. Uiere was a coach at the pool named
Wally Bacharach who had been Johnny Weissmuller's (Olympic swimming champion who later starred as ‘Tarzan’
in the movies) coach."Boyle remembered Bacharach “weighed about 300 pounds, but he knew a lot about swimming and he gave me a
lot of encouragement and taught me a
lot about swimming."Boyle also played water polo on some of Bacharach’s teams.However, Boyle “didn’t really concentrate on swimming" until he got into
high school.
“I was small in size, but I still played a
lot ot football and soccer in high school. But I broke my collarbone and a bone in my elbow playing football. A ISO-pound kid shouldn't be tryinc to back up a
tootbBlHiner'’-he-reasoned.------
Continued Boyle, “Because of the
football injuries I was pretty much
forced into swimming as a full-time sport and I made the high school’s varsity swimming team my first year out and won my varsity letter
specializing in distance swims."
Soon after graduating from high
'school Boyle enlisted in the Marine
Corps in 1942 during the Second World War.“With the Marines being an amphibious outfit and always being close to
water, swimming came in handy right
Walt Boyle Sr. has always been in his own nattiral element
churning through a body of water,
from the start," he rememl>ered. having to swim to save these guys from
“I was in a raider reconnaissance unit drowning." and we used rubber boats on our Said Boyle, “Saving those guys really missions that had big, heavy wooden made my swimming training pay off paddles. When you got caught in the surf and I was later promoted to corporal
the boats would flip and you always had and got my commission toward the end
guys getting knocked unconscious by of the war."these paddles and I was constantly Following the war Boyle left the
Boyle sits at his desk at his Bermuda Run home and leafs a scrapbook containing clippings, awards
and other memorabilia he has collected throughout a lifetime of .swimming. (Photos By Garry Foster).
Marine Corps and entered University of California at Berkeley where he won his varsity letter by swimming in the 220- and 440- yard events.
The familiar environment of YMCAs and the activity of swimming again entered Boyle’s life after leaving Berkeley.
"After I got out of school I lived in
YMCAs for several years while I worked
18 hours a day managing retail stores. I always knew though that when I came home at night there would be a pool there waiting for me to take a swim," he said.
He added, “I also had jobs teaching
swimming and coaching baseball while living at the YMCAs."In 1950 Boyle reentered the Marine Corps to serve during the Korean War. Before going to Korea he swam for the Ouaniico Marines' Swimming Team
while taking training in amphibious warfare.
II was after he got to Korea that Boyle undertook what he still terms as “the most exciting swim" of his life. He described the conditions surrounding the swim as follows:
“I was with a group setting up an
observation post one night on an island in the Han River. But the enemy found out what we were doing and we had to get off of that island in a hurry.“The tide of the river was going out from the island toward the Yellow Sea.
The Han River has the highest tidal
drop-40 feet- of anywhere in the world.“When we got into the water we were immediately swept down the river by
the fast moving currents. The Chinese
were on one side of the river firing and
the Korean Marine Corps were on the other side firing tracers and it looked
like the Fourth of July.
“Because of this tremendous tidal drop we were being swept along so fast that it looked like we would be swept out to sea. If we had reached the sea we
would have been goners.
“But we somehow managed to stay together and we barely touched the southern side of an island right before the river entered the sea. We saw some friendly guerrillas standing on the cliffs of the island and they threw down some
ropes so that we could climb the cliffs and be safe."
The Korean War ended and Boyle again left the Marine Corps to get
married, pursue a career in retail
managing and marketing, raise a family
and "concentrate" on his childrens’ swimming.“I got to be kind of a swimming fanatic," he said. “I built one pool at one house I had and when I built another
house that house had an indoor pool."
With pleasure he reported that “By
the time my two oldest sons, Hal and Douglas, were 8-years-old they were state YMCA swimming champions in the state of Illinois." And other children
of the Boyles have been fine swimmers
in their own rights over the years.
The Boyles moved to Bermuda Run in Davie County in 1973 and Walt continued to pursue his career as the national accounts Sales director of a large cor
poration while raising his family.
However, after his youngest son, Walt
Jr., graduated from Davie High School a
year ago, his oldest son, Hal, who also lives at Advance and who had been swimming in the Winston-Salem YMCA
Masters' swimming program, per
suaded his dad to return to competitive
swimming after a layoff of many years from competitive swimming.And Walt Sr. has not regreted for one
minute his decision to join the Masters' program.
(NEXT WEEK BOYLE DISCUSSÊS HIS INVOLVEMENT IN THE MASTERS' SWIMMING PROGRAM, HIS RIGID TRAINING REGIMEN
AND THE BENEFITS OF SWIMMING, NOT ONLY FOR HIMSELF, BUT ALSO FOR SOCIETY AS A WHOLE).
N o t h i n g H e l d B a c k ! ! !
W e M u s t R e d u c e d O u r I n v e n t o r y ! !
\
1
M E N ' S
D R E S S S H O E S
M E N ' S
D R E S S P A N T S
C H I L D R E N ' S
D R E S S
S H O E S
L A D I E S
D R E S S S H O E S
A L L
L A D I E S W E A R
C O L E M A N F U E L
• 2 .2 9 o „
P R E S T O N E A N T I - F R E E Z E
* 3 . 4 9 o„
THE DIS(U)UNT HOUSE
Mocksville, N. C.
Open 9:00-9:00 Monday-Friday 9:00 • 6:00 Saturday Closed Sunday
6 DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISH RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1978
U .S .D .A . C H O IC E JU IC Y F L A V O R F U L
S I R L O I N T I P R O A S T
$ |69
1 2 o z .
P K G .
A R M O U R 'S T A S TY M EA T
FRANKS
9 9 «
A R M O U R 'S
L U N C H M E A T S
6 9 *
B EEFEA TER
F R A N K S ^
LB .
U .S .D .A .C H O IC E A E A N TA S TY
S I R L O I N T i p S T E A K i
$ |89
LB .
A L L L E A N TEN D ER
6 0 Z . P K G .i
T O P Q U A L IT Y JE N E O
T U R K E Y B R E A S T
M . 4 9
C U B E S T E A K
LB .
L E A N 100% PU R E FRESH
G R O U N D B E E F
LB.
$ 199
KPflrr’Q
V E L V E E T A C H E E S E
MU FOOD SAVINGS ★ SAVE 24‘
Уз SLICED
S M O K E D P I C N I C S
8 9 «
C O R N O I L
Ш \ QUART ^
F R A N K C O R R IH ER
W H O LE H O G
S A U S A G E
S A U S A G E
S A U S A G E
PATTIES
12 0 Z .P K G .
MAZOLA 100% PURE
★ SAVE 30*
P A N C A K E M I X
o o «
1 6 9
CAN
SAVE 30c
BREAKFAST ORANGE DRINK6 O Z . FREE B O N U S P A C K
T A N G $33 OZ. SIZE
★ SAVE 36'
FRESH CRISP KELLOGG’S
C O R N F L A K E S
18 OZ. BOX
★ SAVE 10*Л'й; PRINGLES POTATO CHIPS
Save Y S L
Щ8Т FROZEN ALL FLAVORS
O G U R l
C A R T O N O F 8
■QUART
★ SAVE30‘
SARA LEE FROZEN
P O U N D C A K E Q O
12^Z.SIZE ^
★ SAVE 30*
> FROZEN DESSERTTOPPING
C O O L W H I P
90Z.SIZE
•k SAVE 20*
MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT
C O F F E E ^
100Z.JAR 9
COKES
DISH DETERGENT 220Z.B0mE
Л , VALUABLE COUPON
KING SIZE
^ 0 0z.i3ie.2 0z.i-
^ è s o a d e 9 | 3
d B L iB IWITH THIS COUPON
HEFFNER'S
cooooNiTAT LAND OF FOOD
_ OFHMXPUCS September 23,1978
TOILET BOWL CLEANER
FOR AUTOMATIC DISH WASHERS
C A S C A D E S
50 OZ. SIZE
★ SAVE 36
••Total Shopping” V
- w 1-No Lmi
UistantMAXIM COFFEE«
80z.Iar *4 ^ Jsa « e 3 2 "
Maxwell HouseCOFFEE »2*^[ 1 Lb. Can ★ SSave 20* I
1 lb. can only with this coupon |
Deal No. _W79.g_
ONE (OUMH PEI МКИ»5Е • OfГЕ» EXPiiES September 23. 1978
LIMIT I COUPON PLR PURCHASE H lF fN ilè S P R fC E S
V A N I S H
12 oz. SIZE 7 9 '
★ SAVE 20*
FOR UNCLOGGING DRAINS
» » D R A I N O
120Z.CAN | C (
★ SAVE 24*
F A T O E S
9«LB .
M O U N T A IN G R O W N G R EEN
C A B B A G E
1 3 !
Sweetheart 9 Oz. Size
Cold Cups
Glad 2-Mil.
Trash Bags 8 Count
Plastic Wrap
Glad Wrap 200 Ft.
Sweetheart 5 Oz. Size
Cold Cups
Sweetheart 9 Inch
White Plates 150 Count
Sweetheart 10 Inch
Dinner Plates
Sweetheart 7 Oz. Size
Plastic Cups 100 Count
Sweetheart 9 Oz. Size
Hot Cups 5*^
Glad barge
Garbage Bags 30 Count
Glad Lawn &
5 Count
Dlicount
Price
99'
‘1.09
75'
99'
*1.23
83'
>1.09
'1.19
‘1.79
99*
YOU
SAVE
1 0 '
1 6 *;
44* I
1 0 '
1 2 '
16'
1 0 '
30'
2 0 '
16'
« DAVIli COUNTY liNTIiRl’RISIi RIK'ORD, THURSDAY. SI:T>TI:MHl:R :i. I‘>78
D a v i e D i s t r i c t C o u r t
No court was held September 4. I97H
due lo Labor Day holiday.
The following cases were disposed ol
in Ihe regular September it, 1978 session
of Districl Court with Lester P. Martin,
Jr.. Presiding Judge and Frank Bell,
Asst. Districl Attorney:
Marvin Ray Bryant, operating motor
vehicle while under the influence. $100
and cost, surrender operators license;
driving while license revoked, voluntary
dismissal.
I>arry Dean Howard, failure lo slop
for duly erected slop sign, not guilty; no
operators license, cost.
John W illiam Liles, operating motor
vehicle while under the influence, $100
and cost, surrender operators license
Debra Holland Cox, speeding B8 mph
in 55 mph zone, prayer for judgment
continued on cost.
Franklin Charles Lawson, speeding 70
mph in 55 m ph zone, $23 and cosl.
Forrest Windburn Hartley, reckless
driving, $2,40 and cost.
Carl Eugene White, assault, prayer
for judgment continued Jo r six months
on condition he not assault prosecuting
witness and other special conditions.
John Howard Stafford, exceeding safe
speed, prayer for judgment continued on
cost.
Tom Shore, assault with deadly
weapon, not guilty.
Wayne Shanks, assault with deadly
weapon. Sentenced to six m onths
suspended for three years, probation for
one year under usual rules and
regulation and special conditions; not to
go about prem ises of Cooleemee
Recreation Center and other special
conditions.
Mike White, assault with deadly
weapon, sentenced to six m onths
suspended for three years, probation for
one 'year under usual rules and
regulations and special conditions; not
go about prem ises of Cooleemee
Recreation Center and other special
conditions.
Diana Lynn Meadows, simple affray,
dismissed.
Charles Dennis Turner, Jr., simple
affray, dismissed.
Operators Licenses
Are Suspended
Motor vehicle operator licenses suspended or revoked in Davie County
for tiie period ending August 2Sth included:Lutiier L. Arnold Jr., 20, of Rt. 4
Mocicsville, suspended as of September
2, 1978 until September 1, 1979.WUUe J. Gadson, 20, of Rt. 4 Mocksville, revoked as of November 19, 1978 untU November 19, 1979.Edith A. Groce, 17, 841 Halender
Drive, MocksvUle, suspended as of
August 31,1978 until Novemi>er 30,1978.Holda P. Watkins, 39, of Rt. 6 Mocksville, revoked as of September 1, 1978 untU Septemlwr 1, 1979.
.Montr Blackwood, assault with deadly
^M'iipon. not guilty.
Sicvp Haley, trespass, thirty days
suspended for one year, not go about
premises of prosecuting witness.
David Eugene McDaniel, improper
:ires and improper mufflers, cost
David McDaniel, larceny, six months
■suspended for three years, probation for
one year under special conditions.
K eilh E dw ard D raughn, rcckless
driving, ninety days suspended for two
years. $.50 and co.st, surrender operators
license for len davs, violate no laws of
N.C
Grayson P oplin, obstruct traffic,
dismissed.
Denny H arold B arney, discharge
fireworks, prayer for judgment con
tinued on condition he pay court costs
and special conditions.
John M ark N ew m an, discharge
fireworks, prayer for judgm ent con
tinued on condition he рту court costs
and special conditions.
Teletips Available
On Tree Planting
Tony Myers of Ri. 1, Woodieaf, was’killed Friday when this gyro-copter crashed near Powan airport
(Photo By James I^rringer)
D a v i e N a t i v e I s K i l l e d I n G y r o - C o p t e r C r a s h
Citadel Cadet James Anthony Speer of Mocksville has received a promotion
within the South Carolina Corps of Cadets for the 1978-79 academic year. A senior at the military college, Cadet Speer holds the rank of second lieutenant and serves as athletic officer
of his company. He is majoring in civil
engineering and is enrolled in the Navy
ROTC program at The Citadel. Cadet Speer is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Speer of Mocksville.
Pancake Supper
Jericho-Hardison Ruritan Club, Green
Hill Road, will sponsor a Pancake
Breakfast, Satur^iay, September 23, at the club, beginning at 5:30 a,m. and continuing until 11 a.m. The menu will be pancakes, sausage and eggs.
Come on out and enjoy a good break
fast, eat all you want, and pay whatever
pleases you. There is no charge;
donations will be accepted.
A gigantic yard sale will also be in progress at the club during the breakfast hours. This is being sponsored by the ladies of the club.
Toriy Carlisle Myersr 39, of Rt. 1 Woodieaf, was killed last Friday about 11:30 a.m. when his gyro-copter disintegrated in the air and crashed at the end of the Swaim Field runway in Salisbury.
Myers, a native of Davie County and a
truck driver with Wrenn Brothers Carolina of Charlotte, was making his first flight in the machine which he had built himself.
Richard Crouch, who saw the
helicopter-like machine begin to come apart when it was 200 feet in the air, said Myers had been practicing take-off and landing maneuvers at the local airport
for the past couple of months.
“He hadn't taken off in it before today," Crouch said. "He had just been lifting it up and putting it down, but he
came in and got gas and told me he was going to try it.“He was pretty nervous about it and I told him I would be, too. But he was
getting confident about landing it. He said he felt pretty good about it and thought he could do it."He went back out on the runway and
made a few more passages, up and down. And then he took on off. He circled back over the airport and he was
maybe over town or over Rowan Mills
and it looked like he was coining back in kind of quick.
“The blades just fell off and he just
came tumbling down, end ov№ end.“We think he was going too fast and there was too much force on the rotor blades," Crouch said. "He was
probably going 60 or 70 miles an hour."
The machine, which can only carry one person, consists of “a couple of beams with wheels, an engine and a rotor on top," another airport spokesman said. "They're not very
common but there are several of them in the area." The machines are manufactured in kit form by Benson Aircraft Co. of Raleigh.
Myers had apparently purchased the kit several months before and was teaching himself to fly it. "That's normal procedure on a one-place plane,'' said the spokesman, who
declined to be identified.
Crouch said he considered the aircraft dangerous.
He and two other men, G. W. Walker and Richard Slmmerson, saw the gyro-
copter come apart. “It appeared to
hit some turbulence," the spokesman iiaid. "It ceered sharply and started flying apart."
A native of Davie County bom April
11, 1939, Myers was the son of Lewis Myers and Ruth McIntyre Myers, He was educated at Woodieaf School.In addition to his work as a truck
One quick telephone call before you plant that next tree may save you years of regret, says Leo Williams, Davie County agricultural extension agent.If you are thinking about planting a
shade or ornamental tree this fall or winter, Williams suggests that you call Extension Teletip first.Teletlp is a statewide telephone answering service of the N.C. Agricultural Extension Service which offers Information on a wide variety of topics.
Included on the system are 45 different messages on trees.
“Suppose a person Is thinking about planting a magnolia," Williams said. “If he or she would call Teletip first and listen to what our extension forestry specialists say about growing
magnolias, he might get much better results."“You can also learn which trees are recommended for which areas and
which are not," Williams continued.
"Since many shade trees will live for 100
or more years, a few minutes spent checking out a tree before it is planted is time well spentv"----------- ---The total Extension Teletip system
has 399 different messages. To hear any
message on the system, dial a toll-free
telephone number-1800662-7301. Tell the operator the number of the message you wish to hear. Have a paper and
pencil handy to take notes.
I Teletip
through—driver, he had been a driver of race cars.....„PPf''?“"? hours for Extension Teleti;
on the Concord Speedway.He attended Woodieaf United
Methodist Church, where services were conducted Sunday by the pastor, the Rev. Shirley T. Jones. Burial was in the church cemetery.Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Ubby Harkey Myers; two sons, Billy Joe and Mark, and two daughters, I'ina and Linn Myers, all of the home; his father Lewis
Myers of Salisbury; and his mother,Mrs. Ruth McIntyre Myers of Rt. 1,Geveland; and one brother, Cody Myers
of Kannapolis.
are 7 a.ii); to 8 p.m; Monday !Friday and 8 a.m to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. For a complete listing of Teletip topics contact your county agricultrual extension office.
TMES <tlUDE It ORNAMENTAI)
C o m m u n i t y I n v o l v e m e n t W i t h
S c h o o l s I s B e i n g E n c o u r a g e d
Remember the summer you went back to see your old high sdiool or elementary school? Chances are you
could almost hear a pin drop as your
footsteps traveled down the corridor to your old classroom.But times are changing and now schools across the state are buzzing with activity not only in the summer but after
school, at night, and even on weekends
for people of all ages.A Community Schools Act was established by the 1977 General
Assembly to encourage greater com
munity involvement in schools by citizens in the community and to encourage their use of the school facility.Approximately 71 local school units were funded by the 1977 General
Assembly to hire a community schools
coordinator and to set up a local ad
visory council.According to Jim Clark, director of the Division of Community Schools, Department of Public Instruction, “As
citizens become more involved in the decision-making process, a climate of mutual respect, acceptance, and understanding of differences develops which can result in improved com- relationshlps. For
Community Colleges and Technical Institutes'. These post-secondary institutions have moved their programs and courses closer to the people who need and want them by using local
schools at night or on the weekends.In Jackson County approximately 13,249 people participated in a variety of programs offered in July at schools in the county while 69,672 people par
ticipated in community schools
programs in Buncombe County.In another city, a group of men at a nearby industry just hop across the street at lunchtime to Welcome Middle School in Pitt County to work out in the gym, saving their company money they
would have spent on an expensive
recreational complex.Other activities going on as a result of the community school effort include summer day camps, gospel sings, art
classes, tennis lessons, bookmobiles, a
little theater, a special Olympics for the handicapped as well as courses and activities sponsored by local civic groups and community colleges and
technical institutes.Plans now call for asking the General Assembly for enough money to fund the other 74 local school units in a community schools program by July, 1979.
Great Pumpkin
It could very well be the great pearance...or so thought A.R. Hollei weighed in at 109 pounds.
pumpkin making an early apiernen of Rt. 7 r —'----•— ■' Cooleemee. This giant
munity-school relationships. For instance in Tryon youngsters are getting together with retired persons who own
horse farms to learn about hor- Uar<lcsemanship and to ride a horse possibly lO p U airy iie ru S
for the first time."aark noted that through cooperation A .. I ¡>«0,1 and community Involvement, the u a iB Uschools become community schools which are operated in partnership with
civic, business and lay leaders, as well as community, state, and federal agencies and organizations.Clark also commented on the kinds of activities occurring as part of a com
munity school program. A great deal of
activity is being generated as the result of cooperation between local schools and
Ens. Charles Williams
In NATO Exercises
Navy Ensign Charles ü. Williams, son of Fred T. and Sarah A. Crabb of 805 Lakewood Drive, Mocksville, N.C., is participating
in the major NATO exercises “Bold Guard '78" and Northern Wedding ‘78" in northern Europe.
He is fourth division officer of the aircarft carrier USS Forrestal, homeported in Mayport, Fla.“Bold Guard ‘78" and "Northner Wedding ‘78" are designed to refine coordination, command and
control capabilities in the external
reinforcement of NATO’s northern
flank and in conducting combined land operations. Taklne place over wide areas of the Eastern Atlantic, North Sea and English Channel, maneuvers will include am
phibious landings in the Shetland Islands and Southern Norway. A large scale landing on the west coast of Denmark's Jutland Peninsula will be followed by an overland movement of the combined allied forces for large scale maneuvers in Germany.Participants number ap
proximately 40,000 men, 170 ships
and submarines and 800 aircraft from Belgium, Canada, Denmark, the Federal Republic of Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, the United Kingdom and the United
States. This represents the largest
combined NATO exercises ever
held in North Europe.Planners for “Bold Guard" and ‘‘Northern Wedding ‘78" include General Alexander M. Haig, Jr., USA,Supreme Allied Commander,
Europe; Admiral Isaac C. Kidd,
Jr., USN, Supreme Allied Commander, Atlantic; and Royal Navy Admiral Sir Henry Leach, Allied Commander-in-Chief,
Channel.
A 1972 graduate of Davie County High School and a 1976 graduate of the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C., with a Bachelor
of Arts degree, Williams joined the
Navy in May 1976.
2504 Ash2506 Basswood2508 Beech2510 Birch2512 Cedar, Red2513 Cedar. White (Juniper)2S18 Chinquapin2520 Crabapple2522 Crepemyrtle2524 Cypress2526 Dogwood2528 Elm2530 Ginkgo2532 Gum, Sweet2533 Gum, Black 2535 Hemlock 2537 Hickory2539 Holly, American2541 Ironwood2513 Juniper (White Cedar)2543 Magnolia2546 Maple, Culture2547 Maple, Leal Problems 2549 Oak2553 Pear, Flowering2555 Pine, Culture2556 Pine, Diseases a Insects2557 Pine, White2560 Poplar, Yellow (Tulip)2562 Redbud2566 Sourwood2568 Sycamore2570 Willow. Weeping2572 Pruning Trees2574 Ferllllzlng Trees2576 Selecting Shado Trees2578 Avoiding Problem Trees ’2580 Using Fruit Trees In the Landscape2582 Planting Trees for Wildlife2584 Planting Trees lor Windbreaks ft Barriers. 2586 Removing Tree Stumps2588 Repairing Storm Damaged Trees2590 Estimating Value ol Trees2592 Hiring a Tree Service2594 Controlling Webworms In Trees
1964 Class Reunion To
Be Held October 7
The 1964 graduating class of Davie
High School will hold a class reunion at
Rich Park in Mocksville on Saturday, October 7, from 3 p.m. till you want to go home.The reunion will feature a picnic.
Families should bring a well-filled picnic basket and your own soft drinks.
Uiis is a family style picnic.Persons Interested in more in
formation about the reunion should
contact Pat A. Hege at 633-7041 or at Rt.1, Box 275, Salisbury, N.C. 28144. You can also contact C.J. AngeU Jr. at 634- 2883 to leave a message for Pat Hege.
C IK K I) MKATS
Cured meats do not keep their high
quality long in the freezer. The reason is
that Ihe seasonings added in the curing
pvocess speed rancidity.
B U Y O N E H A M
O R S A U S A G E B I S C U I T ,
G E T O N E F R E E
We're serving old-fashioned country ham and sausage biscuits. And there's more
on our menu, including apple danish, orange Juice and coffee with free refills.
Bring in this coupon below, and get our free Breakfast Bonus.
BUY ONE HAM OR SAUSAGE
BISCUIT. GET ONE FREE
WITH THIS COUPON, GOOD TIL 10:30 Д.М.
HaideeiOffer Good Only At Hardee's Of MocksviUe Tfiru
S E P T E M B E R 3 0 ,1 9 7 8 The place that brings you back
The top dairy herds in Davie County for the month of August is as follows;Fred F. Bahnson, Jr. 71 cows, 46.0 average milk and
1.39 average butterfat.Brantley Farm, 210 cows, average milk 46.0, test 3.0 and butterfat 1.39.Lone Hickory Farm, 72
cows, 383 milk, 3.6 test and
1.33 average butterfat.
Sparks & Miller, 55 cows.
36.4 milk, 3.5 test and 1.26
average butterfat.Wade Groce, 75 cows, 38.0 milk, 3.3 test and 1.25 average butterfat.
Smith Grove VFD
To Have Barbecue
Smith Grove Volunteer i-'ire
Department will have a bar-b- que Friday, September 22 and Saturday, September 23.They will have sliced and
chopp^ pork and chopped beef. If you have a large order and would like to call Ihe order in. call 998-3484.
Hendricks Reunion
The descendants of Jesse Adam Hendricks and Mary Ann Anderson Hendricks reunion will be held Saturday. September 30th at the Center community building from 3 p.m. until 7 p.m. All friends and relatives are invited lo come and enjoy the
fellowship.
Everybody is asked to bring a picnic supper which will be spread at 5:30 p.m.
C h a n g e y o u r
c o o k t o p
t o m a t c h
y o u r m e n u
JENN-AIR
GRILL-RANGE
powirtd "äi ' V venlllilion lytUKI li bulli wlihin tiw ) rang«, ciplunngimoka «nd odor» L more »Hieitntiií
Jenn-Alr's incredibly versatile model selection lets you create a range to meet your every need! In cooktops, choose the
beauty of smooth white glass-ceramic or the electric conventional-element Simply
lift out either cartridBe lo convert your
range to a Char-Fiavor grill in seconds! Convected or Conven
tional radiant heat in your oven at the flip of a switch! The Conven
tional cooks your present recipes 'r\without change Convected,
\ your jenn-Air cooks cooler and faster
(Turkeys, roasts and
hams cook at 50‘lower temperature, reducing cooking time as much as 30%*)
^ml our thomroom or piion* lor Ifii brocKurt ótKnturxg Jtnrt-Air t compJM* hnt ol rtngtt md eook lops
D A N I E L ' S
F u r n i t u r e & E l e c t r i c
at the Overhead Bridge Phone 6342492 Mccksville.N.C.
Foi The J. Chai les Hardings
ÜAVIli COUNTV’ tNTI-RPRISU RhXORD. THURSDAY. Si;l’Tl:MüKR :i. I')78 Ч
S a t u r d a y N i g h t s ' A l m o s t U n b e a r a b l e ' L i v i n g N e x t T o D r a g S t r i p
By Doug Livengood
What's it like living beside a drag
strip?Well, according to Mrs. J. Charles I* Harding, who lives with her husband beside the Farmington Dragway on
Highway 801 in Davie County, "it's almost unbearable".To illustrate her point, Mrs. Harding spoke Monday about experiences she and her husband had last Saturday night in connection with a weekend motor
ic cycle race at the dragway.“My husband and I were watching television Saturday night when we
sttirted smelling this horrible smoky
smell. We looked out the front door and in the field in front of our house there was just a big fog of marijuana smoke which had drifted over from the drag strip," she said.“We called the sheriff’s department
|)» about this, but they said they were too busy and couldn't send anybody out to investigate." she added.Later in the night, Mrs. Harding said
she and her husband started hearing
pistol shots being fired from the area of
the dragway. "It got to the point where we could actually hear the bullets I 'k- coming through the leaves of the trees around our house/' noted Mrs. Harding.
' She reported that Mr. Harding again
called the sheriff’s department about the disturbances at the drag atrip and thisrtime two deputies came to their house to investigate.After arriving at the Hardings’ home
I t and talking briefly with the Hardings,
Mrs. Harding said one ot the deputies remarked to the other deputy that they (the deputies) had better get their shotguns and walk over to the dragway to investigate the pistol shots.
According to Mrs. Harding, while the
deputies were on the dragway property, |,A supposedly investigating the shooting, “at least 10 shots were fired." But, she said, "When the deputies came back over to our house they said they did not see one single shot fired while they were
over there."Pistol shots continued to ring out from the area of the dragway, even while the
I. deputies were standing talking to the
Hardings after returning from the
dragway's property, she said.Mrs. Harding said the deputies told the Hardings that they had talked with the dragway's manager while in
vestigating the shooting and that the
manager had told the deputies that there
I . were no private security officers at the It dragway at that hour of the night and that the last security officer had left at
Gathering Ordinance, which went into effect in the spring of 1972. (The ordinance actually went into effect
February 5, 1973). This ordinance
specifies that there be a fee of $100.00 filed, and one security officer be employed for each 500 people attending ( a mass gathering) for a duration of 15 hours, for security of all people and
property within 2600 feet radius of such gatherings.“This ordinance has never been enforced. I feel that this ordinance has
been violated at least twice during the
last month.“Starting on Friday afternoon, at 5:00 o'clock, cars and vans started arriving at Farmington drag strip. The crowd .....................tout Friday
11 / . i.
Mrs^ J.Charles Harding explains what life is like living next to Far-
(Photos by Gari^ Foster)mington Dragway.
8:30 p.m.A hand-cohstructed Signlianging from
the roof of the box office at the
dragway’s entrance reads, "No
Firearms of Any Kind Allowed. Will Be
Enforced."“The deputies did teU us they would check back sometime during the night. But I stayed up all night anyway and the shooting stopped about three o’clock in the morning, but they continued to race
the motorcycles up and down the track
at the drag strip all night," commented
Mrs. Harding."In fact, they raced the motorcycles over there from noon Saturday till late Sunday night," she added.The Hardings have been living in their
home for thirty years and for seventeen
of those years-since the dragway
opened in l96l~Mrs. Harding explained that she and her husband have had problems with the dragway’s operation.“Our biggest problem has been with
trespassers coming onto our property
from the dragway," she said.
Because of the persistent problem
with trespassers, the Hardings have owned three German Shepherd attack
dogs for several years to warn them of trespassers and to attempt to frighten
away any trespassers.
Sign at the entrance to Farmington Dragway says
prohibited on the premises. (Photo by Garry Foster)
that firearms are
C a r o l i n a R e v i e w
by Jerry Mobley
1980 RUMBLINGS. . .The 1978 political campaigns are hardly under full steam but 1980 political rumblings are already
rampant in Raleigh over several statewide offices.
Political "feelers" are bing extended
by a number of potential candidates in an early attempt to get some idea of the possibilities for success. Most of the action, if not all, is on the democratic
i<lder
:; The most tangible effort has been on
■ alf of Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green. His
1 run at the governorship in 1980
J guided by the "Green Cabinet"- i group of business and political leaders around the state who are repor-
Uy lining up potential resources and rters.lis past weekend, over 600 of those
l^pporters gathered in Raleigh for a
l^undraising banquet and “celebrity l^ a s t" of the lieutenant governor.»! Should Green run for governor, there ‘ 'ill be no shortage of candidates for his cated position.
I ; At least two department secretaries in
tthe Hunt administration are eyesing the ace for It. gov. Both Transportation cretary Tom Bradshaw and the retary of Natural Resources and ommunity Development, Howard Lee,
are reportedly considering such a race.
Lee, who was defeated by Green in the ¡1976 Democratic primary runoff, might 'ilso be considering another try at cond District Congressman, L.H.ntain. The former Chapel Hill
ayor lost a respectable 1972 race
^ainst Fountain.In addition, Speaker of the House, Carl Itewart, is almost certain of running for It. gov.
1 Secretary of State Thad Eure's seat
will probably be a battle between
eady announced candidate, George
Згеесе (Breece lost a close race to Eure
I 76), and Senate Pres. Pro Tem. John iley of Cumberland County.Although Sec. Eure has said he might
jyell run again, his age would be a real
rawback. The “oldest rat in the
emocratic barn" will be a robust 81 ears old in November of 1980.Olher reports in recent weeks have ut Johnston County Senator Ed Renow in a possible race for Henry ridges' office as State Auditor.
[Another possibility is a try by former
1 U'Herron campaign aide, Ben Utley, |>r Labor Commissioner John Brooks' sition.|UNT ACTIONS. . Gov. Hunt an-
nced at bis news conference last
|eek that he was extending his
"Also," she continued, "the loud
racket from the dragway makes life almost unbearable. The loud speakers over there are really louder than the cars running up and down the track.""And Saturday night was not the first
time we’ve had people at the dragway
shoot toward our house not knowing that on the other side of the cornfield and trees which separate our house from the dragway that there are people living,"
she said.
Mrs. Harding reported that she and
her husband have also complained about the dragway’s operation in the past to numerous county officials, apparently without much success, if any, in having their complaints answered to their
satisfaction.
"We talked to the county com
missioners about the problem several years ago, but they told us there wasn’t much they could do to help us," she said.In May of this year, following a
weekend of motorcycle racing at the
dragway, Mr. Harding wrote the
following letter to Ron Vogler, the Davie
County manager, requesting his aid in helping solve some of the problems at the dragway:"Dear Mr. Vogler:
"I have been told that it is the
responsibility of the County Manager to
enforce the Davie County Mass
hours of continuous operation.
“I talked with Sheriff Klger about
getting some officers up to the drag strip for crowd control Saturday night, after the noise became unbearable. He said that a deputy went in to observe the
goings-on, Saturday afternoon, and the
manager of the group asked the deputy to leave, saying that his presence was unwanted, and that the area was private.“It was necessary for me to call the
sheriff. jgaln, jjiter a Jive rock band started playing and singing vile, lewd
and profane songs, so loudly that we could hear them plainly in our living room with doors and windows closed. Other neighbors voiced similar complaints.“Since this property has been zoned as
a business property, it might be a good
time to determine whether it is a
bonaflde business or a nuisance. Internal Revenue and N.C. Dept, of Revenue could assist the local government, as to the business credibility. The neighbors can certainly vouch for the
nuisance part.
“People who live five to ten miles from here have said that they can hear the noise. I have run off hundreds of trespassers from my property. I have seen more speeding done on the highway
than on the track. The property is not
enclosed, and people go up there at all hours of the day and night. I once heard burglars break into the place, but did not report it, because any noise, or behavior
is normal at any time up there.
“My house is about 500 feet from the entrance. I am forced to spend over $500.00 each year, for dog feed, for three German Shepherds, attack dogs, in
order to survive. I cannot leave home, at
any time, for fear of destruction of my
home by the people who attend this drag
One of the three German Shepherd attack dogs the Hardings keep to ward off trespassers.
strip."If you determine this Farmington Drag Way is truly a business, could you use yoiir influence in having it operated as a responsible business, such as,
providing genuine crowd control (not
token), directing loud speakers toward the crowd, and not at neighbors, and forcing these people to observe reasonable hours, etc.?
Very truly yours J. Charles Harding
“P.S. There was a tattoo artist at the
gathering Saturday. It is very unlikely that this tattoo artist had license to practice this trade in Davie County."Ten days after Harding’s letter was dated, county manager Vogler wrote
Mr. Harding the following reply:
"Dear Mr. Harding;
“Thank you for your letter concerning
the current use of the drag strip next to you. After checking with the Sheriff’s Department, it certainly appears that
the event of the motorcycle drag race
would come under the purview of the
Davie County Mass Gathering Ordinance.
‘Therefore, the owners of the drag strip have been notified when the or
dinance applies and given a copy of the
ordinance so they can make application
to the County for the necessary permits and comply with the ordinance.
Sincerely,
Ronald H. Vogler
County Manager”
Have the Hardings ever thought about moving to escape what they believe to be
"unbearable" conditions caused by living next to the drag strip?
“I think that after you get to be 60- years-old, as I am, not many people of that age want to go out and start life in a new community. I have lived here tlU it
feels like home and I don’t want to go out
and start a home somewhere else,” explained Mrs. Harding.
executive order for merit selection (by a Judicial Nominating Committee) of Superior Court judges for another year. He also said that he would ask the 1979
Genral Assembly to enact such a system into law.
The merit selection will hopefully
minimize the political connections needed in the past for judicial appointments.In separate action, the governor
announced that the accounting firm of
Arthur Andersen and Company has been
selected to review and make recommendations concerning the operation of the state Banking Commission.The Commission was tarnished this
spring by reporta of an alleged
“coziness” between Commission Head
John Tropman, his deputy, Jessie
Yeargen, and the Northwestern Bank.Both Tropman and Yeargen resigned under fire.PCB.. .The problem refuses to go away.. .Initial efforts to remove the cancer- causing chemical from the roadside have been unsatisfactory and further
tests are underway.
One recent suggestion, to leave the
chemical where it is, probably will not receive a great deal of consideration- especially from the residents who live along the 210 miles of contaminated
roads.
MORE. . .Bickering continues between
supporters of North Carolina’s two state
porta~the ongoing dissension may come to head in the nëxt several months since dropping profits for Wilmington and continued deficits in Morehead might
force consolidation in some areas. .
Only liquor-by-the-drink action this week is in Sanford. Sanford holds the distinction of being the one city in N.C.
where beer may be purchased only by
the six-pack and at room temperature.. Gov. Hunt probably does not relish his speech to the annual meeting of the state AFL-CIO this week since his Commerce
Secretary, Lauch Faircloth, called the state's anti-union climate a "selling point" in a speech last week to the Eastern N.C. Development Association.
Temprralure U Same
It is not hotter in the sun than in the
shade. People feel warmer because the
sun heats Iheir skin and clothing, but the
air temperature is Ihe same Officials
temperatures are recorded by ven-
tiaited, shaded thermometers, so Ihe
sun will not heat the glass and mercury
and distort the reading, the National
(ieugraphic Society says.
G e t a S i i m i e I n t e r e s t L o a n f i x M n . . .
^ T H ENORTHWESTERN
i l N K 4 & e .
O r aslc y o u r d e a le r a b o u t N b r l i i w e s t e m S im p le In te r e s t F in a n c in g .
DAVIh COUNTY I-NTIRPRISL KI CORI’, riRiRSDAY. Slil’TtMHIiR :i, l‘)78
Modeling for the Women’s Club Fashion snow last weeK are trom leii to
right; Mrs. Frances Smith, Mrs. The)ma Spencer, Mrs. Lena Haire and Mrs. Peggy Cornatzer.
Moclcsville Women’s Club models, <l to r) Mrs. Mae CUck, Mrs. Ann
Goin, Mrs. Betsy Cochrane and Mrs. Elaine Brown.
M o c k s v ille W o m a n ’s C lu b H a s F a ll F a s h io n S h o w
Forty members and thirteen guest
met September 13 at the Bermuda Run
Country Club tor the September lun
cheon meeting. Mrs. Lester Martin, Sr. and Mrs. James Kelley, Jr, greeted members and their guest at the door.Hostesses for the occasion were Mrs,
James Kelley, Jr., Mrs. George Haire,
Mrs. Roy Harris, and Mrs, Roy Brown, Jr. The elegant tables were decorated with pale yellow table cloths and " miilticoloredTxisea-and baby’s breath.
Student guest was Miss Stella Deane
McCullough who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry McCullough and a senior at Davie County High School,Special guests were Mrs, Elva Grace
Tomlinson, Mrs. Carol Crowell, Mrs.
Letty Pennington, Mrs. Sallie Riddle,
Mrs. Nancy Cartner, Mrs. Jane Bullard,
Mrs. Joyce Shields, Mrs. Nancy Shanks, Mrs. Mary Harrison, Mrs. Clara Corriher, Mrs, Ann Livengood and Mrs.
Camille Martin.Mrs, Steve Martin (Camille) was welcomed into the club as a new member by membership chairman,
Mrs, Charles Bahnson, who presented her with a club yearbook.Mrs. Fred Long, the club president, honored the life and memory of a
beloved club woman, Mrs. Eva Phillips, with a memorial tribute. She was born in West Valley, New York, moved to Mocksville in 19S0, and Joined the club in 1968. She died July 24, 1978, The
Mocksville Woman’s Club is richer for
having had her as a member.The club donated $S(XI to the Davie County Library Piano Fund,For the program, Mrs. Pat Latta, presented an entertaining, informative, latest color and style Fall Fashion Show
using cliib members, Mrs. George
Haire, Mrs. Sebon Cornatzer, Mrs. Ray
Smith, Mrs. William Spencer, Mrs. Claude Goin, Mrs, Fletcher Click, Mrs.
J.K. Cochrane, and Mrs. Roy Brown, Jr.
for models. Their clothing which included a variety of fashionable dress, sport, casual, coats, hats , and evening attire accessorized with jewelry and
accessories were furnished by down
town Davis Department Store in Winston Salem. Mrs. Knox Johnstone commentated the show introducing the models and ably describing their en
sembles. The fashion show was enjoyed
by all.A luncheon buffet concluded the September meeting of the Mocksvllle
Woman’s Club.
Amber Suzanne Johnson celebrated
her 2nd,birthday on Sept. 5,1978. She had a cake from her Grandmothers and aunts and uncles and cousins. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Johnson of Rt. 1, Harmony.
B i r t h s
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Eudy of Orlando,
Florida proudly announce the birth of their first child, a son, Brian Nicholas, bom September 5th.The baby weired 5 lbs. 8 ozs. and was
WA inches in length.Maternal granc^arents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray Yandle, Sr. of Charlotte.Paternal granc^arents are Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Eudy of Cooleemee, N.C.Great grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
M,R. Eudy of Route 4, Mocksville, and Mrs. Sally Foster of Route 7, Mocksville.
Mr. and Mrs. James M. Jones of 942 Hardison Street proudly announce the
birth ot their first chUd, a daughter,
Kathy Lynne.She was born at 10:51 a.m., Thursday, August 31st at Davie County Hospital. She weighed 7 lbs. 11% oz. and was 20 %
inches long.Paternal grandfather is Mr. Walter F,
Jones of St. Petersburg, Fla.Maternal grandparenU are Mr. and Mrs. D. Clinton Wilson of Route 7, Mocksville.Great-grandmothers are Mrs. Odessa
Jones of Winston-Salem and Mrs. Lottie
Lltten of Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Van R. Thomas, Route 1, Advance, announce the birth of a daughter, Karl Monroe, born Saturday,
September 9th at Forsyth Memorial
Hospital in Winston-Salem.The baby weighed 7 lbs. 3 ozs. and was
20 inches in length.Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs, Vance Dunn of Route 3, Mocksville,
Paternal grandmother Is Mrs.
Beatrice Bauer.Great grandmothers are Mrs. Nannie Dunn of Rt. 1, Advance ; and Mrs. Grace Thomas of Bennettsville, S.C.Mrs, Thomas is the former Tanya
Dunn of Mocksville,
Hi, I'm Amanda Marie Osborne, but you can call me Mandy. I Just turned Z
years old, and I had the best party,
Mommy and daddy think we might have to move out to make room for all my new toys.
My mommy and daddy, (Karl and
Joanne Osbome) gave me a party that
my whole family came to; my mom'rie
(Marie Jones) my Aunt Lela, Uncle John, Cousins Johnny and Michael Butero, and my uncle's mother, Anna Butero. We all had some of my crazy
cat cake, ice cream, and coke, and a great time, ’ 'Besides all the toys I got at my party, I also got some nice gifts through the mall
from my Grandpa Wllford, and my
Grandma and Grandpa Osbome, and even my nice neighbors, the Jay Brim's brought me a present too...I really like . birthdays.
Fork Jaycees To
Honor Sr. Citizens
The Fork Jaycees are sponsoring a Senior Citizen Appreciation Day on Saturday, September 23 for all Senior
Citizens, 60 years of age and older, in the
Fork community.This event will be held at the Fork Recreation Center and is scheduled to begin at 3 p.m. It will last until everyone is ready to go home.There will be old timey chicken stew
and homemade ice cream available to
all who come. Bring your own bowl and
join In the fun. Transportation will be provided to anyone needing it. Contact Grady Barney at 998-5007.In case of rain, this event will be
postponed until September 30, same
time and location.
Miss Angela Shoaf
Honored At Shower
Miss Angela Shoaf of Stokesdale was
honored Saturday evening wilh a miscellaneous shower at the home of Mrs. Elmer Groce of Wyo, Assisting, Mrs, Groce was Mrs, Fred Athan and Mrs, Ernest Groce,Upon arrival the bride-elect was presented a corsage of white and yellow
daisies.The large group of friends were invited to the dining room for refreshments, The table was covered with a
lace cloth and centered with an
arrangement of mixed summer flowers.Miss Shoaf will marry Edwin Spach of
Farmington, Sunday, Sept, 24.
Kathy Chaffin has been appointed editor-in<hief of Appalachian State University’? newspaper "The Appalachian."
A bl weekly newspaper,"The Appalachian'.' prhits 14,000 copies per week. Just
ecently rated "All American (the highest possible rating) by the Associated
Collegiate Press for the third consecutive semester, “The Appalachian" is
recognized as one of the best college newspapers in the nation.Chaffin was a features writer for "The Appalachian" for two years prior to her appointment. She Was also the creator and editor of a smaller campus publication, "The Twcetsle Times,"
As editor-in-chief, Chaffin heads up a staff of seven section editors and 35 staff writers. She is responsible for formulating the newspaper’s editorial stand on major Issues and retains final authority In deciding what is to be printed.Chaffin, a 1975 graduate of Davie High, is presently a senior at ASU double
majoring in English and Political Science. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Morgon Chaffin of Route 1, Mocksville.
David and Julie McIntyre, children of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Mcln<
tyre of Mocksville, celebrated their birthdays last week with a party at McDonald’s in Salisbury. David was 7 years old September 6th and
Julie was 4, September 9th. Twen^ of their little friends enjoyed hamburgers, french fries, coke and a Ronald McDonald birthday cake.
Their grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. D.K. Bailey of Cooleemee, and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Otis McIntyre of Salisbury.
Mary Rebecca Essie and Ben Marshall Forrest celebrated their flrst
birthday Sunday with a party »t the home of their grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Forrest of Route 1, MocksviUe. Rebecca and Ben are first cousins born less than 2 hours apart on Sept. 18,1977, and delivered
by the same doctor.
Homemade Ice cream and a mecial “pumpkin" cake made by 1. Refiecci • * * '* .............Rebecca’s mother was served.ecca’s brother, Jeff assisted her In-
WOman’s Club Has Miss Stella McCullough
As Special Guest At Bermuda Run
opening girts and Ben was helped by his Ы-other, Chad.
Rebecca Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Essie Jr. and Вел is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Forrest.
Ben also shared honors with his ie*year old cousin, PhUlp Forrest, at ven by their aunt and uncle M r. and Mrs.
Miss Stella Diane McC^lough, a senior at Davie County High School, was a special guest of the Mocksvllle
Women's CHub at Its first meeting of the
1978-79 year held at Bermuda Run on
September 13, The Women's Club honors an outstanding young lady from Davie County High School at each of Itsmeetings.
The accomplishments of Miss McCullough are many. She was selected as a foreign exchange student by Rotary
International and lived in Finland
during the summer of 1978. Another
summer has been used to attend
Western Carolina University for Its summer program for gifted and talented students.
At Davie County High School, Miss McCullough was secretary of the Drama
Club furlng her freshman year, has
served as secretary and president of the
Social Studies Club, has been a member of the Student Council for three years, and on the committee of Student affairs.
Miss McCullough attends the Holy Ooss Lutheran Church and is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Larry Mc
Cullough of Route 4 Mocksvllle,
a birthday supper Sat.
Steve Turner. Ben and Williams of Rt. 7.
are grandsons of Mrs. Frances Turner
Around And About
^
ENTERS BAPTIST HOSPITAL FOR TREATMENT Enoch C. Jarvis of Route 2, Mocksville, entered N.C. Baptist Hospital Monday
for X-Rays and therapy.
SPENDS LAST WEEK IN ARKANSAS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bean of Mocksville, Route 7, spent last week in Magnolia, Arkansas. Tliey made the trip especially to take №s. Bean s mojh»- Mrs. Beatrice Shore home, after a visit with them here. They also visited two
brothers of Mrs. Bean's and their families while there.
WEEKEND VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. Bob Kent of Lenior, Ms. Lynn Kent, a student at UNC-G, and Mr. and Mrs. Allen Carter of Greensboro were weekend guests of Mrs. Vida Allen at
her home on Route 3.
Toni Jo Benson celebrated her eigth
birthday anniversary Friday afternoon
with a party at her home on Edgewood Circle, Cooleemee. Approximately 20 Uttle guests attended. Refreshments of birthday cake, decorated cup cakes,
potato chips and Kool-Aid were served
by her mother, Mrs. Hayden Benson. After the honoree opened her gifts, the guests were treated to a watermelon feast, followed by a ‘‘seed>splttbig" contest under the supervision of her
older sister, Traci. Prizes were awarded
to the whiners, Julie Coleman and Melissa Shoaf. Assorted favors were also given to each little guest Assisthig with the serving were Toni's grand
mothers, Mrs. Otis Canupp and Mrs.
Bessie Naiie.
X^ooteetnee Sr; ~
Citizens Meet
The Cooleemee Senior Citizens spent Monday in
Kannapolis and Concord
where 39 members had lunch
at the K & W Cafeteria, toured the mall in Concord and visited the Cannon Mills Outlet Store in KannapoUs.
The group retumed home late in the aftemoon.
Their regular meeting wUl
be held Monday, September
25, in the feUowship haU of Ute
First Baptist Church at 10
a.m. The newly elected officers WiU be instaUed during the meeting.
W e W ant T о Give Y ou
p G u y ^
,/0 ,D o l l s:s \л V Л' -Located 2/10 Mil« From
Hwys. 158 & BOI Intertaction on Hwy. 158
—^/ea^e o n / a d —
Gail Bowles
& Vickie Tuggle
PHONE 998-2351
Future Homemakers
Hold Meeting
The first meeting for the
1978-79 Future Homemakers
ot America was held Wed
nesday, September l3Ui, Officers that were elected In May conducted Uie meeting.An up-membership chairperson alternate was elected. They are as foUowing: first period- Cindy Williams, second period- Lynn Dale, Uiird person - Joanne Klutz,
fourth period - GaU WUUams,
fifth period - Carolyn Lyons
and sixth period • Angie Brown, These people wo„ wiU also help Uie officers wlUi various F, H A, acUvities.
Everyone in attendance
w u invited to join F. H. A„The next scheduled meeUng will be held Wednesday, October 4th.
Back by Popular Demand
No
Appointment
NeededColor Sketches in Pastels
Saturday, September 23,1978
10 A.M. til 5 P.M.
P . B . ’s H o b b y S h o p
North Main Street Mocksville, N,C,
Fulton
Chicken Stew
BEHIND HENDRIX BARBECUE 64 EAST
F r i d a y N i g h t , S e p t . 2 2
7 : 0 0 P . M .
C A R L S T E W A R T
SPEAKER OF THE NORTH CAROLINA HOUSE
FEATURED SPEAKER
E N T E R T A IN M E N T B Y T H E T R I-C IT Y B O Y S II
, в в € н » /
■ il
. . l i
iüi
Fulton Precinct Democrats
RICHARD HENDRIX, CHAIRMAN
I
ill
i l
Ad puid tur Ь> Davie Cuunly Dcmocraiic l-Aecutive Cunimillee. Bill liamek Chairman
IMVIl; COUNTY liNTI-RPRISi
»■ '»J
MRS. WILLIAM LACY HAIR JR.
...was Diane DuU
D u ll- H a ir V o w s A r e S p o k e n
Miss Susan Diane Dull became the bride of William Lacy Hair Jr. on Saturday, September 16, at Lewisville Baptist Church. The Rev. Joe Coltrane
officiated at the 2 p.m. double-ring
ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas H. Dull of Winston-Salem. She is a graduate of West Forsyth Senior High School and Forsyth Technical Institute. She is employed as a staff nurse at Forsyth Memorial Hospital.
The bridegroom is the son of № . and
Mrs. William Lacy Hair, Sr. of Winston- Salem. He is a graduate of Parkland High School and is employed by R.H.
Airringer Distributing Company.Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown of white satalustre organza over taffeta, designed with a high neckline, long sheer sleeves and an A-line skirt that extended into a chapel train. Beaded Venise lace, sequins and
seed pearls accented the neck, sleeves,
bodice and train. Her elbow-lenght veil
of illusion fell from a lace covered headpiece which was trimmed with seed pearls and white satin ribbon. The headpiece was worn by the bride's sister at her wedding. The bride’s bouquet
was a cascade of yellow and white
sweetheart roses, stephanotis, babies’
breath, lilies of the valley and greenery.Mrs. Connie Burnham of Baltimore, Md. was her sister’s mati-on of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jeanette Boner of Winston-Salem, Ms. Deanie Walker of Winston-Salem, Mrs. Elizabeth Lunsford of Kingsport, Tenn., all sisters of
the bridegroom, and Miss Anne-Marie Dowe of Winston-Salem. Their gowns were yellow chiffon over taffeta with a wide fluted collar overlaying the bodice. Each carried a miniature cascade of
yellow and white roses with white
pompoms, babies’ breath and greenery.
Miss Jodi Key of Winston-Salem was
flower girl. Her floor length gown,
made by the bride's mother, was a white
crepe de chine. She wore babies’ breath in her hair and carried a basket of yellow rose petals.Master Adam Key of Winston-Salem was ring bearer. He wore a white
tuxedo.
William Lacy Hair, Sr. was his son’s best man. Ushers included Kevin Dull, brother of the bride. Bud Lunsford of Kingsport, Tenn., Burton Boner of Winston-Salem, and Т.К. Jones, also of Winston-Salem.
Mrs. Ann Canupp was organist. John
Canupp was soloist.The bride's cousin. Miss Cathy Keaton of Advance, presided at the guest register. Wedding scroll were distributed to the guests by Miss Teresa Jones and Miss Christy Jones of Winston-Salem.
RECEPTION
Following the ceremony, a reception
was held in the church fellowship hall.The bridal table was covered by a lace cloth and held a five-tier wedding cake decorated with yellow rosebuds and topped with white satin bells.
A centerpiece of mixed white and
yellow flowers graced the table.
Mrs. Getty Holder and Mrs. Ruth Brown of Lewisville and Mrs. Judy Jones of Winston-Salem served refreshments.
The newlyweds will make their home
in Clemmons.
Temporary Deafness
Sustained exposure to sounds above
the 85 decibel (dB) level can cause
permanent hearing losses and exposure
of even a short duration to sounds between 100 and 125 dB can cause temporary deafness, warns the Belton Crusade for Hearing Conservation.
Series Of Parties
Honor Miss Shoaf
Buffet Dinner Miss Angela Shoaf of Stokesdale bride-elect of Edwin Spach was honored recently at a buffet dinner at the home of
Mrs. Robert Oakley ot Lexington. Assisting in entertaining were Mrs. Woodrow Long and Miss Lillie Mae Moteinger, aunts of the bride.The serving table was covered with a
Belgian linen embrodiered cloth. An arrangement of mixed summer flowers centered the table. The menu consisted of baked ham, green beans, potato salad, baked apples, congealed salads,
relish tray and hot rolls and banana-nut pound cake.The bride’s table was centered with an arrangement of mixed summer flowers and yellow candles. Place cards with tiny pearl hearts and yellow ribbon
marked the places for the guests. The bride's place was designated with a pair of kissing angels.The hostess presented the honoree a
yellow carnation corsage and a covered
silver vegetable dish.Among those present was Miss Shoaf's bridesmaids. Child attendants and their mothers. The mother of the bride-to-be
Mrs. Fred Shoaf, the mother of the groom-to-be Mrs. Sanford Spach, and Mrs. Wade Spach.
Misc. Shower
Mrs. Wilburn Long, Mrs. Olin Men
denhall and Mrs. Richard Whitt were
hosts at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Angela Shoaf, September 24th bride- elect of Eddie Spauch, at the home of Mrs. Wilburn Long of Winston-Salem.
Upon arrival the honoree was presented a corsage of yellow carnations.
Refreshments of cake squares, sand
wiches, sausage balls, cheese balls, wedding cookies, nuts, mints and lime punch were served from a table covered with a white lace cloth. An arrangement of yellow and white mums, ans shasta
daisies was flanked by pale green tapers
in hurricane globes.
Special guests were Mrs. Fred C. Shoaf, of Stokesdale and Mrs. Sanford C. Spach, mothers of the couple. Ap
proximately twenty-five guests presented Miss Shoaf with an assortment of lovely gifts.
Cookout
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Spillman were hosts at a cookout at their home September 7 honoring Miss Angela Shoaf of Stokesdale and her finace Eddie Spach of Farmington.
Candles centered the yellow-covered
tables where guests were seated on the
lawn. Hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad, pickles, homemade peach ice cream, a HoUie Hobbie boy and girl cake and individual heart shapied cakes were served.
The twenty-five guests surprised the
bridal couple with a pantry shower. The hosts gift to the couple was an electric can opener-knife sharpener.
Bridal Shower
Miss Angela Shoaf bride-elect of Edwin Spach was honored with a bridal shower Wednesday September 6th at the home of Mrs. Woodrow Long of Lexington. Co-hosfess were Mrs. Robert L. Oakley, and Miss Lillie Mae Mot- singer, aunts of the bride.
A color scheme of yellow and white
was carried out in decorations and refreshments.
Upon arrival the honoree was presented a corsage of white mums.Special guests included the bride-
elects mother, Mrs. Fred Shoaf and the
groom-electe mother, Mrs. Sanford Spach.
Refreshments consisting of pound cake, open face sandwiches, wedding cookies, cheese rings, nuts and lime punch were served to those attending.
Brock-Genovese
Mr. and Mrs. Burr C. Brock, Jr. of
Farmington, announces the engagement
of their daughter, Patricia .Ruth, to
Nicholas John Genovese, both of Asheville.Mr. Genovese is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Genovese of Statesville.The couple will be married October 21st, in Asheville at the Church of the Redeemer.
B a r b e r J u n c t io n {I
e p o t R e s t a u r a n t ! I
U.S. 70 EAST AND 801 SOUTH
BARBER, NC
RESERVATIONS FOR;• SPECIAL PARTIES ALL ABJU• GROUP MEETINGS PPBMITR• WEDDING PARTIES ranivJHD
»..-■Ki.rT - -'V - t
DCCC Offers
Advanced Art
Davidson County Com
munity College is offering a course in Advanced Art starting on Thursday September 21, 1978 at 9:00 a.m. until 12:00 a.m. for 11 weeks at the B.C. Brock Bldg. 717 North Main Street, Mocksville.The instructor will be Ms. Helen Thorn of Winston-
Salem N.C. there will be a
15.00 registration fee.
More information may be obtained by calling the College office at (704 ) 634- 3415.
Specializes in prime ribs of beef and
other fine steaks and a variety of delicious seafoods.
Car Wash
At Macedonia
The Senior High class of
Macedonia Moravian Church will hold a Car Wash at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Craft on the Redland Road, Saturday, September 23,
beginning at 8:30 and con-
; Unuing until 2 p.m. If your car needs a cleaning up job, please support these young people. There will be adults
working along with the students.
PHONE 278-4591
Hours: Tuesday • Saturday 5 PM • 'Til...
To Rommamnrate hit 700th
parachute jump, Britich Army Sergeant Hector Macmillan
made a leap In full Scottiih national dre$(, including kilt«, while playing "The Road To The Ulet" on his bagpipes!
I III RsiMV. si i'Ti mhi:r :i. 147s и
Parties Honor
Margaret Daniel
Surprise Office Luncheon
On Friday, September IS, a surprise
luncheon was held for Miss Margaret
Daniel, bride-elect of Mr. Ted Harris. Hostesses for the occasion were the approximate forty-five ladies who are fellow workers with Miss Daniel in the
Marketing Research Department of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company.The hnnoree was presented a white
S p a r k s -P h ife r
Mr. and Mrs. John F. Sparks of Route 2, Mocksville, announces the
engagement of their daughter, Teresa Karen Sparks to John Thomas Phifer of
Route 2, Mocksville. His parents are Dr. and Mrs. William H.Phifer of Monroe,
North Carolina.The bride-elect is a 1975 graduate of Davie County High School, and graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill this year.Mr. Phifer is a graduate of UNC, Chapel Hill, N.C.
A r o u n d A n d A b o u t
CALIFORNIA VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Skala and Mrs. Mary Longley of Chico, California visited Mr. and Mrs. George Hartman at their home on Depot Street Sunday. Mrs. Skala is a cousin of Mrs. Hartman. Other visitors in the afternoon were Mr. and Mrs. John Hartman of Advance and Mrs. Robert Bunch and George Bunch of Statesville.
SPENDS WEEK WITH SISTER-IN-LAW Mrs. L.R. Powell of Mocksville, Route 1, spent last week with her sister-in- law, Mrs. T.P. Dwiggins at her home on Wilkesboro Street.
HELPS GRANDSON CELEBRATE BIRTHDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Prentice Campbell of Greenwood Avenue and Mr. and Mrs.
William Gales of Cooleeme" were special guests of their irandson, Brent, at his
home in Hudson, Friday, S. ptember 15th, at a cookout'’ j celebrate his Sth birthday. His cake was a racing car. Enjoying the occ^ on with the grandparents were Brent’s aunt, Miss Susan Gales of Statesville.is parents and sister, Beth.
PROMOTED BY MARF/ES
Marine Lance Corporal James G. McCullough,# in of Ervin and Pricsilla A. McCullough of Route 4, Box 32EE, Mocksville, N.C., has been promoted to his present rank while serving at the New River Marine Corps (Helicopter) Air
Station, Jacksonville, N.C a 1976 graduate of Davie High School, he joined the Marine Corps in November 1976.
silk rose corsage Uj^n arrival,
ladies’ gut to the bride-elect was a Lenox china bread tray.The buffet table was covered with a blue cornflower print linen cloth centered with multi-colored zinnias in a
crystal basket. GuesU helped themselves to fresh vegetables with dip, Jarty sandwiches, potato chips, stuffed )eef rolls, mixed nuts, and other
assorted hors d'oeuvres. Desserts in
cluded conconut chocolate brownies, lemon cake, butterscotch squares and party mints. Lime sherbet punch ac
companied the meal.
Open House
Mrs. Roy Brown Jr. was hostess at Open House for Miss Margaret Anne Daniel bride-elect of Ted Harris of Winston-Salem, Friday September 15, al Lee Lane on Sanford Avenue.
The invited guests were served pecan
pie with ice cream, cheese balls, tea and coffee.The bride was presented with a wooden serving tray.Guests included Mrs. William C. Daniel, the bride's mother and Mrs. Thomas Jefferson Caudell, the bride's
grandmother.
Dinner at Town Steak HouseMr. and Mrs. Ed Latta were hosts at a dinner at the Town Steak House,
Saturday evening, September 16.
Honoring Miss Margaret Anne Daniel and fiance, Ted Harris of Winston-Salem who will be married September 24.A full course dinner was served after which the invited guests enjoyed music
and dancing.. The honored couple was presented a salad plate in their chosen pattern.Guests included Mr. and Mrs. William
C. Daniel, the bride's parents.
Whitley-Dw ham
Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Whitley of Walker Street, Salisbury, N.C. announced the engagment of their daughter, Patricia Carol to Morris
Marshall Durham, son of Mrs. Harold
Durham and the late Mr. Durham, of Route 4, Mocksville.Miss Whitley is a grudate of SaUsbury High School and is employed with Food Town grocery there.
Mr. Durham is a graduate of Davie County High School and is employed with Food Town Grocery in Salisbury.A December wedding is planned at .Stallings Memorial Baptist Church in Salisbury.
Hog Weighs 1,904 lbsFull-grown hogs commonly tip the
scales at 800 pounds, but Ihe heaviest on
record was a pig in North Carolina that weighed 1,904 pounds, or about the same weight as a Volkeswagen Beetle, National Georgraphic says.
Little Miss & Little Mr. Christmas
PICTURE
CONTEST
PARENTS ENTER NOW
ALL APPLICATIONS MUST BE
RECEIVED BY OCT. 9,1978.
Sponsored By
M O C K S V IL L E JA Y C E T T E S
"Little Miss And Little Mr. Christmas"
PICTURE CONTEST
Child's Name ......................... ......................................................
Age..................... Sex . . . Blrthdate .................................
Parents Name ..................................................................................................
Addreu ............................................................................................................
Phone ...................................................................................
CONTEST RULES
(1) Contest is open to all children between the ages of 4 and 6. (Child must be 4 as of Jan. 1, 1978
and not 7 before Jan. 1. 1979
(2) Contest will be open to the first ten girls and first ten boys who return the above application blank
to the Mocksville Jaycettes, P. 0. Box 813, MocksviUe, North CaroUna 27028.
(3) A 5 X 7 photograph will be required to officially he entered in contest. You wiU be contacted by a
Jaycette after you send in the above form i ottnd photo with entry form by October 9, 1978.)
(4) Your Child's photograph wiU be in the MocksviUe Enterprise and in the window on the square.
The parents will be responsible for placing and collecting the jars of money at local stores. The
winners wiU be determined by the largest sum of money coUected and turned in by Nov. 16, 1978.
(5) The winners wiU receive a $25 savings bom'. The other contestants will receive gifts. All
contestants wiU ride in the Jaycee Christmas Parade.
(6) Winners wiU be contacted by phone November 17, 1978.
(7) Proceeds wiU go to Buckle Up Babes (BUB) and other community services.
i: рлу’и (4)UNTY i N ii Ki KiM. 1^1 ^
D a v i e S o i l & W a t e r C o n s e r v a t i o n D i s t r i c t H o l d s A n n u a l A w a r d s
Cokie Jones (rii Mr. and Mrs. Л;ht) presents the ‘‘Farm Family of the Year” award to like Gaither.
North Carolina Commissioner of Agriculture Jim Graham was the featured speaker at the annual awards banquet of the Davie Soil and Water Conservation District held last Friday
night at the Smith Grove Ruritan building.Commissioner Graham told the gathering that he supported the prin
ciple of land use planning but planning
should come form the county level."Farmers own 85 per cent of county land,” Graham said. “They are the people who will be the most affected and
must be afforded a powerful voice In any
land use concept.”Graham called for protection of farmers from nuisance suits coming from developments surrounding his
property. Often, he explained, an
existing farmer can be put out of
business when new residents object to farm odors.The commissioner also asked for fair taxation 6f agricultural land and called
for careful study of the potential impact
on agriculture of Section 208 of the
federal Water Pollution Control Act and similar legislation which increases production costs and restricts farmer flexibility.Mr. Graham was introduced by Brady
Angell.
Charles Bullock, treasurer of Davie
District presided at the awards banquet.
Johnny Allen, District Superior in
troduced the special guests.
The Communications Award was presented to Robin Carter,
photographer of the Enterprise-Record,
In presenting the award fo Ms. Carter.
Sylvia McClamrock said that "the Davie Soil and Wafer Conservation Dlsfricl feel you worthy of special recognition for the excellent job you have done in
photography coverage of district events.Your assistance with our occasions, such as our awards banquet tonight, speech contests, posters and essay
contest awards, and other events, much
of it requiring your night time par-
ticlpniinn. I present this plaque to you on tiehalf of the supervisors in grateful recognition and appreciation."The “Farm Family of the Year"
award went to Mr. and Mrs. Michael Gaither, whose farm Is located in the western area of the county, near County Line. Selection is based on practices carried out in the conservation plans of
the district supervisors.
In presenting the awards to the Gaithers Cokie Jones noted that “Michael became a district cooperator only in March of this year. He is doing
an excellent job of applying the con
servation practices and land treatment
in ail aspects of soil and water con
servation". Slides were shown depicting various phases of the Gaither farming
operation.“It is because of their Interest in conservation that the Gaither family was chosen. It makes us proud to see
jVIr. and Mrs. Luther West accept the “Good Year Merit" award from Edgar Cartner.
Mr. and Mrs, Luther WMt were young farmers interested in conpresented the Goodyear “Certificate of Merit” for being chosen the outstanding farm family of the year from the Davie
District for 1977. The presentation was
made by Edgar Cartner.
servatidh; It is With great pride that we
present this award to you, Michael and
Cathy. We are proud of the work that you are doing and urge you to continue your efforts."
Robin Carter (left) of the ENTERPRISE-RECO RD accepts the
“Communcations Award” for outstanding newspaper photography from Sylvia McClamrock.
Jaycettes Sponsor Christmas Contest
The Mocksville Jaycettes are sponsoring a“UtUe Miss and Mr.” Christ
mas contest. This event is in con
junction with the MocksviUe Jaycees
Christman parade. All contestants and winners will be riding in the parade.Any child between the ages of four and six is eligible to enter the contest. Entries may be made by returning the application in this issue of the En
terprise. Pictures of the contestanU will be featured weekly.The parents of each child wUl be responsible for placing jars in
businesses in the county. The winners
will be selected according to the amount
of money turned in by each contestant.
Proceeds from this event will be used for the Mocksville Jaycette project Buckle Up Babes and other community service projecU. Buckle Up Babes Isa new project of the Jaycettes. Ite purpose is to promote and provide Infant car safety by making available
government approved carseate to any
family. Proceeds for the Little Miss and
Mr. Christmas will go toward the purchase of these carseate.
Recent projecte of the Mocksville Jaycettes have been to donate a blood
donor chair and medical cabinet to the
Davie County Hospital, and to establish
and maintain a layette program through
/ m
i f
Commissioner of Agriculture Jim Graham (center), guest speaks at the Soil and Water Conservation Awards Banquet, chats with Rev.
Charles Buiiock (left) and Brady Angell (right).
the Prenatal Care Clinic at the Davie County Health Department. The club also sponsors a Girl Scout troop and a Babysitter’s clinic. Also, each year the Mocksville Jaycettes provide a $300 scholarship awarded to an outetanding
Davie High School student.
Volks Wrecks On 1-40
Damages were estimated at $1,000 as the result of an accident on Interstate 40 Sunday afternoon about 10:40 p.m.
Edith Broadway C!arter, 41, of 213
Main St., East Bend was the operator of
the 1965 Volkswagen that was damaged in the accident S-miles east on 1-40.State Highway Patrolman James M.Newton said his investigation showed
that the Volks station wagon was
proceeding east on 1-40 and was struck
in the rear by an unknown vehicle
causing Ms. Carter to lose control and overturn in the runway. The other
vehicle momentarily stopped and then left the scene.A sbcteen-year-old passenger in the Volks, Rhonda Carter, also of East Bend, was taken to the Davie County
Hospital.
GOP Candidates Protest Barring
Of Political Advertisement In
North Davidson Football Program
The North Davidson Senior High
School principal, Sam Houston, last
week reportedly barred the publication
of a Republican political advertisement in the high school football program while permitting the publication of a Democratic advertisement.
The Republican advertisement had
been bought and paid for by Gilbert
Boger, Bill Land, state senate can
didates from the 21st Senatorial District, (Davidson, Davie and Rowan Counties) and Frid Pratt, Melvin Stamey and Terry Grubb, House candidates from the 30th House District, (Davidson and
Davie Counties). The ad, featuring the
names and pictures of the Republican candidates had previously appeared in the football programs at every school in Davidson and Davie counties with the exception of Thomasville High School. Approval for the ad to appear in the North Davidson program had been
received from the North Davidson
Booster's Club and coach prior to Mr.
Houston' veto of the ad.
The Democratic advertisement,
featured a half page picture and name of C. A. “Whitey” Smith, a current
Democratic County commissioner who is seeking reelection this year in Davidson County. In explaining his
actions, Mr. Houston said that Smith's
ad was a public service ad on the part of a public servant and was in no way a comparison to the Republican ad.Commenting on Mr. Houston's action, Gilbert Boger and Fred Pratt, local
Davie candidates said that it appeared
Mr. Houston had acted on the basis of
poor judgement rather than partisan political motives. They concluded by saying they hoped that the public school systems in North Carolina had not
become enmeshed in Democratic state
politics to the extend that a school
principal would jeopardize his job if the afforded the Republican party in equal opportunity before the voters.
Woman Is Sentenced
For Damaging Property
Brenda HaU Pierce, a 30-year-oId East
Spencer woman, was found guUty Monday in District Court of damaging personal property in the Cooleemee Shopping Center on September, 3, 1978.In a consoUdated judgement, Judge Lester P. Martin gave Ms. Pierce a
sentence of 6 months, suspended for 3
years on condition she be on probation for one year, make fuU and complete restitution for aU damages.Ms. Pierce was charged with Uttering
in the Cooleemee Shopping Center by turning over a trash can; damage to
personal property in breaking the glass in the door of the J.N. Variety Store, damage estimated at $75; breaking glass in Libby’s Fashion Shop, damage estimated at $275; breaking the fiourescent light at the Cooleemee Sunoco Station, damage estimated at
$20.Deputy Junior Mauldin was the
arresting officer.
fl-HNews"!
SHADY GROVE The Shady Grove 4-H aub had their regular monUiIy
meeting on Tuesday, September 12, at the home of ' their leaders, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Cope.
They discussed going to the State Fair, working on their CHiristmas float, and going to the Council Meeting.
After they finished their business, refreshmente were
served by Ashley MaxweU.
They then played a game and
the meeting was adjourned.
Rocky Cope-Reporter
Puppet Show
The Little Jack Puppet
Siiow, a dental public health
educational feature, visited
schools for over 30 years in
North C arolina, teaching
school children about good
health and nutrition.
Pennington Chevrolet
O N L Y THREE
IN S TO C K li
Chevrolet's Little
Economizer Truck On
Sale At Close Out
PriceslllComeIn
And Take Advantage Of
These Rock Botton
Prices Today!!!!
Stock No. 679
Mfg. Sue. Rel. I^ce $4533.30
YOUR COST
* 4 0 3 0 .1 5
Stock No. 301
Mfg. Sug. Ret. Price $5179.30
YOUR COST
» 4 5 7 9 .2 5
Stock No. 171
Mfg. Sug. Rcl. Price $5054.30
YOUR COST
• 4 4 7 5 .1 0
Plus Tux & Title
New Centuiy Affiliates Invited To Attend Academy
Howard L. Correll Jr. and
Wade D. Grubbs of the
Boxwood Realty Co. of MocksvUle have been invited to attend a special real estate
seminar.More than 200 brokers,
owners and managers of real
estate offices from throughout
North America who have recently affiliated with Century 21 wUI attend a four-
day Century 21 International
Management Academy in
Costa Mesa, Ca. starting
August 14.Dick McKenna, vice president of Sales and Management Development
for Century 21, said the seminar is “strictly an
educational academy.”He said the seminar is designed to introduce aU new Century 21 affUiated brokers
and managers to the ad-
DAV'sToMeet
The DAVA and DAV's will
meet Monday, September
25th at 7:30 p.m. at Uje Holy Ooss LuUieran Church. AU members are asked to be sure and bring with them a Junior
member.
i'luteci Teelh
One hundred and sixty-nine
North Carolina communities
add sufficient fluoride to their
water supplies lo protect Ihe
loelh of children against
cavities.
vanced marketing tools and systems that Century 21 offers to help brokers and salespeople better serve their
client’s needs.
The orientation, he ex
plained, is the first in a series of concentrated management seminars and worlcshops Century 21 provides to in
crease effective management growth.Century 21 is an in-
ternationai real estate organization with more than
6.000 affUiated, independently
owned real estate offices
Uiroughout the United States and Canada, and more than55.000 sales people. Last year Century 21 gross sales in
North America exceeded $10
bUlion, McKenna noted, and
represented almost 300,000
real estate transactions.
Pennington
Chevrolet Co., Inc.
PHONE 634 2145 Dealer Licence 789
Saturday Oct. 7th
8 a.m. till 5 p.m.
Brock Center Gym
North Main Street
Mocksville
A D V A N C E T I C K E T S
N O W O N S A L E !
SAVE $2.50 ON RIDES!
Discount admission and ride tickets on sale through
September 28 at all Northwestern Bank officos and the
Coliseum Box Oliice dt tlie Fairgrounds
Eniov 9 lull filled days and nights with the exciting
JAM ES E S". RATES SHOWS on the midway plus
special bit) n.imi; piolessional enterlainnnint
Chitwood Auto Thrill Show —
Oct. 2 & 3
Mickey Gilley — Oct. 4
Tom T. Hall — Oct. 5
Tractor Pull — Oct. 6 & 7
WTOB Disco — Sept. 29 & 30, Oct. 7
WTQR Blue Grass & Country Play-Offs
— Sept. 29 & 30; Oct. 1, 2, 5
Mariah Group every day I
It's Something Great in '78
A World of Fun waiting for you at
D i x i e C l a s s i c F a i r
Sept.29’0et.7
W in s t o n - S a le m
W E W IL L B E
O P E N F O R B U S IN E S S
T H IS F R ID A Y , S E P T E M B E R 2 2 A T 1 0 :0 0 A M .
For the finest selection of Choice Grain Fed Beef be sure to visit
our Meat Market, County Market, Entrance is on south side of
building.
i!T A e ^ € iA e ^ ^ u U € i^ e m o fo € * A .< ^ ie c £ € U fi/ u c e 6 '. ^ c m e in
tm < ^ < te e - < H tA & e /e c U ( m - o ^ A e a 4 iA € i/n c i6 e a 4 i^ € u e ii;
A o € tA e /i€ i4 € ift/M > € iu 4 i(& ^ ,
VO 5 SHAMPOO (ReK..Oilv.Drv)88«
24 OZ. SCOPE MOUTHWASH *1.3 9
14 OZ.LAVORIS MOUTHWASH •1.19
18 OZ. SILK & SILVER HAIR CONDITIONER •1.0 9
1 OT. LIOUID PLUMBER 88*
1 OT. TEXIZE GLASS PLUS (Spray Refill)88«
lOT.TEXIZE CLEANER 88*
3.5 OZ. REJOICE SHAMPOO 39*
BABY BLANKET & PILLOW SET *2.88
TWIN SIZE MAHRESS COVERS *1 .7 9
BOYS & MENS SOCKS Pkg. of 3 Pairs 99'
SHELF PAPER Ree. 1.29 69*
GIFT WRAP PAPER (Large Roll) Reg. 1.99 99*
INSTANT GUN ICER (Chills glasses in an instant)*1,4 9
1600 WAH HAIR DRYER Reg. 39.95 *12 .9 5
OFFICIAL SPY CAMERA (Makes Real Pictures)*1.00
WALKER NO. 311 SALTWATER REEL *11.9 5
WADDERS EXTRA SPECIAL ONLY *4.98
40 PIECE TAP & DIE SET Reg.‘49.95 *22.95
TROUBLE LIGHT (App. 25 Ft. HD Cord)*3.29
BLACK & DECKER GARDEN HOSE CONNECTORS & ACCESSORIES
STARTER SET 7.95 Value_________________________*3.99
OF
Discount Merchandise
Located in th e Ellif Center on h ig h w a y 601
3 M iles South o f M ocksville
FRED O . ELLIS , O W N E R
D O R O T H Y H O W A R D . M A N A G E R
)W E A P P R EC IA TE Y O U R B U SIN ESS
DAVIÍ: COUNTY líNTtRI’RISI- RKCOKü. THURSDAY, SI l’TKMHl-R ’ I. I47S l.í
H e a l t h D e p a r t m e n t A c c q u a i n t s P u b l i c W i t h T h e V a t i e t y O f S e r v i c e s A v a i l a b l e
In conjunction with Public Health Week in North Carolina, September lo- 17, the Davie County Health Department last Friday held an "Open House and Health Fair" at the department's quarters in Mocksville.The purpose of the "Open House and Health Fair” was to help citizens of the
county become acquainted with the
variety of services available for them at
the tax-supported health department.The health department actually kicked off its observance of Public Health Week with a mass glaucoma, diabetes and hypertension screening
clinic. Hundreds of persons were
screened for these diseases and many were referred to their personal physicians after the screenings for further evaluation.Activltes at the “Open House and
Health Fair” included exhibits, in
formational games and tours and a film festival of health-related films which were shown continously during the day.The exhibits at the health fair included;-Chronic Diseases-A display of
equipment and techniques used to detect
heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes, glaucoma, tuberculosis, cancer and other chronic diseases.-Child Health-Equipment to measure
Big Names At Dixie Classic
Big name stars and thrilling feats of skill will add excitement and glamour to the grandstand shows at the Dixie
, Classic Fair here September 29 through
October 7.The Chitwood Thrill Shows will return ' on Monday, October 2 with a rare collection of daring exhibitions of driving skills. Long a popular favorite with Fairgoers, they will be held over
for additional performances Tuesday,
October 3.The grandstand will feature Mickey Gilley the next night. Gilley has been heralded as country music's newest sensation. He will appear with the Red
Rose Express.The widely popular Tom T. Hall will
be on hand for the Thursday show.
Millions of fans have seen him in his television appearances and bought his best-selling records.On October 6 and 7, North Carolina Tractor Pullers Association will conduct a tractor pull in front of the grandstand. Prizes in this event will approach $4,000.
Radio Station WTQR, an FM station
which programs what is termed All American Country, will schedule the finals in its state-wide talent contest at the Fair. On September 29 from 6:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. three Country and
Western bands and three Blue Grass
bands will compete. This program will be repeated the foUowing evening. On Sunday, October 1, the hours will be 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. During this time, Blue Grass bands will compete for the, championship. The winner of this'
contest will go to the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville on October 18 to appear on Bill Monroe's Blue Grass Special.Competitions among Country and Western bands will continue on October 2 from 6:00 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Three semi-finalists will compete for the
championship, and a chance to appear
on Ralph Emory's Pop Goes the Country nationally syndicated television show, at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, October 5. The contest.precedes the Tom T. Hall show.What has been called a Celebration of
Sound and a Festival of Nostalgia will
take place each day when Mariah performs on the outdoor stage. This magnetic show group of 12 talented young people will bring the freshness of today’s harmonies with instrumentals and choreographic innovations. Their
nostalgic program will feature
Dixieland, down-home Country, blasts from the past, and even a stroll down old
Broadway."We’re excitied about such a fine array of entertainment talent,” said Fair Manager W. B. (Bill) Austin, Jr.
‘‘All of these performers are tops in
their fields, and we’re looking forward to a wonderful time.”
Center Fair President
Expresses Appreciation
Millard Anderson, President of the Center Community Development and all the people of the Center Community would like to express their appreciation to everyone who helped to make the
Center Fair and Barbecue a success.
"We were a little short of help at times
and we hope that everyone understood and realize it takes lots of help to have a barbecue and fah* at the same time.” said Mr. Anderson.Tbe winners in the drawing held at the
Arbor on Fair Night were:
Oval Glass Top Table-Jimmy BaileyBrass and Wood Wall Lamp-Ms. Overcash.
Large Load Mulch-Roy Forrest.
76 Qt. Ice Chest-Eric NlchoU, Ford Toy Tractor and Wagon-Lee Call.'nie next Barbecue at Center will be on Saturday November ll.Two Trucks Are involved In Wreck
A traffic accident occurred Saturday, September9,al2:45p.m.,onU.S.60l N..
1 involving a ‘76 Chevrolet truck driven by
Walter Tillman Dull, 62. of Rt. 6, Moc- I ksville and a ‘78 Chevrolet truck driven by Robert Leon Baumgartner, 77, of Enka, North I'aroiina and owned by Ihe Appletree Chevrolet Company of
I Asheville. North Carolina
According lo the accident repori filed
I by officer B.A. Foster of the Mocksville Police Department, the truck driven by I Dull was traveling north on 601 when the I truck driven by Baumgarlner pulled out [from a parking lot into the path of the I Dull truck
No injuries occurred in the accident ¡and no charges were filed.
The truck driven by Dull sustained ItSOO in damage and the truck driven by iBaumearlnpr sustained $5on in damage
Peggy Mackie, dental hvKienist with the health department, offers Doug Chappell a cup of fluoride solution to helpprevent tooth decay. (Photo by Garry Foster)
demonstrated at this exhibit.
-Dental Health-A dental hygienist demonstrated proper flossing and brushing techniques. This hygienist regularly vislto the public schools to
explain to studento and teachers the
proper techniques of dental care.-Environmental Health-A model of a septic tonk system, examples of various types of soil in Davie County and
discussions of the health department’s
responsibilities regarding the areas of water supplies, solid waste control, communicable disease control, sewage disposal and food handling procedures
in restaurants highlighted this exhibit.The staff of the Davie County Health Department emphasized at the "Open House and Health Fair” that the department was created with the
primary responsibility to serve the
citizens of the county.Public Health in North Carolina is 102 years old, but in Davie County official public health activities were only begun
just over 40 years ago.
vision and hearing In children and an X- ray display of a child suffering from scoliosis were exhibited. Each year the county's public health nurses screen more than i,ooo students In the public schools for scoliosis In connection with the school screening program.
-WIC (Women, Infants and Children) Program-The health department Is cu^ently serving a caseload of over two hundred persons in this supplemental feeding program.
-Home Health Program-After having been referred into this program by a physician, more than 120 persons in the county are presently being served by the
program which provides skilled medical care by public health nurses who visit these persons at their homes. These
home visits total about 3,000 per year.-Epilepsy-This exhibit, sponsored jointly by the Davie County Health Department, the Comprehensive Epilspsy Center of the North Carolina
Baptist Hospital and the N.C. C. Epilepsy Foundation, told of the . ser
vices available to the county’s epilep
tics.-Family Planning and Cancer Detection-Blrth control methods and techniques used to detect cervical and breast cancers were explained and
Ancient people believed a
birtlistone brought good luck
to the wearer and also in-
nuenced a person’s personal
ity by strengthening such
traits as courage, sincerity,
and loyalty, according to The World Book Encyclopedia.
Nick Mando, assistant principal of Davie Hieh Schml plays tte
coronary care game at the healtli department’s “Health Fair in order to determine the expected probabilities of his life span based on
various factors affecting lifestyles.
M O C K S V I L L E F U R N I T U R E & A P P L I A N C E
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14 DAVII-; COUNTY I NTI PKRI.Si: RliCORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1478
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AI sc wotch for extro Free Bonus Sup^r Saver Coupons
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DRUGITEM
Martha Kontos, president of tlie Davie Arts Council and Preston Badgett, council member, smile approvingly at tiie response from Davie people to tiie Arts Festival.
Festival goers take time out froni the day's áctivitlés to eiijoy some ol tiie good food available. Tables and chairs lined Court ^uare for their convenience.
OAVIB C O U tyrY
II
Feature IB September 21,1978
Brother and sister Donna and Keith Hilton won the disco dance contest with their sleek style and movement.
L a r g e C r o w d s E n j o y A r t s F e s t i v a l
Approximately 7,000 people attended the festivities held by the Arts Council Saturday.
Story by Valerie Slogick
Photos hy Robin Carter
How else can the “Arts Alive Since ’75” Festival be described except as a complete success. Saturday, September
16, 1978, On-the-square in Mocksville
was a day to remember.It was a day of sunshine and good old- fashioned Southern style fun. Crowd flow throughout the day was estimated ,, at around 7,000 persons. Between 10 ¿.-.Y ¡ftva.m. arid'W flow was con-'. tinuous.V There was something for everyone from one end of the uptown business area to the other. The art and craft
displays and wares were some of the best around.. Many persons took advantage of the vendors and did some early Christmas shopping. Those that didn’t buy seemed content to browse.
The Camel City Rollers Rock Band won first place in competition in that division.
Coloring Contest
..To help celebrate the success of
the "A rts Alive Since ’75” Festival
held this past Saturday. September
16. 1978, the Davie County Arts
Council has an added attraction for
all children between the ages of
four and I3~a coloring book con
test.
. ."Ju st do your best coloring and
enter one of the delightful pages
from Janies Donaldson's festival-
theme coloring book.” said an Arts
Council official.
..Age categories for the contest
are as follows: 4-6, 7-9, 10-13.
Contests must enter one of the
categories and subm it designated
drawings pre-selected by the arts
council for their particular age
group.
. .Entries must be in crayon. One
entry per person.
..Entries may be returned to the
Arts Council office, located on the
third floor of the County Office
Building, the week of October 9-13.
. .Winners from each age category
will receive a blue ribbon and their
entry will be framed by one of the
following merchants: The Fram e
Shop, West Innes Street. Salisbury,
N .C .; C audeli L um ber Co.,
Mocksville, N.C.; Creative Fram e
and Stitchery Shop, Mocksville,
N.C..
..F o r m ore inform ation and
contest rules stop by the Arts
Council Office or call 634-3112.
Coloring books are available for
sale at the Arts Council Office.
Everyone enjoyed the many authentic
demonstrations provided by the Senior Citizens Group. Tom Hauser’s free carriage rides around town were a smashing success with the children.Competitive and complimentary
entertainment is a big part of any
festival and we had plenty on hand. The stage area was in constant use and the grandstand was over flowing with
people throughout the day. First place decisions proved to be a particularly difflcult task for the panels of judges.Hungry festival goers had a variety of
good things to eat. The homeade ice
creanl concession appeared to be one of our biggest attractions, thanks to the usn. Everyone enjoyed the convenience and comfort of our sidewalk cafe tables.If by chance you missed buying one
our festivai-theme coloring books, or an
Arte Alive T-shirt, you can still make amends. They are on sale at the Davie
County Arts Council Office located on the third floor of the County Offlce Building. Don't forget we are having a
coloring book contest for children between the ages of four and 13. Entry blanks are available at the Arts Council office.
For those that would like to be ‘‘A part of art” and have a personal hand in next year’s festival, we urge you to become
further acquainted with the Davie County Arts Council. Stop by our offlce in the County Offlce Building. Our membership is always open and you
don’t have to bé a Rembrandt to par- ticipate-just concerned.
Winners of competitive events:Juried Art : Marjorie Hoyle 1st place Lou Clement 2nd place, Annette Ratledge 3rd place, Steve Miller
Honorable Mentions, Ann Hartley
(continued on page 6B)
The National Guard Band from Fort Bragg presented a concert on the square.
Thp l.ighthouse Evangelistic .MlnUtries, Incorporated was one of the many groups to participate in the Gospel contest.
Kate Wilson, instructor of HealUi Occupations at Davie High School, and her students were on hand to check blood pressures throughout the day. Sonya Crews of .Mocksville takes advantage of the services provided by the group.
:в IMVll COUNTY I NTlíRI’RISi: RlíCORD, Tlll'RSDAY. SUPTliMBbR :i. 1978
Hickory Hill Women
Hold Championship
Tournament
Hickory Hill Golf and Country CTub
held its womens’ championship golf tournament September 9-10 and Betty Foster walked away with first place in
the championship flight.
A field of eighteen women par-
ticipated in the four flights.Sybil Kimberly was runner-up in the
championship flight.Linda Dwiggins won the top honors in the first flight and Betty Ketner was the runner-up in that flight.In the second flight Georgianne Everidge took top honors followed by
Beth Humphrey.Gwen Pope won the third flight and Emily Kemp was the runner-up in that
flight.Championship flight winner Betty Foster and runner-up Sybil Kim
berly.
Flight Winneis
Winners at Hickory Hill womens’ tournament were Georgianne
Childrens Competitive Sports
Cowboy
Cheerleadeis
1978 Mocksville Cowboy Cheerleaders are (front row , I to r) Jennifer Johnson,
Lelj^ Gantt, Molly Jackson, A ^ e McDaniel, mascot, (2nd row) SabrinaMciAmy Johnson, Shawn iHiMan, Annette Foster, (3rd row) Shawn McGuire, Tracy Southern, Sandy nroud, Teresa Hinson, Deann McBride,
Paulette Foster (4th row) Britt Sandford, Jeannie Luna, Gina Howell, Deborah Lagle and Tonya Evans. (Not pictured, Tammy Couch) (Photos by Robin Carter)
Do you know how to avoid extra
telephone installation charges?
P a r e n t s R u n n i n g T o o M u c h O f T h e S h o w
Frmnplaying jacks, to climbing trees and racing bicycles down neighborhood streets, children have been competing for years."It’s an inevitable part of growing up for kids to measure №emselves against each other,” says Dr. Mryon B. Liptzin,
director of the mental health division of the Student Health Service and assistant professor of ps><:hiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “It’s
developmentally important to know
what your capabilities are.”Kids are competing today, but along with neighborhood pickup games their activities are centered more around organized competitive sports. It is
estimated that some 20 million children participate in organized sports across the nation.The competition itself is not bad, says
Dr. Joseph L. DeWalt, director of sports
mcdidiic and associate director of the Student Health Service at UNC-CH. "Competition prepares for all aspects of later live. For instance, it helps a child to learn the value of team work,” he
says.
The problem begins when parents enter into the children’s sports picture, DeWalt and Liptzin say.Liptzin says, "Most organized children’s sports, like Little League basketball and football, are organized,
run and cheered by parents. The fun of
participating in these activities, he says, becomes less important than winning and being champion. Coaches, like the rest of society, want to win and they want their teams to win the trophies.DeWalt says that nothing is wrong
with winning-it is a lot of fun. "But it's
bad when coaches lose their jobs
because their team’s not winning, when teams win by breaking the rules and when one team tries fo hurt the other
team’s good player,” he says.Besides coaches pushing their teams to win, parenU pressure their children to play well and win, DeWalt and Liptzin say. A lot of parenU see their child’s participation and successes in sporU as
a fulfillment of their own fantasies, DeWalt says.
“(3iildren can take peer pressure, but when a parent tries lo get a child to
achieve his own goals, the resulU can be disastrous,” he says.Because adult coaches might be caught up In the Idea of winning, many of the younger or less skilled children sit on the bench much of the season. Most of
the time the superior athletes will play
the entire game and the lair players will not have the chance to develop their skills, Liptzin says.
What does the child athlete think about it?
Studies have shown that children would much rather be playing on a losing team than sitting on the bench of a winning team, Liptzin says. And, when
the kids choose sides, teams are more
evenly divided and players are more ' quently rotated.Jthough parental may be
freouently rotated.Although parental pressure harmful, parental guiclance and concern will always be present. Both Liptzin and DeWalt suggest guidelines that might be
beneficial when considering organized
sporU activities for young athletes.Grouping children by ability rather than chronological age would give more children the opportunity to play. Team ' ly would be recognized rather than
Uvidual superior athletes.
Allowing children to participate in making the rules and regulations to better conform to their needs and level of skill makes sense. DeWalt says, ‘‘As long as the line of communication is left
open between the coach end the
children, the sporU acUvlty will be more
enjoyable. There’s nothing wrong with
conforming to their rules”Using smaller equipment to accomodate a child's smaller body size
would make plaj ing a lot easier. “To place a young child in front of a standard size soccer goal Is a waste of time,” he says. “Smaller goals would make a child goals feel much more effective.”Emphasizing participation rather than winning would be an improvement in children’s organized sports. Liptzin and DeWalt say that the Rainbow Soccer
program in Chapel Hill is an example of a more human, personalized approach.“Children in the program are taught to participate for the physical good of
the sport and the wonderment of what the body can do.” Liptzin says. The program emphasizes grace, form, participation and sportsmanship rather than exclusively winning.“All boys and girls on the team play;
the halves are shorter and the fleld and
goals are smaller; the winners and losers cheer each other’s effort,” he
adds.Practice is necessary for an athlete’s self-discipline and conditioning. But too much after-school practice can reduce
the amount of time and energy available
and necessary for well-rounded
emotional development, Liptzin «ays. “Kids also need to be reading, out catching frogs or lying in bed dreaming about being president of the United
SUtes,” he says.
The ideal situation, he says, is for a child to be free to optimally develop all aspecU of his personality. “When kids are thrown into parent-adult-run sporU which tend to monopolize free time, they (kids) lose.”
MocksviUe
Cowboys
Football Team members are (front row, I to r) Kip — ■ Shawn Steele, CharlesThe 1978 Mocksville Cowboy Football Team memlters a Sales, Sterling Scott, Carl Navlor, Bradley Steele,
Kurfees, Brian Cook, Scott Harbin, (2nd row) David Tkach, Steve Angell,
Carl Roberson, Tommy Gordy, Ronnie Nall, Scott Gantt, Todd Poe, (3rd row)
Kelly Sales, Lee Rollins, Dexter Mock, Mike Campbell, Greg Barnette, Frankie Carter, Robert Martin (4th row) Wilbert Foote, Cnrls Jones, Mike Wyatt, (back
row) Coaches Dennis Sine, Carl Roberson, John Williams, and Larry Harbin.
Davie County Little League
The Davie County Little League Football Program completed IU second week on Saturday night celebrating Ambulance Service and Rescue Squad
Night. The Cowboys and the Ouers
remain as the only undefeated teams. In the first game the Cowboys won over the Rams with Dexter Mock and Karl Naylor each scoring a touchdown. Mock added a two-point conversion for a final
score of 14-0.In the second game the Oilers
defeated the Trojans by a score of 22-0.
John Folmar ran for two touchdowns and two conversions while David Gillespie powered in for the other score.On Saturday night the League will be celebrating Volunteer Firemen Night. The schedule will bring the Rams vs. the
Oilers at 6:00 p.m. and at 7:00 p.m. the
(3ilefs vs. the Trojans.
Fork Discount Women Go Undefeated
The Fork Discount women's softball team finished undefeated in the tournament held at Sheffield Ball Park.Eight teams participated in the
tournament which was held September n through September 18.Members of the team are: Faye Lanier, Bonnie Lanier, Linda Comatzer, Lori Young, Kathy Hanes, Qndy F. Lanier, Jane Young, Renae Jones, Ann
Barnes, Linda Dwiggins and Cindy A.
Lanier. The team was coached by Burl Lanier, Michael Lanier, and Tim Young.
Davie Girls Lose Match
Salisbury scored an B-1 victory over Davie County in a North Piedmont Conference high school girls tennis match at the Davie High courU Monday
afternoon.
Coach Carolyn Murray's undefeated Salisbury crew clinched the decision by winning all of the singles events.
Standings Won
Oilers 2Cowboys 1Trojans 0Rams 0Chiefs 0
Lost Tied 0 0
II«: SKrIa lunktr IS) nw Tam- t-li Karan Smilh (SI ovar (I) oviT Tracy Sta№'
SItialai: Slai \y Allan, hi, I Kathryn Cartar (tl avar Tracy Slaalatoa »•I. *•>; Caral Cartar IS) a>ar Kalina GriMtta, <-< «-I; Wandy Wallan'lil avar Paija staplataa H, H; Sutia Pait IS) e*ar Karan Carnaiiar, M, t-i.DauWai: Sunkar-K. Cartar (Sl avaar Am-Allan. 1-i, t-l; Staplalon.Staplatan IOC) a»ar c. Cartar-Waltart, hi, 4.«, n, nil-aacky lianlwur (Sl a>ar Katharina Latham-Orlialta. »-4, t-i
Lori Young was selected as the most
valuable player.The winning team received a trophy and individual trophies were presented
to the team members.
Steve Stultz Wins
Super Stock Victory
Steve Stultz of Walnut Cove grabbed the super-stock victory at Farmington Dragway Friday night when he defeated Kenny Melton of HillsvUle, Va in the
finals. Both were drivers of Camaros.
The lop qualifying run was made by
Arnold Hinson of Kannapolis, who was
running off the national record clocking an elapsed time of 7:20 seconds on the mile drag strip.Roy Van Levan of Winston Salem won
the pro-modified division over Authur Bryant of KernersviUe.Two Winston Salem drivers, Darrell
Gaither and Dan Ferguson, fought it out for the "B” bracket elapsed time division victory with Gaither taking the win. Tommy Burrows of King posted his
fifth victory in eight weeks at the track when he defeated Bill (Siildress of Winston Salem in the "C” bracket elapsed time division.
Of Education
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and decide where you want them installed. Bjr’ carefully
planning, ever>'thing can be
installed at one tinie. Which means you won’t have to
spend money for extra installation visits.
T'hai'« juKt one of the
mun> liood ideuii you’il Hnd
in our new booklft, called “Telephone Tips."
It’s full of helpful hints on how to save money and time,
and there’s information about other telephone services, too.
For your free copy of
“Telephone Tips.” just call your Centel Service Representative.
umaki Tf (.(PHONE
Nationwide Scholarship Program For High School Seniors
A nationwide, quarter
million dollars, scholarship
program for high school
seniors graduating with the
class of 1979, is being
offered this fall by the Na
tional Association of Sec
ondary School Principals.
Members of the Class of
1979 are encouraged to
enter the third annual Cen
tury ill Leaders Program,
which offers 102 studenU
the opportunity to partici
pate in an expense-paitl.
three-day symposium at his
toric Williamsburg, Virginia
in March.
The grand national
winner »-ill receive a
810,000 scholarship, and
102 state winnei-s will each
receive Sl,.'iOO scholarship
grants. Two other seniors in
each state will each receive
$.500 scholarships
Local winners will be se
lected on the basis of a
know ledge of current
r,vlit&, tiiid ai'i ajiplii tiuur.
that reflects their Iradership
activities. These winners will
bi* required lo write a brief
projection, outlining what
they see us one of Am i rica •
future challenges and ho« it
should be met
The 102 state winners
invited to participate in the
W illiam sburg experience,
will have demonstrated a
grasp of current affairs in
social, governmental or in
ternational areas, as well as
thoughtful concern fursolv
ing these problems in the
future.
At Williamsburg, students
will discuss relevant issues,
and will propose solutions
to problerru confronting the
nation now and in the years
to come.
H igh school seniors
should contact their prin
cipals for details and appli-
rat;i;ns fur the Centiiry III
Lrt>aders Program. Applica
tions must be submitted by
October 13.
The program is admin i»
tered by the .4ASSP and
funded by the Shell Oil
Company.
S p o r t i n g G o o d s
OAVIEHIGHSCHOOLJACKEIS...............» 1 5 ’ ®
DUKE, WAKE FOREST, N C STA1E,
CAROUNA JACKET.............................* 1 5 * »
W IlSONTDYPOOim ..........................• 1 9 ”
WILSON DUKE FOOTBAU.......................* 1 6 ”
WILSON DUKE J R ....................................* 1 4 * *
REMINinON 1100 SHOTGUNS
2 2 9 » N O W THRU
___________________S tP T .a O O N LY
DAVIE SPORT SHOP
50 Cou;t Square Mxksville, N.Cs
r T -
ÜAVIL COUNTY liNTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2\. l')7« ,?B
D a v i e R o u t s M o o r e s v i l l e 3 8 - 0 F o r T h i r d S t r a i g h t W i n
E a g l e s P l a y A t
T h o m a s v i l l e
F r i d a y N i g h t
Halfback Brent Burton scored three times as Davie County rolled over Mooresville, 38-0, in a non-conference high shcool football game at Mooresville
last Saturday night.
Davie quarterback Scott Pratt opened
the scoring for the War Eagles in the first quarter when he carried the football 42 yards into the end zone. The try for two points failed.
Burton scored the second Davie
County touchdown on a one-yard plunge
in the second period. His score gave the War Eagles a 12-0 advanUbe at half- time.
Burton scored twice in the third
period. His first touchdown of the period came on a 79-yard pass from Pratt. His next score of the period came on a two- yard run.
Brad Bullock raced over from the
eight in the fourth period and Doug
I *. Fowler made the final Davie County touchdown on a one-yard plunge. Shannon Pulliam made two extraì>oint3.............................. .......Davie County displayed a potent of
fense, rushing for 319 yards and passing for 159.Meanwhile, the War Eagies held the
I k Mooresville Blue Devils to 70 yards on
the ground and 108 yards in the air.
The Davie defense has now extended its string to 11 consecutive quarters that it has not allowed a score against it. The only score against Davie this season was in the first quarter of the opening game
when one touchdown was scored.Burton paced Davie County’s ground attack with 77 yards. Pratt was close b^ind with 73.. It was the third straight victory for coach Joey Kennedy’s War Eagles.
They are unbeaten as they travel to
Piedmont
standings,
schedule
NORTH PieOMONT CONFIRINCI
CMf. Ovtrtll W-L W.LUCitnofon 2>0ThomtivHI* 2-0Davit Couniy MSalUbury l>0Norfh ftewtn MW*tt Row«n M AfthffboroNorth D«v)r<ion 0-3Trinity 0-2
SOUTH PIEDMONT CONFIRINCI
M
Ü
hi2-t0>3MM
Ctnlrtl Cêbarrut Sun Vttlfv South Rowan Concord Porttt HItll North Stanly NorlhwttI Cabarru» Eatt Rowan Aibtmarit
CMif. Ovtrall W-L W*L2*0 3-0 )•«10 M M 0*1 0-2 0-2
4-0Mi:i
Scott Pratt
.....best game at QB Lonnie Wilson
....3 interceptions in 2 games
Wark Pollard
.....played well on defense
Brent Burton.....scored 3 TDs
rnomasviUc Friday night for a con
ference game.The loss left the Mooresville team with an 0-4 mark.
Scoring summary :
Davit County MoortlviNt 4 t 12 14-M • # » »-•DC- Prett 42 run (run ftlltd)DC- Burton 1 run (run falltd)DC- Burton 79 ptu from Pratt (pan falltd)DC- Burton 2 run (pan falltd)DC- BullocK I run (pau falltd)DC— Fow(tr I run (Pulliam runrun)
First Down» Ruthing Yardaot Palling Yardagt Paiits Punt»Fumblti Lo»t Yard» Ptnailttd
STATISTICSDavit Coun^ Moorttvltft
31» 70
5-»^ é-JS
IS 5
C o a c h K e n n e d y I s P l e a s e d W i t h W i n
By Doug Livengood
‘Once we got up three touchdowns we really started to dominate the game,” said Joey Kennedy, head football coach
at Davie High, after his War Eagles
defeated Mooresville at Mooresville last Friday night."We made an awful lot of misUkes in the first half on offense and we gave up some pass completions on defense. But, we were pleased with the win and happy everybody got to play a whole lot in the game," Kennedy added.“It’s been eleven consecutive quarters now since the only touchdown of the
season was scored against us and that
was set up by a blocked kick,” he observed.
Said Kennedy, "Brent Burton had a fine game with three touchdowns scored and an interception. Scott I^att had his
best same at quarterback with his
throwing and directing our running offense. Brad Bullock played well both ways against Mooresville and Lonnie Wilson and Mark Pollard played well on
defense. Wibon had int4srcepted three balls in the last two games.”Although the War Eagles are unbeaten with three early season wins
under their belts, Kennedy and his
squad know they have their work cut out for them Friday night when they travel to Thomasvllle for a conference tilt against the unbeaten Bulldogs.
In some polls Thomasville has been ranked as the second best team hi the state in the high school 3-A playing division. However, according to Kennedy, he and his assistant coaches
“feel Uke Thomasville is probably the
best 3-A school in the state and possibly
the best high school football team period in the whole state.”"We’ve been looking at films of Thomasville all weekend and they are Just awesome with no apparent weeknesses,” Kennedy said Monday
afternoon.“They have a dream backfield with Hanner at quarterback, Welbom at fullback and Burton at tailback,” he
remarked.And on defense the Bulldogs have
“two super defensive players" in Harris at nose-guard and Banks at tackle, he
reported."As far as Thomasville, this will be just a great opportunity for our kids. We
know they are going to be heavily
favored, but we’re going down there and
give it everything we’ve got ” promised
Kennedy.
WKT PIIOMONT
*Wl-tSouth irtdtM 1*0Slatt»viMt 04 M-0Llncolnton(x) 04 MM)NtwtonConovtr(K) 0*0 I'MSt. Sttphtntd) 04 0-24Moorttvlllt 04 0-44Wtll irtdtll 0-1 0-44(I) — Friday'» lehtdultd gamt not in- ciudtd
FRIDAY'S RESULTS •Saliibury 17, Aihtboro 7 59ulh Rowan 4), Albtm«rlt 0 Ctntral Cabarrui 20, Ea»t Rowan 6 North Rowan 35, Wait Rowtn 0 Davit County 31, Moort»vlllt 0 Ltxington 14. North Dtvld»on 13 Thomt»vMlt27. Trinity 0 North Stanly 13, Concord 7 Sun Valley IS, Fort»t Hlllt 9 Northwnt Cabtrrvs 20, Mf. Pt§0stnt
South irtdtll 34. Bandyi II Altxandtr Ctntral 12. Statttvlllt é Frtd T. Foard 22. Wtit irtdtll 20Maiden at Ltncolnlon. »cor« not avail- abitNtwton-Conovtr at Hickory, »cort not availabitSt. Sttphtn» at Bunktr Hill, »cort not availabit
NIXT FRIDAY'S SCHEDULR North Rowan at Saliibury Eatt Rowan at South Rowan North Davld»on at Wt»t Rowan Fort»l HIM» at Ctntral Ctbarru» Concord at Sun Vallty Northwt»! Ctbarru» at North Stanly Eaittrn Randolph at A»htboro Davit County al ThomaivIMt Trinity at Ltxington Kanntpoll» Brown al Wln»ton*Saltm PsrhltnaWtit Irtdtll at Llncolnton Moortivlllt at St. Sltphtn'i South irtdtll at North irtdtll
Agricultural Commissioner Graham Heads The NASDA
Deacon Football coach John Mackovic
was found early Sunday afternoon in the Wake Forest Ubrary in search of reference material pertaining to “cat
skinning”, in particular the removal of
the hide of a Bengal Tiger."There's this large cat,” he was teUing the patient Ubrarian, “a large
kind of cat sometimes caUed the Tiger
but that’s not quite what this one Is, fact is I’ve heard it caUed a Bayou Bengal.” "A Bayou Bengal?”, she asked with obviously self-tau^t courtesy.“Yeah, a Bayou Bengal."“Coach, I know you are a Wake Forest graduate and that you have your Master’s Degree and I have the greatest amount of respect for what you’ve been trying to do with out footbaU team here at Wake Forest, and I know you’re a proponent of positive thinking and I
hate to dispute you. I know perfectly
weU that the term Bayou refers to a
portion of the state of Louisiana, but Coach, tigers are not indigenous to that part of the world. It’s a fact.”"Young lady,” he said calmly, “this is a different breed of tiger and It has been
Indigenous to that part of the country for
a long time now. You don’t seem to understand that this Tiger eats footbaU players, entire teams sometimes. Why just last night they ate a team from Indiana, the entire team. Young lady,
we are doing down there this Saturday
night and I tuve no intention of being
eaten, alive or dead, and I want you to get out from behind that desk this moment and find me some material about what we might do to skin that thing. Are you wiUing to be responsible for the possible ramifications if you do
not?”“No sire,” she said, "but you’U have to prove to me that there are Tigers in
the state of Louisiana other than in a zoo
somewhere. What I mean is that I just don’t beUeve there are ngers in the South eating people from Indiana.” Young John whipped out a copy of the sports page. “Look right here, do you
see that ? See where It says Tigers Eat
Hoosiers 24-17’?”“I see it but I don't beUeve It,” she said."You know, that was my reaction
when I say It on fUm this morning,” he
said.“You say they have it on film, these
Tigers eating footbaU playerè from
Indiana?”"I spent most of the morning watching
' it with my own two eyes. They have this one named Charles Alexander who is
something else to watch.”"A Tiger named Charles Alexan
der?”
"Yeah, and their trainer is named
CharUe. He’s been around for awhile
and knows how to whip them into a fury. Look, I’m getting a little tired of this conversation. I’U teU you what. Down in that part of the coutry, as you probably know, they sUU beUeve in the power of voodoo, magic spells, and things of tliat
sort. See what you can find me on tliat subject. Maybe that’U do the trick.” “Make up your mind please. Coach. You came in here wanting to know howlo
skin a cat and now you want material on voodoo. Which wiU it be?”“I’m not sure. What do you think?”
“I’d try a UtUe bit of both.”“Good Idea, Mix up the plan, so to speak. I’U teU you what. You get the material together for me and if we win
I’U give you the game baU. Okay?”
“Just one more thing. Coach, ^e re specifically are these Tigers in Louisiana?”
“They roam aU around the LSU campus.”“Oh, my goodness. Don’t bring any of them back up here. They’d creat a panic.”“That thev do.”
Vehicles Involved In Mishap
Two veiiicles were involved in a
mishap last Saturday In MocksvUle on Gaither Street.Involved in the 10:10 a.m. accident was a 1973 Oldsmobile station wagon operated by Precyous Bost Sales, 39, of
MocksvUle and a 1972 Ford truck
operated by Latimer Buck Alexander IV, 20, of StatesvUIe.MocksviUe Chief of PoUce Alton Carter said his investigation showed that Mrs. Sales was sto p ^ for a traffic signal. Alexander made a left turn
behind Mrs. Sales, cut too short, and
struck the Sales vehicle.Damage to the Sales vehicle was estimated at >300 and no damage to the
truck.Cooked Meat
One pound of boneless cooked meal yields aboul (hree cups of chopped or diced meat.
James A. Graham
North Carolina Commissioner of
Agriculture James A. Graham was elected president of the National
Association of State Departments of Agriculture (NASDA) here today. The election came at the final business session of the association's annual meeting.
Graham moves from the post of 1st
vice president to the top office succeeding John M. Stackhouse, Ohio director of agriculture. NASDA is made up of the top agricultural leader in each state and maintains an office in
Washington, D.C., to coordinate efforts
among the states with the federal
agencies and the Congress.Active in the association since his appointment as commissioner in 1964, Grahahi has also served as president of Ihe Southern Association of State
Departments of Agriculture.
Jim Graham is a native of Rowan County. North Carolina, is a graduate of Cleveland High School there and North Carolina State University where he was elected permanent president of the class
of '42. He began his career as an agriculture teacher in Iredell County and later served as superintendent of Ihe Upper Mountain Research Farm, manager of the Winston-Salem Fair,
first full-time secretary of the N.C.
Hereford Breeders Association, and manager of the Farmers’ Market in
Raleigh. He served as president of the
National Association of Market
Managers.Graham was elected commissioner of agriculture in 1964 and re-elected in 1968,1972 and 1976. Under his leadership the department has been reorganized
according to programs administered by
the various divisions. He has always
been in the forefront of efforts to help the producer and the consumer alike. His determination has been that the many- faceted programs of the department would serve the people of North Carolina in the best way.
Graham has been honored on
numerous occasions. The North
Carolina Citizen's Association selected him for ils Distinguished Service Award in 1977, and he has received the state and national 4-H Alumni Awards. He was Progressive Farmer Magazine's 1970
Man of the Year in North Carolina Agriculture, Honorary Seedsman of t)ie Year and the 1974 Raleigh Kiwariian of
the Year in addition to many other honors.In other activities Graham is a Shriner, a director of United Cerebral Palsy of North Carolina, the Raleigh
Rescue Mission, Campbell College and
is a deacon of First Baptist Church.Graham is married to the former Helen Ida Kirk. They have two daughters and four grandchildren. He
operates a beef cattle farm in Rowan County.
Jody Curtii Johnson celebrated hla Sth birthday on Sept. 21, 1978. He had a party in his Kindergarten claii at Harmony Elementary School. Hli
parents are Mr. and Mr*. Randy
Johnson of Rt. I. Harmony.
German silver ii made from copper, zinc, and nickel.
i«i rrint
.Store butler In ils orltJlnal wrapper or
iiinlainer and ll «111 iiol piek up flaviirs
Ircmi iiilier l(K)d.s
we can help you.
H O M E
MROVEMENT
L o a n sbSOUTHERN DISCOUNT
p. 0. Bo> 689 /42'ACourt Sqove Mochsville/North Carollna/27028
Mon. & Fri.-S-'OO a.m.-6.'00 p.m.
NEW HOURS: Tuei Thru Th urt.-g:00i.m.-S:00 p.m.
C LO SED ON SATU R D AYS
World Series Brain-Teasers
îf < ê ^ îL îE S
Coastal pier operators are bugged I o death with the same question over and over: "How come the fish ain't biting?”WeU, gather around, friends, cause
I'm going to tell you about the time they
did bitel...and bite!...and bite!...and
bltel...In my 25 years of operating Kure Pier, this is probably the biggest fish run to hit
the coast in modem times.
WhUe the 1957 fishing season ended in a blaze of fuU lards stands, parts of It would have been enough to disgust a hog.Hie fish started moving about a week
early in March and foUowed a usual
pattern untU May 16th. At that time, we
had a rather heavy northeaster and catches slowed down to a walk. There is seldom a time in the year that the avid angler can't at least catch enouth fish to
eat, summer fishing Included. But from May 16 thru September 29, catches along the coast were the slowest I had seen in my six years of pier operation.
On September 28, a severe northeaster
moved in and contUiued buUding for
three days. At the peak, waves were breaking over the end of the pier, 19 feet above the normal water line. Having had considerable experience with hurricanes in the past, this one scared
me. Fortunately, the wind shifted in
time and the stage was set for a most fantastic fish run.On September 30, the sea calmed and puppy drum from one to seven pounds moved In. Over 500 were landed in the
next three days. These were foUowed by
flounder, blues, trout, mackeral, black
drum, pompano, whitings, and spot- s...spots by the hundreds of thousands. For 28 consecutive days, the fish hit for a
minimum of eight straight hours a day but actuaUy averaged from sixteen to eighteen hours per day...often hitting around the clock for days at the time. On the 29th day, they broke the chain by
hitting only seven hours per day.
In all, during October and November, the fish hit for 57 straight days. During Uie entire time, they were caught a minimum of five straight hours out of each 24hour period...for 57 days. During
Uiis entire period, every fisherman
caught fish as fast and often as he could bait and cast.
As an example, four fishermen from
Matthews, N.C., fished two days in October, returned home and supplied all the fish for a church fish fry. They fed 185 people, chUdren free, and raised $163.00. Two weeks later, they returned.
fished two more days, and had another
fish fry. This time they fed 144 people and raised $132.00.1 might add Uiat two of Uie fishermen on each trip were women, as are many of our best pier anglers.More people left Uie pier with the fish
stiU biting than ever before. A common
complaint was: "I didn't give up; I just
gave out.”It would be a conservative estimate to say that weU over two mUlion fish were landed at Kure Pier In Uie faU of ’57.
Catering to the needs and desires of
our fishing visitors kept our nose to the grind-stone every hour of the day. The tackle shop didn't close day or night for 57 days. When we closed the pier on December 1st, every operator In town
was dead tired.But...we groaned aU Uie way to the
bank!
Do You Know?
Hearing Losses Persons who say they hear everything
that is going on around them are only kidding themselves, according to the
Beltone Crusade of Hearing Conservation. People know only what they do hear-and not what they don't hear. Crusade officials point out. This Is aprimary reason why many persons are
suffering from undetected hearing losses.
Noisy Environment
While today's urban dweller certainly
lives in a noisier environment that most persons residing in rural atmospheres, farmers alco can encounter excessive sound levels such as the noise generated by machinery and power
tools, warn officials of the Beltone
Crusade for Hearing Conservation.
Cleaning The Uven Cleaning the oven can be a lot easier and a lot cheaper if just a few preventative steps are taken.Just a simple box of salt can decrease the buildup inside an oven, according to agricultural extension specialists at North Carolina State University.
Sprinkle spills generously with salt while the oven is still warm and the sticky spill will lift off with a spatula
when the oven cools.And. if the oven needs a thorough cleaning, a bowl of ammonia set in it overnight wlll loosen much of the soil hy
the next morning.
Who holdii the lifetime World Scries record for must Kumes played (75); most at-bats (2.’>9); and most hits (71)?
saa>(UEA »iJOA "»N ‘Bijag |ioA :m3msnv
What pitcher holds these lifetime World Series records? Most wins (10); most games (22); most games started (22); Innings pitched (146); most strikeouts (94); most bases on balls (34); most losses (8).
saanuBA Hjox Maj^j ‘pjQJ :H3MSNV
Special this week only
New Items Added Daily For Best Deal In Town See Fred Allen
Whal i« the World Serie» a lte n d a n ierecord?0;ÌM OÎ
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q u o .w s d 1 J .J S' a lu u
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uo Bd|a2Juv SO'’!oBü.íui.) (juiisjjjipoQ S\>|d2lUV >o']
sdijüS -'Ml .i*'üiUKÏi \ V
All Art Supplies Must Go
3 0 t o 5 0 % . K
How many baseballs are supplied for each World Series Game?lauuosjad a*n<>iji(ii|j .<<) ,,dn a4U Xam -paijaau ajB ajom J] auietl qaea joj sjiBq ■asBq ua/op xi« ,,dn qnj,, sajidujn 'sjjBqaSBq an^Baq |BUU1)U\ pUU Ut.'jIUtfUiV'IBIJIJJO JO ,ir. lIllJUjnUBUi■ Xiii’duii),) spooQ Xuiiiodg
s!(ii!i.«u}j s. 3 uj O X V ui iiuipjoa.'iv U'JMSNv
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F I R E S T O N E S T O R E
112 North Main Street
4B DAVII-; COUNTY HNTI Rl’RI.Sli R liC O R D , T H U R SIM Y . Slil’TliM BER : i . l ‘)7S
■■ t ' iSi?'
Wrecker attenips to lift truck which plunged 40 feet below roadway.
South Davie Jr.
Eagles Lose To Knox
The South Davie Jr. High Eagles football team lost to Knox Jr. High of Salisbury, Tuesday afternoon, in a game
at the Davie High Stadium, by a score of
164)Knox scored in the first period on a 15- yard sweep and in the final period on a 3- yard plunge.Davie was penalized over 100 yards in
the game, 85 In the first half.
The Davie squad also turned the ball over twice, once on a fumble and once on an interception.The coaches for the Davie team
praised the defense after the game and
singled out Kevin Green and Mitchell Green for their big games on defense.Offensively the Davie team was Just not able to get started in the game.However, the coaches of the team
believe the squad is much Improved over last year.South Davie Jr. High's next game is Tuesday at the Davie High Stadium
against Thomasvllle.
Gustatory Sweating
Eating highly .seasonedur spiced foods
causes some people to start sweating
around the face. This condition is called "gustatory sweating" and a few people develop gustatory sweating after surgery or trauma of the parotid gland
or a symptom of diabetic autonomic neuropathy.The condition is discussed by David D. Stuart, MD,of Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis, in the August issue
of the Ahrials of Internal Medicine.
Facial gustatory sweating is a sign of diabetes is still of ten missed, he writes in describing the case of a diabetes patient treated at Minneapolis Veterans
Administration Hospital. The condition was first reported in 1973 by Dr. B.J. Watkins.
The cause of diabetic gustatory
sweating remains unknown. DR. Stuart
goes on to say that the symptoms can be controlled with certain drugs, but more patients prefer the symptoms in place of the side effects of the treatments.
The Annals of Internal Medicine is the
official journal of the American College
of Physicians, a national prefessional
association of more tnan 40,000 specialists in internal medicine and related areas.
D r i v e r T r a p p e d I n W r e c k F o r 1 0 H o u r s
An injured James Cloer Jr. of Rt. 7
Mocksville laid in underbrush beneath
the South Yadkin River bridge on US 601
South in midst of his wrecked pickup truck for more than ten hours Sunday before his cries for help were answered.
Cloer, who was thrown from the
camper truck after it went over the side of the bridge, said Monday he realized he had to remain calm and not go into shock.
"I knew shock would kill a person quicker than anything. My leg was busted and I knew there was no way I could make it up that bank. I yelled until
I had no voice left. Every time a car
went ^ I. would scream like crazy", said Cloer. ‘
Neither the wreckage nor Cloer could
be seen from the road some 40 feet above
him, and Cloer was unable to make passing motorists hear his screams of his pounding on the side of the vehicle.However, a resident of the South River community, out for a walk after church on Sunday, finally heard his cries for help. The rescuer, who was not identified, told State Highway Patrolman L.W. Bjorkland he thou^t he heard
Cloer calling earlier, “but it was
Saturday night and I thought it was just somebody down on the river fishing and hollering”, he said.The State Highway Patrol was called
at 11:45 a.m.Cloer, a 2B-year-old paint contractor, was admitted to the Rowan Memorial Hospital with a broken leg and other abrasions.Cloer was on his way to Salisbury at
1:30 a.m. when the pickup truck ran off :k the brldR
tropper said.On Monday Cloer said he swerved the truck when he thought something ran out in front of him. “nien I couldn't get
it back on the road and the next thing I
remember was hitting the bridge and all
I could say, God, help me now."
Goer said he landed about 20 feet from
the truck and that he crawled to it to get to the horn. “I figured the only change I had of anybody finding me was to beep
the horn”, he said.However, Cloer could not get the door open. "Ididn’t have any more strength. And then there was no battery in the
truck so I couldn't beep the horn", he said.Cloer said he ripped a piece of chrome off the truck and started beating against the side of the truck. When he got no
response to either the beating or his
yells, he decided to wait until daylight.
Cloer said he slept some, but there
the road, struck djte railing and Cloer’s truck was a total loss after falling off bridge.
traveled about 90 feet through the air, Bjorkland said. The camper went over
the embankment and on >o the river bed
and came to rest under the bridge
against a column. The bridge is 40 feet high and Cloer and the wreck could not be seen from the road.About 20 gallons of paint were in the
truck, and paint, most of it white, was splattered “all the way to the river, some 100 feet from the wreck scene, the
McAuley Spends 81 Days Visiting Farms In Russia
David McAuley of Statesville, one of
12 young Americans to spend 84 days
touring the farms of Soviei Russia, has three aunts living in Davie County. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George McAuley of Rt. 4 Statesville. His mother is the former Unda Cartner, a sister of Mrs.
Louise (Duke) Tutterow, Mrs. Lois (Clyde) Glasscock, and Mrs. L*rene (Raleigh) Glascock of Davie County.
McAuley, a senior in animal
husbandry at N.C. State University,
applied for the Russian tour last winter
after reading about it in a county 4-H
^ A € tA /m € icy>
F O S T E R - R A U C H D R U G C O .
Bill Foster, RPH
t'-t-*'
Wilkesboro Street
Mocksville, N.C.Bob Rauch, RPH
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bulletin.He represented North Carolina in 1974
at the national dairy cow judging contest
in Columbus, Ohio, and Is a veteran of 4- H speaking contests—an experience that helped him get the Russian trip. Those who went on the trip agreed, in
exchange for the trip, to give sllde-
lecture presentations on Soviet farming
to civic and school groups.McAuley said he found the Russians eager to find out how Americans live— ask questions such as, "How many
hours do you work?” and, “Do you have
a car?”American food costs astounded Russians, he said, because food there is very cheap. On the other hand clothes there are expensl ve~and moot Russians
quickly identified members of the tour as Americans because of the members' jeans and shoes, as well as the style of their hair and eyeglasses”, he said.
7m ff T H E Y K I S S
A N D T E L L
ON rif4 2 i
œ W lY W E D
G A i m
They reveal all — well,
almost all — when host
Bob Eut^anks asks questions
ol lour recently-united couples on Channel 12 TV's
irreverent, uproarious, uninhibited Newlywed
Game tonight and every
happy weeknighi at 7 PM'
Host: Bob Eubanks
7 0 0 P M A B U N D
was much pain.“I've been In accidents before and I
know about shock. I knew the best thing was to be cool and relax. All I could do was to lay and wait. I was going to wait throught most of the day and when 1
knew there wasn’t much time I was
going to try to crawl out”, he said. "However, I felt like crawling would endanger my leg worst than It was”.The pickup, owned by Cloer’s father, was demolished. Cloer was charged
with driving too fast for conditions.
D E L I G H T !
D X n N G G A U m
Bachelors and Bachelorettes ages 16 to 76 seek out the perfect date behind closed doors every weeknighi at 7:30PM! Host Jim Lange plays matchmaker on TV-12’s dream date!
HOST; Jim Lange
B P M S IG H T IN G 4 0 15 :
T H E
U N D ER W A T ER
IN C ID E N T !
P R O J E C T O R a
Fishermen sight aU.F.O. which plunges into the ocean-ramming and sinking their boat! Based on authentic Air Force files! Edward Winter and
CaskeySwalm
9 P M a x H O U R S
T O U V E !
Q u m c r
A mysterious poison has claimed two lives-and now Quincy has six hours to find the cause before his assistant, Sam, becomes victim number three!
JackKlugman
Robert Ito
10 PM
Egg protein is to near perfection tiiat tciontiiti ofton ute it as a standard to measure the value of protein in other foodi.
E L L E N ’S
C A R E E R
T H R E A T E N E D !
W .E.B .
Ellen Cunningham decides to give her friend. Angelica Hutton, that one big acting break. But Jack Kiley 's reputation at Trans- Atlantic Broadcasting is riding on the show, and now Angelica could put their careers in danger!
Pamela Bellwood Richard Basehart Alex Cord Andrew Prine
U IX II
O r a l C o m m u n i c a t i o n s S k i l l s A r e N e e d e d In
N e w T e a c h e r s C r i t e r i a ^ S a y E d u c a t o r s
DAVIL COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. SI-PTEMBLR 21. 147« SB
'A high level of compelciicy
in oral communication skills
should be included in the new
set of guidelines now being
developed for college students
who seek lo gain stale cer
tification as teachers, say two
educators al the University of
North Carolina at Green
sboro.
Dr. Ethel Glenn and Dr.
E llio tt Pood of UNC-G's
D epartm ent of C om
munication and Theatre said
they reached their conclusion
after conducting a research
project on the correlation
between sludent teachers and
their oral com m unications
skills.
"W hat we found in truth
was that oral communications
skill is actually a vastly beller
predictor than SAT (Student
Aptitude Tests' or prade point
average uf whal kind of
teacher a student will be,"
stated Dr. Glenn, an associate
professor of speeech at UNC-
G.
Basing their study on a
sample of 35 student teachers
last spring, the two faculty
members sought to answer
two questions: (1) Are SAT
scores and grade point
averages significant
predictors of student teaching
success? (2) Do com
munications skills bear a
significant relationship to
student teaching per
formance?
In conducting their study,
the researchers studied
m easurem ents of each
student’s oral com
munications skills, plus in
dividual SAT scores and
grade point averages.
M oreover, each student's
faculty supervisor and public
school cooperating teacher
rated the individual's per
formance at the conclusion of
the student teaching ex
perience.
Then, Dr. Glenn and Dr.
Pood evaluated the resulting
m easurem ent of student
(caching performance against
Ihe other three elements-SAT
scores, grade point averages
and individual measurement
of oral communication skills.
What Ihey found was this:
Tilt- students who wprn rated
above average as sludent
teachers did not have
systematically higher SAT
scores than those who rated
below average as student
teachers. The same result
was found in regard to
students who had
systematically higher grade
point averages in college.
“However, of those who
were rated above average as
sludent teachers, 95 percent
also were rated as having
above average oral com
munication skills," stated Dr.
Pood, an assistant professor
of speech at UNC-G.
Conversely, if the students
did not score highly on the
oral communication
measurement, 72 percent of
the same ones didn’t perform
w ell as student teachers,
pointed out Dr. G lenn.
Moreover, she stated that of
those who did very well on the
communication
m easurem ent, 92 percent
were “top notch teachers."
“The bottom line on all of
this is that one of the things
we ought lo be requiring of
teachers is good oral com
munications skills," said Dr.
Pood.
He noted that committees
representing both the State
Board of Education and the
U niversity of North
Carolina's Board of Gover
nors recently have been at
work drafting new guidelines
aim ed at enhancing the
quality of new teachers who
are initially certified. Among
other elem ents, the new
approach as presented Sept. 5
to the State B oard of
E ducation calls for the
developm ent and ad-
F a r m M a r k e t S u m m a r y
Sweet potato sales in
creased this week as additional packing houses begin to operate as the harvest progresses, according to the Market News Service of the
North CaroUna Department of
Agriculture. Fifty pound cartons of uncured US No. is were reported at |6.so to $7., few $6. and $7.50 on September 13. Prices paid to growers for U.S. No. 1 yams delivered to packing houses with crates exchanged were mostly $4., some $4.50 and few lower. Prices paid by processors for 50 pounds
delivered ranged $2.50 to $3. Movement collected for the period September 10-13 totaled over 30,000 cartons for an increase of 7 percent over
the same period in 1977.Egg prices for the week ending September IS were 1^ cents higher on medium with large and small sizes steady
compared to those of the previous week. Supplies were generally short. Demand was good. The North Carolina weighted average price
quoted on September 15 for
small lot sales of cartoned grade A eggs delivered to stores was 68.56 cents per dozen for large, medium 58.80 and smalls 39.10.Heavy hen prices were
hl^er this week and trending
higher for next week. Supplies are adequate and demand good. Heavy type hen prices were 19 cents per pound at the farm with buyers loading.
A total of 13,790 feeder pigs
were sold on 11 state graded sales during week of September 11. Prices were irregular. US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-50 pounds averaged $109.63 per hundred
pounds with No. 3s $105.36; 50-
60 pound 1-2S averaged $96.61, No. 3s $87.01; 60-70 pound l-2s
$85.10, No. 3s $76.27 ; 70-80 pound l-2s $80.98 per hundred pounds with No. 3s $69.86.
At weekly livestock auctions held within the state the week of September 11 slaughter cows were $1.25 to
$2.50 higher, veals steady to
strong and feeder calves $1 to $3 higher. Utility and commercial slaughter cows brought $36.50 to $44. per hundred pounds. Good veal
calves $55. to $67; Good slaughter steers above 800 pounds few $50. to $51.50; Good and choice slaughter
heifers above 700 pounds
$46.50 to $49. at one market; Good feeder steers 300^ pounds $55. to $73. and Good Feeder heifers 300-500 pounds $47.50 to $58.; feeder cows $32. to $44 per hundred pounds. №by calves brought $22. to $89. per head . Market hogs
brought mostly $48. to $50.05
and sows 300400 pounds $40.
to $45.60 per hundred weight.Canton state graded yearling steer sales September 12 sold 946 steers. NC- 2 steers 500-600 pounds
brouf^t $60. to $67.. 600-700 pounds $59. to $63.75 and 700- 800 pounds $U. to $59.50 hundred pounds.Com prices were Irregular and SUybtMllii «tcady tu 1C cents per bushel higher
through Thursday, September
14 compared to the same
Ririod of the previous week.
0. 2 yellow shelled corn ruged mostly $2.08 to $2. is
minislration of a screening
Icsl lo be given at the end of
Ihe sophomore year in college
for students interested in
becoming teachers.
Dr. Glenn said she noticed
that the new plan as presented
calls for testing on general
academ ic areas such as
English usage, literature, fine
arts, social studies, math and
science.
"W e noticed in the news
account that they didn't
m ention anything about
testing the students in oral
communications skills," she
added. "W hat we are saying
is that, as a result of our
research, we are convinced
lhal oral com m unication
com pelency is a very
necessary prerequisite for
those students who wish to
become teachers."
D r. Pood added that
com pelency in w ritten
English usage should not be
confused w ith oral com
munication skills. “ You can
have all the knowledge in the
world, and pass all the written
tests you are given, but if you
are not competent in oral
communication, you can'l be
a good teacher," he em
phasized.
In oral com m unications
skills, the two teachers said
they are referring to in
terpersonal communications,
articulatio n and public
speaking. For the past five
years, Dr. Pood added, UNC-
G has been testing students'
skills in these three areas as
an entrance requirement in
teacher education.
In an effort to share the
results of their research, the
two faculty members said
they have sent sum maries to
Davie Bruton, chairm an of
the State Board of Education,
and to J. Archie Taylor of the
State Department of Public
Instruction. A dditionally,
they have prepared an article
for possible use in the Journal
of Teacher E ducation, a
national publication.
"II's nol enough to test
people and soy you have lo
m ake certain scores on
knowledge lesis in certain
areas of sludy," said Dr.
Pood. “Before we certify
anyone in Ihe stale or
nationally as a teacher. Ihey
ought lo pass an oral com
m unications test and be
certified as com petent lo
com m unicate Iheir
knowledge."
Dr. Glenn added that she is
convinced that enhanced oral
com m unications skills by
classroom teachers can
ultimately help bring about
improved scores on student
achievem ent tests in the
state’s public school systems.
"If a teacher has good in
terpersonal communications
skills, I think the teacher can
sense whether Ihe students
are learning the m aterial,"
she added. "And if they are
not, the teacher has Ihe ability
to adjust the material for
belter results."
Dr. Glenn, who received her
Ph.D. from the University of
Te.vas at Anslin, joined’ the
UNC-G faculty in 1972. She
serves as director of the
co m m uication education
program in Ihe Department of
Communication and Theatre.
Dr. Pood, who came to UNC-G
a year ago, received his Ph.D.
from Florida Slate Univer
sity.
Coon Club
A meeting will be held at
W U liam R . D avie Fire
D epartm ent, F rid ay , Sep
tember 29th at 8 p.m ., to
discuss the forming of a U.K.-
C. Coon C lub for D avie
County. Anyone interested is
asked to please attend.
Follow ing the m eeting,
refreshments will be served.
F or m ore inform ation
contact David Ritchie at 492- 5588 or Jay Brim at 634-3329.
Tr. .. Pete and Martha Kontos (center) take a moment to show M n and Mrs. Vloslos
V m t O J S F i O tn Gl eece Kontos of Greece a few of the Arts Festival atttacUons. Mr. Kontos paivisiting with them in their home in MocksviUe.
’ parents are
E d u c a t o r s A r e T r a i n e d I n L i f e S a v i n g S k i l l s
Public school students attend school in
a safer environment than they did a year ago thanks to steps taken by the 1977 General Assembly and the Department
of Public Instruction in the prevention
and treatment of injury and Illness.Many schools across the state used to depend upon calling a doctor or relying on a faculty member to handle certain emergency situations during school hours. However, the efforts of these two institutions found a better way of dealing with these often critical situations.
In 1977 the General Assembly ratifled
Joint House Resolution 1459 which recommended that all schools in the state have at least one faculty member
certified in first aid and lifesaving skills. They went further to ask that the State Board of Education set up the necessary
training sessions to certify staff in loctd
school systems in these essential skills.
According to State School Superintendent Craig Phillips, one representative from each elementary and
secondary school in the state was
trained last spring by the state agency’s Division of Sports Medicine in cooperation with the state system of
Community Colleges artd Technical
Institutes.Approximately 2,000 educators were trained this year as part of this program. Certification was awarded by the American Red Cross.The skills that were involved in the
first aid training was that of standard first aid which includes the immediate and temporary care given to a person who has become injured or suddenly taken ill.Certification in Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) was given by the North Carolina Heart Association. CPR
Includes mouth to mouth resuscitation and external heart massage. The program enabled participants to become skilled as basic rescuers in both
CPR and F.A.
HEARING AID SERVICE CENTER
Today!
Thursday
10-12 A.M.
BEITQNE HEAfllNR АШ SFRVircFOSTER DRUG COMPANY 634-2141
per bushel in the eastem part of North Carolina and $2.10 to
$2.29 in the piedmont. No. 1 yellow soybeans ranged mosUy $6.50 to $6.84 in the east and $6.50 to $6.62 in the
piedmont. No. 2 red winter
wheat $2.85 to $3.34. New crop
prices quoted for soybeans $6.10 yi to $6.56 per bushel.At western North Carolina shipping points the apple
market is lower for a light
demand. A few packing plants at lower elevations have closed the season. Red
Delicious 88-125S brought $7. to $8. and Golden Delicious $0. to $11. for tray pack cartons.
The supply of beans was short with pole beans $9. and round green $7. per bushel hamper. Cabbage offerings are light with 1% bushel crates green
$5 to $5.50 and egg plants in 1 one ninth bushel crates $7. Tomato market was barely steady with a weak undertone. 20 poimd cartons of
large and extra large turning
pink brought $6. Tomato offerings should last about 10 more days.The broiler fryer market is sharply lower for next week’s
trading. Supply is fully
adequate with the demand
moderate. Weights were
desirable. The North Carolina FOB dock weighted average price for less than trucklots
1 the week^’of September 18 is 25 cents per ^und. Last week 7,144,000 head sere
slaughtered in North Carolina
with the average live weight on September 13 at 4.03 pounds per bird.Market hogs at daily cash buying stations about the
state sold steady to 50 higher
during week of September 11 and ranged mostly $47. to $50. per hundred pounds.At the Clinton state graded
feeder calf sale held September 14 a total of 525 steers and 413 heifers were sold. NC-2 steers 300-400 pounds brought $71 to T4.; 400-500 pounds $71. to $74. and 500 pounds up $63.25 to $73.25. NC- 2 heifers 300-400 pounds brought $59.50 to $61.50, 400-
500 pounds at $59.50 to $M.50,
and 500 pounds up $55.50-68.75.
4-H News
4-H COUNCIL
The Davie 4-H Council will meet Tuesday, September 26. at 7:00 p.m. at the County Office Building Auditorium. The main purpose of this
month's meeting will be to elect Council Officers for 1979.Each club has been notified of the number of votes representatives are eligible to
cast. Officers to be elected will include President, Vice- President, Secretary- Treasurer, Reporter,
Historian, and Recreation Leaders.New officers will be installed at the Achievement
Program November 2.
Hraith Kunds
i.i)c'al health departments
art“ largely funded by Ihe with some Stale support and Federal .issjstani'i' for special pi'otiraius
E P A M I L E A G E E S T I M A T E S
City i:^
1 liu'hwav 18
City 18
1 li,u,h\v;iv
City 1 /
Highw ay 24
w r
City le
1 liyhwav’
City 36
Highw ay 49
City 17
Highw'ay 22
B B & T ls ^ n r e s n u ^ b eeven more inroartant to you
t h a iiE R K s .
r e c r e a tio n a l v e h ic le s . ( H o n it im p r o v e m e n ts , t(K).)
Y o u c a n a p p ly fo r y o u r lo a n in m in u t e s a t a n y
T lie E n v ir o n m e n t a l P r o te c tio n A g e n c y ’s
m ile a g e f ig u r e s te ll y o u h o w e c o n o m ic a l a n e w
a i r s h o u ld b e to d r iv e .
B u t B r a n c h B a n k in g a n d T m s t C o m p a n y ’s
S im p le In te r e s t L o a n fig u r e s te ll y o u h o w ..................... ------
e c o n o m ic a l a n e w C£U‘ s h o u ld b e to b tw . e v e n c a ll y o u w it h y o u r a p p r o v a l i f y o u d lik e .
B e c a u s e th e r e ai*e m a n y w a y s a B B & T I f o u r S in ip le I n t e r e s t f in a n c in g is n o t a v a ila b le
S im p le In te r e s t L o a n c a n s a v e y o u m o n e y e v e iy
t im e y o u m a k e a p a y m e n t.
W e n i£ik e lo a n s fo r a ll k in d s o f a u to m o b ile s a n d
B B & T o ffic e . 6 i* d o it b y p h o n e .
T h e n w e ’ll p u t o u r s e lv e s in to h ig h g e a i' to g e t
y o u r lo a n a p p r()v e d . S o it ’ll b e d o n e q u ic k ly . W e ’ll
H WtU wJlilipiV vow
a t y o u r d e a le r, c o m e to B B & T .
A n d m a k e y o u i’ n e w a u * m o r e e c o n o m ia il
t h a n y o u ’d fig u r e d .
B B & T S i n g l e I n t e i r e s t L o a n s
Mt ii.Ui Krilfi .ll 1 t-i! b t' C' 'I ii< »litii' ■
IM\II «lllM'i I Ml K! ■ TIILIKSDAV. SI I'TÜMUIÍK : i . l'»7X
Dean and Clay Jones of Route 2, Mocksville won second place in ttie Country and Bluegrass Music Contest.
Canning Land and Cattle Com^ny •ed for saleoffered ai)out 100 head of
I iU first sale at
its Moose Hall Farm near Mocksville
last Saturday afternoon.
Van Frye, general manager of tlie farm, said prior to the sale the breeding stock would be offered in 66 lots.The lots included about 40 cow-calf pairs; several heifers and other young
cows already bred to select sires and
show heifers.With the exception of a pedigreed bull consigned to the sale, all animals were to be from the Oavie County farm, Frye had said.
Among the animals on display at the
sale was Massive, one of Canning's prize
bulls.Moose Hall Farm is north of Mocksville on Woodward Road, off U.S. 601 and Cana Road. ~
F a r m i n g t o n N e w s
Mrs. B.C. Brock Sr. entered
Lynn Haven Nursing Home on
last Wednesday, September
13.Mr. and Mrs. W.S. Spillman had as their Sunday guests, Mr. and Mrs. G.E. Collette Sr., Mr. and Mrs. G.E.
Collette Jr. and little Jay all from Winston-Salem.About 45 people who were descendants of the James and Samantha Perry family attended the 11 o'clock worship service at Farmington
Methodist Church on Sunday
September 17. The pastor Rev. J.E. Cloer delivered the sermon. The Perry's came
from Winston-Salem,
Ridgeway, Va. and Hickory N.C. and other places. They came for a family reunion at their home church. They also
toured the Farmington
community cemetery and the
Olive Branch cemetery. The Perrys used to reside in the North Farmington area here. The Perry family had such an enjoyable day that they plan
to come back for another
reunion next year.Our very deepest sympathy goes out to Mr. Grady Smith and other relatives here in the fatal death of Mr. Grady's
brother,'Earley C. Smith who
was killed in a truck accident at his home in Apex N.C. Mr. Smith was thrown from a truck in which he was riding. Ilie truck then rolled over him which proved to be fatal. Mr. Earley Smith grew up
here in this community. He had many friends in this area who will be 80 sorry to learn of this tragedy. The funeral services were held Sunday
afternoon September 17 al 4
o'clock at Apex N.C.
Mrs. Carrie S. Tucker and son, Gilbert Tucker visited
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman
Marlin In Walkertown last Sunday aftemoon.
M o c k s
Our church wishes to ex
press sympathy to our pastor,
Rev. Alvord and family in the death of his mother at Rodesia on Saturday.Prayer services were held
at the church and in the
homes on Friday and
Saturday evening for the
revival services.Homecoming will be
Sunday, September 24.
Revival will be Sunday
through Thursday. September 24-28. The speaker will be Rev. Jim Allred from Mt. Carmel U.M.C., Winston.Mrs. Peddle Carter entered
Davie County hospital on Monday where she underwent throat surgery on Tuesday and returned to her home on
Saturday.Mr. and Mrs John Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Joe White of Winston, Paul G. Jones and Wayne Jones spent Sunday afternoon with Clyde Jones.Mrs. Eva Wilson of Fork spent Tuesday with Miss Ethel Jones.Mrs. Margaret Carter spent Thursday with her mother Mrs. Lydia AUen of Courtney.
ilralth KacilUieii
There are 81 local or district
hfalth departments in .North
Carolina. There Is a public
health iatilily in every county
of I ho si a If
Something For EveiyoneAt Tiie Arts Festival
(contlniieil I'roni page IB)
Honorable Mentions, Catherine Arther Honorable Mentions, Bill Branham Purchase award (furnished by Davie Auto Parts)Merchant Awards!
Mrs. Davis Cope Rlntz’, Geraldine
Boger Foster Drug, R.O. Kiger Daniel Furniture, Anita Clement Davie Jewlers, Esther Foster Wilkins Drug, Bertha Dulln Hall Drug, Michael Livingood Moore’s, Tom Nicholson
Davie Sport Shop, Bobby West Belk's, Bobby Trexler Discount House, Lynn Bridges P.B.'s Hobby Shop, Betty Potto Foster's Jewelers, Pat Baker Fashion Shop, Brenda Eaton Fashion Shop
Louise Daigle C.J. Angell Applaince
Co.Competition Winners:Rock Capiel City Rollers, Country The Martins, Gospel The Singing Disciples,
Tbe Davie County High School Marching Band, Dancing Boots, and Majorettes opened the day’s restlvitles Saturday atlhe Arts Alive Since ’75 Festival.
Dtsco-DanceHilton Donna Hilton & Keith
George Kontos attached brochures on epilepsy to helium filled balloons. The balloons were later released to floatover the county
Little Missy Long of Mocksville gladly receives a balloon from clown Bill McLawry ofHiddenlte. N.cf
Cattle Offered For Sale At Moose Hall Farm j
Moose Hall, the 1,642-acre
farm of the late Dr. Lathan T. Moose, was acquired several months ago by Canning. The company, also acquired the 1,700-acre Quail Roost Farm at Rougemont in Durham County this year.
The company plans to build on the two
farms one of the largest Angus breeding
herds east of the Mississippi River, Frye said. The Davie farm now has about 1,000 brood cows, he said.
Quick Process Pickles Fresh pack or quick process pickles such as corss cut cucumber slices, whole cucumber dills, sweet gherkins and dilled green beans are brined several
hours or overnight, then drained and
combined with boiling hot vinegar, spices and other seasoning.
Making wooden shingles by hand Is an art displayed by Don Frazer of Winston-Salem.
Alvin Richardson of Route 6, Mocksville, demonstrates the art
blacksmith at his display Saturday.
A L L F O R M S
O F I N S U R A N C E
of a
Little Reema Soudab, daughter of Dr.
and Mrs. Thurman Soudah of Mocksville
is overcome with the day's activities. With a balloon in each hand, she simply cannot decide which display to visitnext.
In a quiet moment Danny Lavtrence
takes time to clean up debris and
reflects on the day's happenings.
(Photos by Robin Carter)
PERSONAL
A u to
H o m e o w n e rs
M o b ile H o m e s
In la n d M a r in e
L ife
M o rtg a g e
A c c id e n t / H e a lt h
H o s p it a l P la n s
BUSINESS
C o m m e rc ia l
P r o p e r t y
W o rk m e n
C o m p e n s a tio n
G e n e r a l L ia b ilit y
In la n d M a r in e
C o m m e rc ia l A u to
G ro u p In s u r a n c e
B o n d s
B R A N T L E Y - E D W A R D S
I N S U R A N C E A G E N C Y
A G E N T : D A R R E L L E D W A R D S
P H O N E 6 3 4 - 2 1 0 S 6 3 4 - 3 8 0 9
5 0 3 A V O N S T R E E T M O C K S V IL L E , N C
BUY NOW AND SAVE!
The Forward Harvest Forecast is good in most of thisarea, and Ford
has just offered a trading bonus on six tractor models through
SEPTEMBER 30TH!
We have a good tractor inventory available to us and we're willing to
make long trades to keep customers coming in....
YES, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS... .AND WILL WORK TO EARN IT!!!
GIVE US A CALL-AND WE'LL GALLON YOU!!!!
Ì r
D a v i e T r a c t o r
& I m p l e m e n t
Highway 601 South Mocksville, N.C.
DAVIl; ( ÜIINTV liNTliKPRISli KlilUkU. IHURSDAY. Slil’TKMBl-R 21. 1478 7B
% a v s e ^ ìb o d è
Home of the never ending sale.
INfood stamps
1/ GO
r FURTHER AT
^ LOWES FOODS
S a v e M o r e O n Y o u r
^ Total Food Bill Й З Й Г
H IS W E E K A N D E V E R Y W E E K A T L O W E S F O O D S
....
rOUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS PRICES QOOD THRU 9/23/78.
MONDAY thru SATURDAY '8-9
S U P E R S P E C I A L ' S A V E 5 0 ^ в !
и с к R o a
.S. CHOICE
* B r M i M M t S p M l a l *
3-1 LB. CA RO LIN A PRIZE BACON
2-1 LB. VALLEYDALE PO RK SAU SA GE
2 LB. HILLSHIRE 9 L B S .
SM OKED SAU SA GE * ^ ^ A A
2 LB. VALLEYDALE THICK ^ 9 9
SLICED BO LO GN A
U.S. Choice Boneless
C h i M k S t o a k ••••
U.S. Choice Cubed
C h u c k S t e a k ••••
U.S. Choice Boneless
S h o u l d e r S t e a k •
Lb.
• Lb.
• Lb.
I h i i » . 8 9 * a S fttr . ь 8 9 *
Y O U S A V E 20'^!
Ш QT. D E L M O N T E
C a t s u i
M A R K E T M A N A G E R S P E C IA L
5 LB. SIRLOIN
T i p R o a s t
5 LB. SIRLOIN
T i p s t e a k
10 LBS.
$ - 1 7 9 9
Qarden Freah ^ ш.
Y o i i t o w C o r n S IS 9 * 0 r9 /'
4 Lb. Beg Eastem Oolden Or Red |
D o iic io u t A p p l e t • • • • i
^ Gal. Arcadia
« P W IW •• • • • • •
8№ ^C|0arden Fresh
I * • • •• • •
2-1 Lb. Bags Idahoan
~ ~ ~
Y O U S A V E 3 2 ' !
^ O R T H C A R O L IN A S W E E T
P o t a t o e s
S P E C I A L ' S A V E 4 0 ' O N C O F F E E '
6 Pk. Sealtest Ice Cream
S a n d w i c h e s .............................
5 Oz. Steak Sauce
A k * 1 « « « * « a « a a a a a a « « «
13 Oz. Totino Cheese,
Pepperonl, Hamburger, Or
6 Oz. Kraft Sliced Weight Watcher
C h e e s e .....................
2 Lb. Kraft Velveeta
C h e e s e .....................
12 0z.Kra1t Individual Wrap
C h e e s e .....................
BOz. Kraft
C r e m e C h e e s e
lOOz.Stlck Kraft
Sharp Cracker Barrel
C h e e s e
• • • • •
• ••••••••••
I t
C o f f e e
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* 20 2
1 LB. BAG
MAXWELL
HOUSE
LIM ITI W ITH *7.5 0 FO O D O R D Fi
„ 7 0 Z .G L E E MtOOTHPASTE 7O Z . TU B E
H EA D & S H O U LD ER S
6 O Z . LIQUID H O LD
C O U G H SU P P .
25« O F F
LA B E L
1.5 O Z . R EG . O R U N S C . R O LL-O N^DEODORAN
\ 1 ^ ^ \ 2 0 * O F F $ ^ 0 9
LA B E L ^ I
IÍ2 O Z . R EG .O R U N S C . A/P SPRA1SURE DEODORAN
$ 1
9 9
4 0 Z . LIQUID H O LD
C O U G H SU P P .
$ 1
5 9
Only Two More Weeks To Complete
' Ybiir Flatware Collection!
This W ee k's Item :
Salac^ork
3.25 Oz. McCormick
B a c o n B i t a .....................................8 9 *
S A V E 4 0 ' T H I S W E E K !
25 LB. CHAMP
D o g F o o d
7 9
13 Oz. Keebler C.CI Drops,
Choc. Fudge, Or RIch’N Chips
C o o k i e s .........................
' ^ F I E S T A
C H O O S I r a o M T m i i m u m s
7 Oz. Murray
Assorted Varieties
C o o k i e s a a
16 Oz. Box
C l u b C r a c k e r s
16 Oz. Keebler
H o n e y G r a h a m s .................
léOz. Zesta _ _
S a i t i n O S a aaaaaaaaaaa
H ERE’S H O W TO RESERVE YOUR SET:
1. COME IN AND CHOOSE YOUR PAHERN.
2. REGISTER YOUR CHOICE ON THE FORMS PROVIDED AT THE STORE.3. COLLECT FIESTA STAMPS AT 99‘ EACH (plus tax) ANO PASTE THE STAMPS ON YOUR SAVER CARD.
4. REDEEM COMPLETE CARDS AT THE STORE.
S P E C I A L S A L E !
1 LB. Q T R S.
P a r k a y
24 Oz. Log Cabin e ■
S y r u p .................................................* 1
3 9
A 1 6 ' S A V I N G S '
1 5 У г 0 2 . G R E E R
A p p l e s a u c e
s k D e t e r g e n # ) ^
$ - | 3 1
Q T . B O T T LE
10* OFF LABEL
10 Oz. Maxwell House
I m t a n t C o f f e e .... * 4 ' *
.....................................8 9 *
7 Oz. Ortega
K i t
FOR
I I O e t e r g e n t
$ 0 6 9
157 O Z .
B O X
40* OFF LABEL
* B A K E R Y D E U *
K I C K O r r S P E C I A L
12 Pieces O f Pried С М с к м
3 Breasts 3 Drumsticlcs
3 W ings 3 Thighs
1 Pint Potato Salad
e Fresh Rolls ___
Т а к « S o « « To Tfce B all
----------• » » • T f c l s W — k — i i ______
F r e n c h B r e a d .................4 9 *
Delicious
» I inolio
Уг G A L . K R A F T ^ ^
O r a n g e r s
J u i c e
BRlGHìENtRS
Delicious
^ h o c o l a t e C a k e ^ ^ 3 * ^
32 Oz. Log Cabin Complete A S C
P a n c a l c e J M l x
32 Oz. Log Cabin
Buttermilk Pancake a ■ ^
••••••••••••a a a a ar ■
7У4 OZ. K R A F T
M A C A R O N I & C H E E S E
D i n n e r
4 « !
FOR
8В IMVIl; COUNTY liNTlíRPRISi: RliCORD. THURSDAV. SbPTUMBER 21. 1978
CHARLES F. JAMESCharles Frank James, 45, of Rt. 4, was dead on arrival at Davie County Hospital on Thursday night. He died of
natural causes.The funeral was held Saturday at Turrentlne Baptist Church conducted by the Rev. Johnny Enloe. Burial
was in the church cemetery.
Born Dec. 18,1932, In Davie County, Mr. James was a son of Carl James of Rt. 4, Mocksvllle and the late Emily
Spry James. He was a member of Turrentlne Baptist Church, was a veteran of the Korean Conflict and was a brick mason.Survivors, In addition to his
father, include his wife,
Mildred Wagner James;
three sons, Gary, Mark and Keith James, all of the home; two sisters, Mrs. Juanita Lagel Rt. 7 and Mrs. Shirley
Seats, Rt. 3, both of
Mocksvllle; and four brothers, E.M., Carroll, Gene and Jesse James, all of Rt. 7,
MocksviUe.
MRS. J. N. SMOOTMrs. Mary Ester Dwlggins
Smoot, widow of the late
James Napoleon Smoot, 81, of Route I, died at the Davie County Hospital Thursday morning.TTie funeral was conducted
at 2:00 p.m. Saturday at
Eaton’s Funeral Home Chapel by the Rev. Cameron Dodson. Burial was in the Salem United Methodist
Church Cemetery.She was born in Davie
County to the late John Wesley and Emily Ratledge Dwlggins and was a member ofthe Salem United Methodist Church.Her husband preceded her
in death January 5, 1978.Survivors include two daughters, Mrs. Fred Foster of Route 1, Cleveland, N.C., and Mrs. Wallace Green of Route 1, MocksvUle; three
sons, Mr. W. L. Smoot, Mr. J.C. Smoot, and Mr. J. W.
Smoot, all of Route 1, MocksviUe; 10 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchUdren;
and one sister, Mrs. A. C.
Stonestreet of Winston-Salem.
HORACE S. HAW ORTHHorace Starbuck Haworth, prominent High Point attorney and active church and
civic worker, died Saturday at the High Point Memorial Hospital.The 86-year-old resident of the Presbyterian Home had been in dedlning health for a
month.He was married July 27,
1923 to Frances Kinsey Morris of MocksvUle who survives.He was educated in Uie High Point public school,
graduating In 1910, and
continued his education at Whittier CoUege in Whittier, Calif, where he received his bachelor’s degree in 1915. He received his law degree from
the University of Michigan in
1920, following service in the army during World War I. He began the practice of law in High Point in 1922.He held many civic
responsibUities and business
UUes including director of the
Southern Furniture Ex- ponsition BuUding, director of Uie High Point Hotel Co., president and director of the YMCA, a charter member and first president of the High
Point Civitan Club, and
district governor of the
Civitans in 1925.He had served on the board of directors of both High Point and Guilford coUeges and at the time of his death held the title of trustee emeritus at both coUeges. He also had
served as trustee for High
Point Memorial Hospital and chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Greensboro, now Federal Home Loan Bank of Atlanta.
He was a birtiuright Quaker and member of the High Points Friends Meeting. He had been representative of
N.C, Yearly Meeting to Uiree
Friends World Conferences—
Swathmore, Pa.; Oxford, England; and Greensboro.Surviving in addition to his wife are one son, Horace S. Haworth Jr. of NashviUe,
Tenn; two grandchUdren; two
sisters, Mrs. Bertha Mellichampe of Billings, Montana, and Miss EdiUi Haworth of Maryfield Nursing Home.The funeral was held
Monday afternoon at Uie High Pointe Friends Meeting House by Dr. WUIiam G. OuUierie
and the Rev. Cecil E. Haworth. Burial was in Oak- wood Memorial Park
Cemetery.
MRS. ELLA B. FOSTER Mrs. Ella Barney Foster, 85, of Route 3, died Tuesday morning at Davie County
Hospital.
The funeral will be 2 p.m. on Thursday at Dulin’s United MeUiodist Church in Davie County conducted by the Rev, WiUiam 'Hiompson and Uie Rev, Norman Frye, Burial
wUl be in the church
cemetery.The family will be at Eaton’s Funeral Home on Wednesday night from 7 to 9 o’clock. The body wiU be
placed in the church 30
minutes before the funeral. Born June 21,1893, in Davie County, Mrs, Foster was a housewife and a member of Dulin’s United Methodist Church, Her husband, George
Leppard Foster, died in
January of 1977.Survivors include 10 daughters, Mrs. Gurney Melton, Mrs. Johnny Lagle,
Mrs. Wallace Sparks, Mrs.
John Forrest and Mrs. Claude
McNeill, all of Rt. 3, MocksviUe, Mrs. Robert
Robertson of Advance, and
Mrs. Henry Thomas, Mrs. Walter Orrell, Mrs. Felix Reavis and Mrs. Alton Orrell, all ot Winston-Salem;One son, George Foster of Rt. 3, MocksvUle; one
brother, George Barney of Rt.
3, MocksvUle; 26 grand
children; and 21 greatgrandchildren.
ERNEST C. BUTNER Ernest Clemmons Butner, 93, of Route 1, Advance, died
at his home Thursday morning.
The funeral was held Saturday at Vogler’s Clemmons Chapel at 2:00 p.m. Burial was in tiie Macedonia Moravian Church Graveyard.He was born in Davie County to Walter L. and Addie
Lee Butner and lived aU of his
life in the Macedonia Church Community where he was a weU known farmer.He was a member of the
Macedonia Moravian Church.Surviving are his wife, Mrs. Ruth MiUer Butner of the home; three daughters, Mrs. James R. (Josephine) Ellis of Route 1, Advance, Mrs. Cecil (Dorothy) PhiUips of Route 2, YadkinviUe, and Mrs. Earl (Eva Lee) Steelman of Radcliff, Kty.; one son, Mr, Kenneth M, Butner of Route 1, Advance; seven grandchUdren and seven greatgrandchildren.
MRS. FRANCES YOUNG .NOAKESMrs. Frances Horn Young Noakes, 71, died in an
Oakridge, Tenn. hospital,
Saturday, Sept. 9, from injuries received in an automobile accident there, September 6th.
She was born in Davie
County to the late John and
Emmiiine Summers Horn, and was first married to Uie late Floyd Young of Cooleemee.
Survivors include her
husband, Mr. Noakes of the home; and four chUdren, Geraldine, Bobbie, Chad andC.C. aU of CaroUna Beach.
She was' the sister of the late
Marsh Horn of MocksviUe.
Funeral services were conducted in Wilmington, N.C.
Planning Board
{Meets Ttiursday
MocksviUe Planning Board
wUl meet Thursday, September 28th at 7:30p.m. at Uie
Town Hall.
Homecoming,Sunday
T he Cooleem ee Presbyterian Church wiU have Homecoming, Sunday
(September 24).Sunday School and the Worship Service at the
regular time. Immediately foUowing church wiH be dinner on the ground. Everyone is invited to come and bring a covered dish.“The Believers” wUl meet
at 6:30 p.m. at 7:30 p.m. The
evening service wiU be
testimonies, a special hymn singing, and a history of Oie church wUl be given.
Dr. Robert Bratcher,
research associate In the
Translations Department ot the American Bible Society, win speak at First Baptist Church, MocksviUe, Sunday,
September 24, 1978. Dr.
Bratcher prepared the basic draft of "Good News for Modern Man," the New Testament In Today’s English
Version. He was also chair
man of the team of seven scholars who prepared the translation of the Old Testament in Today's EngUsh Version. They completed their work in November 1975.
The entire "Good News
Bible’’ was published by the
American Bible Society on December 1, 1976. The public is cordially Invited to hear Dr. Bratcher.
Center To Observe
Homecoming Sunday
Center United Methodist
Church will observe homecoming services Sunday
October 1, 1978.The Rev. Keith Tutterow of Elk Park, N.C. a former member of the Church wiU deliver Uie moming sermon
at 11:00 a.m. Church School
wiU be at 10:00 a.m. A picnic
lunch wiU foUow the moming
service and there wUI not be an afternoon service.Rev. Cameron Dodson is pastor of the church.
School Water
North C arolina has the
largest network of fluoridated
school water supplies in (he
nation - 115 schools.
'The Restless Ones’
At Tlie Lighthouse
“THE RESTLESS ONES," considered the most suc
cessful moUon picture yet
produced by EvangeUst BiUy Graham, will be shown in Cooleemee on Sept. 23 at 7:30
p.m. in "The Lighthouse" (Cooleemee Recreation Center).With the accent on youth,
Uiis feature-lengUi fUm deals imaginatively and dramaUcally wiUi the teenage crisis, WiUi a background setting provided by the 1963
BUly Graham Los Angeles
Crasade, and artfully woven into Uie story pattern, “THE RESTLESS ONES" is a hardhitting, bold approach to our social problems.Here is a Him which dares
to be different, a story which wiU sUr the heart and mind. Having seen “THE
RESTLESS ONES", you wiU
never be the same.As one reviewer said, "Here is a picture that teUs the world Uie truth and comes up with
an answer, not an easy an
swer, but an answer from beyond us." This answer wiU saUsfy, challenge and inspire young and old alike and wiU appeal to churchgoers and
non-churchgoers. The
Christian message comes Uirough in the midst of a realistic teen-age situaUon,
cleanly and without cloying. Swift-moving plot episodes highlight the opportunities
facing tbe church.Screenwriter James CoUier has skiUfuUy brought into focus the contemporary plight of both teen-agers and parents, A sensitive script,
produced by World Wide
Pictures under the direction
of Dick Ross, has resulted in a "break-through” in “THE
RESTLESS ONES."
Singing Sunday
At Baptist Tabernacle
There wiU be a Gospel
Singing at Uie Davie Baptist
Tabernacle, Sunday, Sep
tember 24th at 7:30 p.m. Special guest performers wUl be the Victors of Winston- Salem.Everyone is invited to attend.
Revival Services
At Community
A series of revival services
will begin at Community Baptist Church, Gladstone Road, Monday evening at 7:30 wiUi tiie pastor, Uie Rev. Johnny Abee preaching
Monday Uirough Thursday, Sept. 25 - 30th. Guest speaker Friday evening wUI be the
Mr. and Mrs. F.R
Beauchamp celebrated their
golden wedding anniversary,
Sunday, September lOth with a picnic lunch at Fairfield Mobile Home Park. Hosting the occasion was their only child, a daughter, Mrs. Bryce
Blackwelder. The couple was
married September iSth, 1928
at the Baptist parsonage In Mocksvllle. The week before, Mr. and Mrs. Beauchamp spent some Ume vacationing
at Fontana Dam, saw the Lost Sea in Tenn., visited the Grand Ole Opry and spent sometime in Maggie Valley enroute to (heir home on
Route 2, Advance. Friends
and relatives attended this special occasion.
Rev. WiUiam Wease of
StatesviUe, and Saturday evening, Uie Rev. Roy Watts of Harmony. The public is invited to attend.Special singing will be provided each evening.
UMYF To Begin
Shut-in Visitation
The UMYF of Chestnut
Grove-Union Chapel United
MeUiodist Churches wUl begin a monthly shut-in visitation program this Sunday, Sep- tember 24 at 6:00 p.m. The
young people wiU visit at least
one Shut-in from each church.This visitation program wiU continue on the Fourth Sunday of each month. A time of fellowship, laughter, and
prayer wUl be shared between the young people and the ' shut-ins.Adult counselors for the UMYF are Mr. and Mrs.Bruce Myers from Chestnut Grove and Mrs. Nettie Groce from Union Chapel.
Health Laboratories 4 \North Carolina has one of the most modern public health laboratories in Uie nation.
JERICHO
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Route 7, Jericho Church Road
Phone 492-S291
SERVIC ES: Mnister - Charles Isenberg
Sunday: Bible Study and ciatiet for aii ages at 10:00
Morning Worihip at 11:00 a.m.Evening Worihip at 6:00 p;m;
Wednesday Night: Mid-wmkB ibie Study at 7:30
SERMON TOPICS FOR SUNDAY, SEPT.24:
' Bible Study- “The Restoration IMovement" by Bill Ijames
Morning Worship-Guest speaker: Edwin Boger
Evening Worship- Congregational singing
THOUGHT FOR THIS WEEK
"Kindness is a language
that the deaf can hear and that the blind can see"
1ST CHI______^p: 1st Sunday 10 a.m. 3rd11 a.m. - Sunday School 1st Sun. 3.2,4, Sundays l^a.m . _
WESLEY CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCH Worship; 1st Sun. 11 a.m.^ 3rd Sun. 10 a.m. - Sunday School 3rd Sun, 11 a.m., 1,2,4, Sundays 10 a.m.
NO CREEK PRIMITIVE
BAPTIST CHURCH
The Episcopal Church
"THtRE IS A TIME FOR EVERYTHING . Ecclesiastes 3:1, The Living e.ttfc. lyndale House
F iv e M IN U T G S
Shepherd Moming Worship 9:30 a.m. '
Church School 1(T:40 a.m. Father Willis Rosenthal, Priest hi Charge.
DAIL-A-PRAYER
634-3311
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Austin Hamilton, Sunday School
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.
1238 Bingham Street IWocksville, NC
PHONE 634-2167
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.
MOCKS UNITED ME THODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH
EATON
FUNERAL HOME
328 N. Main Street MocksviUe, NC PHONE 634-2148
6 miles East on Hwy 64, Rev. Yates K.
Wilkinson, Pastor, Sunday School 9:45 a.m. Wonhip Service 11:00 a.m.-Evening
Worship 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE UNITEDMETHODISTCHURCH
MARTIN HARDWARE
& GENERAL
MERCHANDISEFeeds, Dry Goods Groceries, Fertilizer
PHONE 634-2128
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
LIBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCF
BETHLEHEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
HARDISON UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
A.M.E. ZION METHODIST CHURCH
DULIN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH-Rev. John F. Edwards
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
NORTH MAIN STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST Donald Freeman, Minister, Sunday School 10a.m.-Worship Servicc 11 a.m.-Evening
WorsiUp Service 7 p.m.-Wed. Service 7;30
FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH
DAVIE TRACTOR t
IM PLEM ENT!».
Ford FarmingSales and
Service-New Holland EquiR
Mitbuty Roid A Complete
PHONE 634-SB6g Repair
IIHFRTY WESLEYAN CHURCH
COBLE LIME t
FERTILIZER SERVICE
Cooleemee, NC - Hvvy 1S8
Bufinen Phone 284-4354
Home Phone 284-2782
Troy C. Vaughn, Pastor
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH Ho^ital St., MocksviUe, NC Rev. Robert
L. Taylor. Sunday School 10 a.m.-Morning Worship 11 a.m.-Evening Worship 7 i.m.
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOLINESS CHURCH Rev. A. W. Smith, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Wonhip 11 a.m.-Life-
iiners 7:30 p.m.-Evangelistic Service7:Ju Wed. Bible Study 7:30 p.m.
DAVIE SUPPLY CO.
MocksviUe. NC
PHONE 634-2859
MARTIN EQUIPMENT
& SERVICE
508 Depot St. MocksviUe, NC PHONE 634 2082
c c ' I . ."Г!*;. T' ..
TREASURED THOUGHTS
"Without God, we cannot;without us. He will not. ‘
So said Augustine, many cemurins ago.
Therein lies the prefect balance between
God's sovereignty and man's freedom.
God will never surrender His sovereignty, but He will not force Himself upon any
man’s will.
The question is often asked, "How much
faith does it take to save a man?" The
best answer is, "It takes all the faith you have in the right PERSON."
The rich ruler trusted riches - no salvation. But the Samaritan woman trusted wholly in Jesus, and the result was her salvation.
Vou are a part of that fateful equation:
"Without God. you cannot;without you. He will not."
Oddly enough, the blasphemous "God Is
Dead" idea has done some good in our old world. For one thing it caused Billy Graham to say, "He can't be dead.I talked to Him this morning and He answered my prayer." A bumper
sticker found on the back of cars says,
"God is alive and living in my heart."
But some concepts of God deserve
to die - pagan idols, gods of materialism, and the quaint old "grandfather God" and if they do, that's good! Pity the man whose faith and trust was placed
in such misconceptions. It's no wonder
he shouts, "God is dead," when he learns how mistaken he has been.
But for others, the words of the angel
to Joseph are solid fact; "They shell call his name Emmanuel, which being interpreted is, God with us" (Matt. ):23l.
OCommunily Advirtliina
GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Walter L. Warfford. Sunday School
10a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-BT-U 6;30 p.m.-Evening Worship 7;30 p.m. Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Prayer Meet
ing Wed. 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD. Cooleemee, NC
CLiiMUNT GROVE CHURCH OF GOD
I. W. Ijames, Pastor, Sabbath School 10 a.m.-Worship Service I p.m.-Prayer Meeting Wed. 8 p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ON
MILLING ROADBarry Mahorney Pastor. Sabbath School
10 a.m.-Morning Worship 11 a.m^______
IlS/ieiOta
is feature is pub- ■ in the interest_ __tter community and is made possible by these sponsors who believe in building character.
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Road,Sunday School
10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.
HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Norman S. Frye, Pastor, Sunday
School 9:45 a.m.-Woiship Service iangelistic Service
7:30 p.m.-Wed. Service 7:30 p m.
HUNTSVILLEMETHODIST
id Sun. .10 a.m.>th Sun. 11 a.m.
fiOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH Sunday School 9:45-Worship 11 a.m. MOCKSVILLE PENTECOSTAL HOUNESS CHURCH James C. Hodnett, Minister
Sunday School 10 A.M.Worship Service l i A M.Evangelistic Service 7:00 p.m. Lifciinen Sunday 6:00 p.m.
Bible Study Wed 7:30 p.m.
MACEDONIA MORAVIAN CHURCH Rev. John Kapp, pastor-Sunday School
10 a.m.-Wonhip Service 11 a.m.-Youth
Fellowship 6:30 p.m.-Evening Wonhip 7:30 p.m.
MOUNT OLIVE METHODIST CHURCH Worship: 2nd Sunday 11 a.m.. 4th Sun.10 a.m.-Sundav School; 4th Sun. 11 a.m 2,1,3 Sundays 10 a.m.
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST
Jericho Road, Office; 492-5291 Home: 492-S2S7.ChailesC.lsenberg 7257
ST. FRANOS CATHOLIS MISSION Sundays at 10 a.m. - Sunday obligation
fuUHled also at anticipatory mass on
Saturdays at 8 p.m.634-2667 or 246-2463
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Jbnmy Hfaison, Pastor, Sunday Service
9:50 a.m.-Wonhip Service 11 a.m.-Sunday Evening 7 p.m.-Wed. Evening 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNirr GROVE UNITED
METHODISTCHURCH
BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
EATONS BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Moming Worship11 a.m.-Training Union 7 p.m.
DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLE
Rev. T. A. Shoaf. Pastor, On Forlc Bixby Rd. Sunday School 9:45 p.m.-Morning Worship
11 a.m.-Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.-Bible
Study Wed. 7.30 p.m -Evening Wonhip 7 p.n
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCIl
Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.-Evening Worship Service 7 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD Bixby
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY Rev. Charlie Talbert, MocksvUle. Rt. 4 (Epheaus) 284-4381
CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKESVILLE PENTECOSTAL
I'OUNESS CHURCH Modcsville, Route 5, Rev. Albert Gentle Sunday School 10 a.m.-Wonhip Service
11 a.m.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fork, NC, The Church of the Ascension
(3iuich School 10 a.m.-Moming Prayer,
Sermon 11 a.m.
A T T EN D T H E CHURCH
O F Y O U R CHOICEI
C. A. SEAFORD
LUMBER COMPANY
Jericho Road MocksviUe, NC PHONE 634-5148
I. P. GREEN
MILLING (».IN C .
Daiay Flour
We Custom Blend 524 Depot Street Phone 634-2126
FARM & GARDEN
SERVICE. INC.
961 YadkinviUe Road
PHONE 634-2017
or 634-5964
FOSTER DRUG 1Я.
Lowes Shopping Center MocksviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2141
TED’S GROCERY BAG &
MIDWAY RESTAURANT
Salisbury Road, MocksviUe
Glenn S. Howard
-------DBA-------
SOUTHLAND DISTRIBUTORS
Route 1 - Advance PHONE 998-8186
JEFFCOCO., INC.
ROUTE 1 - Advance
"Our staff and employees encourage you to attend the church of your choice."
SHEFFIELD LUMBER
(PA LLET COMPANY
Route 6 - Box 153 M«4keviUe, NC PHONE 492-5565
DAVIE COUNTY KNTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. |Q78
Schools And Business:
Getting The Job Done
Tie piall the students who pass through the public school system enter the economic
community to pursue a career.Public enducation depends largely on the business community to provide adequate employment opportunities for its graduates.Whitehurst will work full-time with educational, business, and industrial
groups to share information about effective programs. He will assist in organizing groups to share information about effective programs. He will assist
in organizing business resources in
communities across the state and demonstrate how business persons can assist in classroom learning.
I'f
For the first time in educational history a national corporation with
regional operations in North Carolina’s Beaufort County has donated the fulltime services of one of its top executives to help establish a program to promote a formal working relationship between the public schools and the business community.The official. Brooks Whitehurst, engineering services manager with Texasgulf Inc. in Aurora and chairman of the N.C. Career Education Advisory
Council, is the person that will provide
the link between schools and businesses.The trend toward greater citizen participation in public education and
community affairs is growing in North
Carolina and across the nation. The new
community school programs and the use of more volunteers in schools are evidence of the trend.Traditional means of educational
involvement, such as community advisory councils and parent-teacher associations, have become more active in educational affairs.One source of potential school-
community involvement that has not
been fully explored is the development of a better relationship between the business community and public
education.‘"№e business community has a large stake in public education,” says Whitehurst. “Business depends on the
public schools for graduates with the
basic skills and work attitudes necessary to fill entry-level positions.I* When questions concerning business
locations arise, the quality of the schools
Isanimportant consideration. Will there be a sufficient supply of people with theskills industry needs? Will employees, „ ...............particularly management-levei EnochC. Jarvis of Route 2. Mocksvllle professionals, want to locate their was honored with a birthday celebration
fatJjiUes in the area and place their his home Sunday. Mr. Jarvis was 83
children in the public schools? Unless >’«“'■* y»“ng.the answers to these questions are yes. Attending the picnic luncheon were
theattraction or expansion of business is Lester Jarvis of Covlnton,likely to be directed to other areas or Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Jarvis and states.” Kimberly of Greensboro. Mr. and Mrs.
The educational community also Thomas T. Jarvis, Wayne Jarvis of e . adepends heavily on business for Winston-Salem. Mr. and Mrs. Frank The Piedmont Health Systems Agency financial support and the employment of Jarvis, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Jarvis. Mr. will conduct a Community Heajth its:.high scho^ graduates. “•«> M™- Lester Boger and Scott of Forum Mocksville on Tuesday, Oc-liorth Carolina’s business community Mocksvllle. Mrs. Sandra B. Sizemore tober 3 at 7:30 p.m. in the Davie County
contributes directly to the financial ®"d Brent of Hamptonville, Mr. and „support of public education through the Mrs. Richard Yount and Tony of . The Piedmont Health Systems Agency \afious state and local taxes they pay. Salisbury, Mrs. Pat J. Huffman of funded by the Department of Health, Indirectly, the salaries businesses pay Hickory, Tony Jarvis, Mrs. Helen Education, and Welfare to prepare em'ployees contribute to both the state Jarvis, Joey Jarvis, Barry Allen, health plans and to assist communities
and local tax base which supports Nathan Allen, Dorma Allen, Jesse ^ developing improvements in the
education. Mabe. Jeff Bracken, Mr. and Mrs. Mike health system. The Community Health
I ^ In North Carolina, approximately 35 Jarvis and Heath, Mrs. Roy Groce and Forum is the first of three meetings percent of each year’s high school Mrs. Jarvis. scheduled for Davie County.
13-Foot Tomato Plant
tomatoes from this one plant.Health Forum Planned For Mocksville
gra'duation class enters the Job market The purpose of the first meeting is to discuss local health needs. Information
gathered will be considered by the j
Agnecy in setting priorities for the next \ year.Al the second meeting. County I residents and Agency representatives will be asked to assist in developing programs to address those needs
identified at the October 3 meeting. The j
third meeting will be a public hearing on the plans before adoption by the PHSA Board of Directors.All County residents are urged to participate in this important process
which willl help shape future health
services in Davie County.
MILDEW RESISTANT ON PAINT FILM
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REZ®
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Your choice— Oil or Latex-
Interior or Exterior— Solid
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ellect. . . 144
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LATEX
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Palnt Roller &
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Includw fine quality 9" poly
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CAUDELL LUMBER CO.
1238 BINGHAM STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NC
An unusually large crowd attended Homecoming ser
vices at the Methodist Church
Sunday. Many visitors from over the state, as well as ■adjoining oommunities were there. The Rev. John Hamilton of Lexington, now retired, delivered a wonderful
message. He mentioned that
this community held a special place in his heart, as he was here in 1937 as a student from Duke Divinity School and
JerichoHardisonNews
Knox Crowell is attending
Oral Roberts University in
Tulsa Okla. He has made the alumni and newspaper staffs. This is his senior year and he loves his work.Miss Elizabeth Crowell is
attending Catawba College
this year.Mrs. Mary Brock is starting her nursing career off right now. She is working at Davie
County Hospital.
Dewey Parks spoke at the
Ruritan Bldg. on insulating
homes while the ladies were getting ready for a style show. Quite a crowd was there to see the interesting styles for the
coming season.
Also the Ruritans saugage
and pancake breakfast will be held Saturday morning the 23rd. Homemade sausage will be sold. It can also be bought by the pound. Anyone in
terested in good whole
sausage should plan to attend.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Allen had
visitors from N. WUkesboro Saturday night, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Russell and children. Visiting them Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Whit
ten.
Bob Allen is having a birthday cookout this Saturday night the 23rd. Happy bir
thday Bob-your 39th I
presume.
Miss Robin Allen is
progressing slowly from her broken leg. We hope she can be up and around real soon.Miss Vetra Brown had a
birthday Sunday the I7th
which all her children helped her celebrate at her home.Mrs. Ferm Bryant’s
daughter and family from
LiongBburg, N.C. were visiting
here this past week.Mrs. Grace Ratledge's grandson, David from
Georgia was visiting her last week.Mrs. Onie Mauldin’s son and family gave her a bir
thday dinner Sunday. There
were many nice gifts and much Thanks for allgood thmgs.Uttle Chad Thurlo found his
first hen's egg and was very excited about it Sunday.Edd and Nellie Couch just came home from Florida
preached his very first ser
mon.The Rev. Hubert Clinard of Mitchell county is preaching , the Revlvial services at
'’Methodist church. He has been delivering some very inspiring messages; with
good attendance each night.
Rev. Clinard is a former pastor who served here in 19S6.Mr. and Mrs. Bill Zim
merman have retumed from
a weeks visit with their
children Miss Brenda Zimmerman in New York and Mr. and Mrs. Chris Farley and sons Brian and Christojiier in
Arlington, Virginia. The
Zimmermans also visited Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Tighe and
family in Princeton, New Jersey and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Homes in Audubon, New Jersey.Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Smith
of Southgate, Michigan were
luncheon guests Friday and
Saturday of their aunts Mrs.
Minnie Bryson and Miss
Rebekah Talbert. Mrs. Smith
was formerly Mary Jan
Talbert.Mrs. Sally Carter has returned from a 5 day trip to
Miami, Florida. She flew
down to visit several nephews
<Vid neices whom she had never met; children of her sister Mazie Bziley Bronsons who went to Florida some 57 years ago. The Bronson family was though to have
drowned in a flood that hit
Miami years ago. This summer the eldest son James c ^ e to Davie county to see if he could find any relatives,
and was pleasantly surprised
to find his aunt Mrs. Carter
and many cousins. Those whom Mrs. Carter visited were Mr. and Mrs. James Bronson, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Bronson, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Bronson, Mrs. Pat Oliver, Mrs. Betty Suggs, and Mrs. Edna Powell. Mrs. Carter says it was a glorious reunion
for all.
Mrs. Don Hutchens and son of Advance Route 1 were Sunday visitors of Mrs. Clara Baity.
Mrs. Gladys Davis of
Winston Salem has been visiting her sister-in-law Mrs. Georgia Foster.Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Spry spent a weeks vacation at the
coast and the mountains, with a few days at each place.Sunday afternoon visitors of Mrs. Walter Shutt were her
children and grandchildren, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Collette, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene West and Children Kevin and Emily of Winston Salem and Mrs. Bill
Summers of Mocksville. The
West’s also visited Mr. and Mrs. Bill Zimmerman.Our community expresses deepest sympathy to the Rev.
iuid Ml». AifL- Alvurd in Uie
death of his mother. Mrs. Bessie Alvord. She died in Rhodesia where she had been a missionary for many, many years
Most all are major brands—Mostly first—Some Blemished
A T T E N T I O N F A R M E R S :
For Your Pickup This Fall
700-15 Monarch 6 ply T. T. UMT
traction t ir e ........................... $39.50
G78-15 Jetson white mud & snow.. . . 32.50
P235-75 -15 (LR78-15) Mud &snow white India General
steel radial........... .................... 47.50
670-15 6 ply nylon traction 1st Gulf.. 32.50
COME BY AND PRICE OUR:
* Boat trailer tires
* Cycle tires
и
* Camper tires
F a l l C l e a r a n c e s p e c i a l s ”
UNraOYJIL
* Denotes blems
*P195-75R-14(ER78-14) steel belt radial.........$33.00
♦E78-14 White belted-....................................... 26.50
♦G78-15 Black belted.........1—........................ 27.50*
* PR78-15 White 2 ply steel radial...................>29.95*
Radials iiiiT Cf)* HR78-14 black steel belt---------
* GR78-15 black steel belt................ 37.00
* LR78-15 black steel belt.................- 45.00
2 PLY STEEL BELTED
1st line Radials, Whitewall—GM Tread (OMNI)or alray
ER78-14........................................ $42.50
FR78-14....................................... $44.00
HR78-15.................-........................$49.50
JR78-15............................................$52.00
LR78-15........................................... $54.50
HR78-14........................................ $47.50
-EMPCO-Mfg.
by Cenerai
PREMIUM POLYESTER 4-PLY
•7 R ib tread-
A78-13................................................................25.50
B78-13................................................................26.00
C78-13..............................................-................27.00
C 78-14..............................................................28.50
E78-14................................................................30.00
P78-14 and 15....................................................31.QO
078-14 and 15....................................................32.50
H78-14 and 15....................................................34.50
J78-15..................................................................35.50
L78-15.-..................................................-..........36.00
All prices include mounting and iMilaneini; and F.£.Ti
Plus old tire and N. C. state fi*« ^
BARY'STIBE
CO URTNEY JUNCTION Y A D K IN V ILLE M O C KSV ILLE
4б8>58в1 в78>2Ш 634-2366
Houre; 8 to 6 weekdays, 9 to 1 Saturdeye. Courtney tbup closed Bat.
lOB IXWll-; COUNIY I NTliRPRISl; Rl t'OKO. TIU’RSDAV, SI I’Tl-MBIiR il. I‘)7,S
Government Regulations Push Up Housing Costs 'Yesteryear In Motion’ At Jamestown Saturday
Unnecessary governmental
regulations are adding as
much as $100 lo the monthly mortgage payment for consumers buying today’s median priced new home, a
spokesman for the National Association of Home Builders
testified today.And those are the lucky ones, NAHB Vice President-
Secretary Herman J. Smith said, noting that millions of less fortunate Americans
have been priced out of the
housing market entirely.Smith commented on the causes and effects of
housing’s 12 percent inflation
rate in recent years during a subcommittee hearing of the
Senate Judiciary Committee.
The median sales price of a new home has increased from $35,900 in 1974 to $57,300 today.“Housing prices and
operating expenses have increased and are continuing to increase more rapidly than family income and consumer prices generally,” Smith said.
“Those harmed the most are
newly formed families who are potential first-time buyers, low income families and the elderly or others on fixed incomes. For those individuals and families, the
gap between income and the
sales price of a new home is
continuing to widen.”Citing several government as well as independent studies on the housing cost issue.
Smith singled out govern
mental regulations for pushing up home prices more
than any other factor.A Rutgers University study, he said, blamed unnecessary regulations for adding as
much as $9,844, or almost 20
percent, to the purchase price
of a $50,000 home, including $5,115 during the land development stage, $4,129 during the construction stage
and $600 during occupancy.
Assuming that 1 percent of the purchase price of a house is an approximate indication
of monthly housing expenses,
the buyer of the $50,000 house is paying almost $100 morie a , month because of unnecessary regulations. Smith concluded.NAHB estimates that in
1949 the cost of a developed lot accounted for about 11 percent of the sales price of a typical new home. Today, the
developed lot accounts for
about 25 percent of the sales
price.Smith noted that the Rice University Center for Com
munity Design and Research concluded in its study that the delays and costs involved in conforming with government specifications had added between $3,200 and $5,400 to the cost of a developed lot .A similar conclusion was reached by the Government Accounting Office, which
mrasured how much the cost
of single family housing in 11 metropolitan areas including 87 communities has been increased by land development fees and requirements. Smith said. The GAO
discovered that excessive
street standards and related site improvements added as much as $2,655 to the price of a home, while municipal fees were running as high as $3,265
per home tor such things as local reviews, permits. In spcctions and utility connections.Furthermore, he said, the GAO survey showed that it took as long as 21 months for a
builder to get his subdivision plans reviewed and approved or about twice as long as It did 10 years ago.Despite these and other horror stories, the paperwork is growing. Smith warned, "’The Rutgers study found
that a developer of a typical residential project in Los Angeles needed to contact 36 different offices, file 12 different application forms, and produce 87 supporting documents and or
duplications in order to
comply with all regulations. In Maryland a builder had to pay a total of 18 permit fees and 4 bonds for the project requirements. In New Jersey
a project needed 14 reviews
for various stages of water, sewer and site plans, six agency fees, four permits and the payment of one bond.”A prominent builder in Northern Virginia, Edward R.
Carr Associates, says his
4-H Workshop
Held At Penn
The Northwest District
Craft Workshop was held at
Penn 4-H Center near Reid- sville September 19 and 20 this week. Five Davie County participants took advantage of the opportunity to leam new craft techniques. The
workshop was sponsored by
the Extension Service for leaders in the fifteen counties in the Northwest District. Extension Home Economist, Nancy Hartman, attended with the group from Davie.Mrs. Lib Anderson and Mrs.
Nell Dillon learned Pulled
Thread on Canvas. Pam Speer took basket-making and Vickie Hendrix learned the technique ot wide binding cane chair bottoming. Frame Weaving was the class chosen
by Nancy Hartman.The workshop, taught by area resource people, was open to the general public. Participants will be teaching
local workshops later on.
DAV Unit Serves
VA Hospital Patients
Labor Day weekend was Watermelon weekend at the VA Hospital in Salisbury wi№
the help of the Frankie D.
Howard Chapter 75 and Auxiliary Unit 75 of the Disabled Veterans.Three hundred and twenty
people were served all the watermelon they could eat over a period of three days. Davie County and Yadkin County farmers donated the melons.
Activities of this type are considered to be of therapeutic value to the patients and are encouraged by the hospital staff; however
without the support given by
the DAV and the citizens of Mocksville and Davie County, the activities would not be possible.
overhead costs increased 230 pcrcent between 1971 and 1978, primarily because of all the paperwork and redtape
involved in dealing with government regulations, Smith said.Besides the costs and delays
involved in government regulations, builders today are confronted with soaring material costs, which account for about 30 percent of the
Drama Set For
First Baptist
A drama team directed by Mrs. Ellene McIntyre joins
the Sanctuary Choir of the
First Baptist Church of
Mocksville under the direc- 'tion of Rev. James T. Lochridge, Jr. to present the pulpit music drama entitled “In My Father’s Name” at 8
p.m. September 24th at First
Baptist.“In My Father’s Name” deals with the Christian lifestyle based on the Gospel of John. It was written and composed by Ester and Bob
Burroughs; a Southern
Baptist, wife and husband
team from Samford University, Birmingham, Alabama.Accompanying the presentation will be Miss Louise Stroud, Miss Kim
Wells and Mr. Phil Martin.
’The public is cordially invited to attend this special worship period. Those unable to attend on Sunday evening may wish to attend the dress rehearsal
on Saturday evening, Sept. 23.
Cooleemee Club
Meets Tuesday
The Cooleemee Home Makers will meet Tuesday, September 28, with Mrs. Emma Dudley at her home on Duke Street at 7:30 p.m.
sales price of a typical new home.
The price of construction materials rose 13.2 percent in the past year, quite a bit
higher than other commodities listed on the government’s wholesale price index.
In the past year prices of gypsum goods went up 25.4 percent, cement increased 16 percent, softwood lumber increased about 22 percent and plywood was up 14 percent, prompting the Council of Wage and Price Stability to schedule hearings for early
October on the soaring cost of
building materials.On the lumber cost problem. Smith urged the subcommittee to review Federal timber policies that were reducing the supply of softwood timber used in home ■building and, thus, helping to force up prices.
“The annual harvest in the
I970’s from the National
forestS“Which constitute the single largest source of softwood timber used in con- struction-is below what it was at (he beginning of the
decade,” he said. “An in
crease in the timber supply of one billion board feet could reduce lumber costs by somewhere between two and five percent.”
Smith also noted that tight
monetary policies designed to cool off the economy and slow inflation tend to exacerbate
A S C S N e w s
housing's inflationary spiral by pushing up mortgage in
terest rates as well as construction financing rates. Mortgage Interest rates are
near 10 percent in many parts
of the country. Builders usually pay 2 points over the prime lending rate, which was raised to 9-><i percent last
week bv most banks.
Natural Klourlde There are 26 communities in North Carolina whose water supplies carry enough natural flouride to protect the ipolh of children against
cavities. .
The aroma of fresh-made molasses, the chugging of a steam engine, and the clanging of metal on a
blacksmith's anvil will mingle in memory-evoking sights, sounds and smells here Sept. 23.
■ The event will be the Jamestown-Union Hill Lions Club's sixth annual “Yesteryear in Motion,” an all-day celebration of life apd work as they were experienced half a century and more ago.Antique farm machinery and road working equipment still in working condition and running will be on exhibit at
the Willard Moore property on
Dillon Road in Jamestown.Among this machinery and equipment will be a steam
engine, a thresher, a bating machine, a corn husking machine, a grader, a dozer, a panner, and a roller. Also on
display will be a 1927 fire truck and a 1946 Piper Cub airplane.Craft exhibits and demonstrations, including a blacksmith, and the making of molasses and apple elder, are other activities scheduled at Yesteryear in Motion.Adding to the tun and entertainment will be square dancing by the High Point Twirlers, and music by the
First Musical Group. Bluegrass in Motion, and the Golden Gate Quartet.
Food and other refresh- menu will be available from several stands at Yesteryear in Motion.“There is a carnival atmosphere at Yesteryear in
Motion which the whole family can enjoy,” said Paul Floyd, president of the Jamestown-Union Hill Lions Club. "This is a tamlly-type event.”
According to Floyd, attendance at Yesteryear in
Motion has averaged about 1,500 at the five previous events.
Yadkin Valley]
Sunday was homecoming at Yadkin Valley. Rev. J.C. Yeatts was the speaker at the morning worship service and
will be speaking each night
this week during the revival.
Lunch was served outside under the trees after the service and everyone enjoyed the good food and fellowship.Bonnie Weatherman came home from the hospital last week where she had un
dergone surgery. She has
improved some so let us continue to remember her in
prayer.Ruby McBride is still a patient at Forsyth Hospital so they can continue to run tests.
We would like to wish Wade King happy birthday.Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hale and children have moved to a new location on the Baltimore Rd.Ernestine Parker was given a surprise baby shower by the Women's Missionary
Fellowship last Monday night. She would like to thank everyone for the nice gifts. They will ail be very helpful.The Valley community would like to express their sympathy to the family of
Ernest Butner who passed away last Friday.
Farmers who have adequate on-farm storage and drying facilities have greater crop handling and marketing
flexibility at harvest time. They can reduce field losses
by harvesting when the crop
is ready and they can stretch
their marketing over a longer period by using commodity loans to provide interim . financing until the crop is sold. In years of excess
production, they can store
crops in good condition until
prices rise.The Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service offers loans to help farmers buy build, or remodel on farm storage
facilities and to get the drying and handling equipment they
need. Farmers may borrow 85 percent of the total cost of the storage facility at 7 percent interest for a period
of up to eight years.
Ellgibile storage structures include conventional bins, flat and multipurpose structures for storing dry grain, as well as silo-type structures for storing high- moisture grain and high- moisture forage and silage.
Eligible drying equipment
includes continous - flow dryers, batch or in-storage drying systems, and systems that dry by aerating or circulating the crop.
Farmers must apply for
loans within 30 days of the time the items to be financed are deUvered to the farm.For more information on this or any other program,
contact the Davie County
ASCS Office.
Letters T o Editor
Dear Editor:At the “Arts Alive Since ’75" festival a
young man had an epileptic seizure.
Gathered around the young man was a group of people staring, most doing nothing and a handful making sure that an ambulance had been called and was
on its way. If one is around a person
during a seizure and he or she feels that first aid must be rendered, below are the seven tips or first aid as published by the Epilepsy Foundation of Ame.
1) Keep calm, there is nothing you can
do to stop a seizure.2) Do not try to restrain the person. Try not to interfere with his movement in any way.3) Clear the area around him so that he does not injure himself.
4) Do not force anything between his
teeth. There is no chance of tongue- swallowing. If the mouth is open, you might place a soft object like a handkerchief between the side teeth.5) Turn the person’s head to one side.
Make sure his breathing Is not con- tricted. Do not be frightened If the person having a seizure momentarily stops breathing.
6) It is generally necessary to call a
doctor or ambulance Unless the epileptic goes into itatuB epilepticui, where one seizure is continually followed by other
seizures, or if the seizure Itself lasts more than ten minutes. This ten minutes does not Include rest after the seizure.7) Treat the incident In a calm, matter-
of-fact manner. After the seizure is over, let the person rest if he or she wants to. Reassure people around that the situation is under control and that the
person is all right.One of the worst things that people can do during a seizure is to gather around the epileptic, he or she did not pU n to have the seizure. During a seizure there
is nothing to see. therefore no reason to
gather around.I hope that the information supplied
will be of some good to people in the
future. 1 urge people to cut it out and keep it with them, not oniy making themselves educated but in the process «duoating others. For any other information please feel free to contact me.Sincerely,
George Vlasios Kontos. III. Vice President
Northwest North Carolina
Epilepsy Association of
North Carolina, Inc.
Dear Folks back in Oavie,Several months ago I joined a group called "Heritage Roses.” which was formed to find and cultivate the antique roses we almost lost through neglect. It's a national organization, cost me all of $2.00 to join, and if anybody's in
terested, I’d 1)6 glad to send more
details. Anyhow, it's been most ex
citing, and I found out that some of the roses I used lo see around Mocksville fall into the "heritage rose” category. I remember some little girl bringing a lovely, old-fashioned lavender one to
Sunday School,and letting us smell it.
Since Davie is one of the oldest settlements in the state, there should be all sorts of these old roses, and wild ones, hiding around old home-places, old
cemeteries, etc. My aunt, Lois Bracken,
found she had one growing unnoticed in the chimney-corner of her house. I have begged a root. The "American” climber now growing in my back yard, and
thought lo be extmcl by tbe American
Rose Society, was found by John MacGregor, of the Huntington Botanical Gardens, wlien he was riding north from Charlotte, and saw the rose growing in somebody’s yard. Who know what other
rare roses are just sitting there waiting
forsomebodyto find them. And, please
God, before somebody digs them up to build a shopping center on the place.What I’d really love to see would t>e a rose garden of Davie historical roses, maybe some place like the ground of the
public library. It isn’t that expensive a
project-just takes a lot of caring and
hard work.In the meantime, if you know where there’s an old-fashioned rose. I'd love to have a root, a rooted cutting, or just a
cutting of it. If you take up a root, be
careful that it’s the same rose. Some are grafted ono different rootstock. Odessa Fosler used to root them by bending a branch down lo the ground, and covering it with soil and a rock to keep it down. Then she’d let it alone till
it rooted, then cut it off from the mother plant You can also do that on a stem by wrapping it in peal moss, and wrapping
that up till it roots. Air-layering, it’s called, and it doesn’t have to be put down in the soil-wiii ruoi in ili> ui dinary pusitiun. Softwood cutting are the ones
that are taken in the bloonuime u( the rose, and tiiey do best right after the rose lias bloomed, but before the hips ure sei Vuu cut oif about 8 to 12 inciies
(if the stem that had the blossom, and
that’s your cutting; remove about 3 or 4
inches off the top, and all but two or three leaf clusters. Put the cutting, wrapped in plastic,in the refrigerator to callous for a few weeks. Then you can root it in sand or peat moss; the whole
pot goes into a plastic bag while it’s
rooting. That keeps it from drying out.It needs a little air. That’s why the Mason jar method rots the cutting. Root one helps. I'm sure the library would have some helpful books on the subject.
Cuttings in the fall come off this year's
growth in late fall or early winter. Vou cut 5 or 6-inch lengths of mature canes.Store rose cuttings in a lightly moist plastic bag in the refrigerator. Putting them in a glass of water will rot the stems. They travel just fine through the
mail in a moist plastic bag J st be sure
they're not diseased, and it they have roots, just wash ail the soil off, wrap the moist rose in a plastic bag, and send her off. I think they travel better with the leaves removed.Hoses can be send to me at the above
address,or they can be taken to my
niotner, Lessie York, at the Mayfair Beaut> &nop. I'm drafting her and Daddy to help me. You don't have to know the name of the rose-we can probably find that out from reference
books, but I would like to know where it
was growing, and if in sun or shade, and anything else you know about it, like how often it blooms, and the name and address of whoever collected it.If anybody's interested in building a collection of the county's rose treasures. I'd be delighted to correspond with you. Just think, some of these roses we lake for granted have been around for
hundreds of years, some even since before the time of Christ. Wouldn’t it be a pity if we let them die out now.Thanks for your heir
Evona York Thomson
Death ValleyDeath Valley, a seemingly barren desert in southern California and
Nevada, is Ihe home of mure than 230
kinds of birds, 17 kinds of lizards, 19 kinds of snakes, a variety of insects, and iiiijif ilidii 1,500 wild burros, says
.\ationai Geographic World magazine.
Twenty-two i(inds of plants grow only in Death Valley
B e a u t i f u l H o m e s
May have given this unique hnw i,-irT te Win Friends r-ij[^-oER C O N T R A I .J
bedrooms, 1^ I ... .»u uasement, and s
PLAY HOUSE WITH US
In this 2 bedroom, 1 bath cottage. Cozy den, kitchen,
carpeted and tiled floors. To see this bungalow for
an appointment and more information please
contact US at Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
TAKE M E HOME COUNTRY ROAD
You will want to take off your shoes and lay back In this charming 3 bedroom home. Located on ap
proximately 2 acres of land. Enioy a delicious
home-cooked meal in the roomy kitchen that this
joy of a home offers. It features a living room, dining room, den, 2 baths. To see this home please
call Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
DA LE CARNEGIE!
ie In "How to
t features 3_______________ sun deck. No
down payment if all qualifications are met! Call today
at Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
AS T IM E GOES ON!
You will be paying more and more rent, so whv not buy your home now. This exceptionally nice 3 bedroom
may be just the one. Recently remodeled it features a living room, family room, new rooflM. Please call us
today at Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
B E ONE OF THE BEST AD D RESSED PEO PLE IN TOWN!
With this fashionable 3 bedroom home. It features a free standing fireplace in the den, 2 full baths, with
floors carpeted and tiled. Cozy-warm or comfort-cool living with the electric furnace and air condition.
Priced to sell. For an appointment and more information please call Century 21 Boxwood Real
Estate.STOP!
Save your time looking. This 1966 Model 12 x 60 mobile home can be yours. Has a double carport built onto the
back. Plus afr condition window unit. Must be moved soon. For more information call us today.
PRIC ELESS PRIVACY
A 2 or 3 bedroom home located on 4 small teinlng
lots in a quiet zone. It has 1456 square feet of heated area that Includes a beautiful sun porch. Also has
enclosed bacl< yard for pets or children. There Is plenty of garden space with 2 utility buildings.
Absolutely a quiet and private area. Please call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD R E A L ESTATE today.
OW NER WANTS TO TALK TU RKEY
Bring your offer® ■>ewly remodeled .3
bedroom, brick teatures a (separateworkshop-garagt >iew carpet and vinyl
throughout. All situated on a large corner lot south of town. Please call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD
R E A L ESTATE today.
“PERSIM M O N PU DDIN“
Can be made from your own persimmon tree If you buy this lovely 3 bedroom rancher. We want
even discuss the huge recreation room, or the IMi acre wooded lot. But we will tell you about the
utility building outside and the two spacious baths. Priced in the low 40’s. Please call CENURY 21
BOXWOOD R E A L ESTATE now.
"BO-PEEP, BEATLES, AND BACH"
Can all be a part of this home, because there Is room for everyone from little baby to teenagers to
mum and pop. This old charmer has been completely remodeled both inside and out. and features a spacious lot surrounded by huge oak trees. 5
bedrooms, IVi baths, plenty of closet space, and 4 fireplaces. Just minutes from town. Please contact
CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD R E A L ESTATE today.
GO AH EAD AND FA LL IN LOVE
THIS T IM E VOU CAN AFFO RD IT The owners have loved this home but they are
moving. You wlllknow the care it has has as soon as you open tbe door. Just 8 years old. 3 bedrooms,
dining room, kitchen with bullt-lns. basement, and carpet with paved drive. Located in Sheffield Park.Just minutes from town. For more information
call us today.
I RAN OUT OF FING ERS
Counting all the extras in this new energy efficient
brick rancher. This home features heat-pump. thermo payne windows, insulated doors, large concrete patio, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, great room,
dining-kitchen combinaUon, many cTostes. carport, with paved driveway. All this and much more
located in Hickory Tree. Just minutes from town. ,
Please call us today, CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD
R EA L ESTATE.
IF THE PRICE IS RIGHT
You can own this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom brick home with \^k baths, living room, dining
room, large den, utility room, and a big fireplace for these upcoming cold winter nights. Fully Insulated with paved drive. Excellent condition.
Please call us today for more information.
SOMETHING FOR THE WHOLE FAM ILY
There is something for everyone in the family in this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom home; a
workshop for (fad, and a big IH acre yard tor the kids. This home also offers a kftchen that is fully equipped, attic, basement tor storage, and a big
fireplace for those upcoming winter nights. Near Cooleemee. Priced In the low 50’s, Please contact
CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD R EA L ESTATE.
ROOMS OF PARADISE Beautiful rooms for your eyes to feast on each day.
The warm and Interesting features hiclude 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, llvliw room, den with fireplace.
This unique and amazing house is your delight.
Please feel free to call us taday for an appointment.
VACA-nON HOME
We may have Just what you have been looking for.
This lovely home Is located in the Sunshine State. With 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, roomy kitchen, livhig
room, and screened porch. For more information please call us at Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
YOUR OWN PRIVATE WORLD
That presents privacy, beauty, and dignity, yet is easily accessible to all activities. We are privileged to
offer to you a most outstanding residence loGatM In a
prime area in Mocksville. This elegantiy designed contemporary is what we call “One Of A Kind Home’’-
It’s something real spMlal! It was custom built for a
world marketing manager wltti comfort and luxurious
living in mind. 4 bedrooms. 3 baths, family room, living room, kitchen moderne. basement garage, oil
heatine. and central air conditioning, possession immediately. Actually a private UtUe kDigdom. Take
our word for it and look at Uils magnificent contemporary. It has a personality all Ite own. (92,000.00
today at Century 21 Boxwood ~Please call Estate.us Real
NOT THE LAST WORD IN STYLE
But the location is the very best and this 1964 Magnolia
mobile home is very comfortable. Living room, dining room-kitchen combination, and 3 bedrooms. Please call us for more information at Century 21 Boxwood
Real Estate.
SAVE N EARLY 11000
In closing cost, by assuming the loan on this ex
ceptionally nice 3 bedroom home. Spacious living
room, dinhig-kitchen combbiation, IMi baths, workshop, and paved drive. Loated just minutes
from town. F^r more Information please call CENUTRY 21 BOXWOOD R EA L ESTATE.
M ILLIO N M IVIEW
HICKORY H ILL---Step bite ttils elegant 4 bedroom home and see for yourself. Not omy does
it have all the modern conveniences, but It also has large patio deck overlooklnji the beautiful 90 acre
lake, and convenient for all types of sporte-eolf. swimming, tennis, volleyball, and fishing. For
more Information call CENUTRY 21 BOXWOOD
R E A L ESTATE.W HITNEY ROAD
3 bedroom, IMt bath brick home. Full basement, sun deck. No down payment If all qualifications are
met. Call Henry Shore today to see this well kept
home.
REAL BARGAIN
This 1966 Model 12 x 60 mobile home can be youw.
Has a double carport built onto the back. Plus air- condition window unit. Must be moved soon. For
more information call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD
R E A L ESTATE today.
CROSS STREET. COOLEEM EE
This house has been remodeled and will Just suit
you. 3 bedroom, 1 bath, excellent condition. You must see it to believe It. Please call today for an
appointment.
M O BILE HOME LOVER 1964 Magnolia trailer with approximately 1 at
of land is a steal for the young at heart. Located
Mocksville a a i nearRoute 4 _____________
elementary school. See it and you
1 acre on
center &
buy it.
D REA M HOUSE FOR NEW LYW EDS
Dream of yourself In this lovely 3 bedroom home,
with a free-standing fireplace in the den 2 full baths, floors carpeted and tiled. Kitchen with stove
and refrigerator and air-condition. Priced to sell. For an appointment and more information please
call CEOTURY 21 BOXWOOD R E A L EST/fTO.
NO TRICKS, JUST TREATS
For the treat of your life, call CENTURY 21 BOXWOOD R E A L today for an ap
pointment to see this Q fltll or 3 bedroom home,
1 baths, dining room .*^!^n, and breakfast room combination, double carport and paved drive. Also
has central air to beat those hot summer days. Call today-the price is right.
ANG ELL ROAD This is what you have h<>en looking for. Brick
rancher, with 3 b e^-m fV I bath, fireplace, full basement, breezew, S U W juble garage. All this on 34acres that has ..<• It. Road frontage. Jobis
creek at back. Call Henry Shore today to see this
property.
I.AND FOR SALE
DAVIE COUNTY
Laiahan iVlt. uj acres, $1100.00 per acre. Payment extended over 3-yr. period. Some timber.
O FF HW Y 64 West Nice secluded acre^e on Hunting Creek. 10
acres priced to sell. C^li today H O LID A Y A C R E S O FF 601 SOUTH 8.8 acres of building land, ab-eady sub-divided
into lots. Priced tosell. Call today.
O n l u o ;
Í 1Í 2 1
100% VA Financing Available
Other Listings Available
We Buy Equities
We Build Too!
BOXWOOD REAL ESTATE
6 3 4 -5 9 9 7
333 Salisbury Street
Mocksville, NC 27028
DANNY C0RRF:LL MANAGING BROKER DENNIS GRURB • CONTRACTOR
.Associate Broker
CJiarles Evans
Offitr 2Ö4 2537
Salesnian Heiirv Shore
Hon№ 634-5846
Office Manager
Sandra Shelton Salesman
Dick Nail
Home 634-5462
Associate Broker
Shelia Oliver
492-5512
Pinebrook To Sell Popcorn
The Pinebrook Elementary School PTA Is sponsoring a project which begins this
week to raise money for
completing the antenna system and to continue work on the athletic field
surrounding the school.Pinebrook school studenU will be calling on homes In the area to ask everyone to place
an order for "Country rrvstel” aoothecarv lars
filled with gourmet popcorn.
The Jars come in four different designs to match the varied decors and make attractive home decorator
pieces.
By ordering a "Country Crystal” jar from a Pinebrook student; you will not only be purchasing a ■ but also will reach their goal.quality product,
help them to rea
Green Meadows
Tommy Wilson and Glenn Short returned to their studies at Wingate College on Sunday after conducting weekend
revival services at Green Meadows Church. Mr. Short presented special music, song and testimony. Mr. Wilson brought some very Inspiring
messages especially on Sunday morning as he used the Scriptures "You are the salt of the earth”, and the light of the world. We hear so
: much of the bad side of youth
in these days of drugs and turmoil that Its great to know there are many like these yoimg men who are striving to
help make this a better world.
Of course this type doesn't
usually make the headlines.
Beginning October 1 through October 4 a Lay Evangelism school will be conducted at Green Meadows.
If you can attend these classes
be sure to sign up now. It is
necessary to know the
number taking the course so that sufficient materials will
be available.Mr. and Mrs. John Jones
and daughter returned to their home in Georgia Sunday
after spending a week with relatives here.Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Phillips of Forbush were visitors on
Sunday of the Milton James
family.
Joe Langston returned home on Friday from Atlanta Georgia where he had been on a work assignment for Western Electric Co. for the
week.
In these parts recently everywhere one goes someone is commenting on the abundance of grasshoppers.
You see cornstalks that are literally stripped of blades, late tomatoesand other crops are heavily damaged also.
Sympathy is extended to
Mrs. Ernest Butner and
children in the death on Friday of husband and father. Mr. Butner had been a lifetime resident of the Macedonia Community and was the last member of the
Walter Butner family. The
Lord had blessed Mr. Butner with a long life of 93 years and
with good health until the last few years.
Alcohol Information Report
By:
WILLIAM F. WE ANT, M.S.
■ ALCOHOLISM EDUCATION CONSULTANT
Alcoholism; Disease and
' treatment - It is estimated
that 80 percent of all Americans over age twenty ? use alcoholic beverages in
some form. Drinking presents
no major problem to most of these. But to an estimated
' 9,500,000 others, drinking has
: become enough of a problem
to interfere with successful,- happy living. These are the ; alcoholics.
• Alcoholics ' are not : representative of any single- social or economic group In ^ our population, and are, : definitely not all “Skid Row"
- types. Alcoholics include both ^ men and women, of a wide
if age span, from “all walks of- life."Obviously, no one can become alcoholic without
: drinking alcohol, but many facts of the human condition Interact with drinking and
contribute to alcoholism.
' Although no conclusive ! evidence has been uncovered,' it is suspected that something in the alcoholic's physical make-up or body chemistry
produces an unusual reaction
to alcohol. Emotional as well as physical difficulties are certainly related to . alcoholism.
Not all users of alcohol
' become addicted to alcohol. Some drink excessively over long periods of time and with serious consequences and are
still able to stop whenever
they wish. Others lose control over their drinking almost as soon as they start. Alcoholism ' occurs when people continue
to drink heavily In spite of the . painful and Injurious consequences they suffer.
One disease which seems to
be closely connected to
alcoholism is cirrhosis. This breakdown is a direct result of the clumping of red blood
/*
M a c e d o n i a
Rev. and Mrs. John Ka;
members, neighbors, frie
wish to express their sympathy to the bereaved families In the passing of Mr. Ernest Butner, believed to
have been the oldest living
member in our church. He
was very active while he was able to attend church for many years. He passed away last Thursday around dinner
time. May the Holy Spirit comfort the bereaved
families.Those that are in the
boapital are: Miss Ida EUis
who had to return to Davie
County Hospital tbe last of the week. She was very sick when she went back. They were ^ving her oxygen for a while;
Mrs. Margaret Davis is still
improving at her home. Let's remember these along with other« in prayer and with a
card.Saturday, September 23 our
senior His Sunday School Class will be having a car wash at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Craft on Redland
RMd. They will be starting at
8:30 a.m. and continue until 2
o'ciock-if its not raining. So
keep this in mind. If you would like to get your car or trade westied they will be glad to do it. Tiiere will be adults
there to help out.Our young people will be
riffctng up glass again in Ос1вЫг tMore it geu cold
weather. So keep saving it ana
let them know If you have any for them. From the report they have done very well. They wish to thank everyone who helped in any way.
Mrs. Hattie Cope and Mrs.
Dorothy EUis, Chris, Scott
Snider visited Mr. and Mrs.
Bryant Smith in Clemmons on Friday evening of last week. They picked up a truck load of glass from there and a neigh
bor who had some they wanted to get rid of. We ap-
DAVii-: COUNTY i ;nti:RI’r is i-: RtcoRD . THURSDAY. s i;i’t i:m iu;r :i. m?« ц в
h k
Publicity committee membera of Pinebrook School Ester BonardI, Kim Nestor and Xan Gregg show posters they have made about the Popcorn Sale which starts September 21.
cells with the resulting
plugging of capiUarles. Being
deprived of oxygen, the liver cells begin to die. They are then replaced by scar tissue, with the result that the entire organ becomes heavier in its
consistency and more fibrous.
This new scar tissue is not able to carry on normal functions; and unless the degenerative process is
stopped, the liver eventually
is unable to carry on its vlUI work and death results.Only within the past two decades has alcoholism come
to be accepted as a medical problem. Interested persons have demonstrated through
new therapeutic approaches that alcoholics can recover. This does not mean a cure for alcoholism has been found; no
method known today can free the alcoholic from the chronic disorder which makes it impossible for him to control
his drinking. It does mean that through medical, psychological, and spiritual
help many alcoholics can be
helped to stop drinking
without substituting other Injurious practices.(This is the forty-seventh in a series of articles about “alcohol" provided by BiU Weant, Alcoholism Education Consultant with the Tri- County Mental Health Complex. These articles are
designed to create un
derstanding about sensible drinking, alcohol abuse, and alcoholism in our society. If you have a question concerning alcohol that you would like answered In a
future column, phone 634-
2195).
ImmunizationsIn 1959, North Carolina was the first state to legislate compulsory immunization
against polio.
predate them caUing us about it. Mr. Smith U Mrs. Cope's brother. They enjoyed their
visit very much.Mr. and Mrs. Ausbon EUis had visitors from Clemmons last Sunday afternoon. They were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Snow. They were very glad to see them and enjoyed being with them very much. Mr. EUis used to work with Mr. Snow wben they worked at
R.J. Reynolds.Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Nifong and boys attended Ute Nifong
reunion in Davidson County
last Sunday. They had a very good time visiting with kinfolks and friends.Members of Macedonia
keep the time they are supposed tu go to tiie church to get their pictures made for the church's new directory. It WiU start on Thursday Friday and Saturday. So be sure lo
keep tiiese dates in mind.
Redland Club Has Meeting
The Redland Homemaker's
Extension Club met with Mrs. Marian Funderburk on September 12. She began the
evening with thought for the month, “Some of the new
books are so down to earth, they should be plowed under." After the son “God Bless Our Homes", the hostess read a poem entitled "The World
Would Be a Better Place If We
Traveled At a Slower Pace" by Helen Steiner Rice, followed by prayer.Eleven members answered roll by naming their favorite
bird. Contributions were accepted tor the projects
"Pennies for Friendship" and
“Stamps for Food". Members, were reminded of the
following scheduled activities:"Women and the Law", Oct. 5 at 10 a.m. at the For
syth County Agriculture
Building.
“Wood and Solar Energy",
Sept. 27 at 1:30 p.m. at the
Forsyth Agriculture Building.
2 1
W e ’r e H e r e F o r Y o u .
I ,|( il ()lli< (■ is ln(li |)cii<li rill\ ()\N n c d .Hid O p cr.ili (I
CLEIVIM ONS V ILLA G E
Phone 76 6 -4 777
NEW LISTINGS
YOUR PRIVATE ESTATE IN DAVIE COUN- TY...17 beautiful acres surround this spacious Split- Foyer. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, deck. Much more we would like to show you.
EXTRA LARGE LOT! Brick rancher on Redland^ Road. 3 bedrooms, fireplace in Uving room.'
Garage. Mid |30’s.
COLONIAL RANCHER FEATURES 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, den with fireplace. Full basement. Upper ISO’s. Adioining acreage available
NICE LOT WITH WELL and septic tanit. Call our office for details. $5,495.00.
NICE STARTER OR RE'HREMENT HOME in Davie County! 2 bedroom Cottage with kitchen, livingroom and bath. Garage-workshop. Upper
Teen^s.
YOU'LL ENJOY THE Bar-B-Q pit on the la
&atio! Super 3 bedroom brick rancher,
asement. Priced to sell now. Low $30’s.
BUYING OR SELLING?? CALL OUR OFFICE .TODAY AND TALK WITH ONE OF OUR' QUALIFIED REPRESENTATIVES. WE’RE THE
NEIGHBORHOOD PROFESSIONAL. 76S-4777 or
766-9114.
Jane Boyer 766-6944
Rosalie Hart
723-6284
Carolyn Johnson 766-4777 Joyce Wurgley 768-2596
Office
766-9114
J.K. MUler 766-6063
Samie Parks 919-961-6694
John Bailey
766-8324
Jo Mackintosh
766-6936 Linda Pegram 768-1899
Urew-Wood-Johnson, Iik.
E CALL OR SEE
PE AlTOr? Don Wood-Hugh Larew
Office 634-5933
The most unique residential property ever offered in Mocksville! Pre-Civil War brick home on 13.8 acres in quiet residential section
of Mocksville. In origin»' 'hed con
dition awaitinotrees and
boxwoods and a highly desirableexample of early l9Ui Century Piedmont North Carolina architecture with an in
teresting historical background. This
property has been nominated for inclusion on the National Register uf Historic Places.
Hickory Hill Nice lot on Pinevailey Rd. Priced at $6,950.
Cooleemee Two story commercial building. 98 x 48. Only $20.000.00.
Jack Booe Rd.(off Hwy 601 North) • Small acreage tracts available.
Southwood Acres We are selling agents for the lots in Southwood Acres, behind Davie County High School.
Several lots available to fit almost any style house. Let us show you today.
Highway 601 North and FosuU Or.7 Jots for sale, 6.8 miles north of Interstate 40. Cali today for details.
Higiiwiiy 601 StmiiiEstabiistied Mobile Home Park, 13 mobile homes, 11 acres witii pond, nice 2 bedroom home, out
buildings. Excellent opportunity.
H o w a r d R e a l t y & ^ ,
Insurance 1^,
NEW LISTING
• 558 AVON STREET-Two bedroom starter home in very good condition. Kitchen with breakfast area. Living Room and family room. Oil circulator. Nice i lot with garden space. Good in-town residential
location. Priced to sell.
HOWARD STREET-Tbree bedrooms. IMi baths, 4 Large well-equipped kitchen and dining. Spacious• living room. Separate utUltv and carport. All electric. Very good loan available.
ROWAN COUNTY-Don’t miss this one! Three bedrooms, 2 full baths. Extra large family room. Very nice kitchen with range included. Central air. This lovely home is situated on 4'^ acres enhanced ■ ■ ■ ilum, peach and'Ive miles from
Area I meeting with Redland Club as hostess at
Bethlehem United Methodist Church at 10 a.m. Nov. 8.Southern Living Christmas Show in Charlotte, Nov. 9. (Bus to leave County BuUding at 8 a.m.)
Davie County Achievement
Day, Nov. 16 at Brock
Auditorium.
Mrs. Ostlne West, County Agent, presented a program on "The Pros and Cons of Smoke and Heat Detectors".
1 MAIN STREET- 3 Deoroom irame nome- l for remodeling. Very nice family neigh- J. Approximately IMt acres included In lot. tent to shopping. Priced to sell.
In 17th century Holland, the passion for tulips was so great a single root of one plant sold for the equivalent of about
$7.500.
The Greeks were the first people to pursue mathematics as an art for its own sake.
NORTH MAIN STREET- 3 bedroom frame home-
Perfect borhood. .Convenient to shopping.
I0U% FINANCING-3 bedroom brick veneer 1V4 baths. Large kitchen-dining. Livingroom. Citv water & sewer. ALL electric. No money down, If you qualify.
HOLIDAY ACRES-Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher with central air. All electric. Over 1400 sq. feet of heated area plus garage and patio. Very guiet location. Nice lot. Home in extra good condition
with many conveniences. „ .Ta'4’4jTREET-5 year old brick rancher in excellent location. Nice neighborhood. Extra clean and neat 3 bedroom home. 2full baths, large living and dining. Very roomy kitchen and family room with disit* washer. Large utility. Carport. All electric. Many lovely features. Must see this one.
WHITNEY ROAD - Fireplace and sundeck only two of many features in this 3 bedroom brick rancher with full bassement. Large kitchen-dining. Living room. \^k baths. Neat, clean, and well-decorated. Priced within your budget.
RIDGEMONT - Three bedroom all-electric home nicely decorated. Carpeted. Includes V/i baths, living room, kitchen-dining area. Very convenient location for family living. Priced to sell. Call today.HWY 64 WEST-Brick r?’:^'ier, 3 bedrooms, large kitchen-dining. Like SOLV 100% Financing. Call
today.
CRAFTWOOD - No down oavment If Three bedrooms, I’ SOLD n capre I dining combination, r uii oasement.Nice lot. Priced to sell.
CRAFTWOOD - All electric 3 bedroom brick home. Carpeted. Large kitchen with range. Full I basement with drive in door, extra nice quiet lot on dead end street. No down payment to qulaified purchaser.
iSPLIT LEVEL-Over 1500 sq. feet heated area. Also ^ a ir conditioned. 3 bedrooms, living room, large
kitchenand dining area, V/t baths, utility. Lower level finished nicely with fireplace. All electric. (Large lot. Priced to sell quickly.
SOUTH MAIN STREET-3 Bedroojr', living, dinlng- kltchen. large utilitv slarter or¿retirement ho oNOER-SYeneer. Almost new. Very •good condltioi.. Excellent loan available.
RIDGEMONT - off Milling Road. Very jgood buy in 3 bedroom, all electric home. Livi№-dining I combination. Kitchen with storage room. Carport.
by complete orchard of apple, plu pear trees. Also grape vines. Flv
f'iber.
you qualify.Kitchen. All electric.
CRAFTWOOD - Three bedrooms with ^bathrooms. AH electric. Nice garden spot, extra •large lot. Price to sell.
CRAFTWOOD - New exterior painting job really puts the finishing c q i n this home. Three I bedrooms. U/г ba«.» .Лее laundry area.Extra large dining.'Nice. Good Price.
I DEADMAN ROAD - 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, and ^liv in g room or 2 bedrooms with den. Just remodeled. Priced to sell.
CRAFTWOOD-3 bedroom, living room, kitchen- dining. Full basement. Carport. Large lot. Excellent financing.
^SOUTHWOOD ACRES - Nice large corner lot, deeply wooded. Good residential section. City water. County taxes only.HICKORY HILL - Spacious building site overlooking cove in exclusive residential area next to country club. Over 250 ft. road frontage with plenty of trees.
Ъ625 CHERRY ST.-3 bedroom brick rancher on nice quiet neighborhood street in walking distance of snopping. churches, and school. Over 1200 sq. feet heated area. Very good condition. Pecan trees.I Reasonably priced. Call today.
IN-TOWN LOCATION-Older 4 bedroom home. Priced to sell. Perfect for someone to do own remodeling. 2 story frame. Call us today.
HWY 601 SOUTH - Call today for commercial land and buildings immediately available. Call today | about business property now available near Mocksville.
MILLING ROAD - Excellent lot with 3 bedrooms. 2 Baths, central air. Fully carpeted large den with fireplace. Extra nice kitchen. Sun deck. ' »utility. Call us today.Large
iARDEN VALLEY - Lovely contemporary multi- ivel home in prestigous location. Over 3,000 heated I. ft. of living area including living room and
GARDENlevelhome„ „,sq. ft. of living area including ^fam ily room - both with fireplaces. Bullt-bi custom features In dining room and kitchen. Four spacious bedrooms with extra storage all through this home. .Three complete baths, laundry room plus work "room for m a ^ projects. Large playroom off private patio. Centralair. Beautirully landscaped. Many other features. Must see today!
(CRAFTWOOD-Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher. All
electric. Convenit ¿OLD "• P“!! basement. Patio No down payment •• juu niialify.
ICRAFTWOOD-AIR CONDITIONED-3 'aedroom Brick Rancher. \^/% Baths. Large Kitchen-dining. Carport utility. Range, refrigerator, washer-dryer included. No down payment if you qualify.
FOR LEASE
Three bedrooms. 2 baths, large living room, formal dining room, cozy den with fireplace, kitchen with I bullt-Ins, full basement with finished playroom,I hobby room and shop-utUity. Screened porch. Redwood deck. Grill. Two-car carport Central air. Fully carpeted. Acre lot.
; r . LAND
Lake lots now available at High Rock. Call today. ,
P'“® beautiful wooded residential section , Perfect for construction site of dream home.
i836.'prk“id ® K ll
I Julia C. Howard Office - 634-3538 Home • 634-3754
.Myrtle r.rimei« Office - 634-3538 Home - 634-37У7
t s >И14•i-fcaî-* :r
Ann F. Wands Office - 634-3538 Home - 631-322»
Charlie Brown Office - 634-3538 Home • 634-5230
C.C. i'haiiman Office - 634-3538 Home - 634-2334
H O M E F I N D E R
M U LT IP LE LIS T IN G S ER V IC E
S P u n tia ^ - 2 to S
|CRAFTVVOOD-New~homes of different designs. ■ Ranchers & Split levels from 1150 to 1620 sq. ft. with Ibaths and wall to wall carpet. Lartte lots. Flnancln ¡available.
IIDGEMONT-New homes with 3 B.R., IMi Baths, port. Large Lots. 100 percent Financing Vvailable. No down payment to qualified buyer.
SHEFFIELD CONTRACTRancher. fullI basement.
RAINBOW RD -Vefy^SYnNTR ACT 4 Bath Brick Rancher. L.R.. lUlSDER СОЮ Centrallair.
b .m ., . « . 1
I LAKE NORMÁN-I-Beautiful lake front house & lot.■ House has 3.800 sq. ft. heated area. 5 B.R. 3 full baths.■ Built-in stove, dishwasher, compactor & diroosal.■ Formal D.R. Exterior Spruce Pine & Stone. Pier & ¡boat '/^ interest with neighbor.I GARDEN VALLEY ESTATES-Beautifui 3 B.R., L.R..■ den w-fpl.. full basement, carport and large storage pirea. Approx. I acre l>eautlfuily landscaped.
PuNION GROVE • 2 bedroom home with good size
hot. large outside garage, good location. Only
1113,001).I MORSE STRrr^njD CONTRACT rick home with■ full basemeri''''^”^'
NEAR AD^iiNDER CONTRACT,,,e home on lot.
LAKE IWRMAN-New home on water front, deeded I basement, will lease or sell.I COOLEEMEE-2 B.R. 1 Bath home witn oil heat. Uniy
1 Bath home, L.R. Kitchen-
&\ullt-in garage, central
RIDGEM0NT-4B.R.,dining jsrea. __
1-st recently
EDGEWOOD <?IRCLE-Beautifi^,„‘l B.R.. 2% Bath custom built homo • p'XvTRACTj, w-fpl
I bookshelves,\3NDE.R..V.^iuuty rm.. gara lair. All on a wooded corner lot.
B06e RD .^ B.R. Double Wide Mobile home w- Ifol. & electric heat, completely furnished, beautifully ¡decorated, large lot with chain link fence around ■B^rojerty, 2 outbldg. excellent buy
lOAKLAND HEIGHTS-4 B.R. 2 Bath home. 2 car Igaraee. G. Madison.I HICKORY HILLS - Very nice 3 B.R.. 2 bath split■ level, L.R. w-fpl.. full basement, playroom w-fpl..■ many extras. Call Today!
IWILL SACRIFICE! Owner is Moving - Home appraised F.H.A. for $27.500 will sell $23,500, lovely 3
B.R., l >/<2 bath brick home on quiet street on Whitney Rd.11816 WHITNEY RD - Very nice 3 B.R., IM, Bath■ brick rancher, L.R. D.R.-Kit. Comb., Brk. Area,I Utility room and patio.WITH ACREAGE
I LAKEWOOD VILLAGE-Owner must sell- Relocating-very nice 3 B.R., 1 Bath home on corner lot. New roof, carpeted, newly painted. Loan J assumable!I b EAR CREEK CHURCH RD.-Beautiful 3 B.R. 2 Bath
Isplit-Foyer on 24 R. Comb.. Den.Ifull basement (jNDER fireplace. Many estras. ICall for appointment.
ICHERRY HILL RD.-Off *cT>rick home, large Ibarn & numeiiMrvRR COn 8 acres of lana.¡Local tel. to
¡SANFORD AVE.- 2B.R. 1 Bath home on 1.26 acres. iD.R.-Den Comb.
¡garage w-elec. eve. out bldg. 36x20.I CORNATZER RD- 2 В .pcpth home on 5.2 acres of lland, one B.R. hasPERMiift.. Den w-fpl. IFARMINGTON-New 3 B.R.. 2 Bath home built to sell. Il.R .. Den w-fpl.. heat pump, central air. 1 Acre.
joANIELS RD.-Very nice 3 B.R. 1Мг Bath brick veneer■ home on 2.77 acres of land. L.R. Den, large kitchen, garage.ADVANCE-Beautiful 5 B.R.. V/г Bath home on 35 ¡acres of land. L.R., Den & Master B.R. w-fpl. Full ¡basement w-fpl. & playroom. House has 4,175 so. ft. Illving area. 5,000 sq. ft. bam. 4,000 sq. ft. utility bldg. plus 2 other bldgs.
:aNA road- 3B.R. 2 full bath Brick rancher with attached garage. Also 24x30 workshop and approx. IMi lacres of land. Has added Central Air ' COMMERCIAL
|601 SOUTH-18 acres of goodliuslness property for sale lor lease.1б01 NORTH- Business lot 150x300, Ideal location near I
140. City water and sewer.STREET-Good business lot. ’ «1x368.
I 1-40 & 64 INTERSECTION-Good business location.
Grocery & service station with approximately $2,500 worth of stock, 3 gas tanks, private bathroom inside, complete kitchen, & one bedroom. Nine- tenths acre lot.FOR RENT-Commercial property building & paved parking lot. Just outside Mocksville city limits.sFAKMS ANll LAND mmmmmm■ NEAR I-40-Acreage tracts - rour zu acre tracts;I two 14 acre tracts; one 13 acre and one 5 acre tract.
47.13 ACRES ON 601-1 mile north of 1-40. $99.000.I Twenty-five acres north of Farmington, lies
1 beautifully and can be sub-divided.IliOOUSON ROAD-27 Acres Owner willI consider financing. 215 feet of road frontage.IN. MAIN ST.- Nice building lot with ready-made basement area.HWY. NO. 64 EAST- 46 Acres of pasture and woodland
with large stream.FOSTER RD.-99 acre farm with livable house. Ap-
Firox. 60 acres cleared balance wooded. Approx. 2.000
t. paved road frontage.
I MOUNTAIN RD.-Rowan County-2.4 acres of land
I covered in hardwood trees. $3.000.
Щ INTERSECTION 601 & 801-50 acres of land with house & service station or can be bought as foUows; house &■ service station w-2 acres of land; house & service■ station with 10 acres of land; 40 acres of land (ex■ eluding house and service station); 1 acre lot next to
lend on 801 or 601 w-175’ frontage.I ALONG 1-40-130 acres. 65 acres on either side of 1-40■ between Hwy. No. 601 & 64. Ideal for Industrial or■ residential. _______IDA VIiTACADEMV RD.-75-88 acres of land, approx. 14■ cleared balance in timber. An old house could be I restored.■ f OSTALL DRIVE-Off 601 North. Lot 100x263.I HEMLOCK STREET-1.6 acres with 220 ft. frontage on Is. Railway. N. MocksvlUe-Good building sites & smaU■ acreage tracts at the end of Rd. 1479.I YADKIN COUNTY-2.193 acres, acre good bottom I land and good building site in grove of hardwood trees.
¡NEAR ADVANCE-Approx. 15 acres left at $1,650 per
■acre.¡COUNTY LINE ROAD-221 acres with paved road■ through property. 83 acres in one tract with lake. Can■ be sold separately. $850.00 per acre.¡601 SOUTH-77.75 Acres with 2 houses on property. ¡Some of the land reset In pines, some in cidtivation.
loFF 801 NEAH FARMI.N’GTON - Lot No. 3 StlmsonHark. $4.300.DANIELS ROAD - Approx. 7 acres barn and half
hake.OA.MKLS ROAD • 10 to 15 acre tracts. $1500 per [acre.
WE BUY
EQUITIES
MIS
Ш
I N FORM ATION
Manha Edwaf Js Phone 634-2244 Graham Mudison Phone 634-5176 Г. D. 1 lowers Phone 492-7761
Sue Honcj'cull Phone 704-5394 tugene llennetl PhSne 9984727 Sam iJowell Phone 634-5424
973
Insutan.-e Depi; Darrell I dwards/Phonc 634-3889
BRANTLEY REALTY &
I^NSURANCECO..^NC.
,<(S -------R w r r o s m
I Murl>s»ilJe. NC. ___________725-92‘Л
i :h d a v ii; c o iin t y iín t iíri’Ris I; 1<|;с (Ж1). t iiu r .s im v . .sii>ri:Mm:i< :i, i>)7x
EXECUTOR’S NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Boss Rensy Amrswortliy, deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or
before the 21 day of-March 1979 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
’This the 21 day of Sept. 1978.
Ricky Gordon Armsworthy, Executor of the estate of Boss Rensy Armsworthy, deceased.
9-21 4tn John T Brock, Atty.
EXECUTRIX NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Lewis M. Latham, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the Zlst day of March 1978, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.This the I9th day of September, 1978 Mary Latham Beck, Executrix of the estate
of Lewis M. Latham
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy Attorneys
9-21-4tn
NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING BEFORE THE
BOARD OF
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
FOR THE FOLLOWING ZONING AMENDMENT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, pursuant to the
requirements of Article 20-B
of Chapter 153 of the General
Status of North Carolina and
Section 20 of the Davie County Zoning Ordinance that the Board of County Commissioners of Davie County will hold a public hearing at
the Davie County Courthouse,
Mocksville, NC on Monday,
October 2, 1978 at 1:00 p.m. The following proposed zoning
amendment of the official zoning ordinance of Davie County will be considered:
(a) The Davie County Planning Board has submitted a request to amend the Davie County Zoning Or
dinance by adding “airports”
to the list of permitted uses
found in Section 80.2 of this ordinance. Section 80.2 of the Davie County Zoning Ordinance would read as follows if this proposed amendment is
approved:Section 80.2 Conditional Uses. The following uses shall be permitted subject to a
finding by the Board of Ad
justment that the additional
conditions listed will be met: Landfills, provided that all public health regulations are fulfilled and maintained.
Airports, private parks,
playgrounds, clubs and
lodges, golf courses, swim
ming pools, fishing lakes, family camp grounds, drag strips, raceways, and similar
recreation uses subject to a
finding by the Board of Ad
justment that such proposed
uses will not create a public nuisance or be detrimental to the public welfare.All parties and interested
citizens are invited to attend
said public hearing at which
time they shall have an op
portunity to be heard in favor
of or in opposition lo the foregoing proposed change. Prior to Ihe hearing, all persons interested may obtain any additional information on
these proposals which are in
the possession of the Davie
County Zoning Enforcement Officer by inquiring al my office in the Courthouse in Mocksville, NC on weekdays between the hours of 8:30 a .m.
and 5:00 p.m. or by telephone at 634-3340.Jesse A. Boyce, Jr.Davie County Zoning Officer
9-14-2tn
Administrator's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of Mabel M.Dull, deceased, late
of Davie County this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to Ihe undersigned on or before the 7th
day of March, 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of
Iheir recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day of Sep
tember. 1978 Wade Gerry
Dull, Administrator of the
estate of Mabel M. Dull deceased William E Hall
Hall and Vogler
Attorneys at Caw P 0. Box 294 MiKksviile, N.C 27028
»-7-4ln
Public Notices
Executor’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of Bertha D. Jones, deceased, latepf Davie County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate lo
present them to Ihe un
dersigned on or before the 14th day of March 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate payment to the undersigned.This the 13th day of September, 1978 Vernon Dull, Executor of the estate of
Bertha D, Jones deceased.
John T. Brock, Attorney P.O. Box 241
Mocksville, N.C. 27028
9-14-4tn
NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY
The Davie County Board of Education having determined at its August 7, 1978 regularly schedifled meeting that the
following property located in
Davie County is unnecessary
for public school purposes,
voted to sell and will sell on October 14,1978 to the highest bidder for cash, the following
described property, subject to
upset bid, with the
requirement that the successful bidder deposit ten percent of the purchase price and further subject to ap
proval by the Davie County
Board of Education, viz:
A brick veneer house containing approximately
1,900 square feet located on Lt. No. 1, Block F., Section III, of the Subdivision of- Southwood Acres, Addition III
as recorded in Plat Book 4,
page 141, Davie County
Registry, to which reference is made for a more particular description.The above land is subject to
a certain restrictive con
venants which run with the
land as appear and are fully
set forth in Book 92, page 315,
Davie County Registry.This property will be available tor inspection on Oct. 14 1978 from 10:00 a.m.
until 12:00 o’clock noon.
By order of the Board, this
the 11th day of September,
1978.
PUBLIC NOTICE CHANGE IN GARBAGE
PICKUPTO WHOM IT MAY CON-
CER;Effective September 25,
1978 the following will have garbage pickup on Friday instead uf Monday: Area of North Main Street Past
Milling Road Towards Winston. Carolina Street, Milling Road, LakecresI Drive, Sunset Drive, Greenwood Avenue.Town of Mocksville
9-14-2tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
CHANGE IN GARBAGE
PICKUP
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:The portion of YadkinviUe
Road, Circle Drive and Country Lane, which now
have garbage pickup on Monday will be changed to
Tuesday, effective September
25, 197B.Town of Mocksville
9-14-2ln
Administratrix’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administratrix of the estate of
Timothy Wayne Fishel, deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or
before Ihe 31st day of
February 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate
payment lo the undersigned.
This the 31st day of August,
1978.Blanche H. Fishel, Ad
ministratrix of the estate of - Timothy Wayne Fishel,
deceased.
William E, Hall Hall and Vogler Attorneys at Law
Mocksville, N,C. 27028
8-31 4tn
Administrator’s NOTICE NORTH CAROLINA DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of
William Caesar Eaton,
deceased, late of Davie
Wade H, Leonard, Jr, County, this is to notify all School Board Attorney persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or
before the 21st day of March 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.This the 21st day of September, 1978 Buddy Eaton, Administrator of the estate of
William Caesar Eaton,
deceased,9-2l-4tp
Place of Sale: Onpremises,
Hickory Street, Southwood Acres, Mocksville, North Carolina Time of Sale: 12:00 o’clock noon, October 14, 1978,
9-14-4tn
PUBLIC NOTICE
There will be a meeting of
the Davie County Board of Adjustment on Monday, October 2,1978at 7:30 p.m. in the Grand Jury Room of the Davie County Courthouse.
The following applications for
zoning compliances con
cerning Special Use Permits
to place mobile homes in Reslnential (R-20) zoned districts have been received by the zoning officer and are
scheduled to be heard.
(a) Cindi Larae Beane submitted a request to place one mobile home on the South side of High 64 East ap
proximately .2 mile East of
the No Creek Church Road. The adjoining property owners are R.E. Beane, Neal R. Beane, Larry Phelps, Ron
E. Beane, Jr. and the Homer
Barnes Estate.(b) Dale Cornatzer submitted a request to place one mobile home on the West side
of the Fork Church Road
approximately ,4 mile South of Bixby. The adjoining property owner if Clyde Cornatzer.(c) Carol Caudle submitted a request to
place one mobile home on the North side of Jerusalem Avenue in North Cooleemee. The adjoining property
owners are Carl Richard
Reeves, Joan Reeves and
WiUlam Shanks.
Signs advertising the public hearing concerning these requests will be posted at the above mentioned locations.
All interested persons are invited to attend said public
hearing at which time they will have an opportunity to speak In favor of or In opposition to the foregoing
applications. Prior to the hearing all persons interested
may obtain all additional
information on these applications which are in the possession of the Davie County Zoning Officer by inquiring at my office in the Davie County Courthouse on weekdays between the hours at 8:30 a.m. and S:00 p.m, or
be telephone at 634-3340.
Jesse A. Boyce, Jr.
Davie County Zoning Officer
Blue Ridgr Landmark
Pilots should recognize Ihe
Green Park Inn, a Blue Ridge MuunUiii landmark sincc 1882- However, if they’re uncertain, “Green Park” is spelled out in red sage on the slope opposite the historic
Victorian hotel in Blowing
Rock, N.C.
Ext'eul.tr's NOTICE
NOHTII CAKOLINA
OAVIE COUNTY
H aving qualiried as
I’xoculor nt Ihp estate of
Merlic McBride, deceased,
late of Davie Counly, this is to
notify all persons having
claims againsi said estate to
present Ihem lo the un
dersigned on or l)efore llie 14
day of March 1979, or this
notice wiil be pleaded in bar of
Iheir recovery. All persons
indebted (o said estate will
please m ake im m ediate
paymeni lo Ihe undersigned.
This Ihe 14th day of Sep
tember 197Я Hay McBride,
Executor of Ihe estate of
Merlie McBride deceased.
John T. Brock, Attorney
914-41П
7 * ^ ...... ,
V
Cooleemee
Mrs. Bertie Garwood ac
companied her daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bailey Walker and family to Kingsport, Tennessee over the weekend where they visited with her son and
family, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Garwood.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI White spent the weekend Burlington
where they were gues ts of her cousin and family, Mrs. Jane
Owen, LeeAnn and John.
Miss Margaret Hoyle is
recuperating in Rowan
Memorial Hospital where she
underwent surgery Sunday afternoon. She is in room 172.Mrs. Sadie Stroud remains sick at her home on Gladstone
Road.
Miss Dorothy Stone of
Martinsville, Virginia
returned home Saturday after
spending several days here last week visiting with Mrs. Libby Gales. Miss Stone, formerly Director of Nurses
at Rowan Memorial Hospital, is presently the Director of
Nurses of Martinsville General Hospital.
»- , ' I 4iiV
'-SI-:.-
A ■
>
% »
». •
■. M * ' ■.... V. -
Refreshing
VJ -i
With this weeks tem^rature In the 90s, Robin Hamilton, 4, and his little two-year-old sister, Becky, discover that playing in the creek is most refreshing. The little creek flows across the roaa bed near the family garden on Pine Ridge Road, Cooleemee where their mom, Mrs. Roger Hamilton, keeps a watchful eye from the turnip patch. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
Mutilated Cash Comes To Life Under Eye Of Examiner
PUBLIC NOTICE CHANGE IN GARBAGE
PICKUPTO WHOM IT MAY CONGER:Effective September 25, 1978 the following will have
garbage pickup on Tuesday
instead of Friday, : Mumford
Drive, Garner Street, Sofley
Avenue, Edison Street, Naylor Street, Church Street Extension
Town of Mocksville
9-l4-2tn
Administrator’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Administrator of the estate of
Dessie Hodgson Whitaker, deceased, late of Davie County, this is to notify all persons having claims
against said estate to present them to Ihe undersigned on or
before the 31st day of February. 1979, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in-
det>led lo said estate will plea.si' make Immediate payment to the undersigned.
this Ihe 31st day of August.
1978William E. Hall. Ad
ministrator of the estate of Dessie Hodgson Whitaker,
deceased.
Hall and Vogler Attorneys at Law
Mocksville, N.C.
8-31 4tn
Executrix’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
DAVIE COUNTY Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of George H C. Shutt, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to present them to Ihe undersigned on or before the 7th day of March 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of
llieir recovery. All persons
indebted lo said estate will please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day of Sep
tember. 1978 Virginia F. Shull. Execlrix of Ihe estate of George H C Shull
deceased
9-7-4tn
When the money stashed in
the oven gets roasted with the family dinner, don’t panic. Just send the charred remains to Washington.Sent to the Treasury
Department’s Mutilated
Currency Branch, the burnt
bills have a chance of being
identified and replaced. Employees there see charred money all the time-along with cash that has rotted in basements, bills chewed up
andswallo'A’ed by pets, and other bits and pieces that hardly resemble money after going through the washing
Cornatzer News
Our community extends
sympathy to the families of Mrs Elgin Ellis and Mrs. Frank Chaplin in the death of their father, Mr. Chester Slawter of Winston-Salem.Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Jones were Ruth
and Amelia Ann Abee and
Carrie Schrum of Hickory.
Linda Barnette and Crystal of KemersvUle, N.C. were Nora and Evenda Smith Monday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Ardelene
Staley of Churchland visited
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Potts
and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Potts Sunday afternoon.Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hampton of Crew, Va. spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Carter and Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Ellis.Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Ellis visited Mrs. Judy Gillispe and family in
Ferrum, Va. Saturday.Mr. and Mrs. Mike Jacobs
and Brian of Cooleemee, N.C, visited Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jones Sunday.Weldena Allen spent last
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Gary Livingood.Eva Potts visited Mr. and Mrs. Paul Sutton In Hickory
Hill No, 2 recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Frye and Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Smith were recent luncheon guest of Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Bailey.David Vest underwent surgery at Medical Park Hospital in Winston-Salem last week.
machine or food disposer.
In fact, enough damaged
money is sent in to keep 30
"mutilated currency
examiners” busy. In the last fiscal year the office handled 51,000 cases and paid back more than $9 million in
currency.How does an examiner spot
$10 and $20 bills in what appears to the untrained eye to be mere ashes or wads of rotten paper? It often takes
only a tiny scrap, Melvin Gabourel, division director of currency claims, told the National Geographic Society.“These people are able to recognize what kinds of notes they have by the scroll work-
they don’t even have to see a
figure," he said.Much of the mutilated money got that way by being squirreled away, often in a damp basement, causing It to
turn into a solid chunk. When
it arrives at the currency
office, it may need some preliminary rehabilitation, which can vary In technique from examiner to examiner.“I first put mine In water
and bring it to a boil,” said
Restee Laskowltz, who has
been an examiner for 28
years. “That loosens It. Then I put it in plastic for a day, and later roll It with a pencil to flatten it.”Equipped with a
magnifying glass, tweezers,
and tape or glue, examiners spend long hours pasting fragments that look too fragile to touch onto pieces of
tissue paper. From this
jigsaw puzzle, they try to
determine how many bills
they have.Currency will not be redeemed unless more than half of a mutilated bill can be
supplied, or unless It can be proved that the rest of the bill has been destroyed. The more-than-half rule Is designed to prevent people
from collecting twice on one
1ТШПЩТШ
MUSIC HAU
I recently sent to Baltimore for a statement of my earnings and the reply showed much more than I have
earned. What can I do about ihis?It ii possible that someone with a similar number to yours has furnished bit number to an employer from memory and transposed a
number. In this manner someone else's earnings may be posted to your record. Visit your local social security office as soon as possible and
furnish them with the names
and Ihe places you have worked and whal you have earned and they will be able to clear up this scrambled
earnings record” situation.
^HIOHWAy ISO • TIUIU. N. c,Coming
Sat. Sept. 30,8 p.m.
Fall Bluegrass Special
With The King Of Bluegrass
JIMMY MARTINAnd The Sunny Mtn. Boys
Plus Special Guest
Ad V .Adm .$3.50'Rss.$4.00
Coming* Gospel Sing
Sunday Oct. 8,2:30 p.m.
★ The Rambosand Two Guest Groups
Adv.Adm.$3.50-Res.$4.00
$4j0C^tdoop£hjldrar^K00
Arts And Crafts Show
Sun. Oct. 15, All Day
Info Call 478-2498 li/lrs.
bill,
“We’ve had people cut a $50
bill right In half and take a
match and singe the edges. They might come up with a good enough explanation for how the first half was
destroyed, but when they send
the second half In for redemption, we usually catch them,” Gabourel said.Because people are encouraged to send in damaged
money exactly as they found
It, the office gets a steady stream of strange packages. Money-sometlmes life savings-arrives In bumt-up billfolds and purses, safes, lamps, toasters, and rotted-
out pieces of pipe. “Some
came in the other day In a
pressure cooker,” Mrs.
Laskowltz said.
And sometimes the “money” tarns out to be no more than what it looks llke- worthless ashes. One examiner spent hours sifting
through a pile oi what looked
like charcoal searching for
several hundred dollars said
to have been Incinerated in a store fire,“There's no money here, she concluded, “Money has a
certain look, and this Isn’t it."
One time $35 turned up In a
hamburger-ayear-old hamburger.“Somebody robbed a fast- food restaurant, and when police were closing in on him, he put the money into the hamburger,” recalled Margaret Dodson, a mutilated currency specialist.
“The hamburger was held as
evidence by police for a year
before I got it.”In times of national disasters, the office’s
business picks up.
"In the fall and spring, when we have tornadoes and floods, things really get
busy,'' Gabourel said.
Examiners also are called
into action after big plane
crashes, which can result In hundreds of dollars being scorched or shredded.The examiners have even gone to hospitals, donned
gloves and masks, and worked to disinfect cash that had been carried by patients found to have tuberculosis or infectious hepatitis.
People who have mutilated money to be redeemed should send it in the container it was found in, the Treasury
Department says. If brittle or
falling apart. It should be
packed in cotton and boxed as
found.If it is necessary to remove the money fragments from their container, the con
tainers should be sent in along
wiih the currency Flat
money should not be rolled up, and rolled-up money should not be flattened.
Mutilated currency should be sent to: Treasury Department, Bureau of Government Financial
Operations, DCS-BEPA, Room 132, Treasury Annex No. 1, Washington, D.C. 20226.
Burglar * Fire •Hold-up Systems
Residential ommercial
* Free Estimates ' * Brand Name ( System'
e «A N ! OCK.• -. Bo. ' MOCKbVILI.6. N.C. //028
L A T E S U M M E R
If you Ve been wanting Radials, .but at popular prices
^ X 9 1 7 J V X O J >
B R 7 8 x 1 3 ........... *28“
D R 7 8 X 1 4 .............*3 2 "
E R 7 8 x 1 4 .............*3 4“
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G R 7 8 x 1 4 .............*38“
F R 7 8 X 1 5 ...............*40 “
G R 7 8 x 1 5 .............*4 1 “
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- COME TO W HIR! THE TIRE SALES ARE ~
C L E M M O N S
TIRE and AUTOM OTIVE
LewisvilieClemmonsRd.
Clemmons, N.C. 7 6 6 - Д 4 5 0
MOCK Tin OMl MMMthw
4 7 f2 C ovatrf Club ltd. 7 6 a -1010 7бв-1011
т Ш lMawto9 UwUvHW-VitiiM Rd. «4S.547J
A LL P e ia S IN C LU D I
• FEO . T A X
• Ш К 1Н ТШ С
• lA LA N C iilC
V7S4*
DAVIU rOUNTt' ENTERPRISl: RECORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 2\. I>»7S MB
CLASSIFIED ADS
ANIM ALS
Pets & Livestock
FOR SALE...Young full bloodied Hereford Bull. Call
9-21 ItpJ
OFnCE MACHINES
Typewriters
Adding Ibdûnes
Senk» Q iÆ Макее
Е я Н р Ч
OFFICE SUPPLIES
PERSO NALS
CONGRATULATIONS Richard T. Spillman, 1 Joyner Street, Cooleemee,
N.C. expresses "Congratuaiations" to Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Rodger
Barney of Route 3, Mocksville, who will celebrate their wedding anniversary, Tuesday,
September 28. They were married in Mocksville. Mrs. Barney is the daughter of Mrs. Ruby Broadway and the
late J.W. Broadway of Rt. 7, Mocksville.
9-21-ltpS
EM PLO YM EN T
Help Wanted
THERE IS AN OPENING
FOR ... Short Order Cooks for
1st and 2nd shifts. Experience required. Apply in person anyday between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m. at Sam’s Country Kit
chen, Int. 601 and Hwy. 1-40.
7-27-tfn S
' I
EARN Extra income b:
wearing and selling San Coventry Jewelry. FREE Training. Transportation
necessary. CaU: 998-4925 or
998-4832.
8-10-tfnH
WANTED: A baby sitter for a 3 year old, to stay in home and do light house work from 7:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Located 5 miles out on Lexington high
way. Call: 99B-SS40 after 6 p.m.
9-14 tnfP
SCHOOL BUS DRIVERS NEEDED...Pinebrook School
district. For further in- rormatlon call; n9X-:i8riK or !KiK-:i5(Mi.
; 9-14 21npP
HELP WANTED: Real ■ Estate Salespersons needed ¡Immediately! ...Formal - Training Program ...National
: Referral Service ...Excellent ;Office Environment
...Requires Real Estate
. License Contact: Century 21,' Boxwood Real Estate at 704-
“634-5997.
9-14-tfn B ,
WANTED : A bus monitor for 2 hours a day. $2.65 per hour. Good driving record needed. Apply at the Mocksville Child Develop
ment Center. Call: 634-5298.
9-21 2tnpB
$200 WEEKLY stuffing en
velopes spare time possible.
Details, $1.00 and stamped,
self-addressed envelope to:
K.C. Mail Sales, 8023 Leavenworth Rd., Kansas
City, KS. 66109.
9-21 4tp-KC
•WANTED: RN’s and LPN’s
from 11 p.m. until 7 a.m. full Ir'time for new Intermediate Care Unit. Excellent benefits. Call for an intervie.w.
Guardian Care at Clemmons.
Phone: 766-9150.
9-21-tfn GC
Situations Wanted
Will keep children in my home
... Davie Academy Road. For
more information call: 284- 2742.
9-21-3tnp B
FU R N ITU R E
Commercial
NEW AND USED OFFICE
furniture, fireproof files and safes. ROWAN OFFICE FURNITURE, 118 N. Main
Street, Salisbury, phone 636-
8022.
tfnR
Home
FOR SALE: All types unfinished chairs, stools, of all
sizes-upholstered. swivels, deacon benches, all kinds used furniture. Call W. A.
EUiB at 634-5227.
4-13-tfnE
FOR SALE: Several used and rebuilt pianos. Will rebuild and refinish old pianos. Call
998-8959 after 5:00 p.m.
9-14-4tpC
M IS C ELLAN EO U S
FOR S ALE ... Cus tom
frames...any size...expert workmanship...over 35
samples on display...see at
CAUDELL LUMBER COMPANY, 1238 Bingham Street, Mocksville, Phone 63‘'- 2167.
4-24-tfnC
KIDDIE CAMPUS
PLAYSCHOOL. Daycare and kindergarten. Daily and weekly rates. Ages 2 and up. Call 634-2266.
6-1-tfnK
MR. VETERAN-No down
payment on homes. Ranch,
colonial, contempary, etc.
Many sellers pay closing costs. This means your cost is nothing. We will work hard for you. Winston-Salem Homes, Inc. Call: 634-2431.
8-3 tfn
WANTED: Old Muzzle Loading Rifle with Patchbox. Will pay $l000.0t cash or
more. Call before j ou sell. 1-
919-576-9451. Or wr te P. 0. Box 528 Troy,N. C. 27371.
8-lOtfnC
The BibI
FOR SALE: Soybean Hay -
$1.00 per bale in field. Call:
998-8778.
9-21 ItnpS
Have Haybine...WUl Travel- Mowing, raking, baling...all field work. Combining- soybeans and corn. Call: 998-
8778.
9-21 ItnpS -
FOR SALE...Seed oats, recleaned, one year from certified seed. Contact: T.R. Richardson, Rt. 6, Box 169,
Mocksville. Phone: 492-7631.
9-21 2tnpR
Want to determine if local businessmen are interested in a computerized bookkeeping system ... if you are interested
please write to Bookkeeping,
Box 525, Mocksville, N.C. 27028.
2tnp 9-21S
H O P E
e s S I U E B S
^ B U t t P E R gCommercial Property Lots
Acreage Tracts - Homes
Davl6-I redell-Forsyth
& Surrounding Counties
BROCK REALTY
Phone (704) 8724111
Or493B733
"Suffer the little children to come unto me,” said Jesus in the King James Version of the Bible, but this is phrased somewhat differently in the American Bible Society Good News Bible; "Let the children come to me!"Passages from the Bible like "Jesus Blesses Little Children,” especially chosen and presented to help people who are learning to read, are among a variety of colorful Scriptures and Scripture-related teaching materials being published by ABS for use in classes or with individuals this year.Materials available include the following;
• Scripture mobiles that children can cut out and design themselves
• Scripture cartoon books illustrating the story of Abraham
• Scripture Selections with pictures to color on the reverse side
• Simplified Scriptures for special education programs and child evangelism
• Scripture cards carrying Bible references and illustrative photos
A book called Jesus highlights the Ufe and teachings of Jesus from Today’s EngUsh Version of the Gospels for older children, while a “Discovery” Edition of the New Testament, designed by National Student Ministries, includes Bible study help for youth.Available soon will be coloring books with selected sayings from the teachings
of Jesus, and six Scripture activity books with Old Testament stories. These books utilize modern teaching techniques, emphasizing
student participation and learning by doing.
They will include puzzles, word games and quizzes that will require the child to refer back to the Biblical text to find the correct answers. All are illustrated with drawings.
An interdenominational and nonprofit organization, the American Bible Society distributes these valuable aids through churches and religious bookstores, or you can write; American Bible Society, 1866 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10023.
In 1979 the Society's efforts to provide children everywhere with copies of Holy Scriptures in languages
they can understand will coincide with the International Year of the Child.
а<:11Гй<Г«1Improve
y o u rs e lf.
Col. Wanda
AUCTIONEER-
Ccmpiete Auction
Service
^ NCAL-1328
^ 704-633-1404
Rt. 1 Salisbury, N.C.
St«n now 10 plan lor a proteMional ca- roer driving a ~Dio Our private training Acnool oMers competent in-
lenging training lieMi Keep your |ob antfirain on pari lime baiis (Sat 4 Sun) Of allerxl our 3 week lull-itme retideni training Call right now for lull
WINSTON-SALEM
919-723-3233
Э(к:
P r i d e M a r k
R o o f i n g C o .
Tear Off •• Wood Shingles -• Composition
FREE ESTIMATES
ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE
IVIIKEPFBKINS
Advance
Phone 996-5040
DOIXÎCOIÆRT Mocksvllla
Phona 634-3981
0ШВЭв-2341
Slli$bi!rv, N.C.r
lAUCTI
S H E E K
SUCTIONS REALTY COM PSNV
P.O. BOX 903
634-3011
M O C K S V ILLE. N.C. 27028
N C A L 024
N C R L 40328
BOND ED
704/872-0502
S T A T ES V ILLE
N.C. 28677
PR O PERTY
Acreage
FOR SALE...2 acres off 601, 3 miles out of Mocksville. Call: W.A. EUls, 634-5227. Also a 55
acre farm on Gladstone Rd.
2-9 tfnE
Homes
FOR SALE BY OWNER. . 3
bedroom-1 Mi rancher with full basement, 2.3 acres of land on Bear Creek Church Road.
Will help arrange financing.
Call 492-7202.
6-29- tfnB
FOR SALE: 9 room, 2 story home in Cooleemee, 2 baths
with large screened porch and separate upstairs apartment. Located on large shaded corner lot. Convenient to
schools, churches, and
shopping center. Phone 284-
2994 or 284-2761.
8-3-tfnK
NO DOWN PAYMENT: 3 and 4 bedroom homes. Call Bill Shoaf at 634-2431 Winston- Salem Homes.
8-3 tfn
FOR SALE BY OWNER-3
bedroom house on Forrest
Lane. Price reduced for quick
sale. For more information caU: 998-5841.
8-31-tfnB
CREEKWOOD: Beautiful
split foyer, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, 1950 sq. ft., 2 car garage, 1 year old. In excellent condition. $54,000. Call: Bill Shoaf, Winston- Salem Homes at 634-2431.
9-7-tfnWS
Mobile Homes
We buy and sell good used Mobile Homes, Contact:
BONANZA MOBILE HOMES, 722 Wilkesboro Street, Mocksville, N.C. Phone: 634- 5959.
lO-7-tfnB
FOR SALE ... Double-wide
trailer 24 X 50. 3 BR, 2 full
baths, extra insulation, storm windows, central air condition, 10 x 20 awning included. In Excellent con
dition. NO furniture. $10,000. Setting on house movers steel readv lo move! Call; 998-8307. Owner will linariee.
tf-14-tfn H
FOR SALE: 10 X 50 Mobile Home furnished, 2 air con
ditioners, 280 gal. oil tank and
a 10 X 20 porch. Call: 492-7325.
(114 IfnH
FOR SALE...1970 Oakwood Mobile Home 12 x 53. Total
electric. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath
and in good condition. Call: 998-5212.
9-21 ItnpK
FOR SALE...1978 14 x 70 mobile home...2 bedroom..2 baths...built in fire place...excellent condition...assume loan. caU998-
8128.
2t 9-20-F
Let Us Protect
Your Asphalt-
With
"JET— SEAL"
Quality Asphalt
Scaler
FREE ESTIMATES-
BEN MOORE
Quality Paving Co.
Woodleaf, N.C.
£ 0 4 ^
278 -445 8
R EN TA LS
Apartments
FOR RENT: Crestview
Apartments. U.S. 64 East.
Nice 3 rooms, patio and bath. For adults. Call: 634-5420.
8-3MtnpG
Homes
FOR RENT OR SALE...House on Hunt Street.
Contact: Bryan Sell at 634- 2897.
9-21 tfnS
FOR RENT ORLEASE...New stoie bulldinK
on 64 Highway West of 1-40,
Call: 492-5336.
9-21 tfnG
Mobile Homes
Trailers and spaces
RENT. Call 493-4386.
ll-lO-tfnL
for
ff
WANTED TO RENT ... Nice 3 bedroom brick home in the vicinity or near the Davie County Hospital for family of three. Call: 634-3922 after 6 p.m.
9-21-tfn S
“Consumer
o n i h e e b
Banking At Home? Protect Your Money With Travelers Checks
Be it ever so humble, sure there’s no place like home.
But, according to American Express, miUions of dollars
are lost each year by dwellers who habitually leave cash at home.What can these cash hoarders do to protect their money? According to Consumer Affairs expert at American Express, Barbara Sullivan, “There’s little risk in keeping a small amount of cash at home for emergencies. However, with a large sum of money it’s better to deposit it in a financial institution or convert it into travelers checks. American Express Cheques, for example, never expire and, if they are lost at home or stolen, you can get them replaced.”What follows are five common reasons why people lose their money in their homes;1. People hide money at home and, Uke "absent- minded" professors, forget where they put it.2. The pockets of old discarded clothing or items sent to the cleaners often have cash that has been forgotten.3. Pets and children delight in tearing up and even swallowing bills.4. Fires destroy cash, Uke everything else.5. Robbers who break into homes and apartments are experts at discovering “secret" hiding places.
i W A N l i D ' !
I T O B O Y ■
U V E S T O C K
A.L Beck & Son
Wholesale Meats Thomasville, N.C.
iW ILL BUY lo r 100 COWS!
I ;.J|S0, Bulls, Vealt, FaedersB
!Cilves...We Pay Cash For !I All Catde When Picked Up. I 9-2i-itnp В
SALES
3 FAMILY YARD SALE ...
Saturday, Sept. 23 from 8 a.m.
until 5 p.m. Bethel Church Road off Hwy. 64. Clothing of all sizes, household items, drapes, flowers, dishes, baked
goods and toys! Everything
priced to go. Rain date:
Saturday, Sept. 30.
9-21-ltp B
CARPORT SALE ... Friday and Saturday, September 22 and 23, from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. at the Tarheei Gun Oub Road off 158 West - next to
Baltimore Road.
9-21-ltp B
GIGANTIC YARD SALE...3 miles east of Mocksville on Highway 158, tum right at Oak Grove Church. (Watch
for signs). Glassware, fur
niture, toys, clothes of all kinds and sizes Including boys slims. Saturday, Sept. 23, beginning at 9 a.m. and
lasting all day. Rain or Shine!
9-21 ItpS
4 FAMILY YARD SALE...Saturday, September
23, from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. 3
miles east of MocksvUle on
Highway 158. Watch for signs!
9-21 Up
TRASH & TREASURE SALE... Sat. Sept. 23 from 10 a.m. tn 6 p.m.; Sun. Sept. 24
from 1 p.m. until 6 p.m. For
street rod enthusiast a 1937
Ford, Also crystal, china, pictures, furniture and crafts. Located in Woodlee 1 and three-tenths mile from 1-40 on
801 toward Farmington. Watch for signs!
9-21-ltp R
GIGANTIC YARD SALE at
the Jericho-Hardison Ruritan Booster Club on the Green Hill Road ... Saturday, Sept. 23, from 5:30 a.m. until 1 p.m.
Many items to choose from.
Be sure and come out!
9-21-ltp G
YARD SALE ... Saturday,
September 23rd at 13 Whltnel
Road, Craftwood beside
Baker Furniture, from 8 a.m. until -. Over 100 items, some antiques, pick-up truck, motorcycle, clocks, clothes,
lamps and other items. Phone; 634-5801.
9-21-ltp W
4 FAMILY YARD SALE ...
September 22 and 23... Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. untU 6 p.m. A little bit of everything! At McCuIloh’s Curb Market on 158 and 801...
approximately 7 mUes out of
MocksviUe.
9-21-Up A
6 FAMILY YARD SALE ... Saturday, September 23, from 8 a.m. untU 5 p.m. Highway
601 - ‘/4 mile from Greasy
Corner. Watch for signs.
Toys, dishes, furniture, clothes, baby things and much •more! CanceUed if raining.
9-21-ltp C
BIG! BIG! GIGANTIC Flea
Market and Yard Sale ... Saturday, October 7th from 8 a.m. untU 5 p.m. at the Mocksville Brock Center Gymn on North Main Street.
Don’t miss it!
Pick-upI nf»lror
I
YourLocker Beef.
A.L.Bech,Jr,
jR t.l, Thomasville, N.C.S
I Call Collect Anytime: ■
Winston-Salam II (019) 788-9008 II or 788-7S24 S
■ Phone After 6 P.M. ■
learty A.M . (919) 476-689S I
Gough Enterprises (
Complete Home Service
Large Or Small-We Do It AÜ!!!!
25 YEARS EXPERIENCE
ADDITIONS-REMODELINC; KITCHENS-BATHS-ETC. .
TARINETS-FURNITURE & REPRODUCTIONS
PH ONE 998-2076Free Estimates Work Fully Guaranteed
I N S U L A T I O N < ^ ^ 7 ^
BLOWN IN
ATTICS AND WALLS
SiBSiS
W ln t t o n - S a im ^ N X ^ 10 7
First Time Yard Sale ...
Frank Myers residence off
Baltimore Road on
Beauchamp Road. Boys, girls and ladies clothes, odd furniture, braided rug, bedspreads and drapes and odds and ends. Saturday, September 23 from 9 a.m. until 4
p.m. Watch for signs! CaU:
998-4403.
9-21-ltp M
YARD SALE ... Friday and
Saturday, September 22 and
23 from 8 a.m. untU 5 p.m. At the corner of North Main and Spring Street. FamUy sale. Many good items to choose
from.
9-21-Up W
YARD SALE ALL DAY Saturday, September 23. beginning at 8 a.m. and
continuing until 5 p.m. on Pine
Ridge Rd. Look for aigna. Lawn mower, cedar wardrobe, blue jara, clothes,
swings, flower planters, w ^
stove, oil atove, baby doUa, books and ioU of other items. 70 model Step Van. Rain or
shine.
9-21-ltpM
ya rd SALE AT 608 Avon Street, Saturday, September
23, from 8 a.m. until 3 p.m.
Bid clothing, dlahea, quUt
scraps, curUtiitf and many
other useful items; aU priced very cheap. Rain date wiU be the foUowing Sat. September
30.
9-il-itpM
SELL your used or unwanted
furniture, appliances and other items
through a classified ad in
SERVICES
Carpet Cleaning
Give your old carpet a new lease on life with the do It yourself steam cleaner o...
rinse and vac from DAVIE SUPPLY COMPANY, 634- 2859.
tfnD
Electrical
. For fast and efficient service
on all electrical needs, large or smaU, call Karl Osborne, owner of OSBORNE ELECTRIC COMPANY 634-
3398 , 520 East Maple Ave.
5-11-tfnO
Garbage Pick Up
For weekly garbage pick-up anywhere in Davie County ... call BECK BROTHERS GARBAGE DISPOSAL SERVICE, 284-2917 or 284-
2824. Cooleemee, or County Manager’s Office, MocksviUe
6-12-tfnB
Septic Tank
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING SERVICE ... certified to pump septic tanks ... large
truck for full time, efficient service ... also rent sanitary toileU ... caU 284-4362, Robert Page, Cooleemee.
4-24-tfnP
Wall Coverings
Old waUs need a new face.. See complete selection ol
newest wall coverings at DAVIE SUPPLY COMPANY
at 634-2859.
3-25-tfnD
Woodwork
Now Open ... MIKE'S WOOD WORK, we repair broken
furniture and take speciot orders, cabinets, shelfs, «tc. Call 998-5040.
12-8-tfnP
V EH IC LES
Automobiles
FOR SALE: 1976 Thunderblrd
-fully loaded. Must SeU. CaU: 634-3607.
8-31 tfnS
FOR SALE ... Deluxe 1975 Rabbit, light Blue, a-c and a.m. and f.m. radio, in Excellent condition. Call:634-
3880between B and 9 a.m. and
10 and 11 p.m.
9-7-tfn-J
FOR SALE ... '69 Camaro 307 Auto PS Black. White interior. In good condition. Call: 998- 4079 after 6 p.m.
9-21-ltp D
FOR SALE. . .1976 Camaro.
low mileage, good color,
automatic, power steering
and In exceUent condition. CaU: 634-2113 between 6 p.m. and 9 p.m.
9-21-tfnC
Motor and Boat
FOR SALE: 9.8 Mercury Motor. Uke new and a 16’ Walk
through windshield Boat. 55
H.P. with Evlnrude motor. A
long traUer. CaU: 634-5239.
9-21 ItpF
Trucks
FOR SALE ... 1969 Ford 'ä Ton Pick-up, 3 spd., overdrive and air condition. Call: 998-8186.
9-14-4tnp H
FOR SALE: 1972 Ford pickup, long bed. automatic and power steering, $695. CaU: 634-5801.
9-21-ltp W
NOTI£E
WANTED TO BUY
LIVESTOCK
Beef cattle, hogs, veals, or
feeder cattle. I have an
order for all types of caUle.
Will pay market price for your livestock, right on
the farm. Payment In
check or cash, which ever
you perfer.
PROMPT PICK UP SERVICE
I will buy one head or a whole herd.
Give me a calllll
FRED 0. ELLISLivestock & Auctioneering Service Rt. 4, Mocksnlle, N.r.
634-5227 or 998-0744
^jfelon^R esjden^^a^
Vans
FOR SALE. . .1976 Step-in Van 12ft. pay load, duel wheels, automatic tran
smission, power steering and
air conditioned. CaU: 634-
2675 after 5:00 p.m.
AIR WELL DRILLINGm
Route 9, Box 127 SUittsviUc. NC 28677 Phone 872-7614
Advance, NC Июле 9984141
Kessler’s
Furniture & Upholstery
(Formerly Joe’s Upholatery)
OPEN DAILY Mon.-Sat.-9:00-5:30
•Free Estimates
*Wide Variety of Samples •Presented in Homes
•Financing Available
Phone 284-2512
Cooleemee
S P E C IA L A T T R A C T IO N
Jack KochmanHELL DRIVERS
S H O W TIM E
F R ID A Y N IG H T 6 t 3 0 P J M .
AT THEROWAN COUNTY FAIR
loutad Off 1-85 S. of Salisbury, off Julian Road
Other Than Gate Admission, There Is No Additional
Charge for This Performance.
14B DAVII; COUNTY l-NTliRl’RISli RliCORD. THURSDAY. St-PTUMBHR 21. I‘>7S
TO OUR CUSTOMERS
AND FRIENDS FOR MAKING
OUR FIRST YEAR, IN OUR NEW
BUILDING, A GREAT SUCCESS
T R W
S E R V IC E L IN E •TOOLS* EQUIPMENT
It has been our pleasure to serve you
in the past and we are looking forward
to serving you in the future.accessobies
BEPAIB PARTS
AEROSAL PAINTS
• CHEMICALS
SUPPLIES ■ S M O H R O fc ?
hayes-albioncoipoitl.on
nrake systems division
STO R E HOURS:
Mon. thru Friday
7A .M . - 5:30 P.M.Saturday
7 AJW. - 6:00 P.M.
Wilkesboro Street
C U c B # « I V » e u in » t ic
D A V I E A U T P P A R T S C O .Mocksville, N.C.PHONE 634-2152
SSjSSBSI
i
C o u r t h o u s e S t u d y I n d i c a t e s D a v i e
C o u n t y N e e d s M o r e S p a c e F o r J u d i c i a l U s e
A study released last week by thè
goveraor’s offlce assessing the needá and deficiencies of county courthouses tn North Carolina recommends that in the future the judicial use of the Davie County Courthouse by expanded by relocating to another facility selected
non-Judicial functions currently housed in the courthouse.Hie study noted that currently approximately e,8B2 square feet of floor space is used in the Davie Courthouse for Judicial uses and that by 1985 Judicial
activities within the courthouse will
require»,910 square feet of floor space.Approximately 6,000 square feet of floor space should be renovated in the courthouse at an estimated cost of $100,000 to provide this needed floor
space, said the study.
From this recovered space the following facilities should be provided within the courthouse, recommended the study;-A district courtroom;-Extensive ancillary facilities;
-Expansion of magistrates’ facilities;
and"Offices for the district attorney and public defender.In addition, the study recommends
that the HVAC system in the courthouse undergo needed repairs and improvements tie made in or near the courthouse to improve the code requirements affecting handicapped
accessibili^ and life safety.By the year 2000 the report predicts that an additional 1,000 square feet will be needed in the courthouse for Judiciat
needs and this space should be gained by relocating non-judicial functions to another facility and renovating the space at a cost of »10,000.From this recovered space the report
recommends the expansion of court facilities within the courthouse by the year 2000 to include expansion of facilities for the clerk of court, magistrates and probation and parole
officers.In ranking 96 courthouses within the
state, the study ranked the Davie
Courthouse 73rd among the courthouses
regarding overall physical condition.The study concluded that North Carolina’s judicial system suffers from a major shortage of space and more than 10 percent of the county cour
thouses around the state have serious deficiencies.The study was conducted over a three- year period at a cost of $193,800 by the Administrative Office of the Courts and the North Carolina State University
Design School.
In releasing the report. Gov. Hunt said "I have said before that what happens in the courtroom is one of the most important parts of our fight against crime.”
And, he added, “If our courts are going to work efficiently and effectively for the taxpayers, adequate facilities are absolutely essential.”Copies of the two-volume report,
illustrated with pictures and design layouts of each courthouse, will be sent to county commissioners in every county. Tliere are a number of pictures
of Davie’s Courthouse and facilities in
Reflections of the final days of summer are seen in Cedar Creek, Just off
Highway 158 East of Mocksvllle. which remains swollen from the recent heavy rains. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
Wildwood Farm Assessed
$5,000 In Civil Penalities
For Environmental Violations
DAVIE COUNTY
$7.50 Per Year In North Carolina
, $10.00 Per Year Out Side North Carolina THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
32 PAGES
Single Copy 15 cents
Charles A. Marshall Jr. of the WUd- wood Farm, Rt. S, Mocksville, has been assessed $5,000 in civil penalties by the Division of Environmental Management
of the N.C. Dept of Natural Resources
and Community Development in connection with his alleged violation of state environmental laws in operating the
farm.A.F. McRorie, the director of the Division of Environmental
Management, advised Marshall, September 7th, by letter that the penalties
were being assessed against him.
In the correspondence sent to Mar
shaU, Director McRorie made the following findings:-••Charles A. Marshall Jr., owner of
¿iWildwood Fanns,'ber8ina{ter re£Gai«d: > . U as the Farm, was notified on August 22, 1977, that the Farm had been designated a concentrated animal
feeding operation pursuant to 15 NCAC ZH .0123 and 40 CFR, Sec. 124.82 by the Director, Division of Environmental Management. This designation required
the submission of appUcatlons fw an
NPDES Discharge Permit,, unless discharges could be permanently eliminated within 60 days of notification.-•'No permit application nor plans
and speciflciations was ever received by
the Division of Environmental Management from Mr. Marshall regarding the discharges from the
Farm.-“The animal feeding operating
consisted of two separate laying hen
houses which confined approximately
50,000 birds for a period more than 45
. days in a 12 month period and ap-
\ The hen houses were in two complexes '^called the Southwestern and the Nor- 'thwestem. f -••The effluent from the Southwestern
complex was trench-directed over 600
feet of overland flow into a manure
swamp. It had a timed watering system and the trenches cross property boundaries. This sump had overflowed onto land owned by the Girl Scout Council known as the Tarheel Triad Girl Scout proper^. The wastewater overflow
from the sump also had run into the Girl
Scout Lake. The Northwestern complex
also had a trench cross-connection
system which flowed into a manure
sump but silt and sediment accumulated
in the trench to such a degree that continuous overflow resulted. Charles Marshall Jr. the owner, diverted this overflow away from the inoperative sump and into a stream classified as A-
II waters.
-‘‘Chicken waste was periodically
pumped out of the complexes and into the manure sumps. There were no dikes or other facilities to prevent the overflow of wastewater from sumps and trenches onto neighboring lands and
surface waters.-“The hens in the Southwestern complex were a continual source of c ^ p ^ t from the Tarheel Triad Girl
St^tCoUncil since IHovember 1975. The cumQiatlve discharge ol chicken drinking water and manure from this complex resulted in the expenditure of
$3,000 by the council to drain, scrape the bottom and refill the Girl Scout Lake in the spring of 1976.-“A conference was held on March 3, 1976, between Water Quality and
Charles Marshall to establish corrective
(continued on page 7)
I S c i e n t i s t s S a y C h a n g e O f S i t e
I s U n l i k e l y F o r P e r k i n s S t a t i o n
Opponents of the proposed Perkins Nuclear Station in Davie County had th ^ hopes of blocking the plant’s construction somewhat dininisiied last week.
Scientista with the Oak Ridge 14i>t Laboratory told the Peiidns,,<«mM that only >th6numk6l]^<i)ii8i^ ^jorproblem with the ^poM^.site ef the Duke Power Co. nuclear generating station would prompt them to recommend another site.
The announcement of the scientista, advisors to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, came after an examination last week of ten sites - including the one in Davie County -
where the station could be built.
Dr. Robert A. Gilbert, the NRC’s
Request To Block Duke Power
Nuclear Proposals Rejected
A request to block Duke Power Co. from building two nuclear planta has been rejected by the director of the N.C.
Utilities Commission public staff.
Hugh Wells wrote the Conservation
Council of North Carolina recently that studies show the need for the facilities - the Cherokee and Perkins planta. The council had asked him to try to stop Duke from building them.“Our most recent studies, even with
optimistic assumptions for load
management and conservation, show a need in the late 1980s and early 1990s for the facilities you wish canceled,” WeUs wrotf David Martin of Raleigh,
president of the council.The difference of opinion on the planta reveals the widening split on how the state should meet energy needs in the next two decades between Wells, who
favors nuclear power, and Martin, a
N.C. State University physics professor who opposes it.‘The conservation council believes programs to conserve energy and to put solar power to more uses will decrease
the need for nuclear facilities.Wells, on the other hand, believes the state needs to plan for future power demands and would be better off
gerenating more than it needs.
Archie Jones Jr. Prepares For Motorcycle
Trip Through South And Central America
project manager of the Perkins station,
said that the team would have to find
something fantastically wrong with the
current site, or would have to find a much better site, before the team would jrecommend another site.Si^ Mu^enta of the proposed site, Rlb^(id|[№m m m ben of the High Rock Laice'-^Association, accompanied the scientists on a tour of the sites.
The sites inspected included the Davie
site, ‘Tuckertown Lake on the Yadkin River, Lake Norman near MooresviUe, a site near Boiling Springs on the Broad River, and sites at Hartwell, Fishing Creek, Lake Wateree, Middleton Shoals
and Clinchfield in South Carolina.
The opponente’ favorite site was Lake Norman, which is owned by Duke Power.The Davie County site is upstream from High Rock Lake. Perkins would consume ai>out 45 million gallons of
water dally from the Yadkin River and
members of the lake association, a
group of home owners, fear the loss
would lower the level of the lake.Studies show the station’s use of water wouldlower the lake less than six inches except during extremely dry summers when the impact would be greater.The scientista went to the various sites
to measure the temperature of the water
and study the terrain.The Davie County site east of Mocksville has been under consideration since 1974. Duke Power has closed the property to the public.The scientista trekked through tick-
infested woods and drove across rutted, kudzu-bordered roads across the
** iSe NRC ordered another look atthe
alternative sites this year after deter
mining that ita staff had not made independent evaluations of the other sites
in 1974.The NRC staff has recommended that a construction license be issued for the
Davie County site, but the NRC licensing
board has not yet ruled on the permit.The scientista are expected to issue their findings in about a month. , ,
The NRC licensing board will conduct a public hearing on the findings in MocksviUe, GUbert said.
One of the scientists, Stephen Gough,
an acquatic ecologist, said a recommendation for a change would come only if one of the nine alternative sites was obviously superior to Davie County.“For Uiat to occur, we would have to
find a major flaw at Davie County. The
evaluaUons, from our standpoint, have not found any major flaws,” he said.The scienUsta also damaged the High Rock Lake AssociaUon delegaUon’s hopes by declining to consider the use of cooUng lakes for the staUon. CooUng towers are planned at the Davie County
site.
Don Blackmon, a Duke Power spokesman, said the company hopes to
get a construcUon permit for the staUon by Uie end of Uie year and to begin construcUon next spring.Perkins is designed for Uiree nuclear reactors projected for completion in the
late I980’s and early 1990’s.
ttie two volumes.“It is my fervent hope Uiat in Uie
coming weeks and months, county officials and court personnel across the state, along with oUier state officials and members of Uie public, will give careful
study to Uiis report and Uiat in due Ume
we WiU take Uiose steps which wiU find us prepared when the future becomes ttie present,” Chief JusUce Susie Sharp said.“Unless they do, those who foUow after us wUl indeed be confronted with an overwhelming crisis of inadequate facUiUes for the courta of North CaroUna.”The report said the most serious
deficiency of courthouses involves their physical condiUon, with more than 10 percent having serious problems. The most common problem is inadequate safety provisions such as flre detectUon
and alarm systems, exists and
emergency lighUng.It said, however, that almost 80 percent of the buildings surveyed “receive overaU condiUon evaluaUons indicaUiig that Uiey are, when viewed in Uieir enUrety, substandard.”
Professor Robert P. Bums, director of
ttie project at the design school, said in
an interview that one of the major problems uncovered by the study is the poor distribution of space among various county funcUons.Bums said too much space is devoted
to tax and lawenforcement work and not enough to the Judiciary.Bums menUoned in parUcular the pracUce of keeping prisoners in jaU cells ontheupperfloorsof the courthouse. He said he thought this was a bad idea from psychological, symbolic, and security
standpointa.Bums said he would like to see the judicial funcUon entirely separated from oUier county functions by the relocation of administrative and
correction departments into other
buUdings.Bums said Uiat Uie courUiouses ranked in the lower 50 percent of the physical ratings needed considerable repairs and renovations and that the 10
or 11 lowest rated buUdings needed
complete modernization.
Bums said Uie conduct of jusUce was hampered by uncomfortable courtrooms. Some of the courtrooms are defective environmentaUy - too cold, too hot or with bad visibUity and acoustics,
he said.Although the report made no specifc recommendations on paying for improvements, additions and jnain- tenance, it suggested that seriqus
consideration be give tb Uie possibility of
having Uie state take a “signlflcaiit 4blfe’’ iri^Mhcing'Uifem. '
Survey Being Made
On Shopping Habits
The Distributive EducaUon classes
at Davie High School wUI be sending out quesUonnalres this week to residenU of MocksviUe and Davie County seeking information about the present shopping habita of the residents
and also about what the residenta
want in the way of increased producta and services trom local merchanta and businesses.The survey is being conducted In conJuncUon with the proposed
downtown revltaUxation project
being planned for MocksvUle by town officials and local businessmen.
Projects Are Recommended
For Funding By ARC
Governor Jim Hunt is recommending
28 projecta, including three projecta in
Davie County, for fundhig by the Ap
palachian Regional Commission (ARC)
Archie Valejo Jones Jr. of MocksvUle,
Uie 20-year-old son of Uie Rev. Archie V. Jones Sr., left last Thursday to jsmbark
on an approximately 28,000-mUe four-
monUis trip ttirough tiie countries of
Soutti and Central AtomIm.Jones is making Uie trip in conjunction wiUi his academic studies as a Junior at Mars HUI CoUege. He wUl receive sU-
teen hour« of academic credit for Uie
**^fn addiUon, he wUl be periodicaUy contributing articles to the EN
TERPRISE-RECORD describing his
adventures during his tour.Accompanying Jones on Uie trip wUl
be ss-year-old Clyde Townsend, Uie Honda Motorcycle dealer in Dotiian,
Alabama.Tbe primary means of b-ansporUUon during mast of Uw trip wm be by motorcycle.Tbe SouU) and Central American tour
wUl not be the first Ume Jones and Townsend have ventured off together on an extended motorcycle trip. In Uie lummer of 1976 ttie two rode f r ^ H)Uian to CUx!le City, Alaska (16 niUes \om Uie ArUc Circle) on a 87-day,
,000-mUe trip*Foreign enWronmenta, speciflcaUy in luUi and Central America, are nothli« w for Jones. During toe 1960-76 period,
Uved wito hU TamUy, who were
I »utoern Baptist missionaries, tojnost
|( ttie 16-year p e ^ in Ecuador in South Imerlca and Costa Rica in Central
tp# » planish before I spoke
English,” noted Jones.It was whUe Jones and his famUy were Uving in Ecuador in 1974 Uiat they first met Townsend, who visited Uiem for a week whUe he traveled ttirough Soutti America on a motorcycle.
Townsend has been very active in
missionary laymen's work for toe Soutoern Baptist Church and this work brought him in contact wito toe Jones family.
Jones wUl keep a diary and be taking
photographs to bis instructors at Mars
Hill when he returns.He is pursuing a double major at toe school In Spanish and busbiess and hopes to go on to graduate school when he graduates and study international
management.The academic credit which Jones wUl
receive from his experiences on toe bip wUl include 4 hours each in toe subjecta of history, geography, Spanish and economics.
He wUl also serve as the Spanish translator for Townsend whUe on toe tour.
The first stop for Jones and Townsend
after leaving OoUian on September 37th was to have Men in Caracas, Venetuela where Uiey wUl pick up ttieU- new Honda Hawk motorcycles and ottier gear which has already been s h lp ^ from ttie
states. They are expecm to remaw u
Caracas about a week before setUiw out for toe ottier countries of &>u№ America.
Their tentative itinerary has them scheduled to go from Venesuela to
Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia,
Brazil, Paraguay, Uraguar and
Argentina aU toe way to Пегга del Fuego, which is toe soutoemmost point of toe Souto American Continent.From Tierra del Fuego toe two wUl toem bead norto and pass ttvough toe
countries of ChUe, Peru, Ecuador and
Panama and otoer Central American countries on toeir way back to DoUian.“These plans are subject to change and we’U Just have to play it by ear,” said Jones before leaving.
In addiUon to gaining academic credit
for his venture, why is Jones making
the trip?“One of toe biggest reasons Mr. Clyde and I are going on toe trip is to meet as many missionaries as possible and try to help toem in any way we can and give
toem encouragement,” be said.
“Also I just enjoy traveUng very much. I guess I got this entousiasm for traveUng from my dad whUe he was a missionary,” Jones noted.In addition, be remarked before leaving ttiat “At ttiis point in my Ufe I’ve got a lot of decisions to make about my foture ttuit I need time to think about. In order to make toem more clearly U’s
best to get away for a whUe and look at
ttiem objecttvdy and whUe I’m riding on a motorcycle for as long u I wUl be I wUl have Ume to do a lot of ttUnking.”Jones did comment before he left that “If ttiere is any honor or glory of any
sort to be given because of this trip Mr.
Clyde and I don't want it given to us, but to our Creator.”
Archie Jones Jr. was all smiles before leaving on his 25,000 mile trip ,
in toe 1979 project year.
In his announcement of his recom
mendations of toe projecta to serve toe ciUzens of Westem Norto CaroUna, Hunt gave credit to Congressman BUI Hefner for his support of toe ARC and toanked him for his help In securing ap
propriations for toe $8 mUUon in ARC allocations being recommended to toe commission for fiscal year 1979.Hunt wUl submit toe recommended
investment package to toe fuU com
mission through former Governor Robert W. Scott, now federal co- chairman of toe ARC, later this monto. Once toe investment package is approved by toe fuU commission, formal
appUcaUons wUl be subnUtted for
review and approval. Hunt and Hefner said Uiat funds for toe projecta wUI become avaUable to appUcanta by late
spring of 1979.“AU of toese projecta are people
programs,” Hunt said, “and aU of ttiem
wUl have economic impact. Some projecta, such as housing improvement programs, wUl have immedtate and direct economic benefita, whUe ottiers, such as programs aimed at improving
healto and educaUonal standards of our
ciUzens, wUl have more long-term
benefita.The ciUzens of Davie County wUl benefit from programs pUnned for more toan one county.
Comprehensive child development services, covering 25 counties, wUl continue child care wito no reduction in toe total number of chUdren served in toe existing program. ARC funds for ttils
project total $1,433,641 for toe region.
A model classroom program, located
at ttie Nortowest Regional Education
Onter Ul WUkes County, li designed to Unprove ttie teaching tachnlquea ot teachers insbw;Ung basic skills in grades 4-8. Recommended ARC funding ior this pogram U $240,000 for ttUrtem
school oistrate.
Western reading centers, located in
Canton and WUkesboro, Instruct
(continued on page 7)
2 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Outdoor Art Classes
Despite the 90 degree>plus temperature, these Davie High art students awm more concerned with tne landscape they are painting than with the weather.
(Photo by Jim Barringer)
State Of North Carolina' ”
News Tips
From Cabinet Departments
FACE-LIFT FOR REST AREAST'Rest area^ along North (Carolina's highways are getting a face-lift, including a fresh coat of paint in designer colors, improved
lighting, additional sidewalks
and new toilet fixtures. For
further information, contact Regional Landscape Engineer R. S. Boyette in WUson at (919) 237-6164 or Regional Landscape E. C. Orr in AshevUle at (7(И) 252-4458.
MOTORCYCLE LICENSES
ARE REQUIRED- Just this
year, the Division of Motor
Vehicles has issued more than 10,000 licenses to motorcyclists in North Carolina. In years past, a driver’s license entitled an individual to
operate a motorcycle, but as
of January 1, 1978, either a
special endorsement on one’s driver’s license or a motorcycle license is required by law. A motorcyclist with a driver’s license dated prior to
January 1, however, wUi not
be required to carry the motorcycle endorsement untU time for the license to be renewed. Contact Zeb Hocutt, Director of Driver Services, at (919) 733-4367 for more
■ fV-,
information.A depressing subject- Depression is the leading cause of admissions to mental
health centers, and a large
percentage of people with
mental depressions are stUl not being treated. The Department of Human Resources' Division of Mental Health and Mental Retar
dation Services has begun as ongoing campaign to increase public awareness and understanding of this percasive condition. Contact Dr. Jim Osberg, 733-4630.WHERE ARE YOUR VOLUNTEERS?-In 19T7, an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 volunteers gave more than
5,000,000 hours to their time to
helping others through their
work in human service
agencies such as hos^ls; nursing homes; local health, mental health and social services departments; etc. Check in your area to see where volunteers can be and
are being used. An interview
with a volunteer who finds
that the work fiUs a void, as
well as helps others, might add a note of flavor. For information, contact Judi
Lund, Office of Volunteer Services, Department of Human Resources, 325 North
Salisbury Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27611; telephone 919 733- 4502.THEIR LIVES, OPEN BOOKS-Druing the next school year, professional
artists wUl be in schools
across the state, not to teach
classes, but as living resources in film, architecture, poetry, Uieatre, and visual and folk arts.Administered by the N.C.
Arts CouncU, the Artists-in-
School program is designed to lead students into arts experiences not avaUable in the usual curriculum. Contact
Karen Dacons, Artists-in-
Schools coordinator, N.C. Arts CountU, (919) 733-7897, or Michael Matros, (919) 733- 5722.INMATE ART COME OUT-
-An exhibit of paintings and sculpture by inmates of North Carolina prisons wUl be on
display to the public In Raleigh, September 11 IS,
1978.Elbaville Club Holds Meeting
Elbaville Homemakers
Club met Tuesday, September 19, at the Elbaville FeUowship HaU with sixteen members
present. The president, Mrs.
Mable Howard had charge of
the meeting. Devotional« were given by Mrs. Iva Young.The program was on Smoke Detectors, and sUdes were
shown by Mrs. Ostine West.
She also presented an interesting taUc on the detectors.Committee reports were given, after which the hostess,
Mrs. Mickey served refresh
ments.
Fork Jaycees To
Hold Car Wash
Fork Jaycees are spon
soring a car wash at Fulton Methodist Church, highway 801 north of Fork, Saturday,
a.ro. and wiU lae tw ^% ere
wUI also be baked goods at tbe
car wash for sale, so come by for a clean car and some deUclous baked goods that can be used for the weekend.
sported it from High Point's museum to tbe state’s transf - » « -— ..-J w..
Ihe
restoreS4-scre site when Spencer Tbe trolly was usedinNew i
I9«0's.
• »C/M fl» «»vm « waa«» 9 m
niDoitalloii history projact at Spencar. Donated by
High Point Historical Society, the trolly will be tored and used_for tranywrling visitors around tbe
Shops u open to the public.
i Orleans, Ca., until (be mid*
On« oitrich-the largsit bird now livine-weight a* much at 48,000 Ьм hummingbird!,
the (malleit birdi in the world)
•
M O C K S V I L L E . N . C .
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT
TIL 8:30
HARV liST
SA LE
WED. SEPT. 27
THRU
SAT.0CT.7
a s i z z l i n g 4 0 % o f f
c o o k 'n s e r v e
C o r n i n g w a r e
Buy one, buy all-you'll never regret your Investment in
Treezer-to-oven-to-table Corningware. Versatile In the
kitchen and attractive at the dining table. OpSn stock pieces
In beautiful "Spice O' Life" pattern.
F a s h i o n f a b r i c s s p e c i a l
1 qt. saucepan, usually 10.95. .
I'/i qt. saucepan, usually 11.95
3 qt. saucepan, usually 15.50. .
10" skillet, usually 14,95..........
Set of (2) grablts, usually 7.99.
2.V4 cup lipped saucepan
usually 9.50..................................
Teapot, usually 1 2 .5 0...............
Salee.57 Sale 7.17 Sale 9.30 Sale 8.97 Sale 4.79
Sale 5.70 Sale 7.50
Sale! our ‘StatePride’
“Carmen” made with
Celanese Fortrer
Traditional bouquets ot roses on a scroll- .r print background. Easy-care blend of 50%
, Fortrel" polyester. 50% Avrif raypn. A total
/1 ', , look in red. gold or blue.
> Sheets; No-iron blend ol 50% cotton.;50%
polyester. Cream background, i
SALE 2 for « 5Twin size..
Full size......................................2 for $7
Queen size .. ....................2 for $11
King size..................................2 for $13
42 X 36" pillowcases, pkg. ol 2 .............S342 X 46" pillowcases, pkg. ol 2 ..........3.50Bath towels; Cotton and polyester. .
Bath size, usually 2.75 .....................1.88
Hand towel, usually 1.85 ..................1.48
Washcloth, usually 1.25 .....................98cBMspread: Quilted with polyester.
Full size, usually S26.......................19.44
Queen size, usually $36 ..................27.44Draperies; Foam-insulated.
48x63", usually $14.......................10.4448 x84", usually $15......................11.4496 X 84". usually $34.......................26.44"7M ot fiber Industries irtc t sutnam’v of CeUriesc Co>p
(A) Automatic electric,80% polyester. 20% acrylic
lull bed size with thermo
static single control. Blue, gold camel, green. Energy- saverl 72 x 84", 2-year replacement guarantee.
SALE 19.88
Usually $30
(C) Thermal 'Heather' Hi- k}ft open weave traps txxjy
warmth. Mildew-resist.
mothproof 100% acrylic treated to reduce shedding,
pilling. White, lemon, blue, green, beige. 72 x 90".
SA L E 6 .8 8
UsuaUy 9.50
B u g O f f ’
s e p a r a t e s . .
v a u e s f o r
g i r l s w h o k n o
f a s h i o n !
Add Ihe layers, switch Ihe parts—it's all such fun and the results are excit- ingl The prtoes are extra invitingl
(A) 'Annie Hall'-took color-keyed lo tan or porpoise blue polyester & cotton. Sizes 7 to 14.
Vest: chevron-cut bottom.
Usually $7 ................SALE 6.44Trouser; wrap-beit.Usually $9 ................SALE 7.88
Classic shirt: woven plaids.
Usually $8 ................SALE 5.88
(B) Tiered •kirt-reverslble vest setfrom our Carrousel' collection. Soft, timely polyester & rayon challis. fwluted rose or blue. Girls' sizes 7-14.Usually $16.............SALE 11.88
Our ‘Heiress’
sandal fashions
Suede and smooth combinations, all suedes Maivek)us details like gold accents, sawtooth eflecis Lug soles,
stacked heel looks. Slim straps, and an openness that's so right with today s new softer fashion ideas
Womens sizes 15.88
ilght-leg classic Jeans. Poly- est*r&cotton corduroy. Reg. & slim
Usually S9. Sizes 7-14 SALE 7.44
KNIT TOPS 44X
POLYESHR AND COTTON
Usually 5.50 SALE 9 4 * 4 4JEANS
POLYESTER ANDCOnON
4-6X FALL COLORS
Usually 7.50
s a U ^ 6 . 4 4
G IR LS 'B U G O FF"FASHION BOOTS
THICK CREPE SOLE
SMOOTH TRICOT LINED
EMBLEM-DECORATIVE
STITCHING ON SHAFT
SIZES8Vi*4 §ALE
IHuilly *18.00^ 14.88
Ш Щ
Щ è
Great savings fromigs
our Young World
(A) ‘Baby B' slack sets. Polyester & cotton snap-shoulder knit shirts with fun' trims. Novelty jacquard designs, smart stripes. Pull-on corduroy
slacks: prints, solid cotors. 9-12-18-
24 nrwnths. Usually 7.50.
SALE 6.44
(B) 'Busy B' alack sMs. Girls' soM
corduroy slacks with coordinate jac quard knit pullover shirt. Bo^' plak slacks plus turtle-neck style kni
shirts. 2-3-4 years. Usually $8.
SALE1B.4Í
‘Busy S' ooM^athar^MkM'olyester & cotton corduroy
■ drawstring hood. Oouble-lracl
stitches on yoke, sleeve, pockets
Ouilt’Uned. Red, navy
Ifo».
Usually $14.
brown.
SALE 11.4^
sweet & sassy Tilly"
rom our 'Sweetbriar' collectior
3 6 . 8 8
usually $44
Soft leather uppers with smooth toe, slim
full-length side zipper, simulated sli
heels. The perfect boot thst does a beautiful: balancing act with today's <
new fashion ideas.'
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
10 BIG DAYS
WED. SEPT. 27 THRU SAT. OCT. 7
M O C K S V I L L E . N . C .
fJ'
rI
41
>
HARVEST
I
S T A R T S W E D N E S D A Y M O R N I N G 1 0 : ^ A M .
IT'S A FA U FEAST OF BUDGET STRETCHING FAMILY BUYS
SHOP EACH DEPARTMENT AND SAVE. BE HERE WHEN THE DOORS OPEN
Q U A N T I T I E S L IM IT E D O N S O M E IT E M S
' i
%f•>U »
Ivi•»
|«j..
Zip-out or pile lined
w inter c » a ts...h o t buys
Qmat versatility—coats ol texturizad woven polyesler with zip-out plaid liners. Also mock-
seal collar coat w№ pile lining. Natural, walnut rust, British tan or honey. Sizes 8-20. CMiter coat, also in 16Vi>24%.
SPECIAL PURCHASE! LADIES’
SUBURBAN AND CAR COATS
SALE
54.88
28.88
Suburban short coats of deep, fluffy acrylic pile, rich-looking plush or quilt-lined canvas. Tunnel belts, raglan sleeves, zip or button fronts. Beauti
ful Fall colors. Misses' sizes.
^OIES^ FINE ACRYLIC
LONG-SLEEVE SWEATERS
9.88
Usually $12. Cardigans and zip-front sweater-jacKets. Easy-care acrylic with
ribs, cables, novelty stitches. HooJv, pockets, dolman sleeves. Solids, stripes, in sizes S,M,L.
MISSES’ PANTS
KNIT TOPS
*5.88Usually >7.00
As soft as cashmere, deliciously •■'^.warm and comfortable. Cowl can tbe rolled or draped for softness.
Takes to layering with vests, jackets, shirts etc. 100% acrylic knit warranteed by Monsanto for quality and long wear. It's
the buy of the year! Pick up an I. armful in your favorite colors. Come see them all. Sizes S.M.L.
W.rt.frt..d by Mon..nto for on. full y«ar‘t normtl wf«r. Refund or replace- m*nt when returned with tag and «•let «lip to Moneento.
Misses’ 2 &3-po. pantsuits
Action pantsuits for action people. Suede-look jacket with plaid pants, lightweight polyester/wool combo in wheat or peacock, or 3-pc. weekender, shawl collar jacket, pull-on pants, off-white crystal pleat skirt. Navy or wine.
SALE • 12.88rS29.88
Our ‘Andhurst Quad’.,
a 4-piece wardrobe
at one easy price
You get suit, reversible vest, patterned slacks. Tex- turized woven polyester color-keyed to navy, tan or brown. Switch the parts to suit the occasion. It's the wardrobe idea that keeps up with your busy schedule and social life. Ask lor the Quad.
S A L E 8 9 . 8 8Usually $115
Our Andhurst’ dress shirts
Culled from our own 'Andhurst' collecliofi in a fine assort ment of wanted solidtones, woven stripes and checks. Famous maker workmanship you expect Irom our own brand. Neat permanent-slay collars, deluxe 65% polyester, 35% cotton fabrics that perform dependably.
S A L E 6 . 8 8
Usually 9.50
Men’s Andhurst’ polyester ties
Fall's new colorings. Shape-holding polyesters in stripes,
jacquards, repps, spaced motils. Truly an outstanding group, and right now you save extra .
SALE 4.88
Usually $6
‘Bold One’ corduroy jeans
Fine wale cotton & polyester, side elastics, plus new -4 Q O Ooctagonal-shape hip pockets, flare legs. Brown, tan, I ^ .O O
blue, navy, green, 28-40 " waists, 30-34" inseam. Usually $16
‘Andhurst’ casual slacks
lOCib Dacron" polyesler oxford weave with the H A Q Qcomfort ol stretch you want Camel, brown, or '
navy. 29-42' waists. Usually $14
Our ‘Andhurst’ dress slacks
Expertly tailored in tOO°o lexturized Dacron' poly- "1 Q Q Q
ester. Neat plaids, smart checks Great with thisseason s blazer coat 29-44 Usually $18
Look-of-shetland pullovers
1 0 . 8 8
Usually $13
Our 'Andhurst' with smart saddle shoulder detail,
neat crew neck. Choice of navy, red, maize, brown, heather tan or grey. 70% wool, 30% polyester.
MEN'S COTTON &
POLYESTER JEANS
8 .8 8
Usually $11. From our top maker, so you
know workmanship is first-rate. Medium wale corduroy flare leg style or straight cuts. Scoop pockets, back spade pockets. Camel, navy, 28-40" waist sizes. Great buyl
M EN’S CPO-STYLEPVC JACKET
UiuaHy $10. Wind and weather re- - v a Asistant poly vinyl chloride, with 7 ScScsmooth nylon lining. Classic cut- ^ ■ w W tucks away in small space. S XU '
6 .8 8
Usually $8. Texturized polyester gabardine pant« with front zip, elasticized tiack.
Tailored for smooth fit. Choice Fail colors.
Sizes 8-18. '
LADIES’ SLEEPGOWNS'
4.44
Utualljr $6. Warm, brushed acetate & nylon, embroidered V- necks. Ivory, melon, mint or green. S.M.L.
8av« on wathabl* rob««
Blue, rose. Wrap-style vek>ur wilh satin piping & mock mono
gram, Blue, rust, camel. Sizes S. M. L
S A LE 18 .40
Usually $23
G R EA T B U Y
LADIES GOWNS
BRUSHED ACETATE AND NYLON
YOKE TRIMS PINK-BLUE-MINT
S-M-L Usually 7.00
S ALE ^ 5 * 6 0
SLIPS AND PEniCOATSADJUSTABLE LENGTH FOR ALL YOUR
NEW STYLES "CUT-A-IACE" HEMS
ON NON-CUNGBRITEANTRON III
NYLON FULL SLIP Usually7.00 SALe 9 * O U
PETTICDATS Uwally^5.00>S.50
REQULAR-LONQ ,4-00^^
SPECIAL SCARF VALUES
OBLONGS, BIAS TIES, SCARFS BEAUTIFUL PAHERNS AND COLORS . _
8"X66” U$ually *5.00 S A LE * 2 « 8 8
BOYS KNIT SHIRTS
POLYESTER AND COTTON SIZES 8-16
Usually >5.00-*6.00
* 3 . 8 8 - « 4 . 8 8
BOYS JEANS
SELECTED STYLES
s a le Usually >6.00 TOU3.00
* 4 . 8 8 r S 8 . 4 4
BOYS JACKETS
CORDUROY - QUILT LINED SIZES 4-7; 816
* 1 3 . 8 8 ! * J 4 . 8 8
MEN'S WARM COTTON FLANNEL SHIRTS
Usually $6. Outdoorsman husky M A A
printed plaids. Neat banded col- £L iar, button-thru flap pockets. Ma- w w
chine care. Sizes S-XL.
Men’s ‘Andhurst’
boots, casuals
Moccasin-styie suede: oxford or ankle-high boot. Planlaiion crepe soles, wedge heels—and all comfort. Sandtone. ^ _____
Usually $22 SA LE 17.88
Dress boot: sleek side zip; plain toe. Smooth tricot lining. Black, brown.
Usually $31 SA LE 25.88
O N E I
BATH TOWELS
COTTON AND POLYESTER1.94
HAND TOWELS Uiualh2.00 1ul4
WASH CLOTHS Usually 1.50 .94
O N E G R O U P
G I R L S
KNEE SOCKS
ASSORTED SHLES Values To >2.50
50 TO 1 « 0 0
L A D I E S K N IT
TERRY SCUFFSMACHINE WASHABLE-SOFT . ABSORBENT COnON AND
POLYESTER TERRY. FOAM CUSHION INSOLES ASSORTED COLORS SIZES S TO XL DURABLE SOLES
Usually >3.50 $
PAIR SALE 2 . 4 4
BED PILLOWS
DACRON FIBERFILL
MACHINEWASHABLE-DRYABLE REFLUFFABLf -ALLERGY FREE STANDARD-QUEEN-KING
*4.88 EACH
4 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
F o s t e r - R a u c h D r u g S t o r e C o m p l e t e s E x p a n s i o n P r o j e c t
Bill Foster (foreground) and Bob Rauch, co-owners of Foster-Rauch
Drug Store work diligently to fill the many prescriptions brought to
their firm.
With the aid of the new computer system installed prescriptions can be
filled more rapidly and accurate records kept for the tax record service
provided by the store. Bob Rauch is pictured above. (Photos by Robin
Carter)
C a r o l i n a R e v i e w
by Jerry Mobley
SENATE RACE (MAYBE) ...The U.S. Senpte race between Incumbent Republican Jesse Helms and his Democratic challenger, John Ingram,
seems to be gaining momentum after
several months of relative quiet. Even the traditional Labor Day “official" beginning of the campaign for both men brought little attention.Perhaps much of the inattention has been because of the apparent huge lead that' Helms has held over North Carplina's maverick insurance commissioner.
Events of the past couple of weeks,
however, have at least heightened Tarheel awareness of the race even if the gap between the two men has not lessened.Foremost in the news last week was Ingram’s rejection of the insurance
industry’s request for a 9.1 percent
increase in homeowner's insurance rates. His action drew criticism that the rejection was politically motivated.Ingram also was catching flak over his attendance at regional bearings he
had^scheduled concerning the proposed
rate increases. Ingram supposedly
attended only one of the four hearings around the state.Ingram, for his part, seemed to be defending his actions reasonably well but Ihe controversy caused still more calls for Ingram to step down as In
surance commissioner.The resignation requests brought a timely defense of Ingram from fellow dentbcrat. Gov. Jim Hunt.In a letter to a Greensboro attorney, Gov. Hunt said he approved of Ingram's
decision "not to resign as commissioner
while conducting his U.S. Senate
campaign."Tqe governor carried the debate a bit further by pointing out that Senator Helibs should not be expected to resign
his incumbency either while managing
his cAmpAiftn*MeanwhUe, the Helms' campaign was distributing literature accusing Ingram of taking part in expensive junkeU whilein public office. The aaccusations brought a quick response from the insurance office that the trips in question were taken as part of Ingram’s role as insurance com
missioner and were not paid for at
taxpayer expense.Ingram, in turn, continued to ask questions about Ihe huge campaign chest of Jesse Helms (now around $5 million).
Foster-Rauch Drug Store located iti
L«wes Shopping Center on Wilkesboro Street has completed its expansion, doubling the size of the original facUlty.
First opened in October 1974 by
William L. Foster, the store has grown from 2,000 square feet to 4,000 square feet featuring the most modern In pharmaceutical and health care
products.“Our drug store," said Foster, registered pharmacist and co-owner of the facility, “offers our patrons the most modem concept of one-step shopping. In
addition to our complete pharmaceutical department, we have also made avaiiabie to our customers everything from small appliances to
invalid supplies."The atttracUve modern decor carried
throughout the facility helps In the display of the many producte available. Along with a wide selection of health care needs, the store also offers a complete Une of Revlon cosmetics, a
large greeting card section, a record
department, plus photo developing and supplies. The store provides free blood pressure checks and a free tax record
service.Bob Rauch, registered pharmacist
and co-owner who joined the company in
June 1975 said, “we plan to offer the best
in prescription service at discount prices. Buying merchandise tlirough volume has enabled us to hold down costs, passing the reductions on to our customers.” ..................... ...........Another modern feature added was
the installation of a computer system which automatically stores prescrip
tions fUled.“This Is an efficient method which aids In accuracy and reduces the amount of time it takes to locate
necessary prescription information,"
said Foster.“We are glad to be a part of the health care profession In Davie County," he said, “and will strive to promote and
allty at
|O K K (O lin ^
G lfT/
w
Kathy Boger, Shirley Denniston and Glenda Howell, employees, arrange items on the shelf for customer convenience.
Judy Galliher Is Chosen
As Ingersoll-Rand
Employee Of The Month
Judy GaUiher has been chosen as the
Ingersoll-Rand “Employee of the
Month" for August.She has been with IngersoU-Rand since June 1974. She previously worked for Vulcan Materials as a computer operator. At IngersoU-Rand, Judy has n M t J t ' r worked as an invoicing clerk for oneRoger Cranford Joins Air Force year, an invoicing cierk typist for emonths and back to her present job as
provide the utmost in quality and con
venience to the people."The store Is open 8:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, 8:30 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Saturday, and 1:30 p.m. - 5:00 p.m.
on Sunday.
Roger D. Cranford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Cranford, of Route 1, Woodleaf, NC, has enlisted In the US Air Force.
Airman Cranford, a 1975 graduate of
West Rowan High School, joined under
the Air Force's Delayed Enlistment Program (DEP), which aUows him to accumulate time in the Air Force Reserve until he enters active duty on October 19, 1978.Sergeant Gary Hubbard, Air Force recruiter in Salisbury, NC, stated that Airman Cranford successfully completed a series of tests which qualified lim for the Munitions Maintenance
Specialist field of training.
invoice clerk.Judy’s supervisor, Clyde Glascock, says, “Judy Is very efficient and always on time - ready to go to woth."Judy resides in the Turrentine Community, on Rt. 3, Mocksvllle , with
her husband, Grady, and two children
Michael and Sandi.She Is a member of the Ladies Auxiliary and supports community and school functions and is a member of the
Turrentine Church.Judy Is described as having an outstanding personaUty, very helpful with IngersoU-Rand social functions and always ready to help when help is
needed.
0. K. Pope of Pennhigton Chevrolet Co. in MocksviUe, North CaroUna wiU serve as 1978-79 Davie County Area Chairman tor the North Carolina
Automobile Dealers Asioclation. An
nouncement of his appofaitment was
made today by NCADA President Jesse W. Corbett. Jr. of WUson. During his term, he wiU act as Uaison between new car and truck dealers in this area and _the state and national dealer 'associations.
Cub Scout Pack 525 Gets
New Committeeman
“If you are a boy between ages 8 and
10" goes the message of recruiters to
prospective Cub Scouts.James Warren of 414 South Main in MocksvUle isn’t sure about the age limitations, but he is now registered as a Chib Scout. Mr. Warren has bMn helping Mrs. Linda Chaffin, den mother of Den
1, Pack 525.
When Rev. Carter of Holy Cross
Lutheran Church announced Sunday that the Cub Scout Roundtable would be at the church Monday, September 21, Jim was Ustening. Monday he gattiered up his Cub Scout grandson and went to
Uie meeUng. He was surprised to leam
that Uie Roundtree is for adult leaders.
Two other boys were present so they spent the evening at “boy sports" while
Mr. Warren sat in on the Roundtree.During the evening Scout Executive Ben White asked Cubmaster Larry Freeze if he needed any scout appUcations. Mr. Warren pointed out that he needed one. It was supplied and fUled
out.The result: Cub Pack 525 welcomes a new committeeman, Mr. James Warren, age 72.
At week’s end, Ingram was in AsheviUe with President Carter (Car
ter’s second N.C. trip in as many months
to help Ingram) and enjoying at least a share of Uie public’s joy over recent developments at Camp David.In short, the race between Helms and Ingram Is not over yet. And with approximately 75 percent of the state's registered voters being democrat, anything can sUU liappen.Ask LuUier Hodges.
HUNT-HOBBY...GOV. Hunt recenUy escaped what could have been a very uncomfortable meeting with AFL-CIO members hi Charlotte. The governor
spoke to the group only days after his
Commerce Secretary, Lauch Faircloth,
caUed tiie state's anU-union climate a “seiUng point" wlUi industry.Needless to say, Uie union members were quite upset.
But union leader, WUbur Hobby, in
troduced Hunt as Uie “Best friend of Uie
working man In Uie governor’s mansion
since Kerr Scott~and coming up fast."From Uiere It was roses-at least untU Uie next crisis at Uie state ports...PCB...According to Hunt press secretary, Garry Pearce, a new site for
temporary storage of iniUal road- shoulder scrapings of PCB wiU probably be found rather than engage in a court batUe wiUi Uie city of Warrenton (Uie origlonal site).
If a new site cannot be found, however, the governor is prepared to go to court.SURPRISE...The most surprising development hi the liquor-by-the-drink
compeUUon is the raUier one-sided lead
held by Uie mixed-drink proponenU- referendums now stand at 4-1 In favor of mixed drinks.
Operator's License
Is Suspended
Motor vehicle operators licenses suspended in Davie County for Uie
period ending September 1, 1978 in
cluded:Richard Stephenson, 29, of Rt. 1 Advance, suspended as of September 7, 1978 unUl November 6. 1978.
Kreth Sauiage Fresh pork sausage does not retain
quality as long in the freezer as oUier fresh pork cuts. It soon becomes rancid.
oFall '78si
THENEW1979'SAREONTHEWAY! FOR TOP
BUYS ON THE SEVERAL 1978'S WE HAVE LEFT
IN STOCK.... SEE US TODAY.
Watch for the
Grand Showing
of the all new 1979’s.
IDODGE MONACO 4DR.
1-DODGE MAGNUM 2DR.
l-DODGE CHARGER 2DR.
1-CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 2DR.
1- PLYMOUTH FURY 4DR.
2- PLYMOUTH VOLARE 4DR.
3-DODGE ASPEN 4DR.
4DR1-PLYMOUTH HORIZON
l-DODGE OMNI 4DR
l-DODGE D-100 131"WB. 6CYL
l-DODGE D-100 131”WB. U
"DEMOS"
l-DODGE MAGNUM 2DR. "DEMO”
1-CHRYSLER CORDOBA 2DR. "DEMO”
1978 PLYMOUTH FURY 4DR.
1977 PLYMOUTH FURY 4DR.
1978 CHRYSLER LEBARON 2DR.
1978 DODGE DIPLOMAT 4DR.
1977 CHRYSLER LEBARON 2DR.
1978 DODGE MONACO 2DR
U T E MODEL USED CARS STILL UNDER WARRANIY
The Sale You Have Waited For...
U S E D C A R B A R C A I N S
SEE US ■ ■ ■ YOU WILL WOT BELIEVE OUR PRICES
FURWES MOTOR CO.
225 DEPOT STREET MOCKSVILLE, N.C.
UAVlb COUNTY BNTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, l ‘)78 - 5
E x u a n s i o n C e l e b r a t i o n !
N o w T h r o u g h O c to b e r 13
F R E E P R I Z E S
T O B E G I V E N A W A Y ! ! !
i r C A M E R A S ^ W A T C H E S ^ G I F T S E T S
i r P L U S M A N Y M O R E ! ! ! !
D raw ing To Be H eld October 13th Items O n Display In The Store!!!!
~SEIinr
TOOTHPASTE
7 0 1 .
DRY IDEA
ROLL-ON DEODORAN T
I.SOZ.
IE 6 U L A I 0 1
UNSCIM TID
1 . 1 9
2.11 VALUE
METAMUCIL«
M C K ET S 3 0 + 4 H I E
4.61 VALUE
GERITOL'^
2 . 2 9
3.98 VALUE
TABLETS
40*1 OR
LIQ U ID
I 2 0 i ,
SergeantsSentry IV
Flea and Tck Collars FOR DOGS/FOR CATS
1 .5 9
L ee N ^ s
Brush-nn Artlñcial HnRcrnail Kit
3 . 7 9
5.00 VALUE
ONE A DAY
V ir AM INS
W inilO N
MO't
5 . 9 9
CLAIROL
SH O Rf A SASSY
M a im nm cu B co iM iM in
in .
NORMAL t
IXTRAMRT
1 .2 9IflSYftLUfci
OIL OF
OLAY
LOTION 4 01.
4.75 VALUE
«
wiuM iufaiNM r
fENNIS BALLS
Whoppers
MALTED MILK CANDY
14% Oz. Size....................7 7 ^
AM/FM
8TRACKTAPE R A D I0 .:4 2 « 9 5
FM CONVERTER....?. 1 9 . 9 5 I
CASSETTE r ec o r d er . ! 2 6 . 9 5
Multi Band 9 0 0 o e
PORTABLE RADIO.......... 3 2 . 9 5
H3llow66n
PARTY SUPPLIES & DECORATIONS
Business Size 50’s
MEAD ENVELOPES..
Regular Size lOO's
MEAD ENVELOPES.
2 / 8 9 * S M R N S H A M P o a ...* .1 .0 9
2 / 8 9 '
Normal to.Diy& Oily 16 Ol
FLEX SHAMPOO.............1 . 6 9
72’s
SOMINEX.
Vaseline 15 Oz.
PETROLEUM JEUY..
MrAMUCIL PACKETS.
* 1 . 7 9
9 9 «
P H O T O SPECIALS!
12 Exposures (color)......$ 1 .9 920 Exposures (color)......$ 2 .9 9
20 ^ ON ALLWILTON CAKE DECORATING SUPPLIES
EXTRA 10% Off ON ALL FOSTER-RAUCH DRUG VITAMINS
Ex Body & Ex Conditioning 7 Oz.
SHORT & SASSY
CONDITIONER
6%0z.
KERI LOTION
*ÍSíÍon
FORDRV9(iNCAR!
J
KERI®
LOTION
6.5 O l.
1 . 6 9
2.99 VALUE
S H A R P
E L 20«
lucraMNC
CALCMATM
Northern 4 Roll Pack
TOILET TISSUE
35’s
STAYFREE MINI PADS
Smuckeß 12 Oz. V
STRAWBERRY P R ESER V ES .....0 9 ^
2 . 9 9
Wilson ,
TENNIS BALLS 3’s.1 . 9 9
GulfUte 1 Quart Wilson
CHARCOAL STARTER..6 9 ’
r a O - C U R L 1 4 0 0CMUM KM win t AnACNMiNTtMMWATT
4 . 4 97.95 VALUE
FREE BIOOD PRESSURE CHECKS
FREE TAX RECORD SERVICE
FOSTER-RAUCH
DRUG COMPANY
TYLENOL®
EXTRA STRENGTH
CAPSULES — m
2 . 5 9 13.98 VALUE
P R O 1 5 0 0
PR«RtMMUl HAM MYER
IN* «A n
9 Ü 9 929.95 VALUE
VISIT OUR RECORD &
GREETING CARD DEPARTMENTS
LOWES SHOPPING CENTER PHONE 634-2141 MOCKSVIUE, N.C »
6 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
R o g e r A u s t i n T o S p e a l t A t
R e p u b l i c a n D i n n e r T u e s d a y
Roger, ElghthDistrict Candidate tor Congress, will be the guest speaker at a fund-ralsing dinner for the Davie County Republican Party, October 3 at the
Davie County High School cafeteria at 7:00 p.m. Admission to the event will be $7.50 per person with the proceeds going to the Davie County Republican Party.
Austin maintains his residence in
rural Union County he was bom and
raised. He is a Jesse Helms type conservative and has campaigned hard on the side of conservative issues. He has endorsed the Kemp-Roth Tax Cut Bill and a balanced budget.
Austin has also campaigned hard on the side of a strong national defense and supported the production of the B-1
Bomber and opposed the Panama Canal
giveaway.
Austin commented that he is always
happy to come to Davie County and is looking forward to attending the dinner October 3.
Woman Is Charged
With Taking Check
Marie Welch Foster, 24, of Rt. 4 YadkinviUe was arrested Monday and
charged with breaking and entering and
larceny at the residence of Jimmy
Foster, Rt. 5 MocksvUle.Reported taken from the house Monmy was a check in the amount of $457.48 drawn on Branch Banking and Trust Company and issued to Jimmy
Foster.Ms. Foster was released on a $500
bond for a court appearance on October
23.
Peoples’ Day
Mayor R.C. Smith of Mocksville wUl hold his monthly "Peoples’s
Day" at the Mocksville Town Hall
on Monday, October 2nd, between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.The purpose of "Peoples' Day”
Ii to give everyone an opportunity
to come and sit down or call In a relaxed atmosphere to discuss with the mayor any problem they might have or to have answered
any questions about the town about which they might be concerned.
Roger Austin
GOP Headquarters
Opens Tuesday
The grand opening of the
Republican Headquarters will be
Tuesday, October 3rd at 6:00 p.m.
on the Square.
The Republican Headquarters
are located next to the Farm
Bureau office.
Former Congressman Wllmer
MIzell and Congressman candidate
Roger Austin will formerly open
the Headquarters.
After the ceremonies everyone
will then go to the Republican
Dinner at the High School at 7:00
p.m. where Roger Austin will be
the featured speaker.
Everyone is Invited to attend and
meet all the candidates.
Vehicles Collide Head On
Two vehicles coUided headon Sunday
about 10:45 a.m. on the Davie Academy Road, 5.6 mUes south of MocksviUe.Involved was a 1071 Dodge operated by Kathy Delaine Chaffin 21, of Rt. 1
Mocksville and a 1973 Chevrolet
operated by Augusta Hallman Gaither,
59, of Rt. 7 MocksvUle.
State Highway Patrolman J.L. Payne said his investigation showed that Ms. Chaffin lost control of her car on a wet road in a sharp curve, crossed to center
of road and bey .md, strUUng the Gaither vehicle headon.Damage was estimated at $1,000 to each vehicle. The injured were taken to
the Davie County Hospital. Ms. Chaffin
was charged with exceeding safe speed.
Residence At Fork Is
Broken Into And Robbed
The residence of Kenneth 0. Brown, 31, of Fork was broken into last Saturday between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. Entry was made through the basement door by use of screw driver.
Reported taken was a coin coUection
valued at $400; $55 in church coUection;
a RCA television valued at $550; a Colt 45 valued at $450; two boxes of sheUs valued at $20; U.S. MUitary holster valued at $45. Damage was estimated at
$200.
The Davie County County Sheriff’s
Department is Investigating.
P n v t n f n l unidentified cyclist enjoys the beauty of the countryside in Davie from thé± u s i u t U I seat of a two-wheeler. (Photo by Barringer)
Young Farmers And
Ranchers To Meet
The Davie County Young
Farmers and Ranchers group
wUl meet at the County Office BuUding on Thursday, September 28, at 7:30 p.m.This is a very important
meeting and President
Spurgeon Foster, Jr. en
courages aU members to be
present.
Dough Art
Rescheduled
The Battle of Bunker Hill was actually fought on nearby Breed's Hill, and lost by the Revolutionaries.
Dough Art has been re
scheduled for Tuesday,
Ocotber 3, at the Smith Grove Community Center from 7 p.m. untU 10 p.m. This is an eight week course and wUl be
taught by Lou Hurt.
Anyone may register by caUing Mrs. Hurt at 998-3118 or PhyUis WUIiams at 998- 8303.
■ I love the red rose,
■nie lily fair.
The queenly lotus,, The orchid rare.'niese are the aristrocracy,. Yet they can scarce surpass
The beauty of the
peasantry...<. Dew dampened blades of grass.Unknown Thank God for the family. Everyone else demands your ibest; only the family lets you ¡relax- everyone else expects the quick work of approval; the manufactured smile; the
effort to be courageous or
witty. Only before the family
may you storm, sulk, indulge in pessimism or be comfortable or stupid.For aU the world the weU-
brushed coat; the polished
sheU, the careful tie; only in
the family circle may you doff them aU and put on the carpet sUppers. The family is the solty value of №e world.
After continuous effort to
please, continuous attempts
to be entertaining, continuous sturggles after graciousness, what a relief to enter the famUy haven and let off a
Uttle steam! How good to toss
the curt criticism and catch
iOie swift retort, to bury your hose in a magazine and ignore conservation; to scatter things and let Uiem lie; only
the family knows you wiU
imough to understand; only ;№e family loves you enough to forgive.The world offers you toU
;with routine and good manners. Only the famUy hands ,'you out chaos and confusion land only the family affords
iyou real rest. Thank God for
;Ute famUy!Recipes for a family....CREAM PUMPKIN PIE
1 cup cooked pumpkin,
'drained: 2 eggs and 2 egg yolks
VFWToMeet
'' The Thomas Ray Davis V. -F. W. Post 4024 regular meeting wUl be held Tuesday October 12th. This meeting
wUl be a supper meeting and
include chicken stew for aU
the members and their wives. Be sure and attend.
GOP To Meet
Tbe Davie County
Republican Executive
Committee wUl meet Monday
night October 2, 1978, at 7:30 p.m. at ttie Oavie County Courttiouie. This is an open Meeting and aU RepubUcans
pre invited to attend.
Jones Reunion
Set For Sunday
The Jones reunion wUl be
held at the Davie Academy Community building on Sunday, October 1.The descendants of James .Monroe Jones and Virginia
BeU Anderson Jones are in
vited to come and bring friends ana a picnic lunch which wUI be spread at 1 p.m.
V4 cup brown sugar
Vi cup granulated sugar 1 cup sweet cream >/ii teaspoon salt Vi! teaspoon cloves
^ teaspoon nutmeg Combine pumpkin, sugar and eggs and beat until light or blend. Mix spices and salt and stir into first mixture. Add
cream and stir untU weU
mixed. Line a 9-inch pan with pastry. Prick weU and put in hot oven for 5 minutes. FiU with pumpkin and bake in a slow oven until firm. Cover with meringue made of 2 sUffly beaten egg whites and 4
tablespoons of sugar and Vi
teaspoon baking powder.
Brown in slow oven.PECAN PUMPKIN PIE % cup brown sugar 1 teaspoon cinnamon1 teaspoon ginger
V4 teaspoon nutmeg
2 tablespoons orange juice
2 eggs, well beaten
>/i teaspoon all spice
Va teaspoon salt 1V4 cups rich milk, scalded 9-inch pie shell unbaked. Combine sugar, spices, salt and pumpkin. Add molasses,
orange juice, eggs and hot
mUk. Pour into pie sheU. Bake
in a hot oven (425 degrees) 10 minutes, then in a moderate oven (325 degrees to 350 degrees) 30 to 40 minutes.
TOPPING
V< cup butter 1 cup pecans 1 cup brown sugar
CtmtbineaU ingredients and
spread over top of pie. Place under broUer flame or return to oven about 5 minutes to glaze top. Serve slightly
warm or cold.PUMPKIN CAKE
'/i cup butter Ml cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar2 eggs, weU tieaten V* cup pumpkin2 tablespoons maple syrup
2 cups cake flour V* teaspoon soda3 teaspoons baking powder V4 teaspoon salt
cup sour milk
Two-thirds cup nut meats,
chopped and floured Cream butter and sugar thoroughly, add eggs, pumpkin and syrup. Mix
thoroughly. Sift dry ingredients together three times. AU alternately with mUk. Add nut meats. Bake in buttered pan (8x12x2) hi a moderate oven (350 degrees) 30 to 40 minutes.It wiU soon be time for fresh
pumpkins! Lets make use of
them!Suzanne
Gospel Singing
At Pleasant View
Gospel Singing wiu be held
at Pleasant View Baptist
Church, Sunday October 1, beginning at 7 p.m. Guest musicians wUl be The Gospel (Quartet and Roger Belvins.The church is located on
highway 901, 5 mUes east of
Harmony.
Everyone is welcome.
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Underpass Road (off Hwy. 801)
Advance.: Phone 9984174
Thai '.S' u'luni she ccinu’
ai ni(\ icattlcs flying,
irings /1аррпщ.
]Vfy first nest
T
^ h e eggs w e re .still w a rm . F e lt just lik e a
p illo w th a t’s b e e n slept o n a ll n ig h t. I
.p ic k e d th e last o n e u p a n d g in g e rly p lac e d
it in th e b a sk e t. T h a t’s w h e n she c a m e at m e ,
w a ttle s fly in g , w in g s fla p p in g . C ha.sed m e o u t of
th e h e n h o u se a n d rig h t in to th e a rm s o f m y
g ra n d p a .
“ O r M a b e l get y a ? B et y o u a c c id e n ta lly
too k h e r nest e g g l’
H e p o k e d in to th e b a sk e t a n d d re w o u t a n
egg. “T h is o n e h e re , .see? It’s c h in a . P u t it in th e re
ju st fo r M a b e l. L ittle s o m e th in g o f h e r o w n .so
sh e ’s n o t sittin g th e re a ll a lo n e . M ig h ty c o m fo rtin ’
to a h e n , boy. N e st eg g c a n b e m ig h ty c o m fo rtin ’
to so m e fo lk s, too!’
L a te r th a t day. G r a n d p a g a v e m e m y first
S av in g s B o n d . S a id h e ’d p la n n e d to g iv e m e a
le c tu re a b o u t sav in g , b u t O l’ M a b e l h a d d o n e it
a ll fo r h im . T old m e th a t th e B o n d w as m y start
o n a p e rso nal nest egg. A little so m e th in g stashed
a\\ av’ to k e e p m e g o in g .
E v e ry y e ar a fte r that, G r a n d p a g a v e m e
a n o th e r B o n d . A n d ev e ry time I got a c h a n c e , I
a d d e d a B o n d o f m y o u t i to th e ¡)ile. T hose
B o n d s g re w u p rig h t a lo n g w ith m e.
T oday, I ru n o n e o f th e biggest ran ch e s in :
th e S o u th w e st. A n d y o u k n o w h o w it a ll got
s ta rte d ? F ro m a little bitty nest egg. Gue.ss I o w e
a lot to G r a n d p a . A n d O l’ M a b e l.
Start huildinfr your ncsl c'Kfj;. Siffn up for the
Payroll Savinffs Plan at work. Or the Boml-a-Montk
Plan where you .sare. Whether you're savinff
for an education, rethement
or even a new home.
Bonds can make sure
there 's a fund in
your future.
rica.
I Th« CowMii
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 -
L a s t W ill A n d T e s t a m e n t O f
D a n ie l W e b s te r Is F ile d
By Doug Livengood
The last will and tesUment of a Davie
County man who murdered his wife,
eonfeued to the killing aiid asked to be
^ t to death for his crime, was sen
tenced to die in the gas chamber and
then committed suicide has been filed in
the Davie County Clerk of Court’s Of
fice.
- Theman, Daniel Webster, 51, of Rt.l,
Advance, murdered his wife, Gladys
Beauchamp Webster, 56, in July 1977 at
the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
M.K. Beauchamp, where Webster and
his wife Uved.
After he confessed to the murder and
Wildwood Farm Is Fined
i (continued from page 1)
measures for the effluent discharge,
'ttese included;
- “Excess water from- the chicken
oDmplexes was to be piped so as not to
come into contact with the manure and
to be discharged in such a manner as not
to flow into the adjoining tributaries of
t ^ Girl Scout .^.ake;
;--"The drainage system for the
nianure sump was to be modified to
prevent overflow;
~ - “FiU dirt was to be placed In the
l«jwer elevations immediately down-
siope from the chicken houses to
^ ^ u d e any wastewater from draining
into the Girl Scout Lake.
- “These measures were never taken.
i-"T h e Farm ceased its poultry
atlon on or before June 30, 1978,
t ever having obtained a ^rm it.
Hie discharge continued from at least
August 22, 1977 to date of closing.”
l:McRorie then stated that he was
assessing a covil penalty against
Marshall and the farm of $5,000 after
considering the following;
--"T he discharge of effluent without a
piirmlt after be^g designated animal
f$edlot operation in August 1977;
- “Prior water quality problems which
resulted in effluent being discharged
onto enighboriiv lands and into surface
waters;
- “The Inaction of the owner in
abating this discharge;
- “The disregard of the agreement
reached on March 31, 1976 by the par
ties.”
McRorle further notified Marshall
that within 30 days of receipt of the
notice of assessment uf the fine Marshall
must:
- “Submit payment of penalty to the
Dept, of Natural Resources and Com
munity Development...
- “Submit a written request for
remission or mitigation of the penalty,
including a detaUed justlflcatlon for
auch raauest: or
- “Submit a written request for a
formal ai'dminlBtratfve hearing, In-
cludingv^'^Miatement^af the apfeciflc
factuu'dr issues'in dispute.”
In addition, wrote McRorle, “A
remlsilon request Is limited to con
sideration of the reasonableness of the
penalty and is not the proper procedure
for questlcMilng the validity of the fin
dings and concludlons contained in the
Findings and Decision. Because a
remission request forecloses your option
of an administrative hearing, a
remission request must be accompanied
by either a waiver of your right to such a
hearing or stipulation that there are no
factuu issues in dispute. You or your
represenUtlve may present this type of
request to the Environmental
Management Commission. ReUef from
an adverse determination of a remission
or mitigation request Is by appeal to the
Superior Court.”
Also, McRorle informed Marshall, “If
you wish to contest any finding of fact or
conclusion of law in the attached Fin
dings and Decision, you should request
an administrative hearing. Such request
precludes a request for remission or
mitigation. As above, relief from an
adverse determination after a hearing is
by appeal to the Superior Court.”
Finally, wrote McRorle, “FaUure to
make payment or to exercise one of the
other options wUl result In this matter
being referred to the Attorney General
with a request to initiate an action to
coUect.” ___________
asked at his trial In Davie County
Superior Court last October to be put to
death, a jury returned a verdict
directing that Webster be executed.
In November, however, while
awaiting the day of his execution,
Webster took his own Ufe by slashing his
throat and arm in CeU No. 13 of Death
Row at Central Prison in Raleigh.
In a handwritten, three-page
document dated November 6, 1977, the
day of his death, and delivered to the
Warden of Central Prison, Sam
Garrison, after his death, Webster wrote
of his “final requests on this earth.”
Webster wrote that one of his final
requests was to have his court-appointed
attorney, GUbert Davis of MocksviUe,
"do as I requested earlier” and “have
me buried as close to my 'beloved wife’
as possible.”
Continued Webster, “I pray the
cemetery committee at the Bethlehem
United Methodist Church...wUl aUow me
to be buried in their church cemetery, as
this is not only my ‘beloved wife’s’
wishes, but mine also.”
He wrote that he wanted the church’s
pastor, Donald Funderburke, to preach
the funeral.
According to tiie wUl, Webster said he
did not want “any flowers, friends, or
relatives at my funeral." He added, “I
want 'Eatons Funeral Home’ of
Mocksville to please see I receive a
simple pauper’s burial, if they wiU.”
Webster’s body was actually
cremated and buried in his boyhood
hometown of Wilmington by order of one
of his sisters.
terference by his in-laws In his and his
late wife’s lives. This alleged in
terference, according to Webster,
eventuaUy led to ttie murder of his wife
and his own suicide, wrote Webster.
However, said Webster hi the wUl, "I
have asked God to forgive me of my
sins, and to also forgive my inlaws,
because I forgive them In death!”
Webster wrote tiiat he beUeved the
deatti penalty should be abolished.
“I lied to my dear lawyer, doctors and
jurors in my case" because “I made the
jury give me a death sentence,” he
wrote. He added, "This goes to show
some future man or woman could easily
do tiie same as I did. They could
threaten the lives of tiielr jurors and Ue
to ttieir lawyers and to psychiatrists and
demand death!”
During ttie trial Webster told ttie
Jurors ttiat if ttiey did not kill him he
would kUl ttiem if he ever had the op
portunity.
In ttie wiU Webster said that Warden
Garrison "can give my personal effects
to some inmate in there.” He
bequeattied "aU ttie money” in his
prison trust fund to what he said was his
"dear friend and attorney, Mr. GUbert
Davis Jr.”
In a final account statement, fUed "'“'
Sept. 14 by Davis with the Clerk of
Court’s Office, Davis wrote "After in
vesUgation, I find no assets in (Web
ster’s) above mentioned estate except
$200.88 ttiat was turned into ttie Clerir's
office by ttie Department of Correc-
tton...This being the only assets, I
hereby relinquish all ri^ ts to said
estate and request ttie Clerk’s office to
disburse to the Coble’s Funeral Service
of Wilmington...ttie 1200.88 to be applied
to (ttie) outstandhig funeral bill (of
Webster).”
In ttie final hours or moments before
Local Projects Are
Recommended For Funds
(continued from page 1)
teachers to teach reading. ARC funds
totaUng $150,000 are recommended for
ttie ttiird year of tills successful program
to develop comprehensive reading
programs. During the first year of the
project, over 3,000 teachers and ad
ministrators participated in readiriff
staff development activities.
Hunt said the recommended in
vestment package Includes a total of
over $23.7 million from all sources,
Including state and local government,
other federal programs, foundations and
many local fund-raising drives.
he died, Webster wrote "Life wltiiout my
adorable wife, who is in her grave, is
unbearable for me.”
He continued by saying, “Some wUl
say I took a coward’s way out! WeU,
cowards do not take tiieir own life.
Doctors swear I ’m a sane man, but who
knows between being sane and insane?
Jesus knows! I have said I was not
afraid to die in the courtroom! The
greatest decision Daniel Webster wiU
make in his life on eartii is his own ac-
counUbUlty to God almighty! Once
again, my wife was a sweet humble
woman. I love<< her. I hope (n see her and
her mom and dad in Heaven!”
The wlU was signed as toUows:
Daniel, Webs ter
Death row
c:eU no. 13
Central Prison
Webster appended a postscript to the
wUl when he wrote “P.S. Don’t pray for
me. I have an open direct line to God
almighty.”
At tiie top of the flrst page of tiie
handwritten wUl Webster had written
“Memo; To Associated Press, Raleigh,
N.C.,” indicating he wanted the will
released to a major news medium at his
deatti.
But in the Webster fUe in the Clerk of
Court’s Office at tiie Davie County
Courtiiouse is a letter dated November
7,1977, the day after Webster's death, to
ttie Clerk of Court from David M. Black-
weU, senior administrative assistant for
ttie Oept. of Correction, stating that
Webster’s wiU was enclosed and tiie
Dept, of Correction "does not Intend to
transmit this paper writing to the
Associated Press.”
BlackweU’s letter furtiier stated tiiat
ttie department "has not disclosed the
contents of this document to any news
media representative” and "It does not
bitend to do so in the future.”
Vehicles Collide On US 64
Two vehicles coUided last Friday
about 7 p.m. on U.S. 64,6.5 miles east of
MocksvUle.
Involved was a 1972 Chevrolet
operated by Judy Fravel Barr, 25, of Rt.
3 Advance and a 1972 Plymouth operated
by AUce Oicelda MUam, of Lexington,
Va.
State Highway Patrolman L.W.
Bjorklund said his investigation showed
ttiat the Barr vehicle was attempting to
make a left tum from N.C. 801 onto U.S.
64. However, the MUam vehicle was
approaching from the east, swerved and
struck tiie Barr vehicle in the left side
ind came to rest on the shoulder.
Damage to ttie Barr vehicle was
estimated at $1,000 and $ m to ttie
MUam vehicle.
String Quartet Tp Play
Four young musicians fron New
York, Oklahoma, Texas and
Mlimesota, all recent graudates of
Ihe North Carolina School of Arts,
will bring area muiic lovers an
unusual opportunity to hear live
some of the great Uterature for
stringed Instruments.
Paul Hatton and Teresa Fream,
violins. Van Hodge, Viola, and
Robert Madura, VlolonceUo make
up the quartet, which will perform
two four-movementworks: The
Quartet K.58B in B Flat by
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and the
Quartet Opus 67 by Johannes
Brahms.
Known as the Arioso Quarter,
they have played extensively in the
schools ot Catawba County, where
they have been under the aspices
of the Third Century Artist
Program during the past year.
The concert Is scheduled for 3
p.m. Sunday, October 1 at the
Davie County Library, and Is open
lo the public free of charge.
R e la x in g '
Roy Templeton of near Union Grove could think of no better way than to spend гаЬог Day №an relaxing on the river bank at Cooleemee Junction with his favorite fishing pole. (Photo by Jim Barringer)
Town Votes For Splitting PTCOG
By Doug Livengood
At a speclaUy caUed meeting last
week, which only lasted about 5 minutes,
the Mocksville town board voted
unanimously to johi in the movement to
have the Piedmont Triad CouncU of
Governments (PTCOG) spUt into two
regions.
The board adopted a resolution, to be
sent to Governor Hunt, petitioning the
governor to splU the PTCOG.
The resolution stated that tiie town
board “beUeves tiiat tiie best interest of
MocksvUle would be served by mem
bership in a regional planning group
which included the following
municipalities: Forsyth, Surry, Stokes,
Yadkin and Davie, and tiie cities and
towns therein.”
The resolution also pledged the town
of MocksvUle to join such a regional
planning group if the governor creates
ttie new planning region suggested hi the
resolution.
The Davie County board of com
missioners earlier this month
unanimously passed an identical
resolution caUing on the governor to
spUt the PTCOG and pledging tiiat
Davie County would jota ttie same new
planning group if the governor created
U.
Indeed, in passing the resolution last
week, one town commissioner, Patricia
Latta, remarked that the town board
“could do nothing else” but vote to have
ttie PTCOG spUt because “tiie Davie
County commissioners have indicated
that we (the town of MocksviUe) would
be Isolated, so to speak” if the town
board did not vote to support the
movement to spUt the PTCOG.
In recent weeks, the governing boards
of not only MocksvUle and Davie County
have asked the governor to split the
PTCOG, but also of Yadkin, Surry and
Squid
Large schools of squid sometimes
leave tiie open sea to spawn in waters
along rocky coasts, anchoring tiieir 7-
inch-Iong egg cases to roclcs or seaweed.
Each case contains several hundred
eggs and sometimes the cases blanket
half a mile of seafloor, reveals the
National Georgraphlc Society’s new
book, “The Ocean Realm.”
Stokes counties and many of the towns
wltiUn tiiese counUes have made ttie
same request and pledge that they
would join a new planning region if one
is formed by the governor.
MocksviUe, along with the counties of
Davie, Forsyth, Davidson, Surry,
Guilford, Rockingham, Caswell,
Alamance and Randolph and most of tiie
towns and.cities within these counties,
are presenUy dues paying members of
ttie PTCOG.
The PTCOG is a reÿonal plannbig,
administrative and consulting
organization which serves member
governments in PlamUng Region G of
ttie state.
Proponents of the spUt are attempting
to form two separate regional councils
of governments out of ttie present
Region G, wltti Davie, Forsyth, Yadkin,
S u ^ and Stokes counties and the towns
and cities wittiln these counties forming
a new western region of Region G. ’The
remaining counUes and towns hi Region
G would form a new eastem regional
councU of governments.
Those advocating spUtting Region G
have consistenUy argued that the region
is too large, with such counties as
Alamance and C^asweU in the eastern
part of ttie region having very Uttie In
common with such counties as Davie,
Surry, Forsyth and other counUes hi the
western part of the region.
These same proponents have also
frequenUy argued that many of the
programs and services offered by the
PTCOG for its member governments
are geared toward benefithig larger
munlcipaUUes, such as Winston-Salem
and Greensboro, at ttie expense of ttie
smaller municipalities within the
Democrats To Meet
The Davie County Democratic
Executive committee wiU meet Mon
day, (October 2, at 7 p.m. at tiie
democratic headquarters.
Plans wUl be finalized at tills meeting
for ttie BUI Hefner RaUy, which wUl be
held October 9tti at ttie Shady Grove
School. Tlcketo can be obtained through
precbict officers and at the headquar
ters.
The pubUc is invited to attend this
meethig. _
region.
In addition to MocksvUle Mayor R. C.
Smith, ttie only other town officials
attending last week’s board meethig
were town commissioners “Buster”
Cleary, Bob HaU and Pat Latta, with
commissioners (}ene Seats and Joe
Murphy being absent.
When ttie town board earlier ttiis
montti discussed ttie posslbUity of voting
to spUt tiie PTCOG Seats had expressed
his desire not to vote on a split at ttiat
time because he feared reprisals from
ttie PTCOG by attempting to block an
addition to tiie Lynn Haven Nursing
Home of which he is the administrator.
Murphy, on the other hand, had raised
questions about whether or not
MocksvUle and Davie County would be
served as weU by ttie proposed new
western region as it might be by a region
including Rowan and IredeU counties.
In related developments during recent
ttie 'ch a h ro ^ rf *tte Forsytti County
board of commissioners, Fred Hauser,
and the mayor of Winston-Salem, Wayne
(}orpening, pubUcly voted at recent
meetings of the PTCOG to keep the
PTCOG unified.
It has been widely speculated sbice
ttie issue of spUtting ttie PTCOG arose
several months ago that the governor
would be reluctant to spUt ttie present
Region G and divide ttie PTCOG unless
Forsytti County and Winston-Salem
were hi favor cl the split.
VéhiclesColiideOnNCSOl
Two vehicles were hivolved In a wreck
Friday about 4:40 p.m. on N.C. 801, 4
mUes south of MocksvUle.
Involved was a 1974 Chevrolet pickup
operated by David Lhiwood Harris, 34,
of 8 Marginal Street, Cooleemee and a
1963 Chevrolet operated by Lawrence
CleUand MUler, 62, of 25 Watt St.,
Cooleemee.
State Highway Patrolman A.C. Stokes
said his investigation showed ttui
Harris was backing from a private drive
and faUed to see'the MUler vehicle,
backhig partiaUy hito the side of it.
Damage to the pickup was estimated
at poo and $675 to ttie car. Harris was
charged with a safe movement
violation.
Ribeye Roast
A ribeye roast is the meaty, boneless
heart of the beef standing rib roast. It
has an exceUent flavor and is superbly
tender in the higher grades.
Blackwood Reunion
To Be Held Sunday
'T h e annual Blackwood
reunion wUl be held Sunday,
October 1 , at tiie Ridenhour
Arbor on Center Sti-eet Ext.
Cooleemee. AU friends and
relatives are cordiaUy invited.
A picnic luncheon wUl be served at i p.m.
DAVIE COUNTY DEMOCRATIC EXECUTIVE С0ММ1Ш Е
Congressman
Bill Hefner
8 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Save on
fte d
FRESH Y O U N GFRYER QUART
1 2 0 Z . P K G .
JESSE JO N E S SLICED
BOLOGNA
8 0 Z .P K G .
$ J 1 9
JESSE JO N E S PURE PO R K
SAUSAGE
$ 1 3 9
UB.
A R M O U R 'S „ . « I t t O A f
LUNCH MEATS
6 0 Z .P K G .
6 9 "
GROUND BEEF^
9 9 "
C R ISP FR Y IN G HOLLY RID G E
BACON 5 , 3
J O L D F A S H IO N M ED IU M S H A R P H O O P
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$ 1 5 9
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PEANUT BUHER
1802. Glass ^ 1® ’
★ Save 10'
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LB.
KELLOGG'S FRESH CRISP
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if Save 50*
if SAVE 10
Mueller’s Regular or Thin
SPAGHEni
HIDRIITowels
CUT RITE
★ Save 10'
,20 oz. P
iMaxwellcof
WAX PAPER
« M í V A L U A B L E C O U P O N .........‘„ ..v
U M B
R
22 F L . O Z. SIZ
E X T R AIS&H Green Stampsj
with this Coupon and Purchase of
One $9.95 or More Food Order
NOTE: Limit of one Food Bonui Coupon with each order 1 1
Good Onljr^at Heffner’s through 11
% 9
SAVE 38c
WITH THIS COUPON
PItCIwilHOUt
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100 FOOT ROLL
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DYNAMO
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H October 4.1978 J i r m - M U . 'i i f.M . w ■ m i j t t ^
D l l e Z I ^ ^ Y S ^
W“ 1 SAVE 1
H E F F N E R 'S P R I C n
Mrs. Filbert’s
Imitation Mayonnaise Quart 85^14*
pel Monte
Tomato Catsup » 2 oz. Bottie 7?2 0 *
Assorted Flavors
Sego Diet Drink loo^ can«3/‘l 41*
Quaker
Quick Grits 5 Lb. Bag 89*28‘
Baker's
Chocolate Chips i 2o*.pkg.99*34*
Armour’s
Treet 99‘20^
Daytime Pampers
Disposable Diapers so coum ’2.49
Overnight PampersDisposable Diapers i 2 Count ’Ù 5 6*
Johnson's Toddlers
Disposable Diapers *1.89 2 0 *
Johnson’s Overnight
Disposable Diapers ’2.65 2^
L A N D , O F F O O D
'illOHT TO RESERVE NONE SOLD TO'
q u a n titie s \ DEALERS
Johnson^s Daytime
Disposable Diapers 24 count ’2.49 2 0 ‘
Johnson’s Newborn
Disposable Diapers 24Co„nt ’1.89 2 0 *
$ « 0 9
I
*
I
OGGI
SU N K IST -FU L L O F JU IC E LA RGE I
l | KRAFT’S DELUXE
1 MACARONI DINNERS
1 Æiifi
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - 9
★ SAVE 20*
SEALTEST
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CHICKEN OF THE SEA
OYSTER STEW“
★ SAVE 12*
YOUR FAVORITE FLAVORS
Hl-C DRINKS
46 0Z.CAN
★ SAVE12‘
ARMOUR’S
POTTED MEAT
30Z.CANS
★ SAVE 13’5
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4 9 «12 OZ. SIZE
ir SAVE 10*»
I
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I
PET RITZ FROZEN CHOCOLATE
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2 LB. BAG
■k SAVE 14*
, ^ 2 Lb. Can№E *K 29
Save 60* ^iPURINA'S CAT CHOW
CAT FOOD
5 LB. BAG
$ 45 9
★ SAVE 20
DIXIE XTAL lOX
POWDERED SUGAR
7 9 ’
★ SAVE 16*
^ iM A X W E M ;^ U SE
IN ^ N T COFFEE
$10 OZ. JAR
★ SAVE 50*
PURINA DOG CHOW
^ D O G F O O D «
25 LB. BAG
★ SAVE 4.00
lofa! Sl ‘.yf}ping" V jioo
3 ,»\t 1 Nu Liiini Sp
2 V'l.iahlr Im
SI:,...,
• ** * 'y n..------ L)..
vM
1 Nu Liiini SpL"
2 V '!i,ahlr Tm()
Sia "i",
3 D'S.'M-I' ^^rir
HSFPNER'S PRiCÉS
snaBta Assorted Flavors
Canned Drinks 12 oz. can
(THAM'S CHUNK
IGFOOD $
25 LB.BAG
★ SAVE 40*
CHATHAM’S CHAMP
lOG FOOD
50 LB. BAG
★ SAVE 50*
¡Assorted Flavors
hastaPrinlB a-*«»-"«"".
Red-Very Berry-Grape-Orange-
Hawaiian Punch si*e
Lo-Cal Red
Hawaiian Punch 46 Oz, Size
Lipton's
Family Tea Bags 24 Count
Lipton's
Instant Tea 3 Oz. Size
DiKount
Price
6/»l“
39*
59*
59*
’L33
U.89
YOU
SAVE:
H EFFN ER'S LAN D OF FOOD COUPON
WITH THIS COUPON WHEN YOU BUY
M B THE 1 POUND CAN OFSAVE s a n K a
^ A D E C A F F E IN A T E Dm ■ V C O F F E E
■ i f AT H E F F N E R 'S______
1 LB. CAN ONLY
With Coupon $2.89
Without Coupon $3.29
ONE COUPON PFB PURCHASE • OFFER EXPIRES. Sept. 30. 1978
16*
12*
1 2
46'
50*
PreainCoffee Creamer i6 0z.Bottie
Armour’s
Sliced Dry Beef ^
'"?oirW eve*W Iin^'"j8Sortei^oI^^
Bathroom Tissue 2RoiiPack
Fantastic Cleaner 64 Oz. Size
Fresh StartlaundnfDeterge^^TàümIrÿTïêtêrgèiü"***"*""*"*
C lO r O X ll lüO O z.S lze
»1.49
49'
*1.59
*1.99
*2.27
16'
30'
60'
42'RIGHT TO RESERVE
QUANTITIES
10 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
T w o -Y e a r -O ld O n T ra m p o lin e
Little two-year-old Christopher Jordan is no small-fry when J work-out on the tranpoline. In the above phofaM, Cnrlslophi ^trates^th^lt^ow i^ljjJJyj|m *yjgJ^Joo^ounce^R^
when it comes a ler demon- down and
wrings back to his feet. Christopher is the' son of Mr. and Mrs. Denny Jordan of Raleigh, formerly of Cooleemee. (Photo by Jim Bairlnger).
local Students To See Theatre Group
Students attending Mocksville Middle
School in Davie County Schools will have
the rare opportunity Septemi)er 29th to
.see alive theatrical performance en
titled “Purrzazz.” The production is
Iw s^ on the “Merrie Mdodies” car
toons of the SO’s and 40’s.
Performers from the Southern
Education Theater will present the one-
hour production which features four
cartoon cats, Ai, Patty, Fedddy,
Purmelope and FX, a misguided sound
effects man. The five l>and together
after learning they are to !>« retired
from show business and therefore
discarded. They try to sell themselves
as an act but have no success. The play
ends happily however, when they act as
their true sdves and are accepted by the
producer.
The comedy features two comedy
^pes: slapstick and satire. Students
will also see examples of pun, paradox,
epigram and irony.
The ]presentation is made possible
through the Department of Public In
struction’s Edwin Gill Theater Project.
The project grew out of the late State
Treasurer and State Board of Education
member’s interest in the theater arts.
According to Jim Hall, director of the
state education agency’s Division of
Cultural Arts, the live performances
provide valuable learning experiences
as well as entertainment. “For some
students this will be their first contact
with a live theater performance,’’ noted
HaU.
Special Registration
At Smith Grove
Registrars of the Smith Grove
and Farmington precbicts will be
at the Smith Grove Fire Depart
ment on Saturday, September 30th,
10 a.m. to 12 noon, lo.register or
make precinct changes in
preparation tor the general
election.
Noise Level
Most persons consider their residence
a safe place, but, warns the Beltone
Crusade for Hearing Conservation, the
noise level found in a home kitchen can
sometimes be as intense as that en
countered on a busy street corner.
Ricky Sparks Taking Part
In NATO Excerises
Senior Airman Ricky D. Sparks, son of
Mrs. Nancy S. Bowies of Rt. S,
Mocksville, N.C., is taking part in
"Crested Cap ’78,” a North AUanUc
Treaty Organization (NATO) exercise
conducted in (lermany.
Ah*man Sparks is an aircrew egress
systems repairman at Seymour Johnson.
AFB, N.C., with the 4th Tactical Fighter
Wing.
More than 800 personnel and 48 F-4
fighter sircraft were deployed from
Seymour Johnson in support of this
exercise which is aimed at enhancing
our ability to rapidly reinforce NATO.
’The airman is a 1975 graduate of
Davie County High School.
Letters To Editor
Dear Editor;
To the citizens of (^leemee, I need
your support. It concerns the large dogs
running around loose. In my area it is a
large German Sheperd about a year old
and an Irish Setter. They come into my
yard, tear up my trash, scare my
childi«n and chase chiidnn who are
riding bicycles. If the owwners won’t
show anymore understanding than to let
these dogs run free, then I hope the good
citizens of Cooleemee will act. Some will
say that their dogs aren’t dangerous.
The dogs I have had weren’t dangerous
to me either. If your child was riding his
bike and was chased by a dog, how
would you feel.
I have lived in a lot of places but the
people here are the best. Most of the
people ttiat I have met seem to l>e ex;
ceptionaly friendly and really seem to
care. Please think more of your com- *
munity than to just let things go and
hope tiiat they don’t happen to touch"
your lives. “
Thank you,' ^
Mr. R. N. Combk
Cooleemee
Brown Sugar ^
Brown Sugar not only imparts its i»wn
distinctive flavor to bakery products but
it helps to keep them moist.
Alcohol Information Report
By:W IL U A M F. W EANT,M.S.
ALCOHOLISM EDUCATION CONSULTANT
Teenage Alcohol Con
sumption - The teenager does
not invent tbe idea of
drinking: he learns it. His
drinktaig behavior, in part, is
patterned after that of
prestigious adults in the
community, including his
parents. ’The patterns and
social context of drinking by
adolescents reflects the
patterns and social context of
drinking among adults.
Communities and schools
are becoming increasingly
concerned in light of moun
ting reports of adolescent
drinking and resulting in
toxication. This is perhaps
one of the strongest
arguments for schools to
provide effective alcohol
education. Generalizations
often implicate the entire
teenage population, but those
involved in frequent and
excessive drinking behavior
may represent only a
minority.
The proportion of teenage
Farmington
News
The (lueen Bee Class of
Farm ington M ethodist
Church met at the home of
Mrs. W.L. Brock with Mrs.
Danny Smith as co-hostess for
their September meeting.
Circle No. 1 of the U.M.W.
were their invited guests.
There were about 14 members
present, including both cir
cles. Mrs. Charles Lashley
gave inspiring devotions,
closing with prayer. The
business session was then
held, after which refresh
ments were served by the
hostesses.
Anyone who would like to
work on the U.M.W. auilt U
invited to come to the old
bomeplace of Mrs. Lizzie
W illiams on Monday
evenings. Remember winter
is just around the corner. .
Miss Nancy Ellis, a student
of Brevard College spent the
weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Gilmer EUis.
Mrs. HatUe Wood visited
her parents Mr. and Mrs.
John Freeman Sunday tiie nth near KemersviUe.
A very beautiful wedding
was held Sunday aftemoon,
September 34 at Farmington
United Methodist Church,
when M iu Angela Shoaf of
Stokesdale and Edwin Spach
of Farmington were united in
holy roatnmony. The church
was filled to overflowing with
the many guests, friends and
oelgbborB who gathered for
this occasion. Ilie reception
immediately followed tbe
ceremony in tbe Masonic
Lodge HaU.
I ^ s e caU W8-SS49 for any
items you have to contribute
to (he Farmington News. It
wiU be greatly appreciatod.
users varies among com
munities and even within a
single community. In some
places, a' majority ' ot
teenagers wiU be users; in
others, only a smaU mbiority.
An indication of possible
teenage drinking Is the
drinking behavior of that
adult population which
provides the models for
drinking behavior.
Surveys show that the in
cidence of users increases
with age. Use is greater
among males than females.
Young people who Uve in
urban areas are more apt to
be users than those living in
rural areas. Students at
socioeconomic extremes, high
and low, tend to be drinkers.
Drinking of alcoholic
beverages can be dangerous
to individuals of any age.
Intoxication of young people
can be especiaUy dangerous.
Since alcohol’s effects are
related to body weight, a
smaU amount of alcohol is aU
that is needed to cause
pronounced effects in young
people.
Psychological intoxication
often occurs even more
readily than physical in
toxication in the young. In this
condition, people may do
fooUsh or reckless things,
endangering the safety of
themselves or others. Poor
judgment and the neglect of
moral standards are very apt
to occur as a result of this
state of being.
Parents and schools aUke
have an obUgatlon to foster a
healthy, realistic approach
toward helping the teenager
to understand the effects of
alcohoUc beverages and to
guide the youngster in making
an inteUigent decision about
the use of alcohol. Attempts to
impose adult standards on
teenage situations may very
Ukely result in rebeUion and
distrust. Teenagers are trying
to leam student feUowship
and how to be independent
without losing adult security.
(This is the forty-eigth
article in a series about
"alcohol” provided by BUI
Weant, alcoboUsm education
consultant with the Tri-
County Mental Health
Complex. These articles are
designed to create un-
' ut sensible
abuse, and
society. If
you have a question con
cerning alcohol that you
would w e answered in a
future column, phone 634-
2195.)
‘Any man who takes
risks wMi his пюпеу
has alot more guts 4ian I do.”
In iV ri/v?c о lr»l* cmf-c A riam r»tnim fn v o iir inVi>RfTnpnf W lfh
1*^
In today's economy, it does take a lot of guts
to gamble with your money. Unless you've got
money to bum. Which most of us don't. It's hard
enougi to scrape together a little “investable” cash
in the first placi.
That's what makes The Northwestern Bank's
8'year, 7’4% Certificates of Deposit so attractive.
A dam nice retum to your investment, with
absolutely no risk whatsoever.
So why take chances with your family's
future?
Bring your investment dollars down to The
Northwestern Bank, and turn them into high-yield,
low 'risk Certificates of Deposit.
C E R T IF IC A T E S O F D E P O S IT
IN T E R E S T R A T E M IN IM U M D E P O S IT M A T U R IT Y
7 ’/4%$1.000 4-years
7Ш SI.ООО e-years
7»/4%$1.000 S-veers
The gresttit rsliabis sgs reported for s monkey it s i^ t 46 ysart for a male mandrill tiaboon named "Qeorgs."
Substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
NORmWESTERNBAMK4U
Mntifair FDiC. Deposits ituumi to $40,000
<19
г
lural Elderly Need More Contacts
;With People To Ease Loneliness
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - IJ
“For older people, to be in poor
‘ health meani they are frequently
isolated from others and don't feel
> like getting out into groups of other
people. As a result, they become
.'more withdrawn. And this tends to
increase their physical problems.
^ It gets to be s vicious circle." -Dr.
•s. VIra Kivett, assistant professor of
‘ family relations in UNC-G School
' ;of Home Economics.
Trapped by invisible bonds of
loneliness, hundreds of thousands of
America’s rural elderly have been
relegated to an empty place on the shelf
their final years.
But through the work of researchers
Uke Dr. Vlra R. Kivett at the University
of North CaroUna at Greensboro, the
ftroblems associated with frequent
oneliness are beginning to be noticed.
! As director of a recent study of
ioneUness among the rural elderly In
CasweU County, Dr. Kivett found that IS
percent of the 418 senior citizens sur
veyed, aU es years or older, admitted
t)iat loneliness was at least an oc-
■caslonal problem. Dr. Kivett conducted
Uer study in association with the N.C.
¡(Vgricultural Experiment Station and
with the assistance of UNC-G doctoral
Study Jean P. Scott, a research assistant
jwlth the N.C. Agricultural Foundation.
• , WhUe the survey was Umlted to
^sweU County, a rural locale known for
ra dependence on tobacco farming, Dr.
lUvett feeb that Uie study’s findings
have application far beyond Uie county’s
«orders. Due to the demographic
^aracterlsUcs of those surveyed in
6asweU, the findings can be viewed as
fairly typical in rural, bypassed counUes
statewide.
A recent naUonal survey revealed that
loneUness Is not a problem taken UghUy
by older Americans. Among the 12 most
s^ious dUemmas facing the elderly
today, loneUness ranked fourth, behind
only fear of crime, poor health, and
inadequate income.
Is Uiere any possible means of
aUeviaUng the problem of loneliness
among the rural elderly?
• ‘.'.There are meUiods and strategies
that can be used that would Intervene In
this process of loneUness,” said Dr.
Kivett, an assistant professor of family .
relaUons at UNC-G. “But Uiere have
bwn few efforts put forth to prevent it.”
Many rural counUes, plagued by
tradlUonal problems associated with
poverty and limited economic
development, have been unable or
unwilling to provide even minimal
outreach services for Uie elderly.
: As relaUonships end for older adults
ttu-ough physical infirmity and deaUi,
there is a greater need for the services
of families, churches, community
neighbors, and friends.
reassurance programs as
well as daily personal visitaUon can help break Uie isolaUon so often experienced by Uie elderly. Dr. Kivett suggested.Perhaps Uie most acute problems of loneUness among Uie elderly occur foUowing Uie deaUi of a spouse. And ttiis seems especially severe for women.“We know In our socles there are very few role models for older women,” said Dr. Kivett. “Women don’t know
what to expect as they go into this new
role of widowhood. And in many cases
they are very passive and find it very
difficult to reintegrate Uiemselves Into
the community.
“A wldow-to-widow approach would
seem to be an efficient way of doing
this,” she added. “A person who has
experienced a similar problem could
llteraUy wa№ Uvough new experiences
wiUi the widow. In many cases this has
been shown to be a better strategy than
those put forUi by famUy members
themselves.”
Problems associated wiUi health are
among Uie most discouraging for senior
citizens. And when older adults perceive
their health as poor, Uiere are Increased
chances for loneliness, the study
revealed.
“For older people, to be in poor health
means they are fi^uenUy isolated from
oUiers and don’t feel lUte getting out Into
groups of oUier people,” said Dr. Kivett.
“As a result, they become more with
drawn. And Uiis tends to Increase their
physical problems. It gets to be a vicious
circle.”
Among a number of potenUal health
problems, diminishing eyesight can be
one of the most severe, she noted.
“Very often, people who are
sighted also tend to withdraw
people. Their mobility is poor and they
may appear to be disoriented or con
fused,” she said. “And, in turn, people
treat Uiem as if they are confused or
avoid them."
A combination of paUence and sen
sitivity to Uie needs of ttie elderly by
famUy members is especlaUy important
when health-related problems are a
factor in loneUness, Dr. Kivett
suggested.
The avaUabUity of such visual aids as
talking books, tape recordings, and
large-print books are also of great help
to the older adult with fading vision, she
said.
Related to aU other problems of the
rural elderly studied in CasweU County
was the need for transporatUon. Half of
those surveyed depended upon others
for their transportaUon nee^. And in
most rural counties there is usuaUy a
lack of pubUc transportation, which
compounds the problem, said Dr.
Kivett.
“Many older people cannot afford
cars or the upkeep and gasoline for
cars.” she said. “Many older women in
particular never learned to drive. In
their generation, husbands usually
assumed ttie driving responsibUiUes.
“Programs for training older women
to drive in cases In which Uiey can afford
it would be one intervenUon technique.”
“But ttie real answer for tran
sportaUon for ttie elderly in rural areas
is Uie need for smaU-scale, barrier-free
vehicles that can get to Isolated areas
and can accommodate wheel chairs.
This is now being used and seems to be
the answer,” she said.
Geographical, poUtical, and economic
problems in North Carolina's rural
counUes have retarded ttie development
of social service networks, a difficulty
not encountered to Uie same degree in
more urban locales, pointed out Dr.
Kivett.
But Uie problems associated with
loneliness among ttie rural elderly are
not aU of an external nature. D p. Kivett
noted ttiat ttie senior citizens in such
situations must strive to overcome these
problems.
"M any lonely adults place the burden ■
of effort upon ottiers to relieve their
loneliness,” she wrote in a recent
publication. “The emotional symptoms
Uiat frequentiy characterize the lonely
such as fear, anger, self-pity, envy, and
distrust, serve to alienate them from
Uiose who would intervene.”
NoneUieless, Dr. Kivett feels ttiat a
greater commitment to reach Uie rural
elderly must be attempted if Uie
problems of loneliness and alienation
are to be solved._______________
"Truly absurd is the man who
never changes."
Auguste Barthelmy
G o a l Set F o r
D a v ie H ig h B a n d
M a g a z in e Sale
Alice Byers and band director, Robert Patillo pose with the chart that wUI
display daily goals attained by the county wide magazine sale to be held
September 29 through Octoiier 9. Sponsored by alt Davie County Schools
participating students hope to reach the 130,000 goal set for tliis year. A per
centage of the totai sales wiii go for the purchase of the new band uniform s for
the high school which is modeled by M iss Byers. A s a promotional effort,
Patillo has prom ised to wear the goofy glasses pictured for a week if the goal is
met. (Photo by Robin Carter) ____
Farm Market Summary For Week Of September 18-22
(Federal-state Market
News Service North Carolina
Department Of Agriculture
Division Of Marketing)
A total of 13,053 feeder pigs
were sold on 12 state graded
sales during the week of
September 18, according to
the Market News Service of
the North CaroUna Depart
ment of Agriculture. Prices
were mosUy |l to 94.50 higher.
US 1-2 pigs weighing 40-50
pounds averaged (105.18 per
hundred pounds with No. 3s
$108.37; 50-6D pound l-2s
averaged «96.89, No. 3s «91.07;
60-70 pound l-2s 188.66, No. 3s
«78.91; 7040 pound l-2s «83.13
per hundred pounds with No.
3s «74.24.
At weekly Uvestock auc
tions held within the state the
week of September 18. Prices
for slaughter cows were 50
lower, veal calves higher, and
feeder calves irregular.
Utility and commercial
slau^ter cows brought «36 to
«43.50 per hundred pounds,
Good veal calves «60 to «69;
Choice slaughter steers above
800 pounds «53.50 to «55.30 at
one market; Good slaughter
heifers above 700 pounds «44
to «48.50; Good feeder steers
300-600 pounds «55. to «71 and
Good feeder heifers 300-500
pounds «50 to «59.50, feeder
cows «33 to «43 per hundred
pounds. Baby calves brought
«20 to «85 per head. Market
hogs brou^t mosUy «47.70 to
«51.20 and sows 300-600 pounds
«40 to «45.80 per hundred
weight.
Com prices were irregular
and soybeans 12 to 20 cents
per bushel higher ttu-ough
Thursday, September 21
compared to the same period
of ttie previous week. No. 2
yeUow sheUed com ranged
mostty «2.07 to «2.20 in ttie
Eastem part of the state and
«2.06 to «2.29 in ttie Piedmont.
No. I yeUow soybeans rangedmn«»lv tu «0 tn M '' ■-
East and «6.65 to «6.89 in ttie
Piedmont; No. 2 red winter
wheat «2.85 to «3.38; No. 2 red
oats «1.10 to «1.15; and MUo
«2.80 to «3. New crip prices
quoted for harvest deUvery
soybeans «6.18 to «6.60.
Egg prices for the week
ending Sqitember 21 were
lower on large, higher on
mediums and steady on
smaUs to ttiose of ttie previous
week. Supplies were
moderate. Demand was good.
The Nortti CaroUna weighed
average price quoted on
September 22 for smaU lot
sales of cartoned grade A
eggs deUvered to stores was
Large, Medium 59.86 and
SmaUs 39.09.
The BroUer-Fryers market
is sUghtty higher witti con-
dlttons firm for next week's
trending. Supplies are
moderate with some plants
short. Demand is good. The
North Carolina dock weighed
average price is 41.43 cents
per pound for less than
truckloads picked up at
processing plants during the
week of September 25. This
week 7.1 million birds were
processed in North CaroUna
with an average live bird
weight of 4.03 pounds per bird
on September 20.
Heavy type hens were
higher this past week and
trending higher for next week.
SuppUes were adequate and
demand good. Heavy type hen
prices 21 cents per pound at
the farm wiUi buyers loading.
For the penoa septembei^
18-22 gross tobacco sales on
ttie South CaroUna and Border
Nortti CaroUna Belt totaled
19.4 million pounds and
averaged «144.27 per hun
dred; Eastern Belt 32.3
miUion pounds and averaged
«105.78; Old and Middle Belt
28.4 mlUion pounds were sold
for an average of «141 per
hundred. For ttie period Uie
Stabilization Corporation
received .9 percent on ttie
Border Belt, .8 percent on the
Eastem Belt and 2.8 percent
on ttie Old and Middle Belt.
Market hogs at daUy cash
buying stations about the
state sold 50 higher during
week of September 18.and
ranged mostly «47.50 to «51.50
oer hundred pounds.
"Exuberance is b e a u ty."
William Blake
W E L C O M E
T O THE
^C H EVR O LET Л
1 9 7 9 S H O W I N G
BEOINNING THURDA Y SEPTEMBER 2STH
Two Years Ahead Of Our Cotnpetitors In Foresight, Styling, Engineering & Economy
Y o u are invitf-d to set the p ace in v o u r n eig h b o rh o o d b v b e in g the first to o w n one
REFRESHMENTS
t FAVORS
SPECIAL CLOSEOUT ON ALL 1978 MODELS & DEMO'S
HURRY, HURRYi!
GET YOURS WHILE WE STILL HAVE A GOOD SELECTION THEY ARE GOING FAST
“ W e T ra d e T o T ra d e A g a in ”
P E N N IN G T O N C H E V R O L E T C O ., IN C .634-2745
308 Wilkesboro 789 Mocksville -
N o v a C u s t o m BLAZER C api-ictt L a n d a u E L C A M I N O
12 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
MRS. EDWIN LEE SPACH
..... was Myrtle Angela Shoaf
S h o q f-S p a c h V o w s A r e S p o k e n S u n d a y
ureeiUDoro, iTumpeier.
Escorted to the altar and givei
marriage by her father, the bride '
attired in a formal'gown of white i
. Myrtle Angela Shoaf and Edwin Lee
Spach were united In marriage on
Sunday, September 24, at 3:00 p.m. hi
the Farm ington United Methodist
Church, Fan^ngton, N.C.
The bride is th^ daughter of the Rev.
and Mrs. Fred C. Shoaf of Stokesdale,
N.C. Formerly of Farmhigton. The
bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sanford C. Spach of Farmhigton.
Offlclathig the formal double
ceremony was the Rev. Fred C. S
father of the bride and Rev. James E.
aoer, mfaiister of the church.
A program of Classical music was
presented by Thnothy Shoaf, brother of
the bride, organist and Pierre Debs of
Greensboro, Trumpeter.
■ [Iven in
I was
I gown of wmte sata
peau satin designed with a high necklhie
Qf alencon lace, sheer yoke, and long
Ihce appllqued fitted sleeves. The em-
ph« bodice had an overlay of reem
broidered alencon lace, embeUished
with seed pearls and crystal beads. The
sUrt that extended hito a chapel trahi
was enchanced. with motifs and an
ehiborate border of lace and pearls. Her
waltz length veil of white silk illusion
had a double row of seed pearls and kce
appliques secured to a lace covered
Jtuiet cap. She carried a cascade of
yellow roses and gypsophiUa, accented
with greenery.
Attendhig the bride as niaid of honor
was Miss Jayne WUUams of Durham.
Bridemaids were Karen Shoaf, of
Lexington, coushi of Uie bride; Sonya
Spach of Winston-Salem, neice of the
bridegroom; Ruth Hartman and Nancy
EUis both of Farmhigton, and K aA y
Foster of ModuvUle. They wore full
length gowns of maize knit with a Venice
Uce yoke. The cape of maize chiffon was
trianve shape with a high neckUne.
They each carried a long stemmed
yeUow rose witti streamers.
Jennifer Long of Welcome, the flower
ghl wore a yeUow gown with a white
organdy phiafore and carried a white
basket flUed with yeUow rose pedals.
Ring bearer was Matthew SpUlman of
Farmington.
The bridegrooms fattier attended him
as beet num.
Groomsmen were Richard Shoaf of
Stokesdale, brother of ttie bride; Wade
^ c h of Whiston-Salem, Dwight Spach,
n a n k Spach, and Terry Spach brottiers
of ttie bridegroom, aU of Farmhigton.
Acolytes were Steve Spach and Max
Spach of Whiston-Salem, nephews of the
bridegroom.
Guest were registered by Mrs. Wade
Spach of Wbistmi-Salem.
The weddhig was dhvcted by BIrs.
Robert Oakley of Lexhigton and M iu
GaU Motsinger of Greensboro.
The bride is a 1977 graduate of Davie
High School hi MocksvUle and attended
Greensboro CoUege, Greensboro, N.C.
Mr. Spach is a 1973 graduate of
Parkland Senior High School, Whiston-
Salem and a 1977 graduate of N.C. State
University, Raleigh, N.C. He received a
B.8. Degree hi Industrial Enghieering.
He was a member of ttte American
bistihite of Industrial Enghieere. He is
employed u pUnt enghieer of Armtex
Inc.. M o t Mountahi,TTc.FoUowhig ttie wedding recepUon ttie left for a wedding trip to I, Virginia. Upon their iple WiU make their home in FarnUngton.
RECEPTIONRev. and Mrs. Fred C. Shoaf entertained witti a receptton, Sunday aftemoon hi ttie Farmhigton Masonic Lodge immediately following the weddhig ol ttieh’ deleter.In ttw foyer of ttw Lodge Miu LUUe Mae Motsinger, tbe bride's aunt registered ttw guesU and directed ttwm hito ttw Dhihig HaU. Tbe entrance to ttw HaU was decorated witti baskets of
Williamsburg, VirgI return the couple wiU make
Good-byes were said by Mr. and JMrs.
Foy Hege of Gastonk, N.C.
REH EA R SA L D IN N ER
Mr. and Mrs. Sanford C. Spach, ttie
bridegroom’s parents honored the
couple .witti a dhuier hi the Farmhigton
United Methodist Church FeUowship
HaU, Saturday evening. September 23,
foUowhig ttw weddhig rehearsal.
The serving table was covered with a
green Uble clotti witti a white Uce
overby, centered witti a five-branch
candelabra and an arrangement of
mhced flowers.
Tbe buffet dhiner consisted of Country
bam biscuits, potato salad, green beans
and com, devUed eggs, pldcles, sUced
tomatoes and cake squares decorated
with rose buds were served by Mrs. Don
Foster, Mrs. WUbum Long, and Mrs. Ed
Johnson.
The 40 guests were seated at tables
with a centerpiece of candles and
flowers.
The bride and groom chose ttiU oc
casion to present gifts to theb- at
tendants.Jaycettes Meet
The MocksviUe Jaycettes met
Thursday. September 21. at ttw County
Commissioiwrs Room at 7:30 p.m.
Tbe president. June Johnson
welcomed Sandi Robinson, a new
member to ttw meeting.
Devottoos were read.
The secretary and treasurer repwts
were given.
Committee chahmen reported on old
projects Tbe club projects BU B (Buckle
Up Babes) U underway witti ttw pur
chase of ten O M car seato to be rented to
ttw pubUc. Anyone hiterested hi ttwse
should contact Rosemary Court at 694-
3740, Patty Renegar at 634-3218 or anyJa^tte.— LitOe Mr. and Miu Christmas contest Is underway. Proceeds from ttils project wUl go to BUB and ottwr com- muolty servieee Tbe Jaycette* wUl attend ttw faU regional m e e ^ at Bettilehem United
It Chur« (
Leach-Pardue
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Leach of Rpule 6, Mocksvllle, announces Uie engagement of
their daughter, Wanda Gall, to David Scott Pardue, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar
Pardue of ZlonvlUe, North .Carolina.
Miss Leach Is a 1977 graduate of Davie County High School and is presently
employed with Unifl In YadkinvUle, N.C!
Mr. Pardue graduated from. Watauga High School In Boone. He is employed
with New River Builders Supply Company there.
The wedding is planned for 1 p.m. October 21, in a home ceremony at Zion-
vUle, N.C.
greenery. Rev. and Mrs. Shoaf greeted
and received the many guests. The HaU
was decorated with two candelabras
hitertwhied witti Ivy, pahns and baskets
of greenery.
A disphiy table was covered witti a
white Unen cloth and net overlay edged
witti lace where ttw Bride’s bridal doU,
Bible and a poem written to the bride by
her aunt was displayed.
The focal pohit of the dlnhig haU decor
was ttw Brides table featuring a sU-tier
weddhig cake ^ c h was decorated and
lopped witti ydldw roses. The bride’s
bouquet compUmehted the UUe. After
ttie bridal couple cut ttw traditional flrst
sUce of cake, serving was completed by
BIrs. Robert Oakley and M h» GaU
Motsfaiger.
A large centeririece of yeUow and
white mums, gypsophUla and ivy cen
tered ttw Servhig table fhinked by two
five-branch candelabra. Assisting in
servhig the ham biscuits, u u u g e baUs.
open face sandwiches, cheese wafers,
weddhig cookies, relish tray, mints and
nuts were Mrs. HoUis Motshiger and
BIrs. CWde Shoaf.
Preslung at the Punch table.BIrs;
Woodrow Long and BIrs. Wayne Shoaf
served punch from the sUver punch
bowl.
Hie tables were covered with maize
taffeta and a white Irish lace overlay.
Nosegays of yeUow and white mums
witti streamers accented ttie tables.
Musical Entertahiment was provided
by Blr, Timottiy Shoaf on the Grand
piano. .
Rice bags were destributed to ttie
its by Jennifer Long and Blatthey
A r o u n d A n d A b o u t
ANTIQUE CAR SHOW
The 4th Annual Antique Car Show at YadkinvUle Elementary School ball park
Saturday September 30,1978 from 10:00 A M to 6:00 PM. Judging to begin at 2:00
PM.This event sponsored by the Courtney Ruritan Club.
- SER V ES AS PA G E
Paul Gardner of MocksviUe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Randy Gardner, Rt. 7, Box
342 J, served as a Page in Governor Jim Hunt's offices In Raleigh the week of
Sept. 18-22. Paul is a Freshman at Davie County High School.
RETU RNS FRO M FLO RID A
Mrs. Mary WiUie (Bowles) WUson has at last returned home to MocksviUe her
пвпу relativesand friends wlU be glad to leam. She spent the past year In Florida
visitbg her two sons and Uieir famUies, The Walter Leaches of Maitland, and
the Clyde Leaches of Ft. Lauderdale. Her one daughter, Mrs. Spencer
^ainhour, lives in Forsyth County, as'does her granddaughter, her great
granddaughter and twhi great, great granddaughters. Mrs. Wilson was 88 in
AprU, a great age to reach and dohig so wdl. She is the sister of Mrs. Edna
Everhart of Fork and has many o t h ^ y ^ ^ ves andinlawsintbe county.
RET U RN FR O M \hRG IN IA VISIT
Blr. and BIrs. Clay Tutterow and son Ray have retumed from several days
visiting Nancy’s brother David G: (Red) Tutterow and family in Alexandria,
Va, “Red” suffered a severe heart attack in August but is recovering nicely.
C ELEBR A T ES 12TH BIR TH D A Y
Ray Tutterow, son of Mr. and BIrs. СЛау Tutterow, celebrated his 12Ui bir
thday on August 23 while in Alexandria, Va. He was ttie special honor guest at a
party hosted by his aunt, Mrs. Charles Pitts, and cousin, Mrs. Davena Pratt.
Also honored on this occasion were Wendy and Kim Pratt, whose birthdays are
■ October 6 and 17th respectively. And of course present was 3-monUi old “Rusty”
Pratt, Jr., brother of Wendy and Kim. Hie guests were served “Big-Macs”,
cokes, potato chips, and a specially decorated Baskln-Robbins ice cream cake.
BIrs. Pratt is ttie daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David G. Tutterow.
H o s p it a l E m p lo y e e s A t t e n d F o o d Se ssio n
Mrs. MUUe West and BIrs. Kermit
Cartner of MocksvUle, N.C. attended ttie
faU meethig of the North CaroUna
Hospital, InsUtution and Educational
Food Service Society (HIEFSS) hi
Whiston-Salem, N.C. on September 21
and 22, 1978 at ttie HoUday Inn-West.
BIrs. Kathryn' Pendergraft, H IEFSS
advisor, also attended.
■ Margie Dunn, Food Service Super
visor at ttw N.C. RehabUitation Center
for ttw BUnd hi Butner, N.C. was hi-
staUed as President; Garland Deal,
Food Service Director of the Medical
Park Nursing Center hi Mt. OUve, N.C.
was histaUed as President-Elebt; and
Nora Thomas, Food Service Dh«ctor at
Westem CaroUna Center hi Morganton,
N.C. was histaUed as secretary.
Three educational programs entitied,
“Are Vou Assertive?’’, “What Team is
Coming to Your Hospital dr Nurshig
. Home?” and "Wake Up! What Are You
Wortti?", were weU presented and were
of great value and interest to ttiose hi
attendance.
Ч '
n *l
MRS. DAVID LEE FOSTER
.... was Patricia Jeanne Latham
„-.♦I
Latham-Foster Vows Are Spoken "
_ . . . . . . . J ________„ J .. .__<'L'
H IEFSS is a national organization,
which was founded in 1960 by The
American Dietetic Association (ADA),
representing ttie Food Service Super
visor or Dietetic Assistant and Dietetic
Technichin. The objectives of H IEFSS
are “to promote education in schools,
hospitals, and ottier institutions in
nutrition practices of human beings and
in food service; to advance the science
of food service for ttie general pubUc
welfare; to improve nutrition service;
and to develop conthiuing educaUon
opportunities for its m em bers."
Members of H IEFSS are recognized by
employers as having met certain
requirements of education and ex
perience which more than meet
. requirements of federal regulations for
skUled nurshig faculties.
Biss. Pendergraft, West and Cartner
are employed by Davie County Hospital.
CheeseAll natural cheese should be served
unchllled to help bring out its distinctive
■ flavor and texture.
Patricia Jeanne Latham and David
Lee Foster were united in marriage at
two o'clock p.m. Saturday, Smtember
23, at Eutaw Heights Baptist Church in
Fayetteville, N.C. The Reverend
Lawrence O. Harper and Dr. James I
Murphy officiated at ttw double ring
ceremony.
The bride is ttie daughter of Blr. and
Mrs. James G. Lattiam of FayettevUle.
She is ttie granddaughter ot Mrs. S.R.
Latham and ttie late Blr. Lattiam. The
bride is a graduate of Terry Sanford
High School and Averett CoUege hi
DanvUle, Virginia.
The bridegroom, son of Blr. and BIrs.
Uoyd R. Foster of FayettevUle, is also a
graduate of Terry Sanford High School.
He attended Western Carolina
University and graduated from
Mettiodist CoUege hi FayettevUle. He is
employed witti Belk in Laurinburg, N.C.
Weddhig music was presented by
Robert McDuffie, organist, Mrs. Terry
C. Terry, soloist and Terry C. Terry
violist.
Escorted by her father, the bride wore
an empire gown of ivory selesta witti a
capelet trhnmed in alencon hice and a
chapel train. She wore a matching hat.
The bride carried a white Bible
covered by white and orange delight
roses. The Bible was carried by her
Mother when her parents were married.
Bliss Jo Anne Lattiam was her sister's
maid of honor. She wore a gown of
copper polyester. Other attendants were
BIrs. BreU Daniels of DanvUle, Vhrglnia
and Miss Lisa Baker of FayettevUle.
They wore dresses identical to that of
maid of honor and aU carried bouqueU
of dried and sUk flowers hi faU colors.
Best man was ttie bridegroom's
father. Ushers were Lt. Lloyd Douglas
Foster and M ark Stephen Foster,
brottiers of ttie bridegroom.
After a weddhig trip to the mountains,.
ttie couple WiU reside in Laurinburg,
N.C.
The bride’s parenU entertahwd witf
reception fahmediately foUowhig
ceremony at Green VlUey Coimtify-;^
Club. ‘ p*FoUowhig ttw weddhig rehearsal, ,
groom’s parents entertahwd the bridu
Die and weddhig party witti a dhihn.,‘‘~
mber22a(the:
VUUge
tevUle.
turant hi Fay;et-'/;',,'
Hi! I’m WUUe Elmore and I’m 3 years
old. My Mommy and Daddy (Peggy fend
Clarence) gave me a bhthday party U it
Wednesday evenfaig. Uncle Roger
brought me a red “Winnie The Poob'’ .,'*;)|
cake and we bad ice cream, potato chips ' [
and Kool-aid. A lot of my friends cam e'?. |
and brought me presents and we had a;
good time playing together.
W m . R . D a v ie F T A
T o M e e t O c t o b e r 2
The fh^t meeUng of Uie WUIiam R.
Davie P.T.A. is scheduled for Mon. Oct.
2, at 7:30 p.m. This wiU be Open House
night, and everyone is
It speaker wUl be
to attend. Rev. Larry
-----------1 October 7tti, which is■ponsored by ttw SMt Davie Jaycettes.
The
Stai
A membership drivels now underway,
and ttw suite bringing in the highest
percentage of piembers wUl be awarded
a prize. Help your suite hit Uie 100
percent mark.
Officers for ttie 1978-79 year are as
foUows; President, Barbara McDaniel;
Vice-President, Ed Jarvis; Secretan,
Diane Anderson; Treasurer, Judy
Anderson.
T e a L e a v e s
Dried tea bush leaves can be
processed to make three different kinds
of tefl * flrecii. Mflplf Ap oolofiff.
A ccord ^ to NCSU agrimtural ex
tension spechiUsts, green tea is un
fermented tea made by steamhig and
dryhig ttie fresh leaves.
To make black tea, the leaves are
fermented or oxidized and then dried.
This causes ttw leaves to tum dark
brown. Black tea produces a tea witti a
rich, hearty flavor Oolong tea is semi
fermented. It is Ught and has a subtie
flavor and bouquet. For variety or
special teas, the leaves may be mixed
witti Jasmhw, gardenia, mhit, orange or
spices.
T r y O u r
H e a lth ,
B eau ty A ids
Besides having your prescriptions filled,
you’ll find w e’re stocked with a variety
of cosmetics, toiletries, vitamins,
first aid and sick room supplies.
Stop in today!
Hall Drug Co.
118 N. Main
MocksviUe
Phone:634-2111
Night 634-5400
Do you need MATS to help your Pictures Sell?
Well, we've got’em • and they only cost Va (HALF)
of what they would cost if they were custom cut
for you. These are inlays mostly, but regulars to
and some ovals. If you need it, we will shrink-wrap
your art In our Half-Priced Mats for
-YOU GUESSED IT -H A IF -P R IC E . We even have
Artists buy our Mats before they paint their
Come by and Buy something for
one-half more than Nothing.
THE F R A M f S H O P
3 3 3 S A U S S U R Y S T .
M O C K S V IL L I. N .C . 6 3 4 * 5 6 6 1
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1478 - 13
Nancy Franctne ElU* daughter ot Mr.
rand Mra. GUmer H. ElUa o( Farmington
haa been aelected aa one o( the two
I Freahman Repreaentatlvea ot Eaat
« Sue Bean Hall, at Brevard College.
I la-alao In the Student Government
I AaaoctaUon and aerving on the Social
Board. She haa been aelected aa the
[ Student Ambaaaador for Brevard. She la
•ently on the Annual Staff and a
I member of the women’a aorlety of the
college. She is a Pre Lau Major.
Letters
To TheEditor
|»ear Editor;
Gerald and I would like to use your
I newspaper as a means of saying thank
I you to u l Uie people who participated in
9 Gerald Markland Softrall Benefit. It
means so much to us knowing i are concerned and want to help.I We sincerdy appreciate aU the time and
dedication of ttie players and the people I who were responsible for organizing ttieI beiwfit
\^e shall always remember the kind-
lesMi Shown to us by our many friends.
ThaiOu to all of you again and God’s
I bleuings on each of you.
Sincerely,
Kattiy and Gerald Markland.
. Dear Editor:
On Saturday, September 16th,
downtown Mocksville was transformed
into an exciUng and magical fairy land
uUed "A R TS A LIV E SIN CE ’75". The
streets and sidewaUu were fUled witti
. aying their wares of arts
and crafts. 'Tables dressed in red
'checkered table cloths beckoned passer-
byers to stop and partake of the good
food and hoepitality-both of which were
abundance!! The handsomely
Bted stage was almost never void
of a/variety of entertainers, and scat
tered here and yon were clowns, whit-
tters, people sdling baUoons coloring
books, various demonstrators, and lots
' a.of, laughter and scurring feet
^1^. trying to take it a l ^ ! ! .
^tdwh MocksvUle is a limque and
a " the perfect spot for such a
fairyland transformation. The large
»tree«;i|ind the perfect square of streets
aUJ^nii to such a transformation.
“gorgeous weattier was certainly a
J cona^buting factor-wothout good
%ea(ber, this day would have been
] doomed. But, nice location plus nice
doesn’t necessarily equal a
111 fesUval. The succeM of ttie
S-ALIVE SIN CE ’75” Pesvival
^ ) to aii extremely hard '
^Qliited group of people wh
ttie Davie Arts CouncU’s
:of Directors, the Merchants
county offlcbils, town of-
the Mocksville Enterprise
B; WDSL, many organizations and
SS individuals— all of whom
l.logettier for one purpose-a day
[ii> the brim with art, crafts, fun
Binment-a day that the
Cicould reflect on with pride and
tM ialf'of th? DaWe Arts Council, I
) to openly and sincerely ttiank
who'gave of ttieir time and
to help make this festival
I great Hundreds of ttiank you letters and
I notj^ are being written this week and
Ittiopefully no name has been overlooked. I But, even ttiough hundreds of people wUl I be receiving “ttiank you’s” in the maU
I within the next week or two; there are „ . ' ‘ serving persons who wUl
Inotr ,7b these thousands of spectators
wh9 , cfime early ii
throMUhout ttie day.
in the morning and
^ who clapped at our
; who bought of our wares;___J to our music; who smUed atK.'bttier; who helped clean ttie streets land who in essence, “made” ttiis Ifestival great-a very special “Thank ■Уои'д. .
I Tm Arts Council appreciates aU the
■support so generously given throughout
" »‘county. It is our hope ttiat ttiis
jij^rt for the expansion of the arts
|contlnues to grow.
Sincerely,
Marttia Kontos, President
Davie County Arts CouncU
¡».St, To Join Uie Arts Council caU «34-
|3iu;
и
DECA Club Elects
I Officers For New Year
Tbe Davie High DBCA Club started
re^dent, Andy Naylor; Secretary-
гГеиигег, Tammy Miller;
^arttmentarien, Walter Minor;
kistpnan, elalne Howard; and
teporter, Debbie Unkiord.
Monday tbe officers attended a
arUamentarian procedure workshop at
Ле Starmount High School.
Tlie next dtotrict social wiU be on
^ t« e r 16 at ttie Nortti IredeU High
Brown Bread
I Bolton Brown Bread is a steamed
h ix ^ e of wheal flour, cornmeal and
Jye flour combined with molasses, milk
|nd A»it. Soda and baking powder are
! leavening agenU.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester R. Carter of
Route 1, Advance, announce ttie birtti of
ttieir first chUd, a son, Zachary Austin,
bom Wednesday, September 20 at
Forsytti Memorial Hospital in Winston-
Salem.
The baby weighed 8 lbs. 12 ozs. at birtti
and was 22 inches in length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Austin of MocksvUle.
Paternal grandmottier is Mrs. Sally
Griffitti Carter of Advance, Route 1.
Great grandparents are Mrs. Sam
Austin Sr. of Asheville, and Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Rice, also of AsheviUe.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Moore and son
Daniel of Route 2, Mocksville proudly
announce the birth of a son and brother,
Grady Matthew.
Matttiew was bom at 7:21 a.m.
Saturday, September 16 at Davis
Hospital in StetesvUle. He weighed 6
pounds 6 ounces and was 20 inches long.
Matemal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Glenn Reavis of MocksviUe Route
5.Paternal grandparents are Rev. and
Mrs. Paul Moore of Route 3 YadkinvUle.
MRS. THEODORAS DEMETRIOUS HARRIS
... was Margaret Anne DanielDaniel And Harris Vows Are Spoken In Greek Rites
with
Miss Margaret Anne Daniel and
Theodoras Demetrious Harris were
united in marHage Sunday, September
24, at half after flve o’clock in the Greek
Orttiodox Church of ttie AnnuncUtton,
Winston-Salem. Reverend Father
George Kiricoples officiated at ttie
double ring ceremony.
Wedding musicians were Mrs. Donald
Bingham, organist; Mrs. Manuel
Kranis, organist; and ttie Greek Or
ttiodox Choir. The program of wedding
music Included “Voluntary on Krem-
aer” - .Gordon Young; “Jeau, Joy of
Man’s DéUring*’- Bach; “Fragmenta of
an Etude" - Chopin. “Trumpet Volun
tary” - PurceU, was used as ttie
processional wiUi “Toccata” - Widor, as
the receMional.
The bride is ttie daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. WUUam Cicero Daniel of Wan-
dering Lane. She is a graduate of Davie
County High School and Catawba
CoUege, where she was named to
"W ho’s Who Among Students in
American Universities and CoUeges”.
In 1970, she was presented at Uie Sub-
Debutant BaU in Lexington. She is
employed as an Assistant Brand
Research Manager with R. J. Reynolds
Tobáceo Company.
The b rid^oom is the son of ttie late
Mr. and Mrs. Demetrious Harris of
FayetteviUe. A graduate of FayettevUle
High School and North CaroUna State
University, be served as a Corporal in
ttie United States Army. He is owner and
President of Northwest Structural
Components, Inc., in KemersvUle.
Brought in marriage by her fattier, ttie
bride wore a gown of ivory chiffon
featuring a modified waistline.
Queen Anne neckUne and fuU
sleeves. The bodice of Uie gown, as ^
as the deep cuffs of the sleeves, were
trimmed with Alencon lace and seed
pearls. The flowing skirt extended into a
fuU chapel train. Her chapel length veU
of ivory aiU( Ulusion was attached to a
Camelot cap. Alencon lace and seed
pearls covered ttie headpiece and ex
tended in a deep edgiiu around the veU.
She carried a cascade of Japette or
chids, stephanotis and chlorophytum
centered on a Testament from the Holy
Land which was ^ven her by her
matemal Grandmother.
Mrs. Peter Hondroe of Winston-Salem
was matron of honor and Miss Barbara
Jeanne Daniel, sister of the bride, of
Winston-Salem was maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Elaine Agapion,
niece of ttw groom, of Raleigh; Miss
Julia Basic-Price, neice of ttw groom, of
Quincy, Florida; Mrs. Robert Etzel,
Mrs. Steve Sharpe, Mrs. Jerome
Thomas, of Winston-Salem.
The attendanU wore idenUcal gowns
of emerald green fashioned witti an
empire waistUne and fuU skirt. A
triangle cape coverlet of chiffon ex
tended to mid-skirt bl back and was
edged in emerald green saUn. They
carried natural wicker baskets fUled
witti sUk rosea, cosmos, ttger UUes, wood
Ulies, sonya freexia and babies' breatti
in shades of coral, deep yeUow and
white.
Honorary attendants were Mrs.
Jonathan Hale, of Winston-Salem,
cousbi of ttw bride. Nieces of ttie nroom.
Miss Ashley Agapion and Miss MlcheUe
Agapion, C ÍRalel^; Miss Helen CionU,
of Charleston, B.C.; Miss Rebecca Prtce, oi Quincy, Florida.
Mr. Peter Hondroa of Winston-Salem
was best man. Ushers were Demetre
Gionis of Charleston, S.C.; Daniel
Agapion, of Raleigh; nephews of ttie
groom. John D a m l, of LiUington; Deno
Fasul, of FayettevUle; cousbi of Uw
groom Jack McCauley, of GreenvUle,
S.C.; and Chris Koumparakis, of
MartlnsviUe, Virginia.
Master Mich«« GionU, nephew of ttw oi Charleston, S C. was crown
Mrs. WUUam Daniel chose a hand
nabited green chiffon sleeveless gown
wiUi a matchbig Jacket for her
daughter’s wedding.
The bride-elect’s grandmother, Mrs.
Jeff CaudeU wore a formal gown of
apricot silk.
RECEPTIO N
FoUowing the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs.
WUliam Cicero Daniel hosted a weddbig
reception at Bermuda Run Country
aub.
Guests were greeted at the doors by
Dr. and Mrs. Deno Pantelakoe of
FayettevUle; Mr. and BIrs. Michael
Swatai of Wnston-Salem; Mr. and Mrs.
Jefferson Bowden of MocksviUe; and
Mr. and Mrs. Michael PhUUpa of
Laurhiburg.
Presiding at ttie guest roisters were
Mrs. Joseph B. Jarvis and Mrs. J. Brent
Holcomb of Winston-Salem.
The buffet tables were covered with
white linen, centered with
arrangements of white snapdragons,
yeUow Marguerite daisies, tangerine
camaUons, and sahnon snowdrift pom
poms, with sUver branched candelabra.
Guests were served assorted hot and
cold hors d’oeuvers consisUng of quiche
Lorrahie, Dutch meatballs, chicken
Uvers with bacon, ham biscuits, wing
dings, dohnades, assorted sandwiche
roUs, assorted canapees, fresh fruits
and vegetables and mixed nuts.
Desserts taiclud^ a choice of wedding
cakes, baklava and Kourambiedes.
Music was provided by ttie Grecian
Keys of Warren, Ohio.
REH EA R SA L PARTY
Dr. and Mrs. Burton Price of Qubicy,
Florida; Mr. and Mrs. Steven A^pion
of Cary; and Mr. and Mrs. Kerry Gionis
of Charleston, South CaroUna, were
hosts Saturday, September 23, at Ber
muda Run Country a ub for a rehearsal
party honoring their brother, Ted
Harris, and his fiancee, Margaret
Daniel.
CocktaU hour began bnmediately
foUowing the wedding rehearsal. Guests
were served hors d’oeuvres including
assorted cheeses, mixed olives, fish
mold, dolmades, tiropeU, and
spanakopets.
Chamber music was provided by the
Arisso String Quartet from Catawba
county.
The head table was covered witti
yellow linen, centered with an
arrangement of Wobum Abbey roses
and Marguerite daUles witti sUver
branched candelabra. Guest tables, also
covered witti yeUow Unen, received
centerpieces comprised of white tapered
candles entwbied with English ivy at ttie
base. Each place setttaig was marked
witti a fresh mbiiature coral rosebud
and an engraved menu of the evenbig’s
fare, Usted bi botti French and English.
The menus were printed bi neen bik on
white parchment paper with a deckled
edge. Enclosed bi emerald green felt,
they were bound with a gold cord, nie
names of ttw bride and groom were
embossed bi gold on ttw front cover. The
menus were a special gift to ttie bridal
couple from Dr. and Mrs. Price.
PreskUng at ttie guest regUters were
JuUa Basic-Price and Elabw Agapion.
Guests were served ttw four course
dinner including seafood cocktail
delight, Greek salad, flamed
Chateaubriand, stuffed baked potato,
broUed tomato half and broccoU spears
witti hoUandaise sauce. Dessert was a
creme de menttw parfaU accompanied
by bakalva. Champagne was served
Uu-oughout Uw dbmer.
BR ID ESM A ID LUNCHEON
Hosting a bridesmaid luncheon
Saturday, September 23, at noon at
Bermuda Run Country dub bi Advance far b rid e ^ t , MIm Margaret Ann
Daniel were her grandmottwr. Sin!
CaudeU and aunts, B(rs. Sheek Bowdei:,
Jr., Mrs. BUI Howard, Mrs. Sam
Howard and a cousbi, Mrs. Jonattian
Hale.The table was covered witti a white ciotti and centered witti an arrangement of fresh mUed faU flowers. •
ine nonoree was presented a cym-
bidium orchid corsage upon arrival.
Twenty five guests enjoyed a
delightful luncheon which consisted of a
mixed fruit salad, stuffed tomatoes with
chicken salad, marinated asparagus,
devUed eggs and assorted relish tray.
Dessert was lime and raspberry sher-
bert.
The hostess gift was a Lennox china
.salt and pepper.
Special guests included ttie bonoree’s
mother, Mrs. William Daniel of
MocksvUle, M rs. Burton Price of
Quincy, Florida, Mrs. Steven Aqupion of
Caiy, N.C., Mrs. Kerry Gionis of
Charleston, S.C., Ms. Jane Howard of
BalUmore, Md. Mrs. Jeff Bowden of
Mocksville, Mrs. Mary Fasul and Mrs.
Deno Tantelakos, both of FayetteviUe.
Mrs. Jesse Helms To
Be In Davie Oct. 18
Mrs. Jesse Helms wUI be In
Davie County, October 18th, plnch-
hltting on the campaign traU for
her husband who Is recuperating
from back surgery.
Mrs. Helms wUI be guest at a
luncheon of tbe Christiap Woman's
Club to be held at Bermuda Run.
This wiU be one of the stops
during Ihe day of campaigning In
Davie and Cabarrous Counties.
Advance
News
M iss Rebekah Talbert
drove to Rutherfoi'dton Sunday
where she attended a college
class reunion. She was a
member of ttie cbiss of 1932 at
Rutherford College. One
Hundred and twenty-five
alumnus were present for the
occasion, which biduded a 91
year old man-stUl very active
and alert, and a lady who
graduated bl 1908. Four class
members had died sbice last
years reunion. Flowers were
placed in tbe Abernathy
Memorial church bi memory
of ttiem. Dr. Vb-gU Queen, a
1931 graudate, was speaker
for ttie reunion which was
held bl Abernathy church.
Miss Talbert enjoyed a day of
rembiiscing wiu> all her old
friends, and especially
visiting with her former
coUege room-mate.
Mrs. Grace Spry, Mr. and
Mrs. Leroy Ward spent
Sunday bl Sheffield where
they visited their sons,
brottier’s and famUies Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Spry and
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spry. They
attended church services at
the Wesleyan Methodist
Church and enjoyed the
message by ttie Rev. Smitti.
Visitors of Mrs. Ctara B a i^
Uiis week were Mrs. Paul
Jones, Mrs. Lib Potte, and
Mrs. WUlie Cook.
Mrs. Walter ShuU is ttie
proud grandmottier of her
lOtti great grandchild Ashley
DeAnn Bennett bom Sunday,
Sept. 24 at Forsyth Hoepital.
She weighed 8 Iba. and 3 ou.
and 2lMibiches long. Ashley’s
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Bennett of MocksvUle
Route 3, and she has a 2 year
old sister Christy.
"Ha who ha* clear idesi cao command." Goethe
The Hampton Mariners Museum at Beaufort, North CaroUna, has displays of sea and shore birds, fish, mammal specimens and sea shells. Museum Curator Charles McNeUl Is shown at left. (N.C. Travel and Tourism Division photo by Clay Nolen.)
North Carolina’s Hampton
Mariners Museum Operates
With Personal Touch
Jody Smith was honored on hla 12th
bb-thday wltti a party at Jerusalem FU-e
Department, boated by his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Smith. He and hU friends
played games and enjoyed refreshments
of bblhday cake and Ice cream. A
special guest was his aunt. Mrs. Eva
Eaton of Spencer, N.C. He received lots
of nice presents.
The Hampton Mariners Museum
located here is designed and operated tc
give visitors a personal experience
about North CaroUna and the sea.
The moving force behbig the museum
is curator Charles McNeiU, who refers
to himself as a "beached mariner”. It
takes just a few minutes with McNeiU to
leam of his love for the sea and his
enthusiasm for the museum.
"We operate the museum with ,a
personal touch. We want people to
reaUy leam somethbig when they come
here, ” said McNeUl.
Beaufort is entrenched with history,
and nearby are Morehead City, Attantic
Beach, Emerald Isle, and Salter Path.
The Hampton Museum was created in
1952 by an act of ttie Nortti Carolbia
Legisbiture and is an arm of the
Museum of Natural History located in
Raleigh. The Department of
Agriculture operates both museums.
For years the museum was more or
less in a state of Umbo, bebig shuffled
from room to room and containbig a few
boards with sheUs on them. But, along
came McNeUl, and tilings began to
happen. He has been at the museum for
Uiree years after bebig Db«ctor of the
North CaroUna Port at Morehead City,
and a former merchant marine. He is a
graduate of ttie U.S. Merchant Marine
Academy.
From only 25 to 30 visitors a day, the
museum is now attracting as many as
700 people a day.
“I have always wanted to go to sea,”
said McNeUl, a naUve of WhitevUle.
It is a the sea, the histoiy of the men
who saUed the taU ships, and^e modem
biologists who study the sea, that form
the backbone of ttie museum.
The museum has an outstandbig
coUection of sheUs, shorebb-ds, fish and
mammal displays. Natural habitat-
oriented saltwater aquaria offer ttie
opportunity to study Uve marine
creatures native to the coastal en
vironment.
TradiUonal Nortti CaroUna designed
boat buUdbig is highlighted in the ar
tifact secUon, and a secUon is devoted to
privateering documente, boat buUding
tools and navigation bistraments.
Marble artificate are found ttiroughout
Uie museum, and a "ship's library”
contains plans, charts and historical
volumes.
A tour of the museum can last from 30
minutes to two hours. And, visitors can
further leam about ttie sea through ttdal
flat, rock jetty, and salt marsh field
trips, and shellbig trips. OccasionaUy
cruises to surrounding areas are offered
SaUing lessons are also offered. Ad
vance registration for these programs is
advisable. There is a smaU fee for some
of them.
A 32-year-old, 42-foot sport fisherman
yacht, the "Rum Runner” is used for
outdoor acUviUes. And on display, are a
1910 Beaufort sprit-saUing skiff, a 40-
year-old sharpie, and a 50-year-old
Beaufort racing skiff.
"There is no average day, month or
season for us,” said McNeiU. “Each
period is a chaUenge, and we have a
wonderful staff. They deserve a world
of credit for theb- dedication. We want
visitors to ask questions. We have
people ready and wUlbig to help them.”
An interesting collection in the
museum is the one on ship models.
Studying the mbiute detaU on some of
Uie models can be mbid-boggling.
McNeUl is also an accomplished ar
tist, and many of his watercolors hang,
proudly in homes of North Carolinians
and oUiers.
"M y painting has faUen by the
wayside. I don't have as much time as I
used to have, but my desire to create is
fuUUled bl the museum.
" I had private lessons when I was 10
years old,” McNeUl added, "but the rest
of the painting I just picked up. I never
wUl pass up ttie chance to ssee a good
pabitbig.”
Witti ttut gleam you'U find only in a
Scotman's eye, he said: "When I wrote
my mottier that I was going to work with
the museum, U didn't surprise her. She
sent me a copy of a newspaper article
written when I was eleven teUing about
my visit to a museum.
McNeiU said there are many things he
and his staff would lUie to do. They are
now planning a Strange Seafood
Spectacular, which is an exchange of
unusual seafood.
The museum is open year around,
with the exception of Christmas and
New Years Day, Monday through
Friday, from nine to five, and on Sunday
from two to five. There is no admission
fee.
When visiting the museum, ask about
Uie programs going on outaide, after you
have enjoyed ttihe displays. Chances
are they wUl have soomething going on,
and you can tiet it wUl be done with a
personal touch.
PORTRAIT PACKAGE
PORTRAITS INLivme COLOR
NO AGE
GROUPS
t - t x i l l - t x 7 IS -K s lle ti
G e n e I n g r a m Available . . .
F r id a y ( S e p t. 2 9 ) S a t u r d a y ( S e p t. 3 0 )
11 >00 »5^00 p .m ♦ 1 0 t0 0 .5 t0 0 p .m .
T/Áwtei
P P S P r o d u c tio n
14 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Law Enforcement Officers
Qualify For Marksmanship
Friday, September 22nd members of
the MocksviUe Police and Davie County
Sheriffs Departments qualified for
marksmanship at the Police Academy
Pistol Range, Lexington.
To qualify one must score at least 70
out of a poMlble 100. All officers from
the police and sheriffs dqwirtments
qualified with at least a score of 83.6.
The scores were acquired bv shooting
' from distances fo seven yards without
aiming; thirty yards from kneeling
position; twenty-five yards shooting
with right and left hands; fifteen yards
aiming freehand.
Those qualifying for "Master” and
"Expert” were: John Colw, "Master”
with a score of 99.2; Alton Carter,
"Master” with 98.8; Bob Hupp, "E x
pert” with 95.2; A.D. Adams, "Expert”,
with 94.4 and Bruce Foster, "Expert”,
with a 92 score.
Others qualifying were: George Frye,
Dicky Oroce, Mel Reynolds, R.O. Kiger,
Robert Purvis, Richard Sharpe, G.W.
Edwards, Glenn Cornatter, James
Jones, Eugene Foster, George Harrison,
Don Gregory, Junior MaulflUn.
Trade Lynette Sechrest of Route 2.
Mocksville, celebrated her second birth-
^ y Sunday, September 24th with a
dinner party at her home. Twenty-five
adults and sbc children attended the
occasion. Among the guests were
Tracle’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Sechrest of Route 7, MocksviUe
and a great grandmother, Mrs. Nannie
C^U of Route 7. She had a large square
birthday cake with candles.
DAUG HTER AND GRANDSON H E R E FO R VISIT
Mrs. Andy Atwell and little son Seth of Vancouver Washington, arrived
September 18 for a weeicB visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Franic Short of
Route 7, MocksviUe. She is also spending some time with Mr. and Mrs. Jay
AtweU of North Garden Virginia before returning home.
VISITORS FR O M C ALIFO RN IA
Mrs. Carolyn Thompson, Miss Debbie Thompson and PFC Donald Thompson
arrived by plane from Palmdate California September 22 for a 2 weeics visit
with her brother, C.E. Craven of Salisbury Street and other relatives. P.F.C.
Donald Thompson is stationed with the 23rd Engineering Company at Fort
Richardson Alaska.
COOK-OUT AT CRAVEN HOME
A cook-out was held on September 23rd at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C.C.
Craven on Wandering Lane, honoring the Thompsons and the birthday an
niversaries of Lee Ann and Kim Craven, Patsy Atwell, Donald Thompson and
Robert Thompson. Robert, Donald’s twin brother Is stationed in Germany and
was not present. Many friends and relatives enjoyed.the celebration.
CRAVEN REU N IO N
The children of the late Mr. and Mrs. G.L. Craven of MoclcsviUe held a reunion
at the home of Mr. Floyd and Dean Craven in Salisbury on Sunday, September
24th. Approximately 50 relatives and friends attended.
BIR TH D A Y D IN N ER
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Short entertained the Thompsons with a dinner
celebrating the birthday of Frank Short Jr. on Monday, September 25 at their
home on Route 7 Mocksville.
SU NDAY VISITORS
Tamra Hendricks and three of her coUege friends from Appalachian State
University visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Worth Hendricks, Sunday. They
also attended the Hendricks' reunion at Rich Park.
ATTENDS EX EC U T IV E BOARD M EET IN G IN R A LEIG H
Mrs. John Carman of MocksviUe attended an Executive board meeting of the
North Carolina Symphony Women’s Association at the Woman’s Club in Raleigh
Wednesday, September 20. FoUowing the meeting, the executive board attended
a Kick-off luncheon for the 1979 Symphony Overture-Marathon. Mrs. Carman is
corresponding secretary for the State organization.
ATTENDS PIANO WORKSHOP
Miss Louise Stroud and Mrs. John Carman attended^ 4 hour piano workshop
at Separk Music Company In Winston-Salem last Tuesday. The workshop was
conducted by Walter and Card Noona, composers and teachers from.Vlrginia
Beach, Va.
National School Lunch
Week Is Oct. 8-14
National School Lunch Week’s theme,
Eat to Leam - Leam to Bat”, wlU again
be presented across the nation October 8
- 14,1978. This theme was deslfpied to
focus attention on the Importance and
increase the awareness ot the benefits of
good nutrition to students, parento, and
the general pubUc. Emphasis this
school year is on eating right and
physical weU-being.
Again promoting this year’s NSLW
are characters from the cartoon strip
“Wee Pals” by Morrie Turner. Tumer's
cartoon characters are featured on this
year’s poster advocating the Idea that if
one eats right, one should be "Fedin’
Good, FeUin’ Groovy.” Turner’s car
toon characters offer a fun way to
celebrate NSLW and at the same time
stress the significance of teaching
chUdren to eat the right foods so thay
they wUl feel right, play hard and work
well.
Firemen’s Association
Meets With EMT'S
The Davie County Firem en’s
Association met September llth. The
Wm. R. Davie Department was in
charge of the meetng.
Guests were the Davie County EM S
personnel. Johnny Frye spoke on the
local ambulance operation and showed a
film of various E M T procedures.
Several items were discussed of mutual
concern both to the ambulance service
and the fire departments.
The County Line VFD was In charge of
Uie meal for this meeting. This depart
ment wUl also be in charge of the Oc
tober meeting set for 7 p.m. at the
MocksvUle Fire Department.
The Center V FD wUl be in charge of
the next dinner meeting which wlU be
Dcember llth.
VFD PROJECTS
The Comatzer-Dulln VFD wUl have a
barbecue chicken supper on October 7th.
The County Line V FD wUl have a
supper on October 28th.
The Jerusalem V FD wlU have a Texas
style barbecue on November 4th.
Letter To Editor
Dear Editor:
I thank you. for printing the rules for
first aid for an epUeptlc seizure.
Realizing that you and your staff are
kept busy daUy I would Uke to correct a
sm all typographical error in rule
number six. The first Une reads “It is
generaUy necessary....” The line should
read “It is not generaUy necessary...”
I would Uke to remind everyone to
make that change seeing that it changes
the meaning of the rule and again urge
everyone to cut out these rules In order
to further theh- knowledge of epUepsy.
Also if anyone would lUie any more
information about epUepsy they should
fed free to contact me.
Sincerely,
George Vlasios Kontos III,
Vice-president
Northwest North CaroUna.
Chapter EpUepsy
Association of
North CaroUna, Inc.
Freshwater Farmers Are Chasing Rainbows
And 'Cats’ For Profit In Farm ing Ventures
They aren’t exactly
swimming in profits yet, but
about 5,000 of the nation’s
farmers see a future In fish.
Last year 110 million
pounds of freshwater fish
were harvested down on the
farm. That’s a bumper сг<ч>
compared to the 2 mUUon
pounds produced In i960 when
com m ercial freshw ater
aquaculture first got under
way In the United SUtess, the
National Geographic Society
reports.
The harvest, valued at
between |100 mUllon and fl2S
nUUlon, Induded 70 mUUon
pounds of catfish, 30 mUUon
pounds of trout, and 10 mUllon
pounds of crawfish.
Most of the catfish are
raised In ponds that cover
thousands of acres in
Mississippi, Arkansas, and
Louisiana. Farmers also
cultivate "cats” in several
other states, Indudlng Texas,
Missouri, Georgia, and
Ollnols.
Catfish Uke warm water
and grow quickly in relatively
shaUow ponds. “Dig a hole,^’
said an Arkansas enthusiast
WHAT HAVE WE
GOT TO OFFER?
744- Moulding Comets Now, With About 600 More
Coining Shoitly.
463- Different Mat Finishes (230 Fabrics,
29 Photographic Finishes, 204 Regular Mat Finishes,
And If You Have A Special Fabric You Want To Use
We Can Do That Too.)
175- Inexpensive Prints
30- Framed Pictures You Can Just Buy,
Take Home And Hang
Oh, Almost Forgot - Ceiamics! Dolls, Steins, And What
Not - By Vickie Uppard, Winner Of Four Blue Ribbons
At This Year's Cabanus Coun^ Fair.
WeN, Thafs Enough Of Numbers And We Hope Enough
Variety. &01A M M
ORNATE AND OVAL FRAMES IN STOCK!
The Fram e Shop
333 Salisbury Street
Mocksville, N.C. 634-5661 j
somewhat ' optimistically,
"and It’s ready to become a
catfish pond.”
In Idaho, they’re forever
chasing rainbows. Trout are
raised there in earttien or
concrete ponds of cold,
rushing water called
raceways. Almost 90 percent
of the commercial trout catch
comes from raceways in that
state.
“Pure aquaculture doesn't
include fish raised in hat
cheries to stock fishing
streams, because ttiey sur
vive as wUd fish In nature for
part of their lives,” explained
H.R.- Schmlttou, a U.S.
Department of Agriculture
aquaculture expert.
“In addition to the basic
species in ttUs country, far
mers can raise bass,
bluegUls, and oUiers. They
also raise a lot of bait min
nows for anglers.”
Freshwater farmers in
Louisiana dote on crawfish.
The smaU coushi of the lob
ster is to Cajunland what
roast beef is to England.
Cooks in the state serve
crawfish fried, baked in juicy
>atties, and simmered in
>isques and gum'oos. At least
90 percent of the 10 mUUon
pounds raised hi Louisiana
never leave the state.
The appetite for seafood has
grown throughout the United
States in recent years. An
nual per capita consumption
of fish is now 13 pounds.
Reflecting the demand. Im
ports of fishery products last
year were valued at $2.6
bilUon.
"There’s no lUcelUiood of
our reversbig this situation
except ttirough better use of
our natural stocks, both
within our own 200-mUe limit
and witti our aquaculture,”
observed Schmlttou.
Mr. and Mrs. Jlggs CampbeU
of Trenton, New Jersey
returned home Monday
moming after spending ttie
weekend here witti his aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. BUI
White.
Mrs. Elsie Carter of Nortti
Mrytle Beach, S. C. ac
companied her sister, Mrs.
Irene HeUard, home last week
for a two week visU. Mrs.
HeUard had spent ttie two
previous weeks with Mrs.
Carter.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie HeUard
and children of EUenboro
were ttie weekend guests of
his mother, Mrs. Irene
HeUard. They returned home
Sunday afternoon.
Donnie Benson and bis
girUriend of Charlotte were
ttie Sunday visitors ' here
wltti his grandmottier, Mrs.
Bessie NaUe of Route 7. Miss
Margaret Hoyle returned
home Monday from Rowan
Memorial HotpiUl where «he
underwent surgery Ust week.
She is recuperating nicely.
Miss Shirley Jacobs entered
Davie Hospital Tuesday
where she continues to un
dergo treatment and ob-
S 6 T V 8 tiO D .
Mrs. Don (Peggy) HeUard
of Wait Street is undergoing
treatment at Davie Hospltsl
HeUo, my name Is Mickey Glenn
CUnard Jr. I am the son of Nancy and
Mickey CUnard ot Rt. 3 MqcksvUle. I
was 4 years old Wednesday, September
27. My Mommy and D a d ^ gave me a
birthday party Sunday,8eptember 24 at
my home. M y birthday cake this year
was made in the shape of a guitar. We
had lots of food, cake and Ice-cream for
my tamUy and guests. My grandparents
are Dorothy Renegar and my great
grandfather Mr. Charles C. Renegar,
both of MocksviUe and Mr. and Mrs.
WilUam CUnard of KernersviUe.
Births A t D ix ie C la ssic
Mr. and Mrs. Alvls BeU of Route 4,
MocksvUle, announce the birth of ttietr
first chUd, a daughter, Jennifer Lynn,
bom Wednesday, September 20th at
Forsytti Memorial Hoapital in Winston-
Salem.
The baby weighed 8 lbs 6 ozs. and was
21 inches in length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. CUfford Howard of Rt. 2, Advance.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Bell of Route 4,
MocksvUle.
Local Chapter Of
Secretaries Meets
The Mocksvllle-Davle Chapter of
NaUonal Secretaries Association (In-
temattonal) met Tuesday, September
I7tti at IngersoU-Rand.
Guest speaker for ttie evening was
Chief of PoUce Alton Carter.
Plans were made for a yard and bake
sale to be hdd Saturday, September SOtti
from 9 a.m. untU 3 p.m. at the Rotary
Hut on SaUsbury Street.
The widely popular James Et Strates Shows will set up its mIIe>Iong midway for the Dixie Classic Fair in Winston-Salem October 7. Hie kiddle rides offer excitement and thrills for ail. Firemen of the next decade, these youngsters ring bells and blow
In Germany it was believed
good luck to have weaMis
on the roof.
he Dixie Classic Fair in Winston-Salem, September' :itement and thrills. unKsters ring bells t_______whistles just like their counterparts in any fire department. There’s no high-speed chase, just the fun of going round and round.
Forii Jaycees Entertain Senior Citizens! '
petition ;
T find every day an exact repetition.
I get up each mom and dust off my
wits.
Grab for the paper and read the
obits.
If my name is missing I know I ’m nol4
dead
So, I eat a big breakfast and go back
to bed.
South Davie Jr. High
Ties Thomasville «
The South Davie Jr. High footbaU
team battled to an 8-8 tie Tuesday
against Thomasville at the Davie High«
Stadium.
Thomasville scored first in Uie'game
in the second quarter on a 30-yard run
and made the 2-pt. conversion. - «
Davie got its score in Uie 4tti peniod on
a 28-yard pass play from Pete Smoot to
Brian Kett. Davie also made its 2-pt.
conversion.
Kevin Green and Eric Southem
recovered fumbles for Davie and
Rodney Barker had a good defensive
^ m e for Davie.
Davie’s next game is Tuesday at 4
p.m. against China Grove at China
Grove. ‘
Fork Jaycees and Jaycettes en
tertained the senior citizens Saturday,
September 23, with a chicken stew and
homemade ice cream at the Fork
Recreation Center.
Many showed up insplte of a cool,
cloudy and rataiy day. Good food and
wonderful feUowship were enjoyed by
the young as weU as the old.
FoUowfaig Is a poem submitted by
Mrs. Ruby Foster:
When I was young and my sUppers
were red,
I could kick my feet over my head.
Then I grew older and my sUppers
were blue,
But stUl I could dance the whole
night thru.
Now, I am old and my sUppers are
black,
I waUt to ttie comer and puff my way
back.
The reason I know my youUi has been
spent.
M y get up and go has got up and
went.
I reaUy don’t mind, when I think wiUi
a grhi.
Of aU ttie grand places my get up
has lieen.
Since I have retired from Ufes com-
SAV E SAV E SAV E SAVE SAV E SAV E SAV E SAV E SAVE
s t o c k R e d u c t io nSai£
O U R LO S S IS Y O U R G A IN l!
where she has been a patient
for ttie past week. She is in
room 12.
The Cooleemee Civic Club
wUl meet Tuesday, October 3,
wltti Mrs. John Spargo at her
home on Rjffin Street,
Cooleemee at 7:S0 p.m.
The Drifters Club of Davie
County honored Mrs. Juanita
Frye witti a luncheon Monday
at her home in Ephesus in
cdebration of her blrttiday
anniversary. Members at
tending were; Betty
Williams, Sadie M esiick,
Sadie Stede, RepU Motes,
Mary MltcheU, Mrs. Dyson
and Bessie NaUe. There were
also ttvee visitors: Maggie
Harpe, Donna Potta and
Becky Cregar.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beck
and Mr. and tlrs. Hayden
Beck were hosU to a steak
supper honoring Beck Bros.
SofttMdl team Saturdw night
at ttie U Stop N GriU in
Codeemee. At ttie conclusion
of ttie meal each player was
presented wltti a trophy from
ttieir sponsor.
The annual Hartley
Reunion wUl be held Sunday,
October 1, at Uie Franklin
Conununlty Center BuUding
at EUis Crou Roads. Dinner
wUl be served at 1 p.m. AU
relatives and friends are
invited.
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DAVÎE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1978 - 15
Cleaning Kenan Stadium After Home
Football Games Means Backbreaking
Work For Reserve Officers Training Corps
........................ occaBlonally had three home games in a the seaU to d is l^ e the trash.
li' Z
Home football Saturdays at the
University of North Carolina at Chai
Hill will find the campus flooded
enthusiastic game fans.
With baskets full of fried chiclcen,
warm rolls and all the other picnic
' necessities grasped firmly in hand,
; these Tar Heels are ready to cheer,
Curse and cajole their team towards
another victory.
What few of these fans see, however,
js Sunday morning at Kenan Stadium.
: As the sun peeps over the rim around 8
ii;m., workers move in to clean up the
tons of debris left over from Saturday’s
: i^diron clash.
: "W e usually haul about seven dump-
; truck loads of trash out of there after
- ¿ach home game," says Bobby Gales, a
foreman with the university’s grounds
crew that maintains the athletic fields.
But the regular grounds crew aren’t
. the ones who wade into the mounds of
trash on Suhday morning. They are,
instead, members of the Air Force and
Navel Reserve Officers Training Corps
(ROTC) unite on the UNC-CH campus.
The athletic department began hiring
. the ROTC units to do the cleaning about
four years ago. Devon Brouse, athletic
facilities superintendent, says that using
the ROTC unite has relieved the grounds
crew of what often turned out to be a
seven-day week.
. "Back a few years ago.” he says, “we
occasionally had three home games I
row. When the regular people worked all
week and then had to come in on
weekends to clean the stadium, it would
mean 28 straight days without a day
off.”
The ROTC unite now split the home
games between them, and each receives
a $600 contribution for each clean-up job.
The money comes from game receipte.
How does one go about cleaning a
4S,000-capacity stadium piled high with
the remains of thousands of picnics and
impromptu celebrations?
Gales says the studente have found by
experience that it is best to divide Into
three teams. Two teams take the
stadium, one on each side. A smaller
group collecte the litter from the
parking areas spread throughout
campus. With about 404S people, the job
usuaUy can be done in six or seven
hours.
"The girls are sent around through the
rows of seate first to pick up the bot
tles,’’ he says. "Then the guys come
along behind with the blowers to blow
the loose trash out to the ends of the
rows.”
The grounds department supplies 20
pack blowers. The blowers, weighing
about 30 pounds, consist of a gasoline
motor and a white, circular pipe about a
yard in length. The motor pushes a
strong blast of air through the pipe,
which can be directed under and around
Dixie Classic Adds To
Entertainment Lineup
The 1978 Dixie aassic Fair will
feature a wider variety of entertainment
to Fairgoers during ite run here Sep
tember 29 - October 7.
Mickey Gilley, a widely known
country singer, and Tom T. Hall, a
renowned singer and songwriter, will
appear In concert, Gilley on October 4
and Hall on October S.
Another new attraction announced by
William B. Austin Jr., Fair manager,
will be the Zayer Corporation Dbcie
Classic Fashion Show. This event is
scheduled for Arena I at 11:00 a.m.
Saturday, September 30, 3:00 p.m.
Sunday, October 1; and 11:00 a.m.
Saturday, October 7.
Band competitions sponsored by radio
station W T W will be kicked off in Arena
I for Countiy and Bluegrass semifinals,
6:00 - 9:30 p.m. Friday, September 29.
Tliese will continue at the same time for
Country semifinals on September 30 and
at 2:00 p.m. on Sunday, October 1, for
Bluegraas semifinals in the Grandstand.
If's back to Arena I at 6:00 p.m. Monday,
October 2 for more Coiint^ semifinals,
and then to the Grandstand at 6:30 p.m.,
October 5, preceding the Tom T. Hall
Show, for the Counbry finals.
Hie Blariah Group has been booked
. for programs of current and nostalgic
-^Sancing and singing. Their schedule of
' M pearances, all at the F a ir’s
Snowmobile, includes the following:
4:00 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday, Oc
tober 3; 4:00 p.m. 6:00 p.m., and 8:30
p.m. Tuesday,October 3; 4:00p.m., 6:00
D . m . . . and 8:30 p.m, Wednesday, Oc
tober 4; 4:30 p.m., 6:00 p.m., and 8:3U
p.m. Thursday, October 5; 4:00 p.m.
6:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Friday, October
6; and 2:30 p.m., 6:00 p.m., and 8:00
p.m. Saturday, October 7.
A new event which promises to create
a lot of attention is the Dolly Parton
' Look-Alike Contest. It begins at 7:00
p.m. in the Grandstand on October 4,
preceding the Mickey Gilley concert. At
that time, eight finaliste will compete
for cash and merchandise prizes.
Judges and participating sponsors will
be Bobby Teague Appliance and TV
Center, Professional Diet Control
Center, Hoagie King, Classic Beauty
Salon, E.H. Petree Custon Lamps,
Carolina Keyboards, Triad Heating and
Air Conditioning, and Radio Station
WSMX. Bach contestant will be in
terviewed by W SM X Station Manager
Curly Howard.
In addition, the James E. Strates mile-
long midway will open ite rides and
shows at noon each day, and the Zam-
belli fireworks will go off at 9:30. each
ni^t. The Chitwood Auto Thrill Show, a
display of daredevil driving, will en
tertain in the Grandstand October 2 and
3. On October 6 and 7, members of the
North Carolina Tractor Pullers
Association will compete for $4,000 in
prizes.
Apples
Apples can be protected from
darkening by mixing them with lemon,
orange, grapefruit, or pineapple juice
before adding other ingredients.
The girls do at times use the blowers
but because of the weight of the engines,
the Job more often falls to the males.
Gales says. With the high pitches whine
of the blowers resounding through the
stadium, the workers resemble moon
walkers as they move clumsily through
the rows, blowers harnessed to their
backs.
Twenty or more curious onlookers are
often drawn into the stadium and
usually stand for a half hour or more
watching the cleaning process.
Rakes and brooms are distributed to
the other workers while the blowers are
at work. ■
The sections of temporary seating in
the end zones must be cieancu by hand
since the trash cannot be blown out of
the soft earth. Press boxes and
restrooms also must be spotless when
the day is ended.
In the late afternoon, the trash is waist
deep or higher at the end of the rows.
The garbage which extends in white
ribbons from top to bottom of the rows of
steps must be raked or swept down to
the bottom of the stands and loaded into
waiting dumptrucks. The trucks
alternate from side to side of the
stadium, collecting trash as it comes
tumbling down. Workers wade hip deep
in the garbage as it is pushed and puUed
into cans which are heaved onto ihe
trucks. h
As much work as a normal stadium'
clean-up is. Gales says, it doesn’t
compare to the added work caused by
rainy weather or too few workers. Trash
that has been rained on won’t blow out
from under the seate. And if only 20-2S
people show up, no matter what the
weather, the task can last as long as 9 or
10 hours.
When the day’s chore is done and the
dirt-smudged workers head for a hot
shower and soft bed, three images
remain imbedded in their minds: liquor
bottles, chicken bones and peanut shells.
" I couldn’t believe all the liquor
bottles,” one sophomore girl said after
her first clean-up. " I don’t see whay
people can’t take some of the bottles
away with them.” Another remembered
the pain of crawling under the end zone
seate, picking chicken bones and every
celery stalk out from under the moth-
infested muck.
A junior who has been through three
clean-ups said, "The first thing you are
bound to notice is all those little bitty
peanut shells. You get in a section
where there are a lot of them and they
blow up into a cloud around your head
and settle all in your hair.” And, he adds
with a grimace, "Right behind the
peanute comes Col. Sanders and all that
uneaten chicken.”
"Jim m y Carter must be a few miUion
bucks richer after this weekend,” one
girl said wMle another added, "There
Can’t be one poor chicken left standing in'
this whole state.”
Brouse says the ROTC unite do a good
Job of cleaning Kenan because of their
youth and the numbers of people they,
bring out to do the Job.
The grounds supervisors don’t go over
the stadium with a white glove after
each clean-up, but no cans, bottles or
large pieces of trash are aUowed to slide
by. "W e would probably let a peanut
sheU or two lay there,” Gales adds, "but
not many of those.”
S e e ^ S a w -A -T h o n
C iv it a n A n n u a l S e e -S a w -A -T h o n Is S a tu rd a y
Vehicles Collide On US 158
Two vehicles coUided last Thursday
about 4:24 p.m. on U.S. 158, 9.8 miles
east of MocksvUle.
Involved was a 1977 Jeep operated by
Lane Piatt HoUar, 20, of 607 Cherry
Street, MocksvUle and a 1977 Toyota,
operated by Herman Stanley Marion, 44,
of Rt. 1 Advance.
Stete Highway Patrolman J.L. Payne
said his investigaUon showed that HoUar
had stopped behind a stopped school bus
which was discharging studente. Marion
came up from the rear and slowed to
stop. However, his foot sUpped off the
brake pedal onto the accederator pedal
pushing it into the vehicle ahead of him.
Damage to the Jeep was estimated at
$300 and $1400 to the Toyota. There were
no charges.
"You never know what is
enough until you k n o w
what is more than enough."
William Blake
The Junior Civitan Club at Davie
County High School wUl sponsor ite 3rd
Annual See-Sawathon September 30
from 8:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. on the square
in MocksvUle.
Proceeds from the event wUI go
towards the purchase of suppUes for the
Developmental Class of the Severely
and Profoundly Retarded. The class
which is open to aU severely and
profoundly retarded persons in Davie is
held in Cooleemee under the direction of
Sydna Sanford.
Approximately 25 Junior Civitan Club
members are expected to participate in
Uie attempt to attain their $800 goal.
People are urged to sponsor participante
by the hour or by making a donation to
the fund raisiing event.
The club raised $600 last faU for the
class. Lou Anne Eaton, club president
said, "we hope to attain the support of
the people during this project and reach
I the supporour goal to be used in I
rthwhUe program.”
! support of this
Around <b About
W EEK EN D GUESTS
Mrs. June Powell and her chUdren, Mark, Lisa and Susan of Lakeshore Drive
in Clemmons spent the weekend with her aunt, Mrs. T. P. Dwiggins at her home
on Wilkesboro Street.
F o u r C o r n e r s
' Homecoming will be
Sunday October 1 at Courtney
Baptist Church. Revival wlU
' ' in and guest speaker for
week wUl be the Rev.
Yates WUkinson, pastor of
4-H News
HORSE SHOW
. Tbe Davie County 4-H Horse
Clubs wiU bold their annual
County Horse Show this
Saturday, September 30. The
show wlU be held at ttie
TraUblazers 4-H Ring, Inc. off
of highway 801 Nortti on rural
road 1446. This wUl be an
tftemoon show beginning at l
p:m. and continuing unUl ite
conclusion. Tbe '
show wiU be ttie
diaries Styren of Sophia.
Ringm aster will be Mrs.
George WUson. The class Ust
for tbe show wUl include:
' (1) EngUsh Showmanship,
(3) Western Showmanship,
13) Very Baby Green Jump 2’,
.(4) Equitation over Fences
3’6” , (5) Equitation-Hunt
Seat, (6) Barrel Race, (%)
EngUsh Pleasure, (8) Saddle
S u t EquiUtion, (9) Open
Pieosure, (10) Pole Bending,
(11) Trail, (13) Western
Horsemanship, (13) Goat
Tying, (14) Western Pleasure,
(15) Egg and Spoon, (16)
Western Riding, (17) Coke
Race, (18) Beginner’s Walk-
Trot, (19) Simon Says, and
(30) Anyone who has not won
a Tn^hy.
AU entry fees wUl be $3 ÜI
each class. All riders
ref^terlng for Uie show must
be • 4-H member and 4-H
cards wUl be checked.
Awards wUl be given in
each class-trophy for first
(dace and ribbons for first
place ttarou^ sixtti place.
There wul be no open
concession duriiw ttie show.
Only snacks and drinks will be
on sale in ttw concession. Rain
dst» for the ihow li the
following day, Sunday, Oc
tober 1.
According to Douglas Lee,
Aulstant Extension Agent,
ttw public is InvltMl to attend.
N o a S S u b » wUl be charged.
Fork BapUst Church. The
pubUc is uivited to attend.
L.S. Shelton Sr. was
honored for his 79tti birttiday
Saturday night at ttie K & W
Cafeteria in Winston-Salem.
Those attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Craft of Winston-
Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
White and Mark, Mr. and
Mrs. Clifford Fleming, Mr.
and Mrs. L.S. Shelton Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Grady Beck, Mr.
and Mrs. Leonard Shelton,
Mr. and Mrs. BUly Shelton,
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Hamm,
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Potte and
Shane, Teresa Smitti, Danny
SpUlman, Larri Smitti, Junior
Johnson and Denise Shelton.
We extend our sincere
sympathy to the famUy of
Dillard Parker who died
unexpectedly Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe White and
M ark attended the Fall
FesUval of Music at Calvary
Baptist Church in Winston-
Salem Sunday.
Mrs. Edna Ard and
daughter Judy of Winston-
Salem were dinner gueste
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Parrish.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Parrish
attended a birttiday dinner
Friday night for his sister,
Mrs. Mary Rose in Winston-
Salem.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shelton
attended a birttiday supper
for Mrs. Cindy Anderson
Monday night at ttie home of
her parente of Souttiwood
Acres MocksviUe.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Baity of Courtney visited Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Shelton Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Richard Vest has
returned from Medical Park
Hospital in Winston-Salem
after undergoing surgery
recenUy.
in 1926 it was possible to
buy an sutomoliile for as
little as S2e0l
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D a v i e C o u n t y H ô p i t a l A u x i l i a r y O c t o b e r , 1 9 7 8
C a ll: R u b y S o u t h e r n - C h a i r m a n - 6 3 4 - 2 9 6 5
■11 Ill'll m m i T A 'J H М Л Г Ш Т М Ш П 'А Ш Ш Ш ■ ¿ !1 И :1 .Г Л 'Ш н и :!!> 1 Х Ш » Л Л 1 :1 .Г Л 'Д
1 2 3 Rubv
Southern
4
Jean Carlton
b Ruby
Southern
6 7
8 ^ Ruby
Southern
Rubv
Southern
11
Carroll Crowell
12 Ruby
Southern Carroll Crowell
Ц
^6 16
Мае Markland
17'
Ruby
Southern
li
Jean Carlton Ruby
Southern
20
Carroll Crowell
21
22 23 Gertrude
Madison
Ruby
Southern
25 “ Ruby
Southern
27
(^rroU Crowell
¿è
29 30 ^Gertrude
Madison
¿1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 1
p R S r THINGS FIRST
Я Ш П Т
F S U C
Y o u r S a v i n g s I n s u r e d t o $ 4 0 , 0 0 0
In 1934, First Federal was the first savings and loan
in North Carolina to provide insurance of savinss accounts through the FSLIC, an agency of
the Federal government. Today at First Federal, you not only have the security of knowing your
savings are insured, but that they are earning a high return with interest compounded
daily. Come by any of our offices and let us open an account to help secure your future.
FRST i^DERAL SAVINGS
Main Office: 230 N. Cherry Street
Branch Offices; 490 Hanc« MalVlSO S. Stratford Road/2815 Reynolda Road/3001 Wauglitown Street
MocltcviUe Office: 215 Gaither Street
16 - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Summaiy On Proposed Changes
In Wildlife Uws Is Available
Sportsmen and others in
terested In the proposed
changes In North Carolina’s
wildlife resources law can
obtain a free, detailed sum
mary of all the proposals.
"Because of the widespread
interest in the proposed
changes, we have compiled a
detailed summary tn booklet
form which k available to
anyone who writes for it,”
announced Woodrow Price,
chairman of the Committee.
"To get a copy, simply write
to: Wildlife Resources U w
Revision, Room 383, Archdale
Building, 512 N.Sallsbury
Street, Raleigh, N.C. 27611.
•‘Of course, these are only
proposals at this point,” said
Price. “Before any final
proposals are drafted, we will
hold a series of public
hearings across the Stale.
Ten hearings will be held
across the State during
September, October, and
November (see schedule
below).”
The Conservation Law
Study Committee Is a body
established by the 1977
General Assembly to consider
revision of the 1935 game law.
The Sttidy Committee has
agreed upon a number of
tenUtive proposals to modify
the provisions of the original
bill, particularly in the
penalties section. Higher
fines and revocation of
hunting privileges are
proposed for convicted game
law violators. Also, the new
law - as currently proposed -
would place the authority to
regulate the manner of taking
game with the N.C. Wildlife
Resources Commission.
“All these proposed
changes are tentative, and we
are making an all-out effort to
find out what the people of the
State want and to incorporate
as many of their desires into
this new bill as possible before
we send It back to the
ature in 1979,” said
Price pointed out that, "If
the bill passes, it will be the
first comprehensive revision
and updating of North
Carolina’s 40-year old game
law. There have been many
amendments to the 1935 game
law and many local game
laws have been passed over
the years. This has created a
great deal of difficulty for
wildlife officials in trying to
enforce this complex set of
laws. Also, the general public
does not have ready access to
the laws which control their
hunting, fishing and trapping
activities because so many
are local laws which are
buried in the statute books
and are beyond the control of
the Wildlife Commission. The
result has been confusion
among sportsmen and hin
drance in the proper
management of wildlife
resources.”The Study Committee has
devoted a great deal of time to
trapping and the status of
furbearing animals. Their
current proposals direct the
Wildlife Resources Com
mission to establish a fur-
bearer research and
management capability, and
to more closely regulate the
taking, buying and seUing of
furs in the State.
The fox would be classed as
both a game animal and a
furbearer, and the Wildlife
Resources Commission would
be directed to establish a
closed season for fox hunting
to protect females while they
are rearing their young. Also
electronic calling devices and
guns would be prohibited for
hunting foxes, and fox
trapping would be limited to
two months per year with
steel traps legal for only one
of those months. Before the
Wildlife Resources Com
mission could open any
trapping season for foxes, it
would be required to conduct
a thorough study of the fox
population in the area and
make a positive deter
mination that an adequate
number of foxes was present
to provide for both hunting
with dogs and trapping. Sport
hunting for foxes must be
¿ven priority over trapping
when populations are low.
Th^ Cummittee’s new draft
of the game law revision
differs in several ways from a
similar revised bill which was
unsuccessfully introduced in
the 1977 legislative session.
Some of these changes are
listed here:
-The Wildlife Resources
Commission would be
authorized to regulate field
trials, including retriever
field trails which could be
held throughout the year.
-M igrant farm workers
would be treated as residents
for the purpose of purchasing
most fishing licenses.
-The local game com
missions in Dare and
Currituck counties would be
preserved.
-The law passed in 1977 to
protect the beaver would be
preserved.
Price added, "Sunset
legislation passed in 1977
included the 1935 game law.
This means that the existing
law will be automatically
repealed on July 1, 1983, and
that we will be without a law
for the conservation of our
wildlife resources unless we
are successful in getting new
legislation adopted. With this
in mind, our Committee has
been working hard to develop
a revision that will serve the
cause of wildlife conservation
well and that wiU be ac
ceptable to the citizens of
North CaroUna. These pubUc
hearings are the time and
place for interested persons to
teU us how they feel about the
1 revision.”
meetings wUl be held
according to the foUowing
schedule:
^ -Edentpn^- Courttaouse^at
7:30 p.m. jbn September'26;
-New Bern - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on September 27;
-Elizabethtown - Bladen
Technical Institute at 7:30
p.m. on September 28;
-Raleigh - HUton Inn at 4:00
p.m. on September 29;
-NashvUle - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on October 10;
-Graham - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on October 11;
-Albemarle - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on October 12;
-YadkinvUle - Courthouse
at 7:30 p.m. on November 8;
-Morganton - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on November 9;
-AshevUle - Courthouse at
7:30 p.m. on November 10.
HEALTH TIP S
by The American Medical Association
Our knowledge of medicine,
and all of science for that
matter, has increased greatly
in the last century. But Uiere
are times when we take this
information explosion for
granted and assume that we
have always known these
Uiings. Sometimes it is in
teresting to look back at
medical foUdore to see how
far we reaUy have come.
WhUe some of this medical
folklore is amusing and quaint
some of it was remarkably
accurate. For example, the
Indians of SouUi America
used to chew fever-curing
Peruvian bark to treat
malaria. Today we use
refined quinine derived from
the same source. For heari
trouble, the English brewed a
tea made of the leaves and
flower of the foxglove. Today,
we use degitalis refined from
this plant.
Uiere is, perhaps, no more
fertUe area of folklore than
pregnancy and childbirth.
Mothers used to be prohibited
from painting and decorating
whUe Uiey were pregnant.
Uiis was a real and useful
warning because paint in
those days contained a great
deal of white lead and tur
pentine. The lead was truly
dangerous and the turpentine
was nauseating and un
pleasant.
Paints today contain very
UtUe of eiUier white lead or
turpentine to the expectant
moUier can pabit aU she
wants, even the waUs. Con
trary to general belief, there
is no danger to her in stret
ching. Nor is there any danger
of her causing twists of knots
in a baby's umbUical cord by
hanging out Uie wash or by
hfiAdUiig rope.
General medical super
stitions cover a wide range of
diseases, meUiods of treat
ment, and materials. Con
sider:
- A popular treatment for
whooping cough consisted of
passing the patient through a
horse coUar three times.
- When a man died of
tuberculosis his famUy, tired
of harboring so many cases of
Uie disease, decided to put a
stop to it. After the funeral
Uiey lingered in ttie cemetary,
lifted the casket, and buried it
face down. The belief being
Uiat Uiey had ended tuber
culosis in that family.
- Greasing the patient was
considered an honorable
rememedy for any disease of
the chest such as a cold,
pneumonia or tuberculosis.
Some of tbe popular soluUons
were skunk’s oil, cam
phorated oU and goose grease.
These greases only made the
patient messy, smeUy and
uncomfortable. But those who
believed in them said any fool
knows the greases cut
straight through to the li
and help to loosen the
Maybe we've come a long
way, but then again, maybe
we haven’t.
RSVP To Sponsor
Fiddlers’ Convention
The Retired Senior
Volunteer Program of Davie,
Yadkin, Surry and Stokes
counUes is sponsoring Its
second annual Blue Grass and
Old Timey Fiddlers’ Con
venUon on Saturday, October
21, at Veterans’ Park in
Mount Airy.
The program wUl begin at
8:00 p.m.
Admission wUl be charged,
but ChUdren under 8 wUT be
admltt^ed free if escorted by
someone wiUi a Ucket.
More tiian |!,000 in prizes
wUi be awarded.
Bands interested in com-
peUng may write to Dulcy
Fackrell, P.O. Box 309,
BoonviUe, N.C. 27011.
CHAWP
D O G
FO O D
IMORTON FROZEN FRIEDCHICKEN
ORE-IDA GOLDEN FROZENURK*IMA VULUCri ГКУАВП .FRENCH FRIES 2 ¡Í, 79^
CARNATION
COFFEE-MATE
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CAM PBELL'SPORK and BEANS 164)2.
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OLD VIRGINIAAPPLESAUCE 25-oz.
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CRISPLETTUCE J . 39’
M O UN TAINAPPLES ’cZ .1 9 ’
W ESTERNCANTALOUPES . 59’
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PLUS DEP.
SAVI »O'
F o r 5 4 Y e a r O ld W a lt B o ttles S r ........
S w im m in g - Is
T h e F o u n t a i n
O f Y o u t h
(SECOND OF TWO ARTICLES)
Walt Boyle Sr. of Bermuda Run has
never enjoyed the activity of swimming
as much as he has enjoyed it during the
, past year in which he has been involved
In the Masters’ Swimming Program as a
member of the Winston-Salem YM CA
Masters’ Swimming Team and the
state’s Tar Heel Masters’ Swim Club.
That’s saying a lot for a 54-year-old
man who started swimming in rain
barrels as a very young child living on a
ranch in West Texas and later* graduated to swimming in rivers, pools
and oceans all over the United States
and the world while in high school,
college, the Marine Corps and Just as a
private citizen.
And Boyle’s Joy with the Masters’
program does not come solely from the
fact that during the past year he has set
’ 8 North Carolina state Masters’
freestyle swimming records for men
aged 50-54 years and earlier this month
finished in the top ten swimmers in the
nation in 5 freestyle events at the 1078
AAU National Long Course Masters’
Swimming Championship held in Rhode
Island.
In a recent interview Boyle elaborated
on the reasons for his enthusiasm about
the Masters’ program.
He explained that the Masters’
program is made up of swimmers aged
25-years and older. The swimming
classes in the program are in five-year
increments and at S4-years-oId he is
> currently swimming at the top of the 50-
54-year-old class.
“The Masters is the on
ly sport I know where you look forward
to getting older so you can enter a new
age class and be several years younger
than some of the other persons you are
competing against,” noted Boyle.
» He added, "O f course, the competition
Is a part of It. I get a kick out of it even
thou(^ I know I ’m eventually going to
get beat. It's always a challenge and as I
constantly improve on my practice and
meet times I Just want more.”
Another “big bonus” for Boyle from
the Masters’ program is the sense of
• comradery present among the
program’s participants. “I am now
swimming In competitive meets all over
the c o u n ^ against fellows I swam with
or against in Mgh school and college and
it’s great to SM them again and renew
old friendships,” he said., Bob Amudson, whom Boyle said “was
the fastest swimmer in the world in
1942” and who is currently the captain of
the Virginia State BIasters’ Swim Team,
flies to Winston-Salem twice a month
Just to visit Boyle so the two can practice
swimming at the Winston-Salem YMCA.
Boyle also readily admitted that the
’ physical well-being which he derives
from the training and competition of the
Masters’ program is “a big reason” he
is so thoroughly involved with the
program.
“When I was a lot younger and in the
Marine Corps during the Second World
, War I saw men transfer into the Corps
from the French Foreign Le^on who
were in their 50’s and could stUl outwork
and outperform much younger men,” he
noted.
“Later, when I was with the Marines
In the Korean War I watched General
‘Chesty’ Puller, who was also In his 50’s,
outwalk, outshoot and outclimb anybody
' over there and I Just looked forward to
getting to this age and still being In good
shape,” explained Boyle.
“Do you know there are men who were
captains of their swim teams in high
school and college who are now involved
with the Masters’ program who are
swimming faster at age 50 than they did
in high school and college,” Boyle
rted.
ile continued, " I think this is in
credible what’s happening. I think this
whole Masters’ program is going to have
a lot to do with our national welfare and
I feel a lot better about our country with
this attitude of toughening up mentally
and physically.”
Boyle theorized that “We’re going to
have to move away from the t.v. set a
little bit if we’re going to stay a coun
try."
He pointed out that “High per
formance can be prolonged and
maintained longer than previously
thought could be expected.”
According to Boyle, recent studies
have shown that “A Master swimmer
can affect some delaying of the aging
process with a regular training program
of swimming 2,000 yards a day, five days
a week, at an 80-percent intensity.”
This "intensity of training” is the
“key factor” in comparing aging
studies, he said.
"The long-term effects of an 8-year
training program have shown only
positive results with no adverse effects”
and "It is concluded from this study that
the majority of Masters’ swimmers will
show these same aging curve reversals
of the physiological factors and a con
tinued nigh physical work capacity of an
untrained person 20 or 30 years
younger,” reported Boyle.
He cited another study to support his
claim that vigorous exercise is
beneficial to persons attempting to stay
in good physical condition.
"A few years ago, researchers from
the University of Pennsylvania studied
the circulatory systems of two groups of
rats. One group lived in small cages and
did not get any exercise. The other
group was dropped into buckets of water
for several minutes a day,” he ex
plained.
"Well, to keep from drowning the rats
swam with great gusto,” he said.
“Later,” noted Boyle, “after a few
months of this, both groups of rats were
killed and their arteries injected with a
latex substance which became solid,
making a cast of the circulatory
systems” and, not surprisingly, "when
dissected out and weighed the casts
from the swimmers showed greater
development of arteries in the heart and
the volume of the circulatory system
was much greater.”
What is the moral to this study? “We
should all Jump into buckets of water
every day and avoid the University oi
Pennsylvania,” exclaimed Boyle.
Proper dietary habits is another
important factor in staying in good
physical condition, Boyle said.
"It’s important to get enough vitamin
and mineral supplements every day and
after a swimming meet you should in
crease your intake of potassium,
calcium and magnesium,” he said.
And a reduction in the intake of sugar
is essential for good health, Boyle said.
“Be realistic about your sugar intake
and don’t go overbrard with it,” he
commented. “A little sugar or honey on
the oatmeal is fine and won’t hurt most
of us a bit...Tbe problem is excess sugar.
Putting sugar on your strawberries or
grapefruit-that’s too much!”
"You don’t need to eliminate all
sugar. Just most if it,” he reasoned.
And training and rest are two
essential factors in preparing for a
competitive swimming meet, Boyle
said.
yle backs up his philosophies of
al well-being by training at a pace
at would put almost anybody, except
(continued on page SB)
Walt Boyle Sr. has always been in his own natural element
churning through a body of water.
physi
that'
Anytime you see Walt Boyle there’s a good chance he will be
swimming in a pool somewhere.Following a swim, Boyle weighs to see how many pounds he lost during the strenuous practice.
F e a tu re I B S e p te m b e r2 8 ,1 9 7 8
Stoiy by Doug Livengood
Photos by Garry Foster
Weight training is also incorporated In Boyle’s practice regtineD. His dog "Killer” looks on in tbe background.
Boyle and his dog, “Killer,” take time out at their Bermuda Run home for a rare moment of relaxation.
2В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28. 1978
ГГП
W i n s H ic k o r y H ill T itle
Nineteen-year-old Johnny M iller of Mocksville won the cham pionship
flight of the H ickory HiU Golf Club Cham pionship held during the past
two weekends at the club. Kenny Jordan Sr. was runnerup In the
championship flight. Some 70 participants played in the tournament
and 31 participated In the championship flight. M lUer scored a 6 over
par 296 In posting his victory. Other flight winners were as follows: 1st
flight - Jerry Clyde Hendrix; 2nd flight • Daw son Strider; 3rd flight -
Bill Dw iggins; and 4th flight - Jerry Callison, Runners-up in the in
dividual flights were: Bob Vandiver, 1st flight; Vernon Thompson,
2nd; Clarence Ahlstrom,3rd flight; and G. B. Smith, 4th flight.
At every fishing spot along the
Carolina coasts, there is a discussion
topic that could be generaUy entitled:
“What's Happened to the F is l^ 7 "
The simple answer
is...nothing...nothing at all. Fishing is
continuing the same as always. There
are probaoly as many fish being caught
today...but fewer being caught per
person.
Let’s look at coastal fishing
historically. In the 20’s and 30’s, fishing
was usuaUy very good because there
were fewer fishermen, fewer faculties,
not as many cars or roads. And then
came World War II.
From 1940 through 1946, coastal
fishing came to an absolute standstiU.
Less than 1 percent of the sports or
commercial fishing being done prior to
the war was being done at aU dunng the
war. On Kure Pier, for instance, fishing
was done only in dayUght hours and an
armed sentry was stationed on the end
of the pier for the duration. Burning
ships could be seen from Kure Beach.
Offshore submarines were occasionally
spotted by smaU boatmen.
By the oceans were abnormally fuU of
fish. Two mating fish in 1946 could easily
have produced 100,000 fish by 1946. It
was probably the greatest fish growth
explosion In modem times, held in check
otuy by nature’s selection of the species.
But here was stUl a period of tran
sition yet to come before normal fishing
could resume by the populance. AU
fishing equipment had to be rebuUt.
Boats had to be repaired and replaced.
The returning warriors had to find their
place in society, marry their wives, get
settled in their nobs, buUt their houses,
have their cliUdren...aU before there
was time for play.
On the national scene, the factories
had to i>e reconverted to consumer
goods. The automobUes had to be buUt;
the roads repaired and constructed; the
M o c k sv ille R a m s
1978 MocksviUe R a m FootbaU players are (front row, I to r) M a rty A tk iu o n
Ron Whitlock. R u ss WhlUock, Terry Payne, Tim Howard, Gordon T
„ , Crisev, M ic ky Atkinson, <2nd row) Perry Sum m ers, Steven Scott, u a vio o»n-
R a m s C h e e rle a d e rs ford, Steven Moore, Robert Furches, Jeff Scott, Scott Fisher, Artie Palm er,
(3rd row) Jeff Gaither, San Odum, Jim m y Broadway, Todd Bam hardt, Tony
Foelds, Robert Rutherford, Meade Atkinson, Tracy Frost, (back row) Bobby
Wall, Ted K iser and Jim Fields.
Do You Know?
cszJSTGsa
For best resulU, canned pickles
should be stored in a dark, dry, cool
place where there wUl be no danger of
freeiing, says Dr. Nadine Tope,
agricultural extension foods and
nutrition specialisU at North CaroUna
State University.
Freezing may crack the iars or break
the seals and let in bacteria that cause
•роШмК^'
Protecting the Jars from Ught wUl
prevent bleaching and possible
deterioration of flavor, says Dr. Tope.
Pickle C ^ r
Using the wrong pots or pans for
heating plckUng U ^ d s can change the
color of the pickles.
According to Dr. Nadine Tope,
agricultural extension foods and
nutrition specialist at North CaroUna
»
State UnTverslty, copper, brass, galvanized or Iron utensUs may react with acids or salts and forms un- dersirable compounds as weU as the color change in the pickles.
For best results, she recommends
using utensils made of unchipped
enamelware, stainless steel, aluminum
or glass.
Choosing Cucumbers The best pickles comes from cucumbers that are Just-picked fresh.
If they can't be used immediately they
should be refrigerated or spread out
where they wUi be weU ventilated and
cool, says Jane Aitchlson, agricultural
extension foods and nutrition speclaUst
at North CaroUna SUte University.
Cucumbers are one vegeuble that
deteriorate rapidly, particularly at
room temperature. |
ф % ¥ м 1 щ о о о т т•»ewpp 14 тие >1*>меы'* ш а COKV fveuCf vefciP мя те., cníeFi,4 гелюятч» С*>ШШСвЛ, АМР МЕ71СД1.
Of Ае«уCCWMUJJiCATiC«J> АМР SnClAUffT^АМР А>8^селгг
ш т в > п ш т мом -TPAPiTiowAu ;
gears of an operaUng nation running
smoothly again...aU before there was
time for play.
In 1952,1 bought Kure Pier because 1
thought it ha(f a great product and
wasn’t advertised enough. With a $20
typewriter and a $100 camera, I started
M ocksvUle R a m Cheerleaders are (front row, 1 to r) Jenny Marlon, M issy
Long (2nd row) Sharon PenweU, Regina Swicegood, Karen Green, K im Jones,
JIU W alker, (3rd row) Tonya Turner, LaRhonda Ketner, Susan HoweU, HoUy
W lnterberg and Beth Edw ards. (Photos by Robin Carter)
_ the caroUna fishermen about the
coastal fishing, particularly at Kure
Pier. Aycock Brown was doing the same
thing from Dare County.
The word spread and the people were
ready to play some and fish a lot. And
the ocean was fuU ot fish. Catches in the
so’s and early 60’s were reaUy
astronomical.
The number of fishermen increased as
the population soared. Piers Jumped
from 7 in the C^roUnas in 19S2 to 65
today. Commercial boats improved
from rough scows operated by hand to
sophisticated equipent operated by push
button. Pleasure boau mushroomed.
(Лшг1ег boats doubled and redoubled.
Head boatt got larger and larger.
Shrimpers dragged the bottoms so many
times they have destroyed the pastures
of the sea. In the early 50’s,you seldom
saw a boat at. sea. Last summer, on a
calm day, I counted 66 wltMn eyesight.
So...to return to our original quesUon: .
“What’s happened to the fishing?”
People...people is what has happened to
the fishing. I dare say there are as many
fish cauipt today as ever before (ex
cluding 1952-1965). But...the catches per
person are down because there are more
ways to fish and more peqile Ashing.
A point to remember; Fishing with a
rod and reel is the most inefficient
manner in which you can fish.
Just think—you go to the end of the
pier, nothing but water as far as you can
see in any direction. You cast in a bait as
big as a dime and expect a fish to find U.
To me, It’s not a question of why they
don’t bite. It’s a mystery they ever do
bite.
There must be a lot of fish out therel
Girls Volieyball Team
To Play In Thomasville
The Davie High girls’ voll^baU team
wUl travel to ThomasvUle, September.
28, to iday matches against both
ThomasviUe and Asheboro.
The matches wUl be played at 4 p.m.
At present, the Davie girls are
sporting a 3-3 season record.
VoUeybaU coach Aileen Steehnan
pointed out that Asheboro is currently in
first place in the North Piedmont
(inference in the ghrls’ voUeybaU race
and Davie is in second place.
“We need two wins at ThQmasvUle to
be able to move closer to ftait place,”
said Steelman.
So ftb a ll T o u rn a m e n t
A id s G e ra ld M a r k la n d
; A men’s; benefit softbaU tournament .^
sponsored by the Fork Recreation '
Center for GeraU Markland ended
September 17 with a team sponsored by
auctioneer Johnny Foster winning the
tournament.
Ninteen teams played in the two-week
tournament.
Second place in the tournament was
captured by the Foater Drug team and
tMrd place went to the Brown Bros.
Lumber team.
Foy BaUey, who organized the tour
nament, r e p o ^ that $1,000 In proceeds
were raised by the tournament to help
pay for some of Markland’s medical
expenses he has incurred because of a
serious Ulness.
Sportsmen Meet Set
For Farmington Dragway
October 7th & 8th
Farmington Dragway wUl be the
scene of the International Hot Rod
Associations final National Title Series
sman pdnts meet of the season,
sns have been finalized for the event
to take place on Oct 7 and 8 with over 200
top contestants expected to enter.
This is the second such event staged at
Farmington this season with the last
National TlUe Series in July attracting
over 6,000 to the track. Included wUl be
the super charged dragsters and Funny
cars that reached speeds in excess of 160
mph in the 5 second elapsed time range.
Already on the entry Ust are Butch
Osmon of Leavitsburg, Ohio and Dough
Newby of NorfoUi, Va in the dragster
division. Osmon is currently leading In
the national points standings of Ш ВА.
Funny cars entranU indude Deroy
Worley of NorfoUc, Va in a Mustang,
Mark King, VlrginU Beach, Va, in a 500
cubic inch hemi CorvetU and Ronnie
Midgget along with Lee Papas boUi in Chevy Funny O rs. Several national
titles may be decided during the event
with Butch Osmon expected to cUnch the
International Sportsman tlUe with a
Farmington victory.
Another interesting battle is bolding
forth in the super-stock division with
Mike Boyles of King and Roger Ben-
nefield of Greer, SC battUng U out for
first place. Boyles is a frequent winner
at Farmington.
During the last national title series at
Farmington several world records were
set. A purse of Ю5,000 wUl be at stake.
Faulty Brakes Are
Charged In Fatality
A Winston-Salem man charged in
connection with a motor vehicle fataUty
near here May 15 was found guUty of
having improper brakes in Oavle
County District Court Monday.
RuAis 0. Joyce Jr.; had originally
been charged Mth death by vehicle after
his car eoIUdad with a van driven by
Susan B. Keever oi Rt. в MocksvUle at
the Intersection of 1-40 and US Ml. M lu
Keever, 13, died Instantly.
In ottier court action llonday, Bmest
Cranford of Davie County, w u sen
tenced to a year in JaU (or robbing a
ted mai "соШ<>регш1
center.
machine at a
ы в й с р Ч я б
4PM
500 PM
WOW!ГНЕТОМ ANDJERRf SPDBRMAN SUPER-^PeOAL COMEDY fJOUR .
All your lavorite cartoon characters in an hour-long cartoon extravaganza every weekday afternoon al 4 on TV-121^ Comedy, thrills and adventure on TV-12 Tom & Jerry Spfderman.,. artd Friends 1 1
WARM HEARTEl FAMILY! MYTHREEThe Douglas family — a household that will make you laugh, make you cry, and always keep you entertained. Join Steve, Uncle Charley, Robbie,Mike and Chip this afternoon at5:30on WXII-TV, Channel!2.Fred NIacMurray William Demarest
SKmnNG40i7!THEDEmJSHIMtrSmciDBfnm UECTUFOWhen the entire town of Davidson reports mysterious sightings for two nights,Captain Ben Ryan and Sgt.Harry Fitzare called in to investigate I Edward Winter and Caskey Swalm
Cranford а м е а М the sentence to
Da^vie County Superior Court.
THETRICKOFDEATH!QumcrWhen a magician is murdered performing an escape acton TV, Quincy must find the cause before other magicians are killedi JackKlugman DonAmeche AnnBlyth Jo Ann Pf lug
ЮРМ DAIfSоптктBBCOMES
W EADan Costello-super salesman for Tfans-Atlantic Broadcasting- has a drinking problem which triggers a major crisis between the network and a key advertiser. Ellen must keep Dan on Ihe account-and on the wagon! Pamela Bellwood Richard Basehart Alex Cord Andrew Prine
U I X I I
ic"D a v ie L o s e s T o T h o m a s v ille ;
L e x in g to n H e r e F rid a y N ig h t
D A V IE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY. SEPTEM BER 28. 1978 - 3B
"Thomasville Has Truly A Great High
School Football Team ” ,Says Coach Kennedy
Thom asville's powerful Bulldogs
rolled over Davie County's War Eagles,
27-0, in a North Piedmont Conference
high school football game at
ThomasvUle last Friday night.
It was the fourttishootoutof the season
for the Bulldogs who share first place in
the conference chase with Lexington,
' both teams having 3-0 conference
marks.
It was the only setback of the season
for the War Eagles who are now 1-1 in
the conference and 3-1 overall. The War
Eagles take on Lexington at the Davie
m gh stadium thU Friday night at 8:00
p.m.
Thomasville, ranked second in the
' state's 3-A ranks, exploded for 20 points * ' In the first half to settle the issue and
pick up its fifth straight victory.
Fullback Sterling Welbom led the
assault. He raced 79 yards for the first
touchdown and Ikey Davis kicked the
extra point.
A few minutes later James Burton
scored on a 34-yard run. The third
Thomasville score came on a 52-yard
punt return by Davis.
Thomasville’s final touchdown of the
night was made in the last period when
Welbom churned over from the ten.
Welbom rushed IS times for 237 yards
and Burton had 09 yards on nine carries.
Brent Burton was the top gainer for
the War Eagles with 41 yards on 12
carries.
Davie County picked up 188 yards and
held a 10-8 M ge in fhvt downs.
Thomasville rushed for 348 yards and
passed for 23.
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TUtmaivMlt
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S-1M 1-M1170
Th«matvMI«T- Wflbern n • to » -»• N 0 t~V run (Dtvli Hick)T- Burton U run (kick falltd)T- Davli S2 punt rtturn (Oavli kick) T- Wtlbern ^run (Davit kick)
thé
D EACO N !
Larry Lanier
Wins Lexington
Road Race
On Saturday, September 23, Larry
Lanier of Advance won the Lexington
Street Scene 10,000 Meter Road Race.
He covered the hilly course in a time of
31:43. The second place flnisher was Ed
Stenberg of Winston-Salem who is a
former Duke All-American cross
country runner. The в mile race was
sponsored by Zimmerman’s and the
Lexhigton VMC
A true life fairy tale. The names have
- been changed to protect the identities of
the guilty.
Allied Press collegiate football editor
Hasty Nicholson sits at his desk hi a
I , . flush corporate office building in New
'Y o r k carefully studying upcoming
* - Ifootball games from various parts of the
' country. He analyzes the teams, their
records, the current injury reports, all
the data he can put his hands on. After
careful study he sends word over the
teletype to all the Allied Press sub
scribers, newspapers, television and
radio stations all over the country —
“Let the word go forth and be known
across the land. Hasty Hicholson
cts LSU 40, Wake Forest 0 hi Baton
I this Saturday night.’’
And the word seeps to all parts of the
land; local columnists and sportscasters
take Hasty's word and sow it across the
> fertile minds ot those who scurry for bits
and pieces of taformation about-every
game everywhere every weekend and to
those who might just bet the farm, the *■ stock, and the barrel if the spread is
right.
And inevitably the players on the two
teams hear of Hasty's prediction and it
> settles hi theh- mhids. One team to ease
off and relax despite constant wandngs
by coaches and team captains. The
other team beghis to feel hisulted,
b belittled, ridiculed, puxzled and perhaps
riled about the predicted disaster.
And then the fans. When Wake Forest
phiyed LSU down in Baton Rouge last
Saturday night, the fans came to Tiger
Stadiuih hungry for a win, a BIO W IN by
a BIO SCORE to boost the rathigs hi the
naUonal ppUs.
“We might get a hundred tonight,
maybe two hundred,” slurred one fan
entering the stadium. "The Tiger’s
gonna roar tonightl”
And there were those who leaned back
and pitied the team hi black and gold,
empathized with their most certahily
hopdess situation. “I just hope they
don’t get too many peqile hurt. You
gonna feel for 'em. What if you were
theh* coach?”
And there was the rookie reporter
seeking the comaradarie of veterans of
the Tiger Stadium press box.
“Where’s this team from anyway?”
he asked aloud with a Uugh and a slap
on the back of another reporter.
And so it went last Saturday night at
Tiger Stadium hi Baton Rouge as the
Deacons met the tenth raiuted LSU
Tigers hi what one national writer had
termed “the thhrd worst mismatch of the
season.”
A Baton Rouge television reporter,
seizhig the 40M) predicUon that had been
prhited nationwide, went a step farther.
On Thursday before the game he
predicted the score would be “*L‘S ‘U 68,
Wake Forest 14.”
The fans were hungry. And when 10
p.m. central thne roUed hi they were
miffed. LSU 13, Wake Forest ll.
A loss for Wake Forest and a whi for
the tenth ranked Tigers. But as the
players left the field the Tigers were
roundly booed by theh- own faithful and
the Deacons became the recipients of a
standhig ovation at their end of the
stadium.
Amid all the wild predictions and the
disappohitment is a pohit. Hasty can
conthiue, undoubtedly will, to make his
predictions. But if he gets the chance to
read this column I hope he’ll somehow
get the pohit that predicUng a score is
hazardous to the health of everyone
hivolved... fan, player, coach, reporter.
Pick a whiner if you want to, Hasty,
but you can take those scores and add it
to whatever you normaUy hidulge hi on
prediction day. Go ahead and pck the
whmers, but ask people who beUeved
“LSU 40, Wake Forest 0” what they
thought of your predictions last Sunday
morning.
Piedmont
standings,
schedule
By Doug Livengood
“Thomasville has got really and truly
great high school football team and we
would have just had to have had an
unbelievable night to be hi the ballgame
and we just cu ^’t,” observed Davie
H l^ head coach Joey Kennedy after the
Bimdogs defeated his War Eagles, 27-0,
at Thomasville last Friday ni^t.
Kennedy noted that “if we could have
taken a s-mhiute stretch out of the
second quarter when they scored 20
pohits the fhul score would have been
only 7-0.”
He reported that the fh«t two times
Davie had the ball during the game “we
moved it really well and probably should
have got somethhig on the board.”
And, according to the Davie coach,
"When the game got really rough and
dirty In the last half we started hitthig
better.”
Kennedy remarked that defensive end
Kenny Moore and defensive safety back
Steve Fleming had “good defensive
games” for Davie agahist Thomasville.
Despite a lot of hard hitting in the
game last Friday, coach Kennedy
reported that his squad did not receive
any serious hijuries from the contest.
For the fh-st time this season Davie's
prospective all-state offensive tackle,
Rex Allen, who has been inluried In pre
season, played in a game and Kennedy
said Allen seemed “to hold up pretty
weU.”
ReganUng the Thomasville defeat,
Kennedy said he believed "our kids saw
how it was like playing agahist the best
and I think they learned sometlihig from
it and I believe Thomasville respects us
Kenny Moore
....good on defense
as hitters.”
This Friday night’s opponent is
always tough Lexington.
“You’ve got to remember that
Lexington is the defending North
Piedmont Conference champions and
they are tied with ThomasviUe for first
place,” said Kennedy.
Hearing Loss
A small child who is not usually
awakened by a loud sound may te
suffering from a hearing loss, warns the
Beltone Crusade for Hearing Con
servation. Such children should be
given a complete hearing test the
Crusade officials add.
Steve Flemii ...go«dlefensive game
“They’ve got reaUy good talent and
quickness as usual,” he adde
ton
--J added.
Kennedy mentioned that Lex!
‘‘has a great sophomore back in a __
named McIntosh and they are led hi the
Une by two college prospects, David
Rice and Ed Thnberlake, who play on
both offense and defense.”
Hearing Tests
While a hearing test will neither
prevent nor alleviate a hearing loss, it
usually is the first vital step toward
obtaining the help that is available to
most hearing impaired persons, ac
cording to the Beltone Crusade for
Hearing Conservation.
NORTH rilDMONT CONPIRINCS
CMl. onraji
Themuvlllf Ullnglon mrlliRoMn Otvl. County
ÎSSSr"
*й»4
r.iMЬ2
»
яMilM
NIXT ICNIDULB
^ïrsw?.rAs;?i3iÂî
Larry Lanier
Lanier received a trophy and an (85.00
gift certificate for his first pbice fhiish.
Other Davie County runners competing
hi the race were Taylor Slye, Tom Stare,
Joyce Call, and Chuck Tomlinson ( now
of Salisbury).
Davie High School
Girl Netters Score Victory
Davie County's gh-ls handed North
Rowan a 7-2 loss hi a North Piedmont
Conference tennis match played at the
North courts Monday aftemoon.
The results; '
*t NtwtofhCoftevfr »■tWMtiratfali . ,1 orlrmldy
fr«MI et Wllkti Ctntral
ovtr im Kiuttt. »-t. t-i.Ooubitt: AlItfHAmM (DC) ov
(DC) ovtr Mtl*
____Stapitton (OC) ovtr CÔMhKIutti, »-V HtnM-Kartn Cernttttr (OC) ovtr Clark*-
Folti, é-i. ±7i T.
Eddingtr, Ф4,
"Rabbit Thief”
In Cooleemee
There's a “rabbit thief”
loose hi Cooleemee...
And Margaret Jacobs would
like for whoever took her
bunny to "come back and get
it's food...I just bou^t it a
new bag and I'll leave it near
the empty cage.”
The rabbit was apparently
taken last Monday n ^ t while
she visited with a sick friend
hi the hospital. The door to the
Uttle pen was shut and latched
and it is highly unlikely the
bunny let himself out and shut
the door back.
Possibly the same thief also
took a rabbit from it’s cage at
the home of Mrs. M ary
Cranfill, who lives near-
by...And left much worse than
it’s food. M ary's rabbit had a
litter of little bunnies who are
now without a mother to feed
them.
Rabbits are not so scarce hi
Davie County, but what
anyone wanting one badly
enough could easily fhid one.
?In fact, Blargat«t and Mary
' would much rather have
given theirs away (with food
and babies) than to have them
taken under such cruel cir
cumstances.
T H U R D A Y — F R I D A Y — S A T U R D A Y
ONLY
2 5 'T r o u b l e L i g h t s * 2 * 9 9
Ч . 9 9
H a n g i n g P o t s
F - M C o n v e r t e r * 1 5 . 8 8
B ic L i g h t e r 6 9
G o l f U m b r e l l a * 4 '* 9 5
P o o l S t i c k s * 9 * 9 5
E le c t r ic R o c k C lo c k * 4 6 * 8 8
J e w e l e r y B e i n g A d d e d D a i l y !
F O R THE BEST D EA LS IN T O W N SEE:
F r e d o r E d it h A l l f i n O w n e r O p e r a t o r
FIRESTONE STORE
1 1 2 N o r t h M a i n s t r e e t
Club mixed doubles tennistournament last week the championship was won 1^ the team of Grady Day and Jan Stapleton (left), defeathig Judy and Don Beam (right) instraight seto, 6-4,6-4. A totai of eight teams competed. (Photos by1 Carter)
Third place in the Hickory Hills Country aub mixed doubles tennis . tournament went to Bob and Gene Rauch (left) who defeated Sam and Shelby Nichols hi three seto, friO, 4-6, and 6-4. The other four teams in the tournament included Ron and Helen Gantt; Rocky and Susan Johnson; Brad and Pat Bullock; and David and Donna PoweU.
DAVIE 601
RESTAURANT
9 9 <
b b e a k f a s t s p e c i a k
1 Egg, Bacon Or Sausage, Grits or
Gravy, And Fresh Homemade Biscuit Or Toast.
Complete Line Of Sanwiciies.
TKISWiEKOimf- * 1 0 0
3 Hot Dogs Or 2 Hamburgers For
Also Now Specializing In Plate Lunches
Meat With Your Choice Of * 1 0 5
2 Vegetables. *
They Also Have Pit Cooked Bar-B-Q Everyday.
6 i 0 0 o . m . > 4 t 0 0 p . m . M o n . - S a t .
^ Mile South Of Mocksville
T
B U L L H I L L
FAMILY CAMPGROUND
B R IN O T H E F A M I L Y
S a t . • S e p t . 3 0 t h - R a in D a t e O c t . 1 s t
B a r> B > Q A n d C h ic k e n N ' D u m p l in g s
1 : 0 0 p .m .> U n t il
G o s p e l S i n g i n g 5 : 0 0 p .m . T o 6 : 0 0
( S U N N Y S ID E R S )
B lu e G r a s s 6 : 0 0 T o 7 : 0 0
C o u n t r y M u s ic 7 : 3 0 T o M i d n i g h t
(T H E W H E E L S )
SQUARE DANCING, ROUND DANCING,
CLOGGING
Proceeds Going To Cooleemee Presbyterian Church
Building Fund.
RRIN^- Y»»'« CHAIItS
Admittion At Cits $1.00 12 Yurt and Oldsr
s Miles North Of Salisbury On Highway 601
THIS TOTAL WASHERFEATURES TWO AGITATORS TO DO DIFFERENT KINDS OF WASH!
□ Handwash"'Agitator designed to
wash small, lightly.soiled,
delicate loads.
□ Uses up to 24% less water per fill
than ils own low level setting.
D Regular agitator for heavy-soil
loads with ground-in dirt.
□ Saves hot water and saves time by
offering a shorter wash period.
□ Variable water levels.
□ 3 Wash/ Rinse temperatures.
Model WLW2700T
Matching Dryers:
Electric Model DLB2550P .. $000
Gas Model OLL2550P......$000
A Lot o f A p p lia n c e f o r Y o u r M o n e y
DANIEL'S
FU R N IT U R E A N D ELECTRIC
At The Overhead Bridge Phone 634-2492__________Mocksville, WC
4В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Brushy Mountain Apple Festival Set For October 7th
This steam engine will be fired-up at the festival by Ray Lunsford. It is owned by Gene Linney.
.lie first Brushy Mountain Apple
Festival will be held Saturday, October
7th, on Ihe Alpine Village Shopping
Center site on U.S. 421, about two mUes
4t of the Wilkesboros.
! ita purpose Is to promote this
year’s Brushy MounUin apple crop, the
festival also will feature old-fashioned
cooking, arU and crafts, and en
tertainment.
’The festival Is sponsored by the
Brushy Mountain Ruritan Club.
Numerous other Ruritan clubs, civic
and church groups are participating too,
said Steve Forrest of the festival
committee.
The festival will be on two levels
graded for the shopping center. Two
horse-drawn wagons will take visitors
from one level to the other throughout
the day.
Forrest gave this guide to the festival;
People will enter and park at the
bottom level.
They will be greeted by none other
than Johnny Appleseed. He Is William
Kuensel, a local teacher who frequently
done his Appleseed costume to play the
role.
He and others will be giving each child
attending an apple, courtesy of the
Brushy Mountain Apple Growers
Cooperative.
An auction in which "anyone can
bring anything’ ’ to sell for a fee also will
be on the bottom level.
On the top level, visitors will have a
wide choice of food prepared by various
clubs: Wilkes County chicken barbecue,
old-fashioned Brunswick stew cooked in
a huge, open kettle, fried apple pies
from a wood cook stove and hamburgers
and the like from concession wagons.
Apples will be for sale at $4 to <6 a
Visitors will be able to see apples
going into cider press and will be able to
buy the freshly made elder. They also
will see molasses being made. The
molasseswill be for sale. Honey also will
be sold.
An authentic copper still will be
displayed by Charlie Swain, described
by Forrest as one of Wilkes’ most
colorful characters.
An encampment of eight Confederate
soldiers will re-create the Civil War.
Among the crafts being demonstrated
will be spinning and carding of wool,
black powder gunsmithing, splitting oak
and making split-oak baskets, caning
and pottery and stained-glass making.
Bluegrass bands will provide music
throughout the day.
An apply pie contest will be held to
find who can bake the best pie.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lowe are the
festival’s marshals. Lowe also is a well-
known Brushy Mountain storyteller and
apple grower.
A friendship quilt also will be made
during the festival. People will be In
vited to add a square to the quilt.
Connie Robinson is standing with a red deUclous apple tree. 80 percent
Kelly March Branson, age 92, a
former reitdent ot Davie County, Is now ,
a resident of Sebring, Florida. He was
visited recently by hli granddaughter,
Nancy Cohen White. He was bom in.
March 1886, son ot John WUliam
Branson and Mary Jane Wood Branson.
His father was bom April 29, 1853 and
died August 15, 1942. HU mother was
bora August 12,1857 and died October 15,
1932. They were resldenU of the Bailey.
Chapel Community of Davie County.
Accompanying Mrs. WhUe to Sebring,;
Florida for the visit were her aunt. Edna
Eaton; mother, Annie B. Cohen; and
brother, Juan Wallace Cohen.
Fires Reported
Fires reported In Davie County during
the past week Included:
September 24, about 8:34 p.m., the
Jerusalem VFD answered a call with a
tanker to assist in a Rowan County fire
on Dooley Road.
September 24, about 6:42 p.m., the
County Line VFW answered a call to
assist tbe Jerusalem department in a
Rowan County fire.
September 2S, about 3:07 p.m., the
Smith Grove VFD answered a call to a
house fire at the Frost residence on
Boger Road.
N.C. Museum Of Histoiy Kicks Off Membership Campaign
Charlie Swalm is wltti аде of his many copper stills. This one is wtUed
to the Wilkes Community CoUege. One O f thestober 7th.hese will be on display Oc-
Cedar Creek
The moit common turname
in the United States ii Smith.
Cloie to 2.5 million Smiths
reside here.
The North Carolina
Museum of History
Associates kicked off their
statewide 1978 Membership
Campaign on Thursday,
September 21 with a coffee
given by First Lady Mrs.
James B. Hunt, Jr. at the
Executive Mansion.
The Associates are a
volunteer and financial
support group for the State
Museum of History on East
Jones Street In Raleigh. The
Museum maintains Its own
collection and exhibits as well
as 23 historic sites around the
state.
According to Mrs. H. A
Underwood, State Mem
bership Chairman, a primary
concern of the Associates is
that antiques and artifacts
which tell the state’s history
are lost or sold outside the
state because the Museum
receives only 14,000 annually
f6t iie<julliitions. ■ The
Associates use membership
dues to purchase North
Carolina artifacts when they
come on the market.
More than 250 campaign
workers arrived at the
Mansion from all over North
Carolina. The group enjoyed
quiche, shrimp tarUets, fresh
fruit and other delicacies
there before walking across
the street to the Museum for a
training session and
distribution of membership
materials.
Museum Administrator
John Ellington and Associate
Executive Director Eve
Blades used slides to
illustrate the Museum and
programs of the Museum
Associates. The volunteers
saw a preview showing of a
television spot filmed by
H onorary M em bership
Chairman, Andy Griffith. TV
and film star Griffith
paraphrased his famous
recording, "What it was, was
footbaU" by saying "What it
was, was history, and where it
is, Is our North Carolina
Museum of History.” He
urged NorUi Carolinians to
join him as a member of the
Associates.
During their session at the
Museum, campaign workers
were among the first to view
the Associates most recent
acquisition - a rare 18th
Century North Carolina-made
comer cupboard which the
Museum may loan to a state
historic site.
Associates membership
money is also used for
“Museum Days’’ wiiich take
the collection and staff
curators to communities
across the state, catalogues
for the exhibits, an annual
community museum award of
$1,000, and a traveling exhibit
system to recycle past
exhibits and make them
avaUable to small museums.
The Associates set a
campaign goal of 2,225 new
members. Memberships are
avaUable ranging from $5 for
a student to fl.OOO for cor
porate benefactors. Members
receive invitations to exhibit
p re vie w s, w o rksh o p s,
discounts, special programs,
and a newsletter.
The state Is divided Into
districts for the membership
drive, each with a district
chairman, county chairman.
and campaign volunteers.'
District chairman for this'
area is Martha McNair of
W inston-Salem . County
chairmen are Linda Reeder of
MocksvUle and Joan CotteriU
of Advance. Other volunteers
who were at the Raleigh
meeting are: PoUy Van Hoy,
Valerie Slodgick, Doris Frye,,
Judy TUley, Vera AngeU and
Suzanne StovaU.
Bake Sale
At Farmington
Farmington Day C are '
Center wUl sponsor a bake
sale at the Center, Saturday,
September 30, from 10 am ■
until 3 p.m. A rummage sale'
wUl also be hi progress at the
same time. The Center is •
located on Uie Farmington“
Road.
The pubUc is urged to come
out and help support the
centw.Gasoline Consumption
Motor vehicles In the U.S;
consume about 328 mlUion
gaUons of gas each day, ac^'
cording to the Federal High*
„wav Administration.
41
A thought for ttie day..."Let
us not be weary hi weU^loIng;
for In due season we shall
reap, if we faint not,”
We have had some
changable weather at times.
However the cool night are
appreciated very much.
Sunday here at Cedar Creek
was a pleasant and enjoyable
day at church.
The worship devotionals
were opened by Bros.
McKennedy Eaton and James
Horn. The pastor Dr. Hay
brought a spiritual message.
Some of our famUies Uiat
haven’t been in quite a whUe
were back at service and we
were aU happy to have them
back. We also had a guest
from Wbiston-Salem attend
service.
Mrs. Ann Campbell of
Winston-Salem was here
along with Mrs. Daisy Tatum
who have been shut-in
recently and have been
unable to come.
The members here at Cedar
Creek have enjoyed wor
shiping with our sister
churches In their annual
h o m e c o m in g r e v iv a l
meetings. It has been a
blessing to aU of us.
CaUers Sunday at Uie home
of Mr. and Mrs. Arttiur Scott
were Mr. and Mrs. John Scott
of Charlotte. John is tbe
brother of ArUiur.
Mrs. WUliam Eaton had
overnight guests last Thur
sday, Mrs. Mary Neeley of
Cooleemee. It was a joy to
have her.
OdeU Eaton and son Tracey
and Mrs. Ann CampbeU caUed
Sunday at the home of their
mother and sister.
Mr. and Mrs. ArUlur Scott
are aU smUes over a new
grandson bora to Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Scott of Whiston-
Salem recently.
We really missed little
George Scott Jr. Sunday. His
sister said he was home wiUi
flu.
Mrs. WUliam CampiieU and
boys of Winston-Salem caUed
Sunday at the home of their
mother Mrs. Lucy Tatum.
.Mrs. OdeU Baton and Mrs.
Grace RidgeU were In Win-
ston-Salem recently. Mrs.
Lucy Tatum and Mrs.
WUUams vUlted 'M s. Katee
Sutzer last Sunday who was a
patient hi Uie Davie County
Hospital. We are glad to know
that she is recuperating at
home now. I’m sure her
neighbors and friends wUl be
happy to know.
Darrin Baton visited
Junior, Paula, Von and Lana
Transou recenUy and had a
good Ume. He aUo visited
Tony Tatum and Tracey
Baton.
I
■
Film At Cooleemee Baptist
B C RF FUms presents Its
newest release "The Power of
Prayer” , a color motion
picture to be shown at Uie
First Baptist Church of
Cooleemee on Sunday, Oc
tober 1, at 7:30 p.m.
Why should we pray? How
should we pray? For what
should we pray? What is
unanswered prayer? Iliese
are questions man has asked
since God first spoke to bim—
quesUons Uiat must be an
swered!
The opening moments of
‘The Power of Prayer" are
It In Isreal, examining
jMnds of years of Jewish
history and how they pertain
to prayer.
The fUm features some of
the most well-respected,
Christian spokesmen in
America; such as, Dr W.A
Criswell, Dr. John F.
Walvoord, Josh and Dottle
McDowell, Chaplain Ray and
*0r. and Mrs. Howard Hen
dricks. Tb«M men and women
wUl be iharins whal Uie Bible
(ays as to the now and why of
*
prayer. They’U also share
their own personel ex-
of 'the times of
frustration and
periences
victory,
confusion
The pubUc is cordiaUy in
vited.
Coon Club
To Be Discussed
A meeting wUi be held at
William R. Davie Fire
Department, Friday, Sep
tember 29Ui, at 8 p.m. to
discuu Uie forming of a U.K.-
C. Coon Club for Davie
County. Anyone hiterested is
to attend.
Following tbe meeting,
refreshments wUi be served.
For more Information
contact David Ritchie at 492-
SS88 or Jay Brim at 834-3329.I
The ancient Greeks consider
ed two of anything unlucky.Ш
SEPTEM BER
Good Friday & Saturday Only
W e P r o c e s s B e e f F o r T h e P u b l i c
COUNTRY MARKET
Located in the EUis Center on Highway 601
Midway between Cooleemee and Mocksville
P H O N E 6 3 4 - 2 3 1 2
H O U R S
8 i 0 0 a .m .*5 t 0 0 p .m . M o n .> W e d .> T h u r.*F rl.
8 i0 0 a . m . « 1 2 t 0 0 N o o n S a t .
(Closed Tuesday)
Bill E. Broadway-Manager Fred 0. Ellis-Owner
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS!!!!
I
I
i!:Si1Ш
li
iw
II
• e
STO RE HOURS:
Mon.-Thur. 11:00-8:00
Fri. -10:00 - 9:00
Sat.-9:00-6:00
FOOTIES 3 PAIRS FOR *.7 9
CIGAREHES (OUR EVERYDAY PRICE) PER CARTON ‘ 3 .3 9
STICK PINS EA. *.5 9
POT HOLDERS M 9 E A . OR %FOR *1 .0 0
BICSHAVERS REG. *.7 9 2PKS. Ч.00
FOSTER GRANT SUN GLASSES REG *3 .4 9 *1 .9 9
SMALL LOT OF LADIES PANTS JUST 4.98
GIRLS KNEE HI SOCKS 3 PAIR FOR *1 .0 0
REJOICE SHAIMPOO 2 FOR *.5 0
8 8 c SPECIALS 1
15 oz. V-05 SHAMPOO (REG.,DRY,OR OILY)*.ee
22OZ. 409 CLEANER *.88
32iOZ. LIQUID PLUM’R *.88
16iOZ. NEW FANTASTIC BATHROOM SPRAY CLEANER *.88
400 PK. QTIPS *.88
FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM VINYL BABY PANTS PK.0F3 *.88
LOW BOY 8-QT. UTILITY PAILS *.88
SOFA PILLOWS * 1 .1 9
4 PLACE SEHING DISHES (SECONDS) JUST *4 .9 8
BOOSTER CABLE 8 FEET *2 .0 0
PET MILK GALLON Ч .6 5
WE H A V E W ESTERN SHELLS!
Prices Good Thursday,Friday,ASaturday
OF
Discount IMercliandise
L o c a te d In th e E lllt C o n to r o n h ig h w a y 60 1
3 M ile s S o u th o f M o c k iv llle
FRED O . E U IS. O W NER
DOROTHY H O W A RD . M A N A G E R
WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINE
The White House Is Seeking
Candidates For Fellowships
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - SB
The Preeldent’B Commlision on
White Houie FeUowshipi It seeking
highly qualifled candidates tor its 1979-
BO competition. Fourteen to nineteen
positions are open for this extraordinary
but highly competitive opportunity.
President Lyndon B. Johnson
established the program in 1964 to give
outstanding younger Americans tir-
stfaand experience in the process of
governing of the nation. The White
House Fellowship program is a non
partisan effort to draw in a few of the
brightest and most promising people
from all over the country to work at a
unique level in the Federal government
tor a year.
Presidents Nixon, Ford, and Carter
have continued the Fellowship program
with a high level of support. President
Carter has removed the specific age
limitations. The program is now open to
all those who are early in their careers.
Fellows have been chosen from a wide
variety of careers and professions in
cluding law, medicine, teaching, state
and local government and the arts.
Hie Fellows serve tor one year,
usually as a special assistant to the Vice
President, a member of the President’s
Cabinet, or to a presidential assistant.
The Fellows may be Involved in the
development of special programs, assist
in speech Writing, engage in in
terdepartmental task forces, or do other
tasks assigned by their principals. The
knowledge that each Fellow gains in his
work assignment is shared with the
other Fellows during the year-long
educational program which fs conducted
in addition to the work assignments and
provides the Fellows an opportunity to
meet with government leaders Jour
nalists, and other related to govern
ment.
The Commission is looking for persons
who will be the future leaders of their
chosen career or profession and ot their
community. Applicants should possess
enough credentials of accomplishments
to show their potential for their
leadership and of community or
professional contributions.
The competition for the Fe llo w sl^ is
open to all United States citizens. There
are no occupational, age, sex, racial, or
religious restrictions. Howeyer, current
employees of the Federal government
are not eligible with the exception of
career military personnel.
For additional information or an
application send a postcard with name
and address to tbe President’s Com
mission on White House Fellowships,
1900 E. Street NW, Room 1308,
Washington, D.C. 2041Sor call (202) OSS*-
6263. Requests tor applications must be
postmarked no later than November IS.
1978. The deadline tor receipt of com
pleted applications is December 1,1978.
Walt Boyle
(continued from page 1B)
an Olympic
He is the
competitor, to shame,
itlonal accounts salesnai
director for a large corporation and
travels extensively throughout the
eastern United States. He leaves home
early Monday mornings and does not
return until late Friday nights of each
week.
But his heavy travel schedule does not
deter Boyle trom following his rigid
training regimen.
“I make up my own work schedules
and I know the location of every major
coUege swimming pool in the country so
that I can be in certain locations to use
the pools for swimming and training,”
he admitted.
He noted, however, that he has "a
little trouble” when he travels in Ten
nessee finding pools to use for his
practice swims when on the road.
Boyle “usuaUy” gets up trom bed very
early in tbe m om inu and is in a pool
swimming “by 6 o’clock.” He continues
to work out untU 8 or 9 o’clock.
“I start out each moming by swim
ming 1,680 meters as a warmup. Then I
do two or three 500-meter runs, do some
work on my swim kick and then end up
with some 200-meter runs,” he reported.
He explained that his swimming
schedule was based on what he is
training for at any given time, but that
he “always swims more than I have to
so tbe grind of the meets won’t seem so
bad, at least psychologlcaUy.”
In addition to his normal swimming
exercises, Boyle does “situps in units of
100” and also Jumping Jacks and squato
every day. If he can manage It he
“might even do some running or
bicvclina durina the day.”
If for some reason he Is not near a pool
or does not have the time to take a
practice swim during a particular day
' has a weight training program,
_____ tbe swimming coach for the
University of Delaware set up for him,
that be can do right in his hotel or motel
room.
“I carry my weights with me
everywhere I go. lU s is an equivalent
w el^t program which compensates for
missing a long swim,” he said.
does “overheads” with the
^ in units of 25-30 and is capable ot
ahnost 40 unlU per hour of these
____jeads. He also does special, weight
exercises for strengthening his back and
arms..
To Boyle it is “most important” that
he get the required amount ot exercise
every day because “ii you lay off for
over 72 hours you start to lose your
tone/' he Mid.
He would Uke to see more emphasis
placed on the beneficial aspects which
can be derived trom swimming for
almost every member of society.
“I think the emphasU should be
placed on the Utetime sports, such as
swimming,” he remarked.
“Swimming is a sport the whole tamUy
can do and be interested in. We need
more pools hi our pubUc schools to trahi
our young people and to be also used by
the community for family nighu,” said
Boyle.
He continued, “Swimming is also a
good therapy tor. rehabilitation
programs” because “you can UUor
difterent strokes for different foUu” to
overcome the bad effects of auto ac
cidents, heart attacks, pregnancies, etc.
And whatever problem you might
have psychologically or emotionally
swimming can be “a tranqulUzer” to
bring some peace to the psyche, said
Boyle.
FinaUy, swimming is important
because it serves a safety purpose for
being able to rescue persons from
drowning .in emergency situations, he
concluded.
What does Boyle hope to achieve in the
future in the M asters’ Swimming
Program.
“I’U feel very comfortable by just
staying in the top ten in the country in
my age group and with constantly im
proving my style and techniques,” he
reported.
At present, Boyle is training for the
Masters’ AAU Sun Belt Short Course
Regional Championships to be held in 0-
ak Ridge, Tennessee hi October. In AprU
of next year, he is planning to travel to
Honolulu, HawaU to participate in the
National AAU Short Course Cham
pionships for Masters’ swimmers.
It seems sate to predict that whatever
competitive swimming meets Walt
Boyle Sr. wUl participate hi in the future
that he wUl certainly give a good ac
counting of himself.
Dale Brown Heads
Local Campaign
For St. Jude Hospital
St. Jude ChUdren’s Research Hospital
is pleased to announce the appobitment
ot Dale Brown as (Siairperson for the
taU door to door march in MocksviUe.
The campaign wiU take place hi late
October and Uie proceeds wUI be used to
continue the work of St. Jude Hospital.
Founded by entertataier Danny Thomas
sixteen years ago, St. Jude ChUdren’s
Research Hospital is devoted to pain
staking medical research and care of
children stricken with catastrophic
diseases, including Leukemia,
Hodgkin’s disease and other forms of .
cancer.
St. Jude's is non-sectarian, hiterracial
and completely free of charge to
atients.' Once a patient is admitted, the
ipltal provides total medical care
d, when needed, also provides tran-
aUon and lodging for parent and
St. Jude’s is Uie largest chUdhood
cancer research center hi the world. The
work done there benefits not only the
hospital’s .patients, but children
everywhere because the results of this
research are shared wiOi physicians
worldwide. Everyone can now share in
the optimism of a growbig “Cure Rate”
because ot the work at St. Jude
ChUdren’s Research Hospital.
St. Jude’s receives assistance trom
federal grants, but over 60 percent of its
support comes trom volunteer con-
IribuUons. In October, the residents of
Uils community wUI have an opportunity
to help chUdren live throu^out the
world by givtaig what they can to St.
Jude’s when a volunteer comes to their
doors?
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C h a rlo tte F u n d e r b u r k e —
A S u m m e r I n T u r k e y
By Marlene Benson
This past summer proved to be ex-
ciUng as weU as most educational for
ttiree Davie County girls who spent two
and a halt months living witti a family in
another country.
This week we feature Miss Charlotte
Funderburke, a Davie High Student who
spent the summer in Bursa, Turkey.
“I was more homesick during ttie
ttu-ee days of orientaUon hi New York
than those months in Turkey”, said
C9iarlotte. . .“because we were not
aUowed to go anywhere.”
The biggest adjustment was the first
week or so. “The language barrier was
tbe greatest problem,” she explained..
.1 hardly knew anythhig they were
saying. However in just a' short Ume,
there were more and more ways ot
communicating.”
Sponsored by American Field Service,
Charlotte learned a great deal about Oie>
Uves and customs ot the Turkisb
Her Turkish tamUy, the YUdiz!
Uves hi Bursa,, the fifth largest city
the country. Charlotte says they were
quite wealthy, as tar as the Turkish
customs go. They have an apartment in
the city, hi which she only spent one
night, and also a two story summer
home on the Marmara Sea where they
spent the remainder of her stay.
Charlotte says in addiUon to Mr. and
Mrs. YUdiz and her ttu«e Turkish
sisters, ages 21, 19, and 8, the summer
home was also occupied by aunts, uncles
and cousins. “There was no less ttian ten
people for supper every night,” she said.
‘The Turkish people were amazed,
that most people in America Uve in'
houses (not apartments).”
Food was quite different in Turkey
and was always cooked hi olive oU. They
eat a lot of plant and beU peppers
and much of the meat is either lamb,
beef or fish. Charlotte says she learned
to eat most of thefr food,but ttie way they
. ired ttie fish made it impossible for
to try. “The only bad thing is when
you look at the fish and U is looking back
at you — They cook it whole, with brad,
eyes, fins and aU.”
The-biggest difference hi Turkey, in '
comparison to America, is the land.
Charlotte says there is very Uttte or no
grass in most areas. “Only the very rich
or maybe some motels have grass - and
they keep the spriniders going aU day. It
only rained twice during her entire visit,
there are no forests, only olive trees or
fruit trees.”
The biggest «ntertainment is “friends
sitthig around togettier - taUchig.”
Charlotte says there was a motel next
door to the summer home and the famUy
>rquld get aU dressed up hi the latest
fashions to just “sit around the paUo and
taUi.”
During the more than two months she
was in Turkey, she says she only saw
one movie and the people watch very
Uttte television. They have no color t.v.,
but some of the shows were the same as
here. They were usuaUy broadcast in the
Turkish language and very tew were
ever hi English.
The people never drink coffee with
theh- meal, Charlotte says they have it
afterwards. And it is never perked, but
boUed in the grounds with sugar already
in it. They also have only hot tea and
theh- déserts were always fnUt.
Teenagers in Turkey are never
aUowed to date. If they go anywhere
with a boy, she says they are never
alone. Her twhi coushis, who Uved hi ttie
summer house with them, were 23 years
of age and had never dated. “Parents
always, or most always, arrange the
weddings, she said.. .The girls don’t lUie
it, but that is the custom.”
. CSiarlotte attended Uwee weddings
whUe ttiere which are quite difterent.
They are never held hi the church, or
mosque as they.are caUed. They are aU
.of Moslem faith and they usuaUy rent a
place tor ttie weddhig. The wedding only
takes a.bout five minutes, she said. Just
the torthaUfy ot signing a document. The
recepUon is ttie big ttihig. . .witti loud
music, dancing and everyone seems to
enjoy it more than ttie bridal couple.”
Just before Charlotte left, her Turkish
famUy began a month-long fast on
August 5, which would continue untU
Septemtier S. Because ot religious
beliefs ttiey would fast trom 4 a.m. untU
8p.m. daUy. This means ttiey neither ate
nor drank anything. “They would not
even go swhnming tor tear of drinking
some water accidentaUy”, she said. And
of course, Uving on the sea, swimming
was one of ttieir greatest acUviUes.
Oiariotte only participated hi the fast
one day and her Turkish sisters did not
fast eittier. . .Her Turkish parents,
however, were very devout.
During this period ot fasting,
Charlotte said a drummer would go
ttirough ttie streets at 3 a.m. every day
waking everyone to get up and eat,
before beghmlng tbe fast at 4 a.m.
During her visit, Charlotte said she
toured parts ot Istanbul; but did not get
ttie opportunity to see nearly as much of
the country as she would have Uked to.
She seemed very fond of her Turkish
famUy and although thehv is a com
pletely different Ufe trom which she is
accustomed, she enjoyed her visit and
shaU remember theh* hospitaUty for
many years to come.
Story by Marlene Benson
Photos by James Barringer
6В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
Little-Noted Arctic Islands Assume Importance_ ...... . ___ ... É»AntA«*a опИ ttiKalore « ^ knlf
SW IR LIN G M A E L ST R O M of a hurricane
spins over the Gulf of Mexico. Scientists
working in 0 broad field called weather
modification are trying to check hurricanes
and hailstorms, encourage snow and rain
fall, and banish fog over airports. In some
cases good results have been achieved by
seeding clouds with substances such as
silver-iodidc particles or dry ice. In rain-
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
making, flares containing silver iodide par
ticles are sometimes dropped into clouds.
Each of the trillions of particles provides a
nucleus for surrounding moisture to freeze
on, forming an ice crystal. The crystal falls
earthward as a snowflake until it reaches
warm air, where it melts and becomes a rain
drop. Tests conducted in Florida give indi
cations that seeding has given good results.
€om e Rain,Hail,Snow,Or Blow
Weather Makers Do Their Stuff
5
By Donald J. Frederick
t; A new breed of rainmakers
■;has replaced the traveling
, confidence men who once
: bilked desperate farmers.
They are scientists working
in a broad field called weather
modification. And although
r they don’t make wild claims
or release secret gases to
create rain, they have in some
cases changed the weather,
. the National Geographic
Society reports.
Optimism about the results
' achieved so far was reflected
; in a recent report by a
citizens’ panel set up by
Congress that urges a con-
. certed 20-year “weather
resources management”
program to tap those potential
rivers and snowbanks in the
sky. The plan envisions
doubling current weather
research spending to $37
million and raising the ante to
$90 million by the fifth year.
So far weather modifiers
have attempted to tame
hurricanes and hailstorms,
^ induce rain and snowfall; and
disperse fog over airports:
' Given the right set of cir
cumstances, tbe National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, in a project
called Stormfury, will revive
attempts begun in the early
1960's, and abandoned after
1971, to defang killer
hurricanes.
If the right storm comes
along this summer or fall, five
heavily instrumented aircraft
will leave Miami or San Juan
to meet it head on. After
seeding the storm with par
ticles of silver iodide, the
flying laboratories will then
return to measure the effects.
The seeding technique
proved most successful on
Hurricane Debbie in 1969
when winds one day were
slowed as much as 30 percent.
The day after, with no
«eeding, the storm rein
tensified.
Storm fu ry’s weather
warriors shy away from
claims of even partial victory
based on a single success.
“We need to treat at least 10 to
12 more of these big
hurricanes in order to
evaluate results and test our
theories properly,” Dr.
Merlin C. Williams, director
of N O AA ’s weather
modification programs, told
the National Geographic
Society.
“Since the hurricane season
is so short and our testing
guidelines so strict, we'll be
lucky to treat a hurricane a
year. We figure it would be at
least 10 years before we can
get enough meaningful date,
unless we can get permission
from foreign governments to
work in other areas, for in
stance off the west coast of
Mexico and the northwest
coast of Australia.”
N O AA ’s Florida rain
makers seem closer to solid
conclusions. For six years
they’ve been seeding cumulus
clouds over tbe state, and
they've had strong evidence it
his ihcreaied rainfall by as
much as 20 to 70 percent over
selected target areas.
If this summer's studies
confirm the promising results
of earlier work, the scientists
plan a new series of tests,
applying the knowledge
they’ve gained in Florida to
an area in the midwestern
corn belt centered in central
and southern Illinois.
In another experiment
aimed at understanding the
effects of cloud seeding on
summer precipitation, the
Bureau of Reclamation has
begun an ambitious program
covering the high plains area.
“We’re looking at a vast
agricultural area that takes in
west Texas, Oklahoma, west
Kansas, Nebraska, Montana,
and part of Wyoming, the
Dakotas, and Colorado,” said
J. Hunter Holloway, a Bureau
spokesman. ‘‘In our
preliminary tests wewon’t be
concerned about rainfall, but
will try to learn as much as
possible about cloud for
mations in this region.
‘‘Later we’ll focus on
rainfall. The stakes are big.
Economic studies have shown
that if we could squeeze out an
additional inch of rainfall in
this vast area during the
critical growing season, it
would boost agricultural
income by $500 million.”
Other cloud work done by
the Bureau in the Rocky
Mountains and California
indicates that seeding
mountain snowstorms can
increase snowfall by as much
as 10 to 25 percent. Since the
winter snowpack ac
cumulated in the West means
liquid gold in the form of
irrigation water in the
summer, perfection of the
technique would have an
enormous economic impact
on everything from crops to
increased hydroelectric
power.
The econonic stakes also
are big in hail suppression
endeavors. Hailstorms that
batter thé United^States cost
about $700 million in crop
damage each year.
Working since 1972 in a
region known as “Hail Alley,”
around a point where
Colorado, Nebraska, and -
Wyoming join, experts from
the National Center for At
mospheric Research in
Boulder, Colo, have been
studying cloud seeding to
reduce hail damage.
Results have been in
conclusive. As Henry Land-
sford, an NCAR official put it,
‘‘The researchers have
learned a great deal about
hailstorms and have found
not^ effective in suppressing
hail. But they have not yet
determined whether cloud
seeding can be useful.”
*IUR4I|
Some say it'* best to plant
otatoes on itarry nights.
ALL FORMS
OF INSURANCE
PERSONAL
A u t o
H o m e o w n e r s
M o b i l e H o m e s
I n l a n d M a r i n e
L i f e
M o r t g a g e
A c c i d e n t / H e a l t h
H o s p i t a l P l a n s
BUSINESS
C o m m e r c i a l
P r o p e r t y
W o r k m e n
C o m p e n s a t i o n
G e n e r a l L i a b i l i t y
I n l a n d M a r i n e
C o m m e r c i a l A u t o
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BRANTLEY-EDWARDS
INSURANCE AGENCY
A G E N T I D A R R E L L E D W A R D S
P H O N E 6 3 4 - 2 1 0 S 6 3 4 - 3 8 8 9
S 0 3 A V O N S T R E E T M O C K S V I L L E . N C
By William J. O’Neill
National Geographic News
Service
Far above the Arctic Circle,
.Svalbard is becoming a focus
of East-West rivalry.
Shrouded in the darkness of
Articic night for four months
of every year, the archipelago
lay unnoticed and unclaimed
for centuries after Dutch
explorer Willem Barents
stopped there in 1596 and gave
it the name of Spitsbergen,
“Land of Pointed Moun
tains." Its Norwegian name,
Svalbard, means, “Land
With Forzen Shores." Both
are accurate.
For years the island group
that stretches to within 650
miles of the North Pole was
visited only by walrus hun
ters, sealers, and whalers.
Scientists came later,
followed by polar explorers
who used thp inlands as a
Jumping-off place.
Now, despite the islands'
nigged ice-and-snow-covered
terrain, they are attracting
international interest.
“To the Soviet Union, they
pose a potential security
problem," Gordon Young
writes in the August National
Geographic. “To the rest of
the oil-hungry world, they
hold promise of easing the
prospective energy shor
tage."
Norway has administered
the islands since 1925, when it
assumed sovereignty under a
treaty that bars their use for
miliUry purposes. The pact
also gives 41 nations rights to
exploit Ihe area’s resources,
but only Norway and the
Soviet Union do so.
Both mine coal on the big
island of Spitsbergen, llie
island's 1,000 Norwegians and
2,000 Soviet citizens live in
separate communities, but
join in folk dances or the
“Svalbard Olympics”-<hess
matches, table-tennis tour
naments, and ski races.
The town of Longyearbyen
is named for John Munro
Longyear, an American who
started a coal mine there in
1906. A Norwegian firm
bought him out 10 years later.
Today the company town and
its mine are operated by the
Norwegian government.
The Soviet Union and
Norway each take up to
450.000 tons a year from
Svalbard's mines, but coal is
not the archipeinuo's only
asset. The im(K>riance of the
islands reaches beyond their
24.000 square miles, roughly
the size of West Virginia, and
extends to the surrounding
seas.
Murmansk and its military
bases lie just 720 miles
southeast. Soviet Navy
submarines need the ice-free
passage between Svalbard
and Norway's mainland to
reach the Atlantic.
The two neighbors disagree
over their oceanic boundary.
Norway maintains that the
demarcation line from the
mainland to the Pole should
curve around Svalbard,
dividing the Barents Sea in
half.
The U.S.S.R. argues for a'
relatively straight line from;
the Russian-Norwegian'*
border to the Pole. This would/
cut closer to the islands,'
giving the Soviet Union-
jurisdiction over an additional'
60,000 square miles of the;
ocean. i
Then there is the question ;
of who will have rights to the<
oil that geologists believe is in'
the region. Several nations-'
have drilled on Svalbard’s.
islands, but the results have'
t)een disappointing.
"If oil exists, it lies off-^
shore,” Young points out. -
"Man by
novelty."
nature It fond of'
Pliny The Elder
Authentic EtvgU ^
Stoi\ewai^.
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English Stoneware is something special. Made the
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Potters take the clay from their native England and
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All this care does make an elegant difference, recog
nizable in subtle variations from piece to piece.
By saving at Branch Banking and Trust Company, you
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DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1978 - 7B
T o m T rip lett
G enerell M a n a g e r
C H E V R O U !
U N D E R N E W M A N A G E M E N T
G e ra ld T o d d
V ice -P re sid e n t
R icky T rip lett
N e w ir U se d C a r M a n a g e r
S A L E S M E N
D a n R eece D a n a T rip lett
O c ie F a llin , S a n d y D ra u g h n
T o m D a v is B ren t Johnson
R o n a ld Shore
24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE
SALES HOURS; MONDAY-FRIDAY
8:30a.m.-8:00p.m.
SATURDAY 8:00 a.m. til 4:00 p.m.
t A i e 4 i ^ ^ € 3 ^ S f ¥ i / € i 4 m / n ^ /
SEPTEMBER 28-29-30
/
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT!!September 29~Shows At 6:00 & 8:00 P.M
- FROM THE GRAND OLE O PRY-
Jim & Jesse & The Virginia Boys
BACK UP CROUPS
Jim Burchette And The Yadkin Valley Partners
- A L 50-
Jerry Casstevens Band
ALL USED CARS WITH CERTIFIED MILES II
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8:00 a.m. - 5:30 p.m.
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G & J
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FO R
E V E R Y O N E !l!l
WFMX Of Statesville
And
WXII TV Of Winston-Salem
Will Be There
Friday Night For Live
Broadcasts!!!!!!
I
I
I
I
I
8B - DAVIE C O U N T '^E JO íR P R IS ^E C O R ajm iR S D A Y ^E ^
Davie District Court
The following cases were disposed of
in Uie regular September 18,1978 session
of District Court witli Lester P. Martin,
Jr., Presiding Judge and Sam Cattiey,
Asst. District Attomey:
Leroy Thurman Cowan, no operators
license, $25 and cost.
Steven Anthony Puckett, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Arthur Lacotte Rogers, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, cost.
Maynard Lowell Self, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, cost.
Tracee Lynne Roberts, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Wanda Clark Cline, reckless driving,
$100 including cost.
Carmen Lynette Rucker, speeding 68
mph in 65 mph zone, cost.
Billy Gene Shinault, too fast for
conditions, voluntary dismissal.
Donnie Durham, breaking, entering
and larceny, dismissed; breaking,
entering and larceny, sentenced to
twelve months suspended for three
years, probation for two years and
special conditions to remain in school,
observe curfew, not go about premises
of prosecuting witness.
Charles Foster, no operators license,
$25 and cost.
Robert Carl Nichols, speeding 67 mph
in 55 mph zone, prayer for judgment
continued on cost.
Jeff Smith, breaking, entering and
larceny, voluntary dismissal.
Tony U. Wilson, Jr., two counts of
breaking, entering and larceny, sen
tenced to twelve months suspended for
three years, probation for two years and
special conditions to remain gainfully
employed, pay fine of $100 and costs, not
go about premises of prosecuting wit
ness.
Kenneth Gerald Walls, trespass,
sentenced to thirty days suspended for
twelve months, not go about premises of
prosecuting witness, not threaten,
communicate threats or have any
contact with prosecuting witness.
Fred Jaynes Ferguson, Jr., exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Benjamin Henry Hale, reckless
driving after drinking, $100 including
costs.
Mark Allen Stout, reckless driving, $98
including costs.
Douglas Bell Brewer, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Carl McCrary Freeman, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Curtis Junior Eads, speeding 75 mph
in 55 mph zone, $23 and cost.
Linda Cook Anderson, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Ronald Eugene CranfiU, operating
motor vehicle while under the influence,
sentenced to pay $100 and cost,
surrender operators license and other
conditions.
Donald Ray Davis, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
William Franklin Whisenhunt, ex
ceeding safe speed, cost.
Bobby Gray Sweat, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Robert B. Akard, Jr., speeding 86 mph
in 55 mph zone, bond forfeiture of $150.
Mark C. Patrick, speeding 86 mph in
'55 mph zone, $31 and cost.
Brenda Hall Pierce, littering, two
counts of damage to property, damage
to personal property, sentenced to six
montlis suspended for tliree years, cost,
probation for one year, make full and
complete restitution for all damages.
David W. Knotts, nonsupport, prayer
for judgment continued on condition he
make support payments.
Amos Stewart Brown, assault,
dismissed, prosecuting witness does not
desire to prosecute; bastardy, prayer
for judgment continued indefinitely on
condition he support child.
Tony Edward Garcia, speeding 70
mph In SS mph zone, $23 and cost.
Laura Woodward Pharr, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $23 and cost.
Jacqualyn Donna Stroud, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
The following cases were disposed of
in Magistrates Court or paid by
waivering court trial:
John Lebmce Hurst, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Melvin Anthony Cobb, speeding 68
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Richard Glenn Rhode, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Emest Gerald Knowles, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Christopher L. Rainford, speeding 83
mph in 55 mph zone, $50 and cost.
Michael Steven Boger, improper
mufflers, cost.
Albert Pence Eaton, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Kenneth Wayne Myers, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Russell Angell, expired in
spection certificate, cost.
Douglas Scott Henderson, speeding 68
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Kerry K. Hill, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Craig Allan Murdock, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Nancy Hutchens Marion, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Edith Willingha Womble, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Delaine Koontz Brown, speeding SS
mph in 45 mph zone, $S and cost.
Glenda Meredith Hester, spading 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Patricia Gail Jones, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Wallace CecU Lankford, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.'
Ricky Lee Simmons, i
70 mph
. . J 69 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Paul Douglas Spelle, speedin
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Jerry Wayne Bailey, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Thomas Eugene Driver, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Dennis Craig Cartner, improper
registration, cost.
Thomas Herbert Fitzgerald, speeding
69 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Dwight Henry High, too fast for
conditions, cost.
James Garfield Lapish, Jr., too fast
for conditions, cost.
Forrest David Ross, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Walter Scott Snyder, failure to display
current approved inspection certificate,
coat.
Kim C. Bennicker, speeding 70 mph in
65 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Sherman Blair, jr.. speeding 78 mph
in 55 mph zone, $35 and cost.
Anthony Darren Buck, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $io and cost.
Paul Porter Brown, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
William Jackson Denton, speeding 68
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
DaUas 0. Johnson, speeding 70 mph In
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Richard Daniel Anthony Howard,
failure to yield right-of-way, cost.
Thomas Wavne Howard, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Glenda Hater Kanupp, speeding 65
mph in SS mph zone, $5 and cost.
Betty Huie Allen Head, no operators
license, $25 and cost.
Carolyn Blaine Holston, speeding 68
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ava Barefoot Harris, speeding 67 mph
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ronald Lee Haynie, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Gerald Paul McLaughlin, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
George Ray Morton, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Cassandra Kay Lee, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Sharon Mae McLamb, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ricky D. Lee, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ervin Eugene Barneycastle, excess of
45 mph in 45 mph zone, cost.
Vera Annette Broadway, failure to
yield right-of-way at duly erected stop
sign, cost.
Roger Dale McDaniel worthless
check, make check good and pay costs.
Dewey Donald Allen, Jr., faUure to
reduce speed to avoid an accident, cost.
William Joe Cartner, excess of 35 mph
in 35 mph zone, cost.
Marine Clark Church, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Gwyn Gene Dwiggins, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
_ Roland Larry Carr, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Carl Edward Conner, speeding 70 mph
in SS mph zone, $io and cost.
Cynthia Gale Cupp, speeding 67 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Allen Wayne Cornatzer, too fast for
conditions, cost.
Jean Elizabeth Greer, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Virginia Ruth Fox, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $io and cost.
Stephen Bennett Fleming, safe
movement violation, cost.
EdsU J. Fletcher, Jr., speeding 66 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Joseph Phillip England, sp____
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Raymond Lee Fuller, speeding 69 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Patrick A. Hinchy, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $io and cost.
Michael Anthony Hendrix, speeding 70
m ^ in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Bronson Whitefield Hayes, speeding
66 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Gregory Phillip Lathan, speeding 65
mph in 55 mph zone, $s and cost.
Michael Patrick Lathrop, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone and no operators
license, $2S and cost.
George W. Morgan, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $io and cost.
Clementeen Robertson Matlock,
speeding 66 mph in SS mph zone, |10 and
cost.
Gulherie Glenn McArthur, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Robert Martin, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $io and cost.
Gary Wayne Queen, speeding 66 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Vicky Akers Roberu, speeding 66 mph
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
ng 66
"^ M e rH rT R alS^^ ch o ls, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $io and cost.
Belton John Peele, HI, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Dwight Revere Sammons, operating
motorcycle without safety helme!, cost.
Mark Keston Ray Spaugh, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
George Edward Swain, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Joseph Glenn Summerlin, 1
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Joe H. Phillips, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Samuel Lee Rose, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Lawrence Ervin Roach, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
John Edwards Shipp, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Howard W. liiompson, two counts of
worthless check, cost on each count.
Rickey Howard Brannock, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ronald George Blevins, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Mary Jane Boehme, speeding 69 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Barry Pernell Arrington, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Sue Morrow Currie, speeding 68 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Susan Lendra Dellinger, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Edna Newcomb Ellis, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Richard David Flores, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Hugh Mitchell Frost, speeding 68 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Joseph Darnell House, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Todd Emmerson Kight, speeding 66
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
William Allen Ladd, speeding 68 mph
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Lois Shore Lytle, safe movement
violation, cost.
Joseph Phillip McSwain, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Charles Kent McLawhora, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
William M. Mendenhall, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Waiton Nading, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Richard Leroy Stark, Jr., speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Michael Otis Shrewsbury, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
George Claylon Sweat, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Cecil Wayne Stewart, failure to
properly secure load, cost.
Raymond Spells, Jr., speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Kira Renee Teague, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
August Vanderwoude, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Joseph L. Wilson, no operators
license, $25 and cost.
James A. Walters, speeding 68 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Henry Alexander Thompson, speeding
69 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Berenice Leonard Win: ter, speeding
70 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Linda Damell West, speeding 67 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Charles G. Dalton, worthless check,
make check good and pay costs.
Clay T. Christie, worthless check,
make check good and pay cost.
Magalene Blackwell Frost, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
Joe Gaines Black, speeding 68 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost,
Jackie Hailaman Bolin, speeding 70
in 55 mph zone, $10 and^cost,
ari Douglas Wall, expired inspection
certificate, cost.
Richard David Wormack, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Lemuel Edgar Willis, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Kenneth Wayne Gregory, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Terry Gibbs, speeding 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
James WiUiam Bamhardt, failure to
stop for duly erected stop sign, cost.
Luther N. BritUan, spelling 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
David Lee Bumett, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Henry WUson Brown, too fast for
conditions, cost.
Albert P. Cass, speeding 66 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Daniel Ray Cook, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Kenneth Dale Foster, failure to
comply with license restrictions and
improper registration, $25 and cost.
James Joseph Green, speeding 66 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Catherine Marie Johnson, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Duane RusseU Hobaugh, sp e ^n g 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Clinton Hamm, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Robert Sandalin Keller, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
WUliam Holahan, speeding 67 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Otas KiUian Lewis, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Joseph PhUlip Rogers, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Georgia Bamey Sorin, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James A. Schowalter, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Thomas Michael Sanders, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Salvatore StabUe, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
HazeUe Johns Suhrie, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Eloise Young Spangler, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
RusseU Warren Winchester, speeding
68 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Edward WiUiam Vanromer, speeding
70 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Stephen Eugene Burrow, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Sharon Lee Carter, excess of 35 mph in
35 mph zone, cost.
Timothy G. DUlard, speeding SO mph
in 35 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Ruth Hines Cline, faUure to stop for
diily erected stop sign, cost.
Charles Edward Earnhardt, excess of
35 mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Raymond Alex Keller, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Ray Jeno Johnson, excess of ^ mph in
35 mph zone, cost.
BUly Columbus Park, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
KenneUi Ray PadUIa, foUowing too
close, cost.
Robert Michael Martin, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Jack Anthony Naylor, Improper
mufflers, cost.
Richard Brannon, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
TimoUiy Shan Bobbitt, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Susan Kincaid Betz, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
^ary Virginia Brooks, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Aaron D. Barnett, speeding 65 mph in
55 mph zone, $5 and cost.
Elbert Lee CampbeU, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Charles Martin Cleary, excess of 45
mph in 45 mph zone, cost.
Jeannle Carter, excess of 35 mph in 35
mph zone, cost.
aaude Junior Coivert, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Hal Deal, s p ^ n g 70 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
WiUiam Lindsay Covington, Jr.,
speeding 70 mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and
cost.
Michael Jerome Givens, exceeding
safe speed, cost.
WUUam Thomas Gibson, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Martha Elaine Flynn, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Ransom Obedean GUlespie, improper
turn signals, cost.
Roger AUen Edwards, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Margaret Heath HiU, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Harvey Lee Hampton, speeding 69
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Jeffrey Douglass Kerr, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
3 Heffn Jackson,BrenzandoI
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Tina Dawn Kincaid, speeding 70 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Donald Martin Hendricks, disturbing
the peace, cost.
John Franklin Hampton, faUure to
comply with license restrictions, $25 and
cost.
Joel David Hjertstedt, speeding 70
mph in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
James David Hepler, foUowing too
close, cost.
Judith Thomason Hutton, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Marye McCorkle Jones, speeding 67
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
WUliam Henry Hudson, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Troy Thomas Hamlin, excess of 35
mph in 35 mph zone, cost.
Maria Ann MarshaU, speeding 65 mph
in SS mph zone, $5 and cost.
Linda Carol March, safe movement
violaUon, cost.
Nathaniel David Massey, speeding 66
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Mary Speaks Revels, speeding 70 mph
in SS mph zone, 110 and cost.
King Mlomon Raines, Sr., 1
mph in SS mph zone, $10 an
Rachel Perdue Robertson,
mph in SS m|A zone, 110
Francis Rockett
mph in SS mph zone,'$10 1
David C. Veach, speeding 78 mph in SS
mph zone, $35 and cost.
Nolan Hugh Sonnier, speeding 68 mph
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Herman Lee Sctzer, exceeding safe
speed, cost.
Dennis 0. Toadvlne, speeding 70 mph
in SS mph zone, $10 and cost.
Audreia Peebles Burts, speeding 65
mph in SS mph zone, $5 and cost.
Joseph Lynn Cox, speeding 70 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Norman Lee Oarren, speeding 70 mph
tn 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
GUda Frishbery Glazer, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Terri Jo Lewis, improper passing, $10
and cost.
Mack Hannibac LttUe, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Sharon Roxann SaviUe Parker,
speeding 70 mph In 55 mph zone, $10 and
cost.
Jorge Rosales, no registration, cost.
BUly G. Overton, speeding 69 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Gary Moore Stimson, expired in-
specUon cerUficate, cost.
Robert AUen Weeber, speeding 68 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
PhyUis Blackwell, worthless check,
make check good and pay costs.
Jerry Dean Parris, speeding 66 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
OrvUle Bland Moxley, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Fred J. Smith, spewing 68 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Virginia HoUie Arges, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
NormandVormand Arthur MivUle,ing 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
William Foy Martin, speeding 70 mph
In 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Scott M. Ramsey, speeding 68 mph in
55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Earl Junior Robinson, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
EUen Louise Pierce, speeding 69 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Alan Polk, faUure to drive on
right half of highway Uiat was sufficient
width for more than one lane of traffic,
cost.
Joseph Allan Rushlow, speeding 70
mph In 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
David Wayne PoweU, speeding 70 mph
in S5 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Sam P. Rosa, speeding 74 mph in 55
mph zone, $25 and cost.
John M. NaUey, speeding 69 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Thomas Frank Presley, speeding 70
mph in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
John H. DarUng, speeding 69 mph in 55
mph zone, $10 and cost.
Danniel S. Pearson, hunting birds
without hunUng license, cost.
Jeffrey Dean Norris, speeding 67 mph
in 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
James Thomas Smith, speeding 69
mph In 55 mph zone, $10 and cost.
Little 14-month-old Joey Carter splashes around in the Cooleemee Pool,
which officially closed Labor D ay for the season, but rest assured that
Joey will be back next sum m er splashing bigger than ever. He is the
son of M r. and M rs. Phil Carter of the Pine Ridge Road. (Photo by Jim
Barringer).
Health Tips
From The American Medical Association
There is a right way and a
wrong way to do almost
everytiiing and this includes
taking medicine.
' Whritr* - medicine is
prescribed for you, it is
prescribed for you alone and
should be taken in the exact
dose at the proper time for it
to best do its job. Since some
prescripUon medicaUons can
be dangerous to you if taken
improperly, the North
Carolina Medical Society
offers a few useful directions;
- Store medicine in a
cabinet, preferably locked,
away from the reach of
ChUdren.
- Keep only those medicines
that you are currenUy using.
- Destroy old prescripttons
because many drugs lose
potency or become
chemicaUy changed over a
period of Ume.
- Never take medicine in the
dark, it’s too easy to make a
mistake. If it’s late at ni^t,
tum on the light. If you wear
glasses for reading, put them
on.
- Keep medicines in the
original container to avoid
confusing them wiUi other
medic^es. If you use a piU
container paste a smaU label
on ttie inside of ttie Ud.
- Keep medicines away
from the bedside table. Make
it necessary to get up and
cross the room to take them.
It is too easy to take an
overdose of the medication by
accidentally repeating it
during the night when you’re
sleepy.
- Read the label in a good
Ught before opening ttie bottte
or container. Read it again
before taking Uie medicine.
• If you have more than one
contahier of pUls or capsules
to take, make sure one is
closed before taking the ottier.
This avoids mix ups in taking*
Uie medicaUon.
■ When pouring from a
botUe, keep Uie label facing
up so that if anyUiing drips
down ttie side of ttie botUe it
wiU not discolor the label and
make it hard to read.
Homeowners:
Inflation can be more
dangerous than fire!
If you had to rebuild your house today, it would
probably cost twice as much as it did twenty
years,£(¿0 . That's v^hy you need Ngtionwlde’s
Homeowners Insurance with optional "inflation
protection". Help keep your coverage current.
Call (or details.
J.E. Kelly, Sr. and J.E. Kelly, Jr.
303 Wilkesboro St., Mocksville, N. C..
Phone 634-2937NATIONWIDE
INSURANCE
Nationwide is on your side
Nationwide Mutual Fire Insurance Co.
Home Office: Columbus, Ohio
Th e growing South:
It now has one-third of
the country’s people.
A n d Southern Railway
is growing right along
Everybody knows the South
is one of the fastest-growing areas
in the U.S. But what you might not know is that it now has one-third of the country’s
population.
Needless to say, we at Southern Railway are happy about all this because each time the South grows, we grow, too.
After all, who do you think carries the raw
materials to the new plants that are part of this growth? And their finished goods to
market? In large measure, we do.
And, as the South's population grows who do you think brings the things these people
need? The cars, the carpets, the appliances,
the clothing, the sporting goods and the food?
Largely, we do.But, we’re not growing just to keep up
with the ever-increasing population. We're growing to be prepared for an even bigger
South of the future.
According to the federal government, the
with it.railroads will get an inaease in
freight volume of 143% by 1990. And the railroads’ share of market
will go up by a big 24%.
Will we get the lion’s share of these inaeases when they come? Maybe. But whatever happens, we’re getting ready for them by
expanding right now.We’re putting in a new $43 million freight classification yard in North Carolina. We’re
adding to our miaowave communication sys
tem, which is already the largest in the South. And we’re laying double track where one used
to be enough to handle the traffic in the area.
So, even though we’re growing right along with you, we’re also growing ahead of you.
Because when the demand is there, we
want to be there, ready to serve.
S O U T H E R NIHC THAi Cives a GBUN light to INNO\«kTlON$
The Southern Railway is one more good reason
for living in the South.
Symm. WMn>n9ion. D C 20013 An «gu«! oppertuntljr »«»loiftr.
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1978 - ЧВ
WE ALWAYS GIVE YOUTOTAL FOODf^
SAVINGS! №
rOUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED.. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS
M O N D A Y t h r u SA TU R D A Y *8 • 9
S U N D A Y 1 2 - 6
H O U R S t
PRICES GOOD THRU 9/30/78. -
M U M F O R D D R IV E
YOU SAVE 30*,в !
FRESH GROUND
M in u te S te a k
A 20‘ SAVINGS!
1 LB. PKG.JENKINS
L iv e r M u sli
THIS WEEK SAVE 40‘,„ !
id Steaic
^LB.
Top Round A _
M M k . L b * 1 ‘
B r e a s t Lb
* B r e a i c f f a s t S p e c i a i
* ■ Quarters
B r e a s t Lb
£ Leg Or
3-1 L B . C A R O L IN A P R IZ E B A C O N
2-1 L B . V A L L E Y D A L E P O R K S A U S A G E
2-1 L B . T H IC K -S LIC E D
B O L O G N A
2 LB . C E N T E R & E N D C U T
C O U N T R Y H A M
к 9M UO M UC
9 L B S . O N L Y
$ ^ 4 9 9
U.S. Choice Top
R o u n d R e a s t • .
U.S. Choice Bottom
R o u n d S t e a l i
U.S. Choice Bottom
R o u n d R o a s t
Garden Fresh Produce
4 Lb. Bag Eastern
Red O r Golden Delicious
A p p l e s * ••••••••••••
Garden Fresh
C a r r o t s ..................3 1 Lb. Bags « 9 J r
Garden Fresh
O r e e n B e a n s • • . • l i b s
Vi Gal. Arcadia A A C
O r a n g e J u i c e ...................W
Idahoan Instant
A 20" SAVINGS!
I 2 LB. HAYES STAR DRY
in to B eans
MARKET MANAGER SPECIAL
5 LB S . B O N E L E S S C H U C K S T E A K
5 LB S . B O N E L E S S 1 5 L B S . O N L Y
C H U C K R O A S T
5 L B S . B O N E L E S S
B E E F S T EW
1 9 b D W e I» 1 7 «
THIS WEEK YOU SAVE 14'
U.S.D.A.
GRADE ‘A’
DOZEN
25 Lb. Chatham
B o g F o o d * * * * * * * * * * * iB
7V4 Oz. Kraft IMac & Cheese jm ■
B in n o r * * * * * * * * * * * * ^ 9 / I
« f t a r t h a W h i t e r i e i i r
7 9 *
PL. OR S.R.
5 LB. BAG
1 Lb. Pkg. Gunnoe PorkSauscHpo...........
1 Vt Lb. Pkg. Gunnoe PorkSauscme.......
U.S. Choice Cubed
R o u n d S t e a k * * * . t * * Lb.
U.S. Choice
B r e a k f a s t S t e a k * * Lb.
U.S. Choice
l y e R o u n d S t e a k * * Lb.
Pork Shoulder
R o a s t .................................Lb.
40^ COUPON GOOD TOWARDS THE
PURCHASE OF 1 LB. CAN OF
I SANKA COFFEE
I OFFER GOOD THRU SAT. 9/30/78....LM IT 1 PER
CUSTOMER PLEASE! 4169-9 VC
/i
^ ^ F IE S X
$1»
$ 1 * 3
$ | 9 9
$ | 9 9
$ | 9 9
$ | 1 9
SPECIAL! SAVE 20'!
2 LB. IDA TREAT CRINKLE
French Frie s
H E R E ’S H O W T O R E S E R V E Y O U R S E T :
1. COME M AND CHOOSE YOUR PATTERN.2. REGISTER YOUR СНОСЕ ON THE FORMS PROVIDED AT THE STORE.3. COLLECT RESTA STAMPS AT 99* EACH (nus tax) AND PASTE THE STAMPS ON YOUR SAVER CARD.4. REDEEM COMPLETE CARDS ATTHE STORE.
g^ySraiEW FREEDOM MINI-PADS
30 CT. $1 69
TYLENOL EX.STRENGTH
T o o c t .
T A B L E T S ^ У
VICKS FORMULA 44D
$2^®
e.S O z . Redi Mix
Biscuit O r Cornbread
Mix .........* * *
IS O z .F o lg e r's Flaked
C o M e o • • **•**
THIS WEEK SAVE 20'!
5 LB. SOUTHERN BISCUIT
Flo u r
10В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1978
Funerals
SA M U EL D. P A R K ER
Samuel DlUard Parker, Sr.,
80, of Route 5, Mocksville,
died Monday morning at the
Davie County Hospital.
The funeral was conducted
at 3 p.m. Wednesday at the
Courtney Baptist Church by
the Rev. O.M. Burckhalter,
the Rev. Eugene Goodman
and the Rev. Ronnie Baity.
Burial was In the church
cemetery.
He was born in Surry
County to Fred and Lula Doby
Parker. He was a member of
Courtney BapUst Church and
was a retired farmer.
Surviving are his wife,
Hessie Ola Peele Parker; one
daughter, Mrs. Loyd Nance of
849 Madison Ave., Winston-
Salem; four sons, William
Edgar Parker of Route 5,
Winston-Salem, Charles L.
Parker ot Route 2 Harmony,
Max A. Parker of Route 8,
Mocksville, and S.D. Parker,
Jr., of Route 4. YadkinviUe;
two sisters, Mrs. Lillian White
of Dobson and Mrs. Ruby
Inman of Mt. Airy; one
brother, Walter Parker of
Dobson; 14 grandchildren and
one gr<Mt-grandchild.
Revival Services
At Liberty Wesleyan
Revival services will begin
Tuesday. October 3 and.
continue through Sunday.
October 8th at Liberty
Weslyan Church in Sheffield.
Services will begin each
evening at 7:30.
A film about the Second
Coming of Christ will be
shown Saturday evenihg.
Guest evengeUst wiU be the
Rev. Richard Poe, youth
director of First Wesleyan
Church in High Point.
Special music will be
provided each evening.
The pastor invites the
public to attend these special
meetings.
Green Meadows
P in o N e w s
The fall revival will start
Thursday September 28 and
run through October 1. All
members and the public are
invited to attend at
7:30 p.m. at Wesley Chapel
Church.
Luther Dull enjoyed Sunday
with a birthday dinner at his
home. All his family was
present including Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Pendleton and sons
Sterling and Blake of
Gastonia, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
DuU of High Point, Mr. and
Mrs. Vemon DuU and Tina,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene DuU, Mr.
and Mrs. Thurmond DuU and
Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Gerry
DuU and Krista and Virginia
DuU.
Fred Trivette has returned
home after being in the
Baptist Hospital for several
wedcs for surgery.
Mrs. Roy Dixon’s condition
Is some better at this writin«.
IRwMMHMnRRRnMtSSwMmMMm^
Y a d k i n V a l l e y ||
The Young People wUl meet
at the church Saturday night
September 30th at 7 p.m.
Patsy Shore is sick at home
this week. The doctor said for
her to stay in bed untU her
condition improved.
Ruby McBride is a patient
at Forsyth Hospiul where she
had to undergo testa and x-
rays the past week and a half.
But her condition is better.
Bonnie Weatherman and
Georgia Parker are still
confined to home due to
sickness.
Lorena West went home
with her sister. Kathleen
Black, for a visit last week at
WeavervUle, N.C. She is to
retum home about the middle
of this wedc.
Smith Grove To
Have Chicken Stew
The Smith Grove United
Methodist Church wlU have
an Old Fashion Chicken Stew
and Gospel Sing Saturday.
October 7. starting at 6 p.m.
The church is located on high
way 158 approximately six
miles east of MocksvUle.
Everyone is invited to enjoy
this Christian fellowship.
Please bring your bowl, spoon
and drink for this free
Chicken Stew and listen to
some good Gospel Singing.
Rev. William A. Poole.
Executive Director of N.C.
BaptUt Homes wiU be guest
speaker at the eleven o’clock
service at Fork Baptist
Church. Sunday. October 1st.
He has pastored cburcbei at
Burgaw and at Graham. N.C.
and has been Executive
Dhvctor for eighteen years.
He Is married to the former
Kate Teagne of Fairmont and
they have 3 sons. A cordial
welcome is extended to the
public from the pastor, the
Rev. Yates WUkinson and the
congregaUon to attend this
special service.
I 4-H News I
SM ITH GROVE
The Smith Grove 4-H Club
met Friday, September 22. at
7 p.m. at the home of Pat
Carter. The meeting was
caUed to order by Pat Carter.
For Old Business we
discussed the club’s annual
picnic which was held in
August.
For New Business we
discussed due date for Record
Books September 29. the
County Council Meeting
September 28 at 7 p.m. in the
County Office BuUding, and
National 4-H Week October 1-
7.
Then we had refreshments
which were enjoyed by aU and
the meeting was adjourned.
Pat Carter. Reporter
Advance Barbecue
The Advance Volunteer
Fire Department wUI sponsor
their annual pork and beef
barbecue Friday and
Saturday, October 8th and 7th
at the fire department.
Coming next Sunday Oc
tober 1 at 7:30 p.m. is a lay
sm school at Green
I Church. Classes wiU
be held each evening Sunday
through Wednesday.
The Annual Meeting of the
Yadkin Baptist association
meets at the Green Meadows
Church on Thurs. evening
Oct. 19. Friday's meeting wUl
be wlUi Enon Baptist Church.
The Joe Langstons visited
with their daughter and
fam ily in W illis Va. on
Saturday. WhUe there they
e n jo y e d g a t h e r in g
Chtoquapins and Fox grapes
In the woods, which appear to
be reaUy fuU of both.
Mrs. Lester Carter and new
son returned home on
Saturday from Forsyth
' Hospiul where lltUe Zachary
Austin arrived on Wednesday,
September 20. He is the first
chUd bora to Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Carter. He is also the
first grandchild of Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Austin. His other
grandmother is Mrs. SaUie
Carter.
Make your church New
Year's resolution now. SUrt
next Sunday atUnding Sun
day school with the beginning
of a new church year in
Southem Baptist churches.
Mrs. Leroy HoweU is a
patient at the Forsyth
Hospiul receiving tests to
determine the reason for
vocal trouble she has been
experiencing for several
months.
Mrs. Ruby McBride has
been a patient at ForsyUi
HospiUI since September 13
undergoing several testa and
minor surgery. She was
reported to be Improving on
Sunday.
Mrs. Joe Langston visited
Mrs. Reid Hauser one af
ternoon last week. Mrs.
Open House
For Parsonage
Open House wUl be held at
the New Parsonage of the
Church pf Good church,
Sunday, October 1st from
three o'clock untU flve o'dock
in the afternoon. The par
sonage is located on Highway
801, Cooleemee.
The pubUc is invited to
attend.
Hauser was feeUng some
better than she had for a
whUe.Mrs. J.C. Bowles wUl enter the hospiul this week for treatment.
A truUi from the past by
Victor Hugo...Have courage
for the great sorrows of Uve
and pauence for the smaU
ones; and when you tave
laboriously accomplished
your daUy Usk. go to sleep in
peace. God Is awake.
Center Homecoming
Services Sunday
Center United Methodist Church will observe homecoming services Sunday October 1. Rev. Keith Tutterow of EUc Park. N.C.. a former member ot the church will deliver the morning message at ll a.m. Churdi school wUl be at 10 a.m.
A picnic'lunch wiU toUow the morning program and there wUl not be an afternoon service.Rev. Cameron Dodson Is pastor ot the church.
Members of Uie S lu ^ Grove School’s summer readn-s,’ club, who completea №e requiremente of reading at least ten books over the summer, are shown abovej
S !»“ Strtder. Karen J«
Thursday at 7 o'clock p.m.
will be the . recreational
program for all ages.
Everybody is invited to at
tend.
Those that are in the
hospiUls are Miss Ida EUls
who is in Davie HospiUI. Mrs.
Taylor Loflin is in Forsyth
hospiul and Mrs. Annie Smith
HoweU is in WhiUker Care.
Mr. John Cope haa returned
home from Davie hospital and
is recovering real good. Lets
remember these along with
others in prayers and with a
get weU card.
M iss Cindy EUls spent part
of last week with her parenU.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben EUls. Cindy
is sUrtlng to Rowan Tech. for
an X-ray Tec. and she sUrts
on T h u i^ y of this week and
wUI be Uving In Spencer. We
wish Cindy the best of luck in
her school work.
Those visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Ausbon Ellis over the
weekend were Miss Donna,
Ken, and Todd EUls their
grandchUdren from Winston-
Salem. Donna’s birthday was
Saturday. She had a birthday
cake with cheerleaders on it.
Donna is a cheerleader at
Jackson. School in Winston-
Salem. We wish Donna many
more happy birthdaya. Mr.
and Mrs. Ellis reaUy enjoyed
ttiem being with ttiem over
ttie weekend.
The adult class ot Mr.
Elmer Beauchamp went to
Shattlon Springs last
Saturday afternoon.
Our young people will be
picking up ^ s s agahi in
October. So keep this in mind,
and save your old bottles or
any kind of glass. They sure
wfll appreciate it very much.
Mrs. Hazd Wood, Mrs.
Pansy Smitti visited Mrs.
Nannie Smitti in Portmoutti.
,Va. last week. They enjoyed
being wltti Mrs. Smitti.
Mrs. HatUe Cope. Mrs.
Hazel Smitti visited Mr. and
Mrs. Pink Hendrix in IredeU
County last week. They en
joyed being witti them very
much.
Mr. Scott Snider had a
birttiday last Thursday. He
had a cake and hia Grandma
EUls tbced him a Pizza supper
on Thursday. We wish Scott
many more happy birthdays.
Scott was very lucky at
school. He goes to Pinebrook.
He put his hand In a bag and
brought out over $2.00 In
change. So he was very
ttckled over ttiat.
St. John Zion To Observe
Annual Women’s Day
One hundred women in
white annual woman’a day
wUl be observed on Sunday
October 1 at 6 o’clock at St.
John A.MJ!. Zion Church
MocksvUle, HUlcrest Drive.
Guest speaker wUl be Mrs.
Mabd Jones of SaUsbury N.C. .
wife of the late Bishop
Raymond Luttiw Jones.
onPerreU. 2nd row: AlUs Smith. Deena CampbeU. HoUy Fairchild. Tür-
TUIey. Tla'’ Matttiews. vSranlta A lZ ‘d. UniSS WUkinson, Janet PeireU. Back roW: David Carter, Lisa Beauchamp and Mary Ann Bal^.
SHEFFIELD-Calahaln
The Sheffield-Caiahaln 4-H
Qub met August 24.1978, at 7
p.m. at the Community
BuUding. President, Malinda
Wright called the meeting to
order. Kattiy ReUly called ttie
roll and read the minutes of
the last meeting. Eleven
members were present.
Frankie Potts had devotions.
We discussed 4-H Church
Sunday October 1 and decided
to Ro to New Union Methodist
Church. We also discussed thf;. J
Center Fair September. 9. • i
Malinda Wright urgid' S'« |
everyone to enter something ■
in the fair. !
We had two new member's J
to join. They are Scott Alien »
and Tricia RcUly. ;
Birttidays this month were >
Scott AUen, Tricia Reilly, and: ]
Ann Wright. , ; I
Malinda Wright served! j
refreshmente and the meeting, {
was adjourned. ’ '
J ' •
Som e cicadas live under
ground for 17 yean, then
emerge for a few weeks of
wnthine before dying.
JERICHO
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Route 7. Jericho Church Road
Phone492-5291 •
S E R V IC E ^ Mnista- - Charles Isenbe^
Sunday: Bible Study and clsiiei for ail ages at 10:00.
IVtorning Worship at 11:00 a.m.
Evening Worship at 6:00 p;m;
Wednesday Night: Mid-WMkB ibte Study at 7:30
SERMON TOPICS FOR SUNDAY, SEPT.24:
Morning Worship: "What Makes the Cross of Christ
Unique?"
EveningWoKhip^uest^geajjepWa^^
THOUGHT FOR THIS W EEK !
"The wages of sin Is death. Don't you think that men
should stop sinning before payday?."
il*
, ITOl
i f a ^ f-lu n i^ ^ o o lls 't 3.2,4. Sundays 10 a.m.
3rd Sun. 10 a.m. - Sunday School 3rd Sun, 11 a.m., 1,2.4. Sundays 10 a.m.
NO CREEK PRIMITIVE
BAPTIST CHURCll
ThàEpiibopaiGhurah- - < Cooleemee, The Church of the Good
Shepherd Momiiu Worship 9:30 a.m. ChurchSchooll0:40a.m. Father WilUs Rosenthal, Piieit in Charge.
DAIL-A-PRAYER
634-3311
CAUDELL
LUMBER CO.’
1238 Bingham Street
MocksviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2167
EATON
FUNERAL HOME
. 328 N. Main Street
MocksviUe, NG
PHONE 634-2148
MARTIN HARDWARE
&6ENERAL
MERCHANDISE
Feeds, Dry Goods
Groceries, Fertilizer
PHONE 634-2128
DAVIE TRA(m)Rt
iMPLEMENTCO.
Ford FarminçSales and
Servioe-ifew Holland EquiR
MiAuiy Roid A Complete
PHONE вЭ4-6969 R^peir
COBLE LIME t
FERTILIZER SERVICE
CoolNmN, NC - Hwy 168
Burinen Phone 2844364
Horn« Phone 284-2782
ADVANCE BAPTIST CHURCH
CEDAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Austin HamOton, Sqnday School
10 a.m.-Worshlp Service 11 a.m.
MOCKS UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
YADKIN VALLEY BAPTIST CHURCH
CHINQUAPIN GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
EDGEWOOD BAPTIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE BAPTIST CHURCH
CORNATZER BAPTIST CHURCH
FORK BAPTIST CHURCH £ mUet East on Hwy 64, Rev. Yates K.
Wilkinson, Pastor, Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Worship Service ll:OOa.m.-Evening' Worship 7:20 p.m.
CORNATZER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
UNION CHAPEL UNITED METHODICT CHURCH
ELBAVILLE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
OAK GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CENTER UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SALEM UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
UBERTY UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
ADVANCE UNITED METHODIST CHURCl
BETHLEHEM UNITED'METHODIST CHURCH
HARDISON UNITED MEraODIST.(^URCH
AAI.E. ZION METHOblST QIURCH
DULIN UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
COOLEEMEE UNITED METHODIST
CHURCH-Rev. John F. Edwuds
DUTCHMAN CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
NORTH MAIN STREET CHURCH OF CHRIST
Donald Freeman, Minister, Sunday School 10a.m.-Worshlp Service 11 a.m.-EveRinr
Worihip Senrice 7 p.m.-Wed. Service 7;3c
FARMINGTON BAPTIST CHURCH
UBERTY WESLEYAN CHURCH
Troy C. Vaughn, Pastor
MOCKSVILLE WESLEYAN CHURCH Hospital St., MocksvUle, NC Rev. Robert
L. Taylor, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Moming
Worship 11 a.m.-Evening Worship 7 a.m
BEAR CREEK BAPTIST CHURCH
REDLAND PENTECOSTAL HOUNESS CHURCH
Rev. A. W. Smith, Sunday School 10 a.m.-Wonhip 11 a4n.-Ufe-
Unars 7:30 pjn.-EvsnceUstlc Service 7:30-Wed. Bible Study 7:30 pjn.
CONSIDER THE BIBLE
T h e b re a d a n d w in e h a d t>een s h a re d . T h e p r o m is e o f t h e P a s s o v e r w a s n o w f u lf ille d in t h e L o r d 's S u p p e r.
T h e m e n r e c lin e d , a t re s t, a r o u n d th e lo w ta b le . Q u ie t c o n v e r s a tio n to o l« p la c e w h ile t h e L o r d lo o k e d
h r i p l l ^ f r ie n d s , " H e s a id , k n o w in g f u ll w e ll w h a t th e w o r d " f r ie n d "
O p e s i t t o u c h y o u t o k n o w th a t G o d w a n ts a n d n e e d s fr ie n d s ? H e c a lle d A b r a h a m H is frie n d . A n d t h e ir
fr ie n d s h ip Is o n e o f th e h ig h e s t a n d h o lie s t c h a p te rs in a ll s a c re d h is to r y .
Y o u a r e my f r ie n d s if y e d o w h a ts o e v e r I c o m m a n d y o u . " O u r L o r d h a s f r ie n d s e v e ry w h e re . P e o p le
lik e y o u a n d m e w h o , in th e jo y o l lo v in g a n d s e rv in g , f in d th is F r ie n d s o v e r y re a l - H e is c lo s e r th a n
a b ro th e r]
OCommwAitv
GREEN MEADOWS BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Walter L. Warfford, Sunday School 10 a,m.-Worshlp Service 11 a.m.-B.T.U. 6:30 p.m.-Evemiu Worship 7:30 p.m.
Evening Worship 7; 30 p.m.-Prayer Meeting Wed. 7:30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD, Cooleemee, NC
CLEMENT GROVE CHURCH OF COD I. W. Uames, Pastor, Sabbath School 10 a.m.-Worship Servicc 1 p.m.-Prayer Meeting Wed. 8 p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST ON thOLUNG ROAD
Barry Mahorney Pastor, Sabbath School 10 a.m.-Moming Worship 11 a.m^_____
o f a better community and ¡8 made pos- s/bie by these sponsors who believe in building character.
OAVIE SUPPLY CO.
ModuvUle, NC
PHONE 634-2859
MARTIN EQUIPMENT
¿SERVICE
508 Dei
PHON
St. M ^viU e, NC
TED'S GROCERY BAG &
MIDWAY RESTAURANT
Salisbury Road, МоскауШе
COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH Gladstone Road,Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service 11 a.m.
HOPE BAPTIST TABERNACLE Norman S. Frye, Pastor, Sunday School 9:4S a.m.-Worship Service
10:45 a.m.-Evangeiistic Service 7:30 pjn.-Wed. Ssrvice 7:30 p.m.
HOLY CROSS LUTHERAN CHURCH .................a.m.
James C. Hodnett, Mbiister
Sunday School 10AJ4. Worshb Service 11 A.M.idc Servio* 7:00 p.m.
I Sunday 6:00 Р 4 П . ^Wed
^ C X T O N U MOIMVIAN I
10 a.m.-Ww^p^Service 11 a.tn.-Youth Fellowship 6:30 pjn.-Eventaig Worship 7:30 pjn.
2 l*3'sundvs%im
JERICHO CHURCH OF CHRIST Jericho Road, omce: 492-S291
Home: 492-5257. Charles C. Isenberg 7257
ST. FRAN aS CATHOLIS MISSION
Sundays at 10 a.m. - Sunday obligation fulfilled also at anticipatory mass on
Saturdays at 8 p^m.634-2667 or 246-2463
BLAISE BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. Jimmy Hinson, Pastor, Sunday Service 9:50 a.m.-Wo^hto Service 11 ajn.-Sunday Evening 7 pjn.-Wed. Evening 7:30 p.m.
CHESTNUT GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
BAILEY’S CHAPEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
FULTON UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
BETHEL UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
SMITH GROVE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH
ZION UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NEW UNION UNITED METHODISTCHURCH
EATONS BAPTIST CHURCH
Sunday School 10 aJn.-Moming Worship
11 a.m.-Trainlng Union 7 pjn.
DAVIE BAPTIST TABERNACLERev. T. A. Shoaf, Pastor, On Fork BUby Rd.Sunday School 9:45 p.m.-Moming Worship'
11 a jn.-Evening Worship 7:30 pjn.-Blble Study Wed. 7:J0 p.m.-Evening Worship 7 p.m
JERUSALEM BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service
11 a.m.-Evening Worship Service 7 p.m.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Cooleemee
SHILOH BAPTIST CHURCH
TURRENTINE BAPTIST CHURCH
CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD Bbby
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY Rev. Charlie Talbert, MocksviUe, Rt. 4
(Epheaus) 284^381
CONCORD UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
CLARKESVILLE PENTECOSTAL :>OUNESS CHURCH Mocksville, Route 5, Rev. Albert Gentle
Sunday School 10 a.m.-Worship Service tlaun.
THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Fork, NC, The Church of the Ascension Chwdi Sduwi 10 a.m.-Moming Prayer,
Sermon 11 ajn.
ATTEND THE c h u r c h ’^
OF YOUR CHOICEI
C. A. SEAFORD
LUMBER COMPANY
Jericho Road
MockaviUe, NC
PHONE 634-5148
J. P. GREEN
MILLING CO. INC.
Diday Flour :
We Cuatom Blend
524 Depot Street
Phone 634-2126
FARM & GARDEN
SERVICE. INC.
961 YadkinviUe Road
PHONE 634-2017
or 634-5964
FOSTER DRUG CO.
Lowea Shopping Center
MockaviUe, NC
PHONE 634-2141
Glenn S. Howard
---------------D B A ----------------
SOUTHUND DISTRIBUTORS
Route I - Advance
PHONE 998-8186
JEFFCOCO.JNC.
ROUTE 1 - Advance
"Our staff and employees encourage you to attend the church of your choice."
SHEFFIELD LUMBER
tPALLH COMPANY
Route 6 - Box 153
MockaviUe, NC
PHONE 492 5565
Sturdy Wooden Hulls Still Brave The Sea
By WUliam J. O’NeUl
^»• National Geographic News
wSfiiee man tint found he
cross a stream on a
log, men have been
wooden ships.
ulUmately replaced
for the hulls of large
, Just as flberglass now is
instead of wood in the
of many boats. But
n hulls are still in
____^nd, both for pleasure
and woric boats and,
ÍKÜasionally, for ocean-going
vessels as well.
‘ in a small number of
bóatyards and worlcshops
here and abroad, wood
working skills that once ap-
p^red verging on extinction
Are being revived and taught
toYa new generation.
' At' 640 tons, the Antarctic
^ ^ r c h vessel Hero is one of
die largest wooden ships built
S.irecent years. Ordered by
the National Science Foun
dation, she was built at
Bristol, Maine, in 1967.
■ The l2S-foot-long craft,
whoke thick timbers are
overlaid with steel plates, has
made repeated trips to
Palm er Station “sintering aver," locked in the ice that
(ianiimmobUlze the ship, but
cahnot crush it.
"Sh e ’s no icebreaker,”
Alb«rt Betzel of the Foun-
dtttion’s popar operations
staff told the National
Qebgraphic Society. "But we
fed that a heavy wooden hull
is7best for Antarctic work
because of its ability to
withstand ‘pinching’ by polar
tse.”
' Hero follows a polar
N E W A N D O L D mingle at a New Jersey boatyard as cratls-
men use electric tools and traditional methods to form the
clean lines of ahull planked with red cedar. Because of searci-
ties of the right wood and the time-consuming hand laborin-
voived, wooden hulls are increasingly expensive. Yet many
owners of fishing boats and pleasure crait prefer them.
tradition. The schooner-
rigged steamship Roosevelt,
the first vessel ever built for
Arctic exploration, had a
wooden huU that was 2% feet
thick to withstand the
tremendous pressures of the
ice pack.
The Roosevelt carried
Robert Peary to within 500
miles of the North Pole in
March, 1909. He completed
the trip by dogsled to become,
a month later, the first man to
reach the pole.
Trawlers, shrimpers, and
other coasUl fishing craft
often are steel-hulled today,
but many fishermen still
prefer stoutly planked hulls of
seasoned wood.
"Wood Is the Cadillac of
boat hulls,” said a veteran
Chesapeake Bay oysterman.
“It can ride out most anything
the sea throws at you. And if
you get holed-probably
through your own
carelessness- it’s easier to
patch.”
Shrimp boats built at St.
Augustine, Fla., are a
famUlar sight at quays in
Guyana, Guatemala, Mexico,
as far away as Iraq, and In
•U.S ports. The 72-foot diesel
trawlers have oaken ribs,
with cypress used for
planking below the waterline
and fir for the freeboard.
Wood is even enjoyhig a
resurgence among pleasure
craft, from sleek racers to
cabht cruisers-but with an
innovation that makes It more
competitive with fiberglass.
The development of
stronger waterproof epoxies
has aUowed boatbullders to
replace heavy planks with
lightweight plywood hulls for
boats that are swifter and
more economical.
But new methods bring
their own hazards. One firm
sued a supplier for falling to
provide "m arine grade”
plywood. The laminated hulls
came apart hi the water, and
some boats sank.
SW A D D L E D in aluminum, this baby can
better retain body heat. The Silver Swad-
dler, actually a thin film of aluminum bond
ed to polyester, was invented by a doctor to
[ Parents: Be Alert For Strep Throat This Fall
•Schools days are here
aln-and so are Increased
ances for children to pick
ta infectious diseases from
one another. A common
cl^ntaglous and potentially p d&ngerous Infection Is
streptococcal Sore throat. It
eta lead to rheumatic fever,
wwlch damage the valves of
K tl{b* heart. Fortunately,
prompt Identification and
b^tm ent of a strep throat
w j^ peniciUhi or another
antibiotic will cure the in
fection and remove the threat
of rheumatic fever.
"You, Your Child, and
Rheumatic Fever” is the title
of a free pamphlet which may
be requested from the North
Carolhia Heart Association, 1
Heart Circle, Chapel HIU,
N.C. 27514. It provides In
formation which aU parents
should know about protecting
their cbUd’s heart.
Not every sore throat is a
strep throat. The only way to
make sure Is for a physician
to swab the Uiroat so that a
culture may be made for
microscopic examination.
Sometimes, the physlcan
wlU prescribe medication or
give an injection without
waiting for №e results of the
Oiroat culture.
Here are Uie signs to look
for If your chUd complains of
a sore throat;
1. Does Uie chUd have
Pittsburgh HOUSE paint
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CAUDELL LUMBER CO.
1238 BINGHAM STREET
MOCKSVILLE, NC
6 m
fever? How much?
2. Does his Uvoat hurt when
he swaUows?
3. Does It hurt under Uie
angle of Uie Jaw when you
press genUy? Do you feel
swoUen glands there?
4. Did the sore throat come
on suddenly?
5. Does he have headache,
nausea, or vomiUng?
6. Does he sneeze, cough,
have a runny nose, has his
voice changed, or has he lost
his voice?
Not aU of these symptoms
need be present for the child
to have a strep InfecUon, nor
do they necessarUy hidlcate
strep, but they do mean that
you should seek medical
attenUon, so that treatment. If
necessary, may begin without
delay.
Gospel Singing
And Homecoming
At Gospel Baptist
Gosoel
homecoming will"__________
this weekend at Uie Gospel
Singing and
{ wUl be observed
Baptist Church.
Saturday evening, Sep
tember SOtti, Uie Redeemed
Trio of Mocksville and
Calvary Way Quartet of
YadkinvUle wUl present a
program of gospel music.
Sunday, October 1st is
homecoming, and foUowhig
Uie 11 o'clock service, lunch
wUl be s|»-ead for members
and friends.
Special music featuring Uie
"Gospel Voices,” "N eigh
borhood Quartet” and “The
Gateway Trio” will be
presented In the afternoon.
The church is located North
of MocksvUle, first road past
Cana Road. Everyone is
welcome.
When It comes time for
historians to describe this era,
Uiey might call it Uie A-
luminum Age.
Just as earlier ages of
human development have
taken Uielr names from Uie
distinctive materials that
nu rtured them --Stone,
Bronze, Iron-some people
believe this age should be
named for aluminum.
Cultural analyst Lewis
Mumford has observed that
whUe Uie industrial revoIuUon
transmuted “clumsy wooden
machines hito stronger and
more accurate h-ons ones,” a
task of today is “to translate
heavy iron forms into lighter
aluminum ones.”
Discovered only 150 years
ago and manufactured
commerclaUy Just half Uiat
long, aluminum now ranks
third In use among the world’s
metals. The key is Ito ex
treme versatility.
The same metal that makes
kitchen foil serves as armor
for U.S. mUltary tanks. The
stuff of lawn chairs and LitUe
League baseball baU also
Cornatzer-Dulin
Barbecue Saturday
The Comatzer-Dulln Fire
Department Is sponsoring a
Barbecue Chicken supper
Saturday, October 7Ui at the
'fire ' department from 1:00
p.m. untU aU is sold out.
No tlcketo wUl be sold. The
public Is Invited to attend.
Proceeds from Uie supper
will be used for Uie needs of
the fire department.
Singing Disciples
To Present Concert
Sunday At Fork
The Singing Disciples,
winners of the Gospel com
petition at DaWe County Arts
Festival wUl present a con
cert of Gospel music at Uie
Fork BapUst Church, Sunday,
Oct. 1, at 7:15 p.m. Memben
of the local group are Fred
WUson, J. P. Grubbs, Larry
Cartner and Joe Long. Donna
Lanier is Uieir pianist.
The pubUc is cordUUy In
vited to attend.
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - IIB
Wesley Chapel
Revival Is Set
Revival wUl be held at
Wesley Chapel Methodist
Church, beglnnhig Thursday,
September 28th and con
tinuing through Sunday,
October 1st. Services ^11
be^n each evenhig at 7:S0
and at 11 a.m. on Sunday. The
speaker wUI be Uie Rev. Gene
Cloer,
There will be special
shiglng each evenbig.
The public is invited to
attend.
Funds Available
To Aid Special
Forestiy Program
Funds are available for
cost-sharing under the
Forestry Incentive Program
(FIP). Persons wishing to
estabUsh a stand of forest
trees or improve a stand of
trees should apply for
assistance.
To be eligible for coet-share
assistance under FIP , a
landowner must; (1) own a
tract of no more than 1000
acres of eligible land, (2) be a
private forest laffdowner, (3)
have land that Is suitable for
reforestation if presentiy not
hi trees; for reforestation, or
im p r o v e d f o r e s t
management, (4) have land
that is capable of producing
marketable timber crops, and
(5) have no commercial
harvest on lands for which
F IP cost-sharing application
Is made withhi the past five
years.
Cost-sharing of up to 60
percent of the actual cost of
the practices performed
under the F IP wUl be paid to
eligible participants.
ByJim M LAm oi
e 1976 National Qaogr^ihlc Soclaty
conserve body heat in premature or sickly
babies, Aluminum is turning up in so many
products today that some people believe
this should be called the .Aluminum Age.
Aluminum Shining Through
On Battlefield And Ballpark
forms the vitals of air and
space vehicles.
In рш« form aluminum is
soft enough to whlttie. Yet Ito
alloys can have the strength
of steel wlUi only a Uilrd the
weight. When the late
sculptor Alexander Calder
designed an 80-foot mobUe,
his choice of aluminum over
steel cut two tons from ito
weight.
Alumhium also assures Uie
Calder work virtual im-
morUUty: The histant Uie
metal Is exposed to air Ito
surface acquires a tran
sparent fUm of “rust” Uiat
seals the Interior against
further corrosion.
Along with alum inum’s many roles come paradoxes,
Thomas Y. Canby writes In
Uie National Geographic. For
example, the smetling
process guzzles vast amounto
of energy; yet once made,
aluminum can be recycled
over and over for only a smaU
fraction of Uie energy used In
maUng It orlgbiaUy.
Aluminum comes from
bauxite, which Is devoured by
American planto at Ше rate of
12 to IS mOllon tons a year.
Arkansas supplies about 10
percent of U.S. needs, but
most is Imported from
tropical and subtropical
nations. The International
Bauxite Association, a con
sortium of 11 nations, controls
75 percent of all bauxite
production, a higher
proportion than Uiat of oil
controlled by the
Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
As early as the 1700s
European chemlsto realized
an invisible meUl lurked hi
some clays. Later a par
ticularly rich source was
found hi souUiem France,
near the medieval town of Les
Baux-thus the name bauxite,
as aU sImUar ores are known.
Alumhium, however, exlsto
only In combination with
other elements, prim arily
oxygen, wlUi which It forms ^
hard oxide called alumina.
The challenge of Uberathig
Uie metal defeated chemlsto
until 1825, and It was not until
an unlikely cohicldence oc
curred in 1886 Uiat sclentisto
learned how to produce it in
commercial quantities.
In Uie quIetcbUege town of
ОЫ^Ип, Ohio, a 22-year4)ld
student, Charles Martin HaU,
used electrolysis to suc-
cessfuUy isolate the metal by
fhrst dlssolvhig alumina In a
molten solvent called cryolite.
At Uie same time a continent
away In GenUlly, France,
another 22-year-oId named
Paul L.T. Heroult did Uie
same thing in a sim ilar
manner.
Today most alumhium Is
smelted by Uie HaU-Heroult
process.
BUY Ш MD Ш£1
The Forward Harvest Forecast is good in most of thisarea, and Ford
has just offered a trading bonus on six tractor models through
SEPTEMBER 30THI
We have a good tractor inventory available to us and we're willing to
make long trades to keep customers coming in .. . .
YES, WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS... .AND WILL WORK TO EARN ITIII
GIVE US A CALL-AND WE'LL CALL ON YOUIIII
Davie Tractor
& Implement
Highway 601 South Mocksville, N.Ü
« т е к
R U B B E R
« 0 f i R I i S -
.•S 0 .0 0
...6 0 .0 0
...6 3 .0 0
.6 8 .0 0
..7 S .0 0
BRMxIS.
FRMxM...
GR60x14„
FRMxIS».
GRMxIS.
HRMxIS..
LR60X15...__________________________________________
DUNLOP ELITE SEVENTY
STEEL BELTED RADIAL
•50.000 mile warranty
BR70X13 *49.00
ER70X14..55.00
FR70X14..59.00
GR70X14..62.00
FR70X15.. 61.00
GR70X15..64.00
HR70x15.69.00
* H « ш Oualoa ОаИ SaH SimI M iri Radial Tin man anal« acrou Ika traa« dMta M
Ika liaad wianadkalart аПГ naad daplM bafoia dalnadng 30.000 яШ. Diialap wi«.,
apao praMouliae al tha Oualif niltaga baotlat and ia aulianga lot ika mra aal lira, fm Cfidil lownd Aa paicliaia el a caawarabla naw Dunlap lira baaid aa Dunlop'i Mikaaa Очи'
n io and «la aiiliata iwi ricaind Tin Unit Oai|a laataaaMr lallicu Aa liii
p£at baiag diat|al al lalaH lat dia nplacanml 1на IMaaga will ta dilaraaaad ta Ни
adeaiaiatraading __________________________________
. COME TO WHERE THE TIRE SALES ARE ~
t L E M M O N S
TIRE and AUTOMOTIVE
Lewiiville-Clemm^nt Rd.
CLEMMONS, N.C. 766-5450
MOCK iwe eii AKeiwHve
4T U C«MMrr C M M fM ’tOlO TU-IOIt
IRM ippiif Rd. uyW»
ALL F N ia S INCLUDf
• FID. TAX
• MOUNTING
• BALANCINC
МЙЙСЙ ш-ш
I
12В - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28. 1978
Cana News
Tlie Cana Homemakeri
Club held their regular
meeUng on September 2lit at
their club building. Мома
Eaton served as hoiteM.
Mrs. Lloyd Brown,
president, presided and
conducted the devotion, and
her theme was - “Take
Nothing for Oranted” .
"Prayers of thanksgiving are
an awareness of God’s bounty
and love. For most of us his
gifts are Uken for granted.
This is not true ,of children.
Everything is new, wonderful,
to a small child. Their
laughter surrounds their days
with delight as each event
surprises them.” Mrs. Brown
read a poem by Mr. Ilo
Orleans. In his volume of
chUdhood poetw ThU Won
derful Day, he has captured
much of tills delight in his
poem “All My Senses.” This
offers suggestions for the
enjoyment of "little things” in
our daily lives that often go
unnoticed;
I stand beside the doorway.
And what do you think I
hear?
The chirp-chirp-chirp of
grasshoppers
Which sound so very
near!
I walk around the garden,
And what do you think I
smell?
Magnolia, mint, and lilac.
And rose and coral-velll
I sit at the breakfast table,
And what do you think I
taste? ■
M y cereal, and buttered
toast-
Good food I must not
waste!
I touch the stones by the
, Uly-pond,
And what do you think I
feel?
The soft green moss-as silky
'smooth
As the fur of a baby seal!
I look outside the window.
And what do you think I
see?
A robin, hop-hop-hopping
Beneath the maple tree!
I ’m happy I have ears and
nose
And tongue and hands and
eyes!
With all my senses I enjoy
The world that round me
Ues!
The foUowing members
reports were made: Mrs.
Cecil Leagans lead with ex
cerpts from an article ap-
peuing in tiie Winston-Salem
Journal on July 30. 1978, by
Lucille Rivers, entitled
“Silhouettes Slim m er for
Fall”; She predicts the most
exciting change in fashion we
have had (or some time. "U w
new silhouette will be ibra
with clothes fltted close to the
body. Shoulders will be
slightly padded, which gives a
much better line to tbe
mature figure...What clothes
have always been about is
enhancing the figure, making
one more attractive, which
seenu to have been forgotten
these last few years.
Tbe new look is a planned
one, each outflt complete, in
iUelf. You may use a great
jacket with different skirt and
pants, but it should be more
carefully worked out and with
taste...
Lets hope to see a little
more elegance for a change at
dress-up occasions and not the
uninspired dungarees and T-
shbrts.
Skirts are supposed to be
longer, about 2 to 4 inches
below the knee. Don’t follow
this rule blindly. Make your
skirts the length most flat
tering to you. Keep in mind
rtion to height and
..There can be soft
at the top of skirts
and trousers...
Evening and dress-up
clothes wiU be very, feminine.
Tbe "UtUe bUck dress” wiU
be back for dinner and
cocktails, as well as the soft,
suit. But it is evening clothes-
that go all out with cdor and
glam or that hasn’t been
around for a long time.”
Btrs. Herman Brewer gave
a valuable and timely ad
monition on “Vital Food Care
and Storage.” She quoted
from a recent article on the
subject by Beth Tartan.
S in w copies of a booklet
enUtied; “Food Selection,
Storage, and Preparation”
will be sent free, to anyone
writing to : Food Selection,
Storage and Preparation,
Dept. FB, P.O. Box 46U,
Chicago, П1. tom. Listed are
a few tips from Mrs. Tartan's
article that will certainly be
hel|tful to those new in the
kitchen; 1. Befrigerator
temperatures should be
maintained at S440 degrees
F. or M C. To allow d r to
circulate freely, foods should
not be crowded. 2. Presb meat
and poultry should be loosely
wrapped in wax paper or
aluminum foil. Store in
coldest part or meat com
partment... Prepackaged
meat* may be stored in ttte
original wrappings. S. Tbe
¿bleta and necks should be
removed from whole chickens
and turkeys, washed and
cooked wimin ii hours 4.
Stuffing in uncooked, or
cooked turkey and chicken
should be removed and
reftlgerated in a aeparate
container.. S. Leftover cooked
~ theats, or meat dlahes should
be covered or wrapped and
refrigerated immediately
after meals.”
Mrs. Edwin Boger gave
some interesting thoughts
from “The Human
Development Letter” on ttie
“Wisdom of the Middle
Years”. The desire for self
expression and fulfillment of
earlier am'biUona seems to
monop<dize and desüHiy one’s
ability to enjoy ttie “present”.
"Certainly Uie mi<We years
is Uie time when pecque do
ttüngs ttiey please, say what
Uiey wish and being honest
with ttiemselves. However,
Uiey should understand ttiat
w^iat is good and right for
themselves as individuals is
also good and right for
everyone in the groups with
Whom ttiey live”.
Mrs. Ostine West talked,
and showed slides for em
phasis, on an all important
subject - SM O KE D ETEC
TORS. "There are basically
Uiree types of smoke detec
tors on tlie market. They are
the ion chamber, the ^oto-
dectric and ttie semicon
ductor gas sensor detectors.
Things to be considered when
choosing a smoke detector
are; Power Sources, Cost and
Location of Smoke Detec
tors”.
We were pleased to have
Mrs. Fred Rich of Greensboro
and Cana attend Uiis meeting.
Friends of Mrs. Grady
Pulliam (Gladys Cain) will be
glad to leam ttiat she is
progressing nicely while
bell« hospitalized at Baptist
Hospital, In Winston-Salem.
Refrediments served by the
hostess consisted of cottage
cheese sandwiches, apricot-
nut bread spread witti cream
cheese and orange m ar
malade, lime tarto and mint
tea.
4-H Week Is
Octolwrl-7
Davie County 4-H members
and ttieir adult leaders will
join farces October 1-7 with
ottier youtti in North Carolina
and across the nation to ob
serve National 4-H Week.
The ttieme of Uie special
observance is "4-H-Freedom
To Be”, according to Douglas
Lee, Assistant Extension
Agent.
"Our 4-H’ers and leaders
will rally bdiind the theme to
point out that 4-H is an in
formal, learn-by-doing ap
proach to education, in which
young people choose tbelr own
projects and set Individual
goua for achievement”, the
nt remarked.
. NaUonal 4-H Week,
Lee pointed out that special
events will be held to:
-Encourage more youth,
agea 9 to 19, to join 4-H.'
-U rge more men and
women and older teens to
volunteer as 4-H leaders.
-Acknowledge support for
the 4-H program.
-R e c o gn ise im portant
contribuUona of parento.
-Gonaider future needs and
plans.
Spectal programs in Davie
County will faiclude mem
bership recruitment con
ducted by individual duba in
ttidr community. In addition,
a recruitment program will
be presented to tbe 4th. sth.
a n d e tt^ d e studento in the
five county elementary
schools by Uie 4-H Agento.
Douglas Lee and Nancy
Hartman. Also, individual
community duba will hdd
Church Sunday services (or
National 4-H Church Sunday,
October 1. Bach dub will be
making special efforta to
show me public
"alive and grow
County”.
The 4-H program is con
ducted ttirough county oifices
by the North Carolina
A gricultural Bxtenalon
Service at North Carolina
State University and A. ft T.
State University.
Cooleemee Seniors
install Officers
The newly dected officers
of the Cooleemee Senior
Citisens dub were installed
durina tbelr
Monday in ttie I
of Uie First Baptist Church.
Mrs. Kattiy Spargo of tbe
Cooleemee Civic a u b was ttie
installation oKlcer.
Offteers dected-to serve
during ttie 1979 year are;
Granville Spry, president;
Mrs. Bessie Naile, vice
president; Mrs. EUid Oibson,
secretary, Mrs. Luna Myers,
aasistant secretary; Russell
Ridenhour, treasurer, and
Mrs. Thelma Gregory.
Chaplain. During tbe in
stallation service, Mrs.
Spargo pinned a roae-bud on
each officer present and also
on ttie song leader, Grady
Uiat 4-H is
I growing In Davie
Davie Native Is Killed In Accident
O u t d o o r A rtists A t D a v ie H ig h S c h o o l
Seventy-six-year-old Early
Caraway Smith, youngest son
of Uie late Enos C. Smitti was
killed Friday p tem b er UUi
tn an automobUe accident two
mUes west of Pittoboro on
U.S. 64.
A native of Farmington,
Smitti graduated from NCSU
in 1925 wiUi a degree in CivU
Engineering. He was a
member of Uie original State
College Quartet and paHly
put himself ttirough school by
working bi ttie dining hall.
After working in out of state
jobs for seven years. Smith
moved to Route 1, New Hill
where he lived until 1973 when
Carolina Power and Light
Nuclear Plant forced him to
relocate in the Olive Chapd
community near Apex.
He followed his fattier’s
foototeps bi ttie profession of
land surveying and paved the
way for his sons-SmiUi &
SmiUi Surveyors.
Also a farmer. Smith raised
poultry and beef. He served
several years wiUi ttie Wake
County S u rv e ro rs
Association, was past
president of Uie N.C. Society
of Surveyors, and past
president of ttie Wake Far
mers Cooperative.
Smitti was a member of Uie
Board of Directors of the C.C.
Jones Memorial Park. An
acUve member of Collins
Grove Baptist Church, SmiUi
served as a dea con, Sunday
school teacher and Sunday .,
School superintendent. He
supported several ChrlsUan
endeavors such as the '
Children’s Bible Ministry, a -
program for youngsters wltti .
summer campa and weekend
retreato at ttie New Life Camp.
on Falls of Uie Neuse Road.
He is survived his wife of I'
flftv-three years, Blonsa .
HoUeman Smitti of ttie hom^ <
Uiree dau^ters, Martha Sou •
(Mrs. John Clement),
Rebecca Ann (Mrs. Sid -
Hatcher) and Sarah Louise
(Mrs. Hardd WUliams); two
sons Louis Calvin and Aaron
Earl Smitti; fourteen' grand-.
children and one broUier, .
Grady H. Smitti of Far
mington.
It can truly be said, his ^
children lost a good fattier, his
wife lost a kind, loving '
husband and his church and ^
community have suffered a
great loss.-s<»
Safety Act of 19M , .
A NaUonal Highway Trafhc
Safety Administration report..
estimates Uiat 200,000 lives
have been saved since th; ..
Safety Act of 1966, which
began the chain of safety .
improvements in oiir.
passenger cars.
By ROPERS WJIITC№R. ^ ^ ^ .When he saw then he went into
a regular conniption,
throwhig the poles to one side
and warning the other fire-
stokers that burning
sassafras would bring on the
worst kind of luck.
Until my recent trip to
Rutherford County to view
Steve Wallace’s molasses
operation, I had never seen a
compartmen^illzed or maze
boUer bi action.
Perhaps my ignorance was
due bi part to Uie fact Uiat
mountabi fdk seem to favor
Uie open box-boiler which is
fUled to capacity wiUi juice,
wiUi no refiUtaig until ttie
contento are boUed down bito
mobtsses.
Once ttiis stage.is reached,
the box-boller, unlike the
flxed-poeition modd. must be
lifted from ttie fbrebox and
placed bi a sli^tty tUted
position at another location.
Here Uie contento are strained
through cheesecloth into
appropriate contabiers.
Neel Austin, a Boone barber-
actor. has a vivid memory of
a box-boUer operation d u ^
his childhood hi tiie Wbikler’s
Creek section of Watauga
County.
“I remember the cane
grbidbig was done by mule
power and Uiat one of Uie men
tending the boUer was very
careful about the fb«wood he
used to keep Uie fire hot
enough to bring ttie cane juice
to a boU. GeneraUy he wanted
oak, poplar, locust, or ottier
hard wood.
"But Uie men who had
hauled bi the wood tor the
molasses-making had thrown
in several sassafras pdes.
"Farm ers have to cultivate
good laws as w dl as good
crops bi order to be successful
today,” acconUng to Kenneth
Mtaito. president of the Davie
County Farm Bureau.
The local farm leader noted
that county, state and
national laws “can eitiier hdp
farmers or hurt ttwm. It’s up
to the farmer to see that
legislation beneficial to
agriculture is written bito ttie
books.”
Mbito said ttie most ef
fective way for the farmer to
be beard is to jobi witti fellow
farmers in a strong
organization like Farm
Bureau. He said ttie county
organisation has set a total
membership goal of 1,S00
farm families during the
current membership drive.
"Local farmers have much
at alake In legislation now
betaig debated tai
Mtaito said. Important :
affecttaig agriculture he said,
taidude; ‘A e Farm Bureau-
supported Agricultural Trade
Act of 1978, which would hdp
provide for expansion of farm
export màrketo; marketing
and bargaining legislation
which has been prcoosed by
Farm Bureau and other farm
organizations; and an ‘anti-
amoUng’ biU, strongly op
posed by Farm Bureau.
“During the last regular
aesslon of ttie N.C. General
Assembly Farm Bureau was
instrumental in defeating
land-use planntaig legislation
ttiat would have followed a
state-wide pattern oi planntaig
rattier ttun local plans with
farmer representation,"
commented Mintz.
The local farm leader urges
ttiat farmers take advantage ot the current membership
drive to align Uiemsdvas with
a farm organization whose
policies originate at Uw local
“Unfortunately he quit Uie
operation early that af
ternoon, and when he was out
of sight the other men Uirew
the sassafras on the fb-e. That
night his house bumed to the
ground and two family
members were kUled. I’ve
always felt a little un
comfortable about burning
sassafras wood since Uiat
time.”
Nancy Taylor, descendent
of a pioneer VaUe Cruscis
family, has more pleasant
memories of molasses-
making and the importance of
"long sweetenin’ ” (as op
posed to "short sweetenbi’ ”
for sugar) bi Uie cooktaig and
eating habito of her family.
“M y dad, who was usuaUy
known as Squbre Taylor, had a
horse-drawn mill, along with
a box-boiler and he made
molasses every fall for us and
any of the. neighbors who
brought theb-caneby.
“Hè stored his molasses bi
ten-gaUon lard ttucketo, and
my mother saw to it that Uiere
was always a cruet filled and
dtttaig on'Uie tablé. TBit’s
how my dad started every
m eal-with molasses^ not
bisculto. and a quarter pound
of springhouse bptter. After
Uiat he was ready for the
regular meal.”
Nancy recalls that Squire
Taylor also counted on his
neighbors to favor his at
traction to molasses and other
mountain food specialities
when he dropped by for a
visit.
“He was known all over Uie
vaUey and when he’d ridge
out on busbieSs he wouldn’t
hesitate to stop at some
farmhouse when ' he got
hungry and go bi for a snack.
“Always he would ask for
some molasses, butter,
combread, and a glass of
buttermilk. If be found
nobody home, he’d simply go
to tbe kitchen and
springhouse and hdp himself.
Dad always was one to have
anap bi the afternoon, and a
number of times a family
which had been working tai Uie
field would come in, see an
empty buttermUk glass on the
table, and ftaid btan nappbig on
one of Uwb- beds.”
As to cooking needs, Nancy
vows that her family would
have been lost wiUiout “long
sweetenbi’ ” .
"W e used molasses in
pumpkin pie, cakes, bread,
sweet potatoes, acora squash
and almost anyUitaig else you
might want to sweeten. Not
just because sugar was scarce
and high but because of the
molasMs flavor. You couldn’t
beat it Uien or now.”
Readers are taivited to send
folk materials to Folk-Ways
and Fdk-Speecb, Box 376,
Appalachian State Univer-
sity. Boone. N.C. 28608.
NICE NEIGHBORHOOD-3
Bdrm. m Bath Brick
Rancher on 2 t Acres. Low
FULCHER-SHORE,INC.
Agent: Jeriy Bracken
4927202.
(919)768-2063
Spry; pianist, Ms. Annie
Pearl Tatum and outgoing
president. C.W. Shepnerd.
Tbe rosebuds were donated b y .
Mrs. Bert Ktaig.
There were 51 members, tai
cUuUng one new member,
Mrs. Zada Bailey, la at
tendance. Mrs. Ruby Foster
presented a moat entertalntaig
reading “Returning Home
From Ш Show” durtay ttw
program, after wblcn all
membera celebrating bir
thdays during the montt ot
September were honored.
**MR. DEAN FOSTER of Rt. 2. Advance J s now assocUted with CENTURY 21 Wohlford i>icrce Realty, Inc. as R«al Estate Salesman. Dean can
help you in buyine and selling real estate. Give
him a call at ^84725."
WOHLFORD-PIERCE REALTY. INC.
2n0Cloverdale Ave.. Suite 1-A
Winiton'Selem, N.C. 27103
Beautiful Homes
A S T IM E G O E S ON!
You wilt be paying more and more rent, so why not
your home now. This exceptionally nice 3 bedri
m ay be just the one. Recently remodeled it featurm ay be just
livingroom ,
today at Century
buy oom
features a
living room, fam ily room, new roofliw. Please call us
' " ' 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
B E O N E O F T H E B E S T
A D D R E S S E D P E O P L E IN TOW N!
With this fashionable 3 bedroom home. It features a
free standing fireplace in the den. 2 full baths, with
floors carpeted and tiled. Cozy-warm or comfort-cool
living witn tbe electric furnace and air condition.
Priced to sell. F o r an appointment and more in
formation please call Century' 21 - Boxwood Real
Estate.
STO P!
Save your time looking. 'This 1966 Model 12 x 60 mobile
hopie can be vours. Has a double carport buUt onto the
back. Plus a ir condition window unit. M ust be moved
soon. F o r m ore information call us today.
P R IC E L E S S P R IV A C Y
A 2 or 3 bedroom home located on 4 sm all totaibig
iiiet zone. It has 1456 square feet of neateilots in a ^_________
area that includes a beautiful sun porch. Also ha
enclosed back yard for pets or children. There 1
plenty of garden space with 2* utility buildings.
AJiSoiutely a quiet and private area. Please call
C E N T U R Y 21 BO XW O O D R E A L E S T A T E today.
O W N E R W A N T S TO TA L K T U R K E Y
B ring your offer« Wftcti ^ewly remodeled 3
bedroom, brick Q C t \\lV jw " features a separate
worksbop-garagt |\v.w ,,ew carpet and vinyl
throughout. All situated on a large corner lot south
of town. Please call C E N T U R Y 21 BO XW O O D
R E A L E S T A T E today.
“P E R S IM M O N P U D D IN "
Can be made from your own persim m on tree if
you buy this lovely 3 bedroom rancher. We want
even discuss the huge recreation room, or the
acre wooded lot. But we will tell you about the
utility building outside and the two spacious baths.
Priced in the low 40’s. Please caU C E N U R Y 21
B O XW O O D R E A L E S T A T E now.
“B O -P E E P . B E A T L E S . A N D B A C H ’’
Can all be a part of this home, because there is
room for everyone from little baby to teenagers to
m om and pop. This old charm er has been com
pletely remodeled both inside and out. and features
a spacious lot surrounded by huge oak trees. S
bedrooms, 2H baths, plenty of closet space, and 4
fireplaces. Just minutes from town. Please contact
C E IS T U R Y 21 B O XW O O D R E A L E S T A T E today.
GO A H E A D A N D F A L L IN L O V E
T H IS T IM E Y O U C A N A F F O R D IT
The owners have loved this home but they are
moving. You w in know the care it has has as soon
as you open tbe door. Just 8 years old. 3 liedrooms.
dining room, kitchen with built-bis. basement, and
carpet with paved drive. Located bi Sheffield Park.
Just minutes from town. Fo r more information
call us today.
I R A N O U T O F F IN G E R S
Counting all the extras in this new energy efficient
brick rancher. This home features heat-pump.
thermo payne windows, insulated doors, large
concrete patio. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, great room,
dining-kitchen combination, m any clostes, car
port, with paved driveway. A ll this and much more
located In Hickory Tree. Just minutes from town.
Please call uB today, C E N T U R Y 21 BO XW O O D
R E A L E ST A T E .
IF T H E P R IC E IS R IG H T
You can own this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom
brick home with Vk baths, living room, dining
room, large den. utility room, and a big fireplace
for these, upcom ing cold winter nights. Fully bi-
suiated with paved drive. Excellent condition.
Please call us today for more information.
S O M E T H IN G F O R T H E W H O LE F A M IL Y
There is something for everyone in the fam ily in
this beautifully decorated 3 bedroom home; a
workshop for dad, and a big IVt acre vard for Ihe
kids. This home also offers a kitchen that is fully
equipped, attic. ^ basement for storage, and a big
fireplace for those upcoming winter lughta. Near
Cooleemee. Priced in Uie low SO’s. Please contact
C E N T U R Y 21 B O XW O O D R E A L E ST A T E .
D A L E C A R N E G IE !
M ay have
Win Friei
down payment if alTquVlUlratioiu are met! Call today
at Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
DALE CARNEGIE!
ve given this unique le ta ’ÿ o w toien^s r - f j « îD E R C O N T R A R I -, features 3
nsf IMi I uasement. and sun deck. No
T A K E M E H O M E C O U N T R Y K O A D
You will want to take off your shoes and lay back in
this charm ing 3 bedroom home. Located on ap
proxim ately 2 acres of land. E n im a delicious
home-cooked meal in the room y kitchen that this
joy of a home offers. It features a living room,
dininff room, den, 2 baths. To see this home please
call Century 21 Boxwood Real Estate.
Off Needmore Road, Woodleaf.
R O O M S O F P A R A D IS E
Beautiful rooms for your eves to feast on each day.
The w arm and interesting features include 3
bi^room s. 2 baths. Uviiw room, den with fireplace.
This unique and a m a m g house Is your delight.
Please feel free to call us today (or an appointment.
Y O U R O W N P R IV A T E W O R LD
That presents privacy, beauty, and dignity,
easily accessible to a in ------ "• ^lactlvlties. We are
! located In aoffer to you a most outstanding residence
prim e area in Mocksville. Tnls elegantly designed
contemporary is what we call "O ne Of A Kind H o m e "-
It’s something real special! It was custom built for a
world m arketing m anager with comfort and luxurious
living in mind. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, fam ily room,
living room, kitchen moderne. basement garage, oil
heatfiig, and central air condiHonlng, possession
immediately. Actually a private little Idngaom. Take
our word for it and loolc at this magnUlceBt con
tem porary .It has ai personality aU Its own. |M,OM.OO:
Please call us today at Century 21 Boxwood Real
Estate.
N O T H I E L A S T W O R D IN S T Y L E
But the location is the very best and this 1984 Magnolia
mobile home is very comfortable. Living room, dining,
room-kitchen combination, and 3 liedrooms. Please
call us for more information at Century 21 Boxwood:
Real Estate.
S A V E N E A R L Y IIOOO
In closing cost, by assum ing the loan on this ex- ■
ceptionaUy nice 3 bedroom home. Spacious living
room, dinhig-kitchen combtaiation. baths,
workshop, and paved drive. Lea ted Just minutes
from town. F'or more biformation please call '
C E N U T R Y 21 B O XW O O D R E A L E ST A T E .
elegant 4
M IL L IO N IIIV IE W
H IC K O R Y H IL L - Step into tills
bedroom home and see for yourself. Not only does
it have ail the m odem conveniences, but it also has ,
large patio deck overlooking the beautiful 90 acre
lake, and convenient for aU types of
swim m ing, tennis, volleyball, and " '
more biformation call C EIM U TR Y ;
R E A L E ST A T E .
s of sporto-golf,
1 fishlM . T o r
21 BO XW O O D
This is what you have b*en looking for.
rancher, with 3 he**"
N O T R IC K S. JU ST T R E A T S
For the treat of your life. caU C E N T U R Y 21
B O XW O O D R E A L today for an ap
pointment to see tills C f j t n or 3 bedroom home, lyi baths, dintaig ro o m .« K ^ n , and breakfast room
combination, double carport and paved drive. Also
has central ab- to beat those hot sum m er days. Call
today-the price Is right
A N G E L L R O A D
looking for. Brick
' 1 bath, fu-epliice, full
basement, breezewt S D U ' .luble garage. AU this
on 34acres that has ..o it. Road frontage. Joins
creek at back. Call Henry Shore today to see this
property.
L A N D F O R S A L E
D A V IE C O U N T Y
Calahan Mt. 65 acres. tHOO.00 per acre. Paym ent
extended over 3-yr. period. Som e timber.
O F F H W Y 64 W est
Nice secluded a c re ^ e on Hunting Creek. 10
acres priced to sell. Call to d ^
H O L ID A Y A C R E S O F F 601 SO U T H
8.8 acres of building land, ab'eady sub-divided
into lots. Priced to sell. Call today.
O n l U I K
m 21
100% VA Financing AvaUable
Other Listings Available
We Buy Equities
We BuUd Too!
®
B O X W O O D R EA L ESTATE
6 3 4 - 5 9 9 7
333 Salisbury Street
MocksvUle. NC 27028
DANNY CORRELL MANAGING BROKER DENNIS GRUBB • CONTRACTOR
Associate Broker
Charles Evans
Office 284-2537
Salesman
Henry Shore
Home 634-5846
Office Manager
Sandra Shelton
Salesman
Dick Nail
Home 634-5462
Aiaociate Broker
Shelia Oliver
492-5512
I
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - 13B
Probably moBt of the 2.8
million people getting social
secu r^ disability benefits
woidd" rather work If they
could *'Unfortunately severe
^physical or mental im-
palrlnehts rule' out gainful
activity for nearly all. But
otherr whose disabilities are
less severe or whose condition
Is improving may feel they
can tiflrsome kind of work even
thougH It is part-time or in-
, ^volveS' fewer demands than
№eif old jobs. Too often these
people- hesitate accepting
employment for fear of losing
their' Bdcial security checks.
The social security law
recoitnizes the Importance not
’ only- 6f providing financial
helpvtn disabled people but
alsp^)( giving them hope for
I rehabilitation. Some are
r'bffered vocational
rehabilitation services by a
State agency. Others manage
to Kturn to the work force on
I their bwn in spite of their
condition, or they might have
recovered.
If yolU are a disabled worker
I '«or a person who became
disabfed before age 22
receiving benefits on a
parent’s record and want to
try^i.work despite a severe
“Ity you are eligible for
I work period” of up to
iths. During those 9
:hs (not necessarily
ive) you will continue
your social security
while you test your
to work,
after 9 months it is
you are able to do
antlal gainful work,
youl^benefits will be paid for
an «adjustment period of 3
emu
wbii
ear
I stoi^If it is decided your work
l^ ls not substantial gainful
woi^, your checks will con
tinue.
Sofoetimes a person’s
iponmtion may improve
considerably in a short period
to Ше point it is no longer
disiibllng. In this case,
, benfits are stopped because
' of n ^ c a l recovery after a 3-
moiHh adjustment period
eve^thou^ the trial work
i Is not over,
pee the trial work
.Sion is intended to give
V0U& chance to see if you can
, .holcRa job, minor work ac- I Uviqrmay be disregarded. As
a gcie^al rule, only months In
whlOi you earn more than ISO
s count as a month of
svork. If you are self-
only months In
I,your net earnings are
^tSO or you devote more
!1Б: hours to the business
,. trial wott months,
i end of the'trial work c
«the amòunt of ' yoUr
9ngs is critical in
J whether you can
substantial gainful
Tbe general rule is if
wages (before
. .rdeducUons) are more
a month, you are
‘ to be doing sub-
___^ I work. However, if the
woif;you do Is about the same
» In amount and quality as done
r workers in your area
w h ( { ^ not disabled, then it
coulB be considered sub-
Dtait^l, and gainful, even
th o i^ you earn less than (240
a ni^th.
B r the same token total
^ income of over $240 a month
m a£ sometimes not be con-
sideved substantial gainful
woif:. In making a decision,
|,£onfflideratlon Is given to I n o i6 worked, duties, and job
rmance. If you are self-
employed, other factors such
, as ifj^agement activities are
1 Into consideration,
netimes a disabled
' receives a “subsidy”
litlon to actual earnings,
¡is not counted as “ear-
for the trial work
are a disabled widow,
wer, or surviving
wife, you are not
|blf for a trial work
k1. If you are able to do
Itantial gainful work
nts will stop 3 months
' your work begins.
iGyou become disabled a
I seqsnd time within 5 years
afte your payments ended,
yotr are not eligible for J anqiher trial work period.
fe m o re information about
tbe-H disability program,
co4Jact the local social
I at 105 Corriher
I Avlfcué, Salisbury, NC. Tbe
telf^one number is 634-2888.
My father filed an ap-
I 'pUeition about 1Ц years ago
»^Supplem ental Security
indm e, but was denied
he had $2300 in the
This money has now
used for living expenses.
Q ^ t be get help somewhere
as4 >e just can't Uve on bis
1 security?
s. It Is passible that your
|»faQler may now qualify for
Butpleroental Security In-
cp«e if bis other Income and
relburces fall within tbe
aewpUble level. He should
~ ;l tbe Social Security
at once to talk about
; a new application.
Iin May 1977 when I
I age 65. At that time I was
1 health and could see
I ior Medicare. Now I
1 Uke to have the Medical
rance- How do I get it
I laid “No” before?
ere is a general
period for people
yourself who beve either
Ibeir Initial
or refused tbe
Mverage. This Is
once yearly betweeen
January u t and March lit.
Coverage, however, would not
begin until July of that year.
My father worked hi the
coal mines of Kentucky for
irs before he had to retire
of lung condition. I
understand there Is some
benefit for miner’s who have
lung conditions. When can he
apply for this?
In 1969 the Federal Coal Min
Health It Safety Act was
passed which gave benefits to
miners under certain con
ditions who contracted
“Black Lung” disease, the
common name for
pneumoconiosis or miner’s
asthma. Although the law Is
now administered by the
Department of Labor, ap
plications can be filed at any
social security office.
I have been receiving social
security benefits for several
years. Now I would like to try
to go back to work. Is this
possible and still receive my
checks each month?
People recelvbig dIsabiUty
benefits under social security
may have a “trial work
period” dependhig on the
severity of their condition. If
you would like to try to work,
contact your social security
office to find out If you are
entitled to a trial work period.
I recently hired a woman to
come in to clean my house
once a week. I know that I will
have to pay taxes and make
reports on her earnings but do
not know how or where to
make these reports. Can you
tell me?
Yes. Information and
reporting forms to report
domestic wages can be ob
tained from any Internal
Revenue Service Office. They
will assign you an employer
Identltlcatlon number U you
do not already have one and
furnish the Information you
need.
I tried to open a bank ac
count for my new grandson
and was told by the bank that
I would need a social security
number for him. How can this
be possible as he is only 4
weeks old?
Under Internal Revenue
Regulations a social security
number must be furnished tor
each bank account regardless
of the age of the bidlvldual.
You can get a number for him
at any social security office
by presentfaig bis birth record
and filling out an application
on his behalf.
I belong to a senior citizens
club and we try to have
speakers each month on
subjects that pertain to tbe
aged and problems of the
aging,. How can, we get
wiheone to talk to us about
social security?
If someone from your
organliatlon who Is respon
sible tor setting up your
program schedules will call
your local social security
office, they will be happy to
arrance for someone to speak
to your group about social
security and its various
programs.
SOME PART-TIME
JOBS CAN BE
EXCITING.
Learn to repair a radio, drive a
lank, or operate a bulldozer, in
the Army Reserve. It’s a good
way to earn an extra income while
you serve your country 16 hours
a month. Call your local unit to
see what’s available. It’s listed in
the white pages of the phone
book under “U.S. Government'.'
Brantley Realty and In
surance Company an
nounces the addition ot
Holland H. Chatrin to their
sUft as a Real EsUte
Broker. Mr. Chaftfai Is a
native of Davie County and
a retfa-ed Navy Chief. He
has been the proprietor of
Chaffhi Electronics tor the
past 11 years, which he will
still operate. He is married
to the former Elisabeth
Moore. They reside on
Depot Street.
Lamw^Vood-Johnson, Inc.
r a
CALL OR SEE
Don Wood-Hugh Larew
Office 634-5933
The most unique residential property ever
offered in Mocksville! Pre-Civii War brick
home on 13.8 acres in quiet residential section
example of early 19th Century Piedmont
North Carolina architecture with an in
teresting historical background. This
property has been nominated for inclusion on
the National Register of Historic Places.
Hickory HUI
Nice lot on PinevaUey Rd. Priced at 16,950.
Cooleemee
Two story commercial building. 98 x 48.
Only $20^)00.00.
Jack BooeRd.
(off Hwy 601 North) • SmaU acreage tracts
available.
Southwood Acres
We are seUing agents for the lots in Southwpod
Acres, behind Davie County High School;
Several lots available to fit almost any style
bouse. Let us show you today.
Highway 6«l North and FosUU Dr.
'7 lots for sale, 6.8 mUes north of Interstate 40.
CaU today for detaUs.
Esteblished
ä e . -
с, 13 m obile bcmies,
___ 2 bedroom home, out-nt opportunity.
H o w a rd R ealty &
I n s u r a n c e
M IW L IS T IN O
Ш
5S8 A V O N STREET-TW O bedroom starter home In
N O R T H M A IN S T R E E T - 3 bedroom frame home-
Perfect for remodeling. Very nice famUy пе Ш -
borhood. Approxim ately acres included in lot. t
Convenient to shopping. P riced to sell.
• l0 0 % F IN A N C IN G -3 bedroom brick veneer Ш-
baths. Large kitchen-dining. Livingroom . City
water & sewer. A L L electric. No money down, if
, you qualify^____
^ h o l i d a y A C R ES-Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher
with central air. All electric. Over 1400 sq. feet of
heated area plus garage and paUo. Very K ^et
location. Nice lot. Home in extra good condition
^1^1. ^ ^
TO T $ T R E E T -5 vear old brick rancher in excellent
location. Nice neighborhood. Extra clean and neat 3
bedroom home. 2Yuli baUis, large living a n d ^ in g .
Very room y kitchen and famUy room with dish-
wasber. Large utility. Carport. All electric. M any
lovely features. M ust see this
Dean Seaford is back from
his trip to Boston to study
Boston’s architecture. He also
went to New York. A group of
11 students took in an opera
Friday night at the
Metropolitian Opera House.
The group was from UNC.
Kathy Seaford spent the
week with her mother and
Dad, Mr. and Mrs. Hardy
Steelman while Dean was
away.
Davie Academy wUl have 4-
H observance week starting
the fhwt of October unitl the
7th. Everyone hiterested in 4-
H whould plan to attend and
brhig new members.
The 4-Hers are observing
Sunday October 1 with Mrs.
Claude Cartner as leader
program director at Salem
Methodist Church. Everyone
should come for morning
service and give the
youngsters a boost and
iliss Paula Shew started
her nurshig career at the
IredeU Memorial Hospital.
She is now an official R.N.
The SmUey Prevetts bad a
sweet sixteen birthday
celebration at theh- home
Saturday.
Sure feeU Uke FaU now that
FaU is here but we need that
rahi we didn’t get last week.
Jericho Hardison Ruritan
pancake and sausage break
fast was a success, hi spite of
the delay in electricity. Sorry
foUu just one of those un
fortunate happenings.
The Yard Sale at the
Ruritan BuUding was also
profitable. Thanks to Uie good
foUu, every Uttle bit helps pay
for the driveway and parking
area.
Lots of colds, flu or sniffles
making their way around at
this time.
The painting party given at
Mrs. Claude Cartners Monday
was hiteresting to say the
least. Nineteen people at
tended, and pahited some
pretty pictures and things.
Mr. and Mrs.Edm ond
benburg spent the week with
theh: son and daughter-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Isen
burg and grandsons Todd and
Tracey.
Lester Frye made a trip
through the crooked moun-
tabis to Bristol Tennessee
Saturday. He couldn’t say it
was so enjoyable a ride.
Try good condition. Kitchen w p breakfast area.
Living Room and fam ily
lot with garden space,
location. Priced to sell.
Room and fam ily room. OU circulator. Nice i
Good in-town residential
H O W A R D S ’iTlEET-Three bedrooms, 1Ц baths, (
Large well-equipped kitchen and dining. Spacious
living room. Separate utUlty and carport. All
electric. Very good loan available.
RO W A N CO U N TY-D on’t m iss this one!
bedrooms, 2 full baths. Extra large famll;
Three
tra large fam ily room. ,
Very nice kitchen with range bicluded. Central air.
This lovely home is situated
by
___ a on 4Mi acres enhanced
complete orchard of apple, plum, peach and
ines. F i'lar trees. Also grape vii !<'ive miles from '
one.
W H IT N E Y R O A D - Fireplace and sundeck only two
of m any features in this 3 bedroom brick rancher
with full basement. Large kltchen-dinhig. Living <
room. IM baths. Neat, clean, and well-decorated.
P riced within your budget.
■ R ID G E M O N T - Three bedroom all-electric home
nicely decorated. Carpeted. Includes 1% baths,.!
living room, kitchen-dining area. Very convenient
l^ atio n for fam ily living. Priced to sell. Call
H W Y 64 W EST -B rlck r»-rher, 3 bedrooms, large
kitchen-dining. LlkeSOVP 100% Financing. Call
today.
C R A FT W O O D - No down navment if
Three bedrM m s, Г S O L D n caprei
you qualify.
Idtchen,
All electric.I dining con^nation. ^uii nasement.
Nice lot. ra c e d to sell.
C R A F T W O O D -A ll electric 3 bedroom brick home.
Carpeted. Large kitchen with range. Fu ll
I basement with drive in door, extra nice quiet lot on
dead end street. No down payment to quiaifled
purchaser.
iS P L IT L E V E L -O ve r 1500 sq. feet heated area. Also
^ a ir conditioned. 3 bedrooms. Uving room, large
kitchenand dining area, baths, utUity. Lower
level finished nicely with fireplace. All electric.
(Large lot. Priced to sell quickly.
SO U T H M A IN ST R E E T -3 B e d ro jp "iiito g , dining-
kitchen, large utilitv »¿¿nTB^PJerfect startw от
retirement ho oN O tflS4en ee r. Alm ost new. Very
good conditioi.. Excellent loan available.
R ID G E M O N T - off M illing Road. Very good buy in
3 bedroom, all electric home. Livliw -dining
I combination. Kitchen with storage room. Carport.
Call today. No down payment if you qualify.
C R A F T W O O D - -niree bedrooms with 1%
bathrooms. A ll electric. Ш ее garden spot, extra
'large lot. Price to sell. ;
C R A FT W O O D - New exterior painting job really
its the finishing c o i n home. Three
o, iJce laundry area.
Good Price.
lEedroom s, 1 ^ ba.u
Extra large dlnlng,''Nlce.
I D E A D M A N R O A D - 3 bedrooms, kitchen, bath, and
living room or 2 bedrooms with den. Just
remodeled. Priced to sell.
C RA FT W O O D -3 bedroom, living room, kitchen-
dining. FuU basement. Carport. Large lot. E x
cellent financing.
^SOUTHW OO D A C R E S - Nice large com er lot,
deeply wooded. Good residential section. City
water. County taxes only.
- H IC K O R Y H IL L - Spacious b uilding site
overlooking cove in exclusive residential area next
to country club. Over 250 ft. road frontage with
plenty of trees.
,625 C H E R R Y ST.-3 bedroom brick rancher on nice
quiet neighborhood street in walking distance of
to p p in g, churches, and school. Over 1200 sq. feet
heated area. Very good condition. Pecan trees.
, Reasonably priced. CaU today.
IN -TO W N LO CATIO N-O lder 4 bedroom home.
Priced to sell. Perfect for someone to do own I
remodeUng. 2 story frame. CaU us today.
. H W Y 601 SO U T H • CaU today for com m ercial land’
and buUdings immediately avaUable. Call today (
about business property now avaUable near
I MocksvUle.
M IL L IN G R O A D - ExceUent lot with 3 bedrooms, 2
Baths, central air. Fully carpeted large den with
fireplace. Extra nice kitchen. Sun deck. Large
) utility. CaU us today.
G A R D E N
level home In
% R D E N V A L L E Y - Lovely contemporary multi-
trel home In prestigous location. Over 3,000 heated
. ft. of Uving area including Uvbig room and
fam ily room - both with fireplaces. Buut-in custom
features in dinbig room and Kitchen. Four spacious
__ SPuHtUt^ - » to S
|C R A FT|I^№ -N ew home^rbf' iiirferent designs. Ranchers & Split Uvels from 1180 to 1620 sq, ft. mth 2 baths and wall to waU carnet. Lane lots. FinancingavaUable. ___ :
ID G EM O N T -N eiH iom es with 3 B.R:, U i Baths,
arport. Large Lots. 100 percent Flna
Available. No oown payment fo i
bedrooms with extra storage all through this home.
.Three complete baths, laundry room plus work
*r o o m for m a w projects. Large playroom off
private patio. Central air. Beautinilly landscaped.
M any other features. M ust see today!
№ RAFTW O O D -Lovely 3 bedroom brick rancher. All
electric. Convenlt s q l D "■ basement. Patio,
No down payment u ;uu Hualify.
I C R A F T W O O D -A IR C O N D IT IO N E D -3 bedroom
Brick Rancher, m Baths. Large Kitchen-dining.
Carport utility. Range, refrigerator, washer-dryer
Included. No down payment If you qualify.
^ F O R LEXiSE
bedrooms, 2 baths, large Uving room, form al
room, cozy den with fireplace, kitchen with- —......is, full basement with finished playroom,
• hobby room and shop-utUity. Screened porch.Redwood deck. Grill. Two-car c---------- ‘
Fully carpeted. Acre lot.’ carport Central air.
L A N D
l4ifce lote now available at High Rock. Call today..
beautiful wooded residenUal section 2 Perfect for construction site of dream home.i^“lPric
Julia C. Howard
Office - 634-3538
Home • 634-3754
*Myrtle Grim es
Office -
tai
Ann F. W ands
Office • 634-3538
Home • 634-3229
Home
634-3538
634-5797
Charlie Brown
Office - 634-3538
Home - 634-5230
C.C. Chapman
Office - 64-3538
Hom e - 834-2534
HOMEFINPER
M U LTIPLE L IST IN O SE R V IC E
______ nancing
I quaUfied buyer.
HICKORY HILL
L E X IN G T O N RD.-Nice 2 B.R., 1 Bath home, L.R.
w-fpl., located on two lots.
F A R M S & L A N D :
RO C K FO R D -65 Acres in Surry County with 2 log
^ a c c o barns, several creeks & streams. Only
for 17,600. Owner wiU
149,000.
GO------j O O D SO N r d .- 0 Acres
consider financing.
S H E F F IE L D lu N D E R C O N T R A C T R a n ch e r, full
basement.
L A K E NO RM AN-l-BeauH ful lake front house & lot. I
House has 3,800 sq. ft. heated area, 5 B.R. 3 full bat№. |
Built-in stove, dishwasher, compactor & dispo
Form al D.R. Exterior Spruce Pine & Stone. Pie
boat H interest with neighbor.
G A R D E N V A L L E Y ESTATES-Beautiful 3 B.R., L.R.,
den w-fpl., full basement, carport and large storage
‘^grox^ 1 acre beautifully landscaped.
WILL BOONE ROAD
ROVE - 2 bedroom home with good size
outside garage, good location. Only
area. Ai UNION (
lot, large
$13,000. „ I
M O R S E S T B r^ S n p o c O N T R A C T ric k home with
full basenMr^il*^^—a p t ‘N E A R ADliJNDER CONTRACT^He h„me on lot. I
l a k e N O h M A « -N e w home on water (ront, deedrt
lot. 3 B.R. V/t Baths. FuU basement, wUI lease or sell. C O O L E E M E E -2 B.R. i ««*»• hnmi* w «n on heat, only
R ID G E M 0 N T -4 B .R ., 1 Bath home, L.R. Kitchen-
dining area. „
H U R C H ST. C O N T R A C T ne iust recenUy
smodelled, llJDP-ii'L^ii.Jornpod.
601 NORTH'
WILLIAM R. DAVIE
remodelled, i^ '” “ “ '¿».ieiiuornooc.E D G E W O O D ÒÌRCLE-Beautifirt Л B.R., 2 % В
____ buUt horn» • w-fpl. & bull
bookshelves,UT^DElk.'rt^'iiuity rm., garage, cenicustom
Bath
It-ln
central
home w*
air. AU on a wooded corner lot. ____
W IL L B O O E RD.-4 B.R. Double Wide MobUe „
fpl. & electric heat, completely furnished, beautiTully
decorated, large lot with chain link fence around
nronertv. 2 outbldg. excellent buy ,
O A K L A N D Н еЛ Ш 1 ^-4 т а г . 2 Bath ЬЫп?ГТ*саг
|щ гаее.____^__ G. Madiifin.___
H IC K O R Y H IL L S - Very nice 3 B.R., 2 bath spUt
baU Today!
level, L.R. w-fpl., full basement, playroom w-f}»!.,
■ Ca
IF IC
raised F.H.A. for $27,500 will sell f23T,500, lovely'3
ric'
m any extras
W IL L S A C R IF IC E ! Owner Is M o v lM - Home ap
’ ‘ ' .........'123,".................
Whitney
IVi bath brick home on quiet street on
!.V R d.
^HOMES WITH ACREAGE <
L A K E W O O D V IL L A G E -O w n e r m ust seH-
Reiocating-very nice 3 B.R., IB a th home on corner
lot. New roof, carpeted, newly painted. Loan
B E A R CREEK CHUKt'U RU.-BiautUul 3 B.R. 2 Bath
SplitFoyeron 24 awe« r A C T R. Comb., Den,
fuU basement \JT4DBR Q P « iireplace. M any estrp.s.
& 5 N F 0r1j *A V E ™ *"b .R. 1 Bath home on 1.26 acres,
D.R.-Den Comb.
! on 5.2 acres of
garage w-elec7eve. out bldg. 36x20.
C O R N A T Z E R R D - 2 B * S ic 0 > t h home on
land, one B.R. hasREP.STn.. Den w-fpl- FA R M IN G T O N -N e w 3 B.R., 2 Bath home buUt to seU.
L.R.. Den w-fpl., heat pump, central air. 1 Acre^
D A N IE L S RD.-Very nice 3 B.R. 1 % Bath brick veneer
home on 2.77 acres of land. L.R. Den, large kitchen,
loV ^ N C E -B e a u tifu l 5 B.R., 3^^ Bath home'' d i »
cres of land. L.R., Den & M aster B.R. w-fpl. FuU
lasement w-fpl. & playroom. House has 4,175 sq. ft.
Iving area. 5,000 sq. ft. bam , 4,000 sq. ft. utUity bldg.
tlus 2 other bldgs.
lANA R O A D - 3B.R. 2 full bath Brick rancher witK
ttached garage. Also 24x30 workshop and approx. IM
cres of land. Hs$ added Central Air
lMiillill»w«lW№a^COMMERClAL
W IL K E S B O R O ST.-Good business location, now
operated as a grocery store. Price includes
building, ail equipment, except what belongs to
dairy distributor, aU stock that Is left at time of sale
to buyer! E X C E L L E N T O P P O R T U N IT Y - C A L L
T O D A Y !!!!!
601 SO U T H -18 acres of good busbiess property for sale
or lease.
601 N O RTH - Business lot 150x300, ideal location near I-
40. City water and sewer.
Q S P O X ST R EET -G ood business lot Mlx368,
1-40 & 64 IN T ER SEC T IO N -G ood business location.
Grocery & service station with approximately
82,500 worth of stock, 3 gas tanks, private bathroom
inside, complete kitchen, & one bedroom. Nine-
tenths acre lot.
F O R REN T-Com m erclal properly buUding & paved
parking lot. Just outside MocksvUle city limits.
ANT) LAND*®»i^^i»W«si
N E A R I-40-Acreage tracts - f Our eu acre tracts;
two 14 acre tracts; one 13 acre and one 5 acre tract.
BEAR CREEK
CHURCH ROAD
RIDGEWAY DRIVE
FARMINGTON
47.13 A C R E S ON 601- Im Ue north of 1-40.199^000,^ '
Л. M A IN ST.- l9ice building lot with ready-made
basement area. , ^ ^ j. jHW Y. NO. 64 EA ST - 46 Acres of pasture and woodland
with lartfe stream.F O S T E R RD.-99 acre farm with livable house. An-
prox. 60 acres cleared balance wooded. Approx. 2,000
ft. paved road frontage.__________________
M O U N T A IN RD.-Rowan County-2.4 acres of land
covered in hardwood trees. 83,000.
IN T E R S E C T IO N 601 & 801-50 acres of land with house
& service station or can be bought as foUowsi house &
service station w-2 acres of land; house St service
station with 10 acres of land; 40 acres of land (ex
cluding house and service station); 1 acre lot next to
end on 801 or 601 w-175’ frontage.
A LO N G 1-40-130 acres, 65 acres on either side of 1-40
between Hwy. No. 601 & 64. Ideal for Industrial or
Ш У Й е AC'aU E M Y RD.-75-88 acres of land, approx. %
cleared balance in timber. An old house could be
restored*
F O S T A L L D R IV E -O ff 601 North, Lot 100x263.
H E M L O C K STREET-1.6 acres with 220 ft. frontage on
S. RaUway. N. MocksvUie-Good buUding sites & smaU
acreage tracts at the end of Rd. 147». .... .
Y A D K IN COUNTY-2.193 acres, H acre good b ^tom l
land and good building site in grove of hardwood trees.|
N E A R ADVAN CE-Approx. 15 acres left at 81,650 per
C O U N T Y L IN E ROAD-221 acres with paved rw d
through property. 83 acres In one tract wilh lake. Can
be sold separately. Й50.00 per acre.
601 SOUTH-77.75 Acres with 2 houses on property.
Som e of the tand reset in pines, some in ciativation.
O F F 801 N E A R F A R M IN G ’TON - Lot No, 3 Stimson
Park. $4,500. ^ ^
D A N IE L S R O A D • Approx. 7 acres bam and half
lake.D A N IE L S R O A D - 10 to 15 acre tracts. $1500 per
acre. ____________________________________________
I 40 & 64
IN TER S EC TIO N
Ш в Л
1816 W H IT N E Y
ROAD
223 R ID G E M O N T
WE BUY'
EQUITIES
i NFORM ATION Heiland Ciuflln
Iniunmoe D«pt: ‘DaneU Edw»rd«/Phone 634-3889
MISШ
BRANTLEY REALTY &MORSE STREET
503 Avon
MocksviUe NC 725-9291
I4B - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
P u b lic N o tic e s
r"
EXECUTO R'S NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AVIE COUNTY
Having qualified aa
Executor of the estate of Boss
Renay Amraworthy,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said esUte to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 21 day of March
1979 or this notice will be
pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 21 day of Sept. 1978.
Ricky Gordon Armsworthy,
Executor of the estate of Boss
Rensy Armsworthy,
deceased.
9-21 4tn
John T. Brock, Atty.
E XEC U T R IX NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D A V IE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate of
Lewis M. Latham, deceased,
late of Davie County, this is to
notify ali persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 31st
day of March 1978, or this
notice will be pleaded In bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 19th day ot Sep
tember, 1978 Mary Latham
Beck, Executrix of the estate
of Lewis M. Latham
deceased.
Martin and Van Hoy At
torneys
9-21-4tn
NOTICE OF PU BLIC
H EARING
B EF O R E THE BO ARD OF
COUNTY COM M ISSIO NERS
FO R TH E FOLLOW ING
ZONING AM EN D M EN TS
N O T IC E IS H E R E B Y
G IV EN , pursuant to the
requirements of Article ao-B
of Chapter 153 of the General
Status of North Carolina and
Section 20 of the Davie County
Zoning Ordinance that the
Board of county Com
missioners of Davie County
will hold a public bearing at
the Davie County Courthouse,
Mocksville, NC on Monday
October 16,1978 at 7:30 p.m.
U w following proposed toning
amendments to the offieiu
coning map of Davie County
will be considered:
(a) Gray A. Laym on
submitted a request to recone
a five acre tract, from
Residential~Agricultural (R-
A) to Highway Busineaa (H-
B*). Ttii* tract ia located on
the Northeastern side of High
way 801 at the intersection of
Howell Road being S.R. No.
1419 and Highway 801. The
adjoining property owners
are James C. Sloan, Robert C.
Gentle, Mark James and Dr.
L.R. Shelton.
(b) T. Holt Haywood
submitted a request to recone
a twenty eight acre tract from
Residential R-20 to
Residentlal-MutUple Dwelling
R-8. This tract is located on
the East side of the Comatzer
Road (S.R. No. 1806) ap
proximately .2 of a mile North
of Hif^way 64 East. Tbe
adjoining property owners
are T. Holt Haywood, Hickory
H ill County Club, Ms.
Florence Mock, and Hickory
Hill Devel(qmient Company.
(c) BiUy Satterfield sub
mitted a request to retone a
three acre tract from
Residential R-13 to Highway
Business H-B. This property
is located on the Soumeastem
side of Highway 158 ap
proximately .1 of a mile East ct Hii^way 801 and Highway
158 intersection. The ad
joining property owners are
Georae E. Wilson, Monty W.
Matthews, George E. Price,
J.M. Bowden, Sr., Maija
Corporation and Bermuda
Run, LTD.
Signs will be posted on each
of the above listed locations to
advertise the public hearing.
All parties and interested
citizens are invited to attend
said public hearing at which
time they shall have an op
portunity to be beard in favor
of or in opposition to the
foregoing proposed changes.
Prior to the hearing, all
persons interested may obtain
any additional information on
these proposals which are in
tbe possession of the Davie
County Zoning Enforcement
Officer by inquiring at my
office in tbe Couruouse in
Mocksville, NC on weekdays
between tbe bours of 8 ;30 a.m.
and 6:00 p.m. or by telephone
at 694-3940.
Jease A. Boyce, Jr.
Davie County Zoning Officer
9-98-Stn
PU BLIC NOTICE
There will be a meeting of
the Davie County Board of
Adjustment on Monday,
October 2.1978 at 7:30 p.m. in
the Grand Jury Room of the
Davie County Courthouse.
The foUowing applications for
zoning compliances con
cerning Special Use Permito
to place mobile homes in
Resinential (R-20) zoned
districts have been received
by the toning officer and are
scheduled to be heard.
(a) Cindi Larae Beane
submitted a request to place
one mobile home on the South
side of High 64 East ap
proximately .2 mile Bast of
the No Creek Church Road.
The adjoining property
owners are R.E. Beane, Neal
R. Beane, Larry Phelps, Ron
E. Beane, Jr. and the Homer
Barnes Estate.
(b) Dale Comatzer sub
mitted a request to place one
mobile home on the West side
of the Fork CSiurch Road
approximately .4 mile South
of Bixby. The adjoining
property owner if Clyde
Comatzer.
(c) (^rol Caudle submitted
a request to
place one mobile home on the
North side of Jerusalem
Avenue in North Cooleemee.
The adjoining property
owners are Carl Richard
Reeves, Joan Reeves and
William Shanks.
Signs advertising the public
hearing concerning these
requests will be posted at the
above mentioned locations.
All interested persons are
invited to attend said public
hearing at which time they
will have an opportunity to
speak in favor of or in op
position to the foregoing
a)iplications. Prior to the
hearing all persons interested
may obtain all additional
information on these ap
plications which are in the
possession of the Davie
County Zoning Officer by
inquiring at my office in the
Davie County Courthouse on
weekdays between the hours
of 8:30 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. or
be telephone at 634-3340.
Jesse A. Boyce,.
Davie County Zoning Office
Administrator’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AV IE COUNTY
Having qualified as Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Mabel M.Dull, deceased, late
of Davie County this is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 7th
day of March, 1979, or this
notice will be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate will
please make immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Wade Gerry
Dull, Administrator of the
estate of Mabel M. Dull
deceased.
William E. HaU
HaU and Vogler.
Attorneys at Law
P.O. Box 294
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
9-7-4tn
Executrix's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AV IE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate of
George H.C. Shutt, deceased,
late of Davie County, this Is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 7th
day ot March 1979, or this
notice will t>e pleaded in bar ot
their recovery. AU persons
Indebted to said estate wiU
please make Immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 7th day ot Sep
tember, 1978 Virginia P.
Shutt, Exectrix ot the estate
of George H.C. Shutt
deceased.
9-7-4tn
Executor’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AV IE COUNTY
Having qualitied as
executor ot the estate ot
Mertie McBride, deceased,
late of Davie County, this Is to
notify ail persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 14
day ot March 1979, or Uiis
notice will be pleaded In bar ot
Uielr recovery. AU persons
indebted to said estate wiU
please make Immediate
payment to the undersigned.
This the 14Ui day ot Sep
tember 1978 Ray McBride,
Executor ot the estate of
Mertie McBride deceased.
John T. Brock, Attorney
9-14-4tn
Executor’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AVIE COUNTY
Having qualitied as
Executor ot the estate ot
Bertha D. Jones, deceased,
late pt Davie County, Uiis Is to
notify all persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the
14Ui day of March 1979, or this
notice wiU be pleaded in bar of
their recovery. All persons
Indebted to said estate wiU
please make immediate
payment to Uie undersigned.
This the 13th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Vemon Dull,
Executor ot Uie estate ot
Bertha D. Jones deceased.
John T. Brock, Attorney
P.O.Box 241
MocksvUle, N.C. 27028
Executor's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D A V IE (XJUNTY
Having qualified as
Executor of the estate of
Ernest Clemmons Butner,
deceased, late of Davie
County, Uiis is to notify aU
persons having claims
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 28Ui day of MaVch
1979, or this notice wUl be
pleaded in bar ot their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate wUl
please make immeditate
payment to Uie undersigned.
This the 22nd day: of Sep
tember, 1978 KenneUi Butner,
Executor of the estate of
Ernest Clemmons Butner
/deceased.
MarUn and Van Hoy Atomeys
9-28-4tn
9-14-4tn
Executrix's NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D AV IE COUNTY
Having qualified as
Executrix of the estate ot
Richard G. Hicks, deceased,
late ot Davie County, this is to
notify ali persons having
claims against said estate to
present them to the un
dersigned on or before the 29
day of March, 1979, or Uiis
noUce wUl be pleaded in bar of
Uieir recovery. All persons
indebted to said estate wUI
please make immediate
payment to ttie undersigned.
This Uie 29th day of Sep
tember, 1978 Láveme Hicks,
Executrbc of ttie estate of
Richard G. Hicks deceased.
9-29-4tp
NOTICE OP SA LE
OF R EA L PRO PERTY
The Davie County Board ot
EducaUon having determined
at its August 7,1978 regularly
scheduled meeting Uiat ttie
following property located in
Davie (bounty Is unnecessary
for public school purposes,
voted to sell and will seU on
October 14,1978 to Uie highest
bidder tor cash, the following
described property, subject to
upset bid, with the
requirement that Uie suc
cessful bidder deposit ten
percent ot the purchase price
and furUier subject to ap
proval by the Davie County
Board ot EducaUon, viz:
A brick veneer house
containing approximately
1,900 square feet located on
Lt. No. 1, Block F., SecUon
III, ot the Subdivision ot-
SouUiwood Acres, Addition III
as recorded in Plat Book 4,
page 141, Davie County
Registry, to which reference
is made tor a more particular
description.
The above land Is subject to
a certain restrictive con
venants which run with the
land as appear and are tully
set forth in Book 92. page 315.
Davie County Registry.
This property will be
avaUable for Inspection on
Oct. 14 1978 from 10:00 a.m.
until 12:00 o’clock noon.
By order ot the Board, this
Uie llth day of September,
1978.
Wade H. Leonard, Jr.
School Board Attorney
Place of Sale: Onpremises,
Hickory Street, Southwood
Acres, MocksvUle, North
Carolina
Time ot Sale: 12:00 o'clock
noon, October 14, 1978.
9-14-4Ü1
Administrator’s NOTICE
NORTH CAROLINA
D A V IE COUNTY
Having qualitied as Ad
ministrator of Uie estate ot
WUlIam Caesar Eaton,
deceased, late of Davie
County, this is to notify aU
persons having claim s
against said estate to present
them to the undersigned on or
before the 21st day of March
1979, or Uiis noUce WiU be
pleaded in bar of their
recovery. All persons in
debted to said estate will
please make immediate
R.C. Foster Estate
Mocksville, N.C.
14 INVESTMENT PROPERTIES
5 Vacant Lots 9 Houses
3 House Trailers
A T A U C T I O N
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 14,1978
BEGINNING AT 11KK) A.M.
On Premises Rain Or Shine
Ì1HWA.M.
351 W ILKESBO RO STREET-4 room frame
house, baUi, Z attic rooms, Lot size 100’ x ISO’.
Metal roof. Presently rented for 190.00
418 GWYNN STREET-Vacant lot-Zoned R-6 Lot size 100' x 150' City water and
sewer. Lot rental 125.00 monthly.
■
491 GW YNN STREET- 4 room
brick home(LR, 2 BR. Kitchen)
Bath, Carport with storage room
Lot 80' X 150' presently rented for
1125.00 monUily.
419 GW YNN STREET-Lot size 100'
X 150’, 2 Bedroom Trailer (10' x
40') 175.00 monthly rental.
GW YNN STREET-Vacant Lot- Zoned R-6. Fronting 147.99 feel on Gwynn St..
and 96.87 feel on Raymond St. (unopened St.) Irregular.
GW YNN STREET-Vacant Lol-fronthig 65 ft. on Gwynn St. and 407.09 ft. on
Raymond St. (unopened from Tot St. lo Avon St.)
609 GWYNN ST.-4 room frame house willi
Bath, separate garage, Lot size 81' x 149’.
Presently rented $60.00 monthly.
payment to the undersigned.
This Uie 2lst day of Sep
tember, 1978 Bud(ty Eaton,
"H applneis l> activity."
Arlitotie
Administrator of Uie estate of
WUliam Caesar Eaton,
deceased.
9-21-4tp
617 GW YNN ST.- 4 room frame house with
baUi, Lot 52' X 149' Presently rented $60.00 per £
month. "
625 GW YNN ST.- 3 bedrooms, baUi, Utchen
living room, flreplace separate garage and
storage building. $125.00 present monthly
rental. Lot site 90’ x 149’
1:30 PJV\.
If you're on a picnic check to
MS that there it lufficient ice
left in the cooler to keep leftover* Hfe and cool till you gat home.
“ EverylMdy worked together and the result was contagious.
This Is an exuberant orchestra playing as if they were thrilled with life along with music. Their discipline Is exemplary.”
-NEW YORK POST
“it was, indeed, a major
performance. The next time It comes to Washington, the
orchestra should try to rent a
larger hall.”-WASHINGTON POST
“The North Carolina Symphony, one of the fastest growing
orchestras in the country, was at the Kennedy Center last
night and pretty much took the place by storm...”
-WASHINGTON STAR
The North Cafdiiia Symphony.
H took Kennedy Center by stom.
It*ll take you by surprise.
The North Carolina
Symphony. There’s no
other orchestra in the
world like it. It can bring
down the house at places
Uke the Kennedy Center
and Carnegie Hall. And
it can bring people to
their feet in cities and
towns all across North
Carolina.
Today, the North
Carolina Symphony is
considered one of the top
symphonic orchestras in
the country. It is the
only "m£\jor” orchestra
between Washington,
D.C. and Atlanta. But
excellence itself is useless
if it can’t be shared and
appreciated, and that’s
what makes our symphony
so unique. It reaches out.
And people love it.
Last year, the
symphony traveled over
19,000 miles, for more
than 200 performances
throughout the state. It
played in auditoriums,
gymnasiums, meeting
halls and public parks,
taking the music of the
masters to the people
where they live. And over
a quarter of a million
North Carolinians, many
of them school children
attending their first
classical concert, stood
and cheered America’s
youngest m£gor orchestra.
This year, your
symphony will be playing
an even more demanciing
schedule than ever before.
And to encourage you to
take advantage of the
performance nearest you,
we’re making a special
"two for one” admission
offer.
Just send a stamped,
self-addressed envelope
and the coupon below to
The North Carolina
Symphony, P.O. Box
28026, Raleigh, NC
27611. We’ll send you a
concert schedule, and a
ticket good for one free
admission to any regular,
non-benefit concert, when
accompanied by a paid
admission ticket.
So, if you haven’t
heard what your
symphony is up to lately,
take a friend to the next
performance in your area.
We think you’ll be
surprised. We’re sure
you’ll be impressed.
The North
Carolina
Symphony
THE NORTH CAROUNA SVMFHONV |
P.0.50X 26036, R8Mgh,NC 37611 |
l' v t w ie io s e iiit la m iM d , ie H - a d d r M M d ■
• n v s t o e e . P lM M t e n O in t a c e n M r « I
M h t d u ie s n d U c k e ig o o d ie r e n e ir M ■
( d m lM lo n w h e n a c c o in p c n lid b y ip a id |
■ d m Iiilo n U c M . I
508 AVON ST.-4 room frame house with bath,
back porch. Lot 68' x 399’ Presently'rented
$60.00 monthly. Zoned R-6
1:45 P.M.
513 AVON ST.-S room frame house.
Lot size 100’ x 123’ Present rented
$75.00 Zoned R-6.
2KW P.M.
564 AVON ST-5 room frame house, bath, back
porch. Lot size 75’ x 373’ Presently rented
$125.00 per monUi.
2:30 P.M.
601 RAYM O ND ST.-3 bedroom Brick
house, 1 baUi, presenUy rented
$100.00 montti Lot size 91' x 140'.
3KX) P.M.
I
II
II
iüQfS
804 CARTNER ST.- Lot size
98.60 feel on Cartner St. and
202.67 ft. on Bailey St. (unopened).
2 b-aUers-one rentbig for $80.00
per month, the other $75.00 per
month.
This Sale Not Subject to N.C. Upset Bid Law
TERMS: CASH
20% Deposit Day of Sale - Balance Delivery of Deed
Sale Being Conducted For:
Central Carolina Bank-Durham, North Carolina
Executor Estate Of Raymond C Foster
For additional information contact:
l*tÍ№
______________W e S e U rh e £ a r tk a n d A ÌÌ T h ereo n ' •
ih 9 79 9 '1S 3 3 690 Spring St. D anville. V e .
N.C. State Uc. No. 44 And 45
DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978 - I5B
Dixie Classic Fair
S o m e th in g G re a t I n T S / S ^ S S - O o t ?
Wtnston-Salem, N.C.
■••S..
C L A S S I F I E D
ANIMALS
• Pett and LiveAock
I ' >» Kittens...! gray and 1"j: calico, both female. Call; 998-
3386 after 5 p.m.
9-28-ltpH
■i f o u n d : A e montb old male
nup...CoIUe or Doberman and
a, German Shepherd marked.
*''Rust and brown. Found in the
’ vicinity of Hickory Hills
Country aub. Pay for ad and
shots. CaU; 9984770.
S ‘ > 2 8 ItnpA
:«<C|/IPLOYMENT
: . Help Wanted
. * IS AN OPElflNG
F O R ... Short Order Cooks for
1st and 2nd shifts. Experience
" ^required. Apply in person
■7 : -anyday between 9 a.m. and
Cp.m . at Sam’s Country Klt-
! ;cben, Int. 601 and Hwy. 1-40.
lr : '7-27-ifli s
•S ■
,f E A R N Extra income by
wearing and selling Sarah
Coventry Jewelry. F R E E
Training. Transportation
necessary. Call; 9984928 or
998-4832.
■'•3: 8-10-tfnH
~ W ANTED; A baby sitter for a
UiT 3 year old, to stay in home and
do light house work from 7:30 Z a.m. until 5:30 p.m. Located 5
;;; miles out on Lexington high-
I .« way. CaU: 998-SS40 after 6
' ^ pm-
wt41•fi■S
nV
m
1*2
9-14 tnfP
H E L P W AN TED ; Real
..^tate Salespersons needed
^'^Inim ediatelyI ...Form al
! -Itaining Program ...National
■ I^ e rra l Service ...Excellent J^tilce Environment
^¿...Requires Real EsJ^te
>.U cense Contact; Century 21,
r<-Boxwood Real Estate at 704-
V634-S997.
• 9-14-tfn B
1
I t
iM IÜiM I№
Im prove yourself.
» ¡ « M ii. 'a s . 's ; «Sun ) or $Km4 our 9 mtak MNiow nigitaMUjMi«. CaH
W
FURNITU^RE
Commercial
NEW AND U SED ’6 F FIC E
furniture, fireproof files and
safes. RO W AN O F F IC E
f u r n it u r e , 118 N. Main'
Street, Salisbury, phone 636-
W ANTED ; A bus monitor
for 2 hours a day. 92.66 per
bDur. Good driving record
needed. Apply at the
MocksviUe Child Develop
ment Center. CaU: 634-5298.
9^21 2tnpB
(200 W EEK LY stuffing en-
. velopes spare time possible.
.DetaUs, $1.00 and sUmped,
- jidf-addressed envelope to;
:-K.C. M ail Sales, 8023
■^lieavenwortb Rd., Kansas
;^'City, KS. 66109.
iiT >21 4tp-KC
W ANTED: R N ’s and LP N ’s
from 11 p.m. until 7 a.m. full
time for new Intermediate
Care Unit. Excellent benefits.
Call for an interview.
Guardian Care at Clemmons.
¡ f- Phone; 766-9150.
t 9-21-tfe GC
Z W AN TED : 2 Experienced
'o Cooks at Ramada Inn Steak
I House at Clemmons. CaU;
- 76fr«231.V -:: > 2 8 ItnpT
: : Situitioni Wanted
' WUl keep chUdren in my home
... Davie Academy Road. For
more information caU; 284-
2742.
9-21-3tnpB
' W Ulke^cbUdreninmyhome
with extra care and love.
-tat.00 per week firm. In the
.Fork community. CaU; 998-
;;882l.
B-28 2tpM
WUl keep toddler in my home
on Highway BOl, Advance.
CaU: 998404B.
9-28 2tnp8
tfnR Home
FO R SALE: All types un
finished chairs, stools, of aU
sizes-upholstered. swivels,
deacon benches, aU kinds
used furniture. CaU W. A.
EUis at 634-5227.
4-13-tfnE
FO R SALE: Several used and
rebuUt pianos. WiU rebuUd
and refinish old pianos. CaU
998-8959 after 5:00 p.m.
9-14-4tpC
FO R SA LE: Bedroom suite-
135. and a step-table-$5. CaU;
998-4527 after 6 p.m.
9-28 ItpM _______________
MISCELLANEOUS
F O R S A L E ... Custom
frames...any size...expert
w orkm anship...over 35
samples on display...see at
C A U D E L L L U M B E R
C O M PAN Y, 1238 Bingham
Street, MocksviUe, Phone 63<-
2167.
4-24-tfnC
K I D D I E CAMPUS
PLAYSCHOOL. Daycare and
kindergarten. Dally and
weekly rates. Ages 2 and up. -
CaU 634-2266.
6-1-tfnK
M R. V E T E R A N -N o down
payment on homes. Ranch,
colonial, contempary, etc.
Many sellers pay closing
costs. Ib is means your cost is
nottiing. We wUl work hard for
you. Winston-Salem Homes,
IncrCaU: 634-2431.
8-3 tfn
W ANTED; Old Muzzle
Loading Rifle with Patchbox.
WUl pay $1000.00 cash or
more. CaU before j-ou seU. 1-.
919-576-9451. Or write P. 0.
Box 528 Troy,
N. C. 27371.
8-lOtfnC
FO R SALE...Seed oaU, re
cleaned, one year from
certified seed. Contact; T.R.
Richardson, Rt. 6, Box 169,
MocksviUe. Phone: 492-7631.
9-21 2tnpR
Want to determine if local
businessmen are interested in
a computerized bookkeeping
system... if you are interested
I write to Bookkeeping,
525, MocksviUe, N.C.
27028.
2tnp9-21S
W ANTED TO BUY: Old 6 and
12 volt batteries, also, we seU
good used car batteries. B and
W Trading Post, Hwy 158
East, Phone 634-2605 or AUens
Texaco, 601 SouU», Phone 634-
2421.
9-^tpK
I W ILL NOT be responsible
for any debts oUier than those
made by me personaUy.
Michael R. Tutterow.
9-28 ItnpT
FO R SALE...Imported bulbs
from Holland, tulip, daffodils
and others. G ^ ia l prices on
wood beaters. Lowest prices
ever on Vita-Graze for winter
pasture, hay, sUage., seed,
wheat, oaU, barley and Grace
fertUlzer. Maynard Farm
Supply Co. 493-5206,
YadkinvUle, N.C.
9-28-2tnpM
FO R SA L E ; 1974 Suzuki
(TM250) recenUy bored out
40ttis. and a 18 (t. wooden V
bottom boat witt) a 10 b.p.
Bvenrude and traUer. AU in
GOOD condition. CaU: 4»2-
7288 or 284-2440.
9-28 ItpW
PERSONALS
MCCLAM ROCK
The Bill McClam rock
FamUy express ttjeir heart
felt thanks to Dr. Charles
W illiam s for your un
derstanding, compassion and
care of our beloved pet,
Peedee, who died Saturday
moming. We are confident
that everything possible was
done for him, and we are most
grateful. M ay God richly
bless you and your wife as you
do your worii in Da\'ie County
for Uie betterment of all
animals (pets).
Mr. and Mrs. BUI Mc-
C3amrock
577 Avon Street, Mocksvllle,
N.C.
9-28 ItnpM
PROPERTY
Acreage
FO R S A L E...2 acres off 601, 3
miles out of MocksviUe. CaU:
W.A. EUis, 634-5227. Also a 55
acre farm on Gladstone Rd.
2-9 UnE
LA N D -Y ad kin County 18
acres-wooded paved road
frontage...spring fed stream.
WUl seU aU or develop into
tracks. Phone (919) 6794286,
YadkinvUle.
RENTALS
Apts.
FO R R E N T : Crestview
Apartments, U.S. 64 East.
Nice 3 rooms, patio and baUi.
For adults. CaU: 634-5420.
JAM ES
Words are inadequate to
express our feelings to aU our
friends, neighbors and famUy
tor everyttUng that was done
for us in our great loss. For aU
ttie food, flowers, cards and
memories, we say Thank You.
A special ttiank you goes to aU
of you that tried so hard to
save the Ufe of our precious
dad and husband. May God
reward you in His own special
way.
MUdred, Gary, Mark
and Keith
9-28 ItpJ
(»nCEMACHIISES
Typewiiters
JtídingMictttnes
Servioe On MMakss
Earle's
OFFICE SUPPLIES
Dill 636-2341 Salisbury, N.C.
9-28 2tpB
Homes
FOR SALE; 9 room, 2 story
home in Cooleemee, 2 baths
with large screened porch and
separate upstairs apartment.
Located on large shaded
comer lot. Convenient to
schools, churches, and
shopping center. Phone 284-
2994 or 284-2761.
8-3-tftlK
NO DOWN P A Y M EN T : 3 and
4 bedroom homes. CaU BUI
Shoaf at 634-2431 Winston-
Salem Homes.
8-3 tfn
FO R SALE B Y 0WNER--3
bedroom house on Forrest
Lane. Price reduced for quick
sale. For more information
call: 998-5841.
8-31-tfnB
C REEKW O O D : Beautiful
spWt foyer, 3 ‘ idroom, 2
baths, 1950 2 cars: s^Vr$54V'
CaU; -Ju Shoaf, Winston-
Salem Homes at 634-2431.
9-7-tfnWS
7-29-4tnpG
Homes
FO R R E N T OR
SALE...House on Hunt Street.
Contact: Bryan SeU at 634-
9-21 tfnS
FO R R E N T OR
LEASE...New store buUding
on 64 Highway West of 1-40.
CaU: 492-5336.
9-21 tfnG
Mobile Homes
Trailers and spaces for
BEN T. Call 493-4386.
11-lO-tfnL
W ANTED TO R EIV T... Nice 3
bedroom brick home in the
vicinity or near the Davie
County Hospital for famUy of
three. CaU; 634-3922 after 6
p.m.
9-21-tfn S
AIR WELL
DRILLING CO.
, 1 II M e n t i Meats | I thomasville, |
■Locker Beef. ■
! A.L.Be$I^Jj^ !
|R t.l.Th o ffla s«H le J.G .|
I Call Collact Anytime: S
■ WlRston-Sriem ■ I (aiaiTiiNoi I
■Phone After6 PJM. •
f N i l y A M . ( f f 1 9 ) 476-taK I
Mobile Homes
We buy and sell good used
MobUe Homes, Contact;
. BONANZA M O BILE HOMES,
722 Wilkesboro Street,
MocksvUle, N.C. Phone; 634-
5959.
10-7-tfhB
FO R SALE ... Double-wide
trailer 24 x 50, 3 BR, 2 full
baths, extra insulaUon, storm
windows, central air con
dition, 10 X 20 awning in
cluded. In ExceUent con-
diUon. NO furniture. $10,000.
Setting on house movers steel
readv to move! Call; 998-8307.
(iwner will finance.
9-14-tfn H
FO R SALE; 10 x 50 Mobile
Home furnished, 2 air con
ditioners, 280 gal. oil tank and
a 10x20porch. Call: 492-7325.
9-14 tfnH
FO R SALE...1978 14 x 70
mobile home...2 bedroom..2
baths...buUt in fire
place...excellent con
dition...assume loan. caU 998-
8128.
2t9-20-F
Route 9, RoK 127
i^esvine, NC 28677
Phone 872-7614
Advance, NC
n m e 9984141
NOTICE
WANTED TO BUY
LIVESTOCK
Beef cattle, hogs, veals, or
feeder cattle. I have an
order for all types of
cattle.
Will pay market price for
your livestock, right on
the farm. Payment In
check or cash, which ever
you perfer,
PROMPT PICK UP SERVICE
I will buy one head or
a whole herd.
Give me a call!!I
FRED 0. ELLIS
Livestock a^Aurtloneerlng
Rt. 4, MocksviUe, N.C.
634-5227 or 998-8744
Lifelong Resident of Dsvie
WINSTON-SALEM
723-3233
Let Us Protect
Your Asphalt-
With
"J E T — S E A L "
Quality Asphalt
__Se«ler
FREE ESTIMATES-
BEN MOORE
QuilKy Psving Co.
Woodleaf, NX.
( 7 0 4 ) 2 7 8 . 4 4 5 8
LAND
POSTERS
N.C. Qsnersi Statuti 113-120.2 pravMn that iigni or pomri
prohibiting hunting". . . ihel) mtsiur« not ItM than 10
Inches by 12 Inches snd shsit bt conspicuously posted on pri-
vstc lands not more than BOO ysrds spert dose to end along
the beundsrlsc. At lasse one sucb notice, sign, or poster M l
be posted on eecb sMe of such land, end one at each eorocf
thereof . . The ststutts siso provides thet In eesc such
poctsrs ere M be used for prohibiting fishing, they ritould
be posted not mors than 900 ysrds spsrt sround the siwrc line
line of the pond or lake Invotvsd.
POSTERS IN STOCK
$100 1 Dozen
B A v iB e d U K r r y
SALES
SEV E R A L FAM H.Y YAR D
SALE... At the home of L. Reid
Towell, Davie Academy
Rioad, A LL D AY Saturday,
September 30th. Clothes
children’s athletic shoes
(new), camping equipment,
glassware, cnina, crafts, flax
wheel, antique oak chairs,
other anUques, plants and
several pieces of new
Franciscain china. Many
ottier items, also. Phone 492-
5218.
9-28 ItpT
2 FamUy Yard Sale...Friday
and Saturday, September 29
and 30th from 9 a.m. untU 5
p.m. Flowering planta and
hanging baskets, low prices,
mens and children’s clothing,
women’s clothing, glassware
and anUques at the home of
Mrs. Margaret Lakey-2 mUes
out on 64 West.
9-28 ItpL
Y A R D SALE at 828 Hemlock
Street...Saturday, September
30th from 9 a.m. untU?
Household goods, clothes,
toys and many other ttiings.
Rain or Shine!
9-28 ItpB
-Y A R D SALE...Saturday,
Septemtier 30th from 9 a.m.
untU 5 p.m. 1 mUe off 158 on
the Main Church Road.
Clothes, glassware, toys,
antiques, avon bottles and
much, much more! Watch for
signs. Phone: 634-2239.
9-28 ItpW
3 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SALE.,.Saturday, September
30, from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m. at
634 South M ain Street,
Mocksvllle. OU circulator,
refrigerator and many
misc^aneous items. Rain or
Shine!
9-28 ItpF
BIG...BIG Y A R D SA LE at ttie
residence of John and Bert
Davis, 4 mUes east on Hwy.
158. AU day Saturday, Sep
tember 30, from 8 a.m. untU 3
p.m. aothes-sizes 7 to 32H, 16
oz. yam for $2 per bag and
many other items of aU kinds
and descriptions. CanceUed if
raining.
9-28 itpD
4 F A M IL Y Y A R D
SA LE...R edland Road,
Friday and Saturday, Sep
tember 29 and 30, from 9 a.m.
untU 4 p.m. Mens, women’s
and children’s clothing, shoes,
toys baby items, a few an
tiques and other
misceUaneous items, too
numerous to mention. Watch
for signs.
9-28-ltpF
Gigantic Yard Sale and Flea
Market at the Brock Center
Gym on North Main Street,
Thursday, October 7th from 8
a.m. untU 5 p.m. Some an
tiques and several old school
desks as weU as many, many
oUier items.
9-28-ltnpB
3 F A M IL Y Y A R D SALE... At
the Wayne Snider residence
off of 801 on Yadkin VaUey
Road. Boys and ladies
clothes, wigs, bedspreads,
drapes and odds and enda. AU
types of Avon makes good
Christmas gifts. Also crafts
and a 1931 Chevrolet coupe,
original. Saturday, Sep
tember 30, from 8 a.m. untU 5
p.m. Rain or Shine.
9-28-ltpE
CoL Wanda
I .
M. Myers
• A U C T I O N E E R -
C b r t p b t e A J ír t ío n
Ssrwtoe
^ NCAL-1328
^ 70 4 .6 3 3 -14 0 4
Rt. I SsUsbury, N.C.
Kessler’s
Furniture. & Upholstery
(Foimeily lou't Upholstwy)
OPEN DAII.V
M on.'Sat.-9:00-SiSO
Phone 284-2512
Cooleemee
SERVICES
Carpet Cleaning
Give your old carpet a ne»
lease on life with the do it
yourself steam cleaner o...
rinse and vac from D AV IE
SU P P L Y C O M PAN Y, 634-
2859.
tfnD
Electrical
For fast and efficient service
on aU electrical needs, large
or smaU, caU Karl Osborne,,
owner of O SBO R N E
ELEC TRIC COMPANY 634-
3398, 520 East Maple Ave.
5-11-tfnO
Garbage Pick-Up
For weekly garbage pick-tq>
anywhere in Davie County ...
call B E C K B R O T H ER S
G ARBAGE DISPOSAL
SERVICE, 284-2917 OT 284-
2824, Cooleemee, or County
Manager’s Offlce, MocksviUe
6-12-tfnB
Septic Tank
SEPTIC TANK CLEANING
S E R V IC E ... certified to
pump septic tanks ... large
truck for full time, efficient
service ... also rent sanitary
toUeU ... caU 284-4362, Robert
Page, Cooleemee.
4-24-tfnP
SEPTIC TANK PU M PIN G -
Commercial, reaidential or
industrial. For FAST, ef-
flcient service...caU 996-3770.
9-28 4tnpN
Wall Coverings
Old waUs need a hew face..
See complete selection ol
newest wall coverings at
D A V IE SU P P LY COMPANY
at 634-2№9.
3-25-tfnD
For F R E E Estimate caU;
Manuel Painting and
WaUpaper at 634-2222.
9-28-tnpM
Woodwork
Now Open ... M IK E ’S WOOD
WORK, we repair broken-
fumiture and take speciM'
orders, cabinets, shelfs, etc.
CaH 998-5040.
12-8-tfnP
VEHICLES
Automobiles
FOR SALE; 1976Thuflderbird
-fuUy loaded. Must SeU. CaU;
634-3607.
8-31 tfnS
FO R SA LE ... Deluxe 1975
Rabbit, light Blue, a-c and
a.m. and f.m. radio, in E x
ceUent condition. CaU:634-
3880 between 8 and 9 a.m. and
10 and 11 p.m.
9-7-tfn-J
FO R SALE. . .1976 Camaro,
low mileage, good color,
automatic, power ateerlng
and in exceUent condition.
CaU; 634-2113 between 6 p.m.
and 9 p.m.
9-2l-tfnC
FO R SALE: 1974 Camaro, v |
Burgundy witti power brakea,
power steering, automatic,
ab* condition and AM -FM
radio. In good condition.
CaU; Bobbi at work C91B) 76S-
3745 or at home (919) 78M100.
9-28-ltnpM
Trail Bike
FO R SALE: 1974 Suauzi TM
400. Raced very Uttle. E x
ceUent for traU bike. $360.00.
CaU; 634-5220 after 4 p.m.
9-28 2tpH
Trucks
FO R SA LE ... 1969 Ford W
Ton Pick-up, 3 spd., over-
londition. I. CaU:drive and air c
998-8186.
9-14-4tnp H
Vans
FO R SALE. . .1976 Stepan
Van 12ft. pay load, duel
wheels, automatic tran
smission, power steering and
air conditioned. CaU: 634-
2675 .after 5;00 p.m.
8-17-tfnM
FO R SALE...1971 V-6 Dodge
Van, long baae. In E X -
C ELLB^h' condition. Can be
seen at 536 Avon Sbreet,
MocksvUle.
9-28 ItpM
H O P E
U2IUEBSBUILDERS
Commsrela^ropait^ots'
Acreage Tracts - Homes Dsvle-lredell-Forsyth Il Surrounding Counties
BROCK REALTY
Phone (704) 872-4111
Or 493-6733nSSBBSBB
P rid e M a rk
R o o fin g C o .
Tear Off - Wood Shingles - Composition
PKEE ESTIMATES
ASK ABOUT OURGUARAtflEE
MDCEFERKINS DOÜGOOLEERT
Advance Mocksvllle
Phone 99B-5040 Phone 634>308l
lAUCTI
S H E E K
AUCTION ft REALTY COMPANY
634-3611
P.O. BOX 663 MOCKSVILLE. N X . 27026
NCAL624
NCRL 40326
BONDED
RES. 704/672-0602
R t.126TATE8ViLLi
N.C. 26677
I NSui. A T IO li^ ^ l
B L O W N I N
A T T IC S A N D W A U S
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I6B - DAVIE COUNTY ENTERPRISE RECORD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1978
SENATOR ROBERT MORGAN (D-NC) greets President
Sadat (right) of Egypt in the nation's eapitol on the day
after Sadat and Prime Minister Bogin of Israel had signed
an agreement to seek peace in the Middle East, Between the
two is Senator Sam Nunn (D -G a ).
Scholastic Aptitude Tests
...The Common Denominator
Eaeh year, over a miUton and a half high school students take tbe Scholastic Aptitude Test-the well known SAT- during the process of applying to college. This year, you may be one of them.So whal? So relax. It’s not a matter of life and death. And it is not-all by itself- going to get you in or keep you out of college either.The SAT serves as a common denominator for students all over the country, 'from different high schools with different academic programs. It is used by colleges as a supplement to the high school record and other information about students applying for admission to college.It is a national test that measures some, but not all, of the abilities that are important to success in college.So, it’s not your whole life summed up hi three hours as a few people might lead you to believe, but it is important. To teU you what the SAT is all about and help you prepare to go into the test with a minimum of butterflies in stomach, the College I has published “TaU^ the SAT: A Guide to the Scholastic Aptitude Test and the Test of Standard Written English.” “TaUng the SAT,” which will be avaUable to all students who register to take the test:Describes in detaU each section of the test;Gives sample questions and analyzes the reasoning which leads to the correct answer;Contains hints on test- taking strategies;Includes a complete sample test and answer sheet;Gives correct answers and instructtons for self-scoring.Here are some guidelines on bow to make the best use of this new guide on your own: The SAT is given six times- seven in some states-at thousands of test centers hi tbe U.S. and abroad. Becasuse of college application deadlines, most
your a Board!
seniors take the SAT in November, December, January, and March, whUe juniors take the test in May or June, often for practice or to apply for early admission. Once you’ve chosen a registration datc-and you should do so at least five weeks before Uie test date-4>e sure to get a copy of "Taking the SAT” from your guidance office.When you get ahold of "Taking the SAT’’ read ttu-ough the first section on “Preparing for the Test” to leam how the test books are arranged, how long the testing time for each section is, how to mark the answer sheet, and how to approach the quesUons,Next, study ttie description of each type of question and the suggesUons about how to approach ttie anwers. Review the mathematical concepts secUon possibly vrith the help of a matti teacher. Your EngUsh teacher can be a help witti ttie TSWE section.Once you’ve completed ttiese sections of ttie booklet, then you are ready to take the sample test. Instructions are given for you to follow in setting up condiUons that wiU be Uke the actual test itself.
After you finish the practice test, follow the instruction on “How to Score Your Sample Test” at ttie end of ttie ^ ik . After you have scored your test, you can go back to analyze your performance and see how you might improve it and, with the beneift of the test-taking hints and a real practice session, you should be able to approach the SAT with a good idea of what to expect and with confidence.Students must register by Sept. 29 for Nov. 4 test-by Oct. 27 for Dee. 2 test. Forms are available at DHS guidance office.
Ancient Romans appear to be the fint people to uie napkins.
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As I drove through the Cane Creek secUon of McDoweU County and approached ttie Rutherford County line, ttie signs looked good for molasses making.The cane stalks showed good height, ttie leaves looked r^dy for stripping, and the seed tops were showing red in ttie sun.My destination was the Wallace farm on the upper edge of Rutherford County where a run of molasses had been scheduled.As I drove into the backyard, I saw that I was several hours late Cane Juice , was sending up clouds of steam from the broUer, and molasses flowed from a tap into waiting Jars,Clearly, however, Steve Wallace was not satisfied with either the operation or the product. The cane juice, stUl bubbling away, was a vile green and the finished molasses continued to show ttiis color in the fiUed fruit jars, even when held up to the light.Muttering to himself, he watched the last jar ooze fuU and set about the task of washing down the boiler, “I knew dam well that cane wasn’t ripe enough. Shouldn’t have Said I’d run it?”Indeed he probably shouldn’t, but the man had brought the load in from sixty mUes down-country and' it was hard to turn him down. Then the moment of decision: charge the man the regular toU of one-fourth the run for running up his molasses or write the operation off as a mistake.An overwhelming mistake, without doubt. "Naw, I wouldn’t think of charging you. You’ve come a long way and I was glad to run off your cane.”And then as the man drove off with his unripe squeezings: "That’s the last Ume ru agree to make a man’s molasses before I know what kind of cane he’s gobig to deliver. Why if I tried to seU
any of them jars of green poison. I’d be laughed out of Rutherford (%unty.”WeU, probably not, Wallace has the reputation of being the best molasses-maker in his area-and perhaps ttie most efficient.Instead of a mule-drawn sweep, he uses a trusty T- modei engine with attached belt to turn the rollers and press the juice from the cane, Althou^ of plastic pipe carries the juice to a holding receptacle from which it is released as needed into the waiting boiler.The boiler itself is divided into compartments, with openings at altemate ends of ttie dividers to allow the juice to circulate slowly through from one end of the boUer to ttie other. Picture Uie kind of maze rigged im in scientific labs to check tlie inteUigence of rats and you get the idea.The boiler is fired at the end whece the juice first enters, bringing the juice to a boU and allowing the impurities to be skimmed off.As the liquid moves along ttirough the maze, it becomes thicker and thicker until foamy bubbles begin to form and hicrease in size. By the Ume they reach about two inches in diameter, they begin to burst. At ttie same time they have moved with the flow of the liquid to the opposite end of the boiler,C^ne juice has tumed into molasses. As they are drawn off by way of a spigot inserted into the boiler pan, fresh juice enters from the holding tank so that the molasses-making process is almost a continuous one untU the supply of juice is depleted.As I drove away a new batch of cane was being fed into the rollers. As the juice trickled into the boiler and began to boU, a grin slowly began to emerge on Steve Wallace’s countenance. Uiis was more like it. This time it would be real molasses. This time he would claim his toU,
R u s s e ll P o w e ll
Russell PoweU is a popular mandolin player and owner ot the Pinedene Jazz Center in Soutliern Pines, North Carolina. (N.C. Travel and Tourism Division photo by Paul Phillips.)
The Ticker’ For Sandhills' Southern Pines
There was ttie Pied Piper of HameUn! Robert Preston made it as “The Music Man”.And, there’s Russell Powell of Southern Pines.The Southern Pines area is world famed for golf and horses.But Powell’s big thing is ttie mandolin. He got his first one out of a Montgomery Ward catalog in 1936 and learned to play from a littie book enclosed wiUi the instrument,PoweU does not read music.He is owner-operator of Uie Pinedene Jazz Center,“You should have been here last Saturday. We had 10 people playing and even more standing around listening,” PoweU said.He is a naUve of Southern Pines and takes great pride in his town, “ActuaUy it’s a vUlage,” he said. “It was more or less laid out lUce a UtUe English vUlage,” It is this "vUlage” concept that gives Souttiera Pines that special touch. It is not the typical "litUe sleepy Southern town” that Hollywood portrays. Southem Pines is alive.True, it is a resort town, but U has none of the hoopla that is found in many such areas.But, don’t get the Idea that noUiing
happens. It does, but in a somewhat subUe manner,"Years ago,” PoweU said, "you would see people getting off ttie train witti ttieir steamer trunks, and they would stay from ttie first of November until June. As an old-timer, you can now walk down ttie street and see many new faces, but you soon get to know them,” He laughed and said, "Us old-timers are a UtUe outnumbered today.”Southem Pines is a people town, PoweU pointed out. It has litUe town commons running throughout town, and the "faithful” still gather each morning at ttie post office, drug store or book shop to discuss important issues of the day,"I Uiink aU Uie UtUe shops uptown have really added something to Southern Pines”, he said. He was taUcing about the interesting shops on both sides of Broad Street, Pennsylvania Avenue and Bennett Street, Visitors can spend hours browsing in Uiis five or six block area, PoweU also noted that the Arts CouncU has done an exceUent job in ttiis area,PoweU loves his work, and he loves his music. He has many foUowers, and has been called by ttiem the "President of Pinedene College”, “Mayor of Pinedene”, “Conductor of ttie Pinedene
Symphony”, and "Commander ot the' Pinedene Irregulars”.Of course, it's all in fun, and that’s the feeHng you get when you walk into his. music center,"My dad and I used to operate a service station and grocery store. We: kept a few picks and strings around, and ttien a few instmments, and it just sort of grew,”"What convinced me most that music. was my thing was people coming around on cold days to get their cars washed,” PoweU added.He says, "I would not trade jobs with anybody,”A stroU down a side street padded with pine needles puts you into the atmosphere and stream of SouUiem Phies . Uving.It would be difficult not to mention the golf and horse aspects of Southem. Pines, These activities draw many people to the area.■powell says, “I have never played ; goU. But when I wonder how many golfers play the mandolin?”Southem Pines is a “special place”, - WaUc down its streets.Stop and say heUo,LUce RusseU PoweU and his music___,it gets into your blood.
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Social Security Has New Retirement Provision
A new provision of the social secutity law may have an important effect on the reth^ment plans of working couples if one of them works in puWc employment not covered by social security. Undw ttie old law, the spouse of a person whose work was covered by social security could get a beneflt as a husband or wife regardless of his or her pension income from sources other than social security. Under the new law, ttie person’s social security benefit as a dependent or survivor wUl be reduced by the amount of any pension he or she receives based on his or
her own work in public em
ployment not covered by social security. This work could be for the Federal government or any State or local government.Under an exception in the law, a governmental pension will not affect a social security dependent or survivor benefit if the person becomes eligible for the pension before December 1982, and at ttie time ttie person applies for or becomes entiUed to a social security benefit as a dependent or survivor, Uie person could have quaUfied for ttiat benefit
under the law as it was in January 1977. In January 1977 men had to proye they were actuaUy dependent on their wives to be eligible for benfits- as a husband or widower. A govérnmental pension will” have po effect on a person’s social security benefit based on his or her own work covered by social security.’ More information about thé effect of governmental pensions on social security benefits can be obtained at ttie Salisbury social security offiçe, 105 Corriher Avenue, 28144. The telephone number U 634-2868.
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